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THE SEATTLE By REBECCA STEVENSON Office Phone, Main 600, rtaining at | Dinner Before Dance | a] | Precedin the dance given by/ et Club | Petty Morrison and Sally Harbaugh | Among those who are entertaining jist evening, Geor Milburn enter Sunset clud at the dinner and! tained with a dinner for eight at the! tomorrow evening are Judge) sunset club. } Mrs. Burke, who will have * * . Dinner at Sunset Club Evelyn Colvin entertained a num: of her friends with a dinner at he Sunset club preceding the danes Mew Years day Nr. and Mra, Fa. | given by Sally Harbaugh and Betty TL. Webdster will entertain with a | Morrison for nine at the Sunset club. ee ote Te |New Year’s Eve Mr. and Mre, Fordham Baasett Kimball will have as dinner guests New Year's Ff at the Women's | University club Mise Elma Coilins| and Mr. Carl Donworth Later ce! party will attend the hockey game, and the dance at the Rainier club. | eee f rriage Announced . | ime. M. B. Langley of French Cor | California, announces the wed in New York recently of her Helen, to Dr, Charles D. le. by Miss Moran evening Miss Nellie Moran entertain with a «mall informa! at her home. | se Luncheon by Mrs. Gilman Complimenting Mra. Bert F and Mrs. Charles R. Brown, whi 5 ae leaving for California, Mra, F essive Dinner Johnatone, who goes to the West In € dies, and Mrs. W. A. Avery, who has| ently returned from a year's ab Reverm! of the girls e in California, Mra. Pred Gil-| Ht will entertain this man entertained with a luncheon ve dinner and a dance. The her apartment in the Adi rt n the younger yening with © *hillips | Philips Mor Mins Bidith heon at} afternoon | the noon ae hostesses are Miss Fimily | yeatecday afternoon. ‘This Miss Lucile Eyman, Miss/ first of a series of luncheons which | Green, Miss Phyllis Blake.| \irs. Gilman has planned | ty will end with a dance at .-e | Dorothy Campbell.) py : sso |For Mrs. F 0 Attend Hockey Game | Morrison 4 the people who are plan-| With her sister, Mrs Ag to attend the opening the |Fison, aa honor gues Beason this evening are thoxe ve = wes b atone ata group of friends who have | ‘he Sunset club the hockey games together L j j' past three yeare—Mr. and| Tuncheon Be Lawrence Bogie, Mr. and Mra | “\¢_CCOM ae Stimeon, Mr. and Mrs. Langdon | ise Ruth Lennon entertained with a luncheon of nine covers at Mr. and Mrs. Paul Man- d aan wee, 3. 32 Hotel Washington this after. Mra, Archibal Pe Downey, Mr. and Mrs. Rob-| , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wil-/ Dinner for Daughter | eee Mrs. Rdward For their daughter, Mrs. F. 0 i oe | Downing, of Portland, who is their . guest, Mr. an Mre. R. W. Baxter cker-Pike | will be hosts at a dinner Friday eve . Pike, | at their home, Covers will be wedding of Mins Amy Pike,| "De ‘ F of Mr. a fre. J. Frea-|Pmced for ten, | Pike, to Lieut. Ward E. Becker,| _, Dt cB A., was quietly solemnized at| For Mrs. Vilas Brown this afternoon in the ladies’! Honoring her daughter, Mra. Vil 4 Bee Piymouth church rown, of Portland, Mra. F. N Eee bride wore her handsome — Smith entertained informally at her eae of dark | blue vt uing| home Monday evening. A number ‘ lig lige Mitendane (of Mrs. Brown's intimate friends ow 4 | were present. ‘Marie Holcomb, wore a suit of ¥ brown duvetyn. with @ small) wis Mrs Vilas Rrown as honor hat. Both the bride and her) cust, Mr. T. A. Boemer entertained | wore exquisite Corsages. Soveral of hee Intimate friends. with r. co a theatre party at the Metropolitan best man Saturday evening. the reception and wedding | a Which followed, at the home) ‘rureday afternoon Mra. W. A.| bride's parents, only near rel-|tiarvey gave a theatre party for| kg eragl ip. | Mra. Brown and some of her inti- their wedding trip.| inate friends and Mrs. Becker will live in era eee Announce Engagement t Announced ios ‘mpnaeniant’ Oi taakr daughter, given at the home of her| Gertrude, to Dr. Harry Femier, son in Everett last week, Miss!of Mr. and Mrs. L. Femiler of Port- h Hulbert, daughter of Mr. and) land. & William M. Hulbert. announced | eee F engagement to Mr. Dwight : of Seattle. | Marriage Announced . ot | Mr. and Mra. John J. O’Shaugh- 4 A | nessy announce the marriage of their Year's Dinner daughter, Anne Lear, to Mr. A. Har. “ tee coum N Seattle, formerly of family dinner b the Hotel Washington, New mar's day. Later the party will nome after, February 1 at 15 @ box at the Wilkes. | Mercer st. er Seattle Girl | Carnival Dance ed in Hollywood The Vietory club will give a New | Marriage of Miss Ruth Ros.| Year's carnival dance tonight in the) Barber, daughter of Mr. and| Masonic temple. This is the largest | ‘ormerly of dance o' eir winter season, and a Henry EF. Barber, formerly a f thelr wint a ‘and now of Hollywood, to| mber of special features have been Walter I. Myers, was solémn-| Planned to make it particularly suc-| Wednesday afternoon, Decem. | cesatul F 23, at the home of the bride's bride wore the cown of heavy satin and the veil which her mother’s, and was at by her littie niece and nephew, Ruth and Henry Barber and son of her sister, M MacDonald, who pre the aisie. i OS cassie ta Be Second Annual where she formerly lived. she, New Year’s Danc 4 the University of Wasbing-| The second annual and is a Delta Gamma. Mr. be. given. tn ie professor of English at the |tempie will be held New Year's day ity of Iowa, and they will is informal and will be given un their home in Towa City. \der the aus: s of the F era and the Entre Nous club. A general 4 anc for Young People | vitation to the public is extended MBetty “Morrison and Sally Har-|,,7° Committee in charge is ax entertained about sixty of| Mcane sr Yor Kener young friends with a delightful | ;iccabe Mn Moy Kanne imas dancing party at the home | OMA, Mr. Vesnon i Mr. and Mrs. Phillips Morrison |," . Delta Theta Phi Delta ‘Theta fraternity enter- 2 with an informal dance at the | house Monday evening. eee perian Dancing Club |. Hesperian Dancing ¢lub will & New Year's eve dance at Doug: |), fi this evening. Dancing at 9.) a} Dreamy Moon Club The - ¥ Moon club will give New Year's night The committ ptionall a large 4 oo. d is expect New Ye the Masonic om ee r Pastor of t eburch wil rlors of the Frida The the meet chureh January 2. interesting reports of the ars work will be submitted by circles, committees and officers. The officers elect will then be installed i After the meeting there will be a ‘New Suit for a New Year }social hour with all past officers of} e \the aid as honor guests, in memory/ rand new suit or overcoat tojof the first aid meeting of the| on New Year's morning, along | church fifty years a the Christmas gifts you have Daughters of St. George Ay received, will make the be-| The Daughters of St. George, Alex i " . Jandra lodge No. 172, will hold open ig Of 1920 the New Year, the (rouse this afternoon, at th cottish | hing for the man, young man} Rite hall, First avenue. Snglish boy who never before has ever | Women invited to attend. ed that acme of welcome siir- } | Art Exhibit At the urgent request of Seattle ~ You know there ts nothing at any |@rtt admirers the exhibition of oil paintings and water colors by the| of year more welcome than | ceiehrated A. Moyer Marter, Rt. C. A clothes for either men orjof London, ngiand, and Alma} % yrine | Royer Lorraine, of the French and| remem, pet the ses ea an school, will be continued for ds half the presen ut by giving |one week. in the Eastern Star club husband, brother, or whoever ft contin 4090 Arcade building. A cor BE dial invitation is extended to all in hs ht be, something substantial yOu |ierested in art. Friday is set ‘aside combining service and pleasure | for club members only with the surprise. Nothing | Smee = — — excel the arog oiag new sult REMAINING SEATS New Year's day. you have your funds by Xmas buy- ing, let us help you. Buy the Cherry » Ite easy, confidential and eee sein perrsent Eminent Volinst you get the goods and the é At 6:30 Seats on anle nt $2.50 and $3. Pius 10% sult your convenience, Blalto Style Shop, 207 Bidg.,.over Pig'n Whistle, on | wil December 30, from Portland, stat How to Serve Attractive Buffet le mater Mise Grey: I know a young woman who poved an Ci, Lunch at New Year’s Watch Party (Copyright, 1919, N. B, A) New Year's eve and a watch party Visions of sandwiches and cakes are immediately conjured up at the word “party.” Of course the bent silver and china will be polished and washed to give the finishing touch to the table. ‘The easiest for the hostess, an well As one of the most attractive ways to serve a large party of guests, the buffet lunch, In this way a happy alr of informality ls preserved, the men serving the women. And Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Green and Mr. and Mrs. Trafford Huteson will pend New Year's in Pasadena at the Hotel Maryland. Mra. R. C. White, of @t. Paul, on! her way to California, is the guest of Mr. and Mra. Arthur W. Tid mareh at their home at lands. eee Captain and Mra. Edwin Ralph Rinker (Rosamond Riddie) who spent Christmas with Mra. Rinker’s par ents, Mr. and Mra. Charles Addison Riddle, following their wedding trip. left yesterday for Kockford, Ltinots, | where they will be until their plans are more definite. Captain Rinker is temporarily stationed at Camp Grant. eee Mra, Franklin Palmer left for Idaho Monday, summoned by the finess of her brother vs} Mins Frances Oldham was the guest of Lieut. and Mre. Laurence Richardson in Bremerton for the Weekend. During her stay she was entertained at the dinner dance on the U. 8. Wyoming, preceding the regular dance b% the officers of the Sixth Division at Bremerton Friday evening, Saturday afternoon she was a gtest at tea on the U. 8. & Ar |kansas, Saturday evening at dinner| breath, when a noine like that of on the U. &. 8. Montana preceding the dance given by the officers of the Navy Yard, and Sunday at luncheon on the U. 8. 8. Seattle. Lieut. and Mra, Laurence Richard. of Bremer: with chard son's mother Brown Vancouver tmas and Mrs. M. H. Draham with layghter, Mra. W. C. Brown jeave about January 20 for Call They have shipped thelr car nd expect to tour the south art of the state for the next nthe. ern two Mra Welsh have on Queen Anne divide their time be n Washington and next months. John Harold Shaffer returned Mon from Olympia, where he was guest of Mr. and Mrs. George raham for a few days. « Mr. Ned Man! several days in . of Tacoma, spent eattle last week. and Mrs. Laurence Rees Ellis y and Mr. Carl Ballard have returned from Bellingham, where they were the guests of Mr. and Mra EB. W. Purdy, Mrs. Carl Ballard will remain with her parents a few weeks longer. Mr. and Migs Emily Jerome leaves Sunday to return tc Avrora,, New York ‘ oe 8 -eand Mrs, Thomas Stimson their children, will leave next weeksto Join Mr. and Mra. C Stimaon th California Mr, Cortie"Upp of Portland will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. 8 Potheringham the coming week-end see Mrs, George W. Allen and Mrs James 8. Hoimen will leave, January for California to spend » 1 week eee Dr. George Dilworth and family, of Billings, Montana, are spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs, Abel K. Yerkes. eee tdward G. Arnold, Jr., non of Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Arnold, will leave January 1, to attend Howe's school, Howe, India Mr. SELLING RAPIDLY TETRAZZINI —WITi— WARREN PROCTOR Celebrated Grand Opera Tenor And PIETRO CIMARA, Concert Pianist, at Hippodrome, January and P.M. podrome Nox Oftice, War is nehleved sen jence of 4000. Regarded an the High-| the Wallcourt school tn | STAR—WED DEC, 81, 1919. r \L uch cases, in time married i her She is going to be elated thi jon't incident in What would be the res name as a middle name? [the clever suitor can arrange an al- veniently before the person who is Ynost private supper hour with “lady|to pour, Phates of sandwic love” by a Uittl maneuvering of chairs in halfobscure corners, or staking out @ claim on some deserted staircase. | Use Unshaded Candies | The prettiest way to light a table is with unshaded candles. A silver candelabra in the center and two single sticks throw a soft, friendly light over both table and room The custom of asking an expec y | dear friend ansiat In the