The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 3, 1921, Page 8

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Gazzam. CELEBRATION of thetr tenth Wedding anniversmry, Major Wih Bam D. Frarer, U. S. A, and Mra Frazer are entertaining with a din Ber at their home this evening Covers will be placed for thirty i © Plans Delightful Tea » Miss Inglis 3 “Miss Katherine Inglis, Mra, John M. ~ HI of her mother, Mrs, M. J. Car 6270 20th ave. N. E, on Tues afternoon, May 10, from 4 until @elock. Receiving with the host- and honor guest will be Miss Helen Troy Presiding at the urns are to be ) Mrs. C. Wilbur McMaster, Mra, Rob- | @t R. Fox, jr. Mrs, Francis Everett M and Mrs. John Loor Locke, Assisted by Miss Karla and Miss Stoltenderg, Miss ¢ chen Brehm. Miss Hltsabeth Chadwick and Mise Irene Burns, of Spokana ee Tea imenting Gazzam "Mise Ruth Gaszzam will be the com- ited guest at an informal te: 3. T. Dovey and Mra. Kenelm , Jr, are giving at the home @f Mrs Dovey on Thursday after Boon, with calling hours from 4 until o'clock. te invitations have been limited _ te the intimate friends of the honor s eee Luncheon Arranged Mrs, Alexander M. Wetherill has a luncheon at the Sunset tomorrow, preceding the regu Mar Wedneslay afternoon program. eee F init Preceding 3 tion Dance A pumber of dinner parties are be tH at which Mr. and Mra D. Stimson will be hosts on evening, honoring Mr. and john Arthur Baillargeon (Mar- Ames). Among them will be Mr. and Mrs. Reed Ellis, who will en- @ertain a party of friends at their Dome; Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Far ‘will entertain eight guests at the Glob, and Mr. and Mrs. HL Moss, with Mr. and Mra. HL Parks, will be hosts at ‘Moss residence at the Highlands Ing with a luncheon, as a pre compliment to Miss Ruth ‘Only close friends of the guest of have been invited. i eee Sunset Club afternoon at the Sunset Mr. Kenneth C. Beaton will en- the members and their friends a talk on his “Personal Experi- Women’s Auxiliary | Rainier Noble Post to Give Bridge Tea Phe Women’s Auxiliary to Rainier WMobie post No. 1, American Legion, if entertain with a bridge tea tn a tea room of Frederick and N@l- | @on's on Tuesday afternoon, June 4, the proceeds to be used for the Benefit of dittbied ex-service men jesses and ticket committee be announced later. eee Mrs. Calkins Will Be Hostess In compliment to Mrs. Cornelius Hambien, who has recently returned from war work in Europe, and for Mrs. J. T. Seamen, Mra. Kins will be hosters on Friday at her bome with a luncheon of twen- Be devoted to bridge. + a _ Dinner at Home ‘To compliment Mr. and Mrs. Pat | Wick Parnell Clark, Dr. and Mre. | Walter A. Moore will entertain with | @m informal dinner at their home _ -Bext Saturday evening. eee Affairs to Compliment Betrothed Pair _ . With Miss Katherine Ingtts and | Wer fiance, Mr. Clyde Everett Hud % a the honor guests, Mr. and Albert E. Barry are entertain- | fing with a supper of fourteen cov- -@FB at their residence next Sunday _ @vening. Miss Inglis and Mr. Hud- @peth were complimented last Sun- | Gay by Mrs. Ernest Minor, who en- | tertained with an informa) Luncheon to Honor Mrs. Hunter Mrs. D. H. Nickson will compil- it Mrs. James Hunter with a luncheon at her home an Friday. Places wil) be marked for twelve Guests and bridge will form the Pleasure of the afternoon, eee Informal Supper Mir and Mre Frank H. Madden {were hosts on Sunday evening at their home, entertaining with an in- forma] supper of nine covers. eee College Night Va The active and alumnae chapters ef Gamma Phi Beta sorority will entertain with a College Night Vaudeville in the Seattle Press club Suditorium on Friday, May 20. A program of skete! dances and songe will be presented, and a Special college orchestva will fur- wish music for the oceasion. This Program will he repeaied in August, and Mrs, Frazer to Dinner Hosts; Miss F Inglis Will Be Compli- | mented; Charming Af- F fair Planned for Miss & prenuptial compltment to bas extended invitations for « and miscellaneous shower at the hy to precede the reception: | J. Cal! fyfour covers. The afternoon will| dinner! ‘a &t Snoqualmie Lodge in their honor. | 1 eee WOMEN CLUBS FOR WEDNESDAY Rainier Beach Woman's Club ’S CLUBS will and business meetin hold their election of officers in the Bust news Girls’ club rooms at the Y, W The RaintersBeach Woman's club) C. A. at 2 p,m. will meet at 2 o'clock at the Emer es son school and at 3 o' k the Lincoln Circle Emerson Parent-Teacher association] Tineotn circte of the Child Con will meet. Mra. HL HL Mandigo, | servation league will moet at the who is a Parent-Teacher association organizer, will attend and assist in association for next year. eee Mount Baker Park Wedneeday Lancheon Chub Mra. J. A. Hyde, Mra, W, Ro Gip ple, Mra J. Will Jones and Mra A HL. Kellogg will be hostesses at the meeting of the Mount Raker Park Wednesday Luncheon club at the clubhouse at 1 o'clock. eee Native Daughters of Pioneers ‘The Native Daughters of Pioneers at the national convention of the sorority, which will be held at Lake Crescent and Seattle Thin tn the first Greek letter sorority conven tion to be held in the Northwest. Coaching the first performance which will tmolnde college talent will be Marguerite Motle Shiel, for merty of the Chicago School of Dramatic Art, and Verna Alexan dra Abbott, a former pupil of Ruth St. Denia. Bid Supper Hosts Honoring the members of the set ence department of the University of Washington, Dr, and Mra. D. Ht | Nickson entertained with an infor mal supper at their home Sunday evening. es Engagement Announced Mra. Emma Wallace announce? the engagement of her daughter Norma, to Mr. G. Miller Bell, son of Mr. and Mra RB. Bell, at @ tea given in a private dining room lof the Northold Inn last Saturday |following the matinee at the Moore | A deautiful low basket of pink fweet peas adorned the tabla in the center of which was a kewple, holding pink tulle streamers whioh |pink hearts bearing the names of the engaged coupia, eee Visitor Entertained To compliment Miss Magste Me Kercher from Winnipeg, who ts a visitor in the city, Mra. J. J. Mat thews entertaineal at her home last | Saturday evening with a card party Personal Mr. and Mra. Luther Hull remove Saturday to Eagle Harbor, where |they plan to spend the summer months, Mr. and Mra, George W. Yancy wil! occupy thelr town house during their absence Mr. and Mrs. James Hamitten de Veuve and daughter, Mary Cecilia, their summer home at the Highlands Mr. and Mra. John Randotp La tourette (Sally Clay), of Portland, are being felicitated upon the birth of @ son last Wednesday. Mr. and Mra. Ralph C. Dean and son Richard are planning to leave in @ short time for Portland, where they will reside, Mr. and Mra. Charles K. Poe are leaving next Sunday for Annapolis to attend the graduation of their fon, Mr. Dallas Emory. They will be joined there by Mr. De Wolf Emory and Mr. Tom Emory, who are attending school in Virginia. Dr. and Mrs. Charlies B. Boudwin "| have returned from a ten days’ visit in Vancouver and Victoria, B. C Mrs. Elbridge Hadley Stuart and two children arrived Sunday evening from Chicago, to be the gueste for a week of Mr. and Mra. EB. A. Stuart, leaving+at that time for Portland, where they will visit Mra Stuart's mother, Mra. C. Akerman, Mr, and Mra. S. M. Sylvester of Vancouver, B. C., are the guesta of Mr. and Mra, Harry Whitney Treat. Mra. Louis W. Hill of St. Paul is the guest of her brotherinlaw and |sieter, Mr. and Mra. Archibald G. Clark, for a few days, Col. C. A. Seaone has removed from the Hotel Sorrento to an apartment at 923 Cherry st. Mr. Hugh Purcell ts in Portland on a short business trip. Miss Emily Jerome, who ts attend- }ing Briarcliffe school in New York, will spend her summer varation at her home in this city, arriving about {June 6. Mra. Fred H. Baxter, with her daughter, Miss Harriet Baxter, who has been attending the Common | wealth school in New York city, will jreturn to Seattle the first part of | June. | Mr. and Mrs. Layton Hind Marjo rie Capps) of Honolulu are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son. the meeting | Sun organizing @ new! eee led to smaller kewpies, marking the | jplacea, attached to which were two | home of Mra, WW. Hoagland, 3824 wide at 290 p,m Women's Auxiliary of the Britivh American Association The Women's auxiliary of the Hritieh- American association will }meet at the home of Mra 8 G Wright 424 23rd lay afternoon, Cherry car, ‘we, on V May «4 Take eee Woodcraft Thimble Club ‘The ‘Scattie Wooderaft Thimble club wt!l bold a card party at the Wooderaft club rooms, 409 Hoge Annex, at 215 pm eee Ridgley Rebetiah Acxillary Mra. W. 8 Molean and Mra 8 K. McNamara will assist Mra. A. R Kilgore at the meeting of Ridgley Rebekah auxiliary at her home, 1517 Ninth ave. W. at 130 pom eee Ladies’ Auxillary The Ladies’ auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engt neers will give @ card party at the Foresters hal! at 2p. m eee Cushing Auxillary to Orthopedic Hospital Cushing auxiliary to the Orth pedic hospital will entertain with a card party at the Ballard city ball Wednesday, May 4 oe Seattle Hebrew Benevolent Society The regular monthly meeting of the Seattle Hebrew Benevolent #o clety will be held tn the vestry room of the temple on Wednesday May 4. at 230 pm Board meet ing at 1 p.m . Woman's Centary Club The Spanish department of the Woman's Century ciobd will meet at the ¥. W. A 1039 a m see Red Cross Nursing Claaee Red Crows nursing classes will be held at the Colored Y. W. C. A. a 10 & m. and at Gatewood at Dm eee Tonia Social Club Tonia Social club will meet at the Masonic temple at 2 p. m,; cards see Business Girt’ Health and Reereation Center ‘The Pustness Girly’ Health and Recreation center will meet at 3413% Fremont ave, in the evening. Ad dress by Dr. Roberta Wimer-Ford. entitied “Confidential Chat With Girls.” eee Women of Mocecheart Legion The Women of Mooseheart Legion will meet at the Moose temple at inm eee Witam McKinley Crete William McKinley circle, Ladies of the G. A. Ry, will give @ dinner at noon, fol! by meeting. ee Theertt Club The Programive Tabucht club wit be entertal: with a mosical tee at the home of Mra Cart J. Smith. 1435 37th ave, on Wednesday after. noon, May 4, at 2 o'clock. The fob owing program has been arranged: Prane— (2) “Lister ohne Worte..Mendelsohe (b) “Mark, Mark, the Lark” ra Mise Violet Morkina * Vorab— (s) “Last Woarm . Kramer (>) “Dawe”... Curren Mra Samuel MeDonaid Reading with musical accompantment: “An Old Sweetheart of Mine”..... Riley Mre Frankiyn Coats Violin—Relected | Mr. Arthur Kieth | Reating—Geier Men Not Giara Barton Tent Clara Barton tent, Daughters of Veterans, will serve a € o'clock sup per at the Armory for thetr mem bers and families Wednesday, May 4. In the evening at § o'clock the public is Invited to come and enjoy & program to be given by Mra | Pugene Bell, a talented teacher of expression. eee to Speak THY SHATTLE STAR PATTERSON WOOD BLOCK PRINTS SENT TO BALTIMORE ir ernoon of the 13th on the top Moor Madden, of Philosophy hall, in the new stu- kaaten, wood block prints at their exhibition. two of the palm trees, two of the cyprens, and one of the Campanile, ‘Two of Patterson's paintings have been hung this winter In the Mac beth Gallery of New York—consid ered a signal honor for an artist [architecture will give Its annual ex- hibition in the “shack” back éf the book store, This work is always un usually interesting. Signa Anderson, ‘The home economies department ts | tonie Laud! the other member participating in| Kirsch, this triple open houne. Marela Whit berg, Herbert Bentley, Mra. Lavo Sides, Rowe Mathews, Rone Borondott, Berkeley Hernice Krez, Iaetle Haker, Joneph Antic, 1. Ora Pie “home eo” work, rather than the sonomy side of last year, Different profeswional people wifl| Mrnest Norling, Ted Parsons, G. demonstrate products and they will | MoClaire. be served in @ tea room, Cook books, eee “Aids to Family Catering,” gotten : : up by the students and indorsed by | Committees Appointed the faoulty, will be wold, They say iti hy the Fine Arts is quite a little book. , Every one in urged to come out and pee what thene three popular de- partments are doing, 3 to 6 and 7 to %, Friday, May 14. on the campus. ‘The invitation tn to check the babies (model girls will attend them) and) mo back to the “dear old school) days.” akea Street in Honolula, the center of the Chinese quarter, and the Mar. ket In Honolulu. Patterson has just completed «a sketch for an overmantel of an office of a lumber company in Hoquiam it ie @ modern scene of industry, & train in the foreground, ships load ing lumber and mille in the back ground, depicting the modern sneth od of lumber making, and in the train amoke appears faintly a team of oxen sledding logs in the old man. new, In honor of Mr, Patterson the Hine Arts Society will give a tea the opening night of his June exhibit, eee Albee to Exhibit» His Omar Pictures Wayne Albee, of the MeTiride Studio, will entertain the members of the Women's University club Fri lay evening, May 20, at & o'clock, with a production of his recent col Olen Bheckies, Mra. Reginald If, Parsons, and eee: " ~ Old Dutch Picture Loaned to Fine Arts VAgar Forkner haa loaned the Fine | Arts a quaint, old-fashioned picture, | typleal of the Dutch school, which aimed to rival nature In minute per- fection, It ts a bouquet painted by int ection of pictures illustrating Omar | Albertus Jonas Brandt, an art Khayyam. The original pictures | born in Amsterdam, 1788, and who} were posed by pupila of Ruth st. | died in 1621 te . Cornish ‘ Making Ready for “Friday, the 18th” Lines of tourtets are treoping be | Decorating a Room the Fine Arts there days to cash tn Betty Balmer, a junior in the Uat-| Melr invitations for tickets for the | versity College of Fine Arta is do | “Ste Mars First® trip coming off Fri | ing interior decorating tp the home | 4%, the 13th. “Airplanes, dirigibies ot Mra John Eddy. The work is|8Pd free balloons will dock at t under the supervision of Miss | nights of Columbus hall at 6:20) Bieanor Campbell, instructor of the | **t Bight.” the announcement says, art department, formerly @ student| "S04 Guests of the Art Students’ Mt the Pennaylyania, Academy of |aeuve will troop out as Martians.” | Fine Arts. This w is dewignin ae the fourth annual costume be! j and painting panels for a child's | room in Serulean biue and decorat | 19 the meantime, down at the| ing furniture for a boyn’ room, it| Staller of the University of Wash. | ia the firm work of the kind under.|!peton Fine Arta Extension seo-| taken by @ student in the depart tien, at Fitth and University, paint | Dennia, Students of the school will aswint Mr, Alboa eee University Co-Ed MAY 4, AT 8:30 NEW THOUGHT AUDITORIUM Fifth and University ment, jbrashes are fying, The groaning one oo board of pickles and cake, coffee , pk Skis Goch = sch ttnes tat isinge et | 40 MALE VOICES enools evening's labors is all that keeps sn And to Be Exhibited nome weary sign painters going | ADAM JARDINE after composing the tenth comet | Silver and gold (paint) vie with the! touch of Midas to turn the world to! siittering metal Gandy ladies tn Director MRS. LOU STAUDE. Soprano The annual exhibition ef Seattle high schooler’ work will be given at the Fine Arts next week. Mins Clara Reynolds, supervisor of art In the at 1 checkred — costa with “fol OE yes ngn high schools, will have charge of it, | ©" iikeed ‘ollow Like Mine Small's exhibition taat|'e" Bold feathers on the head. | Tickets on sale af week of the grade achool work, these |“ & “eutey* in fringed home. spun and @ harem veil, not to men. tien the ubiquitous person in the erimaon tam, will all be there, In exbibitions are always largely attend ed by interested parents. Some of | the work is unusually exonlient. | Drawings, water colors, port arta | and craft work, leather tooling, book: | binding, brass and copper work and | nesdiowork will be shown. The post. | ere made for the Arena exhibit of | Washington-made products will also be bung. Student Instructs a “> Campfire Girls Miss Vornita Bweeea, a student of the fine arta department at the unt- | versity, haa been giving instruction | At the Globe building headquarters to some 70 Campfire Girls in the de | igning mottoes for their costumes | the past fhonth . Triple Open House on the Campus Yesterday the students of the Unt- | versity art department held a candy mie, the proceeds of which were to A New Remedy for Rheumatism In this climate children and adults are daily con- tracting rheumatism, It is very prevalent among the young and often mistaken for so-called grow- ing pains. Milder symptoms often mean longer . duration and a more incurable form. In most ° cases rheumatism lays a permanent foundation for chronic heart disease, SYMPTOMS OF RHEUMATISM Tm afult cases the symp < Miss Louisa Lee, who has recent ly returned from India, will apeak | Wednesday afternoon at 2 p. m. terian church. The members of the! | Missionary society and the Ladion’| | Ald society will be hostesses and their friends and anyone interested in missionary work are invited to} | attend. eee | Vietory Chib to Dance The Victory club will entertatn with Its firet informal danca of the} jsummer season on Wednesday even | ing, May 4, in Leschi pavilion. The committee in charge includes Mr. | Vernon Klepper, Mr. Oscar Biegar| and Mr. John Milner ful of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. ‘0 thi many a serious illne: doctor's visit. when the has no Sepetite and won’ | play. when the girl is listless and fever- | ih, when thére are complaints of ne constipation. Give Dr. well's Syrup Pepsin in the smal ailment will have disappeared, Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pi popular compound of Egy, moog take it wi fly many mon’ and-'ast over ei: ||| ig the largest selling liquid laxat the world, and few tautio ami ever without it. Do You Know a Baby Sick With Constipation Tell the mother to give half a teaspoon- ‘ul mother with children in the house will risk being without &@ good, reliable laxative. It will save 3, many a When the baby cries and is fretfu headaches and colds, the mother can bed on the bottle, when you put e child to bed, and with morning the puian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pepdasnd pleasant-tasting aromatics. It nt! a wildly, aa children ut objection. ixty-cent bottle is a last an average fam- Send me funy ane Uh are dress and endorsed in the U, 8, Pharmacoy ear American mothers oes nt pr oopef We ea it million b»ttles of Dr. Cald- ington Street, * well’s Syrup Pepsin trom druggists. It ef wei jus families are Laxative, and itis well to know Cald- 1 dose fs a TRY IT FREE name and ad- willsend youa free Ive {= fod new and ek nono best. Write me today. — ma the reception at the Ballard Prenby. |e toms are sharp pains fa the larger jointa, stiffness and fever. In children the Outstanding features are fever, coated tongue, con Ke stipation and —#0- enlled GREEN OR C growing pains. NALGEN is @ new and effectual rem edy for both acute and chrenie rheumatiam and kindred discasea, There is a flavor to suit youl In All Parts of the City Nalgen Chemical Company 601 Kite Building SEATTLE Telephone Elliott 3806 HAVE YOU SAVED A DIME TODAY? Put one dime aside each day! Place it in the “Daily Dime-Saver” that we give you free of charge—a new one each month. As one after another of the little dime-containing pockets in the “Dime-Saver” are filled you will recognize that you CAN save, after all, if you just have the place to put your dimes, At the end of the month bring your “Daily Dime- Saver” with its thirty-one dimes to the Dime & Dollar Savings & Loan Association ° (Housed with Seattle Tithe Trust Company) 114 Columbia Street, Corner Second Avenue Safe Deposit Boxes in Connection iy peo Stuck in @ corner béhind atacks of | year as follows airplanes and red bunting, she gives | way before our modern beanuties in| Mise An ; "i ‘The crowd, the color, the | Guin oF Cee eee be ‘Weed Sor the Span Rowey of the Oe pat or the noise of the “work” |) i" | Ambrose Patterson, profesor of| partment May 13. The bags ere | Lartien going on theme weeks are not | Hobert Walkinahaw. art at the University, has been In| wood blocked and hand painted, the art’ students alone, Ansistanta|. Presram—Dr. Pi Umsweerento vited by the Baluimore Arts and/ ‘They will hold @ toa at 3 In the aft- 4 J FE eget mt meV Crafta Society to exhibit a set of hie Are numerous. Thin week they wei Mr » tart, Mr. G. W WaPoRATED Virginia Turner, ne Ttoon, Folin Austen, Arti ration—Mise Clara Reynolds, ehatr. one of his much mired voleano, The day depart) Wil fica, “nent kganche, taaien. Groen Vena toate . Ida Matson, Winifred Larrison, Helen Markus, Agatha Wolfe, H. Mooney, Iuth Freedman, | wear? Arthur Lingenbrink, |a thing of clinging black lines and The governing board ef the Fine Arta met with the new president, | pointed the committees for th Manihitin ehatrm: ne | fey Griffin An | Mre Gould, Mr Lam ey, Mra Garrett, ‘Mina | With rt mebrent| fhe ree, A minitiee—Mr y. and are now on their way home to Jonep ont Real ‘| Committon will give every one any|Hchmucker, H.C. Webb, Johanna es an wae ws Pies arts Information desired, ‘Thia year em-|Matheso, Maurine Hyatt, Rows Cur-| lave you noticed that the amart| Cream coo pattorno: . | oro! \ h oth, Fran nop owe lac € In June, ‘The pictures were Maun. | DPasisew the professional side of the|penter, H. Roth, M Roth, Frank | shops are showing all black under left Even milady's night robe ts| in! A. | i Uncooked Fudge Made With Mapleine is a delicious candy with just the right tang of maple flavor. The candy is easily made, as are dozens of other dainty desserts, with The Golden Flavor Grocers sell Mapleine and the carton top, with your address, brings the Mapleine Cook Book containing more than 200 reci- pes. Inclose 4c for postage. CRESCENT MFG. CO. SEATTLE, WASH. Gingham Street Dresses Newest Styles $7.50 We are showing a very select and attractive group of Ladies’ Gingham Street Dresses, embracing the very newest ideas in style, and at a price that will please you. They have dainty organdie collars, cuffs and vestees and come in a variety of checks and plaids in assorted colors. - Sashes of self material. Sizes 16 to 40. New Hair Braid Hats Priced at $7,50 The new hair braid and maline Hats are proving to be the most favored of spring millinery. They are smart a and come in several new and becoming apes. Attractive flower trimming. Priced elsewhere at $10.00. ‘ Women’s Summer Union Suits 75c These are a special offering, being priced regularly at $1.00. They are a bodice style, light weight and of fine cotton yarn; sleeveless and knee length; lace knee. Sizes 36 to 44. Ladies’ Silk Lisle Stockings, Pair 75c Regular $1.25 values of Ladies’ Silk Lisle Stock- ings; fine quality; reinforced toes and heels; 8-inch garter top; black and brown, Unbleached Toweling, Yard 15c 25e value of 18-inch linen finished unbleached toweling. Cotton Bats, Roll $1.25 $1.75 value of fine Cotton Bats; weight 8 pounds; one continuous roll. Size 72x90 inches. White Outing Flannel, Yard 13c 22-inch white Outing Flannel of a good quality— very special. Silkoline, Yard 19c 86-inch Silkoline in fancy floral designs, also in plain colors. “THE STORE THAT, SAVES VOU MONEY’ want long, heavy, lustrous hair . You Can Have It! ‘OU can develop such beau tiful hair that your friends will envy it. ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC provides a delightful means for mak- ing and improving hair beauty, Its faithful use insures a clean, healthy scalp, freedom from oily condition absence of dandruff. Te imparts brilliancy, promotes growth, lends a refined atest its purity renders it safe. ED. PINAUD'S is the one hatr prepe tation that has stood the test of time— 100 years old. PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD ED. PINAUD BLDG, NEW YORK

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