The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 8, 1921, Page 10

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_ Society © Pretty Luncheon Compli- >> ments Departing Miss- es; Entertain With At- tractive Tea. | Smatt Bridge Will Honor Visitor As & compliment to Mra B.S Snider of Clarkdale, Ariz, who is the house guest of Dr. and Mra. A Tollefsen, Mra, H. C. Miller in} ining with three tables of | eat her residence Friday after noon, Married in St. | John’s Church | | The marriage of Miss Nora Aman: | 4a Hage to Mr. Edgar B. Simpson ai Jot Sacramento, Cal., was solemnixed IVE GUESTS ENJOYED | 4) gt John's church in Went Se the luncheon given by Miss @ Leonard this afternoon at the Bunset club to compliment Miss Hor tense Green, who is leaving Sa @ay for New York to attend Miss Bennett's school, and a group of gifs who will depart soon for Bast ern schools ‘The table was centered with a large basket of delicately tinted pink dahlias and yellow snapdragons. Delightful Bridge Married Wednesday ‘Given Today Afternoon ‘Miss Katherine Shank, a much arriage ceremony of Mrs. feted bride-to-be, and Mrs. Howard Chastain (Thelma Harold), an August bride, were the quests of honor at the Attractive tea which Miss Margaret Delan and Miss Eileen Delaney ‘gave at their home today. Dahlias in the golden tones of tumn, arranged in artistic bowls, ted the living room and a silver basket of autumn ra centered the pretty tea table, alternating at the urns were: Ire, Leo C. Miller of St. Louis, Mrs. ler Madigan, Mrs. H. 1. Polson, _— H. Lewis and Mrs. Paul ‘They were assisted by Miss Dor Ehrlich, Miss Marcia Berger, Margaret Yerkes, Miss Louise lich, Miss Alma Calhoun, Miss MeVay, Miss Lura Tanner, Miss “Pearl Harold, Miss Farris Norton, ‘Mise Elzy Bkinner, Miss Marjorie Fisken, Miss Thelma Bailey, Miss agian Shank and Miss Gladys ] eon Will Honor igs. Harrington Grace Fischer has extended overs to take place at the Sunset ‘elub, next Tuesday afternoon for the of Mrs. Elliott Dean Har. ‘Fington (Catherine Butler) of Schen- ee gagement of Miss ‘aufmann Announced ‘Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kaufmann an- ‘Mounce the engagement of their er Adelheid, to Mr. Allan Bier, ‘gon of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bier of Francisco. The date for the] pnarents, Mr. and M T. Robin- has not been set. son, planning taPremain until yi Aaj October 1. eee ‘Wednesday afternoon at the Mrs. Colin O. Radford !s giving ‘@ pre-nuptial compliment to Miss Biudley, who will become the of Mr. Everett Willard Fenton di evening, September assisting the hostess tn the en- it of her guests will be Stanley Griffiths and Mrs. Radford. “Presiding at the urns are to be Burton Radford, Mrs. William Myers, Mrs. Altert Griffiths and H.R. aided by Miss Gowen, Miss Marjorie Fisken ‘Miss Clara Bartlett. An exhibit of etchings and engrav- from the Chalcographic of the of the Louvre, Paris, ts be- held at the Cornish school this Among them are three by an "American artist, Louis Orr, and one “get of children studies by Poulet, as ‘Well as copies of famous master _ pieces belonging to the Louvre—Rey nolds, Van Dycke, Veslasques and Cortot. for a luncheon of twelve / Jattle, at high noon on Tuésday, Sep |tember the sixth, with Rev, Maurtee | J. Bywater reading the service, Miss urea Hage, the bride's sister, and] iss Melinda Finsen were the. at | tendants oe | 5 Bridge at Home Entertaining with aeix bridge, Mra. J. M teas at her home Frid tables of Clapp will be hos y afternoon | ‘The Nina Cramer to Mr. Earl Lowden was performed at the residence of the offictating clergyman, Rev. W | A. Major, yesterntay afternoon at 5/ o'clock, A supper followed at the! home of Mr, and Mrs. EB. Gault, | after ‘which Mr, and Mra, Lowden left on their honeymoon to Victoria, B.C. After September 15 they will be at home to their friends at 3406 36th ave, 8. Personal Mrs. Harry Clise, who has been re newing old friendships in the city for the past two months, left today |for Coronado, Cal. where site will join her goninlaw and daughter, Commander M. F. Draemel, U. 8. N., and Mrs. Draemel, who are stationed there. eee Mr, and Mra. Frederick Struve re- turned last night from a short trip to Blaine and Victoria, B.C eee Mr. and Mrs. Eric Fowler, of Washington, PD. C. spent several days in the city last week. Mra. | Fowler was formerly Mrs. Edwin | Earl, of Los Angeles. eee Mr. and Mra. George A. Hurd, Miss Katherine Hurd, Miss Clarissa Hurd, Mr. Arthur Hurd and Mr. Charles Hurd, of New York, who| have been guests in the city this summer, are leaving Saturday for their home. eee Mra, Faunce Whitcomb and small | daughter, Emily Faunce, of Boston, | are guests of Mra. Whitcomb’ Dr. and Mrs. Caspar Sharples and Miss Lillian Carstens, who left yes terday by motor for a trip east of the mountains, will return Friday. eee Mr. Robert, A. Wilson, who has been residing in Portland for some time, has returned for an indefinite stay. eee Mr, Lacy Hofius left yesterday for the East to enter Princeton. eee Mra. B. 8. Snider, of Clarkdale, Ariz., arrived Sunday to be the guest of Dr. and Mrs. A. D. Tollefsen for two weeks. see Mr. and Mra, Lester Graham (Dor. | othy Cover) are occupying their new | home, 3231 34th ave. o- Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Merritt have returned from a short visit in Yakima. eee Mr. Fred Grinnell returned the first of the week from a three months’ trip abroad. ' eee Mr. and Mrs. James A. Kerr left Tuesday for California, where they plan to spend the winter. ee Miss Alice Watson, who has been visiting friends in the city for several months, left last week for her home in Denver, Colo. . oe Mr. Wilhert C. Hendricks left | Tuesday morning for Chicago, where | he will remain indefinitely. Celeste, of Los Angeles, who have 1. Easily adjusted buckle. 2. Eatre strong pin—cannot bend or break. 3. Highest quality elastic an ‘oughly thor “The other four of the five famous Hickory features sre: 4. Guarantee with every pair assures | Gonpartoseiclattion aotier weap tae | Hickory Garters at your dealer: Twenty-five cents and up depending upon stula and sire _—_—OO wel tested, unMormly excellent. In Five Sizes | | Women's Christian association, The | jthetr home In Los Angeles. Mrs. Harmon Ryus and daughter, | THE WOMEN’S CLUBS CLUBS FOR FRIDAY organization will meet Friday at 1! am, at the Young Women's Chris St. Cecilia Guild Uan association, while the American St. Cectlia guild of St. Clement lization department will meet the church will meet Friday, September | same day at 1 p,m 9%, in the parish houg o>e i> *- Evergreen Lodge, No, 2 Kansas Women's Clab Evergreen lodge, No. 2, A. 0, t The Kansas Women's club will W. will give a benefit whist party Moon. |for members and friends Friday even meet at the home of Mrs, C.J ty, at Riverton, Friday, September |!ng, September 9, at 8:45 o'clock 9% Take 11:20 Tacoma tocal, at Ocel:| Suitable prizes will be awarded dental station, Box lunch, All for. | ore mer Kansas women invited to at-| British American Apsociation tend | The BritishAmerican association “ee | will resume its meetings in the Fine Ww "s Century Club Arts hall, 1218 Fourth ave, Friday The Woman's Century club witl|¢vening, September 9. at 8 o'clock | All members and friends cordially in meet Friday at 2 p,m. at the Young v vited to attend literary and travel department of the | Palm Circle, No. 66 Palm cigele, No. 66, Neighbors of been the gue%ts of Mr, and Mra, Al-| son, Torlief, Jr, have returned from |plang made for the coming member a month's motor trip to Yellowstone |ship campaign. park, | cee nf ig Ballard Presbyterian Church Mra, Stewart F. Barber wit! leave| Mise Louisa bee, returned mixsion about September 16 for the East, ‘rom In will lecture at the where she will visit in New York, | Ballard Presbyterian church tn the Washington, D. C., and Virginia for |evening. two months, cee oe. ADDITIONAL CLUBS Mr. and Mra. A. W. Leonard have come in from their summer home at} Overseas Card Party Port Madison to their town resi ‘The regular weekly card party of dence the Overseas club will be given at the oe Jclubhouse, 404 13th ave. N., Thurs Mra, A. M. Wetherill and children, | day, September §, at 810 p,m. Mra who have been spending several| A. P. Appleyard and Mra, L. Millen weeks in Victoria, B. C., will return| will be hostesses, Members and this evening. | friends invited. eee Mr. Frederick Stimson left Tues day for Victoria, B. C., to attend the University school. . o- Lafayet'o PT. A. Lafayette PoT. A. will hold Sts first regular meeting in the schoolhouse, oe Tuesday, September 18, at 2:30 p. m. Midshipman Richard Frost arrived eed last evening from the naval academy U, of W. Alumnae Luncheon at Annapolis to spend a month with| The University of Washington his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E./Alumnas association will give a Frost. |luncheon Saturday, September 10, at eee 12:30, at the Northold inn. Mise Mr. and Mrs, Herbert L. Baker | Louisa Lee, a graduate of the Unt and Miss Dorothy Baker, who have |versity of Washington, who has been been the guests of Mr. and Mrs./a missionary in India for seven Roy Winders in Portland for a fort-| years, will be one of the speakers night, have returned to their home! For reservations, telephone Kenwood in Beattie, 0060, eee eee Mra. C. C. Gibson and daughter, Alsace-Lorraine Society Beulah, have returned from a two The Alsace-Lorraine fociety will months’ trip to lowa and South |entertain with a card party and Dakota. dance on Saturday evening, at 8:30, at the Geneva hotel, 308 Marion st. Moore will) Mg Birkhart Club Card Party The Birkhart club will entertain on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Jevenings at 8:90 o'clock with card MN, 4441 Cal eee Mr, and Mrs. Ben L. remove next week from 1067 KE. Lynn at. to their new residence, $31) 36th ave. N Mr. and Mrs. F. J, Martin will parties In Carpenter leave about September 20 for an/ifornia ave, Every y welcome eee Eastern trip. ee Knights of the Moon Banquet Mra. J. Curtis Simmons (Katherine| The Knights of the Moon will en Neal Simmons) of Portland spent |tertain with its first annual banquet Monday in the city as the guest of|on Saturday evening in honor of the Misses Mary and Eileen Houla- | members who are leaving for college han, on her way.to Washington, D. (this month. The i.onor guests of the C., and New York, where she will|/evening will be Mr, Herman Lean remain for the winter, der and Mr, Harold Shepard, who o: oF will attend Whitman colle; Mr. Mr. Al G. Flourney, Jr. son of Clarence Anderson and Mr, Edwin Mrs. Beasie M. Flourney, left’ Satur] Wilkerson, who are going to the day to attend the Augusta Military | Washington State college, and Mr. academy at Fort Defiance, Virginia, | Edmund Bireh Ruffner, who is teay- stopping en route for a visit at|ing on Monday for New York city Minneapolis, his former home, to resume his vocal studies. eee . . Yeomen Dance The Yeomen will entertain with a Mrs. M. H. Lockhart and two daughters, Miss Edna and Miss Jane month in the city, left Monday for|hall, Third and Virginia st.. Thurs day, September §, at 9 p. m. new product for home washing. “Don’t rub your youth DASEOL VE, For each tub of clothes thoroughly die- i package solve of Rinsa in two quarteot boiling ~ Wh SEATTLE STAR | Wooderaft, will open its fall session | bert Charles Phillips for some time, | won a wah ea eee fall ae at will leave Saturday for their home.|ine swedish club hall, Eighth ave sda di rd jand Olive st. A program has been Dr. and Mra. Torlief Torland and/arranged to include initiation and Lockhart, who have been spending a/dancing party at the new K. of P.| NOTE: To every laundress in this city. Ask the woman of the house for a package of the wonderful Remember the name—Rinso. Use it this way and save hours of back-breaking rubbing Then let your clothes soak and rinse without any hard rubbing Cynthia Grey: |Average American Girl Picks Her Husband Cold- | Bloodedly, 1s Conclusion of One Correspondent, | Who Answers “Clarence.” | BY CYNTHIA GREY The American girl—she has been, as a personality, at- | tacked and applauded from every conceivable angle, it would seem, But now a young man named Clarence springs a | brand new one. If you area regular reader of these columna you saw his question in these columns on Monday after- noon, i. e., Why do so many of our young women of most ex- cellent character choose a ne’er-do-well for a husband in | preference to the more stable, conservative type of man? | He backs up his accusations with a number of examples. Ia his an unusual experience? What do you think about it? If | our most desirable girls as a class are marrying men beneath | them, ‘why? Following is one reader's opinion: | Dear Cynthia: May I sit on the cracker box and deliver an opinion? | I was reading Clarence's poignant query on the American | girl. He has asked a general question to which one might give a general answer, but it would mean nothing. In the first place, there is no true (by which no doubt he means typical) American girl. American girls are the same as English, or French, or any other kind of girl, each moulded by her particular environment and each nationality laying claim to a few general peculiarities that are typical of that nationality. In the second place, he need not take the examples he has mentioned to heart, because they were probably governed by love, not reason. It would be just as reasonable to conclude | that, because an angry man occasionally kills another man in an argument, all men have a thirst for blood. The American girl, or mont any other girl for that ric matter, generally picks out her hus-|monta the next day, will kill the hair band quite cold-bloodedly, according growth permanently, But you must | to pecifications, dictated by her edu-| be careful not to use both the same leation, environment and natural day. Observe this treatment re- tanté, which ts as it should be. ltgtously and I think you will be sat- Most of the troubles that are |tafied with the results brought to your column are due to eee the transparent pretence, fostered by | Query About everybody, that love lasts as long «8! Suede Shoes | marriage. In fact, the whole tnatitu:|” near ating G: in | tion of marringe ts founded on ft. It|ingorm me in vino gps ia neat lis wonderful how we go on spreading | noo, k : lit, althe we kasw how abeurd § fs |e ae wee em If we spread the truth—that mar. | riage in fownded on friendship and! ,, 'y do not spot ver ‘aail th the respect of equals, It would 88¥° § lrain 4 they are pPrcakdbgecon anf ree lot of disillusionment and unhappl | rpey stretch uaually, more than the ness, but then we are fond of Pre| average shoe. The leather is 40 flex tence ible that they easily tak Why not explode a few of these lor the fon) nny ‘ake the shave pious frauds? Of course there would | ea6''9 be leas grist for your mill and you | ‘ | night even be termed cynic, which ts To Remove the way the world revenges itself on | Freckles those who “spill the beans.” FY. Dear Miss Grey: 1 arm looking for eee |a harmless freckle remedy and hope ' Anti-Jap lyou will be able to help me. Thank Land Law you. M. B The following remedy will remove | Dear Miss Grey: Would you please | freckles and tan: Precipitate aul- inform me if the Japanese can lease phur, tio parte; sine oride, one jland in the state of Washington’ | part; off of amygd., two parts. This Sincerely, G.I. M. |is perfumed according to taste. No, the Japanese cannot icase land | in this state since the anti-Japanese| After land law that wos passed during the | —Advertisement, cleaned and do they stretch more than the average shoe? SUSIE. Can they be! | BY MRS, MAX WEST jbelp much year when farm mothers are over-! ator | whelmed with work | screened There are extra crews of men to| self-wringing | cook for, and much work to| cart—thi | be carried thru when the weather is| that every hot | should A number of my correspondents | make write to ask how to care for t bat under these circumstances how to safeguard their own he and that of a coming baby wh obliged to work under such a strain \to coo! These sare serious questions, It) 1° 6 i, ‘i ought to be wo that no mother nurs. | ing a baby, and no prospective moth jer should have to carry on at the same time such heavy housework | But wince they do, they should have all possible help in this great tank not only on their own account put | th because of the distinct and harmful | **%, but tt effect of over fatigue in the mother | farms today help, machinery should be brought j to the ervice of these mothers, | wherever a machine can be installed} to her relief. EK tricity should be the household benefactor, wherever ip is available and a gasoline engine | will do a great dea! to help in the| | kitehen | | Then there are al sorts of labor. | saving devices which cont little and : CLUSTER 1-karat We sell on very reasonable terms. You pay, only $1.00 per week, and wear the ring while paying. ER MIC 202 pike THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1921. MRS. MAX WEST’S ADVICE ON THE CARE OF CHILDREN The fireless cooker, the ‘Thin ts one of the seasons of the! pressure cooker, the iceless ref, where ice cannot be ha cooler for scrubbl are a few of the things mother of young children have if she needs them to her work easter She should have a good stove with r|an oven that works, and should not jth | be expected to provide the fuel for it. If possible she should have an olf | stove and a summer kitchen In which the whole e shall not be intolerably heated with the big meals, And when it ts all over she should have a pleasant wereened porch with a big rocking chair and a hammock in which she |and the baby may rest and refresh | themselves. ‘These are not much to are luxuries almost be yond the dreams of many women on The department of agriculture will elptul bul here suggest: ed, and much can be done to make |a home more convenient even with @ comparatively small outlay. LIFE’S DARN FUNNY Jelther before or after the baby is| | born Bince it is about Impossible in send on réquest |many places to secure household | '¢tins on the subjects DIAMOND RINGS Every stone select and matched to give the appearance of one large solitaire. 2-karat size ....$146.00 JEWELER last legislature. . . To Increase | Weight Dear Misa Grey: What will make! jme get fat? And what will remove |superfluous hair permanently with- out disfigurement? I bave been using |Mquid preparations, but they only! make it come in worse. Thank you. K. K. K. A recipe for increasing weight was published im The Star of Tuesday, | September 6. | It ts claimed that peroxide of hy- | drogen and apirite of ammonia, using [the peroride one day and the am- away” Beautiful coats of water—mis weil. the solution until you get | $17.3 1 lot Jersey Jackets and Novelty Coats $2.90 cloth in all the wanted colors. STILL ON SALE— ' $50.00 to $95.00 Coats, Suits and Dresses $21.40 Separate Dress Skirts Values to $35.00 $4.80 $35.00 to $60.00 Coats, Suits and Dresses Creations The Florence is now ready with the new Fall models, the most attractive we have ever shown. Pricings are the most moderate in years for high grade merchandise such as this store has always carried. Each style re- flects an individuality all its own. ‘ Normandy, 0 $60.00 to $125.00 value Coats, Suits, Dresses $31.40 Ultra-stylish suits of Tricotine and Duvet de Laine, in navy, brown and reindeer. Sizes 16 to 48. — A.STEIN & COMPANY Garters Youm GUARANTEE OF QuauTy ie mh ie wt ee veS Soak one hour—two hours—overnight —whatever time is convenient. These wonderful, mild suds loosen every particle of dirt. Rinse, to remove the loosened dirt, till the water runs clear. 8+ Made in U. S. A. “SAVES YOU MONEY” (SECOND & UNION SEATTLE. WN Shop Here First Shop Here Last

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