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

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Party at Katharine Bacon will enter. iN at an all-day picnic party at mer home at Wing Point on will be indulged in and in| dancing will be enjoved. t a hundred members of the Mtoe set have been invited and Mrs. Sam Brooks, Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. BE. W. Mrs. Catharine » Norman Tulk were enter. ‘Over the week end at a house given by Mrs, John Considine. are all from Vancouver, ‘and Mrs. Thomas J. Reid en- with a dinner party on Sat- | evening for several friends id, who spent the week them. Covers were placed North Broadway Guild is in ge of the Little the next two weeks. Bis chairman, assisted by Mrs. fin, Mrs. B. J. Perkinson, Cardin, Miss Mary Cheal, ‘Catherine Niblock, Miss Ruth and Miss Laura Cardin. eee ’s Golf Tourney r T. Banks won the gen’s golf tournament from Mrs. Bacon in the final match at Point on Friday, July 4th. ‘women started in the tourney Harbor course, which d all last week. eee Dance at July 19 there will be a dinner at the Golf club. | have proven very popular and | Be continued thru the summer White House ‘and Mrs. Albert Dickinson are congratulations upon the on Thursday. Shop Dance ~ Barbour and Miss of Allan will be in charge of the ‘@t the Red Cross Jumble Shop evening. These popular young largely responsible for the nce at Leschi Pavilion 3 n Star club, lately or- is making arrangements for t dance to be given at >j her ‘while we meurish that word “pep.” kaow yee. will save more each SUIT, COAT, DRESS and FLORENCE UPSTAIRS By BETTY BRAINERD Oklahoma Girl, “Discovered” by Dan Frohman, Coming to Moore OT MISS EVELY Playing the role of Flora Brazier with Otis Skinner, who comes to the Moore Thursday in “The Honor of the Family,” is Miss Evelyn Varden, who, in the comparatively short time she has been on the stage, has made an enviable repu- tation for herself. Miss Varden was “discovered” by Daniel Frohman, whose wanderings landed him one evening at a thea- tre in which she was playing—and thereby hangs a tale, Miss Varden was born in Oklahoma, of Pilgrim ancestry. When she was a small child her famity removed. from Oklahoma to California, where she was reared, and it was in Los An- geles that she played her first part, in Oliver Morosco'’s stock com- pany. Found in Stock For several years she devoted herself to stock work, having tm- Plicit faith in that old school which has turned out so many talented and accomplished actors and act- resses. For a season she was with May Robson, and then returning to elt love—stock—she became the established favorite of Somer- ville, Mass. becoming the leading lady of the first. stock company Somerville had. It was at Union Hil, N. J. Mr. and Mrs, John C. Eden, who were recently married in Chicago, arrived home on Sunday and are at the Highlands. eee Mr. and Mrs. Freaerick T. Fischer entertained Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sum- ner on the yacht, the Rambler, over the week end. eee Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Kilbourne leave today for a motor trip of a month's duration about Spokane and eastern ‘Washington, eee Mrs. Frank H. Nowell and daugh- | ter, Miss Dorothy, spent the week end at Vashon island. eee Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Ferry and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Burnside spent the week end in Victoria, ' ene Mr. and Mrs. Theodore N. Haller have returned from California, where Mrs, Haller spent seven months and LOVE to feed my baby. It seems something more than just fixing his bottles and giving “Try Nestlé's, sugar. It comes to you a powder in an air jave to do is add water and none of the germ Ik—it is the nearest Nestlé’s is pure mille in powder form that is already modified and does not require the furthes addition of milk. Always pure and safe, always uniform, dangers of home modification, Nestlé’s has stood the test of three generations and Aas teday the largest sale of any baby food in the werld, FREE! Enough Nestle’s for 12 feedings. Send the _ elean, fluff boil. There - dangers of raw and free from the u Francisco, Cal tial pockege. Te seems like giving him actual “health—watching his cheeks grow pink, watching his little arms and legs fill out and dimple, watching him sleep better and smile oftener as he grows stronger and takes a firmer grip on life. It was our old doctor who said, You know he must milk in some form—and Nestlé's ig a food made out of pure milk, only » the curds of the milk are broken up and 14 already added to it just the fight amount of cereal—just the right thing I know to mother's milk itself."