Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. SANDEFER pert t the affair. ‘ eee Bridge and Shower Entertaining for Miss Katherine Mra. B. H. Hamlin has ex x Pope for a bridge and . at her apartment tn the Olym- ‘pian, Wednesday, September 16. ing Affair for Jerome ted guest at a delightful tea given by Mins Elisabeth at the Sunset club yester | ‘The hostess was as mother, Mrs. & J.) len Virginls and Miss Marion Wiley yesterday afternoon b@ delightful toa at their home in| : Presiding over ‘Powell, who were assisted by Kathicen Donahoe, Mis¢ Dor- Ewing, Miss Ellen Messer and Aah Lon Bowell. : ) at Yacht Club Wlonoring Mr. and Mrs. Donald Graham of Boston, Miss rene Fisher and her fiance, Mr. 9 Leor Locke, also compli- to Miss Julia Clark of New dinner of sixteen covers win | Saturday evening, Septem HM, at the Yacht club, with Miss) Misa Grace Fischer te be hostesses on Turaday, Bep- 14, at the Singleton home, Merrill Frederick Sproul, Mrs. gl4 Goodnow Graham, Mrs. Wal Frederick Duthie and Mrs. M. Downs will alternate at the The following debutantes Deen invited to assist the host: Miss Mary Trimble, SMiss Leonard,“Mise Evelyn Miss Daniels will entertain | ‘@ dinner of fourteen covers this | at ber home. cee ive Dinner / Home » and Mrs. Clare E. Farnsworth hosts at a beautifully appointed of 20 covers last evening at residence. Dinner for Miss Sullivan As a farewell compliment to their guest, Miss Angela Hope Sulli of Dubaque, Ia., Mr. and Mrs. L. Harrington will entertain with dinner of twelve covers at their Wesidence this evening. eee iss Roberts Plans ge Lancheon Entertaining twenty of her friends, Miss Anona Roberts bas arranged a at the Rainier club for September 14. . . . Birthday Anniversary A number of friends of Mr, and irs. George Regan called at their Pe on Tuesday evening to cele the birthday of Mrs. Regas, - ing the evening music and dane 3 fing furnished the diversion. . a CLUBS FOR MONDAY Elsie Lincoln Benedict Club The Elsie Lincoln Benedict club | ‘Will meet Monday evening at 4 p. m.| gt the home of Mrs. Elizabeth | Drager, 901 E. Howell st. eee ADDITIONAL CLUBS Pastor's Aid Socictf to Meet ‘The September meeting of the Pastor's Aid society of the Bethany Presbyterian church will meet at the “Rome of Mrs. F. E. Bryant, 408 m Anne ave., at 2:30 o'clock | ell September 2, A full at fendance is requested and a special ipvitation is extended to all those whose birthdays occur in the month @f September. eee Chil Omega to Meet. ‘The meeting of the alumnae of Chi Omega sorority set for today at the home of Mrs. Nell Kantner in Byer. @tt has been postponed until Satur Gay, September 11, at her home. y eee wag Overseas Club 4 Overseas club will give the lant of fte suminer picnics Sunday. Leave Pier No. 3, Galbraith dock, at 9:15) 3 ® m. for Chico. Mrs. Emma Wees,| # @hairman. ee Mrs. Barton Guest of Honor A reception in honor of Mrs.) Maude Barton, supreme associate | matron of the supreme council, will be given by Seattle Court No. 1, Order of Amaranth, at 8 o’clock next Tuesday evening in the* Masonic Temple. All members are urged to be present. One bundred years ago, lumbering | $m the United States was confined to | ‘Mike Katherine Jerome was the) TO BE INORED AT LUNCHEON BY BEULAH MITCHELL COUTTS Soctety Editor of The Star GRORGE WILLIAM MERTENS HAS EXTENDED invitations for @ luncheon, to be given at her home Wednesday, in entertainment Mrs. Cleveland B. Sandefer, of Los Angeles, who leaves for her home Saturday. Only intimate friends of the honor guest have been bidden Mt the Golf club eompil- menting Commander Johnem, U. & NM, and Mre Johe- ton TURSDAY, Mra Trafford compliment Huteson. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6— Mre William L. Rhodes and Mre. Aubrey Wilton’s tea at Mrs Rhodew Mra Dea. and Clark, Jute Reception of Mra x Boucher and Mra _ Huteson’s tea tn to Mise Margaret eld Graham George ar Hole, with Mise Frances Old! 20 hostess. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11— Miss Jane Truas's dancing party at her home. At ihe Golf ciud com Mre. Granam and M rene Fisher, a Roberts’ lumcheon at ter chub, na Orthopedie with dance or the benefit axrres Hd of the ort et the Teeht club of the Roepital Tickets may be seeured from Mra F. Bases, Capiter «eit. Marriage Announced Mr. and Mra. Asa E. Schutt an nounce the marriage of their daugh- er, Alice, to Mr. Charles A. Shadel, in Tacoma, August 21. The news came & great surprise to their friends, as plans had been made for a te edding later in the autumn. J and Mrs. Shadel are on their M wedding journey, im and around Vancouver and Victoria, after which at home to thetr Dr. and Mrs. E. O. Mann and daughter, Miss Chariotte Mann. wil! motor to Mount Rainier for the holl- days, cee Captain J. S. Giheon returned last night from a two weeks’ trip to San Francisco. eee Mrs. C A. Peplow and daughter, Marton, returned Thursday evening. after having spent the past month in Oakland and San Francisca, oe Mrs. W. B. Shoemaker, who has been visiting in Los Angeles during the past month, returned Thursday evening to Bit home in this city, ee Miss Elisabeth Lyman, who has been visiting Miss Darthea Sharples for @ short time, will return to her home in Mamaroneck, N. Y. the latter part of next week. eee Mr, and Mra. W. Dwight Mead de- parted last night for Vancouver, B C,, @ spend the coming holiday. eee Mr. and Mrs. Percy H. Bamford are entertaining Mra, W. BE. McCabe and daughter, Miss Emily McCabe, who arrived this week from their home in Connecticut. eee Mr. and Mra. John Harding, who were recently married, are home from their wedding trip to British Columbia, Mrs. Harding was former- ly Miss Viola Geurnett. eee Mra. J. M. %. Atkingon and small daughter, Lydia Pride, returned this week from White Piaina, N. Y., where they have spent several months as the guest of Mrs. Atkin son's son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs, George Morrow, cee Mr. and Mra. L. M. Davenport of Spokane, accompanied by Mrs. Harry W. Hollis, left today for Mount Rain- ler to spend the weekend. . . Returning Thursday from a few days’ recreation at Shawnigan Lake, B.C. Dickinson. eee Lieut. and Mre, Leland W. Miller, who have spent several weeks in the city, guests at the Hotel Sor rento, are departing tomorrow for Oregon, thence to San Francisco, where Lieut. Miller will be sta tioned, oe Mra. M. Oliver and smafl son, who have been guests at the Hotel Pennington for some time, left last evening for her home in Wenatchee. ° . P. Mulvey and and Jerry, have taken an apartment at 1965 Kast Howell etreet for the winter. ee . EB children, Catherine Mr. and Mra Mrs. Donald Goodnow Graham and baby, of Boston, arrived last evening to be the guest of her par. ents, Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Fisher. Also arriving from her home in New York, to attend the Locke Fisher nuptials, was Miss Julia Clark, eee After spending several days in town, the guest of Mrs. Peter W Davison at Adrian Court, Mrs, N B, Solner returned to ber home to- day. were Mr. and Mrs. Alexander | R T In Seattle Conducted by DOROTHY FAY GOULD Ambrose Patterson’s Studio Party evening at the new studio on Senses | and Terry About 12 guests came, to meet Mr. | jis in the city for three weeks, on his way to Paria, | Owing to the inabitity of the honor | Guest to speak English fluently, the, evening was apent in looking over photographs of statues by Oriental | sculptors, Mr. Patterson has redec Orated the studio with a lavender and bright yellow color scheme that sets off the colorful things he so Ukes to paint. His recent work, done |™ the Olympics this summer (that will be on view at the North west artists’ exhibit this winter and at the fine arte department at the university, where Mr. Patterson teaches), were interestingly com mented upon. .fome show quite a radical change in atmoxphere, from the brilliant to the delicate in color | scheme, | Caird Leslie, of the Motropolitan Opera, Wayne Albee and Miss Mc Bride, ef the MeBride studio; Dr.