The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 16, 1922, Page 8

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| Mr. and Mrs. Trimble In-\ troduce Daughter at: Smart Dance; Pre-' Nuptial Entertain-! ments, SUNSET CLUB WAS THE | 7 f Setting last evening for a delight t dance, when Mr. and Mra, Will. Pitt Trimble formally tntro- their daughter, Miss Augusta Trimble, to their friends, The af Tair also honored Miss Esther Stev ne of New York, a classmate of Trimbie, who ts visiting friends im town. ‘The flower appointments for the Pecasion were very lovely, Masses Of Aoft-tinted mid-season flowers, Dy Gombined the paste! shades of blue, , pale yellow, pink and coral soft feathery green. A buffet F was served in the lanai, with Richard PD. Merril) and Mrs. Green presiding at the urna. Representatives from the army Davy were in attendance, from Lewis, Fort Lawton and the Sound Naval station, many of classmates of Lieut. Ford U. 8 A, son of Mr. and Trimble, who ts in town for a time, on his way to his new in the Philippines. | o- | fiss Dorothy Davis } Entertain Derethy Davis has issued for a shower tea at her home , Auguet 24, from 3 until ck, complimenting Miss Louise Saturday afternoon, August 19. y Davis will entertain with a wer at home for Mixs Dorothy) itt, whose engagement was re) announced. # o.* Dr. and Mrs. amson Hosts taining i compliment to Bolm, who leaves this even- New York city, Dr, and Mra. Floyd Lamson were hosts last at a supper at their home the ballet program at The thirty guests included the Members of the Cornish faculty and a few intimate at the Hotel Washington. Luncheon at Home Mra. Robert D. Forbes is entertain ing with a luncheon of eight covers at her home Friday afternoon. eee Miss Coles Hostess Today To compliment Miss Marion Mc Eachern, just returned from Alberta, | Canada, and Miss Vivian Humphries who spent the summer in Nashville, | +Tenn., Miss Margaret Coles enter.| tained at her home this afternoon with a luncheon of twelve covers. The table was centered with « charming arrangement of sweet peas and asters in the mauve tones, see Patronesses Named for |Garden Bridge The garden bridge, to be given by cee Tea and Shower compliment to Miss Edna Mo- » Mrs. Robert E. Smal! and Mary Smal! wil! entertain with tea and kitchen shower at apartments at the McKelvey afternoon. ‘ing at Tea Assisting at the Misses Elleen and iret Delaney's tea Saturday af- for Mise Marcia Berger and Louise Ehriich will be Mrs ‘Trumbull Lee, Mrs. Howard n, Mrs. Edwin Charles Ewing Mra. Frarcis Everett Mitchell, Who will alter ate at the urn# be- tween the hours of 4 and 6 o'clock.| Miss Margaret Yerkes, Miss Gladys + Miss Sarah McClintock of Spo-| Miss Lurtine Brown, Miss Lura} the home of Mrs. Eliza Ferry Leary, | Friday afternoon, August 18, will have the following ilet of — eamen: i and Miss Farris Norton will ting Mra. Dean Gooding ¥. Dunlap, Mra. J. F. Wagner, Mrs. + Miss Hazel McMillan enter - W..H. Pringle, Dr. Sarah Kendall, with a small i a . H luncheon at her airs. J. KE. Chitberg, Mrs. Waiter | this afternoon, oe Reed, Mra. George 8. Ryan, Mrs.| . | Ralph Gill, Mrs. P. 8. Masters, Mra. Dinner to Honor | Howard Joslyn, Mrs, W. H. Utter, Engaged Pair | Mra. David Bowen, Mra. Donald B OMir. and Mra. Henry Broderick are | Oi. Mins Carrie Shumway, Mrs etaetsining with e dinner for sis.{00's* HM. Appleton, Mrs. William at thelr renidence Saturday |2: Blackwell, Mra. M. A. Weed, Mra @vening, honoring Miss Marcia Ber.