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Show t THE CITIZEN wernanl McCormick of Harris-?lSp- a Univer-?- f a graduate of the Miss Michigan, is visiting . $ Sutton at her home at 854 East Miss McCormick Nev., where her way to Anatin, S! south street. of Can ne her ' will Bono Merlin Southwick i8 Mr. Hensine1011 and ay who entertained tea at hGr h0me Ldondo avenue Monday afternoon Miss Daisy Rolapp, a QOr of not ptenaber bride. living room was decorated room a pink rigolds. in the dining too hj, in rhe teley, ty !e tin white color scheme was carried The tea table had a Madeira bowl of pink and rer, with a crystal Hliain d Berkefe as a centerpiece. hostess was assisted by Miss ertainy tjrue Hansen and Mrs. Homer Warn-(of hg The gUsts included Miss Emily ck, Jr, 'ant, Miss Mary Romney, Miss Mar-frMrs. j Felt, Mrs. Frederick A. Moreton, Miss Pulvia Ivins, . Edwin S. Felt, forjj Craw-5r3Wl of s Frances Grant, Miss Alta of the Miss Helen Midgley and Mrs. yte asters Mery T et d, 4muel Nicoles. olor M fllr. and Mrs. W. A. MacMillan, who f j Friday F. me I tainedj lake jJ J. T. World and son, Caleb W. ;llrs. accompanied by Miss Virginia Peterson, have returned from Califor-ia- , altair,' World, oft: s moved from Fargo, N. to make their home In Salt Lake, now at home at 925 Ramona ave- - hire recently RokJ where numld they spent the summer. Peterson and Mr. World attendethe University of California smal- Miss d ler lllltM in x school and Los Angeles. I later visited relatives ... Lawrence G. Peak, 76 First avenue, have returned from Los Angeles, where they spent the sumMr. and Mrs. i Elizabeth Edgehill will leave September 12 for Boston, where the will attend school. j Miss Alice s Terrens of New Wednesday at noon to pend the month of September as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Binwoodey, 815 East South Temple Mr. and Mrs. L. A. York arrived Aril street. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brockbank have returned from a ten days trip through ,YeHwstone park and are at the Nev I leenf; J 5ai( ; .j Mrs. A. C. Ellis and daughters, Miss Claribel Ellis and Miss Virginia Ellis, are at the Broadmoor hotel at Colorado Springs. 'J 1 6 Miss from a Jeanette Groo has returned several weeks visit to Califor-- , uia. Miss Groo spent some time with Colonel and Mrs. William Nelson in San Francisco and later visited Mr. und Mrs. Paul Bassett in Los Angeles. I Miss , hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. J. J. McClellan, and her. sisters, Miss Dorothy McClellan and Miss Florence McCleiian. The guests numbered thirty. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Creer ana Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sharp entertained at a lawn party Monday night at the Creer home on Windsor street in honor gf Miss Elva Silver and Mav Creer, who will be married Wednesday. Dancing was enjoyed on the lawn and light refreshments were served. The decorations were in garden flowers and American flags. The lawu was lighted by electric lights shaded with Japanese lanterns. Mrs. Leland Creer assisted in receiving. Punch was served by Miss Loretta Creer and Miss Virginia Sharp. The guests numbered 150. in her garden that part of the falling body not consumed in its passage, still at a high temperature, cent developments of astronimical science that space is occupied with millions of unseen bodies invisible to eye or instrument because not and too small to reflect light of other luminous bodies sufficient to reveal them before coming in contact with our atmosphere. These bodies, generally very small, ranging from a grain of dust to stones weighing tons, are moving with great velocity around the sun in orbits of their own, in broad streams. The reader must remember that the earth is a planet sailing in the sky, just the same as Venus, Mars, Jupiter or Saturn, and like them and the other millions, has its course around the sun. self-luminou- s. As these millions of little bodies the displaced earth into black diamonds. The hole made by its fall is hundreds of feet across, and nearly as deep. There are four dates in the year when showers of meteors or falling stars are likely to occur, ror the reasons given. They are April 20, August 10, and November 12 and 27. The November showers are the most profuse and brilliant, as well as the most certain to occur. CHOOSING MANAGERS. J. D. Rockefeller, Jr., said in a Y. M. C. A. address: The successful busi ness man today is the one who knows how to choose his managers. A successful modern business is too vast for any one man to handle. So managers are essential, and if these managers are badly chosen, failure follows. The unsuccessful business man is apt to depute authority to such creatures as young Corn Husk. Young Corns daddy sent him to the mill one day to try and sell the seasons wheat crop. Corn got hold of the miller