* | And now I love to feed my baby with those warm, full bottles of the food that have taken away fear from my heart, I know the Nestlé Company will be d to send you enough for twelve jin support of Mr. Skinner. VARDEN where she was playing, that Dan- fel Frohman journeyed one night, and after seeing her performancce at once engaged her for the role of the German spy in “Seven Days’ Leave,” which he was then about to produce. Played With Faversham Following this, she appeared in William Faversham's production of “Allegiance” in New York, from which she was engaged by Charles Frohman to play the leading role But that's only part of Evelyn's tnter- esting story. A lot of it has to do with hardships endured before the Frohman engagements came. There were days and weeks and months of seeking the main chance, all of which is now almost forgot- ten, as Evelyn is a young woman who looks in the right direction— towards the future. The role of Flora Brazier in “The Honor of the Family” ts one that 1s particularly suited to Miss Var- den's talents, and one in which she is seen to decided advantage Miss Varden says that it is a decided pleasure to be able to play @ French character; that she has Played German so long now that she almost felt fn danger of taking on German characteristic: Mr. Haller two and one-half months. eee Mr. Patrick Tidmarsh and Mr. George Tidmarsh left Monday to spend a few weeks at Shelton, Wash. eee Mr. W. E. Boeing returned Sun- day from San Francisco where he attended the Bohemian Club High Jinks. Mr, Reynolds, of Chicago, returned with him and will be his guest. eee Mr. and Mrs. Winlock Miller, who went East to attend Mr. Miller's class reunion at Yale, returned on Wednesday. eee Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Schwager re turned from an eastern trip on Fri- day, eee Mr. W. 8. Walker left Friday for a trip of ten days to Alaska. eee Judge Calvin 8. Hall and Mrs. Hall and Calvin Hall, jr., accompanied | by Richard Lee Johnson, are spend- | Ing a month at Pacific beach. eee Mrs, Warren Hinton is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Sander of El- | lensburg. Mr. and Mrs. Archibald DeVoe and family motored about the Olympic peninsula last week for several days. tee Mr. and Mrs. Farwen P. Lilty, Mr. and Mrs, Henry Sander, Miss Elsa Michaelis and Mr. Prentice spent the week end motoring about Vancouver, . C. eee Dr. D. A. Mitchell, who has been two months in the Kast and in Call. fornia, returned home last Friday. eee Mr. and Mrs. Guy Carleton Wil- | Hams and small son spent the week end in Ellensburg. eee Mrs. M. M. Moore of North Yaki-| ma will arrive in the city this week | to visit Mrs, Bo Sweeney. Dr. and Mrs, B, F. Burch of Spo- feedings and a Mother's Book by kane arrived in Seattle Sunday to specialists on howto take care ae phot visit their son and daughter-in-law, baby, if coupon ‘ou will fill out and sen low, ness, too, MILK, FOOD — the Mr. and Mrs. R. G ‘They want you to feed your baby with health and happi-| NESTLE'S Denney. * . Mrs, H. W. Salmon and children | of St. Louis, Mo., arrived Monday to spend the summer with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, C. J, Smith. . Mrs, T, A. Fransioli and daughter, Miss Josephine, and son, Mr. Thomas Fransioli, are spending a month at Lake Creecent. eee Mrs. James W. Sayre and daugh- ter, Elinore, left Friday for Santa Cruz, Cal, eee Mrs. Richard W, Perry and two sons leave Friday for Lake Chelan to spend ten day: eee Mra. George Faris and. daughter, Jane, and Miss Nancy rnsworth will go to Lake Chelan to spend two! weeks, en) SAN cause FRANCISCO, July 8 —Re Miss salary, as stenographer company, nice salary. with a She might have her duttes were done; but she didn’t. and disposition of the finished prod uct. When the war came on and Uncle Sam's food dictator limited the quantity of certain wheats in flour, Miss Knur studied the orders; and when the mill reports came in she was quick to see whether these or- ders had been obeyed implicitly, She looked out for mistakes which might involve the company with Un- cle Sam or even endanger the mills’ patriotism. A report sent back with Miss Knur's blue pencil mark was about the last thing a mill superin- tendent wanted to see. Result—no mistakes in carrying jout of government orders and—Miss Knur promoted to the assistant sec- retaryship of one of the biggest flour companies in the country. “Perform your required duties and spend your leisure improving the ef- ficiency of your firm,” is Miss Knur's motto. : “Don't be satisfied with being a stenographer,” she advises, “when are you talking about?” I turned upon sternly, for I didn’t want any woman hysterics before those fine, sane men, “Listen, Jane. It's awful! If he dies—it will be on account of my foolishness! You see—I made him dance the ‘Sub-Sea Shuffle’ with mo. Don't you remember—I told you I had invented it, in a joke, to amuse him, right on this very deck!” “But you saved his life, girlie. At least we hope so,” I said. “You don’t know the time I wasted! It's the curse of the pearls, I'm