| Edgars, one of the original founders of an art coterie in Seattle; Mra, | Bailie, and several others were Drea ent. Artista who know the Bohemian club In San Francise, the Clift | Dwellers, in Chicago, and Greenwich | Village, in New York, have always |hoped that @ nucleus of art producers might be collected in Seattle. A sim. ple studio party such as Mr. Patter. | fon knows from life in Brussels so | well how to give, is an Id way to! meet an artist and see frork critically and informally, | vee Oriental Sculpture at the Fine Arts When the Seattle Fing Arts opens Rext week for the fall season, one of the most interesting bits on view will be the three small bronze fig- ures by an Oriental seulptor, new to the Occident. Very peasant-like, eartily figures, representing the modernist's attitude toward realism, some say. Ambrose Patterson ts fascinated | with the knowledge of anatomy | they exhibit, but ta laymen pot} versed in the technique of “life work, the three figures will be more interesting for tho romance and-legend (hat surround then. The materns figured — called “Hymn of Eartu,” ag the artist, | Yasuda, explain means that “meny nice flowers grow from the grovnd. You like flowers very much. Very poetic. The ground never grows, but you must love it, too. All growing things ere net | |uke music. Make a song as they! wrow that fs like a hymn.” 7 crouching figure looks as if it w lenning over to catch this hymn. Yhe “Song of Spring’'-4s a very eur'ut, Egypitan looking malden, fhe suggests the flat work of Paul Munghip, whove head of Jon Ruckefeller wee such a ohar stu’y ax to take the breath away of the man ine’ned to glows a 16 telltale marks of ¢ reer. modeling is full and nice, rep resenting as Spring the figure of 047 MOpwre- The three sons of Mr. and Mre. Durand Hemion Home Portrait by Snow. SA LEMON SALAD ® young girt ef ei This rote it of any aity and, «> admirers say, the little figure delicate, in apite of the hundred pounds it wetghs. ‘The girt tursing Into a sea ser. | pent, just about to be engulfed by waver of green brone, is ered remarkable by techntolans but will pot appeal to the majority of Americans. Scary legends have no/| | Place in our history and are con-| Ambrose Patterson gave one of | sidered poor tate chiefly because hig small studio parties Wednesday | they lack the typical “happy end- No doubt such works of art | tell a story to the public of Oriental nations, and fascinate magazines enthrall ua. year courne Academy at brief stay in “patren,” fo on to at Paris, Like all at actor ete, in the Orient, he has adopted | work has a; juymon.” which in after | zines. & name * ADMISSION MATINER Adulte .. Children . Loge eee NIGHTS ArTER Adulte Children — Logea .., ADD TAX A PARAMOUNT ARTCRAFT PICTURE (¥ | tH iat Ti DNA a Your Old Friend JOE ROBERT ite supreme me: | i, but over it to the effect of the Fine Tokyo, and after neve: mMmakas conaid OLYMPIA—Land owned by Cas- Yasuda han, just finished the five | Per Btacheli, @wise, forfeited to state Arts | by order of supreme court becnuse he «| Claimed exemption trom military ser. Seattle, where his | Vice om grounds of being an alicn. & merchant, remains, wi!! New York and to study|a famous hero of his native prov Tho only 30 years old, hin peared in the art mage-| Walter Damrosch and the New artints, | ince. sup George Barr McCutcheon