and submitted a handful of wheat to him. The miller examined the wheat carefully. Then he said: How much more has He aint your father got like this? got no more like it, young Corn Husk answered. It took him all morning to pick that out. are scattered all through space, in The instance is a common one, and Miss Louise Richards entertained at is easily credible; but there is little a kensington Monday afternoon at her probability that the meteorite found home on First avenue in honor of came from a comet. On any cear night an observer Miss Algie Barlow of Bountiful, who will be married Thursday to Melvin may see numbers of just such streaks of fire, or falling stars crossing Ross Richards of Paris, Tdaho. Yellow garden flowers decorated the the sky, descending to the earth and living room. Blue corn flowers and generally disappearing before reachmarigolds in a basket formed a center-piec- e ing the ground. It is one of the for the tea table. places more thickly than at The hostess was assisted by her others, the path of the earth crosses mother, Mrs. Stephen L. Richards. their paths, and sometimes the earth Musical numbers were given during passes through great streams of them, Pohnny The camel can go eight the afternoon by Miss Margaret Ly- and, by the greater force of its gravidays without water. to leave them tational Caroline Miss and Thomas, pull, compels man, cello, Freddy So could I If ma would let earthown and their were dances speed orbits, given by piano. Fancy me. Harpers Bazar. ward. Their original velocity is Miss Alice Richards. greatly increased by the earths atMiss Katherine Evans of Park City traction and by the time they come was the guest of honor at a tea given in contact with our atmosphere their creates such fricMonday afternoon by Miss Helen tremendous speed Brown at her home, 331 East Fifth tion that the little bodies are soon at AND white heat, and, unless unusually South street. Zinnias and gladioli declarge, are reduced to ashes before orated the rooms. The guests, in addition to the guest they reach the ground. The ashes fall Day of the Season of honor, were Miss Fay Smith, Miss as imperceptible dust. The process of capturing planetary Hazel ONeil, Miss Gladys Brown, Miss Marie Thompson, Miss Jean Jones, matter goes on day and night, and the earth is receiving a coat of this Miss Mary Murdoch. meteoric dust continually, most of AT which, of course, escapes observation Mrs. Margaret Carlisle Fuller enterbecause falling on the oceans or on tained at a luncheon Monday at her uninhabited parts of the land. If, home in the Hillcrest apartments in MONDAY, however, the body of th,e falling SEPTEMBER honor of Miss Mary Perry of Denver, star is so large that it is not wholly who is a guest of friends in the city. consumed in its passage through the . A number of Miss Perrys friends also someis unburned the part Official Labor Day procame in for tea .later in the after- atmosphere times found, and, in rare instances, gram wltn sports, connoon. while still very hot. test, races fun every a as descent While making its minute for everyone. Miss Marjorie Gowans, daughter of is streak of fire or falling star, it BOUTS BIG Dr. and Mrs. E. G. Gowans, has recalled a meteor. The part found is atturned from New York, where she termed a meteorite, or aerolite. Some at 7. p. m. in the Hiptended the teachers college at Columfound been have aerolites weighing podrome at Saltair bia university for a year. Commodore of ending with a fast bathundreds pounds. tle, Lou Paluso vs. Baton his expedition to the north Perry, Mrs. Joseph F. Merrill has gone to tling Travis. found one weighing some tons, pole, her former home at Fort Wayne, Ind., and is said to have sold it to the Have a bracing swim, for a visit of several weens. She win school of technology at Washington and a delightful dance to Sweetens inimitable also visit in Chicago and Davenport, for the sum of $50,000. In Arizona an music. Come out for a Iowa, before returning home. aerolite has been found which weiglii rousing good time at ed thousands of tons, and which, when METEORIC STREAKS OF FIRE. it fell, buried hundreds of feet of the Fare, 35c earth. The United States government A few evenings ago, one of the Children, 6 to 11, 20c; is now engaged in excavating and a under 6, carried free. lady city papers announced that it. The heat generatsd by guarding had observed a falling star glide its collision with the earth was such through the air, leaving a train or to convert much of the minerals of light, and that she afterward found as re-sq- Last BEST mer. h The rooms were decorated in cosmos and roses in pink and white. The J Mildred MacLean and Miss Le Ackerman, September brides, "ere guests of honor at a kensington and given Monday afternoon by lias Madeline McClellan at her home, 24 E.ist Broadway. eune ti-- a . Labor Day SALTAIR 1 S SALTAIR |