The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 23, 1919, Page 8

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Delightful Buffet Supper Mr. and Mrs. Langdon C. Henry Will entertain at a buffet supper on Saturday evening on the attractive unds of their summer home at Highlands. About 45 guests; ft enjoy the affair. As a sum acy setting Japanese lanterns will festooned about the lawn, and supper will be served on small tables scattered thruout the grounds. *, © ~ Dance for Younger Set ¥ Invitations are being issued by nd Mrs. Farwell P. Lilly to a we to be given on Thursday ing, July Sist, at the home of Lilly's parents, Mr. and Mrs.| 4 Sander. The affair will be| compliment to Miss Marion Lilly, ir. Lilly's sister, who has recently) “made her debut; Miss Louise Sun,/ Springfield, Ohio, Miss Lilly's guest, and Miss Marjorie phell, of St. Joseph, Missouri, guest of Dr. and Mrs. Peterkin Invitations will be confined to) unmarried friends of the honor} . } ae eek ‘ea for Visitors “Honoring Miss Lois Reynolds, the | Chelan, BRAL White Elephant Shop Mrs, Inea%. Morrison has arranged and violin num White Ble ja program of vocal bers to be given at the phant Shop on Thursday |Son Born Mr, and Mrs, William K, Sheldon, ijn, are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a son on Se day |Pienic at Norval Hall Norval Hall, the attractive hom of Mr, and Mrs, N. H. Latimer at Port Madison, will be the of a merry party Sunday Forty members of the younger set to gather there for a pienic, and swimming party ee seen on Tea for Chelan Visitor Mrs. W. A. Shannon entertained her country place, Shannon.on last Wednesday, honoring Mrs. J. M, Macedo, wife of the M ruvian consul, who is spending se eral weeks with her. see at Tea at Earlington Mrs. C. P, Constantine and Mre James H. Como were hostesses at tennis | in l {Personal | | Judge and Mrs, Burke will have their guests on a motor trip to Har Hot Springs and Vancouver and Mrs, McAndrew, Mrs met Addis and Mixs Hetty Webster rhe party will leave ‘Thursda expects to return Monday 18 Mrs daughter Are. Ww. D. and Mr, and Gooding Witter, of San Miss Hazel MeMillan and Russel Perkins will leave today | for & motor trip of a couple of dé }to Mount Rainier Perkins and her son-in-law Mr Mr. and Mrs, Harry la Downs) have taken the home of Mr. and Mrs, George at Cry | tal Springs for the remainder of the summer. Miss Margaret Fairlamb is the houge guest of Mrs, Brooks. Keyes Brooks ‘aris Dean Milnor Roberts W., afd his sister Roberts, who went to Victoria Thurdday to attend the peace rade, returned Rome Sunday night | of the U. of 1 Miss Milnorn 1 last | \ ‘ey | | Mr. Moritz Thomsen left Sunday iem- BY WAY Starring in “ BA t Is West" There define, but of the woman who ix to men, That something is the thing called “charm,” It is not beauty beauty alone, There tiful women charming omethi avery di that is hard to inite attribute most attractive at not are many beau- not at all and there @ millions of charming women who a hot beautiful. It is not intellect sweetness, nor at | the man knows th when he She i least, who of cours merely, nor one thing—-but charmyg woman meets her the woman that a man likes to take to luncheon, and sit and chat with, She is the woman he picks as walking companion for @ Sunday noon in the country, She ts the woman he'd rather have out boating, or a pal for swimming. She's the jkind of who isn’t embar jrassed if her husband brings home a woman By CYNTHIA GREY | the others, that What do you think about it? or four, rather, may depend upon your Some persons say “Confession is good for roul “Confession weakens the soul.” The happiness of two lives | views. . | A young man, of wealthy parentage, went to college and spent all of When hi father refused him more money, lexson, successfully an assumed name, to Cynthia altho he was his allowanct in a few months. he forged bis father’s name, sent him to privon. financially and socially in this Western country has courte@and won the hand of a very fine girl. Grey, wishing to know if he should confess his past to her, and his father, to teach his son a ‘The young man, now grown and settled under He wrote sure she could never understand. In the same mall came a letter musical talent and ential theatrical magnate from the home in California to New York ing forbade her to live the life n in spirit, she jJoined-a road show too, came to | s with @ wonderful young man who hates lies, and who condemns girls who have taken a misstep. This man has asked her to become his wife, and is waiting for her to anewer. w Following are some of the girl