sure?!" Mary went on rapidly, but not always coherently. “Down there words can't be heard. One has to make gestures—so,"" Mary waved her hands rather wildly, touched the bottom, our are light was already lowered. Of course, we found Tiny watching us, but he didn’t recognize me. You ses, he had broken with me for good before I had my suit made. He never knew that I took any training. But some- how IT wasn't much astonished to find him walking around under “the sea. It's so strange down there. Anything might happen. But Smith, my trainer, was glued to the sand at sight of Tiny. Divers are supersti- tious, and I think Smith was scared most to death. Well, Tiny came to- ward us in the awkward attitude a diver must take to lift the weights on his feet. And just to show him it ‘was me—it was I—I began to do the shuffle.” Mary was all in a tremble. I saw for the first time in our acquaint- anceship that the little dancing girl was losing her nerve. I Gew her to the steps which led to the wheel- house, I thought it a good plan to keep her talking until we learned the worst or the best about Tiny Goff. “Tiny was making odd gestures, He seemed to say that he was chok- ing. Smith wanted to interfere, but Jane, I thought Tiny had recognized me and was ‘playing opposite’ in an undersea ‘dance of death! So I grasped his hands and dragged him along and he staggered grotesquely and tried to throw off his helmet— which was madness—and stfll I shuf. LIVE STOCK RAISED BY SCHOOL CHILDREN TORONTO, Ont., July 8—As a re-| sult of the success of the stock rais- {ng movement among school children of the United States, the Ontario Agricultural Department 1s organiz ing many boys’ and girls’ live stock clubs. These are expected to result in a large increase in the available supply of sheep, calves and pigs. MEMORIAL FOR NURSES OTTAWA, than 500 nurses went overseas from Ontario alone. It has been decided to establish a memorial for these he- sidered at the June meeting of the Dominion Nurses’ association, Fresh Cake Every Day-- When You Bake With Know More Than Your Own Job; That’s One Secret of Success Hermine Knur sought and assumed duties her position as stenographer did not demand, she is} today a woman of Importance in the business world, with a corresponding Hive years ago she took the job big flour She filled the bill to a y and earned every cent of her “soldiered” | about the office half the day when | She studied wheat, flour milling that position opens a better field forat the same time. “Have you lost your mind? What Mary Thomas to belittle her sex by having a fit of | mummy. | dance by throwing myself into Tiny’s | arms, for safety, when all of a sud “When we | Ont, July &—More} roie women and its form will be con- | you. Every stenographer has the op. portunity to study her firm's busi- ness methods, Often she can assist in their improvement and her own ON THE OCEAN FLOOR fled on, believing that he had caught the spirit of our dreadful subsea duo! And even there, Jane, I thought what a hit we could make of it on the stage. And I laughed to myself inside my helmet—partly | because I was so happy to be with him again!—even down there—where no other girl had ever danced and | flirted with a lover!” Mary gazed far into the green water as tho fascinated by something I could not see; then she turned a white face to me, saying: “But even as I laughed I stumbled. My feet struck something soft— mushy! It was a long roll, like a I would have finished my den Tiny toppled over tn a heap.” Mary herself might have gone down in a heap had I not spoken sharply: “Go on? “Smith came out of his trance and looked at the guage on Tiny’s oxygen tank. The thing was empty. I had been a fool. Timy had tried to tell us he was suffocating and I had been | 80 wrapped up in my own idea that |I had missed his meaning alto- gether.” Unobserved by Mary I cast an anx. fous glance at the recumbent figure of the Montana giant. Had the curse of the pearls snatched him by a hair's breadth? “It's my luck, Jane,” moaned the girl. “I was sent down to save him. And I was true to form. Nothing can keep me from being a silly: A loud “Hallelujah” from the lips of the old engineer interrupted Mary. | Caps went into the air. Mary sprang to the side of the man ho had fallen in love with her at first sight, who had fled from her when he had learned about her past. I wondered if it were wise to let hima gee her when he came back from the brink of the grave, | bishopric. | opened at 1 o’clc | furnished by the Guild | tending are asked to bring their own | All members of | CLUBS FOR WEDNESDAY Ridgeley Rebekah Auxillary Home Sewing Club Luncheon The Ladies of the Grand Army of | the Republic Home Sewing club will meet at the home of Mrs, Dick Allen, 2138 N. 62nd st. Luncheon will be served at 12 o'clock, All members of the order and thelr friends are invited. ene Farewell