The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 16, 1919, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

By BETTY BRAINERD Dance for Dr. and Mrs. Tea for Bride-Elect |Frank Chessman Mrs. Mason Hawkins will One of the prettiest of Bea on Tuesday afternoon from 4 to/ summer dances was that given ® at her home, honoring Miss El | Mr, and Mrs, Clare E. Farnsworth @ene Sparks, whowe marriage | their home last night to/at ‘Mr. Howard Hawkins will menting Dr. and Mrs. Chessman H take| Place August 27 A profusion of flowers in past used the roome *e [shades we Dinner Dance at the jLater a buffet supper was served . and Seattle Tenn ne Mrs. Frederick Bausman Mrs. c lub | Frederick Bentley presided over the ‘The Seattle Tennis clud was the/tea table Beene of a gay gathering last night) ee @t the dinner dance which was! Picnic Supper Held on Friday instead of Wedmes aia Sirs. Montgomers ay, owing to this week being the) ols at a détightful State championship — tournament yeas coe Que hundred and fifty people en to hy _ Pacem ne attate ville, Conn., wh the ene lee Mr. and Mrs. Alexander meee 13 guests at Twenty-four guests motored to Re oe sare 8 Seward park and enjoyed the af “tertained tn honor ‘hed tng tennis players Placed for 10. Mr. Neal Weber was host the dinner prior Lead Society give a mid by compll. about Russel! pienic| for Dr Burke dinner. enter prior lL. Russell em of several visit Covers were Golf Club Dance looking forward which to wi to to 12 the Everyone ts the next dinner dance, be be given Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. Lester Holmes (23, at the Golf and Country Bad eight cuests at dinner. It is asked that reserv ) Among the others who enter made as soon tained at dinner were: Miss Elisa . | Beth Daulton, Mr. and Mrs Charles Engagement Announced a . Miss Mayme McDonald, Mr.| 7070 tO “in a cae an GCoawiere and Bir. Kenneth | ne enuagement of thety : |daughter Ethel to Capt. Oliver Dean Houchen . ormal Luncheon H. G. Buehler, Rinevite, Conn., who ts visiting |O"thopedic bureau Baillie, Mrs. S&S. L This afternoon, Mins Helen ee pe if int 1 luncheon |Schwager, Miss Bernetta Barbour the Seattle Tennis club on and Miss Helen Thompson dis! Six guests were enter. peneed the wares at the stand out side the Orthopedic bureau. while) ° Mrs. J. D. Hamilton, Mra C. § Wills, Mrs. A. N. Lindsay? Mixx Mollie Pierce, Mies Elva Sanders! on at Club jand Mise Dorothy Eaton were ° the tea room. Carl Frelinghuysen Goulden | oes Mrs. John Perkins and her Miss Emily Hale, of Boston.|Luncheon and luncheon on Thursday at ber Theatre Party oe Se Country am, Six guests were entertained by Mrs. John Schram at luncheon at e Party |the Sunset club on Thursday in Harriet Baxter will enter honor of Miss Alberta Schram and! at a house party at her coun-jher house guest, Miss Dorothy! home at Crystal Springs, after| Doe, of Hoquiam Later the guests Donworth dance, which takes |attended a matinee. Saturday evening. Her guests s ee Luncheon for sees Miss Juanita Fisher |Little White House > Miss Winltred Swalwell will en) The Queen Anne auxiliary of the at luncheon next Friday,/Orthopedic guild has charge of the 22, at the Sunset club in/Little White House for three days if of Miss Juanita Fisher,| Friday, Mrs, D. J. Hamilton was marriage to Mr. Donald Gra-/assisted by Mrs. A. N. Lindsay will take place September 2./ Mrs. E. G. Shorrock, Mre. Jeaste guests have been invited,| Leitz, Miss Lucy Semple Swans will be members of the bridal/trom, Miss Georgina Swanstrom ty, and intimate friends of the| Miss Dorothy Merrick and Miss guest. Elva Sanders Miss Hazel Allan and Mies Ruth |Dovell were in charge of the Jap anese umbrella stand outside the in [Personal | Mr. and Mrs Col a turned month’ Jack Gree and re ough Mra, Clarance Ble Wednesda evening motor trip thru Park and Montana. John W. Eddy are end at Bnetai mother, Mrs. from a Yel Mr. and spending with Mrs M the w Edtdy's arrett Mr. Morits Milburn returned Sun day from a month's trip to Alaska eee and Mrs. W. T. Burwell night for Lake here they will spend sev join. Mr. and Mrs returning to by Mr tay left Crescent ral days, w with George H Seattle them motor Mra, C. B. dren Lamont today Portland and from a two chil