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Show I , j .,. ; rr; C . I lii $$& IN THE SOCIAL REALM H H I'ursr-lji'ed. Dyri.vas tlio hqstcss ut H n'Jirfdge-. ,tWruesdax iJftenibon given i irpjhonorof :MFs7 ErC. Parsons, " H tS11'5- u Wt'fflta&mMilBV entertained , H Tijj'sday aftojjotyn, aVrbiJdse for Iior. siUer, Miss A. IJ Itnyiugm) oyudinn; I wR' my3- '' -' SI! ti Jrin'Tin ' o .' H Mr. anil Mnk Jlovt Sherman vill , g(jo up thefr fonrCJalJouef,Nov.wi,2, ' an with Mlfcffiam'l:-M Mlfcffiam'l:-M altthome at The Kenycm for a inunth fl bSiforo their departure for Wnshlog- tqa. D. C. v' V- ' : H ;i. .1. Knolllu of Chicago, who has' H niimy friends la Salt Lake, is a guest aCtho Kenyan. 5 -- H '.MiapsEilUh llofCinait'-hnd .Jtrs.JJen.fr H lo'y: 0f4X:hMifiw;tirlKB(uiSts AlV.Cawl H Mik ATI. lIoffinanS(; Third street. jKlr. and Mrs. Wayne HoinphFlPriav,S H returned fronithclr. weeding .trip. H ,Mr. ;n..l Mrs. Hubbard Heed left H Sunday focuivousteiu, trip.. ,3,-,. 1 Mr. and Mrs. F. E. McGurrin left H Sunday for a short trip to Los An-. H gules. H lrs. John Gi Oulojc'luis rctnnual- H fiom Denver, where she necoiupnued H Governor! Cutler whero hown..tp at H lend the dedication of the "GuggcnliQfiii 1 Aifmiuisti'ntion hulldiiiK. wlilclNflA7lnJ H iiiijcd (o f lie Colorado Scli,OjljQXMlneH. The opening addicss was" nmUj, '' H K(v. F. W. Gonsolus, I), D. An 'elo- 1 qut'iit address, wun given by, Rabbl'W. 1 S.IJFreedmnn, who has many friends H lnSaltvI;nke.'-"MosT.-of tliK-delPgntrir M Including Governor and Mrs. Cutler, n"4.1!l(' JlJ'.0X JJPr.'y Kivcn by Gov- H eriiorrTJonaTd. at" the" Grplic'iinf 'on M Thhrsdny evening. They wero also B driven about tho city nnd shoyiv, m through the nyi(miHceht stnto cftplloj; H by'f Governor rMcT5onnld. m M Airs, ilugh L. Thomas entui t'lined 1 Informally Tiyaduy afternoon at H brJilgoir.wJien, "Utf; follywRC'V ijucalB'. H wero preent:' Mrs. Hussel ifTracey,' H Mcs. Geflrgoi'. WajlaKev-5lys.n.j;i-. H lloU Kelly, Mrs. 12. G. ncldeu, Mrs. .1. H C'aylor. Mrs. G. . Kncon, Mrs. P., H It.irerguson. Mrs, C. II. Post and Mr.i i H oil elovcu young girl friends at lunch- H eon Titesritiv at the Country club. A H tnimseTAficjMinosu'.rP.t'.dUtlio. e'enlor H' of Vie table and low mounds of white H ehK's-iuthemtims were at ejllier cud, H Sev-errir-'Hinitlisiiartis WCro'aJo cn- H teffaitiodkv Mlts 'Anna ''MoQrnick, H Mls Williams and'Mrs.' W E.- Fife. H Mi's. "W. I), McClenn entertained' at H a lj'tisington .Tuesday afternoon. The M ropiiisrjroipiQllil decorjltpd ,,vUli H red) and wjilto c'n'nini ;uuinvy hi the H gtic.ssiug g'une which was n feature of H thcjaftcrnopiK M' Kfanl; Marcy, won K th first ptj(C,Mrs.;WlllIgirt. Cojfon- B theisecond. 'Those "liresenP Wrm Airs." H II. jG, WIIIhniH,, Mrs. ,1. II. McMillan, B Alr. Ix)iils Copelutid, Mi'sT-H'tfUuHJU H Mri. Ell Mrs. Wing'ito1M&&CSin3H, H Mra. J)oritis, Mrs. Marcy, MfbVMJonpn, H teiv Mrs, liingcrt, Mrs. Bontly, Airs. H PriRst(cMrbj-Giicuuda)i, AlrsOJjUclicni H soif and tio Misses Cartel. 1 I? stum ohw'i&& ot b u H jive. Fred Dern entertained' Tuc- H rics 'jot brfdgo teas, 1 ' Miss Jean. Odoll entertained her card-'club Tuesday afternoon for Mrs. Joseph Richards. , . . , Karl Sch led gave a box party at the Orpheum Tuesday ovening for Mr, and AJr.s. Robert W. Glcudinnlng, who are here on their wedding trfp, and who will leave Saturday for Mexico. The party humbered twelve, and was com-jnigp.d com-jnigp.d p(.r.olatlves and Intimate friends rfllie guests of honor. After tno play "tlfOAttyrVas entertained at supper. J f - ''Aidlnnei' was given In honor of the ;.ifUh',b,irthdny of Hon. C. M. Plant, at his liomo Tuesday evening. Relatives .and near friends wore present and en-'jjfyed en-'jjfyed a pleasant ovening. "vAHRShnRtllo-HarrTDWand John Uurt werf married Wednesday in the Tern-plA Tern-plA AgvcfrfMJQjicas given in the evuiilnga:-rfir riofn'o" of the Ijrido's 'St 'Marks Hospital association held a- jyviU; allspdpcl -meeting yednesday Vu)rnlng""arih"oY; 'M.'C. A. Thursdny avoulng. November 8, was decided ,111 on, as. tlwjaiefor. the. Charity ball. t was also decided to hold the ball in the Salt Lake theatre. Clint U Leigh gave a box party JhiurSilay afternoon at the Orpheum n honor of MIsa A. D Raymond. t Mrs,WhidiQr,V. Rico entertained at "Vidgb Thursday afternoon when Mrs. 'W.j.P, Sharp was the guest of honor. I - ..