Wrote It YOU KNOW IT Selection—"Ernani” ,,, very in | fi THIS IS GOING TO BE GOOD Concert Orchestra very Man an Artist yyeerseey a a Romance of New York’s Veiled Ph ty © ed — and Women, ani a ding i the Rushing.Millions. “awe + Verd Roll crackers. Mash yolks of eager with mustard and enit. Add vinegar, making & smooth pasta, Chop sal mon and whites of exes. Mix al! in- eredionts, Add melted butter. | them, just and serve on lettuce. Yasuda, the Japanese sculptor, who | as similar “horror stories” in cheap | Chul ONE @dil ONd-3 4 PA wi EM FIRST SEATTLE SHOWING New York The City of Masks BRINGING UP FATHER . From Pen and Ink to Flesh and Blood MI In Seattle Conducted by fs LOUISE ANNABLE Ladies’ Musical Club Season Plans The Ladies’ Musical club an Hounces that for the opening of its season this year it has been forty Nate in securing the Scott Grand Op era company for @ series of three nights of grand opera, with Antonio Scotti and principal artéats, orchestra and chorus, selected from the Metro politan Oper’ company, New York. The scenery to be used was designed and buih in.the Metropolitan opera house and is an exact duplicate of the scenery used there. ‘The coming of this opera company will give Beattie ap opportunity of hearing grand opera ag it is given at the Metropolitan thmtre, in New York. The operas to be given and the dates are: Monday night, September 27-~ “L/Oracolo” and “Pagliacci” (double bil). Tuenday night, September 28—"La Boheme.” Wednesday night, September 29— “La Tosca.” Ladies’ Musical club membership tickets admit to one of the operas only. All members will be allowed & $3 reservation, with the privilege of paying the addrional amount for higher-priced seats at the theatre when seats are reserved. ‘The second attraction will be a con- cert by Pasquale Amato, leading bar: itone of the Metropoltan Opera com. pany, and one of the greatest oper- atic and concert artists in the world ‘The date for this concert is Thursday evening, November 11. On Thureday evening, December 2. Joseph Lhevinne, world-famed Rus wan pianist, will appear in recital fourth attracuon, which is of uBusual interest, will be the Adoipit Bolm Ballet Intuime, which will ap- pear in conjunction with the Little Symphony, George Barrere, cogguct or, Adolph Bolin has been ca the Srestest dancer, choreographic arust and producer in the world today. George Harrere is known for his chamber music organisation and also ae @ futint of merit, This double at twaction ia scheduled for Monday evening, May 16, 1921. Arrangements have been made to have all the concerts at the Metro. politan theatre, All the regular MONthly concerts of the club will be | held wt the Y. W. C. A, auditorium, ee Staccato Notes Joseph Bonnett, French organist, will tour America and Canada during the coming erason. ee Mary Garden wil! give 35 concerts | earty this fall, finishing before Janu- try 1, when she is to join the Chicago Opera company. Rosina Gall, premier has returned to the United States | and will take out her first papers tm | mediately to become an American citizen, Tom Began, Irish tenor, will makeg & concert tour of Great Britain and rs ia 6 Charles Hackett, Metropotitan ten- or, will appear tn a number of joint recitals with Mine. Alda ig Novem- ber, transcontinental tour of the world’s Russe, i the originator of the world's greatest choreographic eres. York aymphory Will give ten con iA yt lhe | wuiittt (UL ih A Strangely Thrilling W Starrin; ROBERT WARWICK = Two Reels of Smiles Ireland during the latter part of the | | Richard G. Herndon announces ‘a premier dancers, Yokine and Fokina. | Michel Fokine, creator of the Ballet | Tales of Mystery and Horror, by Maurice Level—Short stories with touches that suggest the tales of O. Henry, Thomas Burke and de Maupasaant. cee