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The St. Louis Star and Times from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 7

Location:
St. Louis, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FKIDA1, THE ST. LOUIS STAB JULY 15, 1910. at MAGAZINE FACE mm HOUSEHOLD SOCIETY "Her Greatest, Most Beautiful Picture By Nell Brinkley (Copyright. 110. Mr.

and Mrs. William H. Dimond of the South Side, accompanied by their little son, Byrne, are spending the summer at their cottage at Mount Clemens, Mich. Mr. and Mrs.

David Yawitz of 1020 North Twenty-first street announce the engagement of their daughter, Sarah, to Louis O. Tobias of Oklahoma City. The wedding will take place in the early part of January. Miss Yawitz will have an at home day Sunday, July 17, from 7 to 10 p. and on the following Thursday a family reunion will be held.

Among the party will be Joseph Day Yawitz, who has Just returned from an extensive trip to Honolulu and Japan, in order to be present on this occasion. Mr. and Mrs. E. Sicher and son, Stanley, departed Sunday morning for Chicago, where they will visit with friends, going from there to Elkhart Lake, Wis.

They will return to the city about ths middle of August. -Mrs. W. R. Chlwis and daughter.

Miss Rutb, of 4232 West Pine boulevard, will depart Friday evening to be guests at a week-end house party given by Mrs. C. T. Shewell at her bungalow on the Meramec. Miss Edward H.

Beach and daughter. Miss Gladys, of 4618 Westminster place, departed Thursday morning for South Harpewell, to visit friends for a fortnight. Later they will go to Edgartown, where they will spend the remainder or the summer. The Misses Hattia and Selma Lang departed Thursday for an extended trip to the lakes and Eastern points. Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Wyman, together with their daughters. Miss Wyman and Mrs. Waterworth, are summering at their cottage at We- quetonsing, Mich. Miss Sara Teasdale of 38 Kingsbury place left the city Wednesday afternoon to join her parents at their summer cottage in Charlevoix.

where they will remain until the early fall. Mr. and Mrs. T. J.

Akins of 4116 Westminster place will depart In September for Old Point Comfort. One of their daughters. Miss Marie, will accompany them. Miss Zoe, who Js engaged upon a literary work of considerable promise, remaining at home to devote herself to its completion. During the Intervening period the family will spend some time at their country home In Woodland, Mo.

Miss Alice Ledbetter of 5222 McPherson avenue, whose engagement to Paul Grantham of Albany, has Just been announced, will depart the early part of next week to visit friends and relatives in the north ern part of the. State, returning about September 1. It Is understood that the wedding will be one of the early fall events. Miss James Howe cT Webster Ororea her Five Hundred Club at luncheon Wednesday mrs. i nao.

fmmmr or Texas, a former St. Louis an. is visiting her relatives in the city, where she will remain several weeks. "PITY THE WOMAN WHO SEVER GETS A CHANCE TO HAVE HER PICTUR TAKEN" WITH A TTNY NEW-COME ATOM IX THE HOLLOW OF HER ARM." Mrs. Eckert of Webster Groves will entertain her Five Hundred Club Wednesday.

misty veil around her cheeks and the misty film of dreams in her eyes; there were pictures and pictures ones in in a deep voice of triumph, for SHB had once snuKKled a tiny round nub-Mn of a r.ew-come atom in the hollow of her arm: "Pity the woman who The little faded Lady slid the Beauty's thousand photographs through her crumpled and withered fingers. There was one in a basque and a queer round hat with streamers down the bark, and stockings with the stripes running round (good big stripes, too); there was one in white muslin, with her little pearls round her seventecn-summered throat, and her yellow mane of thick hair done up: there was one in a out of the 'wildering pile of the Beauty's faces the little old Lady (slipped one and hung on to It like death, and the man beside her greedily hung on. too. They bended their heads together over it. and the little old Lady said the sun, with her hair blowing, gay dress like a cloud, with a great soft train billowing out behind like whipped cream, with the slipper that peeked out under it a mouse covered with gems, with the look of a new-found woman in the eyes: there was one in a bride's dress, with the never gets a chance to get her picture ones and sober ones and ones in the took' like this: NELL BRINKLEY.

shadow; prim ones and rich ones, and tiny little foolish kodak ones Hut i MILLINERS HONOR WACHTEL. The marriage of Miss Emmv Rosen-treter, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Adolph Rosentrster. to Joseph Knock, will take place at noon Sunday and will be followed by a reception at the residence of the bride, 4322 Delmar bouievard, from 6 to o'clock.

Dr. Kosentretur will receive for his daughter. No cards have been sent out. Today's Best Story He Discovers That He Is Not a Golf Plaver. Percy the Press Agent By Hank Stores Closed During Funeral Services of Former Association I'rcst, As a mark of respect, the members HERE did you get the head- of the Jobbers' Association of St.

Louis "'Ever see any worse player than i composed of the fallowings firms, I asked him. Levis Zukoski Merc. Kosenthal- "Oh sir he renlied an 4 I lvmg-linnsmaoe Merc. yes. si Miss Ina Morris of 5650 Bartmer avenue entertained Miss Chlorine Cooper of Memphis at a theater party at the Suburban Garden Thursday afternoon.

Crone Flower and Feather Co begin to swell up a bit. 'I didn't think I was so I told him. land Haack. Dyer Brecht Mly. i closed their places of business from 30 to 1 1 o'clock Friday morning dur-j ing the funeral services of Max Wachtel, a former president of their i association.

'Yes. he continues. 'I knows Good Manners Their Necessity worser players than youse. but chee! dey've got sense enough to stay at home and play That was the last straw, so I beat it. Never again!" The Sur is trying io help vou save money.

Look for 'Star Specials" in advertisements. A well-known citizen, who evinces a keen Interest in all that pertains to the history of our country, was desirous recently, while In Boston, of visiting certain localities interesting by reason of their connection with Revolutionary events. One morning when he tins going down in the elevator of the Hub's largest hotel he said to the man at the wheel: "I wish to visit the wharf where the tea was thrown overboard." The elevator engineer looked somewhat mystified. "You'd better inquire at the office, sir." he said. "I guess that happened before I came here.

I've been in Boston only about a year" "Why do you save these old rubbeY shoes?" "They are for hungry Arctic explorers." replied Mrs. Honsekeep. "Been a good many of 'em along this route." and Importance Girl as Percy entered the restaurant with his nose looking like the eatable end of a beet. "Mercy sakes, you won't need a light to go In the dark for some time!" "AH right." replied Percy, scowling; "that isn't new. I've heard the same thing all day long.

If it's a joke it nvjst be a British one. I can't see it." "Chee!" said the Show Girl, lifting her eyebrows, "and you get a grouch with it, too. How did yoii get it?" "Playing golf," Percy finally admitted, while the Show Girl laughed. "That's too good," she snickered. "Where do you get off to play golf?" "I don't." said her companion.

"I only tried to play. Instead of playing goif I furnished a bunch of caddies with an afternoon's fun. did a marathon looking for the few balls I did manage to hit, got sunburned and used up all the cuss words I knew. Never, never, never again "Well, tell us about it." said the Show Girl, sympathetically. "I won't kid you any more." PERCY" NAILS A LIE.

"It was this way." Percy began. DAILY FASHION HINTS IVrry didn't play golf: he just lurnished amusement to the caddies and to any chance sjKTtutors on the links. By KLLA WHEELER WIIvCOX. Copyright, 1310. "I sometimes wonder why you have not paid much attention to the personal manners of the people.

I am a traveling man, and the bad manners I see (especially bad table manners) are astonishing. "In good hotels and bad hotels I see men and women of apparent refinement eating with their knives, holding their forks as a laborer would grasp a pickaxe, drinking with the spoons in their cups, and carrying toothpicks in their mouths after each meal. "I believe reasonably good manners are among the important things of life, if it is desirable that we should be socially pleasant to each other. Undoubtedly most people would like to be well mannered, but they have little or no opportunity of knowing what good manners are. The curriculum of every school should contain a class In manners and deportment.

I suggest that The Star, with its great influence, devote a part of its educational columns tn this purpose." Everybody had been talking golf to; tne to see where the ball went! misses, which showed I was improv- me since the beginning of the summer The only 4-minute records that are right! io. nui v.in i u. i aan me caady ing. The ball rolls to the side of a where it is. and he says.

'It's just mound and snuggles there like it was where you put it. And so it was. I in for a good long rest. And so it had missed it. ell.

I fan the air was. Thev told me to use mv brassie. for fifteen minutes while the caddies1 which is another occult word of golf, laugh and a crowd gets around, until meaning a metal-headed club finally I soak it a good one. THE" UFTOHT IMPERTINENT. "Well, that bail sails like a Zepj.e- -i hrassie the thine around until lin.

Then it gets a cross current of nr th ail of endrtnr, It was the greatest exercise in the world; it brought you back to nature, and it was an easy game to play. The first two reasons are open to argument, but the last is a falsehood of the first water. It is not. I state emphatically, an easy game to play." "I believe you." said the Show Girl. 'Well, I get out on the tee." Percy started to explain, when the Show manage to get it over the mound, and it fails into a ditch.

More hrassie work from me. and more brass from the "Well. I won't prolong the agony. Tl end up home after about riv- hours' work. You see wher" 1 had and sheers on to the ngnt.

finally dropping into a clump of bushes, tramp 300 yards to the bushes end hunt for that blamed ball for haif an hour. More Inuchter from the raddles. Finally. 1 buy another ball from a caddy for 7," cents. I was told afterward that he had found the oki' and that it was my own bail he j.dd to me.

However. I begin again. "This time I hit it after or.iv s-ve-i (jirl interrupted him. "Tea? What has that got to do with golf?" "Oh, not what you mean," explained Percy, "T-E-E. tee.

It the place I from which you drive the ball. I make a little mound of earth, place the ball on it, pick out a club, strike an atti- tude and, whing! Well, I look out on in en. he tur! was cur ur an ovr: the place where 1 had hit it instead of the bail, and the ouddie nad a face a- lone as a e-o, k. eo to other cirls' houses. Do think I owe him an apology? E.

iY. If you really ivit that should rl 'HE correspondent who sends the letter given above has not been a faithful reader of this column, else he would have seen many dissertations on the subject mentioned. Over and over mothers and teachers have been urged to Impress on children the importance of -ood manners in their early youth; over and over it has been stated that THIS is woman's work, and a more far-reaching work in the upbuilding of the race than any other career which the "Woman's Era" offers to her. If the "traelling man" were to extend his travels to foreign lands he would be more than ever pained and at the bad manners of his an countrymen. father and mother quite surpass the tea.

h-rs had tailed to instruct him i' average American parent in the train- a few simple rules of good breeding ing of children. No mater what you do fop vou Public schools should give a few children, or what fortune you a minutes' time, once a wees, to some them, you have been ir.expre5?: training alone these lines: and every cruel if you have not taueht thvm coo, not on the oth-r trirl. why did you til him you did not care? It was not a very flattering thinz to say. and it was most natural that should ho have been requested by yo-i not to go. he would ur.do-ii'tediy have done as you wished.

Vou had better a note and ask him to come and taik things over. newspaper ought to have its good man- manners. ners department, which may aid par- er.ts as well as children. Life is made -ns up of little things, and if we are con-1 Avr PA Div tinuaily annoying one another by small 1 offenses, many beautiful hours and 1 Columbia Indestructible Cylinder Records 50 c. They fit any make of phonograph or graphophone (with 200 thread attachment).

They play the complete selection averaging fully AY2 minutes clearest, most brilliant tone you ever heard and they NEVER BREAK and NEVER WEAR OUT! "The only 4-minute records that are right." Sold by your Dealer or COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. 1008 Olive St ometimes seems that the travel nays are spoiled, which mignt be mad' mericans are mainly those who i happy by the observation of simple. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX I i have never been taueht the common I ru' of good breeding. I decencies of life at home. The greatest eenius in the world will Loud drinking of soup, the visible; not live up to the best of his possibili-use of the toothpick, walking a way ties if he sits with limbs sprawled over from the table while still i unnecessary space when in the societvj food, talking with the el-; of his fellows, eats audiblv.

and flour-j bows on the table, are a few of the i ishes his toothpick in the presence of THE WRONG THING TO SAY. Dear Miss Fairfax: I go out stead; nun a young man ana woma iike to i uuuju.ii; iiiu iiiraiuu! nanus ctxended fellow beings. leiiow one sees moused in ny -n. in by iNinsTRiu. snow lv North t.

Ixmis Men Jubilant Over Prisje-ts 01 SiKt-ess. A. S. Werrmeyr. of the North St.

Louis Ir.d'is'rial Show, which is to be held at the Coiis' tim July 2r, to 3' at a meeting of the North St. Louis Business Men Asseociation. ft. Louis and avenues. Thursday nisht.

said that the coming North St. Louis Industrial Show wli i- the arj. est ever civen a bod of business Americans atj Manner are as important as morals! "ou few fjuestions. as as at American in making happiness for others. Look 1 arTi very fond cf this yo 'to these thine in vourseif and in vour ar'd th other r.ight he esk.

foreign hotels. urg tables. ed me i' At an Enetish hotel a little English ne for the i 1 wouid be ar.ery if he went t- cbihiren while you are wait girl of ten or twelve wa overheard larger evils in the world to be righted. Ail house with a 1 said is. "I don't care." to make him kind of angry said he wanted an answer.

I A NEW "ZEBRA" MOHAIR BATHING MIT WITH TO MATCH, i So fastidious is miiaoi now. that everything about her bathing costume must match as perfectly as the details of her street frock. This is one of the; new "Zebra." or striped mohair bathing suits with a cap made of the wr.d he ti ot During a cruise on a ship ore irae. a whole month of dinners was made miserable by the had table manners of a "man of God." one who wore the which indicatd his calling. Hand asking ner lather it she held her fork and used hr-r hutur knife ouite correctly.

She had been toid by her teacher how to manipulate ths- implements, rml she hoped for her father's corroboration. The father nis- away give him one. so he walked without bi idir me eoodbv. 7h son 1 didn't (five him an answer wa some and weil educated, yet the man mep. materia.

The are in a warm brown In two shades, and the sweater I Th i of fawn-colored worsted has a brown border. This is a particularly comfort-' is to have more than ley an i attendance of more than im) able sweater for bathing or for slipping on after the swim is over; for it i people it is expected. buttons snugly up about the throat and prevents both cold and freckles. vuswu no nuttier iin ner quite s-ri- wa the public nuisance at the ship oecatis i tnmk it a young man e. ousiy.

and this is herein the foreign tabic. And ail because his parents and ut steady ith a fiirl he saouid net if If.

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About The St. Louis Star and Times Archive

Pages Available:
268,005
Years Available:
1895-1950