The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 25, 1923, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Seattle Society Edited by Lillian Keen LeBallister, Telephone MA in-0600 Assistant—Frances Oldham Music—Louise Raymond Owens Dinner Parties Celebrate Christmas Day; Entertain for Daughter rs Before New Year's Dance. Will Observe New Geert hemes, both large and] Year's Day small, are extending cues, Mrs. W. B. Gaffney and Miss hospitalities today to ee And rel! kathleen Gaffney will be at home atives, entertaining with the us| ineormatt: on New Yeary's Day, from tomary informal at-homes, and the} y oroiooi until midnight. eherished event of the year—the Peis Christmas dinner. Mrs. Garber ‘Among the hosts are Mr, and Mra. Alexander Baillie, Mr. and Mrs, Will. “St Entertaining With covers placed for twelve, fam Leonard Eaton, Mr. and Mra, Mra, B.A, Garber will entertain with Frederic Struve, Mr, and Mra, Charles K. Poe, Mr. and Mra, Rich- @ luncheon at her home on Thurs: day afternoon. y ard D. Merrill, Mr and Mrs, Harry Ostrander, Mr. and Mra, B. A. Gare ber, Mr. and Mr Andrew Gillespte, Mr. and Mrs, John H. Powell, Cap- tain and Mra Stephen B, Gibbs, Dr, and Mrs. Jay I. Durand, Mr. and Mra. Cecil Bacon, Mr. and Mrs. D. 8, Fotheringham, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burnell Jones, Mr, and Mra, John E. Ryan. en's University club, Mr, and Mrs, James E. Blackwell, ote « Mr. and Mra, C. W. Lea, Mr, and A ‘ Mrs. Moritz Thomaen, Mr, and Mrs! Progressive Dinner Lawrence Ives, Dr, and Mrs, E. Wel- don Young. Sr. and Mra HB. Burn. (Planned side, Mr. and Mrs, F. W. Alexander, A progressive dinner, planned be- fore the reception and dance at the | Rainier club on New Year’ ve, will! Luncheon and Mah Jongg Miss Eleanor Towne will be hoat- eas at a luncheon of twelve covers, followed by mah Jongg, on Thursday afternoon, January 8, at the Wom. Mrs, Peter Davison, Mr, and Mrs. G. EM, Pratt, Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Ex- get, Mr, and Mra Francis Guy |be given at the homes of Miss Nel Frink, Dr. and Mra, Lawrence Gray,|'ie Felger, Miss Achsa Lou Powell, Mr. and Mra. J. H. Fox, Mr. and Mra|Miss Emily Jerome, Miss Olive Charles McGuire, Mr. and Mrs. H.| Leonard and Miss Alice Blake. A. Crowder, Mr, and Mrs. H. 1. see Greene, Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Ander. x } son, Mr. and Mrs. CoH. J. Sstolten-| At Home Informally | berg, Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Old-) Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Friteh were} ham, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Eden,/at home informally this afternoon | Mr, and Mra David Whitcomb, Dr.|from 12 until 2 o'clock, entertaining ‘and Mra. Frank P. Gardner, Mr. and/a group of twenty intimate friends, Mrs. Arrigo M. Young, Mr. and Mra. ee | Mr, and Mr: | Bere ark sie 'and Mra Willan |Lencheon at Home Martin, Mr, and Mrs. Jasper Fermer,| On Friday afternoon, Mrs. Donald | Dr and Mrs. Frank Wilt, Mr. and| A. Nicholson will entertain with a/ Mrs. Ellis Do Bruler, Mr. ard Mrs.|!uncheon at her home, Clare E. Farnsworth, Mr. and Mrs. es ee ee Informal Tea Planned Grant, Miss Nel! ¥ aera for Thursday Dinner Wi Miss Lila Lawrence is entertaining Will Precede |twelve guests with an informal tea Miss Kerry's Dance lat the Women's University club on Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Nettleton | Thursday afterno< Bre entertaining with a dinner of A ea Ed sixteen covers at their home on New| Seryice at Year's night, in compliment to their ine daughtcra, Mise Jane and Miss |OTthopedic Shops Ruth Nettleton, who are home from Mrs, Clarence McDonald will be! Misa Ransome's school for the holi-|hostess for Madrona guild, at the @ays. The affair will precede the |Orthopedic Tea Shop, on Wednes @ance Mr. and Mrs. A. 5S. Kerry are | day, assisted by Mrs. H. C. Cony giving at their home in honor of ‘a Mrs. Fr their daughter, Miss K ) v 3 Jo, Mrs * Tseph, Mrs en . James. Farrell to ye Luncheon In honor of Miss Bentonla Green, Miss Frances Green and their house Ruest, Miss Laura Green, of Jack- fon, Mich., Mrs. J. D. Farrell is on- tertaining nt luncheon on Thursday at the Sunset club. The Thrift Shop, in the morni will be in charge of Mra. H. Hulme and Mrs. F. C Queen Anne guild, noon, Mrs. O. H. Jules Charbneau, for Madrona guild. | Personal Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Taber, of; Mr. Earl J. Hadley of New York| Orient, Long Island, and Mr. Henry} will arrive in Janu to Taber of Jamestown, N. D., are the| parents, Judge and Mrs uests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. McAl-| Hadley laster. | p 2e.