duties of | hostess by pouring coffee at the head | Of the table is most adva sat the buay lady entertain! guests | A lunch of this sort may be served with a minimum of confusion in a | home without a maid. With the ex ception of replenishing the coffee pot, ponsibly the aandwich plates, no fervice in needed; for the entire mup- Der, an well as the dishes and silver | for serving, is placed on the table. | The ervice piates are wet in piles at one end; whatever silver is laid out tn + r * the most attracive way Have a Simple Meau A simple menu consisting of two kinds of sarglwiches, olives, «weet pickles, salted almonds, assorted can- | w dies and various kinds of individual cakes (these latter should not have » soft frouting am they are to be handled more or less with the fin-| w germ), makes quite as elaborate a And the snowy cloth, shining ai) ver, gleaming glass and the bright | red and green of holly, all glowing under the soft light of old-fashioned | wax candies, makes @ picture attrac-| tive enough to add tastefulness to | far nimpler food | Datnty service ts the first requisite of all parties, elaborate or otherwise. | The watch party lunch should be served not later than a quarter to 11 eo that all may be cleared away and kine are also the guesta gathered about the piano | feo tray, with cups and « juat before midnight singing the New | sortes, is set at the other end con-! Year in. 8 neade the nap jon; the cot her acees Confessions ota Bride Copyrighted, 1919, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association A HACIENDA GOES | ! UP WITH A ROAR It would be the final beneficence | Sometimes I roused myself from my of living, I thought, to dic with Bob.| sleep to reassure myself that I still But my husband wasn't at all ready | held Bob's hand, to die with me, it appeared. With! «, man and a woman who desire |strength which was almost super-/ perfect existence, couldn't invent human, he carried me swiftly down | for themselves a more wonderful in jthe stairs and ran with me toward! stitution than marriage and mon |the patio. He had placed me on a| ogamy,” thought 1. And I review jbench, and was ed, in my subconscious state, the | menace to old social institutions which has been much discunsed since the war. Even the most conventiona persons consider themselves cultured | when they arraign marriage as ar natitution—ae if humanity had in vented something too ideal ta liv up to! | “Marriage tent at fault at all, tw it?" 1 mntd, tu to Bob. “People re at fault.” Rob didn't wu He touched my hair with bis and whispered, “Don’t talk, hone 30 to sleep again! panting hard for thunder after a hurt my. ears. | Bob's body bent over me, close tc me, as bits of flying debris clattered around us. “Janet Jane! Jane! 1 heard bir murmur, not in reproach, but with the utmost tenderness | The explosion of the munition rocked all the little world which was that hacienda Tr on which I rested ewayed like a rowbost hich on a wave. Then stl like that of a tomb fol! the thunder » rained me lightning stroke | rning centered in bench derstand. of course ners oyen but br ame theme ¢ his arma and| 1 ¢losed my my carried me back to bed. Before | kept whirling we reached the balcony, I heard the sourrying of 4 hundred feet, Women were sobbing and screaming. Mer | were shout for buckets and hose. 1 « throb eng ed the pumps of | the deep wells. Then I felt the sof | news of warm blankets about me, and derstand that I clutched my husb: , idealists 1 |unbandaged hand al mer i sleep nota ft At least I rtake it, f hubbub out | awake; ni | mind was going over a the most beautiful th ever had in my life Bob and 1 1 each other more and more the longer we gether! That w © love Hike our ut with wath, husband | been the In the me men to treat it ac eacribed by of th leal state, t ¢ wr ur ing order: law, In t, of an who carri ught the no which wor In b 1 nd inn en and went ¢ rr no longer of doe rtheless, 0 heard oman by her silliness is kept om realizing to what glory her devotion to her husband nN carry her. And man, by } wn selfishness, destroys splendor which h lived to- | ing,"* the real wonder of We didn't wear hetghta ny very eternally seek And IT remembered that Hamiltor Certein had loved and Miller had my Everywhere had mind me loved Py and all an opportunit woman to be * aid "T to m had destroyed therine Miller, for a time, ha¢ changed I from ® gentleman to} mething rather common. One kind of love destroyed, but the other was constructive and made all ense fo's hardships easy to endure 9 hi. “It's all right, old dear? 1 | Suggests Cherry’s)", °"* ae ae on 1 Are you better | mind has been going around | in circles,” I answered. “Change th subject for me, What happened there Kather use, T had come close and to the very end. and our mutual love only thought in my ne > a the for disloyal olf, my pence time here is and Let's go buy Boldt's French pas try, Uptown, M14 Third ave.; down |town, 913 Second ave, | | | mut CHERRY CHAT sty Cherry Way of buy “ee ing clothes ts th é common sense e way—it is the wa that saves you dollars and cent the way that makes a small in come do the dut of a large one in buying clothes. Good clothes are so vitally important to one's welfare || gay thers drunk with prides in business and social life that noth: || while some are drank on theories, || ing should be permitted to stand in || No matter how tmptted, | ithe way of having them—and Cher |ry's plan makes it possible for you to || Naneenrmet be sae tee ldress in the best of style for a few || And both are quite exsential ollare a month | Ine different form or view. Our departments for both men and | women feature nationally advertised \apparel of quality and the value; | remarkable: out | | | | | (To Be Contin For a man to hold one lMne Makes him Intoxtented; | He hopes for off to use bis plan As he haw indicated, | | | | Some men are drunk with their | Aside from our theories, We ken ave more » COAT, DRESS ursrams || BRRY'S cK " RIALTO STYLE SHO) nena education, rather th and movies, altho I have @ nice position lunch as is necessary. wh Kindly in my favor aa is possibie for you | to do. M It makes name the w der, the thing she wa what ed ur no differenc man is tm to and the ding The odds are that she will r the bitter results of her nooner © no whether she tella her fute band or not, If whe tells him, the chances are that a never marry her, and if not tell him and he learns it after he is married, the chances are that he will leave her when he finds it out Bo there you sible that sh exemplary anc are. It is pow might live such an truthfully that in w different woman from what she formerly was, that she has rej would never, under any elreum- trace hex former foot- as, re I way this to mnible, that her husband might overlook her transgression Whether she should tell him now Is & matter for her to de olde pickles, salted nuts, bon-bons and| Stage Struck cake are scattered about the table in| 47) er J wife IT am @ stenog 3 years old, and have always red to be an actress, and still do not like the business world, and in the fault of my father that I mas forced into it because of a busi my artis My heart rtnge jc nature being developed woul are with the or ith a nice salary Please give me your opinion hall Ido? Nothing else give mo an answe What ca tr as ni Re If you have been stagestruck for the past eight or ten years, the chances are you won't be happy until you try it. Then you'll be willing, yes, even glad, to go back into the ing (?¥" business wi The fact that y the stage a Want to go There ia & pow that your intense desire actress will enable you unpleasant features Washington's Leading Dentist The Demand of the I they parted, she coming out West. now poses as a widow, going by his name. you think it would be better for her to acquaint him | with the facts, and not live in fear of hie finding it out later?) we Ut if she signed the | tificate and used the name of the first man and her own YTHIA GREY Can you help me out? e to have a themselves for study. not naturally @ reader the ba Buy current She n two months, and she has not life to her intended husband world ‘Take Invest on in the from th mechanical ct re ant marriage cer- y play EMMOGE ine, . all and of stage life philosophically r nuc win f 1 a measure of Whethe or whethe of wrateful t ne who inaisted that you become ef. ficient in some work that would afford you means of a good | stage nights a week, will kindly for publication, how from getting lonesome. ~ Vienna Rolls Jona father MRS. N. » wives would welcome the few hours to If you are cultivate t maga zines and find out what is going books in instrument ords of classical music learn to distinguish them, if haven't a plano and do not Take lessons in dresstmak ing, and do fine work for your a You might also study French or one of the other languages. Perhaps some other woman who is left at home on one or more she keeps hood for the rest of your days & The only way I know of that you might “break into” the the atrical game would be to apply to the different stage managers and moving picture directors. Most girls who already have a home 4 paying position | Constantin: to fall } “cured” in & | adopted the very. | triumph | dope-pipes, ete, in 1463, | , |Lonely Wife | Seeks Aid Dear Mina Grey older than my for theatres, dan Ko, howe only men are gathered, at all, it must lone. not acquainted here and | neighbors are ail }am. | they attempted He doesn't care| walls, and ing or visiting. ry 1 | saved the city. my| As @ means | shapes husban u tell me wh 1 goes out even t to do? I/na rolls He « ‘0 lodge once |, week c ot object, but what I can do| I can't Ko out, too. uncomfortable coming 1 have tried going to theatre and having him meet me, it means such a long wait until lodge closes Ien't t started? ain lonesome “ — a Watch Party Idea ii An Original o novel idea for the New Year's watch party, and one that will be appreciated by the guests, is to bang @ fancy lantern er the porch light. This designa-| tion will save trying to read house number in the dark on the part of the invited watchers. This ttle scheme will help in two way First—It points out the houee. Second—It i# lke a handshake long before the guests enter your home, and will help to start the evening without @ hitch In Prices and Quality Compare my + offerings with others and see for yourself why I have no competitor The phenomenal growth of my office in Seattle is due to the fact that the public has investigated my office and my methods and found them to fulfill my full claims. Jay Is Sanitation Honest Advertising in Dentistry Is My Policy My ment possi correctly My oper m: st rooms’ and » the instrumen that everything is as are this with what you ideal service and the bes My Seattle office ha: office, oper Honesty every conve ou can # assured are ¢ a rep. EXAMINATION Obey That Eve Impulse and Visit Wilson Today * DR v 81 FRE Insist LADY Opposite Coiman building t workmanship at my in t As business grows will be able to give you more. nd n in the Northwest—every modern equip. t me mplete finest and my r lady Plate department has no equal. patients. ed and the dentists wash their hands. would wish,no matter how fp illed upon to pay for in a small offic advertised price all over the state, and men my guidance, have had wand: owing what is good dentistry, I clair sterill You can rest raicular you are. Naw, com , and remember you get this you utation under have ful suce who bent years tn my t of my success, Best Crowns , Best Bridgework. Best Plates +++ $10.00 Painless Extraction. .$1.00 BE ent Dr. All Work Guaranteed . J.T -WISO O% FIRST AVENUE ¥ Phone Elliott 1833 th " Nowadays we accept the Turkish \ crescent as a-symbol of harems and An a matter of fact | the crescent was @ Christian symbol }up to the time the Turks captured " when crescent &s a symbol of When the Turks failed to capture Vienna by force, in the 16th century, to mine the walls. I married a man|The city’s bakeries were under these when the mine workers He) got near the fortifications, the bak- to stag parties ory heard them, gave the alarm and of celebrating, the Jer than I| bakers made their bread in crescent From this incident we have our present-day crescent shape Vien- it strange how cus- ere ee