|0- H. Carpenter, Mrs. E. B, Hussey, | ge, her fiance, Mr. Richard ¥.) Mts. F. M. Jordan Mra. 8. J. Chadwick, Mra. 0. J ee }C. Dutton, Mra. Albert C. Phillips. . iMrs. George Estey, Mrs. Oswald Affairs Planned |Brown, Mra. Edward Townsend for Brides-to-Be |Mra. Elinor R. Thorne, Mrs. John F ‘Among the many affairs plannea| Hunter, Mrs. J. G. Fenton, Mra. T for autumn bridesciect will be one|M- Askren, Mra. F. D. Becker, Mr 0m Saturday, August 26, to compli J. Clement, Mra. D. W. Mc iment Mise Marcia Berger and Mise|N#ushton, Mrs. A. J. Trumbull, Louise Ehrlich, when’ Mian Alma| Mf. R. H. Morgan, Mrs. Addie Calhoun will entertain at nine tables | Comly, Mra. ree T. Thirsk, Mrs. @f bridge in their honor, at her home. |Bailey V. Williams, Mrs, Joseph ae | Valentine, Mrs. M. C. Sehwennsen, Mra. 8. H. MacDonald, Mrs, Arthur Luncheon Honors DeVoe, Mrs. H. M. Chittenden Mrs. Witter Mrs. C. EB. Gaches, Mount Ver. Mrs. Cari F. Gould entertained |790: Mrs. J. B. Moyer, Everett; Mrs. With an informal tuncheon at her|©: @ Adams, Anacortes; Mrs. Paul Fesidence Tuesday, complimenting! Rhodius, Sedro-Woolley; Mrs. Willis Mrs. Dean Gooding Witter, of Sa: Hopkins, Aberdeen: Mrs, M. 1, n Francisco, who ts visiting her par-| Clifford, Tacoma; Mra. J. Delabarre, @nts, Mr. and Mrs. William D. Per.|Port Angeles; Mrs. W, Wi. Tolman, kins. Mrs. Roy Case, Wenatchee; eee C. Niekum, Tacoma; Mrs. ‘, Howard G, Thompson, Walla Walla; Bridge Luncheon for Mrs. Frost Snyder, Tacoma; Mra. B. Mrs. Leader L. Titus, Ellensburg; Mra. 8. A. Sizer, Mrs. John Donald McPherson will | Raymond; Mrs. W. C. Whitfield, Bur entertain with a luncheon of twenty | ton: Mrs. George Hastings. covers, followed by bridge, at her| Assisting about the grounds will home Thursday afternoon, as a com-|>* Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Howard Bal pliment to Mrs, Edmond”® Leader, a/ lard. Mrs. O. B, Dage, Mrs. Edwin Fecent bride, and a lifelong friend of |J. Reyburn, Mrs, Alvah L. Carr, Mra. the hostess. |D. W. MeNaughton, Mrs. George D. Mrs. Leader plans to leave soon| Schofield, Mrs. H. A. Reynolds, Mra. for New Haven, Conn., to join Mr.|H. D. Hurley, Mrs, BE. D. Burwell, Leader, who will jeave next week to) Mra. N. E. Davin. @oach the Yale crew. ‘Tickets may be obtained from Mra. Mrs. Perry B. Truax will compli ment her daughter, Miss Jane Truax, | ¥!!'* Hopkins of Aberdeen, nom} Mrs. Truax with her daughter are | leaving August 26 for a two years’ stay in Luzerne, Switzerland, | eee McCleary, vice-president general of the national society, and Miss May Dunn Ward, acting dean of women e at the University of Washington Miscellaneous Shower - . In honor of Mise Amy Leone Dev- enpeck, a bride-to-be, a miscell: ne-) — — ——- OUs shower was given by Mins Jeasie | NT. Blanchard and Miss Mary Rigstad PAN TAGE on Saturday at Miss Rigstad’s home ALEXAND) THE MAW 7 Ww in Mt. Baker park. Oo KNOWS ee o Marie Kot! ane jower Bron. * Green ani Punbars Co and Orthopedic Tea Shop Harts Sumated nnd Marion), Pi Pantagescope Service ytiemernt Admatarions Mrs. Lester Elliott will be hostess mrad ch Ba dee for St. Margaret's guild of St. Mark's | — church at the Orthopedic Tea Shop stor Thursday, assisted by Mrs. D. Mc: | HAY FEVER Eachern, Mrs. W. W. Turner, Mrs. | INSTANTLY J. H. Gaffney, Mrs. Carol Butter.} ho worth, Mra. J. W. Barbour, Miss ASTHMADOL Taura Elizabeth Stuart, Miew Cath $1.00 and $2.00 ¢rine Thomoson and Miss Thelma) at all drug stores or sent post paid Barbour. 