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| DANCE GIVEN BY MR. AND MRS. FRED H. BAXTER AT THE YACHT CLUB UN BRILLIANT AND USUALLY SUCCESSFUL BY BEULAH MITCHELL COUTTS Society Editor of The Stor DANCE GIVEN LAST EVEN ING AT THE YACHT CLUB by Mr. T . Fred Hudson Baxter for the pleasure of their daughter, Miss res ‘semen was particularly enjoyable on account of its being prob- ably the last gathering of the season t. The Yacht club, bet there this summer, was aglow wi! which harmonized exquisitely with giadioli room a shining red ite happy welcome to the moon encircled by : Dinner Ag at nis Clu gon Darthea Sharples has Dbidden | twelve guests to dinner at the reg | lar fortnightly dinner dance at the | Tennis club for the purpose of meet: | tng ber house eS rT Mrs. White to Entertain | Miss Elizabeth Lyman, the house quest of Miss Darthea Sharples, and Miss Katherine Jerome, a popular bride-clect, will be the complimented guests at a bridge party to be given by Mra. Russell Hubbard White in) her apartments on Thursday after} geass eee Mrs. Brophy to Be Honored Miss Hazel McMillan will enter-/ tain a few friends with an informal bridge at her home Tuesday after-| noon for the pleasure of Mrs. Frank Cullen Brophy, who is leaving soon for her home in Arizona, after hav-| ing enjoyed the summer as the guest | of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry | and dahlias placed thruout the reoma. where all of the youngtr set could be in itself so reminiscent of the many glorious times th vivid autumn leaves, the colors of huge baskets of African marigolds, In the center of the ball- a sky of multtcolored balloons amiled 200 merry dancers. A buffet supper was served from @ table beautiful with striking baskets of asters, ee DATES To Remember MONDAY, AUGUST 30— Mra. Cectl Bacon and Mra Stephen Cook to entertain at luncheon In honor of Mra. Sherwood Gilleepy of Portiand. Hons call Knee. 166, THURSDAY, SEPTEMDER ‘Mr. and Mra Arehtbald C. dance at the Taent club in honor of their daughter, Mise Betty De oe De Voo's jaw’e luncheon at im compliment to Mra Scott Bone Sunset ctud for Mise oy , SEPTEMBER s— jon for Mr and Mre Prank BR Cooper at the Women’s Uni- Yorsity club, with Heheol Women's loague as hostesses, Mystery porch and garden party at home of Mise Kathieen Gaffney for the purpose of raist for the Social Service club for working giria RRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10— At home for Mise Eleanor Keith, Mine Irene Fisher and Mine Alice ut funda home Winlock, Wash, / + eee Miss Jerome and Miss Fisher to Be ‘omplimented ee Singleton and Miss Grace Fischer are planning a tea to be given Wednesday, September sth, the home of Miss Singleton for of Miss Katherine and Miss Irene Fisher, two whose approaching nuptials are cause of much delightful enter- 3 Urs. Bausman Hostess Miss Anna Sawyer was this after. moon the feted guest at a pretty in- tea when Mrs. Frederick Bauman invited to her home a num- Ber of the members of the Mills Col- lege club. Miss Sawyer, Sa Francisco, fs the librarian of Mills college and is well known, as a conse- quence, by all those who have, at at Washington Next Tuesday afternoon, from 2 until & o'clock, the Hote! Washing- ton will be the scene of one of the most brilliant affairs of the season when the 600 invited guests will con- vene to enjoy the musicale tea at which Mrs. Delphine M. Johnson will act as hostess, Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. Jessie M. Lightfoot, Mrs. M. J. Carrigan, Mrs. 1. K. Maxham, Mrs. J. W. Dunn and Mrs. H. H. A. Hastings. Also will be Miss Catherine BryanSMiss Betty Jackson, Miss Virginia Jackson and Miss Lucile| Cariberg. Washington Park Tennis Club Tea Mrs. Carrie E. Coe and Mrs. Her- bert E. Coe were hostesses this’ after- hoon at an enjoyable tea given at the Coe residence by the Washing- ton Park Tennis club. eee Marriage Announced Mr. and Mrs. George F. Sherwood announce the marriage of their daughter Florence to Mr. Horace M. Miller, son of Dr. H. C. Miller of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Miller wiil make their home in Portand. F; . . Shower for Bride-to-Be Miss Hattie Carlson, an October bride, was honor guest Wednesday evening at a miscellaneous shower given by Miss Gladys Cole, Miss E4éna Hindman and Miss Gladys Hamley at Miss Cole's home, on Brooklyn ave. N. A profusion of pink sweet peas was artistically used about the rooms. The centerpiece in the dining room, where