The Counsel of the Ungodly, by Charles Brackett—A droll narrative of a man who believed that Amer: joan greatent esthetic need is men of Ivisure. How he took a position an butler in a family desirous of “breaking into society” forms « di verting Uitte drama of the kind that John Drew made famous. eee ‘The Great Steel Strike, by William Z. Fouter—The strikers’ version of one of the most momentous contro- versies of the century, eee A Mating in the Wilds, by Ottwell Binne—The girl and the man—the wilderness —the er forces op posing them—the “remittance man” with the shadowy past—the final clinch—the reader's yawn! eee Mary Wollaston, by Nenry Kit chet] Webster-—-Study of a modern American family, with the accent on the modernity, An interesting story of interesting characters. eee The Beautiful Mrs. Davenant, by Violet Tweedale—Why are novela of this type always entitled “The Beau- ful Mrs, Davenant,” or “The Beau Uful Mra. Marchiey” Why not “The Lovely Mrs. Humpernickel,” on“The Winsome Mra. Snickletrits?” eee Johnnie Kelly, by Witbur 8. Boyer Johnnie, we are forced to deciare, is no relation to Huck Finn or Pew rod Schofield. The author dra n interesting picture of a boy, but the queer, mysterious «pirit of boy- hood is not given us. cee Flappers and Philosophers, by F Scott Fitzgeraid—tories tn lighter vein by the very clever author of “This Side of Paradise.” The tales, enn corts In Washington, D. C., next sea- fon, They will also appear in Ralti- tnore, Philadelphia, Rochester, Cleve land, Toronto, Detroit and other Waatern cities, eee Otokar flevcik, the world's greatest violin teacher, has been engaged to tench at the Ithaca Conservatory of Music. eee G. Herbert Knight, distinguished Pnglish organist, was recently ap pointed head of the organ depart ment at the Peabody Conservatory of Munte. jadrolt, modern, witty and delightful, jraise the 1920 flapper to her proper | place in Uterature. eee It’s a Good O16 World, by Brace Barton—Bevo esnays for those in |need of temperamental stimulation. oee Chanteys and Ballads, by Harry | bikaen- Songs of the sea and the |tand, written with vision and clarity | and a keen oye for the picturesque. Lyric verse is the wine of literature. ‘These poems are eparkling burgundy —red burgundy—end sometimes just old-fashioned beer. eee Madam Chrysanthemum, by Pierre Loti—Reminiacent sketches of Leti's first visit to Japan. eee The Man Who Dares, by Leon C. Prince—"Inepirational” messages to H |"Young America’—which, in spite » | of inspirationa] messages, persists in smoking Bull Durham bebind Upp, woodshed and committing other - | erevious snlghomnpan an ind , 4 A Tankara of Ale, compfied by Theodore Maynard—An anthology of drinking songs. What's the use of kicking & man when he's down! eee |THE WEEK’S | BEST SELLERS Here is a list of the books, com- piled by one of Beattle’s largest book- stores, of the boeks most in demand during the past week. Fiction ‘The Rescue, by Joseph Conrad. Kindred of the Dust, by Peter B Kyne. Harriet and the Piper, by Kathteen Norris, ‘This Side of Paradise, by V. Seott Fitagerald. Poor Relations, by Compton Mao Kensie. Valley of Silent Men, by James Oliver Curwood. Noe-Fiction Now It Cap Be Told, by Philp © Gibbs, White Shadows in the South Seas, by Frederick O'Brien, Economic Consequences of the Peace, by Professor John Maynard Keynes. . Roosevelt's Letters to His Chih dren. My Three Years in America, by Count Bernstorft. The indpstry dates jback to the Franco-Prussias war, when France offered a prise for the invention of a substitute for butter, “THE ISLE OF BUNGALOO” THE BIG MUSICAL COMEDY HIT— FULL OF SNAPPY SONGS, PEPPY COMEDY AND BIG, SURPRISING SPECIALTIES BY THE ENLARGED CHORUS OF PRETTY, PERFECT, STOCKINGLESS BEAUTIES OF TWENTY-FIVE GIRLS! ——— RPHEUM [. THI