The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 24, 1919, Page 8

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ini Hit Mt —eCeG-— ' . “ y LIZABETH LEA HODGE, the very young daughter of Mr. and ‘KISS HER By CYNTHIA GREY Dear Miss Grey: Can yoube so kind as to tell me u hy By REBECCA STEVENSON Office Phone, Main 600, Christmas In Charge of Orthopedic Mrs. J. Thacher Hodge. Photo by Bushnell UNDER T: E \. boy will spend from $6 to 7 for a gift to give some girl meme sere ceenn 1, Sealine er | chatee of the Ide Urtneneaio tee | friend, and not give his sistera thought? Bateriain a few friends at dinner|charge of the Little Orthopedic Tea H Christmas day at their home: Shop Friday yeoomber 26. ‘The Mr. and Mrs. James C. Huteson | James A. Ker Wilk give a small dinner for the/C. Watrous, Mra irman; Mra, Joon My brother has-several girlfriends, and almost breaks hia MISTLETOE vec to buy them an expensin box of candy, stationery, ete. : | Miss Grey, why do not boysknow how to appreciate a sine A king beneath the mintletoe lter’s love? We sisters have raved them lots of trouble by ¢ the family Christmas| len, Mra, Frederick The . . | ‘ d _ bere ol analy ae” Sitaenea q Te ee ae 4 » miEb*| looking out for them as tho tey were 2-year-olds. avid M na em | haan capers men Pay tn eigiod ria If they would only bring u five cents worth of candy to Mr, and Mrs, David Moss wi | jkention Unked with thelr sacred! show they thought of us, wewould lay our lives down fo ‘ Hosts at a family dinn | mistletoe, ‘Then, thru all Mrance at thelr] er) 1 i me ©“ Mosswood” =on Christmas Hespe deg? Helgium, England and Ireland, thin|¢em. I hope this is not too lng to print. Sincerely, oy. | Dancing Club Tauiete. eat. Welk tists. us| A SISTER. ee a Dancing club witt| ed. dd the holiday ceremony of 14 a y ol his tations except on 4 Mra. J. F. Douglas will | sacred, and the holiday ceremony jon't know that Iean answer decline invitations D pteriain with a dinner for twenty jo thin evening | |cutting: 1t was of awesome import-| your question, but I'm printing “the quite justifiable plea of # five Christmas day at their apart ath avenue and lance, gay, sentimental, mysterious! thin letter in‘ hopes that every previous engagement "ments in the Waldorf Dancing will be) and selema, in one. thoughtless brother in Seattle If he does not care enough for ‘ | | may see it and read between the your society to invite you to go Mr. and Mra. John W. Eddy will) ,,. b Sacrificial Ceremeny | Mnes, and that perhaps it may to places of amusement occasion- entertain with a family dinner) Victory Club | The Arch Druid, clothed in white,| (pon! ‘that he will aks hewn oe Soclagy tavite igs c may aang day. Mr. and Mrs, James] yy - 4) * . se i 7 do own pec y invited, yo! m Bertiela eady md ihren ée be.| Christmas Eve Dance | paconded a tree — which the plant!” at break-neck speed and buy that he is not really interest be among the guests. | ‘The Victory club will give their! was growing lo ured a golden) that «ister of his a present. As in you erett, will be among guests | Christmas Eve dance tonight in the sickle to cut the mistletoe, which| you may, it is not the price of a omenceciaaialnniesill dropped, to be caught In a white | gift that a sister appreoiates, it mantle by the people who waited be-| is the thought, to know that WOMAN IN NEW JERSEY low. A pienic banquet was waiting,| brother at least thinks of her. and two white bull ready for sue.) — But, my dear girl, ail brothers WALUES KISS AT $20,000 rifice, When the plant was prepared — like yours, T am glad to JERSEY CITY, N. J., Dec. 24— | My own brothers always Dec aa © drink It wan believed to exercise! thought of my sister and me first, A sult against George F. Egan, « protection powers from ghosts, pol-| and every year it gives me railroad employe, to recover $20,000 7 wong, iliness and the like pleasure to receive letters from damages sustained by being kissed, Later, thru ignorance of the orig boys who want helpful sugges- has been filed in the Hudson county | inal custome, mistletoe was supposed | tions as to the