The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 12, 1920, Page 16

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— 4] RTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL BENEF MITCHELL COUTTS Editor of The Star BY BEULAH Bootety IT m MONDAY PRACTICE CLUB will give a musionl tea, at the home ‘@f Mrs, Thomas Green, 954 Nérth Broadway, on Thuraday afternoon, ‘Por the benefit of the Broadway guild of the Orthopedic hospital. The tea ‘Urne will be in charge of Mre. H. J. Fetter and Mra. Wallace Green Collins, | Qasinted by Miss Mary Dudley Walk- Miss Dorothy Ewing, Misa Judithe Miss Lucile Green, Miss Jerome, mm Latty Mra. Farwell Putna: : coos Dwight Fiske ira’ Mre, Adam Beeler Mra. Hildreth at the ptano renDalay Wood Hildreth Mra. Lilly at the plano ‘Mra John Henry Baitinger, Mrs. Frederick Adams, Mra Adam Beeler and Mre. Clare Fameworth ‘Bre, Frederick Bentley at the piano eee Shop Hostesses | Miss Hazel Allen and Miss Rerna- @etta Barbour will be tn charge of The Pansant Saturday afternoon at the Jumble Shop. * “Judge and Mrs. Stephen J. Chad- will entertain with an informal this evening at their home in of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Baxter. eee cale and Tea Nelile Cornish will be hostess musical tea in her apartment at Cornish school on Sunday after to honor Mrs. Margaret Pren- McLean. Mrs. Keith L. Bullitt ‘Mra; Edgar F. Ames will preside st violinist, and Mr. F. Boyd “TELEPHONE the So- ciety Editor of The Si ‘fice, Main 600; Home, Main 2761. Latncheon In honor of Miss Alice Arenson, [who is to be a bride of this month, on Tuesday, Mrs. M. Hamberger en tertained at Hotel Washington at a luncheon of twelve covers. Corsage |houquets of sweet peas, liliesof-the valley and Bride roses were favors at each place eee Tea for Miss Spaulding Mrs. Robert D. Pike will be hostess at an informal tea, at her home, on Saturday afternoon, in honor of Mise Helen Spaulding, who is to be an Master bride, Mre. Cari Gibson will preeide at the tea table and be aasist- ed by Miss Estetlo Hopkins, Miss Be- atrice Cox, Miss Marie Carlson and Miss Ruby Mc: Miss Crane to Wed | Mrs, Charles E. Crane announces |the engagement of her daughter, Marguerite, to Mr. Leo Gneey, The wedding will take place the latter part of this month. ee Miss Aronson Arranges Bridal Party Miss Alice Theres Aronson, whose vice, following which will be a din- nerdance -|Gamma Delta will hoki their menth- BY CORA MOORE New York’s Fashion Authority Whee amall trim hats of spring lose their charm as the days length- en into real summer, soft, frilly hats will be ready to take their place, as they have every summer in memory. This year designers are favoring chiffons and tulles with brims droop FOR SATURDAY , UBS Sorerity Meeting ‘The Iota Ajumn! chapter of Alpha cL |ly meeting on Saturday afternoon et 2:30, at the chapter house, 4534 Unt | versity boulevard. : eee Hyland Park Improvement Gab The Hyland Park Improvement club will give @ social Saturday eve ning, March 13, at 8 o'clock at the Hyland Park ehurch. The club will ,| ning. 7 to 9. Free to all girls. the beauty and beauty. For having introduced us to this later progeny, thereby en- riching eur imaginative life, he has but added to the debt which Irish Uterature owes to him.” Following the lecture Mra. Joseph K. Manning sang @ group of “Moore's Melodies,” and the program closed with an interesting paper, “Ireland tn Drama, Song and Story,” by Mra Leroy Stetson. An informal tea followed, Mrs, Wheeler being amisted by her daughter, Mra. Victor Zednick. FOR THE INVALID The first thing to think of in pre paring for an invalid is to make evorything look attractive. An ill a muddle and ing to aick nerves and makes seem to be an effort. And another rock to steer clear from is the tendency on the part of a well person to serve too much. In one’s anxiety to give nourishment to a weak body the inclination to make @ big custard is great. But a small custard all eaten up leaving a whetted appetite will do more good than a big one half eaten leaving a satiated appetite. SHE HAS FOUR JOBS -| JEAN KANTNER IS ; Mrs. Helen Rj jolt, Mrs. C. K. Rodgers, Mrw. J. M. Elliott and Mrs. F. H. Hitchings | Reception and decorating and the floor managers are Mra. King, Mrs. | P. P. Bliss and Mrs. Bracken. eee ADDITIONAL CLUBS ¥%W.GQA Now ts the time to learn to play