a buffet luncheon wag served, featured a min- ature bride. ity sisters of Miss Carlson, in Alpha Chi Omega. eee Impromptu at Home A charmingly informal at home was given Wednesday evening by Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Webster previous to their departure for Europe. About 60 friends called during the evening to wish the host and hostess a happy voyage and & speedy return. * taf, Betrothal Announced Mr. and Mra. W. W. Ristine an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Audrey, to Mr. Harold Liewellyn Ellis, son of Dr. William Ellis of Minneapolis, Minn. Mr. El- lis served with the royal army medi- cal corps overseas and Miss Pistine is a graduate nurse of Providence hospital. The wedding will take plac the latter part of September. SMART JEWELRY OF GENUINE IVORY The sroartest jewelry that is now found in New York ie made of gen wine ivory. It consists of pendants bracelets and necklaces. The brace: lets are simply made, without adorn ment and the necklaces are long strands of round, smooth beads of @ratuated size. The guests were soror- | Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hastings-on-the-Hudson, are receiv ing congratulations upon the birth of two baby boys Friday, August 27. eee Perry, at Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gilman left this morning by motor for California for & few weeks’ tour, eee Miss Evely@ Nichols wil leave the first of September for Portland, Ore., where she will enter St. Helen's Hall, Mr. and Mra. J. V. Hansen, of Washington, D.C. who have been registered at the Hotel Washington for the past few days, left today for an extended trip thru Southern Cali fornia and the Orient before return- ing to their home, eee Mrs. H. J. Maury, of Winlock, Wash. and her children are the uests this week of Judge and Mrs. 8. J. Chadwick. eee Mr. and Mra. Morton McKinley Taubman returned on Friday from their wedding trip and are moving Dr. Mildred Purman, with her sis ter, Miss Elizabeth Purman, of Washington, D. C., who have been guests of Mra. Lee H. Wakefield, at Port Water, Alaska, returned to @e- attle on Thursday, eee Mise Kathleen Donahoe returned Thursday from a month's visit at Swan Lake, Mont., and @ trip thru Glacier National park. eee Mise Margaret Prosser will return Saturday from a two weeks’ vacation spent at Wing point. eee Mr. Talbot Campbet! will leave the tenth of September to enter the Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology at Boston. offices from the Green building to the Roosevelt clinic on September 1 eee Mr. Donald Fisher returned Thurs | day from a week spent in Southern Oregon. eee Mrs. Henry Phillips and baby | their home Thursday from the Minor hospital. eee Miss Phyllis Blake returned last |evening from Lake Chelan, where she has been for the last month eee | Mrs. G. T. Myers returned Friday | Morning from @ three woeks’ visit at | Wing point, cee |__Mr. and Mrs. Bruce F. Morgan and | Mrs. J. B. Schneider returned Thurs- |day from a week's stay at Lake Crescent. eee Mr. and Mrs. Horace M. Hall and Mrs. Nannie A. Hall are leaving to- morrow by motor for Spokane and Newman lake, where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs, Jesse Hall, eee Mr. and Mrs, Charles Borie Rhodes and children will remain thru the winter months in their home at Three Tree point, eee Mr. and Mrs, LeRoy Danby Lewis and children have taken an apart. ment at Gerrish hall, eee Mr. and Mrs. Fred P, Myer left last night for Portland. Mrs, Myer will return in a few days and Mr. Myer will proceed to California en route to his home in Chicago. eee Justice Charles B. Brewer and Justice Charles S. Jones, of the U. 8, supreme court at Washington, D, are guests at the Hotel Sorrento, eee Miss Betty Craft, of Bellingham, who is staying until Sunday with Miss Karla and Miss Claire Stolten berg, will leave at that time for Med. ford, Ore., to visit with Mr. and Mra Frederick Palouse for two weeks. Mina Craft ia expected to again stop in Seattle on her return to Belling: ham, and Mrs. John A. Colman, of rence —A play dealing with the musty but evernew problems of Capital and Labor, There ia neither soap-boz nor club lounge propaganda | here. LITTLE ESSAYS, trom the writ Tabloid Book Reviews TOUCH AND GO, by D. H. Law-|must understand the Russian peas | THE SEATTLE STAR Mary Frances, Frank Thomas and John Anderson, Jr., the three beautiful children of Mr. East Seattle. —Photo by Snow. ! REMOVING PITS , FROM CLINGSTONES | ‘The variety of peaches known as | clingwtones are usually avoided by the housekeeper when she cans on account of the difficulty of stoning them, ant, who ia not, popular cartoonists | |to the contrary, a bewhiskered in-! | dividual with a penchant for round, | sputtering bomba. But there is a way to remove the THE LAND OF THE BLESSED "t0Ne* that maken it ponsibie to use VIRGIN, by W rset Maugham, | t20#® peaches and as the clingstones ashiour Drama CHOOSE QUIET COLORS IF INC IS SMALL bog Yor — woman who haa s | Every Flower om Has a Story CLUBS FOR MONDAY = All Its Own income. it" in. weer 40 chose aad Benedict —— pc eel pe BACHELOR BUTTONS colors for her costumes, look, witeest a dis toe of Mra. Anna| ‘This flower is slgnifieant or what Saver ae ee pion the gayer ndica ve P | shader p the wearer MykiAhust, 4019 Ashworth ave, on |it# name indi ibacy lof the latter, 000 tires A suit can be ened up with a brightcolored the splashy little sashes for It has never been decided why the Monday at § ro ig name bachelor buttons was given te FE Jomen's Republican Club Meets |this Gower. It in, however, almost | 10% My * Monday Noon as well known under the name of |"! ‘The ‘« King County Repub | cornflower. | he gsc bao! f ‘The ancients attributed wonder |""*% And his garments were o¢ lean club will meet Monday noon at same hue am the blue Meves cafeteria, Senator Wesley L. flowers, is to this flower.| morning he found ‘os ful healing propert erie 4 Bheritt John Stringer will| An eyewash was prepared from/ ries ang Soins arenes. Mr. Albert Grun-|its leaves which had extraordinary |," ..' eg yt yo - pe | stadt will give vocal solos, The meet. | results. lin. deep oeeee, tennee f nH to the public. An old tradition among country | formed hin gules ° Aan folk says that it cast a magica) a the flower be had loved op Orthopedic Tea Shop influence over the fortunes of lov An inviting menu bas been'ers, The flower was to be icked|,, "ere ee nigel Cranes planned for luncheon on Monday at|with the morning dew still on it } the ol English nursery rhyme, If, after carrying it for 24 hours lin the pocket the color was stil! fresh and bright, the wearer would be succersful in his wooing. It tn waid that the expression, “true blue,” joriginated from this custom. The |cornflower was also used as a love philter, A modern superstition is strong will also aasiat. that acquaintances made among Ah Fe cornflowers will prove very valu-| ADDITIONAL CLUBS able. A Greek myth tells of Cyanus. who was very devoted to Flora | the goddess of flowers, Of all her the Uttle Orthopedic tea shop. Dur- ing the coming week Mra. W. C Pardelian will act as hostess and will be aasdsted by Mra RL. Slo cum, Mra. Charlies Wood and Mrs. Henry Robinson. Miss Julia Ripley, Mise Helen Bornstein, Miss Elva Saunders and Miss Margaret Arm $5.00 $7.50 $10.09 DR. E. 0. MANN 3000 Arcade Building Oppanite Hevater ‘Trottqgs Club to Hold Dances The Trotters club announcte a series of weekly Thursday night dances, beginning September 2nd, at the Shrine auditorium, Masonic tem ple. Byncopated orchestra. The! committees in charge of arrange mente is as follows: Mr, Chartes B.) Simpeon, Mr. H. J, Nutting, Mr. A J, Gibson and Mr, G. G, Simpron. ‘These dances are to be informal. eee Rainier Beach Women's Ciub to Meet The Rainier Beach Women's club will meet at the home of Mra. C. J Sturtevant, 9320 Waters ave., on Wednesday, September ist, at 2 o'clock, There will be a municale and Mra, E, Bowman will speak on the Bible and current eventa The afternoon's program will be in charge of Mra, W. & Walker and Mra. George Grant. ee ¥. W. C. A. Swimming Pool Clesed for Repairs From Monday, August 30th, until September 7th, the swimming pool at the ¥. W. C. A. will be closed, sub ject to repairs, The gymnasium and swimming classes will resume their work after September 7th, at which time registration for health clanses, to continue during the win ter months, will be open to all mem bers of the ¥. W. C. A. Report on the seventh floor of the building and jlearn the full particulars. oe realm, he loved the cornflower best bloom he woul fields where When it was in seldom leave the it? METROPOLITAN Svsoav orn” LET ME INTRODUCE MYSE [AM VENUS YOU WILL SEE MEIN MARCUS SHOW OF 1920 AND Of! BABY! WHAT BEAUTIFUL GIR! am 50c to $2 ta. BEREGERPSRERERE-RS"E 97 89998 839 ZEaer nee mes ORDERS NOW es BETES Sy ELSE bs A. 0. R. C. to Meet for Business ‘The ladies’ auxiliary to the Order ot Railway Conductors will hold a | business meeting tn Foresters’ hall Friday, September rd, at 2 p.m. All members requested to be present Dr. J. C. Moore will remove his | daughter, Barbara Ann, returned to| ings of George Santayana, collected |—Lounging thra the land of Murtilo | ian Deareatt’ Soak —Nearly |890 Velasquez with an impression: | 115 te easays on human nature, re-| bie English novelist, @ decided im ligion, art, poetry, materialism and | Prevement on the usual professorial morals; the serene and dignified mus | Joe trot. | ing of one of America’s most charny ing philosophers. cron ian sane oF REEK STORIES, | tt of the Biindloss fiction factory. Hearne fi oor BM vend and THE LIGHT HEART, by Maurice Aristides Phoutrides,—Fatalistic and | Hewilett—An adventure story for! |xomber stories with little of the | YOUns readers, of life in the days of mystic fire of the old Greek writers | ‘he Vikings The gods have come down from the| THE UNCENSORED LETTERS airy slopes of Olympus and are so OF A CANTEEN GIRL.—Amuning | journing in the swampa. jletters of a girl serving with the) | TWENTIETH CENTURY Am*rican forces, | FRENCH WRITERS, by Mme.| WARREN G. HARDING —THE| |Mary Duclaux—For 200 years the MAN, by Joe Chapple.—Campaign | | main stream of the world's literature | gilt applied to a somewhat battered has run thru Paris; this volume of | phonograph. Intensive critietem js helpful in gain: | ing an insight into the work of “| CURE FOR BOIL great modern French writers, |_ THE RUSSIAN PEASANT AND| 4 simple but effective cure for is to apply the ekin of a THE REVOLUTION, by Maurice G.|& boil Hindus.—To understand Russia a | botled eee. This will draw off pus most difficult thing these days—one' and remove soreness in a few hours. MATS. The WILKES Stxoir PLAYERS WED. and SAT. Ofter Next Week Something Exceptional in— “At 9:45” WILLIAM A. BRADY'S BIG DRAMATIC SUCCESS Mats, 27c to So aca WILKES Last “NO MORE TIME TONIGHT BLONDES” fusans ™ | Even, 25e to $1.00 PANTAGES Matinees—2:30 Nighta—7 20 BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEB Vaudeville’s Meledious Hit ° “Revue de Luxe” Merry Whirl ef So Peasy Mciatesh an: PAGE AND and Dance, with Harry Sigman, Lola Van—and Six Pretty Girls, GRAY ELM CITY FOUR CE i [1 <2, Coleman and Ray Le Rue and Dupre “in Details” Pa Sand Artiats Season's Dikgest Thrill Four Hursleys tional Aerial Gymnasta dd epinode of “The Lost 2Be. Nigh: are often the canning them. Before peeling cut with a sharp knife around the Peach, following the THE WILDERNESS MINE, by | "%™ 0D the fruit. larold Blindloaa—The latest 4 | twiet one-half off the other. Withea sharp-pointed knife from the half that holds it. The fruit must not be over-ripe for the Seah will crush and the skin atip | in the twisting 1 ! eae "| = yt Mr CONCERT ORCHESTRA YOUR FIRST CHOICE MI i til Ton lt rit CONCERT ORCHESTRA NUMBERS Selection—“The Red Song—"Daddy, You've Been a Mother to Me” finest favored and firmest peach it is well worth while Then @ cut the Le Visiting members of the order will be welcome. PEACH CUP om julekly reo) t iy | Put the peaches, sliced, tn high- standing sherbert glasses, one peach for each glass. Fill the glass with Fn fee and pour raspberry sauce wer the whol stone MISCHIEF AKERS” THE OFFERING FOR THE WEEK, WITH A CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE SUNDAY, OF THE LEVY’S MUSICAL COM- EDY COMPANY IS JUST THE SORT, OF AMUSEMENT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR— OSCAR GERARD POPULAR SWEDISH COME- DIAN, WILL APPEAR IN ONE OF HIS FUNNIEST ROLES THIS SEASON, SUPPORTED BY ROBERT LORENZO ITALIAN COMEDIAN, WHO IS JUST AS FUNNY AS_ EVER, WHILE THEY WILL BE AF- FORDED THE BEST OF SUP- PORT BY A SPLENDID CAST OF 35 STARS, A BIG $2.00 SHOW FOR 40c —THAT’S WHAT WE ARE GIv- ING SEATTLE EVERY WEEK —IF YOU DON’T BELIEVE US, “YOU HAVE EYES, SEE FOR YOURSELF.” BIG GORGEOUS NOVELTY OFFERINGS —Are always one of our big fea- tures, with the dainty sun-kissed chorus of | | TWENTY PEACHES RATRE MEDI with AN i ‘inna nine OROUS and Ikable—whtm- eal and human—ready to laugh or to fight at the drop of @ hat—that's HARRY CAREY in his latest big production, “BLUE STREAK McCOY.”§ A stirring outdoors story rich with romance and winding up with one of the most desperate fights you ever gaw on the ecreen, Don't miss this picture—it's the real thing. MII",......Victor Herbert MR. VAI HUBER ~- CONDUCTOR EVERY MAN AN ARTIST Snub Pollard Comedy “MONEY TO BURN” Topics of the Day International News |