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Show THE CITIZEN 14 the Hotel Utah. T-EM- pARARfl J Now for another Christmas greens and holly decorated the rooms. At midnight supper was served to sixty couples. Shirley Wimmer, Melton Burns, Willard Squires and Gerald Hines had charge of the affair. PR year! record-breakin- g Dean and Mrs. W. W. Fleetwood were at home to the members of St. Marks parish and other friends New Years day during the afternoon and evening at their home on East First South street. Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday The popular Ince star OMYWY ALTON in the new mystery picture entitled Heir Haostoainxdl's ' Mrs. W. C. Jennings entertained luncheon Friday at her home on Second avenue in honor of Miss Dorothy Bailey, a January bride. Miss Dorothy at Jennings entertained Saturday luncheon at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Jennings, on Laird avenue in honor of Miss Bailey. Friend BURTON HOLMES TRAVELS Thursday, Friday, Saturday The sweet girl in pictures party vTas given by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity of the University of Utah Thursday evening 'at the chapter house, 169 Thirteenth East street. The committee on arrangeA dancing RXIAK(GUIlnMYE (CLAESES in her new Artcraft production A (Sid Named ments was composed of and Kenneth Barnes. Rfilairy COMING The super-producti- pic will arrive in Salt Lake to make their home. Mr. Smith is a business and club man of this city. He has recently returned from military service in France. marriage of Miss Marguerite Rowley of this city and Lieutenant Lloyd L. Curtice took place Monday at high noon at St. Clements Episcopal church at El Paso, Texas. The ceremony was performed by the rector of the church, the Rev. Fort Smith. The bride was attended by Mrs. H. R. Keller as matron of honor, and Major H. R. Keller was THE best man. Lieutenant and Mrs. Curtice will be at home after January 15 at Camp Furlong, Columbus, N. M. MRS. a blind pig with frills. The Usual Time and Prices. EVERYWOMAN on Glen, Elroy McCarthy, Miss Helen Kearns, who has spent the last ten days at the Kearns home on East South Temple street, will leave early in the new year for her home at Ft. Wayne, Ind. Miss Margaret Crowley will accompany Mrs. McCarthy home for a short visit. Mr. McCarthy returned home sarly this week, after spending Christmas in Salt Lake. 7 Holiday evergreens decorated the rooms. Ophelia roses and Scotch heather in a basket formed a center-piec- e for the tea table. Assisting in receiving wrere Mrs. W. L. McGilvray and Mrs. Margaret Blaine Salisbury. Assisting in entertaining were Mrs. I. B. McCornick, Miss Anna McCornick, Mrs. John V. Lyle and Mrs. Charles W. Stimpson. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. W. Mont Ferry, Mrs. J. A. Marshall, Mrs. Frederick H. S. Bird. Cowans-an- d Mrs. A. . John Howard entertained at a musical on Sunday evening at his home on Eleventh East street in honor of Mr. and Mrs. David P. Howell, who are leaving for New York, where they will spend the remainder of the win- ter. Mr. Howrard was assisted in entertaining his guests by Mrs. Musser and Miss Blanche Musser. Twenty-fiv- e guests were in attendance. Salt Lake homes. Among the receptions of the day was one Members of the Utopia club were entertained Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. J. L. Karren at her home, 183 J street, at a luncheon, followed by a kensington. In the center of the table was a crystal bowl filled with violets and the same flowers decorated the place cards. Mrs. John Naylor of Midvale wras the special guest of the afternoon. by Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Saliswho received their friends from 5 until 7 oclock at their home on East First South street. Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained at a formal dancing party Wednesday evening at the roof garden of v PEN HOUSE, in honor of New Years day, was observed many large given bury, in A1 Clawson Robert McConaughy, who has spent the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. McConaughy, will return to Leland Stanford university Saturday. and one of the best Mack Sennett Comedies to date THE SPEAK EASY A prohibition story of The Usual Good Music. at Major and Mrs. Duncan Grant Ricli-ar- t and children, formerly of this city, are spending the holidays witn Major Richarts parents, Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Richart, in Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mullett announce the marriage of their daughter, Rhoda, to Feramorz Decker. The couple will make their home in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Ward enter- tained at a dancing party Wednesday night at the home of her mother, Mrs. J. R. Mathews, 60 West First North street, in honor of Miss Felicia Lambert, who is home on a visit from Washington, D. C., and for Dan Smed-ley- , who will leave in the near future on a mission for the L. D. S. church. Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained at a formal dancing party New Years eve at the Hotel Utah roof garden. A midnight supper was served. The committee in charge of arrangements included Shirley Wimmer, Melton Burns, Willard Squires and Gerald Hines. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Jennings are spending the holidays in Los An- geles with Mr. and Mrs. George T. Badger (Miss Mart Sharp) and their children. Mrs. Jennings will spend several months wtih her sister and Mr. Jennings will return to Salt Lake in a few weeks. Harold Orlob, who is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. E. Orlob entertained at dinner Wednesday evening at the Hotel Utah in honor of his father. Ten members of the Orlob family attended. and Mrs. Frederick Leaver Stauffer have returned to Salt Lake to make their home, after spending the past five years in New York. Mr. Miss Nannie Palmer has gone to Chicago, where she was called by thd death of her aunt on Christmas day. , OBSER VA TION PLANE (Continued from Page 8.) a great . American novel, meaning thereby a novel about "American life. But just because such a novel must of American life it is be an impossibility. In lands where life and its forms have been more or less settled for centuries we may expect' great novels that, in a large sense, visualize the life of the people, but in our country, for many years to come, novels must deal with periods, sections or phases of life. .According to that standard we have produced many great American novels, but none that can be described as the great American novel. all-inclusi- ve The harm that the critcs have done to soaring genius has been measurWhile our younger writers able. might have been fancy free to write novels about the life of any period or people, many of them have been attempting the impossible, striving to write a wonderful synthesis of Ameri-ica- n life. Some day, perhaps, American life will be sufficiently static to bring the task within the range of hu- man genius NEW BOOKS (Continued from Page 9.) little opportunity to enterprise that the vast number of Dublin men cannot be included in such small manufactures as brewing, distilling, the making of soda water or biscuits. The consequence has been to convert the city of hapless industry into a viscid casual pool of unskilled workers, Hawkers, workers and laborers, porters, paupers and their families numbered 103,081 in 1911, with a great many unemployed and un-- . employable included in this huge class. Coachmen, carpenters and van men numbered 15,380. With skilled workers wrages only 79 per cent of London wages and food 107 per cent the price of London food (excepting meat), the condition of the unskilled may be easily inferred. The best way to imagine it is to picture the housing conditions of Dublin. It is an old city, a fatal magnet in the rural districts. Unfortunate country people still crowd up to it. Finding the porest kind of casual Iqj bor, they swell the unemployed ancr unemployable, coagulating in foul and unsuitable tenements such as disgrace no other city in the British Isles. In houses unfit for human habitation and incapable of being rendered fit for non-worker- s. |