The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 3, 1919, Page 8

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S——aeneee By ja couple Francisco Gloria Frink and Miss Virginia |her of the state supreme court, was| Madison, pests will be Mr. Alexander Phil-| tte is expected in Seattle with his Mps, of Springfield, Ohio, and his) pria9 about the middle of Jt “ : ide abc e middie uly, after Mrs. Henry Phillips; Mr, honeymoon at Niagara from California on Wednesday . spent Honors Cousin . Lake Chelan, motoring over . . . Mr. and Mrs. Irving have moved to thelr new Mercer island. A number of people have composed | | a party which will go to Indian Hen- |ry's Hunting Grounds over Fourth | jof July. They will ocoupy the ove | Jernment cabin and will indulge in sliding, snowballing and other win: | home on Miss Virginia Merrill will enter tain a house party of twelve guests . Mr. and Mre. M. B. Wells and Mr, Mrs, John L. Hood and three chil inspiration for the affair é a . 4 * dren, of Pawtucket, R. I, are the | Miss May Rosenberg, Miss Margaret | O'clock when Miss Marguerite | simondson, Mr. A. C. Brandwijk and de Turenne became the bride | Mr. Corwin Chase. | This group have organtzed them selves into a body known as the | @¢ Lieut. Clarence Sewal! Clark of phia. Bishop O'Dea officiat Cooperatice Campers, to make the| With their parents, Mr. and Mrs, 1. ‘The bride made a charming pic-| mountains nearabouts accessible to|T Turner. in her gown of white satin and|the people of the Northwest at low| ¥ carrying an arm bouquet of | cost, "orchids and roses. Her wedding veil | Was caught with orange blossoms, * - Wide was the court tran which teu | Daughter Born | Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Closson are her shoulders. "The color scheme of pink and| being congratulated upon the birth of a daughter. . |have been attending Hamilton col- Mra, Edward P. Ederer and daugh- ter, Mise Pauline Ederer, have re |turned home. Miss Ederer has been attending Columbia university | me © Mrs, J. C. Glass and two children was carried out in a profusion | returned Wednesday from a sojourn flowers which were attractively | . |in the Bast. Arranged around the rosms in| Wistaria Club Dance | The Wistaria club will give a spe The maid of honor and brides-| cial dance at the Leschi pavilion, wore pale pink satin gowns|Zeschi park, on Tuesday gvening, overdrapes of georgette and) Jyly & d pink baby roses. Large pic ‘aici ee ee ew Mra. Robert M. Clarke, of Port- }land, has returned home after visit. jing her sister, Mrs. G. G. Lyon, and her sister, Mrs, Stella G. Webster see Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Todd wilt return to Seattle tomorrow from a month's trip to California. eee Mrs. Charles T. Brehm have moved to Delano Burton go to hats of pink georgette complet their attractive costumes. Miss | Redfield. was maid of honor, | Miss Florence Williams, Miss | Collins, Miss Mary Dela-| Gen. Hodges an Mrs. Hodges. Mr, and and Miss Elma-~ Collins, as | with their daughter, Mrs. Acher, and/and family maids, were extremely pretty her two small children, are at the| beach for the summer, dainty. |Terry hotel. | see | Mr. C. M. Clark of Philadelphia, | eee Mr. and Mrs, Robert M. of the groom, acted as best! Mr. and Mrs. George W. Roole and|and daughter Marion will ‘The ushers were Mr. Andrew |Mrs. William TT. Burwell spent) Bellingham over the Fourth, Mr. Richard Meade, Mr. Leon /Thuraday and Friday in Tacoma pate 8s. 2 ne and Mr. Amaury de Tur-| Mrs. Burwell will then go to Olym-| Mr, and Mrs, C. H. Seaborne, of |pia to visit Judge and Mrs. Kenneth | Tacoma, are spending the summer and Mrs. Clark left for the and will make their home in Pt ‘Iphia. The bride traveled in in imported sult of putty colored | ‘with hat to match and white furs. 20th field artillery, Fifth division, are C., to spend two weeks. Mr, Has- rived in Seattle from France on Tues | kell ts in California and will join day evening, and {s with his mother,| them there upon his return next Mrs, John F, Miller, Lieut, Miller | week. has been in France since July, 1918, | Mrs, Albert C, Philip, her moth- er and two children, left today for and has been in the occupied ter | Union City, on Hoods canal, for