The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 17, 1920, Page 14

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MERRY DINNER DANCE AT RAINIER CLUB BY BEULAH MITCHELL COUTTS Society Editor of The Star POPULARITY OF THE MANY BETROTHED COUPLES has made T recent hostesses rather perplexed as to the form of entertainment to | offer, that their affairs will be keenly anticipated and @ real pleasure to guests. There have been ex and motor trips, but Juncheona, teas, dinners and dinner this week two rather clever innova. planned for Miss Katherine Jerome and Mr, Albert Charles ich will not soon be forgotten, Last evening at the Rainier club | "Mise Mildred Milloc’s dinner dance was @ real delight and carnival spirit | Jprevaited from the hour the guests arrived until the closing bars of “Home, The table, with cov gladioll, connected with a chain | Foste andferns, Dancing, of course, Swas enjoyed during dinner, and after the tables were cleared away circle »two-eteps, Virginia reels and cake enthusiasm that the old dances were | voted as snappy as the fox-trots and fone-steps of today. Mr. and Mrs. | Charles &. Miller, parents of the ae chaperoned the young aed Another original party for which Preparations are belng made ix ‘for tomorrow evening at homa ee me © Luncheon at Sunset Club ‘Mrs. James Kidder of New York , who ts the guest of Mrs. Harry ney Treat has bidden a group friends to an informal luncheon the Sunset club on Saturday, | eee Irs. Ensley i Honored Mr. and Mrs. Richart Dwight iM entertained at dinntr at their! Wednesday evening, . ng Mra. Eusley Boyd Smith Oakiand, who is the house guest her brother and sisterin-law, Mr. @ Mrs. Timothy Jerome. Mrs. came north to attend the jerome wedding on Monday | * * dy ‘Classes to Begin The study classes at the Women's ity club will commence Octo- 1. The book review class, under leadership of Mrs. Charles K. will convene on Friday morn- ‘At 10:20 o'clock. Current events ir by Miss Elizabeth Rowell of , high school, will meet Fré Way evenings and the drama class have Mrs. Alvah Lemuel Carr | leader. The date will be later. eee istinguished itor Honored For the pleasure of Mrs. Oswald on Willard of New York w’ been their guest, Mr. and M liam Pitt Trimbie entertained Wednesday evening at t club, places being mark: 14 guests. °s ainment for rs. Webster. in Texas, Mrs. David and Miss Sara Hanna will be at a bridge party on the oon of Friday, September 24, eee ‘The junior officers of the U. 8. 8. ppl will be hosts at a dan. aboard the ship on Saturday noon in compliment to Miss Graff and her fiance, En-| m Francis Paxton Old, U. 8. > large number of young ladies will over for the affair, chaperoned Mrs. John Dudley Roberts, Mrs. in 8 i Frederick eee kard-Hall marriage Mr. Herschel W. Pickard and Carrie E. Hall, both of Seattle, married in the home of the 2366 Seventeenth Ave &., nesiay, September 8, at 7:30 m. The impressive ring service the church was used and the Rev. 8. Sulliger, D. D. pastor of First Methodist Episcopal Kent, officiated. Only the relatives and very close friends the contracting parties were pres- ent. Mr. and Mrs. Pickard will their home in Seattle, where Mthey have a large circle of friends. eee iss Forster ‘onor Guest In honor of Miss Evelyn Forster, October brideto-be, one of the ble affairs held the past was a quilting party and utili- shower, at the home of Miss Mae ‘The room and supper table decora- were in dainty pastel shades, being the prevailing flowers, supper favors of candy-filled and tiny bags of © were each plate. Present were: lisses Gretchen Shaw, Polly Lee, irene Forster, Anna Blinker, Nettie @oraden, Irene Killean, Mrs. Scoones, J Forster and Mrs. Fare. eee Miss Capps Becomes irs. White Miss Maude Capps, daughter of » and Mrs. Hdward Capps of 532 ave., was united in marriage Mr. Charles U. White at the ly residence, September 15 at p.m. Rev. A. E. Greene of. ing in the tmp ive double service. Miss Lora M, Hanbey bridesmaid and Mr. Martin Z. P. was best man. The rooms beautifully decorated with a sector motit of pink and evergreens, “the bridal bower being formed of hrysantheums and hydrangeas. - “Miss Fily Neison played as a piano “The Rosary,” and followed #e the wedding march from After the ceremony forty guests, among whom Mr, and Mrs. Otis A, Wright of Mrs. W. 8. McLean at the coffee After a trip to of the Cities, Mr. and ‘White ‘Will make their boms at Wenatchea, urn. some Mrs. The | SEPTEMRER 17— Mr. and Mrs Lewis Mardenbergh to be hone: te Banset clu! hn Mr, and Mra BA. Btuart as host tan weret Huteson, Mise Irene Fisher and Mise Betty ft, of Bellingham, Mase