for Rev. E. F. Shayler The annua! picnic of the Women's | Guild of St. Mark’s parish to be held at Woodland park, will be in the na ture of a farewell to Rev. B. F Shayler and his family who are leay ing for their new home in Nebraska, where Rev, Shayler has accepted a Basket lunches will be k ‘fee will be sugar and cream. the parish are cordially invited. one Coterie Club Coterie club annual plenie at Roosevelt park at 11 o'clock. Cars| }leave 20th ave, N. BE. For further| | information call Mrs, L, W. Sloan, Kenwood 2700, eee Meeting of Lorraine Social Club Lorraine Social club will meet at the home of Mrs, William Haitz, 2206 Twelfth ave. N., at 2 o'clock. A cordial invitation is extended to all Eastern Stars. Guests will take the Broadway car to Boston st. ee Ladies of the Grand Army Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic Home Sewing meet at the home of Mrs. Dick Al- len, 2138 N. 50th st, for luncheon at 12 o'clock. All members of the order are invited. oe Company L Auxiliary The auxiliary to Company L, One Hundred and Sixty-first infantry, will hold its regular monthly meet- ing in Room 212 of the County-City building, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. eee Meeting of Mystic Jewel Auxiliary Mystic Jewel auxiliary will meet at the home of Mrs, William Gafford, 6016 Roxberry st., for luncheon at 1 o'clock. eee Pierce and Thurston county pion- ¢ers will hold @ picnic and reunion at Point Defiance park in Tacoma, Wednesday. All King pioneers are invited. Lunch will be served at 12:30 o'clock, after which a program of speeches will be enjoyed. eee Ki Clab Zora Kensington club, at home of Mrs. John Petrovitaky, 2130 Eighth ave. W., at 1 o'clock. eee Meet to Sew ‘The Seattle Woodcraft Thimble club will meet with Mrs. F. J. Schmutz, 1129 24th ave., all day for sewing. ‘ ee Annie Wright Seminary Club Raynor chapter, Annie Wright Seminary club, at the home of Mrs. N. H. Latimer, Norval hall, Port jadison. Buffet luncheon at 1 o'clock. Members are requested to take boat at pier 3, foot of Madison st., at 1130 a. m. . Lorraine Social Club Lorraine Social club, at the home of Mrs. Williazn Haitz, 2206 12th ave. N., at 2 o'clock. all members of the Eastern Broadway car. ‘William Crooks was fined $250 by Judge Neterer for having two ounces of morphine in his posses. sion. Crooks was arrested several weeks ago by federal inspectors in a hotel on Fourth ave. He pleaded Star. (To be continued.) guilty. e ‘or P cookin and sal but those at | clab will) Meeting open to! erfect oil g | Can't Compe te With ’ By CYNTHIA GREY The letter written to Cynthia Grey a few days ago by the man who | signed himself, “One Hundred Per Cent American,” lamenting on the unm | checked flow of Orientals to America, and pointing out a menace thereof, caused much comm om readers, bo > and con, Ridgeley Rebekah Auxiliary annual | Caused much comment from readers, both pro ani Z | plenic in afternoon and evening at In this discussion, I aim to be perfectly fair, giving space to both home of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Max-| sides. Following are the letters eld, 643 c ». Supper « hee The field, 6434 Marshall ave Supper at This Wife of Jap Apparently Happy | Japanese Low Wage Dear Miss Grey: In regard to the Dear Miss Grey After reading | American-Japanese ques. the article of Mr, Miller, and also | tion, I would like to w words, | the letter of “One Hundred Per Cent My neighbor is a lovely American Amerlean,” pertaining to the Jap-| woman, whose husband is Japanese, anese as a menace to our nation,; When they moved into their newly kindly let me suggest and add a few |built home, I could not understand #ide-lights on this question. how they could be happy. They ‘Another of the big “Maru” ships,| have two children, a little boy and |of the N. Y. K. line is due to steam | girl. Just to get acquainted, I asked into the harbor of Seattle next week, | to use her phone. She bade me como I wish it were possible for everyone | in, and was very pleasant and charm- to go out onto the pier and see the | ing. Japanese that will be coming on that; We soon became quite friendly, ship, You can see the “picture|and this is what I wish to say. She brides,” for instance, and see them|is# contented and happy and very, meet their future husbands, whom | proud of her husband and children: they have never seen, only by pic-|He is always very kind to her and ture. They are not detained by tm- migration euthorities, as they considered married. An American woman missionary meets all these passenger ships in| the welfare of these and other Jap- working people in 4 few years, when | their children are grown and can speak our language as well as we? It will mean just this Their standard of living is so low in comparison to ours, that a white man can not now, or in the future, compete with these Oriental gentle- men. I have seen 22 Japanese eat rice three times a day for a week straight, and they told me the rice cost about $1 per day. Dried fish is another favorite dish of theirs, At the present time they have jobs that should belong to our returned soldiers and sailors. But it seems we must wait until they have about per cent of our jobs control about 90 per cent of our hotels, own 95 per cent of the grocery stores and run the public markets, before con- er SECRET SERVICE. She Wouldn’t Condemn | White Wives of Orientals Dear Miss Grey: After reading in| your column about the white girls | marrying Japanese men, I would like to tell what I know about these cou- ples, here in this city, and I have visited the Orient and met with hundreds of white girls (mostly American, French and German), married to Japanese men, and white men married to Jap- anese girls. They seem to live happy lives, the same as other couples, who are successfully married. True, there are some failures among these marriages, but are there not failures among other mar- riages, too? Are not our divorce courts crowded with failures? How many are AmericanJapanese mar- riages? This girl who complained about her social standing, and had no friends, is it any wonder she had no friends, being in the city only two months? Can anyone get ac quainted in such a short length of time? The other couples are not lonely. Their social positions are not, by any means, marred. I know they have formed a ladies’ club, with American and .Japanese members. There {s a similar club in San Fran- cisco, with over 300 members—150 of each, American and Japanese. We should not judge these people by one or two failures. As for suicides and murders, do we not get enough of them in our daily papers? Are they all American-Japanese couples? Of course not. I think any one who speaks on this subject should in- vestigate more thoroly into the mat- ter before judging. I am a pioneer Christian and 100 per cent American, too, but I do not think these Ameri- can girls who marry their choice should be condemned. RED CROSS NURSE. | husband and cannot feel graded herself, altho I am an Ameri- will take some action toward | restricting the Japanese immigrants. | I know of more than 50, right | keeps her welldressed and their are home is furnished beautifully. Never | Christmas or her birthday passes that he does not remember her with a lovely gift. They have many friends and they entertain often. I have noticed some very prominent |anese women. She can speak their language fluently. Do you know/| American people at their home. They what this is going to mean to us|&0 out motoring quite a bit, too, They have left for California now, for a visit. I frankly believe that this wornan is just as happy with her Japanese as she would be with a white man, I like her immensely, that she has de AMERICAN WOMAN, Now This Is Slogan: “Made in Japan” Dear Miss Grey: Speaking of the flood of Japanese to this country, and their seizing of the industries: It used to be, on most articles pur- @hased, “Made in Germany,” now it is stamped on them. ed by our government. this when you are buying articles and know we surely make them in our own country. Did you know ail “Made in Japan,” or Nippon, This is demand- Remember the Christmas toys are coming from Japan, that is, 99.4 per cent are? Anything, from a baby rattle to a train of cars. Thermos bottles, pack knives, tooth brushes, any kind of dish on earth, mouth organs, hair brushes, even AMERICAN FLAGS. These only are a few ot the manufactured articles that come into the port of Seattle nearly every day. I can’t see any menace to our “racial purity,” as some one spoke of, citing the marriage of a white girl and a Japanese, as you will al- ways find some “nut” of a white girl that will marry a Jap. This does not happen very often, tho. A case will come to light once or twice a year, maybe. But don't let's say “every day,” as “One Hundred Per Cent American” wrote. By the way, 1 have seen this white girl he speaks of—they should ship her over to Japan, and have her take the child with her. What would you cail.it? Why, a Japanese child. Youcan’ get away from those almond-shaped eyes. OBSERVER. ASK FOR and GET Horlick’s © Malted Milk 4 APSE USitstisne cod: Betetltetes A Punt. SALAD an COOKING The unusually delicious, flaky pie crust made with Mazola is astonishing. Perfect digestibility follows every time—even with those who complain of deli- cate stomachs that cannot digest animal fats, Put Mazola fo the Test with this Recipe for Really Delicious Pie Crust. 2 cups Flour ¥ cup Mazola Work Mazola well into the flour and salt, about one fourth of a cup; Cor PRODUCTS REFINING CO, Pinch of Salt Ice Water add enough ice water to hold together, roll crust out at once. P. 0. Box 161, New York Products Cook Book contains 68

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