tennis, volley ball and roller skate at the Y. W. C. A. every Friday eve-| A special class’ tn the gymnastum for business girls from 6 to 1, Fr Gays, is starting at the Y. W.C. A. eee Capitol W. C. T. U. Hill W. C. T. U. wilt hold meeting at the home of Callum, 1247 18th ave. 16, at 11 a. m. Luncheon and a program of good gtven, eee Degree of Honor A novel entertainment has been planned by the No. 7 Degree of A. O. U. W., for the evening March 16 in Fivergreen hall, Ar- building, 9 p. m. Progresstve will be played. Many charac fy J. H a? z i Chiffon Hat for Days of Summer Sunshine ae Binney wears a large hat of shell pink chiffon which fMlustrates the mods. Low over the eyes, and flar ing slightly higher in the back, the hat is trimmed only with a band of blue grosgrain ribbon of medium width at the base of the crown, and one upstanding conventional blue flower at the side of the front. The crown is shirred tn upon cords at in tervals, Dr. T. Haieh, of China, who has been in the city three weeks, ad- dressing various cluba, and elames at the University of Washington, left . D. Farrell, who has been wintering in California, is at the Rainier club. Mrs. Farrell, Miss Far- rell and Mr. James Farrell, Jr., will arrive Inter, to take up their resi- dence here, eee Miss Dorothy Wlestling wif ar rive Saturday from an extended so- Journ in California and Oregon. eee Miss Margaret Ames left yester- @ay for Portland to spend a week. er ie Miss Emily Jerome, who ts attend- ing school in Aurora, N. Y, will ar rive on Tuesday to spend the Kaster vacation with her family, eee Miss Helene Jesmer, daughter of Mra. H. B. Jesmer, 6407 Brooklyn ave. arrived today from the East, after having completed a successful season with the Florenz Ziegfeld “Follies” Company, and will be the guest of her parents for two months, after which tim 6 will depart for New York, to again prepare herself for Mf. Ziegfeld’s next year’s offer- ing. Miss Jesmer has been the guest of Mr. and Mra F. D. Rollins, of Minneapolis, for several days. Pity Plight of Bess Stafford ‘will step out of the comic supple te and assist in the entertain. Fairview P.-T. A. Dramatic entertainment will be given tonight at the Fairview schoo! by Mrs. Myron Smith, a graduate of the Cunnock School of oratory of » A musical program will complete the evening’s pleasure. The proceeds are for the benefit of the Fairview P.-T. A. eee Franklin P.-T. A. The P-T. A. of the Franklin High school will hold “Fathers’ night” Fri day evening, March 19, at 8 p, m, The dramatic club of the schoo! will assist. Special musical numbers will be given and Mr. Henry R. King of the school board will deliver an ad- dress, eee St. Patrick’s Bazaar A St. Patrick's Social and Apron bazaar will be held at Caswell hall, Mt. View station, Tuesday evening, March 16, at 8 p.m. Cards, dancing and a program of novel features are promined. Refreshments will be served. . John Hay P.-T. A. ‘The John Hay P.-T. A. held a meet- ing on Tuesday, March 9. The fol- lowing program was given (1) Songs by Miss Aitken; (2) dram- atization of “The Lion and the Mouse” by the boys of Miss Conners’ clase; (3) group of songs by Miss Iverson's class; (4) garden talk by Mr. Chapman; (5) school orchestra work by Miss Adella Parker; (6) round table discussion, HEARD IN CONCERT Jean Kantner, boy nightingale, Bess Stafford Pity the plight of Bess Stafford. She decided on a stage career, and yearned to be an emotional actress, Then some manager discovered sho could make people laugh. Since then they have made it worth while for her to forget all about serious roles and have cast her in every kind of part—including blackface. She comes to the Metropolitan to play the part of the maid in “Twin Beds.” . sae in cath Acs Hsin BONELESS BIRDS Use 1 slice of veal steak, % pound bacon, 1 medium sized onion, and salt and pepper. Cut steak in strips the also of bacon, Mince onion. Season veal with salt and pepper, remembering & the bacon contains a largo jount of salt. On a piece of veal put a slice of bacon and sprinkle bacon with a little onion. Roll up and tle, Fry until brown, then cover with boiling water and simmer 1% Mac hours, Make « gravy in the pan the meat was cooked in, = GIRL’S HASTY MA Dear Miss Grey: Tho 18 years old, and married, I have everything a girl could expect except the man I love. Be- lieving that