returned week's Miss Frantzel Coe left Portland to spend Friday for the week end, Mrs. Ernest Eddy ter, Mise Julia ay to join Col Haskell Haskell, leave Haskell in Bow Col. Haskell has just returned from duty overseas where General ton he served Pershing's staff on Mr. and Mra. C. and Mrs. J. D. Hoge and Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Baillie leave today to attend the Thorne-Corse nuptials which will take place tonight in Tacoma D, Stimaon, Mr see Mise Dorothy Lindsey will leave Monday for Belgrade, Me., to spend the month of September. She will return the month of October by way of Boston and New York. Mr. Robert Hare Delafield Friday for New York left Mrs. FR. H. White left Saturday spend the week end at Index where Mr. White is engaged in bust ness, see Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Hamlin, Mins Phyllis Hamlin, Mr Clarke Hamlin and Mra. Roger Morse Bone return ed Thursday from « motor trip about Vancouver island. Mr. and Mrs. James Macfarlane and Miss Harriet Macfarlane will leave Sunday for Alaska to be gone ten days. eee Mra. Tracy Robertson and niece Miss Jeanette Henry, are spending two weeks at Dearhart, Wash. with Mra. BL F. § Mr. Robert Morse of Boston, whe haw been xpending the summer with Mr. Kobert Bronson, left Saturday for his home by way of Calffor i be Miss Hortense Green, Miss | Merrill, Miss Mary Lea Miss Irene Fisher, Mr.) Green, Mr. Frank Brownell. | Evan McCord, Mr. Neal Mc) Mr. Walter Donahoe and Stuart Frazier. Ets eee ea for Bride-Elect _ A tea will be given next Satur by Mrs. Rose Wilson tn com to Miss Juanita Fisher, .s Pienic for Valdez People|» There will be a basket picnic at 11 o'clock on Sunday at Wood | ts ‘the land park and all Valdez people Ruery are cordially invited. BEF bi Mins Helen Ross of Portland ar- Luncheon at the rived Tuesday to spend a fortnight Seattle Tennis Club {wi Bre. BL. Lembeth . . Miss Alice MacDonald was host eas at a lovely luncheon Thursdsy/ at the Seattle Tennix club. The Jeanette Sewali of Portland house guest of Mies Clara Mins Margaret Osgood and Mixx Mary Chapin left Tuesday with Mr. Herman Chapin for a tour of Yellow stove park I~ \ “Rich But Not Gaudy”--Autumn’s Fashion Decree Bars Freak Models 5 | ‘This a is thin day-evening cout with its drapery. By BETTY BROWN NEW YORK, Aug. 16 [Clever Mr. Shakespeare described the Dear, lautumn modes of 1919 several cen turtes ago when he recommended— buy—rich, but not gaudy! And fashionable women of Amer ica will find their autumn wardrobes font that—costly, oh dear, yes—but jfar removed from the freakish and the extreme |I COLLECT TWO HEARTACHES A Chrys-T mean Mins Lorimer—-would better not know that a diver's suit made after Certeis’ dewign has been found in the fisherman's shack on the shore?” I put my own opinion in | this question and Bob replied | “I think not. She's daffy enough already over what she thinks she spells out on that oulja board. There | would be no sense in giving her in "I suppose that “Coatly thy raiment as thy purse can) THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1919. NLL" mn sult of tan and buff shows the new details, pocket button trimming and new front closing. A sumptuous combination of mouse-colored silk duvetyn and sable demonstration of the beauties of | The taflored frocks of serge, duve- tyn, broadcloth and the tnevitgble jersey weaves are fashioned in™the straight, loose atyle in present vogne. In such gowns the new point is the one-sided effect—achieved by a bit of embroidery at the right of the |bodice, repeated on the opposite | sleeve—and in back, a reverse of the | order Evening frock than day clothes kiess frocks—and most of them ! show more novelty ND A LITTLE WISDOM) ] Oeived that it waaa way he had with all women, with Rose Mullally as well as with Jane Ames Lorimer. | And I wondered if I really liked it auite so well, It occurred to me that | was going to learn a lot about my} husband while my second wooing was | progressing. | “Let's walk,” said Bob, and with out waiting for an answer, he took my elbow in his palm and directed | OMAN'S PAGE | For afternoon bridge, tea, or reception, or informal evening wear the well-dressed woman will choose peasant em! And here is the