gifts they should sourt by Mrs. Mary A. Murphy of to heve been the wood of which the| offer mother and sinters rsey City. Mrs. Morphy’s hus cross wae made. This was the ox I'don't believe it ia really be Pate” yen Le aturphy, Joins with ‘ | e&une your brother doesn’t think 4 planation for ita existence as puny) Ory Or love and appreciate pis wife in the sutt and aske that parasite, instead of @e sturdy tree! ‘6 you—he sort of takes you for |!5,000 af the amount claimed shall tradition said it had been before the! granted andethinks you ar ee he'paid to him. Egan boarded with crucifixion, For thia reason, churches} derstand. I'm real sure if he |he Murphys on October 26, the day might not be decorated with the! knew how you long for him to |¢ the alleged theft of the kiss. shrub.» This prohibition continues to.| give you @ present at Christmas Mrs, Murphy's petition says she day in many churches of France and| b¢ would get the nicest one he | 0. Boag se! wha England. | could afford. as alone in T ‘oom r To Itun 6 1 | tan forced bis way in, put his arn lo Sam Ganmties TiC |round her and kissed her. She was] Changes thru the centuries result: |x.) in, Mime, Greys Tam a girt 17-| tightened and fainted and has been 4 in another custom, still seen in| kind remarks to me or about me to|Pder a physician's care since then, [many an old English community,|my mother. I don’t earn as much as|%¢ affirms. |where the boys and girls go into the |#he does, so sle says she hax a right| Egan's answering affidavit says | woods each holiday to cut the mistle- |to have better clothes and better food | te story is wholly false. |toe. When it is brought home, it is than I. We have so many quarrels | ph hung above the entrance door. Then |that 1 am thinking of leaving home.| |comen the gauntiet—paaning beneath | don't think my mother likes me as / ARS, SHONTS STARTS =| | the arch of berries, the girls are un: |Son't tee how en iny siater, and ince Pood weaggin er don't see how we can agree as lon Joeremonioufly kineed, each in turn, |oorsty eee ee mony ye eerer es ons} = FIGHT AGAINST WILLS by the first boy who can catch | Will you please advise me? NEW YORK, Dec. 74.—Mrs. Willa ' Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fox will en-; Masonic Temple, Campau's orches: fertain with a supper Christmas! tra with the assistance of a cornet] Right at the Roulevard Inn. duo is planning an extraordinartly | a - | good musical program for the, cca | ‘Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lea will give) sion er of fourteen covers at their . on Christmas, Many of the! Wisteria Dancing Club oe ahead om | “The Wisteria Dancing club wit OF Mr. and Mrs. H. EB. Holmes will | give their next dance this evening in| pire with a dinner of oi Christensen’s Broadway hall at their home Christmas day ee | “Mr, and Mrs. O. W. Crockett will ed = in with a family dinner of | i] Arron covers Christmas day } = Satie Dr, and Mra. Donald A. Nicholson | | HM give an informal family dinner ° Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mal Seeley will be among the Mins Louise Fulton, daughter of| Dr. and Mra, John F, Fulton of St.| Paul, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs, Paul J. Judson, has re-| turned to her home in &t. Paul. . and Mrs. Ivan C. Wettenge! | the guests of Mr. and Mre./ B. Opie and Mrs. & y Christmas day in Tacom Miss Frances Leonard is home| from the Annie Wright seminary to |spend the holidays with her father and mother, Mr, and Mra. F. A. : Leonard. | ' Dance by Mr. and | nr | We. Miss Louise Corbett, daughter of| Mrs. Collins | ate and Mrs. Hugh B. Corbett, has For their sons, Mr. Wallace and| returned from an extended Eastern » Frederick Collins, Mr. and Mrs. | trip lace Green Collins entertained “ee t a hundred members of the| Mfr. and Mrs. Charles Fagan left| set with a Christmas dance | for Portland Tuesday to visit their | them, And no these ancient customs | UNHAPPY. |P Shonta, widow of’ the Theo. | oS arg club last ha oj} son, ¥ ‘haries Fagan, who Is tn} have merged into the one ceremony, | Naturally {t hurts to have un- | dee P. Shonts, former president of uct ae tae oukage that tne |e Og | | usually beneath the chandelier, with| kind things ®aid about one, but |th Interborough Rapid Transit com: | ty last night was a happy meet-) yr ive Castile 4 Mr.