Show FASHION AND GOSSIP The Coming Event of the Unity Club MISS GRACE YOUNGS PICNIC A V ry Pleasant Affair A Little Romance That Has Many Counterpart bliss Youngs Picnic I By invitation Miss Gracie Young avery a-very interesting party of about thirty young people spent last Thursday at the noted farm of Williams t Young on the line of the U C Railway about fifteen miles north of Salt Lake The party left by the regular 8 oclock train reaching the farm in thirty minutes The time was most enjoyably occupied in various ways customary on such outs Mrs Le Grand Young accompanied accom-panied the party and did much towards making the occasion so delightful Among those present we noticed the following fol-lowing Mrs Reed Smoot Miss Margie Dwyer Miss May Jennings Miss Alice Dinwoodey Miss Sari Teasdel Hiss Annie Hooper Miss Lizzie Watson Wat-son Miss Nettie Little Miss Emma Jennings Miss None Chambers Miss Mary Teasdel Miss Clara Morris Lee Clawson M Campbell Fred Clawson Clem Scram of Ogden J H Young Sell Clawson Alma Winn Walter Clawson Walter Jennings J B Toronto D S Spencer Ben Eldridge and others The Unity Club Strawberries and Flowers On Wednesday evening at the Social Hall the ladies of the Unity Club give a grand festival to their friends and yes sterday coterie were busy distributing the invitations the attractions will be strawberries flowers music and pretty girls in all sufficient to place a handsome hand-some premium on the invitations and to render any man green with envy who doesnt receive one 8 oclock is announced an-nounced as the hour for the music A Pleasant Ajflalr Friday evening was the scene of a happy throng at the residence of Mrs I M Morgan which partook largely of the excitement from progressive euchre The following names tell of the pleasant time enjoyed during the evening Mr and Mrs A Miner Mr and Mrs John A Groesbeck Mr and Mrs Alonzo Hyde Mr and Mrs Will James Mr and Mrs Wm Groesbeck Mr and Mrs W S Needham Miss Emma Adams Miss Rhoda Chase Miss Zina Hyde Mrs McKee Mrs Josephine Smith Messrs H Groesbeck Will Adams Jas Mair E S Wright Jr Groesbeck and Mr Stewart Generaland Personal SOME VASSAB girls have been photographing photo-graphing the moon Its funny how a girl longs to possess a mans picture wooii ow8iijihftjnay not know him Boston Post As A general rule the first symptom of insanity in a woman is a disposition to be silent Insanity in women is com jartlively rare howeverPhiladelphia Call Ax EXCHANGE notes that there are other fields of ambition for young women than walking quartermiles in quarterhours and points to the record ot a Connecticut girl who achieved five divorces in five consecutive years and she is still in good condition PUT DOWN the day of the month on which you were born Double it Add 7 Multiply by 50 Add your age in years Subtract 365 Multiply by 100 Add the number of tbe montn in which you were born calling January No1 etc Add 1500 The first two figures of the result will give you the day of the month of your birth the next two your age and the last two the number of the month in which you were born Try i it What He Promised the Girl There is a lessoa or two to be learned from the quaint matrimonial incident recorded in graphic style by an enter prizing Western journal Several years ago a young man without any money and still less brains laid seige to the heart of an equally poor but somewhat smarter young woman She led him a lively dance as is the custom with her sex now raising his hopes to the highest pitch now dashing them to the ground without any apparent cause or object The young man went through the usual symptoms of the disease became gay or melancholy by turns grew bilious and wrote alleged poetry to his mistress and in desperate moments protested many things beyond all sense or reason Finely Fine-ly in a moment of unalloyed bliss he swore that it the lady would but wed him he would hire a washwoman doth do-th it portion of the housework or if too poor would do the washing himself him-self elfMany a man has invoked from the realm of the imagination a ghost to haunt his actual life It was so in the case in point The heart that had seemed hard enough to resist his most piteous pleading and most bilious poetry fainted at hearing this passionate avowal and surrendered itself on that one condition dition basis In good time the wedding bells rang and the two were united A brief period of unreasoning happiness followed linshadowed b even the vesige of a cloud Then the money which the young man had borrowed to effect his aatrimonial purpose faded away and a big washing remained on hand There was no help for the youthful husband The honeymoon had begun to wane and the wife vowed a resolute vow that the courtship promise should be fulfilled It was wasH is idle tospeculateon the philosophy of love for love has no philosophy that docs not argue for its own gratification Still this case teaches that young men ought not to say what they do not mean even to the object of their youthful youth-ful affections Probably all women would not have been so obdurate in fact the majority would doubtless have shed a few tears and then attacked the washing themselves But this woman wasnt of that tenderhearted kind She evidently reasoned that a young man who didnt do after marriage whit he had agreed to do before deserved little sympathy and no tears from the woman he bad deceived and she put that principle into practice in such a coldblooded and practical way that probably some other young men will be deterred from marrying at least until they have demonstrated their abilityto keep the more important of their courtship court-ship pledges Philadelphia Timet |