1 JOYNER DKUG CO.,, SPOKANE 3 * 2 2 AMUSEMENTS | Mrs, Bacchus, prominent in musical circles in Spoka with her daughter, Helen, a talented young violinist and | dancer, who has been spending a few days in Seattle, a guest) | Benefit for Orthopedic Hospital | Children's Orthopedic hospital will be the various chapters of the Daugh-| meet ters of the American Tevolution, at| from 3 to & o'clock in | Neleon’s grill room | Trustees’ Meeting, Federated Clubs oe Small, 606 McKelvey apartments, El Motor Picnic Trip tioty Sepe Presiding at the urns will be Mra. | Inee to te regent; Mrs, Howard G And ten of her young friends on 8 | whderpeon of Walla’ ee prio eee _ Snoqualmie, Wednes | chairman of the committees on the| a pmayet 22 | correct use of the flag: Mrs. Henry Bacchus | Per sonal |. Mre. Jason D. Butler will this evening for Schenectady, N. Y., | Butler plans to spend the winter tn }the Kast, returning by way of Calh | fornia in the spring : . | Mian Alice English |traveling abroad thin sall on the Olymple |month for New York Beattle late in October home she will visit in Detroit and) will be joined tn Chicago by her brother, Mr. Hugh English, who will | return with ber via California | been wil who bh summer, returning to ore Mr. and Mrs, Miller Freeman, their three sons and Miss Dorothy Hager, of Vancouver, B. C., returned Monday from & two months’ motor leave to visit her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mra, Elliott Dean Harring: | ton, stopping en ute to spend a | few days with her brother, Mr, C. H Davideon, in Milwauk Mra. Robert L. Green in Chicago and Mrs, Sam uel W. Anderson in La Crosse. Mra.| the Inet of this | On her way | | ) trip to California j eee Mr, and Mra. Bruce Crain, Jr., and Mr. Bruce Crain, Sr, of Lamison, | Ala, arrived Tueeday afternoon and! are the guests of Mr, and Mra, EB. C. | Ewing. Later they will visit: Mrs Ewing's parents, Mr. and Mra, J. 1. Frost, at their home near Wallace} Falls. Mims Verna Ricketts, of Dallas, | Texas, who is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. William Baxter France, ts leav ing Saturday for Spokane. Mr. and Mra. France, with their guest, spent the week-end at Mount Rainier oe Mixa Hazel Jones, of Warhington, | D. C, with Miss Marion Cameron, were the guests last week of Mins Jones’ brother and ef inlaw, Mr and Mre. Harry Burnell Jones, hav ing motored across the continent. eee ‘ | | Mrs. Walter Moore, who ts spend | ing Auguat at Pacific Beach, was in} | | town for the week-end. Mrs. John Rathbone and three chil | Gren, of Chicago, who are the house guests of Mr, and Mrs. K. A. Bur | nell, are spending « few days in Bell | ingham. They will return Thureday | and, with Mr, and Mra, Burnet! and| | Miss Louise Burnell, will motor to/ Mount Rainier for the week-end, ee Mrs. Lestie Richard Groves, Jr, (Grace Wilson) in visiting her par ents, Col. R. H. Wilson, U. 8 A. re jtired, and Mre. Wilson, - ne Clubs CLUBS FOR THURSDAY eturned son Smith for a week, has to her bome in Tacoma. ee Mr. and Mra. Philip Austin Hen ereon have returned from a two weeks’ trip to Miller river. j eee Interlaken and Alki guilds of the! entertainet Thursday, August 17. with a bridge party and @ tea at the! Stockade hotel, at Alki point, Mrx. | Bessie T. Redman, of Aiki guilt, and Mrs. W. B. Henderson, of Interlaken Mr. and Mra. Keneim Winslow, Jr. returned this week from a two weeks’ trip to Rritieh Columbia. Mise Anita Merry Wheeler. whol tric tight bulb, has been the gucet of Mra. Steven-| shade is ecru or a little lighter, and j ite makeup resulte from the growing |together of many nome the reat acroas the | Carbon glacier on which been hiking camp on our second morning fle lake, Whit, the packer, with Freckles and the other two horses, left us. Our camp was permanent now—so no “pack” things any more, He would return arry our be longings back to eivilization in one week, giving us that mudh time to mingle further with the rocks and cliffs of the moun tains, Whit, by now, had become ® part of our family, and as for Freckles — well, you know how we felt about Freckles, cee They left camp at the same time of us started on our hike