The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 22, 1922, Page 12

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\ HE SEATTLE STAR REHEARSALS ON FOR N, W. PLAY i } fa ¥ Cast Prepares for Merchant » Show Feature = Rehearsals have begun for “North i west Products." a playlet in five ‘om episodes, which will he presented next Thureday, Friday and saturday evenings in the Woodward theater Northwest and industrial vention opens Monday for a week con d continues AS 8000 a» a visitor arrives be will be presented with tiekets to the per formance. A block of seats will be reserved each night for the delegates. The public will be admitted free by nnoune * may be Dollar Dinner Tomorrow ined will be made The play is staged by John Nick erson, former stage m " of the Witkes company. Ty Includes other profeasiona) talent, Evelyn At kinson Emma Seavey and Afr Nickerson, who have important roles, are all former members of the Wilkes Players, F Make, who it men ber of ¢ t, hae also had wide professic Xperience, Harold Mauff and May Jenkins, Lincoln high school students, were members of the high scheol cast that originally produced “Northwest Products.” The playlet was written by Miss Katherine Jones, a senior in j the Lincoin hige school, and three perform Recemary te ac commodate the wee the play sented in the hig Htorium The theme of the play ix the value to the community of the uae of home Products and deals with the conver jtiea of the general manager of o wholesale grocery company to the | mute ot Northwest products. Two jehiidren of the McDonakt school | Dorthea Barry, 4, and Lucille Call, § will also take part in the production, Plan Funeral for Seattle Merchant The body of T. E. Jones, Seattle resident and business man, who died suddenly in Gan Francisco Wednes day, is now being shipped to this city, Secording to recent word. Mr. Jones Bad gone south one month age to Sudit the hooks of a cancern. In Beattie, where he had resided 32 years, he had been connected with the Rees P. Daniels law firm, and the Frederick @ Nelson store. He was office manager for the lat- j ter Until two years ago. He is sur j¥ived by bis widow, Mrs Anna Jones; his mother, Mra. J. FE. Jones. &@ son, Kenneth; three sisters and three brothers, tet he and he a! te bring you doy. AMUSEMENTS ANT. G > a the Old Timers are smoking | STROLLERS ae 10g Cigarettes Summer Tourist Fares To Canadian Pacific Rockies On sale until ember 30th, 1922, Return limit October 3st, 1922. 7 i Round-trip. from Seattle to LAKE LOUISE, $42.50 BANFF, $4465 CALGARY, $55.00 EDMONTON, $60.00 “BACK EAST” EXCURSION FARES on sale until August 3ist; return limit, October 3ist, 1922 ~~ ROUND-TRIP FARES FROM SEATTLE TO— Toront $113.75 | Montreal ere $132.78 127.95 = 141.80 160.30 a 166.95 72.00 86.00 81.50 141.60 Cleveland .. ., 106.60 > 120.66 New York . 2. 14740 fe 156.35 , Minneapolis and St.Paul . $72.00 SARSTRANS-CANADA” LIMITED ‘leaves Vancouver, B.C, daily ot 3-00 p.m. arrives in Moatres! in 92 hours, Toronto im 87 hours — Seves business day each wey. Canadian Pacific Railway 608 Second Ave... SEATTLE , MAin 5587 St John | Winnipeg jSt Louis . Of where these | ;the akin should eBeord it, T | Cynthia Grey: | Balancing Chances—The Employed and Home Girl. Business friendships between men and women with all of their opportunities and freedoma, seldom carry over into social life. Thus the balance is maintained in the matri- monial race between the home and the employed girl, One of the latter thus complains: “I am getting pretty tired of going to places of amuse- ment with business girls, Since I have been working in an office I find that I must attend plays and concerts with one|F or more bachelor girls if 1 go at all. Lam not yet 25 years old. Most certainly I want the normal life of a wife and | mother. Men like me and I meet scores of them daily, never- | theless it seems to me that the girl who stays at home has | all the best chances to marry.” | Now tt doesn't seem that way at all to an Impartial observer, Bo many | men marry girls they get acquainted with and meet only In a business way that to the home girl it appears that her employed sister has the better chance to select a husband to her taste ‘The gtel who works often ots scores of men daily, like the writer of the above. he makes of her opportunity depends upon her own tt want evidently suspects that the soctal and busines h better than water and oil, If so, who in to blame? | sense | The workds Perhap a hint of an an 1 ewer in this f a wife | “Lam ® young wife who suffers bitterly because my husband attends | Dia office soctal affairs without me. } There are gay dinners and dances) several times @ year, but he says tt is made plain he wives and sweethearts of the Bot erpe@tted to be ent. Lam jealow it and it stand how |from me for these affairs.” } | Plainty the heartache about the separation of home from office|energy, particularly when they friendships is not confined to bust-|tasir own housework, The old pop nen life. ltar prejudice againat bobbed hair has | Now it i» written tn all ancient and | gone, modern codes of etiquet that the wife must be inchuded in all soctal invita. | tions except for stag affaira } Address of ‘This ix not often done, today, when | Movie Actor the function ts of business origin, and Dear Mise Grey: Thru your col- [nobody approves the infraction of| 0) of The Heattle Htar would you jeustom more than the business girl! | ieee, write the address of Gaston ‘The obvious reason for the remak-|Ci05> qnanking you, }ing of dn old social rule to sult mod. | Ammaeun. jern conditions ts the fact that the) 7 11, saaress ds Tha Fore jwomen of the two worlds do not) “ Lee Angeles, Cal, adapt themselves to each other and | "0s apartments, Los 2 [those who know both worlds know | ~ — that beth sets of women ere equally | espana tle | Im the competition for hushands, | |the outstanding fact te that the in- | fluence some girls have over thetr | |office companions ends at the office | |door, as the firet letter makes clear, | competition for a husband. The bal- 365 Kisie B. Cox, 419 W. Ful ance remains in equilibrium | ton st. reperted that her Individval preference, not time nor auto hit a man at Western ave. and | place, determines most marriages [Virginia st. Thursday. He saved eee [himself from falling by catching hold Dear Miss Grey: Would you kind. |of the rediator. ily tei me if the Diackhead cure ‘Thomas Jordon, 41. of T j whieh you printed recently te to te 366 come, wae taken to the of used in the day or night time Al®o hospital with « fractured skull after j whether it is supposed to be washed ing was hit by an auto driven by off or wiped off with a cloth, |Lioyd Davie, 899 I5th ave, Tt da Dest to use the remedy about | aay at Fourth ave and Jackson st. two or three times work, after | 1 = ~. B. Amdal, 6709 pres Eye yr ip aot we «'367 368:::; ave. N. W., re ported that his auto struck two night. You showld not wipe i off, a+) women as they stepped from the curb af Third ave. and Pike at, | Thursday. They were only slightly |brulesd and refused to give their Misa Grey will recetve callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 1 to 2 p. m., and on Tuesday and Thursday from 11 a m. to 12 m, each week. Please do not come at other times an it seriously interferes with her writing. as shocking. Many wow their hair bobbed, and a: t. A great many wome it ds @ saver of time and! 1922 Record of Pedestrians Hit [Plainty, business ner home life gives jany woman an advantage in the Bobbed Hair Dear Miss Grey: 1 am & woman | Samer, of 37 years and have three children, | 6, 9 and 12 years old I am very 36 short (my oldest girl ts as tall as Friday Tt am). Recently I had my batr bobbed and the neighbors and my husband think tt te terrible, and are shocked at me. / Please tell me if you think it was/ all right Sincerely, MILDRED A If bobbed hair ts becoming to you Kart Levy, 65, 716 12th ave. was tn Minor hospital result of being struck Seventh ave. and Pine ained & fractured shoulder and internal injurtes, | MADISON PARK IMPROVE- MENT CLUB will hold ite regular business meeting Monday at § p. m., te iy shin eet hall, followed by a dance. end 1 ls comfortable, there te no) D ots echoduled tor @ >. mi. Mom day on the bathing beach. Bitar readers who wish sugges. tions for prevention and treat ment of sunburn and freckles will receive same by writing to The Seattle Htar Washington bureau. 1322 New York ave, Washington, D. and inclosing two cents in tampa for postage Candied Laxative Waters | MOVIES For tnfanta, children or adults, 360 at all drag stores, oF sent, p. p, by! Joyner Drug Co, Spokane.—Adver L/ More Than | Mere Money UNDS in the Savings Department of the Dexter Horton National represent more than mere money. They are proot that the saver is worth something to himself and his employer. Savings Department Open Saturday evenings 6:00 to 8:00 o'clock — een Dexter Horton National Bank Second Ave. and Cherry St. SEATTLE “You'll Be Mighty Glad You Won a Disc Wheel COASTER WAGON” RONALD BUIST Says Ronald Buist, 127 Fourth N. IT TOOK LESS THAN ONE DAY for Ronald to Win His Coaster BOYS—GIRLS—YOU CAN WIN A WAGON, TOO, IN YOUR SPARE TIME Without a Cent of Expense! You'll Have to Hurry—They’re Going Fast! ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS TO SECURE ONLY TEN NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE STAR Nearly 100 Boys and Girls Are Proud Possessors of These Dandy Coaster Wagons Follow These Instructions---Get Started Now SEE THE WAGON AT THE STAR OFFICE Here is your opportunity to secure one of these brand-new Coaster Wagons without one cent of expense. All you have to do is to get ten (10) new subscribers for The Seattle Star. You don’t have to collect any money, nor make the delivery of The Star. Just get ten (10) of your friends or neighbors who are not now having The Star delivered to them, to agree to have it delivered by authorized carrier for three (3) months and to pay him fifty (50) cents a month for it. Have subscribers sign rn tion blank printed in this ad. Be sure and get phone numbers when possible, so that subscriptions may verified at once. Do not wait until you have secured all ten of the subscriptions, but bring or phone subscribers’ names and addresses to The Star as soon as you get them so that delivery can be started at once. And one of these dandy new “Dan Patch” Coaster Wagons will be presented to you FREE ! Almost everyone likes a boy or girl who is trying to get ahead. They will like you for your enterprise and gladly subscribe for The Star. GIRLS Use This Subscription Blank or Call at the Office and Receive a Book Don’t let the boys get ahead of you. You CAN WIN one, too! TO SUBSCRIBERS I hereby subscribe to The Seattle Star for a period of three months, and thereafter until I order same discontinued. I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 50 cents a month. I AM NOT NOW THE STAR DELIVERED TO ME.

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