he was killed in France, and having no place to call home, and,to save myself from probable disgrace of some kind, I married another man, Oh, Miss Grey, I wasn’t brave, was I? I can never say that I loved my husband, altho L have been kind and have tried to show him that I did love him, but with great effort. He is a good man, and I know there is a mate for him in this world somewhere. Tell me, how am I to pve him my love when it does not belong to him? I want to what is right for my baby’s sake, for I love him so much I could die for that boy of mine. I cannot make my husband think I love him when I do not. I would have to pass that man by that I do love if I saw him on the street, for I have not done him justice, be- cause I am married Don’t, please, neglect to answer. BLUE EYES. You were not very brave tn the past; but that need not figure in the future, except, perhaps, to make you more courageous. Your hasty marriage has, no doubt, muddled up your life somewhat; but the injustice you did your former sweetheart could not fe nageey | be undone by leaving your husband and ivi im of his son, and your son of a father's love and protection. No, that would not be justice. Such an action would bri years of untold agony and retribution down upon your head, even tho you should later marry the man youtlove. You would not only bring unhappiness to yourself, your husband and son, but to the man you love also. Your marriage can never be undone, so make the most of it. You have an oppo-tunity jks fag be the brave woman you would have been a few years Get that idea forever out of your head that your love does not belong to your husband. It doesn’t belong to the other man, as you seem to think, and if he is the brave soldier I believe him to be, he would not accept it if you were to offer LOST HER THE REAL LOVE HAT do YOU think? Write Cyn- thia Grey, care of The Seattle Star. perky feathers and absurd shoes in raw weather. Tennyson means m |to her than Browning, Maxficld Par ish more than Watteau. She will never be pledged to Greek and has no political aspirations, She rides in street cars and loves flowers without requiring them. She knows a cozy little place around the corner where dinners are served for 60 cents. She turns to look when children pass in the street. She is punctual in her appointments, and her linen waist is fag beaming at 8:30 in the morning as her georgette crepe at §:30 in the evening. Quite frankly she powders her nose, and entertains him in the apartment she shares with the ribbon counter girl, without commenting on the conventions she breaks. “She adores window shopping. She is quick to sense a mood. She knows the exquisite beauty of silence. Her intuition is as sensitive as her sym- pathy. Her smile ax genuine as her tears. Somehow, somewhere, out of the accumulated racial experience of women, there has come to her the \art of mothering a man, As a wife and mother she would be more apt to meet a fellow half-way than the co-ed —she would be more apt to give all, if necessary, while the college-bred woman would expect to receive. “A STUDENT.” EARN STEADILY, SPEND WISELY, SAVE SANELY The Extension Division of the} Home Economics Department of the University of Washington ts pre pared to furnish speakers to clubs, jor other organizations, wishing in formation the Government's Thrift plan for the women. The | movement in this state is called the on 6 |"Consumers’ Thrift Movement,” and kers will outline the work which may be done, will give definite fm |etruction om textiles, foods and \tslation pending. AppMcation for speaker should be made by calling the University and asking for Miss |Bthel Dean, executive secretary. % | Talks have recently been given |by Miss Frances Skinner to the - |erim Congregational Church You Married Women's Club on “Thril to the Hawthorne ParentTeacher® | Association on thing for School Chila"; and to the West | Woodland Parent-Teachers’ Associar tion on the, “Consumers’ Thrift | Movement.” Points in Miss Sidin= |ner’s talks have been the reasons” for the high cost of living, the |housewife’s way of meeting it and a definition of Thrift, “steady earn- |ing—wise spending—sane saving.” | Missy Elisabeth Amery, of the |Home Economics Department of the |Untversity of Washington, .appeared before the Young Married Women's Club of Pilgrim Congregational church