| | laughter and blushes. | You should not take your sister’s | pny, must pay the rent on her for many friends. an ee rn, An ae Se | A Kins beneath the mistletoe. remarks too seriously. You |ay, apartment by Friday or be 4 es + Richard Castle, will spend Christ should refuse to quarrel with | according to a notig: mas in Bremerton, guests of Mrs Before Dance Castic’s son-intaw and daughter, | iy the dance given by Mr. tLieut. and Mrs. Laurence Richard Edward I son, Garrett att a 4 _— — a her. Surely she soon would give “ - up her disagreeable ways if she oar aur The agents clal” 7 found that they had nd t hurt you, vey bad no power to |" "Irs. Shonts is fighting her W® Of course your mother ts as | bad's will, which left the princig fond of you as of your sister. If pat of his estate to Mrs. Am Fashions for] Americans | SSeS e ies many o oe Confessions ofa Bride we ; E a edly smart and equally #im other. Tell her ya i Copyrighted, 1919, by the Newmaner Raterprise Asmectation | pie is the charining bovdcir garment | to pay whatever part of your | 8 GUEST IN NEW YORK |shown in the sketch, It features; carnings she may think just for NIW YORK, Dec. 24.—Maurics your board, and ask her to use |Marerlinck, the Belgian poet, ar Monday after New Years, at th - , na ed J 7 | bloom of white hable ant: a} te of Mrs John tf. seapp ase, WAR CLOUD LIFTS AS OUR SLEEPING || coateo of colored satin with gindie| Hef influence to put a stop to |rive here last night on the liner tub Frida: A M elu evening, re. S Williams Zane will be hostess| Mr. and Mra James Wylie re ‘& dinner of ten covers at the |turned Monday from Vancouver is lub. |where they have been for a few! eee | days i on | Mr. and Mra. 8 G. Dickinson and/ Current Toples ‘Miss Marion Hyiarf will entertain! son, Major F. St. Clair Dickinson, | The clasa in “Current Toples,” late &@ luncheon of twelve covers at have taken the John F, Miller home) ly organized, with Mra A. K. Fisken home Monday afternoo: t 108 West Prospect until the sum-[as leader, will meet January 6, the . ii mer ft eee Ih » tied ee cing |E. Hight asp me Th my ST 17 : : your sister's unpleasant com: | Fra ’ ; and Mra. Le Verne Purcell, of | pat .7; 5, pnchall te convaleecing | in crested i fo atu. | BEAUTY SLUMBERS ON # binek velvet ribbon. The bloom-| parisons. phemg tite hn erty Mac Dotisinas, are receiving |{TO™ ® recent acciden| | x . [erm have sleeveless attached bodice| "Under no circumstances should Am pr y if i ‘ulations on’ the birth of hee th Ree wens fr! iteden. Wediaaien | Without casting a single glance at) Dr, Certeln fushed but he answer. | and the coates is cut in panel effect,| you leave home. A girl your age )Premtere of “The Bluebird” in mus December 20. Mrs. Purcell waa] si ohter, Loyal, and son, Daniel,| The regular meeting of L'Union| any us, Hamilton .Certela went | ¢d very quietly the back panel being six or eight| needs her mother's advice and form at the Metropolitan opera Miss Mildred Purdy, of sham, and is « sister of Mrs. rd and Mrs. Laurence Ree: tay, | teat for & up to the motionless body | have been dercribing a con-| inches longer than the front. ‘Thia| Protection. hous on Saturday night, canceled in|of the girl he had married. Daddy | dition, Mr, Lorimer. Your daughter's | coatee might be made of one of the ' « festivities of| Larimer atammered, bit his lp, and|#0ul has deserted her body for a| wide ribbons that are shown in they, Dear Miss Grey: I have a man . L preg 7 t that 1 cannot sum-|shope in such gorgeous coloring, and | ‘riend I have known for more than | BRIKE ONLY THIRTEEN; left Monday evening for Portland to| Francaise» the guests of Mrs. Lamon December ' — father, Mr. Henty Hahn, during the | {vor of the - | holidays. the Association dew ee rain 1 was ailent. | suppose he was curtous,|Ume. 1 reg , 0, . eae RG nay we Bobs nnd T entninin were, to hear|mon Donna Camilla, She took the] the bloomers may be in a vivid color | “sheng * elt that time, tho, he has WEDDING IS SPOILED heon for Guest Boon Sgpgs outer a a thee Ienanansinny x Utibimtaane| want kind an explanation or | hight train for Mexico City taken me to a place of amusement | DITROIT, Dec. 24.—"The iN for on busi nem rip of - ™, on DI ac 4 a ee _— " bey lege guests iefinite Tength 7 Mra, Edris will join | Lorraine. neva 108 Marion | diagnosis Dr. Certeis would offer us. Then get the poor girl out of thin ony on. As a matter of fac t 1| vay sé, the guests were met,” - my Grote, hl arya 9, a street, where a sp program! “Your daughter is not dying, Mr. | yourself,” demanded daddy. oe im each time, for helihe mery din of J h Sk gave a small informal lunch-| him early in the year 6 r daughter « once told me if I wanted to go any. ry din onep . eee jhae deen arranged by some! Lorimer, Me ana. of that Cortes shook his head mere f “ ski's vedding was getting st at the Sunset club Friday after. Jof the leading 1 dancing | where I need only mention {t to him. n | Mr. and Mrs. Alfred MoMorris are) sng supper tein said after “Imponn I have not the skill but that he thinks it better to let aj When uvenile authorities arri eee jmeonding the holidays with ars Mc-| é ene Jof an examination. “I believe thererto break the apell which has chilled girl — ua for fear she might not | and tom charge of the bride. Morris’ mother, Mra. J. 8. Brace, | ‘ jis no inherited nervy in the} her. But I intend to keep her alive. | care for company and turn him|Symansi, who ts 13 years o ¢ Before Dance oon ane ane soecia somten arel ‘The niamitte, Dab Mumeey | Matory ot your tail ven’ cin uae eat a shee dom ine to enjoy calling at my(Skemrowki said he had promi ling Mins Elsie Christensen’s| Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jordan are| | The regular moeting of the Se igo . be w 4 { sto enjoy calling at my H ing y evening at Christen. | spending this week in Cheney | Day Nursery association will be heid| Certels asked the of | at me in an odd way as if to tell me home, but I don't think I ought CB fren Pager an $800 automobile Pride: ugh will ee | Wednesda ember 31, at 10:30 a} daddy, but he shot a swift glance that he Intended to be nice for my have to ask him outright each time | Urn fe the girl's hand. fe hall, Mies Sally I , in a number of friends with} Mr. and Mra. Frederick Johnstone at her home, will leave, January 2, for New York m. at the ¥ CoA at poor Bob, who certainly had added | sake }a grand blot to the hes to call, and T can’t make up n¥ mind ‘yah hing Aenin o Tks 85" UNCLESAM SELLS EGGS record of | ‘Thereafter, for days and days, our | i and from there they will sail for the| John B. Allen | the family life at the hacienda was centered | ohn B ion P is fo | . Lae i By Miss [tana Sate ae a Tea aly Ait i thar cceimns|, Daddy merely shook his head as| round the bed where lay the seep up his triendehip. “Wat annlr'gos| AT 4 CENTS A DOZEN hine F ‘oli |turning by way of Florida. hs Age ove tn: wrcomotiam| me wuld ng beauty. Often as T looked at UNDECIDED. PHILATELPHIA, Dec. 243 ephine fransiolr Mr. Grant Arnot Mark arrived and will cing earote| “Bob's shellshock was, of course, | her, I wished fora real prince, one It is most unfair for this | Among thegoods for sale in the compliment Mise Dorothy Allen. | yronday from San Francisco to join | !n D districts. There|an accident in the Lorimer his.) Tuite worthy of her, to come from a/ Jane Bliss, Mr. Wallace Collins) iirx Mark who is the guest of her | ¥ a thee at 72nd | tory far land and waken her—and make Mr. Gerald Frink, all home from | father and mother. Mr. and Mex. Mf. and Green he Camp Fire! , * her happy “ever afterward.” | eifer the holidays, Miss Jose-|F wens tHe will remain foe the| itis and Roy Scouta will also join| “I believe, Mr. Lorimer. that your) | ° cee aa eg a Fransioli was hostess at a dine) igi ye in the services. daughter ts suffering from some . ppaw Party at her home Inst evening. |"°4* eres |Gurious separation of the soul from|When he anserted that he dared not the party attended the "dance | the bod, It is like the condition | “rouse her from the spell which heid , ce! Mr. and Mrs. Guy Williams have| pgs : } le i eee Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Green| - ne to Ellensburg for the holidays | Hibernians Play your son was in when he came home He gave her every care, as he vag Be young man to expect you to (yard store: are 18,000 dozén eg] make the advances which should which willbe disposed of at abow come from him, and you should) | > bare ory i a @ lozen. They were As you have given him suff. | from hoardés. A ton of sagar, cient encouragement by inviting | ‘erated with sawdust, has been so him to call, there is to dealers Who will be required purify it gave for Mr. Wallace and Mr lf the It is several degrees | bad promised to do, Fortunately for . Seen | $332 | from the war 1 " y for | ik Collins at the Sunset club.| 1 11 scoran, of Vale, Oregon,| Santa to Kiddies vir. that is a the outcome of the affair, world ‘ jis spending the holidays in Beattle,| Twenty-five Hibernians visited the! “Certeix! You are deceiving ust’ | vent one sft | punce Engagement | with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. prigcoe Memorial school, Orillia, yes-| daddy shouted. Ho always shouts| D0" Manuel were always at the ha 2 and Mrs. E. Tappan Tannatt,| Frank Moran. | e | terday and played Santa Claus to the! when he is angry. “You know well |?" | ma, formerly of Spokane. 1100 happy boys. The visitors were|enough what has happened to my! Quite suddenly, the war cloud h ee ate se tras |cor iat aound te msed Chote entertained in turn by the brothers| daughter, The girl has been put to/Which had been gathering along the Si Hayden Bridwell, Miss Tannatt,|with his mother, Mrs. Margaret|1n charge and the boys, Vocal and|sisep by that creature you call! was dissolved, or at ss ughter of the late Gen. T. R. | Gibson. | instrumenta® music and step dancing| Donna Camilla! Bring the woman | least its shadow was removed fry | Fannatt of Spokane, was graduated | ws eee se |formed part of the high-class pro-|here! Let her undo what sho has|the earth for a while from the Broadway high school of} Mr. Milton mons left Tuesday | «ram. donef* Daddy had this news by #pectal ‘The wedding will take place | morning for Anaconda to «pend the | —————— . fr. Even in that remote! Mexican hacienda, even under the! Hints on Your Home = Py ey A- MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL Ready Tailored Clothes , ¥ For Men, Women and Boys me CHERRY'S x | their honeymoon in and around Spo-| Mrs. L. W. Emmons Bee born t the Hon. James D. Lor: They will make thete home . vee ee a teeny A py F conndenta ass, Furs, Ete. Entre Nous Club of business ‘trip. Mr. Cllen tote /BY DOROTHY FAY GOULD once more, that the cheerful, clumsy | Confidential Charge Accounts and Easy Payments. Christmas dances of the) "Ute Wacitie Ports Co PLANNING THE GARAGE AS PART OF Importance on the globe ‘ ¥ CHERRY’S RIALTO STYLE SHOP Certeis, too, was one of the world's Fesles io, Seba na oe ° e207 Rialto Building, Over Pig’n Whistle, on 2nd Ave. suppenana eave hi tate b) Between Madison and Spring affairs for a dozen years. His activ: | 5 ¥ " ities had not been of a kind to dis: Datnty boudotr garment of white and | Sls As Sl Ss Ss Als SSE y in any column of current colored satin THE HOUSE | Some” Temple. “Ail tne. ‘tormec|DR. NICHOLAS BUTLER sirertainily invited and every eftor’| PRESIDENCY CANDIDATE Will be made to assure them a suc ‘EW YORK, Dec. 24.—Dr. Nicho- constul evening. as Murra % | las Murray Butler, presffient of Co. The patrons and patronesses for lumbia university, is a candidate for D> the dance will be Mr. and Mrs. ©. L.