hills and valleys to the the longest glacier whole of Mount Rainier for thousands of years has fed by and snow falling the By Wanda von Kettler trip on the north side of Mt (This is the ninth of the mountain series) an or even crippled walk f Jak tot of tennating « | We began our climb around é boulders thag oon rca ended |acroas the crags of the glacier, hea and werent ph r ight up » | J ing for the other aide, The ice tightly as might hone as 5 creaked and talked to ttaelf beneath Once one of thom to an, been. 74 us, Grit and rocks adjusted them held, slipped ang’: whlch wo " selver, and seethed and rumbled toward the rv going “> % Little rivulete of melted ice burried) tase, Lacy saig bors lift b 4 4 my southward on the sur rippling | Max were she and around and over our shoes. A gia they at and go¢ an i 4 cher ta Wke # thing alive, More even| out of it than that It ia something that is : always bury, always working, alwa But i grinding iteelf deeper into the ¢ thing € . pression in which it Mes, Always) of ‘ moving, slowly — 1,000 feet in the gi , years, or something lke that—but | just about always moving toward the lower! | yey and level, while new snown and rocks 4Fe | with an hour « | could see the « | by exerting st were the | them hear we wanted | being fed it further up -* What we CrEV ARNON, to get too well acquainted of | Oncar and I mo M anyth like that, But we did | tion of something like 6.606 feet, pam prohibiting the picking of flowers in like just to peek over and to | boulders, up the green slopes and over | Rainier National park, of which No—can't see bottom, a rock-iaden ridge beyond. | Mount Rainier ts a part © the rushing water hum | enow fields dotted the ridge. We “ee dreds of feet beneath burrying took ® crom-country squint beyeng But on to the Carbon glacier. on to join the Carbon river at | the ridge, at Russell glacier, « snow. | We reached, in net such © the wlacier’s mouth. | white glacier on the northwest slope | pe of the mountain—then down. | great while, the edge of the Ovcar almost gummed up the gla “ee | moraine—and looked down, A | oicr that da He insisted upon ok he giacte | steep cliff of dust and rocks and |tenring ice and rocks from the top|.P** nye boyy rao yee tet. | tava ted down 100 feet or more {and hurling them into the crevasses |p ne, Gu lne Oppow ey ae | to the glacier Meelf. And that |just to hear them splash with basso |°C 1m began our these UP the elié glacier! A thing of crags, huge |inuas so far below. We began to| vine at the top with congratwee ; * tions to Georges and Mrs. Georges feo crags, piled one upon the | rear jest he get no many rock® in| ¢ . ‘i iatiieieent. to | Other, and darkened with the the bottom of some of them that the|cetent of mtasine gon vag the dust of ages. At the spot we |ptreama couldn't get by. He insisted | there That cline up the deen OA looked upon it its width was three: |inere was no danger, but the rest . - P an. | rocks and the lava was a case of | quarters of a mile, extending to | of uy fect we did much for the Bla |-one step forward and two et a rock cliff moraine, steeper even . } A pits . down Willis Wall from the summit} region of the mountain. guild, will be the joint hoatesses, eee Seattle Review No. 8 Seattle Review No. &, W. B. A., of the Maccabees, will have their annual pienic at Woodland park, Thursday, 17, beginning at 1130 a. m Raturday for a month's visit in Call fornia. eee Avugu Hood canal | Members invited. sre oO iiioancatiiell ode 19th Thureday, August 17, at P. E. 0. Members ion: m y P. F. O, members of this city will “ ee for tea Thursday, August 17, Elderbloom Clab Frederick & The Elderbioom club will give a pienic in Woodland park, Thursday August 17, at noon. All members in vited. cee ‘The board of trustees of the Fed. | . eration of Women's Clube will hold a | Nina M. Frye Tent Pienle Postponed Mrs. Eliza Ferry Weary, Mra. }*becial meeting In the parlors of the| The plonic luncheon planned by : 2..