American ideal in evening dress—the new fight waist demanding closer corseting, and t! . frock in general type like this satin with rich bandings of Hungarian one-sided drapery are decidedly new and smart. ‘ jare in this class, display long trains. Lace is the choice of all designers Paria expecially favors the all-lace dross in the corsetless type. There is usually 4 sash colored chiffon or satin, with one long streamer ter minating in a train Interest ir the pretty. white and colored neckwear, gilets and similar Pieces is not likely to wane with the summer, even tho coats do hide them from view a part of the time, so the manufacturers have evolved new pieces, One of them is a gilet of realjning dresses and a little shall Princess lace with a section of it! square or round in back crossed with narrow Valenciennes| Belts and sashes are specially frills, designed to give the effect of tured, the latter being rather & camisole, Another is a round col- geous affairs. They are of Mand lar of fine net and Valenciennes or gise French persuasion. much resembling one of the old-fash- Mandarin sashes are of colorful joned berthas. Neither of these broideries on rich satin or velvet pieces ix out yet, but will be within a/one of the metal cloths brocaded week or two. plain with ends fringed or The neck Une ftself will continue | or weighted with a “tosque” which with the “square” first in favor and/a pendant ornament of silver or backs Jower than the front for eve-!and a new note in fashio: y ‘Marriage will take place renal 08 was attractive with three bas caw re! pyre nlleeinean gt pad +25 | formation «he would take as more| my steps down the path which winds |Peas, tied with large bows of ‘pur-) sire Charles Pye Burnett and non| evidence that Certeis ix still living. | under the grand trees of the Lorimer | jple tulle. A dainty corsage of the) purt returned Friday from @ week's| And no sense, either, in onan | | al Tea ; ‘camiieent te: Mrs. Henry} color flowers was at each) outing at Seaside, Ore. her with a mystery which probably |’ “The mystéry wouldn’t+be worth | 9 FY | place. Sixteen guests enjoyed the cee will never be solved." considering, except on Chrys’ ac-| 2 Sees OP i cetaie, count. She will never claim her right several weeks in the city| eee Miss Georgina Swanstrom return I got up and net myself to gather. | the Washington hotel, Mrs. W.| p. Geftney. entertained Informally | Dinner and Theatre Party tes on Friday afternoon at her) giving Mrs. Weston an oP | here will be a dinner 620 at the Washington hotel ty to renew a number of old! ,, the wives of the members of| Mrs. Weston has|?, National Editorial association tonight Seattle for nearly | ine [Acting as hostesses to the visiting «BS |ladies will be Mrs, James Ander-| dge for Visitor |son Wood, chairman; Mrs. E. A.| Harold Parks was hostess Batwell, Mrs. Clark Nettleton, Mre.! bridge party this afternoon in|Frank P. Goss, Mrs. C. B. Blethen, of her sister, Mrs. Albert W. Miss Anna Louise Strong, Miss of New York, who is|Betty Brainerd, Miss Cornelia Glass, the summer with her. | Mrs. Thomas J. Dillon, Mrs. C. A ee | Hughes, Mrs. Proctor F. Cook, Mrs 4 Neal H. Begley, Miss Adella M.| Cross Jumble Shop |Parker, Mrs. John L. Travis, Mrs.| Mary Louise Clary willl wintieid R. Smith, Mrs. Thoma lend play her own accompant|y- Runm, Mrs. E. H. Thomas, Mrs on Monday. at the Red Cross) wiswel) Wilson, Mra. J. Fred Braid Shop. Miss Greenwood will! sts Honora Connor, Mrs. E. ¥{ ae Friedlander, Mrs. W. W. Reaton./ | Mra. Kenneth Gilbert and Mrs. Al for Mrs. Chessman vert ©. Parish, Mrs. Margaret! Richard W. Perry and Mrs |Graham, Mrs. Joseph Blethen, Mrs y¢ Faris were Joint hostesses Adele M. Ballard. t an attractive tea given yester- years. eee to Mrs. Frank Chessman.