who, with unusual cepted offer of a supposedly influe East, and accompanied him from her The offer was a farce, and her breed and broken from a an ambition, « the Penniless She, is in pped out for her. traveling westward She love tle and made good financially and socially at whall she do? answers sent in today: - | Dear Miss Grey Dear Miss Grey: I read the man’s} letter who i# in such a quandary as to whether to tell his fiancee about his reckless young life and his term in the penitentiary as a result | In answer to two letters in The Star of July 21M from the young man and the girth who wish to know if they should confess thelr pasts to their respec tive lovers, I say they should keep MAE, Meat wee Severed days Well, I’ve been in the very same | position, and I, too, am engaged to the tea given at the Eariingt Country club last week eee still, It's just as bad to dig into an | unhappy past as it would be to aif | | the very finest girl. And I told her|a coffin, and no one would think] | of my past before'I grew to care 80| of doing that. man friend to dinner unexpeetedly She is the kind of woman who self at home in any sur- and doesn't embarrass | 83 guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. B.| y n, and Miss Emma Andev-| who is spending the summer her mother in Seattle, Miss| Commander jot Washington |daya in the and Mrs, Hunniwell D. C., spent several city before going to }makes hi rounding, Nia Jennings was hosters at an) tive tea today at her home artistic basket of pinic Loses ced the center of the toa table which Mrs. Stedman and Mrs Robertson presided. Mies saret Ames assisted in the 4) room. During the afternoon! 30 members of the younger, ests Entertained Judge and Mrs. Burke will enter informally at dinner this even- at the University club in honor their house guest, Miss Hetty and Mrs. Emmet Addis, ly Miss Louise Hayden, © ot city. or . Informal Dinner ir. and Mrs. Donald Barnes en at a prettily appointed on Friday night at their Covers were placed for ten./ the guests looked on at the ball for a short while. eae Luncheon at Monroe _ Bix guests motored up from Seat- | fle to have luncheon with Mrs. Don. Olson at nroe on Tuesday. see d Cross Jumble Shop H. B. Perry, soprano, will during the noon hour tomor at the Red Cross Jumble Shop. Ed McDonagh will be at ace: Sts. James Wylie will be eee enic at Deniy-Blaine day Mrs. Francis Guy Frink shtfully entertained a number of friends at an outdoor picnic on grounds of her home in Denny- Guest oee Bruns Honor Edwin Vinaf and Mrs, Max were joint hostesses at a this afternoon at the home Whiting at East Seattle. “tables were at play and the was in compliment to Muss Bruns, whose marriage will ‘place on August -1. wee Dance for Returned i 4d es Drummond, who ar- é in Seattle last week from 18 " j service in France, was dance last night by his <is- a FI Mildred Drummond, at the _ Stockade hotel, Alki Point. Captain immond is awaiting his orders his next detail. He is a mem- e ide bd Sigma Epsilon fraternity y of Washington. tained Saturday at a picnic lunch . oe 8 arriage in Spokane nnouncements have reached Se- of the marriage of Mrs. E. Carleton, a prominent club in who has visited Seattle fre- » end Mr, Bliss Beverly of Spoka The marriage Place in Spokane, where they “will make their home. ————— DOCTOR! . When your doctor gives @ prescription, ask him you should take it to BRALEY— (the manasho brought the cost of Prescriptions down within reason) I am working to knock the “profit” out of pre- scription profiteers, Bring that prescription here and see for yourself. ED. R. BRALEY ’Preseription Druggist 1411 Fourth Avenue Just off Union Street Phone EMictt 3106 We do not add delivery charges to the prescription cost. phat Victory Club Dance At the Victory club dance at the Leschi pavilion on Wednesday Campo's orchestra will be assisted by Ed Long’s famous banjo quartet The committee promises that this | will prove the biggest attraction vet this club. “ee Picnic for Corporal Stopp Corporal David W. Stopp, who recently returned from 18 months’ service in France with th Rainbow division and whose paint ing, the “Rainbow Division,” jas been selected by the government as an emblem for the division. n tetarined Saturday at a pi by Mrs. J. B. Carmichael, orations were French and Americen emblems. featured by | "It’s Swagger _ Sport Jacket BY BETTY BROWN | For the trily smart there is no surer mark of distinction (and world- ly wealth) than the possession of an ultra swagger sport coat to replace the dear old sweater—now become so popular as to have lost its aristocrat. jie air, One of the rtewest models in sport coats is this one, fashioned of green and white camels’ hair, in plaid weave, and all bound ‘round with woolly white collar and cuffs, and a broad belt, A silk sports hat with sash to match the coat spells “exclusive style.” CLUBS FORK THURSDA Mooseheart Legion Annual picnic, Women of Moose- heart Legion, at Woodland park. Take lunch, cup and spoon. ~ ra Elite Social Club Elite Social club will give a mili- tary whist party at’ Odd Fellows’ hall, 2609 Jackson st. Thureday evening, Sunshine Guild The Sunshine guild will meet at the home of Mrs. Della Urch, 2606 W. 58th st., Thursday morning, at 11 o'clock. see Fortson-Thygeson Auxiliary The Fortson and Thygeson auxil- fary of the United War Veterans, | will hold a regular meeting Thurs |day, July 24, at 2 o'clock, in the | Armory. | see St, Mark’s Woman's St. Mark's branch man’s auxiliary will president, Mrs. H. Srey of the Wo: meet with the H. Gowen, at Crystal Springs tomorrot¥. The boat| will leave Galbraith dock at 3:30 o'clock. 6 4.4 Alpha Gamma Delta Members of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority will give a luncheon tomor. row noon at the Bon Marche tea room, Those expecting to attend will please call North 2330, All vis iting Alpha Gamma, Deltas are cor | diay’ Invited, | Pythian Sisters The Pythian Sisters’ club will hold an all Woodland park tomorrow. Mem bers are requested to bring basket lunches and report, at the pienic grounds instead of t Bryn Mawr, as formerly announced. ATE 36 EGGS APIECE; CALLED CONTEST OFF SCRANTON, Pa, J 2 Heemen Miller and West Scranton station, ® training for their return engagement eae eating contest. At Gaul's grove re- cently Knapp and Miller ate three dozen eggs each and had to stop with the score tied because the committee in charge of the bout had only brought six dozen eggs. Altruistie pienie at Bremerton see | Mr. Howard Hathaway, collector [of internat revenue for the United | States government at Honolulu, who |formerly lived in Seattle, spent sey [eral days here on his way East [newing old acquaintances | > | Mine ¥ |the summer in | Eagle River, Wis. ee | Mr. Win Stront spent jend at Mount Rainier is spending Ti, and the week | Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bordeaux | motored to Sultan over the week-end. Mrs, Frank Morris, of Bordeaux turned with them and will be their | suest for several days. and Mrs. Clifford Wiley, Miss Virginia Wiley, James Wiley nd Mr. John Wiley spent the week }end on Whidby island. eee re Mr. Maj. and Mrs, Halloran, Lawton, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Munday, at Westwood, for sev eral days. | eae | Miss Dorothy Caughey, of Port |Jand, and Miss Irma Keithley are the | guests of Mrs, Edgar Reithley 8 Dr, and Mrs, L. M. Hicks, of Bur lUngton, Wis., arrived dast week and jare spending several weeks with |their daughteF and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, W, G. John. Later Dr. and Mrs. Hicks will visit Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Allen, Dr. Alien is. Mrs. Hicks’ son. i oo Mrs. C. E. Bogardus and son, Rich- ard, are home in Seattle, after an ex- tended visit at Gilman, In, | eee Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Talbot, San | Francisco guests at the New Wash- | ington, visited Cosmopolis last week end. eee Miss Alice Murchison has aa her house guest Miss Eleanor Stephens, |of Yakima, Miss Stephens just re cently returned from California. eee Mrs. John B. Collins and two sons, Parker and Jack, have just returned from an extended trip thru the East and South. oe who has been the guest of Miss Har riet Baxter, is now visiting Miss Gloria Frink. | eee Mrs. 8. C. Armstrong has left for Spokane, where she will visit her sister, Mrs. J. D. Ellis, ne © Miss Fay Miller is visiting Mary Brady, in Spokane. cee Miss Dr, B. BE. McCoy and Mrs. MeCoy have been visiting Mrs. McCoy's sister, Mrs, B. J. O'Shea, in Spo | Mrs, Alexander M, Wetherill, who |has been spending ten days in attle visiting her mother Mrs, Jacob Furth, and her sister Mrs, Frederic Struve, left Tuesday to join ‘ther husband, Col. Wetherill, U. 8. who is stationed in Los Angeles. Miss Eleanor Smith, of Bronxville, (IN. Y.. is spending the summer with Dr. and Mrs, W. lL. Gray at Adrian }Court eee Ensign Norman C. |Tacoma, who has been in service at Norfolk, Va, for over a year, |spending several days in Sei He formerly attended the U rity of Washington and was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra- ternity. VALUE OF KISS HELD TO BE $300 FOR ONE The value of a kiss was fixed at 3300 by Judge Mcllvaine in - tencing Israel Schalet, a Bente ville merchant, convicted of kissing Helen Check, a girl who worked in his store, She resented the fa- millarity and had him arrested The judge fined Schalet $200, Bellingham, of tle. OPTICAL SERVICE At reasonable prices. We ' prescribe, grind and glasses and can make or fe any lens on short Established 1908, Glasses fitted in_ gold-filled Curry Optical Co. entaht Specinliats ARCADE, BUILDING THIRD FLOOR 4B 2002-4 of Fort | Miss Virginia Sheahan, of Chicago, | Se-| she is not herself em- doesn't pose as a ple because barrassed ‘highbrow” or talk above of the company she is in; well read and intelligent, and knows lenough about clothes to know what Ishe looks best in “and enough about jeooking t ovide an appetizing | meal, ugh about housek ing to make a small budget |the week without having to ask hus- jband for more Of course, a man doesn't know all these things about a woman by mere- |ly looking at her. Some of them he n't find out until after he’s mar- ried to her, But she has that in- Jeffable something about her that men call “charm,” and that makes women |say “She's a dear.” She's the kind but she's and ¢ of woman who Startling episodes succeeded each other with the passing of the hours of that day. Each seemed tremen dous to me, so emotional, #0 hysteri- cal had I become, Even Tiny Goff took on a dramatic air as he loomed before Mother and me in the dark ened parlor, where we greeted him. All the magnificent strength of the man, the spirit which made him a typical adventurer, was restrained and confined and seemed to make his great body tremble as it did his voice. he sald after I had introduced him to Mother. “Perhaps I had better let my daughter tell you—how it occurred,” | Mother replied. I trust IT may never again be called upon to endure the agony of that or- deal, but I owed it to Mary, as girl to | girl. When I had finished, Mother leame back to us and laid a tender |hand upon Tiny’s arm and led him to the curtains which concealed the | casket in an alcove, | said, | Then he passed thru the archws and I knew that he was glad, as 1 was, that he had “made ft up" with ‘his little girl, and that she was hap py, to the very end, in the idea that his love for her would last forever. “It was the only good she |xnatched from life, And it didn't come to her until the day before she died,” I said to Mother while we waited for Tiny to make his silent prayer above the dead. I had still a great deal to say to him. I had not told him that the pearls had disappeared. But his face us that {t was impossible for me to speak of the silly el And yet those baubles persisted in creating tremendous exeltement in the Lorimer household for another hours. I had no active part in the [events, however, I was obliged |}to wear my }on the chance that I might meet my husband. And there the risk | that Certeis might also notice me, The black hearse, followed by | single mourner, from our sight late in the afternoon, As the sun went down' I watched with mother for the coming of the yacht | Before our men leaped to the dock | 1 whispered to her, ‘Take good care Jot my husband, mother dear,” and slipped away. Once more the dusk found me at the edge of the sea, a subdued and reflective, homesick and love-lorn lit | tle bride, promising myself to for jever appreciate a darling husband jand a protected home life, and to ae to be worthy of the same, and | for passed never, never to be querulous or nag: ging or dominating—when I should r art's desire, uld do about a hundred ain my And it W thousand women a heap of good to be banished for a while from home and husband--as T have been. If they could just live around the edge | of their homes, as I am doing now, |they might notice what a precious | place one’s own home is, and what a privilege it is to keep a home com fortable, and clean, and peaceful |happy. ‘That way, they'd learn little sense—as I hav I lingered on the but I | kept my eyes on the stars rather |than upon the dancing waves. That | accursed spot above the U-boat made me hudder. ‘tiny was speeding westward with one victim of those malignant pearls, C’ORENESS in joints or mus- cles, give a brisk massage with— | | | shore, “YOUR BODYGUARD" ~S0F, 604 420 tiresome masquerade | the heads | last out} TINY GOFF SAYS FAREWELL TO HIS LOVE— AND I TURN BACK TO FIGHT FOR MINE I can't make out it's true, ma’am,” | “You prefer to go in alone?” she} ever || was so stern when he came back to!) FAY CAINTER “The most successful wife 1s the woman who has what men call ‘charm,’ and which makes women say ‘She's a dear." makes a successful wife; she's the;or bring home a box of chocolates to, kind a man wants to|because he knows how charmingly marry. e's the kind of woman he/she will thank him and how much likes to send,a bunch of flowers to} she will mean it. \Jilted by Lover, Girls End Lives | VANCOUVER, B, C., July 23 | Because one of them had been jilted |by her lover and was heartbroken, | Mins Annie Hunter, 37, and Miss | Nellie Hunter, 30, sisters, living at 1770 Robson st., committed suicide of woman rowboat into the False creek. The bodies have not been recov. ered. Their inet letters were found in the row boat, addressed to F. W. Hunter, a brother, and to D, 8. Mont- gomery, of Vancouver. It's an unpardonable sin to steal an_umbrella—on a clear day. deep water of And Chrys was coming eastward, from @ final visit to her old home. And she was jealously eager to bend her proud white neck so that Certeis could clasp that shining string in place! (To Be Continued) think what happens to it? Perspiration contains acids that are harmful to delicate materials. These acids attack the fabric and make it ‘‘tender”. Leaving your blouse like this even a day will dam- age it. The moment your blouse gets soiled, dip it into pure Lux suds! Lux comes in delicate glistening flakes, that melt instantly in hot water and whisk up into a rich, cleansing lather. The gentle Lux way of washing will save your blouse from the harm even a trace. Tuesday noon by jumping from a} much for her that I felt I wouldn't | as ” be able to. At first she could sot | wy wits ee love tae ou pelieve that what I told her wae the| Oo 27 on CHARLES, - | truth—I had changed so much since | A " | then. But upon becoming convinced, she said, “Well, let us both forget all about the past. /I don't know |that man you have spoken of, I| jonly respect the one that is near me.” “Dear Miss Grey: Were th some Belgian children sent to Sp kane? If so, how many and wh date? E As far as I have been able to reacts learn there have been no Belk And so it was, We became en-| gian kiddies sent to Spokane, or | gaged and are to be married in Aug-| none adopted from there. § ust. A. eee | LEMON JUICE FOR FRECKLES } Girls! Make beauty lotion | fora few cents—Try it! Rate ne ete etniteteetesteitn Squeeze tne juice of two tem So, from my own experience, I would say, “Tell the girl. Better | now than after marriage. Love is |blind, and the more one loves, the easier it is to forgive, whereas, after | marriage, the familiarity of each one to the other tends to a mild disil lusionment, and then it would be | harder to tell, v. HH. Dear Miss Grey: I have just fin. ished reading “Anon's" and “A Happy, Sad Girl's” letters, and from |my heart I say to both of them— keep your secrets—your past belongs | into a bottle containing three oun to your past. You are both living/of orchard white, shake well good, upright lives now and that’s all| you have a quarter pint of the that counts in life, |freckle and tan lotion, and I know what I am talking about. | Plexion eautifier, at very, If you tell your sweethearte of your on cost. | past, it will only cause untold misery.| YOUr Srocer has the lemons |"Phe chances are they will never find | 2"Y rug store vr toilet counter Jout, and if they do, they have not | SUPPIy three ounces o: orchard wh for a few cents. Massage this he right to question, Their pasts, | |no doubt, contain mistakes, perhaps |'% fraerant lotion into the hy a6 . » Perhaps | neck, arms and hands each day ah Brent, maybe greater, see how freckles and blemishes There's too much suffering in the appear and how clear, soft world now, so why deliberately add! rosy-white the skin becomes. Yes! more to it? EXPERIENCED. is harmless and never irritates. erspiration hurts fabrics .Launder your blouse the moment it gets soiled! HEN you lay aside a blouse that is even slightly soiled, have you ever stopped to of perspiration does to frail things! Your grocer, druggist or depart- ment store has Lux. —Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. * To wash sheer silk blouses Whisk a tablespoonful of Lux into a thick lather in half a bowlful of very hot water. Add cold water till lukewarm. Dip your blouse through the foamy lather many times. Squeeze the suds through it—do not rub, Rinse three times in clear lukewarm water. Squeeze the water out — do not wring. When nearly dry press with a warm iron— never a hot one. should be gently dry and also should be shaped as they are ironed. Lux won't hurt anything pure water alone won't injure, LUX | THERE IS NOTHING ELSB LIKE LUX! Dry in the shades ee

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