on the subject of “Textiles,” She described fabrics and gave teste for quality, told how to wash wook ens and clean silks, and described economical substitutes for linen. * it. The future has in store for you peace and happi , and, perhaps, real love, too, if you will remain a faithful wife and mother. Make a brave effort to love your husband; keep the thought constantly in mind that he is your baby’ss daddy, and I’m sure your respect for him will at least border on that which is love. At any rate, “what can’t be cured, must be endured,” and “two wrongs can never make one right.” experience in life, and that without practical experience trade or profession in which tend to make your life's work, is experience in my business before I enjoyed the full benefita of my cob lege education, So it is with the majority of co-eds, unless they try to get in touch with the practical everyday problems of life, they never amount to very much as a wife. I'l say they have theory enough for a half dozen wives, but when it comes to good, practical, everyday j management, well, the poor husband needs all the sympathy we can gtve him. I am experienced in having for @ wife a coed, and it was to my sor row. Her education brought her above the highest God-given blessing to & womam—namely, motherhood. Motherhood was all right for our mothers and grandmothers, but not for the enlightaned, educated co-ed of today, As for cigarets, I have never smok- ed them myself, and my friends used to wonder whom I bought them for, and I was always ashamed to admit thag they were for my college girl wife and her educated friends, who smoked them at their afternoon teas, and over their bridge tables, or while they discussed the great social prob- Jems of our large cities. My wife had no more practical ideas of home management than the mouse, the elephant, or the mud-hole that the “Workingman” speaks of in his letter. She was continually in debt, and none of our help remained long because of her utter lack of practical knowledge of home man- agement, and home was not the most pleasant place for me to come I am now married to a former chorus girL She began her .career 18 Just a plain member of the chorus, and thru hard work and study be. came a principal in some of the largest musical comedies, and I will say, she has never smoked cigarets, or haa she ever had any soul mates; but she bas good, practical experi- ence, and a true conception of life, and knows real men and women when she comes in contact with them, and appfeciates them. She can cook and sew and does not have to refer to books of reference. Above all, she knows how to save and I noed never ask, “Is thie bill paid?” And when I need a real pal, whether it is in sunshine or rain, she is ft, and [ am not ashamed of her anywhere The joke of it all is, I have never had to put a ban on rouge and make up, the way the professors of some of our higher educational institutions have had recently to do. If “Workingman"” must condemn the modern chorus girl, J am forced to believe it is because he has never come in contact with her in actual life. A man generally finds the level | he seeks. I am not condemning all of the college girls. There are many fine woman among them, and they make the best of wives because they try to be practical ag well as theoret- feal, and it is because so many col lege graduates do not become prac- tical and roll up their sleeves and be just plain men and women that so many of them are failures, #0 far as their education is concerned. So, finally, in answer to tho ques- tion, I will say again, give me the chorus girl in preference to the co-ed for a wife, I'll say, from real expert- ence, we have a real’ home, and it is indeed a real pleasure for me to come to it after a hard day's work. A PLAIN CITIZEN, Dear Miss Grey: Let me, as a col lege man, say a few words to those who think a college woman will make {* better wife than a chorus girl. Granting that the two types come equally the chorus giris, or any gtri who has won ber own way, would be my choice, D. D. I submit the following article by a fellow student: “Commentators en American uni- versity life have remarked a curious disinclination on the part of univers ity men to marry untversity women. Several generations of statistictans have observed it, and aasigned to it & variety of causes. “In most