¢ | Mr. Mr. Frank Elliott arrived from | Sound is spending the New York on Saturday, to spend the | bis ents, Mr. and Mrs. George holldays with his parents, Mr. and|A. Virtue Mrs. Judd Euiott. eee | Miss Thelma Dr. and Mra. Torliet Toriand and| Edith Mac family motored to Olympia to spend|"!Ns for istmas with relatives. mas -syith — wretic | Mrs. 8. M. Mr. Watson Dodds, of New York,| gfiss Lorraine C. is spending the holidays with his} friday morni parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dodds nd the w see ces Barnhi Hiram E Chauncey H. Virtue of Jenkins and Mi Funke left Monday r Everett, to spend Miss J Jenkins. eve for Yakima, to spe! with Miss Fr Sun. trip Ames returned an extended Mr. and Mr ne with their son, Mr. Howa Wednesday for to attend the dding their son, James E Mis lay Mrs. Kathryn Hamilton and Miss Juanita Hamilton are spending the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Hamilton. ‘pt ai Miss Mary Donworth is Miss Jane Perkins and Mr. Russell | weanesday for the East, Peskins returned Sunday from San| inti starch Francisco, where they have been vis ete Mitig® thelr alster, Mre: Dean Good.| 4 s Mr, and ee iter. Port Angeles, are visit) ter’: othe s. ate Writiandl oe ee leaving to remain | Bitakis Win Mr. and Mrs. Nichol. Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Philips are ppending today with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Diller Fratt in Everett eee Magee Ensign H. Baker day from San Francisco, parents, Dr. and Mrs for ten days. Port eee Mrs. Franci. Monday to arriy Mr. Tony Brandenthaler of Jand, arrived last nig’ to spend r. and Christmas with his brother: vintrong left and sister, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas | Christmas Ni lin Canada Women’s Clubs CLUBS FOR WEDN JAY ADDITIONAL CLARA BARTON TENT, NO. 1 | Rain Clara Barton tent, . Daugh-| meet ters of Veterans, CLUBS CHAPTER, D. A. R. Chapter, D. R Friday, the ballroom of Mrs Decembe -|m., in Jordan's Mr. Ha ducts th public xchoole trate hor con: | who sight-seeing classe will give lecture on the work among th A mus prizes children ZONTA CLUB The Zonta clr formal meeting Wednesday, o'clock ab will hold an in at the Northold Inn, December 26, at 12| WOMAN'S CIVIC The Woman's ( for luncheon o | ber club ¥ nureday, ill meet Decem o'clock, at the eadquarters, Dr ANNUAL WINT! The Progress: hold its Thought club wit | Americ Wednesday, December 26, at 12:39 | “City’s O'elock, at the Hotel F: Mem. | (ueste? bers, former members and friends of | Mrs the club who w tions a with Mrs, 6767. Crow Leisure to make Pearl C. fember h luncheon resery e requested to communicate J, Bileworth 1ve0 ASPASIA’ CLUB aset P PLAYL r Mothet favorite PARLIAMENTARY LAW CL. clubhouse ub men tions." ne auxiliar speaking under Mme derson, will have for i troducing Speakers.” in public Harriet § | his {7 | Robin Mrs. Maurice van Cornelie. Mrs. The Bertie Ht in holidays with van Asch charming hostess—Home portrait by Snow. ° METROPOLITAN MAT, 2 wwe Four New DEC. 26-27 Popular Programs And His Famous _ Band of 100 Temt Shrine Nobles At th Fore Prices—Matine st SEATS NOW SELLING wiitBeg. Sun., Dec. 30 Mati Year's Day ent nd Saturday NOTICE Seats New OUR BIG NEW YEAR’S ATTRACTION To My I guarantee thi Greatest Laughing Musical Show Seattle has ever had CHORGE T. HOOD. Patrons to be the SEA \ GERMANS FACE van Wyck PARTY ATTLE jong will ment fea com ING REILIG ; PAVLOWA MPATADL BALLET't RUSSE an SYMPHONY mpany of 80 Corps De Ballet 40 Superb Se Magnificent 1° ve ORCHESTRA Effects n Three oxrnms Widely The Senson's Notable Thentrieat Event t Musient- Seattle Prices: $3 “Clay & Co, © atamped, self-nddreased elope for return of tlekets ULAR SEAT WEDNESDAY, J tocat Masagement, Frank P, We BLE Une I i 5 GAY GIRLS NE BORGEQUSLY, GCOWNED