%..¢ Henry McCleary, Mra. Edmund | MainierGrand hote: Thursday, Au | Nina M. Frye tent for Thursday, Av Informal Luncheon Bowden, Mrs. Henry T. Byedes, | ust 17, at 10:30 « m. Mrs. Wilson | gust 17, at the home of Mra, Henry Co . Mrs. Edwin J. Brown, Mra. William | & ay, chairmen, requests all mem- | Marks, 1 Alki ave. has been post bers to attend, as the meeting in im. portant poned until a later date, owing to the death of Mra, Anne B. Ber o. Nina M. Prye Tent Fortson-Thygeven Auxiliary, No. Mrs. Henry Marks will entertain! Fortson-‘Thygesen auxiliary, No. 2. the members of Nina M. Frye tent, | U. 8. W. V., will meet at the home of Daughters of Veterans, at her home, | Mrs. Minnie Carlson, 2145.N. 61st at 1222 Alki ave., ail doy Thursday, Au- | Thursday, August 17 sust 17. Friends are welcome, 12 o'clock ae eee Dance and Card Party Alpha Auxiliary A dance and card party will be giv. Alpha auxiliary will hold an all.day en Thursd: August 17, by the plenic at Woodland park, Thursday, | upside down. American oclation for Recogni.| August 17. Bring well-filled baskets tion of the Irish Repub: in the | Coffee will be served 1 welcome auditorium of the A. O. U. W. build. | ~ > ~ ing, 1499 Ninth | Evergreen Drill Team Evergreen Drill Team club, of thy Danish Sisters society, will meet at the home of Mrs. Louis Jensen, 2409 | EYE TALKS) —ny— ; tired. The Serious Business of the Kyes is devoted ex My whol clusively to the eye and Its needa Every depar t from the ex amination to th ng of the necessary lena arried on in the premises under personal supervision. L want to impress on you the care and accuracy each individual case scientific examination eyes will remove all doubt given My your of Mr. and Mra. Newton Leithead left | ptucked it in « | with the leaky. Hack in camp I laid it outside the tent Then Max, our literary friend, came along Now, besides being a poet, Max sometimes acts pecullarly in other ways. He knew, that day, I'd been | guarding that bloom j Ca We To reach the edge, or moraine side, of the glacier we needed to travel perhaps a mile and » half to the west, the glackr Itself flowing south from the north side of the cone, TB as sald before, a mile and a half on a mountain isn't just the seme as a mile and « half on the avenue. We went up, then down, then up again, We passed thru val loys that were dotted and Mecked with mountain flowers — Indian paintbrush, Alpine buttereups, aster and heather of many hues, and the mountain lily or “squaw erase.” ‘The latter tx a funny thing 1 blooms at the end of a long, straight stem and resembles in shape an elec TT narrow end up. tiny petaled blow I thought I'd like to have one of | 14 preen nice to those Hier to take home. it, I think it always #0 have a lot of things with which te litter up the house when one returns from vacations. The lly was a lovely thing our way to the walt until later } turn that same we might not re by route, It that size—and waa hoist ed on a stem « foot and a half long I guarded it all day, sliding hills and stumbling Into bloom raised high with great care. He knew I'd be in front of the tent to plant ft, wrong end up, right at) the place I had teft tt But I didn’t know that. I didn't know my flower had turned ostrich And I couldn't find it. I was much/ grieved | Then the playful thing forgot to finally divulge what he'd done with it until the next day. By that time i it was all ruined but the stem Luncheon at | didn't see much sense in bringing that home. eee Funny, tho, how many eee Mave just been told there t# a law Famed for Its all Gres! There is nothing quite so stimulating or warming as a cup of good coffee in the morning—forthat mat- | i ter, at any time—espe- | cially when you are GOLD SHIkp COFFEE an to whether or not glasses should be worn. Long experience and my apecial |) facilities enable me to give you Ff) the best ‘and most reaponalbia Roasted, Packed and professional service, and you are ; 7 assured glasses that will give were by Schwa jp vou Portect patiatac tion. Sen ory ms. & Co, Ine, jours, am, tol p.m, rattle, Kalas Sid , Washington. The Wonderful Discovery ECZEMINE ) eza } For eczerna and skin diseases now be obtained at good drug stores here or from Joyner Drug ( kane, for $1.00 per bot tleement, ar shah ‘ Par He Rb ck ta hatha yes re he 1 © of the valleys on raine, fearing to was Dr. and Mra, J. F. Wagner have! just about a 4fcandle power electric | returned from a ten days’ outing on i light bulb down swamps | Ss to the = ching for It later Ho proceeded people get real enjoyment out of turning things than the one on which we stood, on the opposite side. cler by dragging him | back | ing But we benefited by it, e y of good grit and dui pl which is sald to be an aid to digese) | Beyond the | wo'd gotten about three-fourths cliffs = severe hill of green led, | of the way acroms when Oscar an- | tion seominaty, over the top of a | nounced to the four of us that he in-| we ridge to t west slope of the tended climbing the cliffs of the mo- | le mountain, Carbon glacier, in raine ahead. Lucy sat down at the! Pel Ss ba gy length, is something like five | edge of a crag and said she desired to| trees beyond our camp, and inc miles. Ko No farther, Max nat down beside| dentally, to swim in it, Madea: her and said he guessed he wouldn't | ‘(To Be Continued.) That day we decorated the glacier | try the cliffs, either, today. I anid} ~ <= locatity with ourselves at different | 14 just as soon fall off a cliff as Seattle Rose Society stops, Georges and Mrs. Keon 6% crevasse open up and swallow] Seattle Rose society and ite @ were the first to say “No further,” | me, so Osear and I went on lary have been invited by Mr. Ja when Mra, Gvorges looked down the | one A, Haya, president of the Taco }100foot cliff of dust, rock and About » half-hour later the | Kose society, to visit Tacoma ¢ [chipped lava and deciar whe be idea was presenting iteelf that I dens, Friday, Aug. 18. The bo loaeeta eet ne glacier just. should have stayed back and | leaves at 9 a. m. from the Colm by looking at it. she and orgen then dared the crevasse to do its dock. | proceeded to make themselves com worst. That was my first expe- — |fortable on the edge of the moraine. rience with hand-over-hand cliff Col sworth circle, Ladies of th 1 gave them my lily to hold. climbing. G. A. H, will give « card party eee We went up again—up and up. | Veterans’ hall, Armory, Friday, PTT The reat of us started for the bot tom, = 2D TEU TTT MU Very much up. But there wasn't any polite | August 18, at £20 p.m. The publ sinking down thru the dust cordially invited. TPMT aa The Cheasty Junior Shop Is Now Fully Prepared to Clothe Your Son for School A Large Assortment of New Fall Boys’ Suits in a wide variety of models, made in the most attractive styles $11.75 - $14.85 - $18.50 Two Pairs of Knickers Beautiful Boys’ Sweaters in the Different School Colors $8.50 and $10.00 Boys’ School Mackinaws $5.50 to $9.75 SECOND AT SENECA a RY 45535 ew 2282 Foot Feaetrrgec#eeur +1 gence é@eoweoatweercor ce Baeane@eecousu<cs 20r een (4 Hast rgeon @€ 2 Pers rera

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