the ritory since the armistice was signed. Mrs, John Eddy and Mrs. W. 8, | summer, : : os groom belongs to one of the known families in Philadelphia. | Miss Elma Collins caught the K bouquet and also cut the} in the cake, while Miss Edith tedfield cut the ring. _ Madame de Chevilly, Mrs, Kelth A Bullitt and Mrs. Thomas assisted at the reception ch followed the ceremony. see Ir. and Mrs. bott Honored ‘A beautifully appointed dinner was last night honoring Mr. and W. Hi. Talbott, of San Fran- elsco, by Dr. and Mrs. Albert 1. _ Bouffleur "at thelr hom Covers “Were placed for 16 guests about a exquisite with flowers of pastel For Afternoons in July 2 i . Dinner Dance at Tennis Club Miss Beatrice Peeples gave a pret- ty informal dinner party last night the Seattle Tennis club compli- Menting Miss Virginia Sheahan, the house guest of Miss Harriet Baxter, and Mr. Edward Buxton, jr., of St. Paul, who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. R, D. Merrill. Later the guests en- Joyed dancing. Mrs. A. H. Anderson entertained @ party of thirty-five at dinner at the Seattle Tennis club, in honor of Miss Lois Reynolds, who is the house guest of Mrs. L. B. Stedman. Mrs. Gilbert S. Meen was hostess to a dinner of fourteen guests hon- oring Mr, and Mrs. James Brinkley. Among others who entertained at dinner were Mr. H. Day Puckett, Mr. Harold Lee, Mr. David, Mr Brown and several other with small- er affairs. see Weck-End Party A house party composed of Miss Leis Reynolds, who is the house Guest of Mrs. L. B. Stedman, Miss oe Cordelia Jennings, Capt. Brazer, Mr. Robert Cushman and Mr. June Sted man will spend from Friday until Monday as the guests of Miss Mar- garet Ames at the Country club. | Marriage Announcement + An extract from a Los Angeles | paper tells of the marriage of Miss * Katherine Bayne and Mr. Harold =) Avery, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. » Avery of Seattle SIMPLE COMBINATION HELPS WEAK EYES Seattle people are astonished at the Quick results produced by simple witch-hazel, camphor, hydrastis, etc., as mixed in Lavoptik eye wash. In one case of weak and near-sighted eyes a few days’ use brought great improvement. In another case it stopped eye pains and inflammation We guarants mall bottle of La- Yoptik to help ANY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. Alumi- num eye cup FRE Swift Drug | . and leading druggists. ITES--STINGS | Wash the affected @urface with bouse- hold ammonia or warm salt water; then apply— | | Peachy will arrive home today from | of weeks spent in san | Lodge, their summer home at Port | Sheahan, who is the house guest Of / married Wednesday in Sherwood| oer meee Harriet Raxter. |Forest, near Richmond, Va. The| Mr. 18, A, Stront has returned from jbride was Margaret Tyler, great-|the hospital, and ia at his home, House Party at |granddaughter of President John| eae 4 Tyler, Mr, Letcher Lambuth ret to: | ry Club le | Mr, her Lambuth returns to Count on mart F. Gould will /q,Claawick recently returned from day from the Hast, where he went a, Mere. Cant aoe vie | Siberia, where with the rank of] to attend the reunion of his class at| @Htertain a house party of people jjicutenant he waa adjutant of the| Princeton univeraiter @yer the Fourth of July, Their ory imrantrs baler ad Mr. Millard T, Hartson eeturned | one befor Ambrose Patterson, M Horton Miss yar Over ina Me | Eas, us ay Mr. and Mrs, J. I. Douglas and | girts, necessitated by the increasing | Ober. |Outing at Mt. Rainier children will spend the week-end at/ number of tragic unions with fakers Bogardus the country home of her p: ts, | ter in mid-summer. may be thousands of such love! ae and Mrs, R. D. Merrill, at the} ‘Those making up the party are | “24 Mra. A. B. Clark, who have been | swindles within the next year, See) Geuntry club, over the Fourth of| Miss Agnes VanSant, Miss Helen |**¥e" weeks in the East, returned) “Gur PR is the ad ie) Yely. Mr. Edward Buxton, jr., who | VanSant, Miss Charlotte Baule, Miss |h°me Monday, | vice. URE ©F YOUR LOV: ig Miss Merri!!’s cousin, will be the | Wisie Opits, Mis# Alberta McMonagle. | R'S IDENTITY “ | Bliss, Miss May Larkin, Miss Mil Mekeias de Turenne- Bean Laskin, “Atlee peatin tin, | Sweats of Mra, A. M. MacWhinnie, . | Mis# Mayme MeCleary, Mies Vida | Clark Nuptial. Nerlin, Mr. Laurence Cunnaraon, |, Mrs. W. H. Rowley, of Victoria, pretty home wedding was sol:| Mr. Oscar Hedlund, Mr, Emit Carl. |B: Cx !s visiting her slater, Mra. W. Wednesday afternoon at|son, Mr. W. C. Erwin, Mr, David)?» Mackay, | | Theodore and Robert Turner, who have returned home and are Mrs. Auzias de Turenhe wore & | Mackintosh, where she will stay un-\at the Sorrento Hotel. 