McMillan SErTEMBER 19— ‘Mise Judithe Gibbs to members of Btubdd-Jerome wed- ding party at ewoer at her deme Elite No. 134 - Mrs. A. A. Welsh, member of Etite Lodge No. 134, will give a whist | party at her home, 4244 Morgan St, Saturday evening at 9 o'clock. The affair is for funds to purchase ma Cty Mrs, Mary Harmor, Judge J. rg and Dr. M. A. Matthews will the principal speakers at the luncheon which the City Federation is giving tomorrow at the Plymouth Congregational church, at 1 p. m eee ADDITIONAL CLUBS Chapter V, P. EF. 0. Chapter V, P. E. O, wil meet Monday, September 20, with Mra Charles Ferguson, 1116 Grand Ave. The hgsteases will be Mra. Charles Ferguson and Mrs. Amy Ferguson. Assisting will be Mra. Herbert Crowder and Miss Helen Bushee. The Roll Call will be answered by current eventa,. Luncheon to be served promptly at 12 o'clock, eee Ballard Review No. 53 ‘The tea which was to have been given today by Ballard Review No. 55, of the Woman's Benefit Asnocia- tion of the Maccabees, has been post- poned for two weeks. eee Stevens Woman's Relief Stevens Woman's Relief Corps No. 1 held its annual memorial services Wednesday afterhoon at the lodge's plot in Lake View cemetery. The attendance was large, Stevens Woman's Rellef Corps No. 1 postponed its noonday social and luncheon, scheduled for yesterday in Veterans’ Hall,in the Armory, be- cause of the death of Comrade Wil- son Davidson, an old-time member of the post, eee Children’s Orthopedic Ten Shop A special meeting of chairmen of guilds of the Children’s Orthopedic ‘Tea Shop will be held Tuesday at 10 a. m., with Mrs. Henry Ewing, 521 Belmont Ave. North, cee The Ladies Auxiliary, Seattle Post No. 18, to the American Legion, wish to announce the second of a | sven of dances will be held this evening at 1616% 3rd Ave. All vet- erans and friends are most cordially invited. Good musica. eee ‘The Attrua chub of the Young Wo: men's Christian association, will be addressed by Mra Clare Ketchum Tripp, of the Washington State Chamber of Commerce, in the assoct- ation bullding*at 6:45 p. m. this even- ing., on the “Know Your Btate Movement." The sons of Mr. and ‘Three young misses, Jane Blinn, Dorothy Allen and Poly Perkins left Wednesday to'enter Annie Wright Seminary in Tacoma for the winter. THE SEATTLE STAR Mrs. John S. Kellen —Home Portrait by Grady. dren have returned from Lake Che lan, where they have spent three months, and will occupy apartments at the Hotel Terry for tne winter, eee Mr. and Mra Phillips Morrison and family will remove the first of October to an apartment at Rex Arma, Eleventh ave. N, eee Mins Maryan Shipman ef Spokane arrived this afternoon to be an at tendant at the StubteJérome nup tials, and ls a guest at the Hotel Sorrenta, Mra. John Fullerton Maloney and eon, Joseph, who have summered in Alaska, have returned to thelr apart menu eee Mr. and Mra. Cari F. Gould and two ehildren are removing today from their country home to an apart ment a¢ 128 Harvard ave. No NEW PALACE HIP PROGRAM PLEASES Dill that opened yesterday at Loew's Palace Hip” As a young, giddy wife, addicted to dancing, Miss Shaw kept the audience laughing duriag ber entire time on the atuge, The first appearance of Harry and ‘| Anna Scranton, an attractive couple, early in October to spend the winter in California, eee } Mrs. Ralph Chatham and Mttle/ daughter returned last wrek from the, East, where they have spent two months this summer, eee Mra. Phillip Marion and two chil- in a singing and dancing number, with acrobatic stunta, was well re ved. “Tony K. MM tells staries and jokes without stopping, and keeps the crowd laughing. EA Jerome and} Frank Albright bave a clever song and piano act, and Anna Vivian sings, as well an accomplishing some good sharp shooting. Sylvia Breamer and Robert Gor- don are starring In “Dawn,” the fea~ ture picture, by Eleanor Porter. BRADBURY ‘These garments. have proven their superior- ity during the many years wo have sold them to the men anf young fellows of Se- attie. This season's models are exception: al yalues—all the new styles and fab- rica, Priced at $29.50 and Upward Bradbury Suits in the Season’s Best Woolens Buy your Bradbury Gults and Overcoats on our Liberal Cost Plan—a few dollars now—balance in small weekly paymenta, 1332-34 SECOND Avenue | also USIC MI In Seattle Versatility of Emil Oberhoffer i |church, corner Sth and Marion sta, | Emil Oberhoffer. ‘There ts no doubt that Emf Ober hoffer, conductor of the Minneapo lis Symphony Orchestra, which ap- pears in concert Thursday, Beptem- ber 30, at the Arena, owes much of his success to the versatility of his