| eee Later the party will be the guest» at the Sunset club, in compli-jof the Pantages theatre. \@ 4 Thursday from a two months visit with Mr. and Mra. A. 8. Kerry at Kerry, Ore. eee Mrs. William Borah, wife of Sen- ator Borah of Idaho, spent several hours in the city Friday on her way to Washington, D. C., to join her husband. She has been visiting her parents in Moscow, Idaho, and is accompanied cast by her mother, Mrs. O'Conell. eee Mr. Temple Fay, who is in charge of the medical department of a boys" camp at Idlewood, Swan lake, is on a two weeks’ motor trip, going thru Montreal and Canada Mr. and Mra. James Wrile left Friday for a week's motor trip about Vancouver island. see Miss Mary Meeker of Chicago will spend the week end as the guest of Miss Eulalie Merrill at the Coumtry club. see Ruhm left Thurs months in Mrs. Thomas F. ay to spend several Berkeley, Cal. ing & mann of pale blue phiox I, myself, wanted to have done with myxteries and adventures for- | ever and yet I couldn't escape from their clutch any ould. The one desire of my heart was to enter upon a tame and monoto nous home life as a wife I was more than willing to “kitchen-minde ‘a dependent | satellite”’—1 recalled at least a dozen more of the names w h «plaster feminists often apply to meek and | lowly married women And I oveted all the hard titles! | And, instead of being at liberty assume any one of them, instead of being permitted to mix salads and | beat cake for excitement, I was still pursued by the ghost, of my adventures and the promise of other mystery to solve | My sister-in-law insisted that her | dead husband had not left her a | widow! And my husband claimed to have resurrected the garb of the man 4 seen disappear in the of the ocean! | I shivered. Bob noticed that I [was shaking and and a» | sumed charge of me in the way I had be past an he rose better than Chrys] somebody—Joe Bach himself. depths to her husband's foreign estates as long an she believes he is not dead? “Maybe that diving suit was wash. | Jed ashore?’ I suggested. “May picked and carried it into the hut!"| ‘That's a clever idea, sure,” Bob/ |agreed, “but how could that diving| | suit be washed ashore—without the} ‘body of the man who perished jim ir | Maybe Dr. Certeis discarded it junder water—and prepared to swim ashore! He was an extraordinary | swimmer, you know—a magnificent! athlete!” . | Some little private detective your. self,” remarked my husband. “Your theory pleases me immensely but it doesn't convince me.” 1 “I don't believe in it myself,” I ad mitted, “but have you a better? = | Then Bob emiled down on me, Rose! Mulla halfindulgently, half admir. | ingly. Just so had he often smiled | on me, Jane Lorimer, his wife! | felt that one of me hated him—just a little bit—for letting the other of | |me bask in that precious smile | But I smiled back at him, brave. ly and happily, until a sharp distrust! | aqbered me jit up Wer a prettily bedecked $e Mrs. Harry Whit-| Treat, Mrs. Robert Wilson,! Robert P. Greer and Mr Luncheon Miss Rosamond Riddle returned Mrs, Vera Strange was hostess) Wednesday from a ten days’ outing at a beautifully appointed luncheon|at Lake Chelan loved so much when he had known| ‘Did Bob ¢ me an Jane Ames, But at that| Katherine Mi particular moment, 1 suddenly per-| (To B dare to smile on| in just that way? Continued) on Friday at the Sorrento hotel |Three baskets of shell pink and lavender sweet peas, tied with large) |pink tulle bows, graced the long| |table, about which the 24 guests, were seated. After the luncheon | |six tables of bridge were at play, | prizes being given at each table | The guests were Mre. F. V. | Brown, Mrs. O. W. Farr, Mrs. Alex jander Dickinson, Mrs. Charles Brown, Mrs. C. H. Eberting, of Hoquiam; Mrs. Frederick V. Ham mons, Miss Dorothy Greene, Mr« H. L. Greene, Mrs, Vernon Pavey, Mrs. Clyde Brown, Mrs, B. B. Allen Mrs, George Webster, Miss Irwin, Mrs. C. A. D. Young, Mrs.| C. A. Kilbourne, Mrs, Lloyd Lewis, | Mrs. Fred Johnstone, Mrs. Grant! MeMicken, Mrs. G. R. Walker and Mrs. A Woodrut: | Informal Dance | Miss ariotte Young gave an in |formal dance last night at the Arm lory. Gen and Mre«. Harvey J | Moss and Maj. and Mrs. BE. H |Keene chaperoned the affair | es aie |\Wedding Announcements | Mrs. Rebecca E. Goodman has ts sued invitations to the wedding of her daughter, Helen Jane, to Mr Alexander Leigh Hanot, of Fair banks, Alaska. The wedding wil take place on Wednesday evening August 27, _ Slip a “Vest Pocket” Kodak into your pocket— i. A basket picnic will be held Woodland park, August 23, by the Kansas Sunflower club, Will H Barr, president of the club, an- nounced today. The Women's Kan- #a% chub will aid the