cases these investigations have been pleased to believe that college women are educated beyond the point of desiring marriage, find ing sufficiency in the higher strata of that life they have been priviliged to enter, “With such a conctusion we are bound to disagree, feeling it an un- deserved indictment of an educational system with admitted imperfections, but none so damning, at that, of un sexing the women it professes to de velop, “The university man does not make his choice hastily, or without thought. For four years he dances attendance to the call of the university girl. He dines her and canoes her, and matches her in termis—at last, he does NOT marry her. “What curious perversity is this? Formed in the sume motld, subjected to the same astimali, possessed of the same intellectual and morai heritage, what Pied Piper of contradictions leads him away? “It ts a subject worthy of consider ation. Not assuming the authority to speak the final word, we beg the privilege of offering comment based on observation. “After four years of exposure to the charm of the university women, the university man marries the girl downtown, the office girl, the shop girl, typist, trimmer, what not? Four years to study the pearl, and he chooses a knick-knack. She wears Your Word Is Good As Gold at Cherry’s CHERRY CHAT We mean Ifteraly that your word is as good as gold at Cherry's. Your pramise to pay wil be ac cepted here as readily as cash, for any articles of ap parel you wish to buy. We believe in the inherent honesty of the average person, and after many years of dealing on this basia, we have no reason to change our mind. Come in and make your selectians from our extensive stock of fashionable apparel for men, women and boys. Cherry's Style Shop, 207 Rialto Bldg, over Pig’n Whistle, Second Ave, be tween Madison and Spring. FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BIG Fruit Trees In Quantity, Variety ROSES 25,000 in 200 Leading Varieties YES! NURSERY STOCK OF ALL KINDS SsEEDS———_F | SPRAY MAT MAIL ORDER SERVICE Send for Planting Guide and Price List ATTENTION! | Owners of the—— Hectris Washer SWiringer As your CRYSTAL hummed through a big wash you have probably wondered what kind of mechanism it com- tained. On account of all the gears and working parts being enclosed se as not to be dangerous you can not sée the “Insides” at work. ; Special : Demonstrating Machine We have just received a demonstrating model with the runs you can see why you never have to touch an oil ca to your Crystal on account of the automatic oiling system, how smoothly the steel cut gears fit into each other. You will appreciate your Crystal even more than you do now after you see this demonstration. At Last-A Sanite Clothes Dryer! The CANTON SANITARY DRYER is the only di cabinet on the market that is thoroughly ventilated while. clothes ‘are being dried and is a most convenient and eco © nomical laundry accessory. No modern laundry is complete | without a dryer. Drop in and let us show you what a prac tical utility this is. Sold on very easy terms. The NEW PREMIER not only combines the vacuum suc- tion method of cleaning and the bristle brush method of picking up all surface dirt, but it adds a third and en exclusive feature, a motor driven brush with soft es fingers that actually pick up all dirt, threads and lint the same as you would with your own fingers. When buying * a cleaner you might as well get the latest improvements. The cost is no more. We sell the NEW PREMIER on the easiest kind of terms. Crown Portable Sewing Machines Simplex and Thor Ironers Largest Stock of Washing Machines in North Pacific THE LIGHTHOUSE, 2 418-420 UNION STREET, SEATTLE Aberdeen Lighthouse Bremerton Light 102 South G St house 421% Washington Ave. Yakima Lighthouse Everett Lighthouse 26 South First 2802 Colt St FREE BOOK FREE BOOK ELECTRIC UTILITIES FOR THE HOME THE LIGHTHOUSE, INC., 418-420 Union Street, Seattle, Wash.: Please send me your beautifully illustrated book on t of the clectric washer. Iam to be under no obligations. NAME. ADDRESS. TOWN. ... 08 AGENTS WANTED In e in Washington. If you would like to represent us without tn- Yootnent, ‘put an ta ihiebon housing on important parts cut away. When this machine — ; how the ball bearings in the motor smoothly operate an@ ~

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