- -" I A luncheon was given Thursday by Miss Mary Kimball at her home on SixthPEast street. ' 'Thursxlay- nlternnon ' nt- Uiilty hall' Mrs. II. Dnrllott, Mi's. Milton D. Jo-eph Jo-eph and Mrs. Theodore Meyer enter-nirie"d-'a"'largo 'number of-their friends at a card party. , Sahi)'day nfteriuiun Miss.' Helen and Miss Hess Gtltzer will 'entertain for Mrs. William C. Mabry of Texas and TMrs. Ijilher V'Sfe'elo of Portland. 'Ore. . The.-'lflute'club hvas. entertained Thursday nfternoon by Mrs. Emmet i 'Miss- Ella Drawn was the guest of honor nt a kltchenfhowed Thursday ftonioongtvenrtryJMrs. D. H: Cameron Camer-on and Mls Irene Sears. v ,v5K s-rr-'j. St . s i The legular meeting of the Historv Section of the Ladles' Literary club .wan luJd-Tliur8(la.v. morning..' Mrs. A. II. Roxrud gave the tonic. "Art of Grpek Sculnturn in the Fourth Cen-ftursv;Dacr,?-The) llellenUtic. Ago in (Scijlntuco. "The -cue , minute, talks Nvere'on'TTiTdias. ' ' J ' i x - - ;&' tr Miss SelmiRVall lott Wednesdny for Wnshington, I). C. where she will join hqr sister, Alice', nndwith her." will enter en-ter Miss 'Sumner's school. ' '"' ' Mi'." and Mnt.l(UinrT. Hueke, who kU lor. Eurdpu-Thursday, entertnined members of the Ruckle family Wednesday Wed-nesday opening at a dinner and thei-,tro.pavty. thei-,tro.pavty. Tlie guests gathered In tlio Kenyon during the ovening and after enjoying an elaborato dinner, ud-jurued;to.the.SnIt ud-jurued;to.the.SnIt Lnke.thontroV.whero thos; witnessed the production of "Peggy fiom Paris." The guests' present, pres-ent, wgro: John V.. Uuc.kkv Miss Lulu Rucklo. Mr. and Mrs. Ray G. Ruckle, Mr. and Mrs. Clinrlos Fowler, Garnott itleelc.CrlJtislilenii'lJ-UeJIill' Head, Mrs. Paulino S4lidB Is visiting her sister, Mih. Isadore Mayers, 5'i East First South. Mrs. Fred Dern entertained at a bridge tea Wednesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. E C. Parsons. Au umn loaves wore used in the decorations. A number of Intimate friends assisted Mrs. Dern In recolvlng her gilcsts. Mrs. Mayer, Mrs. Joseph and Mrs. Harnett Wero the hostesses nt a card party in Unity hall Wednesday afternoon. after-noon. The rooms were decorated with (lowers and autumn leaves worked Into attractive effects. Mrs. W. S. KelirliiK Was hostess at a card party TllOsday afternoon. She was assisted by Miss Theiesa Taylor. 0 . A largo number of society leaders attended the meeting of the Skating club at the Salt Palaco Wednesday evening. & Ot Carl Shied was host at a box party at the Orpheum Thursday evening arranged ar-ranged in honor of Mi', find Mrs. Robert Rob-ert Glendlnlilng. Miss Leila Fowler entertained at an afternoon tea and Mrs. Hugh Thomas at a bridge tea Thursday. A. R. Deem of Salt Lake and Josephine Jo-sephine Sheldal of Council Blurts. la., Hvore married Wednesday evening by Rev. Elmer I. Goshen. The Ceremony 'was witnessed by a few friends of the young people & SI John F. Charles of Dutte and Miss Ida Francis, also of Dutte. were married mar-ried In the Emory-Hclnies apartments Wednesday evening. A few friends wero present. Rev. Elmer I. Goshen officiated v1 S ' Cards have been received from Mr. and Jlrs, Miller of Portland, Ore., announcing an-nouncing thnt the marr.ldge of their daughter, Mamie, and Isidore Leder-miui Leder-miui of Salt Lake will take placo at Portland on the evening of November t nt the residence of the brido's pir-onts, pir-onts, IIS North Eighteenth street. ' Si Si I Miss Miller, who is a very charming girl, has frequently visited in S-ilt Lake and lias many friends here. Mr i Ledcrninn is a well known young business! busi-ness! ninn. Tlio ycmig couple will , make their homo In Silt Lake. Si Si I ; The Wasatch roller skating rink re-cully re-cully opened at the Agricultural park, is belli? patronized by the foremost fore-most society people of the city. It 'is conducted on n high clnss principle' and is thoroughly respectable. -o LOGAN LETTER. '; Editor Truth: The democratic hand organ still keeps standing in a conspicuous con-spicuous place on the first pigo of tho villlfylng "Tribuno" in embryo, "A Vote for tho Ropubllcnn Ticket is a Vote against tho Agricultural Col!eg8." The orgnn clnlms that its inrty nora, Inoes lmvo nothing to do with Its utterances. ut-terances. None of tho democratic nominees will discuss tills question with the republican nominees. A very