| uty : é ents, but they were destined to be} ? cowl - dies. Be. Green, pach apne ol Ppp iondnnd tre chronicled conspicuously in the his-| blending with the ribbon, or the un- A Mrs. WK. McMillan. “yy John R Davis, munteipal justice, | | qd eon had teduieliliee ee ae ae eee | historian, with a mind moving ac-| Unquestionably the most satistac- cording to Freud, would set out to|tory negligee garments have the find who was the unknown woman | bloomer foundation. With this sat- who had been adored by the greatest | isfactory and comfortable garment ad a of all international spies! | aa the foundation, various coatees, . advantage in I was that woman! Tt seemed|overslips, etc., may be provided and We take this occasion moet absurd! at comparatively trifling expense, Rogers’ Baking Powder You get a leavener that is wholesome and efficient and at the same time sells at a price that permits practice of econ- omy. 5c for 16 ounces Does not contain alum The Rogers Company Seattle And some day the historians would | One good looking boudoir outfit re- write that the “unknown” had| cently séen had ankle length bloom- thwarted—and ruined—n remark, ers or overalis of pink eatin with a ble, though most detestable career straight kneo length smock of pale She had divided the man’s interest | blue Georgette, A long lace coatee in his political schemes, and thus|transformed the bloomers into a she had prevented at least one war!| more distinctly feminine negli wing thus imaginative and| ‘The woman who goes into any sort morbid, T rushed to find Bob of business life that takes her daily | (To Be Continued) |into the grind of the workaday - ¢ world owes it to herself to coddle the feminine side of her nature by sup- MASS MEETING FOR plying herself with comfortable and becoming garments for wear durin| Bo many people find a car a neces: | concrete, on account of the fire has EPISCOPAL CHILDREN | jer’ Hunk, “or rect nna relesation mt | sity nowadays, It becomes essential |ard. It Is well to look up the build-| What is expected to be the great-|home, A reasonable sum of money to plan a gar! in connection with |ing ordinance. For that reason, | est mass meeting of children attend-| spent on apparel of this type is the house, many people build their garages sep-| ing Sunday school ever held in Se-| money well spent. Any woman can Satisfactory solutions are most dif-| arate from the house. attle has been called for Sunday aft-| rest amore satisfactorily and happily ficult. Much depends on the lay of| A garage for one car ought to be|ernoon at 3:20 at St. Marks church, | if she feels she is looking rather well | the ground, and whether or not there | at least 8 by 14 feet, and if you want | Broadway and Harvard. while doing it, than when attired in to extend to you our heartiest wishes for AMERRY CHRISTMAS ED. R. BRALEY Prescription Druggist iy an alley in the re | to allow for a workbench, it ought to| A novel feature of the services|a faded and miserable looking ki- 1411 Fourth Ave., Just Off Union Street Your lot will look better if you can | be larger | will be the presentation by the chil-| mono. p ali Jarr your garage ax partot the} If you make your garage part of |dren to the Rt. Rev. Frederic W.| No fabrics may be said to be inex- Phone Elliott 3106 }plan of your houne, the house, it will be more attractive, | Keator, D. D., bishop of the diocese, | pensive during the present period of | Offen the garage can be added as | handier, and you can make a narrow | of the ebildren’s advent mite boxes| high prices, but counters | wing, oF placedaurthe back ot:the |lot Ko farther than if you have to| for wa ie tn this diocese. The chil-| continue to off alluring Than to h the D PE oge . j!ot. So many housew in Seattle are | cut eight feet off a 40-foot lot to al of all Episcopal Sunday schools | things both as fo » and quality on a ah that it is possible to plan |Tow for a drive around to the back,| in the eity will attend in body There the woman who is eer chil aL ome e ‘octor come to see you ‘tas part of the basement, But if a|uniei@ there is an alley, Sometimes | while the meeting will be open to|for material for boudoir garments or KATAKE Is 4 part Of the house, it must| the Mt roof of the garage can be|the public generally, Sunday is Hol, ri y fi y | for dress accessories may usually get be carefully protected if not made of Usediaw a terrace, Innocent's day, {the worth of her money

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