0 Paris gown of Signot|ti1 Monday | +99 Tt was black with silver and | eee Mrs, G, A. Haskell and daughter, | ings. Lieut. Stewart S. Miller of the! Jean, left today for Brentwood, B.| THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1919. Aran n Love W ith 7 ! 1 . Dance for Two Lt. Chadwick a ae ‘Miss Marion Lane and Miss Donna! nding a romar begun whilelhome at the Country club. | Zane have issued invitations for &/he was attend Washington and| risa ! ance to be given on Thursday even: | Lee University, from 1912 to 1914] yg nar 's . | Mr, and Mrs, Edmund Rowde: c fie Toly 20, at" tho home of their|/stepnen F. Chadwick, member of| gut and Are Edmund Rowden and Fakers Prey on Sentimental | Sind and Mra ns Meeucen aS the law firm of Chadwick, McMick mund Robert Bowden and emali| Girls; Many Hearts Are u St kama tog [Orr Reamuey & Ri son of Judge} paby, will leave Tuesday for Cee The affair will be in honor of Miss|stopnen J. Chadwick, former mem » a 3 dur Broken “Be Sure of Your Lover's) Identity,” Declares U. S. Statement | SAN FRAN jlove with a hero: | Fine--but make sure bh re saying “yes. This is the warning of United! States army authorities to American | SCO, July 3.—In s @ real and crooks who prey on susceptible | hearts thru imaginary exploits, | It is the nglest and most danger. | ous captivation ruse, says the army men, and unless parents and daugh. | ters take proper precaution there | Hero? | oo— Army Issues Warning Be Sure He’s Real Before Marrying Him } Here Are Two Disillusioned Brides “The army's blessings, of course, go with the real soldier when he mar- ries, and the army congratulates the sicl who wins the love of any man who has served his country. “It is to keep the uniform from | being smirehed by the few fakers, well as to safeguard tho girls, that| warning seems necessary, “Bvery soldier or officer has pa-| pers to prove his genuineness. Few honest men propose marriage with: out offering indisputable proofs that they are all they claim to be. But some are careless and overlook this step. “Unless you and your family know your lover and are certain of his ree- ord, take time and pains to establish his identity before marriage. “A letter of inquiry to the adju- tant general, Washington, D. C., will | bring assurance whether the hero ts | genuine or pseudo. If he is a fake | and is using his own name, the ad-| Jutant general will tell you the War | department has no record of him. “If his name appears on the reo- ords, the adjutant general will sup-| ply you with his description, age, height, weight, color of eyes, com. plexion, length of service and grade. | “Should any doubt remain, the ad- Jutant general has the real hero's fin. ger prints. And, of course, your par- lor furniture has another set of prints, Compare them.” | Soldiers of the allied armies are!) easily identified thru the consular of fices of the nation in whose army they served. The consul will be glad to help you, Police authorities of San Francisco | say the United States ts likely to/ have © matrimonial invasion of for- eign army fakers. The department has just issued special police cards to the provost marshal offices permit-| ting members to arrest fakers who! prey on susceptible girls thru purely | imaginary military exploits. | Army men have divided the heart breaking fakers into two classes—| those who are assuming the names| and records of real . and those who retain their own names, weaving | the fabric of their “military exploits” from their own minds, | A girl or her parents can easily establish the proof to such claims by the simplest of precantions if the man seems evasive or reluctant to! do so himself, | Eat Less and You || Can Keep Cool \| BY BIDDY BYE Food 1s to the body what fuel {s| to the stove. To reduce the heat, | reduce the fuel. Every one should re- duce his average daily food allowance | from onefourth to onethird during excessive hot spells. Not only the quantity but the kind of food eaten in summer should be changed. Meats, fish, eggs, cheese, starchy foods, fats and sugars are the heat makers. They should be taken in very small quantities in hot | weather, | Fruits, vegetables and bread should form the foundation of the summer diet, with fresh vegetables such as| peas, beans, cauliflower, etc., cooked | with butter and cream, to supply the| nourishment usually given by meat. | If a fresh supply of energy is needed | in a short time it may be had by} taking a fresh raw egg beaten up with cold milk and a little sugar. Our summer foods must also sup-| ply the body with a great deal of! water to take the place of that| thrown off in perspiration. ‘There fore such vegetables as fresh lettuce, | celery, cucumbers and all fruits! should be eaten in large quantities. | ‘Take care to wash all uncooked food | with great care before eating, and to keep all foods, cooked or uncooked, cold, clean, and covered, free from danger of infection by insects, dust, or bacteria growth So far as possible, meals should be roughly standardized. That is, in hot | weather breakfast should consist of cold fruit or fruit juices, either fresh or stewed, of cold bread and butter, and a ready Ked or cold cooked cereal with cream and sugar. Cold water is the best beverage for all summer meals, but if another is de sired serve iced tea or coffee, or grape juice or lemonade. For luncheon there should be a cold salad, or fruit, vegetables, or cold fish or meat combined with vegeta: bles, mixed with a good oil mayon- naise or French dressing and served with corn, rye, or whole wheat bread and plenty of fresh butter, Milk or feed chocolate are ideal luncheon bev- erages, Sandwiches and cookies are good and easily prepared and served, and fruit, fresh or stewed, should be the almost invariable dessert | At dinner there may be a cold fruit, soup, one or two hot vegetable dishes, a cold meat or fish dish, salads, | bread, etc. Meat or poultry should not be served more than three Umes a week, MANY WANT TRIP ‘That at least 150 Seattle people will | attend the €hamber of Commerce | excursion to Lake Crescent July 36 was announced by the chamber spon sors Thursday, Reservations for the holiday outing have nearly reached the 160 limit, | | overlooked the ocean. | possible for one man alone to re- Mrs. Rowste Ritenbere of Denver (tn oval) and Mra. Adele Callaghan Re Viey of San Francisco, Fi heroes, who discovered after marriage their husbands had served prison terms and that thelr battle exploits were wholly imaginary, I GET A TIP ON JEWEL-HUNTING FROM MY RIVAL SEEKER OF TREASURE “Carry out y plan—and you'll) me as remarkable that one small sec. destroy the gen tion of the seven seas should hold I thought of the Hun's warning! the two great interests of my life. with splendid disdain, He couldn't] Bob was worth all the effort scare me that way. Once we had/ could put into existence. started, Mary Thomas and I made a| “As for the pearls, why waste so team that couldn't be stopped by a/ much energy for some little mineral threat, onions?" I asked myself. “That's all After dressing for breakfast, I sat} a pearl is—just a few symmetrical on the small balcony of my room, It| layers of mineral deposit. Were it Off shore I| not for its lustre, a pearl wouldn't be could see a gallant swimmer, my|as useful as an onion. And its pre- Bob, venturesome, strong, sure. | clous lustre or ‘orient,’ in the jewel- I rang for some fruit and coffee to | er's vocabulary, is so transient. Why, be brought up to me, It would be! the delicate perspiration from the hours before the other members of | fairest of skins has ruined the color the family were stirring. | of some of the choicest of pearls.” And far off shore was the Hun’s| And I recalled that curious super- motorboat circling near the spot in| astition that pearls which have sick- the sea which forever fascinated me. | ened and died on the neck of a fa- I took up my binoculars. The man | mous beauty can be restored to life if was moving mysteriously, trailing a| worn by a lovely young virgin. rope, weaving up and down, back} “All nonsense, of course,” ran my and forth, this way and that, as a) meditation, “but I can't help wonder. woman darns a sock, Finally he) ing whether the chemicals in the U- stopped the boat short and I imag: boat might not ruin those pearls, 1 ined I could see the rope go taut. | Suppose it would be a good plan to “Oh, la! la!’ said I to myself,| get them up aa soon as possible. In- ‘What's he up to? Certainly it's im- stead of watching the man with the | magnet, maybe we'd better have a little magnet of our own. I'l talk to Mary today.” Then came the servant with my | breakfast tray. And across the beach | came Bob, lean, brown, dripping, and scorning a bathrobe. | he catled up to me: “May T join you?” I trieve that treasure.” Nothing I could desery thru the lasses explained his actions, but finally 1 “figured tt out," to use Dad day's favorite phrase The man had a large magnet at the end of his rope! Ho was test ing the depth of the sand above the U-boat. The current was always| “Surely,” I called baek, and I changing the ocean bottom, and| couldn’t add another word, for I was there might come a time, after a| choking with very gladness. storm, when the metal craft would/ ‘In five minutes," he replied. be swept clean of sand, Then a mag-| ‘The maid went for more coffee and net would stick, Then a diver would | toast. And I waited for my husband not have to waste time in digging. to join me, al) tremulous. “A very good dea," I said to my-| “Life is wonderful," I thought, | self; “and one which will save “And only love can make it 80.” heaps of trouble. Certainly poor| And as I caught a glimpse of the Mary wouldn't be able to excavate a/ hunter of sea trove, headed toward hole thru a sand hill very rapidly." | the fisherman's shack, I shrugged At that moment Bob swung into| my shoulders. the range of my vision and St struck (To be continued.) —— / ( | \ Tn . % i general le: or French dres matchless. for cooki salads, at the some and Economi lard or compounds, RETRO BLL QLIE SR OLLIE RBA, Oe. TT sR : I ute Seeing my tray/| use of Mazola is im a of Mazola gives you a fat for shortening, cake- ing, deep fat frying, sauteing. had fer sald dressings, ether mayonnaise, cooked And remember—Mazolais —Better than either. Better, more Whole- Write to-day for > Guilta Grey ITI By CY Make Sure Of Sincerity Dear Miss Gre print my letter? Will you kindly | I am at @ loss as to how to act in this matter. I am a stranger here, and being lone some, a friend asked me to join a ladies’ society, 1 did, and met some very nice women. | Last month a neighbor of mine asked me if I would not try and get her a membership in this club. When I attended the last meeting I gave her name and each one of the ladies raised their hands in horror and they all looked at me as tho I had committed some crime. When) I asked the reason they said tt could not be; that this woman had led a| wrong life and that altho she was) married to a nice man now it could never make any difference. I do not enjoy going to the meet ings any more, Even tho this wom: | an id do wrong in the past, if she in willing and tries to do right should | she be condemned and kicked now? It seems to me @ club of nice women | would be doing a real service to hu-! woman like | manity to take up this and help her, What do you| think? STRANGER. If this woman's reformation is | inwardly and not on the surface simply to make an impression, she surely deserves a better fate than the one she would receive at the hands of the club, women. Do you know fe~ a fact that she is sincere in her wish to lead a good life? You are a stranger, | you say, and if the woman is clever she may be deceiving you. If I were you I would not take sides until you have had an op portunity to become better ac- quainted with he _ ae, * | His Experience Bears Out Advice | Dear Miss Grey; I read the letter from C, T. and while I think your |adviee covers the whole sitnation and that a man and woman should | love each other with a love vo strong that there would be no room for | thoughts of a third party, or as you |say, remain single, she also wants advice from someone else from their | experience. | A few years ago I fell in love with | @ sweet little girl tho she knew noth | ing of it. My folks moved to another city and a few years later I came back to lrer town and told her of my llove. She was engaged then to an- | other and had been for three years, |She was a very practical sort of girl, and independent, and instead of letting God decide for her, she took the case in her own hands and fin- |ally could not make up her mind which of us would make the best | husband. | J loved no other woman on earth, and wanted her whole, undivided love in return. This she could not | give, #0 I believed it would be folly | to press my suit further, so gave up. | My heart aches when I think of the | sweet girl I lost. She married the| other man and—wetl, I suppose it) would have been the same if she had married me. When you love you will have the man you love or none at all. F.C. | | | | Employer Gets Fresh | Dear Miss Grey: I am a young! girl, a business college graduate and | have no parents. The other day in looking for a position I made appl- | cation to a man who said he would | give me $20 a week if I could learn to ke him, and before I left he tried to kiss me. This was my first ex- perience in looking for a position. What should be done in such a} case? Is it fair that a young lady should be subjected to such treat: | ment? GIRL READER. If you are under 18 years of age, report this man to the ju- venile department of the police. If you are of legal age or over, report to one of the police women, No Piano In Her Home Dear Miss Grey: Have you room for another brief letter in your col- umns? I am “Wondering Woman” and I have failed to gain much bene- ed mayonnaise, sing Mazola is toButter live Oil for Price of than it. N IIA GREY fit from the letters of Esther and OW. W I should be with my baby deed, if I had the glad to stay home and husband, yes in- piano and victrola to pass the time 6 nd if I only ha he home Es aks of to make attractive hat would you do, O. W. W. and Esther, if your husband had the means to provide these things, and yet would not? By so doing he is breakin promise he made when we were married, that by fall we would settle down and furnish a home. No wonder I am despfondent apd wish to go out. I am no longer sat- isfied with these dinky dark apart- ments. Does this change your opin« ion? Iam still WONDERID To Remove Warts Dear Cynthia Grey: Please tell n what will take warts away? TROUBLEG Apply kerosene several tim day to the warts and after a week two they will fall off, leaving ml sear. Dear Miss Grey: I have been read ing your columns for over a year and now if you could spare the | space I wish you would help me. I am a stenographer, but have re- mained straight and I so hate to see the other girls around me go wrong. My question is this; In the office where I am employed there is an- | other girl, whom I always thought wag the straight sort, but today I happened to discover a letter that proved she is not. I have learned that she ls going on week-end parties. with the boss, who has three bablea and a wife, and that the boss is writ- ing to her chum, and what I would like to know is, hall I tell his wife or just keep out? JUST A GIRI, If by “snitching” on friend husband you could really help his wife and little babes, I would advise you to do it in a minute, But nothing would be gained. It would only make a bad matter worse. Keep out of the whole miserable mess. The wife will learn of it eventually, for murder will always out. 3 Dear Miss Grey: Will you pl print in your columns the address Mother Ryther as soon as possibl aa I wish to raise some funds to help her with her new building. od Cc. 4 Mra. O. Ryther, 1262 Dei +3) Way. “BAYER CROSS” ON GENUINE ASPIRIN £3 . / H. ER “Bayer Tablets of Asptrin” te be genuine must be marked with the mafety “Bayer Cross.” Always buy an unbroken Bayer package which contains proper directions to safely relieve Headache, Toothache, Har- ache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents at drug sto: packages also, Aspirin is the trade- mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mono aceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Suggestion on ma h wil just few memes ter Sets shat i ero for BARTELL'’S DRUG STORE S ae

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