Sunflower club. at Ethel | ° eee Mrs. Charles H. Black, Jr, 1s spending several days at Eagle Har bor, the guest of Mrs. Joseph Black eee Rev. anf Mrs. Hugh Elmer Brown | spent last week end with Mr. and|kitchen—a Mrs. A. H, Lundin Miss Ruth Teal spending the week Catherine Collins to Portland with next week. They motored to Ta- coma today to attend the wedding of Miss Anita Thorne and Capt. C Corse of Portland t# end witn Miss who will return her the first of Mr. and Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. James R Ernest B Hayden Herald jleft this morning for a motor trip Vancouver, B. C eee Mr, and Mrs. J. C, Williams have been wintering in are the Washington who California, hotel Miss Grey on Her Vacation Cynthia Grey is taking a week’s vacation. Ail let- ters sent to the department during this time will be answered by Miss Grey when she returns. Let's go buy Boldt’s French pas- try. Uptown, 1414 3d Ave.; down- town, 913 2d Ave i\Kitchen Standards BY BIDDY BYE | More and more it dawns on |feminine mind that in the ning of her own workshop—the woman should of a voice than is jher by the average r And more and demanding that those plans of the new home clude some of HE’ Kitchen—learned by experience |not by architectural theories. For generations women have dis cussed among themselves |tles of an ideal kitchen until now there is a respectably long list of things a kitchen HOULD be .to | please the modern housewife, and | meet the requirements of the tIn- |telligent woman who uses it as |home-making workshop and | laboratory Summarized, Not too much floor space—-10 or feet square is ad Washable walls. Few pleces of furniture those carefully select eh ned. The stove cupboards so arranged teps that is, so that most used in” preparing ox short as possible An asily cleaned proper height, “with drain + at either side and a window a If possible nother window admit ting sun @nd air giving a | pleasant outlook. | A good floor, hardwood and spot | proof, or covered with lnoleum Oll, gas, electric stoves to give the more allotted architect woman ty blueprint shall in- of a and more ideala the quali food these requirement and ily nd the so meal ave 10s. are sink, of the ards and plan- | le, and with a ventilating ar |rangement tt Plenty sink poss carry off off as little unnecessary heat as| | cooking | | of angle hooks above the) we. | and mixing table for the hanging of much used utenst! Good casters all furniture A refrigerator floor enough to without stooping fee chamber of should oper from |permit putting tn tering the kitchen Plenty of height and widt of them enclosed | A high stool, to permit sitting | work requiring much time A small rolling table with shelves and small wheels to make movable about the on movable raised make its It y the refrigerator the outside to jee without en- | | th helves of proper me most at it easily Kitchen and | SIREN GIVES RELAPSE | TO SHELL SHOCK VICTIM: SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 16. Mullen is at Lieut George ©. the Letter. man Nospital today, recovering fr shell ™m Ar (tack brought upon him from a shrieking jof the siren at the building. Lieut. Mullen was walking on lower Market st., and the blast of the siren | | brought back vivid memories of bat- and he collapsed. He was taken to the harbor amer Bency hospital, where he told the story of being “shell shocked.” shock” received in the gonne Forest and from a new Ferry ASihier has to be quick-witted and wide-awake. And she Can't be unless her body is rightly nourished. You may be a cashier or have any other indoor job, but Whatever you do, eat Krumbles,” Here's why: Krumbles is made of all the wheat grain— bran, kernel and all. It gives you every bit of the good nourishment nature puts in wheat. We cook it, shred it and toast it, so that it is ready to eat just as it comes to you in our “Waxtite” package, which retains the delicate aroma and rich, tempting flavor Krumbles has when it comes crisp and hot from our ovens. Ask your grocer for Kellogg's Krumbles— the only Krumbles made. Krumbles is made in the same kitchens as Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO. Battle Creek, Michigan GRIGINAL HAS THIS 5! K. Kellogg

Other pages from this issue: