The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 3, 1922, Page 4

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a Mrs. Hoge Will Honor Mrs. Boyle at Lunch- — eon; Mrs. Huteson to Be Hostess. Mrs. Robert Boyle, of 4 New York, who is vistting Mr. | and Mrs. Thomas Green, Mrs, James | Hoge is entertaining a fow &@t luncheon at her home at Highlands, Thursday afternoon, as. oe ‘3 Mrs Huteson to ; in Mr. and Mrs. Alfred are leaving Satur for @ year's absence in the Ori} and Europe, Mra, Trafford Hute- | will entertain with a tea at her at The Highlands Tbursday from four until six o'clock, afternoon Mrs. Huteson | ‘ at tea in compliment to Miss Lucy Minnegorode, of Washing: | Won, D. C., head of the public health | who, during her stay in the iy. isa geet ot the Sunset club. onial Ball This 9 The Seattle Yacht club ts entertain: | ne this evening with a Colonial ball | honor of the officers of the visit | Meet and Miss Liberty (Miss Eve- | Atkinson.) committee In charge, with Mr. Seibert as chairman, prom: ® number of novelties for the i among them, a balloon A buffet supper wil! be served e Party ir. and Mrs. W. E. Nichols enter. vell Compliment Helen Jordan is entertaining | a bridge of three tabler at her Saturday afterncon as a com- it to Mrs, Francis Packer, who relatives in town, and who friends of the honor guest. i, ce Nag te The wedding ceremony of Ra dinner at her home at Belle- J Waka Jinx,” on July 15. Mr. B. Bowman is genera! chairman, by Mr. D. K. MacDonald and THE CALIFORNIA— marriages of Miss Vera Coiling,| THE FLAGSHIP daughter of Mrs. Helen Collins,| When did she holst the flag of the Eberle, U. 8. N., commander-in-chiet of the Pacific fleet, Vice Admiral W R. Shoemaker, U. S. N., acting com CLUBS FOR TUESDAY mander, Rear, Admiral B. F. Hutehi- pa son, U. 8. N., chief of staff, Captain Clara Barton Tent W. H. Standley, U. 8. N., napistant chiet of taff, Commander N. H . aide, feet engineer , Commander W. R. Furlong, , aide, fleet gunnery officer mmander G. C, Pegram, aide, flag Clara Barton tent, Daughters of! Veterans. requests its members to ‘meet at the Armory at 9 a. m. Tues day, July 4, dressed in white, to take places in the float in the Fourth | Ge Tely parade. secretary. And many others. Equal . . ly delightful. ADDITIONAL CLUBS ~ Sad WHO COMMANDS ‘ P. E. 0. Chapters THE CALIFORNIA? The five P. E. O. chapters of this! Captain H. J. Ziegemeir, U. 8. N * city will entertain informally Thurs. @ay, July 6, from 3 to & p. m, in| ik & Nelson's grill room, for | Visiting members of the P. E. 0. o- And has since she was commissioned 20, 1921. His ranking offi. Commander W. A. Bmead. xecutive officer, Command | W. Bradley, U. 8, N., gunnery Alki Review, No. 69 jofficer, Lieutenant Commander L. ¥ Alki review, No. 69, Woman's Ben-| Thibault, U. 8. navigat And @fit association of the Maccabees, |fifty other officers. Each important ‘Will meet Wednesday, July 5, at § p.|in his pioce. m., in A. 0. U. W. hall. pea see “4 UFS- | displacement, 32,300 tons. Mean Gay, July 6, at Mrs. Frank MeDer- ‘ mott's home, “Faraway.” Those at.\2#usht, 90 feet. Complement, 1, tending are asked to take the 9/ @'clock boat for Tacoma. Automo- | Biles will moet the guests. see Bethlehem Latheran Ladies’ Ald The Ladies’ Aid society of the! Bethiehem Lutheran church will Meet Wednesday, July 6, at 2 p. m., @t the church, a see Tonia Social Club Tonia Social club, O. EB. 8., will Meet Wednesday, July 5, at 2 p.m, @t the Masonic temple, one Daughters of St. George 6. {HOW A HOTEL CHIEF SEES SEATTLE PLAN ANY The Dauehters of St, George wii| Thomas J man, manager of Meet Thursday, July 6, at 1 p. m., at the Hote} St San Francisco: ME. B.A. hall, A business meeting | “Such & city an Seattle with its ax sured future and progressive citizens Will be held at 1 p. m., while memo- could find no better investment than Fial services will be held at 1:30 p. m. se tee) |® splendid hotel built by the business Seattle Social Club |men and property owners for their Beattie Social club will meet Thurs. |C°M™MON good. Altho Heettle has good May, July 6, nt 2 p. m. at the home of Hotels, a much finer one to keep pace Mrs. 6. Silverman, 256° Washington (Wit! Your progress ix necessary EE Carts will be played. Such a hotel would add the jast link ae . |to the chain of modern hotels in the |large cities on this coast and much to incre the tourist trav Hont’s Point Galld The Hunt's Point guild of the Fruit | oa —— and Flower mission will Btve a pro-| selves with lunch. Guests are wel- — luncheon, July 11, at Hunt's | come, New officers will be elected. int. | : eee Lady Maccabees, No. 944 } Lady Maccabeen, hive No, 944, wil! meet Thurwiay, July 6, at 1:20 p,m, in the 1. 0. 0, F. temple. L. 0. E. Club The L. O. W. club will hold its reg ular meeting Tuesday, Julye11, at the ks’ club, instead of July 4 iderbloom Club The iiderbloom ¢glub will meet ‘Thursday, July 6, at 11 a. m., In the Knights of Pythias hall, Those at- _ tending are asked to provide them: | ee cee at Country Home | Theodore William Hammer was performed at the home of AzeN Roy Puller entertained | the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sewell Sanders, Wednes-| oe day evening, June 14.—Portrait by Grady. (| SEATTLE SERVICE SET | € 9666 Rainier Beach, to Mr. Roman |commander-in-chief? December 20, 1 was solemnized Wednesday, 1921, to be exact. | 28, at the bride's home. After)’ " 1 Mr. and Mre. Dudley will be nr ieeme in Auburn, FLEET OFFICERS “3 Who are they’ Admiral E. W Cynthia Grey is taking a two weeks’ vacation. tere mailed to her department during this time will be answered by her on her return, as promptly as possible, { : | | } Miss Hazle Sanders to Mr. BERTHE DEVEREUX ADAMS HOW MANY GUNS? ‘Twelve of i+inch, to mention a) few. Her armor? Ma chere, you} [would nog understand. HAS SHE TROPHIES? She has. Five silver cups, offered by the Knights of Columbus, the Odd Fellows, the town of Vallejo, the Lé Angeles Examiner and for tilumi-| |nated float, She also holds the navy department trophy for track, and she won the Pacific fleet basketball championship. HAS SHE A MASCOT? Nothing lees than @ small cub Dear. But they live so well on the California that the big and husky they had to shift her to the 200 in Lon Angeles, However, she still surrounds her one-time mates with luck. She's @ bear of a/ mascot, Her name is Prunes. | mareot grew #0 | WATCH OUR SMOKE | ‘That is the California’s motto. She} deserves to be watched, She han} only been in commission eleven months, She has only been in the} active fleet sin December 20, 1921 And she has caught up with the) rest of the fleet in all forma of activ ity—gunnery, engineering, battle ef ficleney ond athletics. She's top notch. | } |18 HE PROUD oF HER? | | Ask him. The commanding officer Jot the California will tell you that jhe is. Very, very proud of her Lightning Causes $4,000,000 Blaze BALTIMORE, July 4 Loss ent! mated at $4,000,000 was caused when lightning struck a grain elevator of the Baltimore & Ohio raliread at Lo. cust Point, last night, were slightly injured, The flames were halted by all the elty’s fire equipment before they spread to the Fort McHenry hospital where 400 disabled world war veter ans are undergoing treatment. Ambulances rushed the veterans from the wards when the fire started. ICTURE BRIDES DESERT FIANCES | BELLIS ISLAND. — Three “picture brides” left their fiances in the lurct when they arrived from They had picked out |spOuses on the way over, Three firemen Europ. brand new All let- fa tron of Chicago cabarets, lost his| ‘ s popularity when he appe: wi Mra. Bertha Mates of New Yorkin Yasolli, leader of a gang of pro- ia the gunst of her brother, Mr.|ninition agenta L. G. Nuller, for a few days before s eis nt Jeaving to mpend the summer in INTERESTED | Alaxka. | “Hennery,” maid the farmer's wife, tte ad | “you gotta get rid of that new hired | and Mra. Warren Sheedy are! pian.” } ving congratulations upon the) “what's th’ matter'th him?" | birth of a daughter Thursday, June “Why, Hennery, he ain't been do- 29, at the Swedish hospital in’ & blessed thing all mornin’ but | nf, Sone standin’ out there in th’ field argutn’ | Mr. and Mra. F. R. Morgan and) politics with thet scarecrow!—Rich. Mr. and Mrs, Hugh M. Caldwell! mond Times-Dispatch. THE SEATTLE STAR Personal Dre and M motored from I Sanford Whiting | tiand Bunday, and | are the guests of Mr. and Mra, Kd: | gar L. Webster, Dr, Whiting in go ing to Spokane to attend the state} medical convention, and Mra, Whit ing will remain in Beattle until bis | return, | at | Mr, and Mrs. Edward Morgan Mills and daughters, Gwiadys and Dorothy, who have been in Seattle for the past two years, guests at the Hotel Sor rento, are leaving about the middle of the month, for San Francisco, where they will reside, “ee Mr. and Mra, D, A. Farneworth | and children left Sunday for Seaside, Ore, to be gone neveral weeks. H eee | Mra, George Fuller of Portland | Among other things with us this Ore, arrived Sunday, and Is the! week is the navy. guest of Mr, and Mra, Philip G. Kin: | art ey oer And the gobs. Mrs, Thomas Hammond and chit eee Gren ieft Saturday for Port Town-| And the mascots send to remain two months, eee © left today for Spo- the state medica ‘The navy ranges from subs to battleships, The gobs from five foot youths to six-foot huskies. The mascots from white mice to | Dr, J, C. Moe kane, to attend convention bef FF apes. To date, the gobs are the Dr. and Mrs. MacWhinnie will re only ones that have come ashore, turn by motor Wednesday, from | ore Brentwood, B. C., where they have| The on the pont office steps last | night something in a blue suit and «| white hat, with a very jovial smile, sang gently to the nearby passing populace, “I'm just a little monkey in my own home town.” been spending a week. see Mr. and Mra. David Henry Jones have returned from a fortnight's mo tor trip to Oregon. . mag ges * | The gobs an attractions, these Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stoll are} } days, oregyying with the Fourth of roe! m n the , Ores eee Seer Len, | July street decorations. The town | birth of @ daughter at the St, Luke's | hospital, July 1. - ee Mr, and Mrs, George P. Endert| and family left Friday for a trip to Lake Chelan jooks just like a Christmas tree—a/ | Patriotic Christmas tree with flags | ncattered here and there among other bits of brilliance. 5 One cute gob explained to some | oe Mr, Barrett Green, who hag been spending three weeks with his par. ents, Mr..and Mra. Thomas Green, ts returned Friday from a motor trip thru California. leaving Tuesday evening for his eee home in New York Mra. Willard Sheldon of Palo Ate tind Alto, Cal, is the guest for a few Mra. A. M. McLelland of Shreves. port, La, has arrived to spend the! weeks of Mee. B. F. escgeinetg eg | summer with her son-in-law nd | Min | «Helen Peck and Mins Mar daughter, Mr. and Mra. HR. Hoge). oe Giesier of Minneapolis are oe. ig spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mra. Samuel L. Barnes. Mra. Louise Allen Larkin and) pbs ye q it f Spokane, who Saeed visiting Mie. Dena W.| ™©rs. Helen M. Northrop of Chi Brown, will return to their home|ca#o ls the guest for « few days) Tuesday morning. of Mr. and Mrs. O, W. Crockett. | . ef one Mra. Fred Yates, who has been Mr. and Mrs. Cassius B. Gates past atx weeks, | left Friday for Glacier and Yellow accom | stone parks, to be away « month John oe indet-| Mrs. on the Aingka. in Winnipeg for the returned Friday evening. panied by her mother, Mrs. MacKay, who will remain initely. | | | rks left Saturday! for a trip to} Harry Spokane . Frederick Stimson returned Frt day from the University school at mr? one | Newspaper Folk to | Victoria, B. C, to spend the sum mer with his mother, Mo. F. &| Have Picnic Sunday} ee Pere News hounds and their friends will Mrs. HC. Henry has returnea|#Ather July 9 at Hall's lake to a tend the escond annual newspaper plonte. There will be sports, games, “<6 plenic lunches and dancing. Inter. urban cars will leave every half hour Mr. and Mrs. Jostah Towne and)». Mr. and. Mrs. Clinton Do a heel uring the day from Fifth ave. and bert: ” the guests of Mr. and Mra. Ot 1 arg from a visit of several months in the East. ¢ 8x! hi ht “Winifred” U he aa. Woman Killed When Gas Stove Explodes Fille of Minnea gen ocksgr-ere P| GREELEY, Colo, July %—Miss th rrived Saturday t 4 the Bsr ‘er cousins Mr. ana} Hana Skinner, of Springfield, Il, Dh with her cousins, Mr tir, GC. OM. Prett | wus instantly killed here yesterday see when @ gasoline stove exploded ERRY WASTER A DRY OFFICIAL CHICAGO.—"The count.” star pa | Mrs. John Agen and daughters, Mina Katherine and Miss Florence Agen, returned Thureday from Cor-| onado, where they spent the winter and early summ | C (portable) , vacation ti OFA. o> Summer nights are Victrola nights! Here. is a genuine Victrola for $50 that you can take with you anywhere. Mahogany cabinet, 9 inches high. 12 inches wide, 174 inches deep, 10-inch turntable. Nickel-plated sound box. Nickel-plated corner protectors, lockin, - Ar and re movable cinying handle, Sherman ay & Go. Third Avenue at Pine SBATTLBE Tecome * Spokane © Pertend By Wanda von Kettler of us that tt waen't that he mind ed being out at time; it was just that being in port more often fe ”m most of the he'd li Which t4 Just as good an explana tion of matters as the one given by & certain Seattieite, who, with hin family, moved from a suburb to a residential district nearer the city one day last week Said he: “No, it wi t that we were too far out—not that; we just felt we wanted to be a little closer | in.” see People like that ought to do well at explaining such things as the polltax. Regardless of what fe said, that always strikes the masses the very same way. see flee where a couple of mountainers who recen attained the top of Mount Constance state thatthe last 2,000 feet are the hardest. And I've always been told it’s the first bun dred years. ee Gone to prepare for the Fourth: be back tomorrow HAYS TO GALL MOVIE PARLEY Filmland Conference to Be Arranged LOB ANGELES, July 1.—The con- ference virus has broken into the movies and the universal cure-all for diplomatic and industrial difficulties when motion picture « *, directors jand producers cast their luck in as sembling around a horseshoe table. This forecast was made today by Will H. Hays, who in a telegram to the players’ board of control of the Paramount stock company here, an [nounced his intention of calling a film industry conference Hays’ telegram was in reply to a wire from the players who pledged him, as director general of the movies, “thelr unceasing efforts to ‘protect the good name of our pro foesion,” and besought his “assurance of protection against scurrilous at- tacks.” The players’ board of control was recently organtzed by the Lasky com- pany to direct an uplift movement from within the movies. Haye’ telegram said in part: “Our complete success is attatn- able only with co-operation of au- thors, actors, directors, producers, distritutors, exhibitors and everyone in the industry combined with the) sympathetic co-operation of the pub. lio. I have an abiding faith that this co-operation will come from all thinking people who must recognize that our purpose Is to matntain th: highest moral and artistic standard: in motion picture production. Very soon I want to arrange for frank and full dicusston with as many play- ers and directors as possible to work out the most effective plan of co operation.” Flower growers in England are making extensive use of the electric light to induce early bloom PRISON FACTORY anderin PLAN APPROVED Committee’s Investigation Leads to Indorsement After a tw © Investigation « committee representing — the manufacturing — interests — of Washington has indorsed the proposed factory program at the state penitentiary at Wall Walla. Members of the committee are George G. Tilack, Beattie; Gus Meene, Jr, J. W. Bailey and Thos. W. Moore, Bpokane, and Frank FE. Day, Tacoma, Their report fol lows | “In addition to the operation of the tailoring and shoe manufacturing for state institutions, o: find in successful operation a stamping plant manufacturing automobile 1 plates and have a definite un nding that it is not the inten: tion to well the products of these de . we cen dersta partments on the open market in competition with established indus tries of the state We find, program for as part of the tentative future installation, « binding twine plant to employ 75 jmen; the installation of a cotton |moods mill designed to employ about 260 men, and an enlargement of the stamping plant to manufacture, in {addition to automobile license plates, certain small lines of hardware not now manufactured in the state, by jwhich it is contemplated a total of 7 It being 75 men will be employod | understood that the products of these three last named departmente may |be generally offered for sale to the| |public, as these products do not, in any way, conflict with similar arti cles now being manufactured tn the state jfinds the committee tn accord with |the proposed industrial program as outlined above; all of which, however, “It is also understood that should investigation prove that either the binding twine or cotton mill plans lare impractical for the penitentiary for any treason, the manufacturers’ committee will be conrulted as to the substitution of other industries that will not interfere with established in- dustries in Washington.” RABBIT QUITS, CROWD RIOTS CHICAGO, — An electric rabbit | went on strike at the opening day of a dog race meet here, Most of the crowd of 2,000 joined tn the riot re sulting when they didn’t money back Star readers who wish informa- tion and formulas on waterproof: ing goods of all kinds—clothing, tents, fawnings, shoes, ete., will receive same by writing to The Seattle Star Washington bureau, 1822 New York ave., Washington, D. C, inclosing two cents in stamps for postage. | | j | P nt grounds; Ba! tieh Hagpi lunch. bas served on th: Take street car to Leschi Boat Anderson nencing “The result of this investigation | is dependent upon legislative action. | get their | Competitions in water Hours of Pleasure, Fun an ¢ Hand will %e there. ote. MONDAY, JULY 8, 1922. ———-_- | | | Mr. Hume is conducting classes in the arts of the the- ater, community drama and 4 stage management at the summer session of the Cor- nish School. A Pure Cream and Milk Product: Use It —in your coffee! —on your berries! —on your cereals! —drink lots of itt Fresh daily at your grocer’s, or telephone Ell. 6210 10c a Pint A “Mayflower” | | | | “Te bulla yourself up quickly after Flu or any wasting fliness, take SCOTCH PICNIC alGAMES AT FORTUNA PARK MERCER ISLAND, TUESDAY, JULY 4TH ged by a jot of the ¢ on nt committee and under the nd St. Andrew's No, 164, Order of ie Society. Highland ing and Athletics; from the Pienle in Pavilion; Twelve Enjoyment, Scot- Bring your reshments ping, Dan: trip to and liroom Dancing Lanches and © grounds at city prices. TRANSPORTATION Buy tickets at f Fortuna ® every half hour the’ ft Boats running every half hour till | boat at 10:30 p. m. American Beau ELECTRIC IRON It will pay you to buy this iron because it is the best. extra first cost is offset many times by its sturdy. reliability that assures the same satisfac- tory results after years of use as upon the day you purchase it. Sold by Dealers and Electrical Companies Everywhere. Manufactured by American Electrical Heater Company, Detroit Oldest and Largest Exclusive Makers. Established 1894. Its slight ae 61 w ee — on one a

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