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lle li THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1 css —_— aaa THE SEATTLE ST Seattle Society Edited by Lillian Keen LeBallister, Telephone MA in-0600 Assistant—Laura Emory | a — — ee | tations Going Out for Tea; Honor Guests at Afternoon Affair CHARLES W! ‘RDP Progressive Lwicheon at Hunt's Point Homes The 4 A. progressive luncheon tn ' y ‘ ; . : nH . rr a H t Mre. St I h v wh a0 t Mrs: Fisher to Lay Give Bridge Tea Et w ta y Ernest Walter brid, at e iH M } ) ond course at the home Martin, and the. last ! i ox Cariton Hall's gar se quest by Mrs. Theodore Otis « w Jit ard of Detroit, Mict who will ee 9 by Mra. W. H. Whit a group ft Pianan for songs hy Margaret Mo ua San Francisco Guests a solo dance number by Miss France alg M o received by th = i J. H. Featherstone “ee Mr } 3. Goodwir Mrs. Calvert to ee gee Give Luncheon rs. W. i Mrs. James H. tain with a tun home at Thr day, July 15, amit 8 that only the who have tickets will be served, that no tickets will be sold on her summ: Wedne { Mrs. James H. Hoyle of San o and Mra. | grounds. Paul C. Ke dy of Oaklan wh Those attending will take the boat are guests Mra, Dav J. Grant, leaving Madisop Park at 12:30 and Mrs. Harry Timm of & o'clock. acter Luncheon by Announce Sister's Mrs. Trueblood Marriage Mra 8. C. Tru 4 entertained Mr, and Mrs. Elmer E. Todd an-|with a luncheon this afternoon at nounce the marriage of thelr sis-|the home of her daughter, Mrs. ter, Nancy Hunt Hill, te Mr. Victor | Clyde Hadley, in honor of Mra Ed. QO. Boone, Friday, June 26, in Vic | ward D and Miss Bertha Hill of tora, B. C. | Indiana, in town for a lis, who are Mr. and Mrs. Boone are at home| short sts at 1608 34th ave ; ates eae Dinner Hosts at Home Mrs. Brown Plans Mr. and Mrs. William D, Freema Barty for 5 axe We k for Mrs. David J. Gra: Mrs. James H. H be a Dawg tga co and Mrs, Paul ¢ ate feuhall |Kennedy of Oakland and Mrs. Harry Ti n BY cisco, formerly of Fra: F. Gordon Alas Five tables will be in play Marriage Service 5 Florence I a. and Mre Ctly, to Bridge Luncheon at Inglewood Mrs. Frank J. Laher will be host- ess at luncheon and bridge Friday afternoon at the Inglewood Goif| Mason read club in honor of Mra. F. F. Gordon |Presence of of Anchorage, Alaska, who is a | ‘ends. guest at The Olympic. The bride was lovely in Twelve guests will be entertained |crepe embroidered in cr see f Lake Forest Park, w afternoon, June 28, at ady residence, with the Rey, I peach » and sweet peas and valley lilies, Small Dinner After a dainty wedding repast, Mr Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Hedges en-/and Mra. Cartwright left for # tertained with a small dinner Wed-/Columbia on their wedding trip, nesday evening at the Seattle Golf| wi be at home in Spokane after| club in honor of Mra. C. E. Gullett | july 15 of Lincoln, IIL, who !s the guest of eee Mrs. Ernst gta | Service at Orthopedic Shops In recognition of the birthday of} North Queen 4 son-in-law, Lieut. George |rect the serv Crawford, U. 8 N., Mr.| Lunch room F: an Mra. Abner Brown will enter-|the Thrift shop o tain with a dinner of ten covers ati be Mrs. C. E. their home this evening. Nestor Women’s Clubs CLUBS FOR FRIDAY Dinner Hosts nme guild will dl at the Orthopedic In charge of day Friday, will Dole and Mra. J. E. [rehearsai will be held Friday, July | 10, at 4 o'clock, at 312 17th ave. KANSAS WOME The Kansas Wome meet at Volunteer park 10, at 12:30 o'clock, for a picnic CLUB ‘3 club will|“Oh Come All Ye iday, July | @Matble basket | nc etihg AUXILIARY OF EPIPHANY | PARISH TO HAVE PICNIC WEST SEATTLE W. C. T. U | West Seattle W. C. T. U. will hold|@y parish will have a picnic Fri- its regular meeting at the Hiawatha | day, July 10, at the summer home Playfield, Friday, July 10, at 2 p. m. All interested women Invited to at-/at Indianola beach. Faithful" ix The boat will tend. |leave from Pier 3 at 9:30 a, m. cee | oem CHILDREN TO REHEARSE | McKINLEY CIRCLE FOR WAYFARER |TO GIVE TEA Mrs. Wesley Dolby will train the| William McKinley circle, Ladies children in Capitol Hill and Broad-|of the G. A. R., will have a silver tea way districts for the children’s|Friday, July 10, at noon, at Mrs. chorus of “The Wayfarer.” The first |Mabel Thompson's home, 1730 N WALLIN and NORDSTROM Announce Opening of Their HALF-YEARLY SHOE SALE Commencing Friday, 9 A.M. UNUSUAL VALUES WALLIN AND NORDSTROM TWO STORES 1423 Second Avenue 4333 University Way ‘| Portrait by Grady. he service in the latives and intimate w pouquet carried Ophelia rosebuds, Any child who can carry the tune | The women’s auxiliary of Epiph-| of Rev. and Mrs. F. R. Bateman! [CHAIRMAN OF GARDEN PARTY] Personal - é f nd 1 D. M ‘ e t to T H 1 _ tf Mr, and M John W. I th th hous: sts, Jude ‘ Joh t H sat I m laught n, and » Jame ! e oks Mr. and Mrs, John E « Price i eturned from a three month visit in the Bast Mra. Willlam Edris returned Su t of several week from a ¥ Ir, Vilas Be §. Wills, for a few Mason Wills, Mrs. Howard Ballard is general chairman of the garden party Rainier chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu- tion, will give Wednesday afternoon, July 15, on the beauti- ful grounds surrounding Mrs. Eliza Ferry Leary’s home. fosth wt guest Perkins for a few days and get off « ALPHA BE Alpha ¥ give a « Regional Dry Chiefs to Issue WRC paorie will Ha: dentoeted Permits After August 1 joes of the Nat July 13, to A 3 WASHIN( Mins ¢ TON, July 9—(By U is of indu at! Boston. noon, at the home of Mrs. May Sny'|the actentift |der and her mother, Mra. Sarah} ment will be the d in a Dexter ave. Take car ee regional » 7, All members and) ORANGE LODGE PICNIC ibition enforce: friends wel The Ke will have a] gust 1, when t anization yo) ¢ jt ) 1, at 1160) scheme becomes effectiv . CLUB Van Bt ave. Luncheon at 1/ This announcement way made at hubert club will meet Fri- | o'clock cars & or 29 department aly 10, home of Mra | set off at Pr st Furry ond ave | : * heon will be se ) ES TEACH FLYING __ | missioner Hi the prohibition | o'clock Oxford ar |unit; Comissioner Blair, of the in revenue bureau, and other leaders of federal dry work The issuance of permits has been handled exclusively by Commission. er Blair for the last four years. on of airplanes a we of tralr U. will mee seryance.” ERN STAR CLUB Samuel Hoa Eastern Star club will meet | istry st 5 Seattle Man May Die From ness meeting at 1:30 CURB BICYCLE TI . head of the alr min | Frid }11 a Board meetin p. m. Election of officers PEKING, July 9 » demon bi Plunge Into Nisqually ove yele, traffic terror thruout the Ori: | ADDITIONAL CLUBS ent, is to be curbed in Peking. By! TACOMA, July 9.--Probably | oh Demet a new law al * must pay 4) fatally Injured in a 60-foot fall into {ALPHA CLUB PICNIC monthly licen of 20 cents (19) the Nisqually river from a railroad The Alpha club wilt have a picnic/cents U. 8.). ewise, they must/pridge near Nisqually, Tom Ed- Saturday, July 11, at Iiahee on the! dispense with their present 7 horns, | wards, 45, of Seattle, was found by wkers and other car-splitting|two boys Wednosday night js and content themselves with| 316 had lain on a small island in ry bicycle bells |the river since early morning. His und. Tho boat will leave Pier 3| nq. at 9:30 a. m. Mra, W. K. McFarland | aig | hosters, | ordin PICNIC DATE CHANGED Ionia chapter has changed its pientc | {date from Saturday, July 11, to Sat jurday, July 18 FUR BUSINESS GROWS WINNIPEG, Man Winniper’s importance as a cénter for the dis-| |boys to his rescue, At Yelm, whero he was taken for medical attention, it was said that tribution of raw furs in wholesale] his condition, was extremely critical, Settle (neo Anna|in value about $750,000, were sold| juries to his hip and head, he | Hubbuch), of Louisville, Ky., was|to buyers from Eastern Canada, the | dragged himself from the rushing | entertained at luncheon on Tuesday, | United States and Europe. stream to the faland. at the Hollywood tavern, by the | seven women lawyers of the city. | Mra, Setttie is a practicing attorney | and w This Association is now paying its 18th semi-annual dividend at the rate of PER ANNUM Oo Y ie SAVINGS We have never paid less. Organized in 1916, our assets are now more than $600,000.00 Savings placed here are safe and profit- able. We have always paid withdrawals on demand. Money received by July 15th cred- ited as received July Ist. $1.00 to $5,000.00 accepted. This. Association is a mutual savings society under State Supervision. NORTHERN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 1010 Third Avenue MA in-3424 s the first woman to open | law offices in Louisville, She ts in| [Seattle with her husband, who is| |attending the convention of the| | American Library association, Mr | Settle is the head of the public Ii | brary system in Loutsville and the jSurroun Jing country Mrs. Settle, who is a member of the Louisville Business and Profes sional Women’s club, ‘Tuesday even ing visited the meeting of the local | Seattle Business and Women's club, where + i | short address, bringing the greet. | ings of the Loulsville club and dis- cussing matters of club interest | She in the president of the Women's City club and has just finished her second term as president of the | League of Women Voters In Louls. | ville | Mr. and Mrs, Settle will leave Saturday to visit Vancouver and Victoria, and will return home by way of California, eee EDUCATION, KEYNOTE OF W. C. 'T. U, WORLD CONVENTION’| | Education was the keynote of the | world's convention of the Women's | Chistian Temperance unions, held | |Jate In June in Edinburgh, at which | time fifty-one countries were repre | sented, Miss Anna A, Gordon, na | tonal executive of the W. C. T. U, | was re-elected to the presidency of |the world organization. Miss Gor: don in her nddrows said: “It will re | quire at least a generation to stabil | {ze In any country a national pro- hibition.” Mra, Ma dent of the © recent lett waret KK. Harrais, pro@ ka WG. TU, ‘ayn that two monn ures recently prevented to the legis Jnture, almed to effect a modifica tion of the dry law, were both de feated thru the wctivity of the W.| ' rial alco- | |feeble calls for help brought the | * quantities {s steadily increasing. | and that he would probably die ORs | During the spring auction He recovered sufficiently to give T LUNCHEON held here recently, furs aggregating| his name and tell how, despite in-| MAY GET BOOZE | | | | | PAGE 15 The Reason While Pure Food Laws do not require that vin- egar be aged, aging is a Heinz standard which demands that vinegar must be good as well as pure. Aging develops flavor, aroma, mellowness—qual- ities a vinegar must have to please particular people. HEINZ PURE VINEGARS In pints, quarts, half-gallons New salad-making recipe book H. J. Heinz Company sent for four ceats in stamps Pittsburgh, Pa. ES DENTIST A local DOGS COST HER FI FARWAY, Eng.—For large number of dogs head, a farmer She ha “Half again as much j or jelly as Lever made chat much fruit.” You are | | sure now oO firm tender Jam and yl elly-and it needs only one minute's boiling - ‘MAGINE starting your jam and jelly with the same unconcern, the same gay confidence you feel when you put the water on for tea, or mix your favorite dessert. Think of being sure beforehand that every glass you make of any kind of jelly is just bound to set and yet will be so tender that it quivers in the dish and melts in one’s mouth. You can know this happy certainty today; millions of women do. Certo makes failure impossible with any kind of jam or jelly. ripen. That is why you often had bad luck with fully ripe fruits. But now Certo itself supplies this neces- sary jellying substance. When you use Certo every batch is bound to set; you need never again re-boil your jam or jelly. Just boil hard for at least one minute— save fruit juice— save flavor and color Just one minute's real active boiling is all the fruit needs when you maké your jam or jelly with Certo. What a saving of your time and effort! What a saving of the rich fruit juice, too, that used to boil away during the long old- fashioned “boiling down.”’ With Certo you make half again as many glasses of jam or jelly from the same amount of fruit. And Certo’s short boil saves all the deli- cacy of the flavor, all the clearness of the color that used to boil away. Sict Certo today from your grocer. A booklet with each bottle gives nearly 100 recipes for de- licious jams, jellies and marma- lades.. Douglas-Pectin Corp., Granite Bldg., Rochester, N, Y, Why Certo cannot fail you Certo is the very element that makes fruit jell—taken from the fruits them- selves in which it is abundant. Some fruits, like pineapple, never have it—you have never before been able to make jelly of them alone. Even in the fruits that usually have this jel- lying property it grows less as they Cerro (Surgjell) _ dentist $500,000 damages . who alleged that bone in pulling @ ee oe