conservative democrat told the writer that this masterpiece of prevarication noil lor its oblect to cnun the voters' minds to bo focused cnthply on tho college question, nnd blur thoir mind and memories regarding county affairs the democratic record being far from pleatant and very indluestlblo. The' republicans have no hesitancy In pointing point-ing with pride to their economicil nnd .efficient administration of county affairs. af-fairs. The Intorests of tho taxpayers Itavq been safeguarded by them., The Jtoavdrs continuo to voto for honest ami efficient men to handln the coun-' ty property. M ' MHlHiiBHBH If it Is possible to direct tho atten tion of the public to tho college and ' divert their attention from county I matters It will perhaps niako them a fow votes. This college qUestlon.hoWeVdr, should not enter politics and would not, !f tho slushheaver of Logan democracy had tho least bit of honor or decency. If that shoot's staff would dig up a little lit-tle of the unpleasant conditions that " existed nmong tho court house gang when their party was rilriillng 'things to suit thc.iatlves it would bo good politics, bit to raise a hue and cry falsely of a non-political naturo for political po-litical purposes seems preposterous, , nnd is beneath the dignity of gentlemen. gentle-men. Tho notorious utterances in tho vllllfler will brand Its authors as" dishonest dis-honest prevaricators and niako them the laughing stock of all honorable ell- I izens who know something about the Agricultural college consolidation question. ques-tion. A repudlicAn. Logali, Oct. xl i90G. o TRUTHS. The aclune of idiocy was renchdd when the Tribune published nri article to tho effect that William and Alexander Alexan-der McWhlrtef are detectives from Scotlahd Yard, London, England, sent here to work In collusion with the Mormons lo bring discredit on the "American" party. The human mind I can't imagine anything more absurd. 1 It simply shows that the Kearns-Amer- J ,Ican party leaders are the most ills- ' honest fools on the face of tho earth, i Their principles are founded on dishonesty, dis-honesty, nurtured In dishonesty and exist en dishonestw. The foillshr-pss Is made glaring by their belief thnt they can fool the people with such clap trap. How strong the "Americans'" are! ' The Park City Record says: "C. A. Wade who was placed on the American party ticket as a candidate Tor recorder wishes It known that he is not a candidate for office on tnls ticket and that ho doesnl want people to think so. Wado has been a republican republi-can all his life, is proud of It, and intends in-tends to stay with the grand old party as long as ico Is at a premium in hades. "J. P. Sweeney, J. P. Lungford and Di Tt. E. Wight, whose names will bo i been on tho American ticket as filed, also stato that they Were not made candidates of their own will nnd do not Intend to run as stated. Fred M. i Smith, loo, has sent a letter to the county clerk instructing him to remove re-move his name from tho ticket, as it Is thero without his knowledge or Coil-sent. Coil-sent. Miss Martha Lanlng, put up by tho same party for county superintendent superin-tendent of schools, Is nlso Indignant , over the use of her name on the i ticket, which was put there unknown to her. She has applied to the clerk J prohibiting it to go on tho official bal- lot. C. H. Getch Is another whoso name Is on tho ticket without his consent con-sent nnd ho will withdraw. Thero nro probably others. So tho American roll of office seekers(?) Is considerably diminished, and tho over-presumptuous commltteo has another trial coming. To say the least the committee wt a littlo premature, tnking altogether too much for granted. Different tactics nnd methods will havo to ho adopted for the party to grow in Summit county. . Neither "bosslsm" nor "churchism" will bo tolerated in this section." Any fool can see through tho "American" "Amer-ican" party methods from the nbove. rhelr plans are similar throughout. vf) Ind, buncombe, vengeance and graft, principally graft. M St A strong fire Is concentrated on R. u. Sleater to compel him t" withdraw fiom tho "American" ticket, on which . he appears us ii candidate for the house of representatives. The grounds .Tor the attack are that Mr. Sleater Is a polygamtst and that It is very In- conrous lor the "American" party, (whose chler avowed principle Is opposition op-position to polygamy, to have a poly-gamist poly-gamist on their ticket. This, of course, Is good campaign thunder for the opposition op-position to the "Americans," hut In ' the light of the facts It Is somewhat hard on Mr. Sleater personally. Those facts appear to be that Mr. Sleater thirty years ago entered Into the poly-,gamous poly-,gamous relation, but that when the , war against polygamy was being hotly . , . waged many years ago Mr. Sleater ' gave his solemn promise to the court that In futuro he would obey the law and abandon polygamous practises. I "Mr. Sleater claims ho has kept ills I promise to the letter, and there Is no evidence or suspicion to the contrary. His plural wife died years, ago, and for a quarter of a century ne has only the one wife which the law allows. Mr. Sleater therefore "appears "ap-pears In the light of a reformed poly-gamlst. poly-gamlst. That his sins of thirty years years ago, or which lie has fully rc-i rc-i pented, should bo visited upon him now is considered rather hnrd. 1 .t .i Aii old lady was being Instructed the other day In the art or voting with the. new voting machines which will be used for the ilrst time in Salt Lake I- next .November. After the lesson and just before leaving she said, "Well, well, I had heard a whole lot about the Smoot machine, and now I know it's nil right." J i Sunday morning, after the wind storm the "American" party streamer . and the Democratic streamer opposite the Cullen hotel were round intertwined inter-twined around an electric light pole, the result of a prank or the wind. Passers-by remarked that the combination combin-ation was very appropriate. . v & " Prot. John P. Meakln lelt Salt Lake 1 '.Monday evening ror the east, to be rone for six months on a lecture and diamatic reading tour. Ho will tell the eastern people about Utah and the Mormons as they are, as ho has been doing for a year or more. Ho lias a 8' number of highly interesting lectures on his repertoire which have already delighted audiences east and west. His "ilrst stop is at Denver, thenco to Kansas City and Chicago and on to . Now York, Tloston and otner largo -cities. His friends here wish him a pleasant and profitable campaign. I The State Journal, which calls itself : Republican, is very angry because the inter-Mouutniu Republican advises all voters, especially voters who hitherto i have been Democrats, to vote the He- , publican ticket this year. The Ropub- : llcauism of the State Journal is only skin deep. Suppose wo call it "Kea'rns-Amerlcan in disguise" and let it got nt that. That's as near as the ordinary man will get to defining the politics of the Journal. J & It is rather unfortunate for the Tribune Tri-bune and tho "Americans" that it has turned out that the "American" party's par-ty's own people are tho ones implicated impli-cated in tho alleged tax regularities, if any Irregularities exist; or, in other words, if any stealing has been done, the so-called "Americans" have done It. "Tho Tribune "trumped up" a case against those who would not join In Its villainy, and it turns out that the Tribune's crowd are caught in the not which the Tribune weaved for others. The Republican rally at the Salt Lako theatre on Thursday ovening was a splendid gathering of earnest thinking neonle. Senator Sutherland made the principal speech of the evening, dealing mostly with local matters. Ho showed in a strong light tho Insincerity and duplicity of the Kearns ''American" loaders. His speech received warm applause throughout. Congressman Howell made a short but telling address, which was thoroughly appreciated. Truth has said many times that nearly every department of (lip municipal mu-nicipal government is permeated with graft. It has been proven so in the matter of tho police department, nt least to tho satisfaction of the public. Tho treasurer's department is now under un-der lire and Irregularities havo been shown. Oilier departments are no better, bet-ter, as will presently appear. The Tribune has Its hands full defending Its hobos', bunco sfcorcrs .and grafters. graft-ers. Tho Tribuno is a great bluffer. Its offer to pay the expenses ,of a, grand ury has enough of loop holes to enable en-able a herd of elephants to escape. A grand jury would bo a good thing t6 have, but tho Tribune doesn't want It. |