musical talents For he ts not onty one of the foremost orchestral leaders of the cougtry; he is a distinguished or- ganist of many years’ experience; fine pianist, and an accomplished Violinist. Incidentally, he is a con poser of much and recognized skill. One of the musical events Minne apolis will long remember ocourred last season when, at a Sunday after. noon concert, Mr. Oberhoffer ap peared as pianist of a trio which included Richard Cserwonky, concertmaster, and Cornelius Van Viet, first ‘cellist, and which played the Teethoven triple concerto with the orchestra, “ Hundreds of persons were trrned away from the auditorium, which was packed by an audience intense ly curtous to see whether the pop ular conductor would score wil equal success as a pianist. He did There i» another musical gift with which nature endowed this man, but which be has allowed to remain un developed—a very fine natural aing- ing volte It is never in evidence except at orchestra rehearsals, when » jon the oratorio of “The Elijah” by | _| work, the purpose being simply to fom NN OP mor 8 rd | he frequently sings @ passage to indicate the manner tn which he wants {t interpreted as to tempo oF expression. Add to all theme amoets, cultivated and uncultivated, the fact that he had @ most thoro grounding in the eawentials af mesic when ho was @ boy In Munich, and that spectal emphasis waa laid tn his training in the enormous and important field of eecloniastical music, in which he 19 @ recogpized authority, eee Rehearsals for “The Elijah” Have Begun Tuesday, September 14th, tn the choir loft of the First Methodist | the Temple Chorus began rehearsals Mendelasohn. The singers of the} city are invited to join in the pro duction of this great masterpiece. There are no dues or expenses to the singers in connection with this ive Beattle the best choral works and to establish @ regular festival chorus for the community. All sing- ers are invited to join in making this @ success.’ Vocal pupils of any teacher Will be. admitted without voice trial and others may make ap pointment for voice trial by calling Montgomery Lynch at Main 4909, or by reporting at the rehearmal any Tuesday evening and then making an appointment. The soloists. for this event will be Ajice Pinckston Mao Lean, soprano; Lois Wiley, contral “DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. 4 PRY A tew conte buys “Danéertns.” After an application of “Danderine” | you can not find @ fallen hair or any dandruff; besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness. has been the one to; Henry ©, Price, tenor; Montgom ery Lynch, baritone, Mra, Mont gomery Lynch is the organiat for the Temple Chorus and Mr. Lynch the director, Players from the Sym phony Orchestra will be engaged to accompany the oratorio and « chorus of 200 voloes 1s desired. It is planned to produce “The Elijah” on the evening of November 16th, 80 every — one interested is urged to report as soon as possible on account of the short time for rehearsing. A Permanent Hair Wave HAVE US WAVE IT NOW ané PAY FOR IT.LATER At your own convenience IN SMALL PAYMENTS Our credit pian is the very best guarantee in the world that you will be satisfied with the results obtained. A wave will save you at least one-half hour every Gay of the week. Every one can now discard the old curling tron and patent eurlers for we have brought the PERMANENT WAVE WITHIN THE The woman who wishes to look her very best— and what woman does Gentist at least once in Even if no cavities have formed in the teeth, the teeth can be cleaned ao Qnd other Giscolorations Our prices are most moderate on all classes of dental work. We eave you money because our large petronage enables ps to accept ver highest grade of work, specialists who are also part owners of the bust ness, Remember the denta) the beauty parior. LADY ATTENDANT big factor in the markets of the entire world of late. Our vast organization, with its headquarters in the world’s great- est shoe market, dipped into its big cash resources and invested heavily in shoes when conditions were most critical. It-was the opportunty of a lifetime and we grabbed it. Today we are passing the BENEFITS TO YOU at the very opening Style Season. of the Fall Care for Your Teeth as You Do Your Complexion Care of the teeth is just as important as care of the complexion. not?—should visit @ good six months, nd polished and all tartar removed. Ty moderate prices for the and all work is done by office is as important as EURUULULANUNULLLALTESUCLOO UT UUUACOLAC MAA ; ge ct ee oS —S6& aepeae ee ee oe ee

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