GLASSY -GANGWAY TTLE STAR BITTER WINTER | Students Starving by the Hundreds, Say Friends VHILADELPHIA, Htrla, altho still hungry, Dee, BAU is startin) kitchens and other relle the because | public millions in their | work for etarving Germany, they know suffering In ax nothing that of the information compared | German’ poople: Juat Friends with | | | | This has been | the American | headquarters Relief workers recelved at Committee Quaker bs rvice from ie Germany | "What these |! meant in tragedy enannot loutelde of json, even In ¢ jit all’ the Quaker | report Phe fall in that the Jand in sight, for | will care for only of 1,000 as dful alternative | educe ation or starve |but a lucky few of the Germany | The young men and women ati hard ull summer to their mainte pitted Deed determination | gninst the steadily falling ma | which ry day wiped out some: thing of what they had accumulated | Jin the previous days. In the very] |week of their return to their ntudies, the mark fell from a hun-| dred million to the dollar to six} hundred = million—their summer's | |work gone Ike chaff before the j wind.” three montha piled ‘on even be imagined many, no one per ermany, can tmagine Relief workers lnnt tragedy the dollar funds on hand,| student feeding, | 500 atudenta in lnat ‘The give up your remains for all students ot} value of | meana year worked something for this year; they and their | dente | earn | nance pourage LITTLE BOBBIE'S FEARS With all a slx-year-old's familiar- }ity with measles, chicken pox and | colds, Bobbie emerged from a slege lof whooping cough much the worse | for wear. The first item of interest ling news ho recetved was that his] faunt was at a hospital and that lthere wan a new baby he would be allowed to go to nee soon May Why not?” foarty mother.” ? ion Weekly th van Wyck and baby daughter,| is a frequent,| Y LITTLE BIT Have you anything furth of tmpri FRANK A. BURT Paul and Erna Hanan Prof. Louis Winsel THE MOUNTERS Fred Weber and Company Pantagescope NELLY FERNANDEZ Teday MA In-0222 ORPHIUM E CIRCUIT VAUDEVILLE Teter Dally —200-8115 BENKY LEORARD “THANK YOU, DOCTOR HATHY KATN JOHNAIE BURKE “DRAPTE THREN AND ONE-HALP ARLES CAVANAUGH & COOPER HERMAN TIMBERG Midnight Matinee New Year's Hive. LS cAnd his MUSICAL COMEDY CO, | leet in the | long period of research into the | since Jorship and gave woman | for | tions to this rule, women who havo! [common sense, ginning to 4| Women Soon to Assume Leadership Over Malet “This Is Women’s Age,” Says Miss Me of California University Faculty ser, our way and th must be some BERKELEY, 5.—Man'n con ing now, tempt for the empty-headed woman] needs contusion as | hun revolutionized the feminine intel] a rewult | Inst hundred years, ac-| “Woman's chief task still js the cording to Miss Mary T. Messer, of| home, altho many women ure fa the extension department of the Unt-|aticld on missions of their vernity of California many of them murried “Man at last hus come to feel con-| necessitating corresponding tempt for the brainless condition of| ments, the 18th century type of feminine) fut mind," declared Mins Mesner, "a con-| dition which he himself created by | «, too much protection "Men no longer will runyeven city blocks to escape a woman who knows As much or more than they do; in-| “This is a wonderful age for worn ntead, they scorn that woman whol en, with opportunities for every one | nnot take an intelligent part in}to rise and develop in different | modern discussions,” ways and work out more original{ Mivn M places for themselves in equal to those held ty men mind of modern woman to neo how] “Woman will never cease to love| It got that way, holds that modern| family ties even in the absorption | woman In the most intellectual bit| of ne , but che will be} of femtainity, generally speaking, | served; must be adjustments, | ¢ Adam and Eve first discussed {ind until theae are worked out, nomics outside the Garden of! lock for a certain amount of dis. Eden. The woman of the 18th cen-|ruption of home life with conwe tury reached the lowest intellectual] quent domestic level, she declared. vorce women, adjurt- | Intellectual Ae. need never Jeopardize | ¢ if whe js allowed a ren onab! portunity to exercise her new-found tal Suppression may | cause wr however. | woman's ser, who has delved thru society, | courts,” C “Man long ago assumed world lead-| z — protection | her services," continued Minss| Messer. “He gained control of her actions and directed her thoughts into channel» where she would be kept subordinate to his dominance. “He told woman it was unwifely and unwomanly to interest herself} intellectually in world affairs, or to| jannert hernelf intellectually in cer. tain directions. Woman therefore ab. stained from doing these things be-| cause of man's ‘superiority.’ "There nwayn have been excep- made men for their were not respect. them and who afraid of a mouse, Now the other kind in getting to be the exception, | particularly where opportunities are presented for their development. “Women have demonstrated that if | given a chance they can compete) with men intellectually and do many things formerly regarded as entire! n6 brain work. orn protest against masculine dominance has in a ir tain phanen resolved itself partial explanation of woman's resentment of household domination | radually a readjustment of the me will remove this sort of thing as a reason for divorce, men, as well as women, adjust themselves The end is not in wight, o can extend to into a divorce paternal because | are be determine f the home vested with authority, We a END-OF-SEASO alater his mother, “You are a ing with tek her.” {have ey | draft, | drowntly, wreckage in the Gi-| me to Ronald dotmineered over his Uitte and made her feteh ond eq tr, a tot. When she was for the entire winter with farted bawting ing, dear?” iakeg WYN fighite and don't neem oing unt, Tonald Why are you er Muriel ‘LL-don't oye her,’ “but L need hor," sobbed Lorton ‘Trannerige, TRUTHFULNESS KEW ARDED A civil war veteran had spent a New York hotel. ‘Whai hin bill, the clerk mt to pay “What, was your rank?"* “1 was a private,’ the old soldier Mi yell, 1 won't chargs you You 1 ae © the first private 4 Judge, hine. CERTAINLY APP’ "ROPRIATE, Mandy—What's yo’ all goin, |! your new baby? we Rastus—Weatheratrip, Mandy therstrip? How come? Rastus—He done kep' me outa the Harvard Lampoon, NOT HUBBY whispered his wife, Mj that there's a harp her fy “John,” onvinced downstairs.” grumbled I hope you don't ¢ have the courage of your onvictions.”—Boston ‘Transcript, HE Bush& Lane Piano Com pany their pa- trons and friends the compliments of the season. N MILLINERY CLEARANCE Beginning Wednesday Morning at 9 o’Clock—Every Fall and Winter Hat in the Criterion’s Superb, Seasonable Display Goes on Sale at HALF PRICE and LESS Absolutely Without Reservations Exclusive Models All Regina, Classic, Gold Medal own designing rooms. Formerly Beth and original patterns from our priced from $15.00 to $28.50 At HALF PRICE (Main Salon) Pattern Hats Another group of several hundred original p conceptions in trims and materials. eason's finest Formerly Priced at $10 to $15. 5 (Main Salon) Clearance Price. . Mattewans About 100 Mattewan Velours in Formerly .00 at $9.75. 3 Clearance Price (Main Salon) priced funtion: ¢ Formerly at $3.00 ¢ Clearance 40 Trimmed Ve beautifully tr Trimmed Hats Hats in Silk lowers priced Sa Price (Basement Salesroom) Sports Hats stock of beautifully ‘Tr wearer every Our entire Hats—those juncts to stain thelr ne negy priced at $3.08 to §' Clearance P (Base ne nent Salesroom) Banded Hats All the hapes in Hatter latest most desir Plush Practically eve About Juvenile ¥ 1 00 Salesroom) ‘ormerly priced to $10.00. Price (Basement Untrimmed Hats med Hats 1 meta shape Ttrim priced $4.75. Pric (Basement Salesroom) Children’s Hats most compre Se Cutewon ozattles [argest Wlillinery § Second at aunty &) tore n side, all ently sta! "Baron, how wilt it whet uch trouble ome friend; das an Ind nt a weel efully all de of the mptingly @ oa water ar enous nsure that n bombardi e to ven three-quart “But our ‘that if land! e suggestll be cove! , it is ould be in illery.”” » “If the attf [I propose, Isary. You before the \¢ intent.” | “You are hig a city of Very momen sails and are and “But if tl from t! d the b securit ‘Perhaps. Any fas beginnil moniously int Jat your disp abandoned nf Cartagena,

Other pages from this issue: