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Show THE CITIZEN Monday evening ' at her home, 954 Garfield avenue, In honor of Miss Benge. The rooms were adorned with hall. 13 A program has been arranged by the chairman, Samuel Dancing will follow. Hadfleld. pink carnations. Mrs. Melvin H. Sowles entertained at her home on Twelfth East street In honor of Miss Dorothy Bailey, a January bride, at tea Friday afternoon. . Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hubbard will entertain on Saturday evening at cards at their home in Federal Heights. . Mrs. Willard S. Evans will entertain on Saturday at tea at her home on Fifth East street in honor of Mrs. Leland Brown, who has recently come to Salt Lake from Ogden to make her home. Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Shepherd of Loa Angeles are visiting in Salt Lake. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Frank N. Huddleson son, Robert, and daughter, Frances, have returned from New York and Columbus, Ohio, where they spent the holidays with relatives, and will be at home for the remainder of the winter at the New Temple hotel. and ' Mr. and Mrs. David I. Stoddard of Le Grande, Ore., are guests of Mrs. Stoddards mother, Mrs. Joseph Howell, in the Hillcreft apartments. Mrs. Jeannette Sharp Ferguson will leave soon for New York to spend several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. William Ferguson. Her son, Fergus Ferguson, has returned to Berkeley to resume his studies at the University of California, after spending the holidays here. Mrs. Fred A. Hale expects to leave soon for San Francisco to visit her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Hunter. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Longden, 518 North First West street, will celebrate their silver wedding anniversary Saturday evening at 8 oclock in ward amusement the Twenty-secon- d Riter to Mrs. Samuel Newhouse, who has recently returned from California, was the guest of honor at an Informal dancing party given Monday night by Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McCaskell at their home on East First South street Dancing was followed by a late supper. Invitations have been Issued by Mr. and Mrs. Ledyard M. Bailey for the marriage of their daughter, Miss Dor- F3 M SMART SHOP PARIS SALT LAKE NEW YORK othy V. Bailey, to Theodore Thornton Hazlewood, Jr., of Boston. The wedding will take place January 24 at the First Presbyterian church, in the evening, and a reception will follow at the Bailey home oh Twelfth East street Mrs. Glenn Q. Smith entertained at bridge tea Wednesday afternoon at her home on Harvard avenue in honor of Mrs. Clifford Kay and Mrs. Bruce Cramer, who is leaving for southern California to spend the remainder of the winter, and of Mrs. J. J. Craron, who has recently arrived from Denver, Colo., to make her home in Salt Lake. Guests were entertained at nine tables at bridge, with others for tea. ' HE wedding of Miss La Veta Mc- Donald and Miles N. Wells took place Wednesday night at 8:30 oclock at the home of the brides mother, y Mrs. Alice B. McDonald. The was performed by Bishop Joseph Christenson and was followed by a reception. I vll Value. Such as We Have Never Before Offered Will Mark This Event Tues- day. A World of Magnificent Goods at I -- 2 vll THIS HALF OFF SALE IS THE MOST GIGANTIC WE HAVE EVER HAD A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO INVEST IN OUR HANDSOME AND WELL SELECTED FURS, LONG COATS, COATEES AND WRAPS, SETS AND SEPARATE PIECES. cere-mone- . The bride wore a gown of silver metal cloth, trimmed in silver lace, and carried bride roses. She was attended by her sister. Miss Alice McDonald, who wore a changeable silk of nile green and lavender. Homer Yeates was best man. Assisting Mrs. McDonald in receiving and entertaining the guests were Mrs. Junius McDonald, Mrs. Wesley McDonald, Mrs. Ronald McDonald and Miss Amelia McDonald. The guests numbered forty. Address Lincoln Club The members of the new Lincoln club are looking forward with pleasure to next Thursday evening, when W. D. Riter, president of the Utah Bar Association, will speak on Submarine Warfare and Wilsonian Diplomacy. The address, which the public is invited to hear, will be given at 8 p. m. in the ball room of the Hotel Utah. Mr. Riter is well known not only as an able and successful lawyer, but as a profound scholar. He is an especially close student of public affairs. A son of W. W. Riter of the Deseret National Bank, he was graduated from the University of Utah in 1894, and received his degree of L.L. B. at Columbia University in 1897. Mr. Riter has been practicing law in Salt Lake City only a few months when the war with Spain broke out. Enlisting in the Utah Light Artillery he went to the Philippines and served until the end of the war with Spain. Since his return he has been engaged in the practice of law. In 1901 he was appointed assistant county attorney and served for one year. "Some months before the armistice was signed he received a message from General Crowder, judge advocate general, informing him that he was eligible for the position of major in the judge advocates department and directing him to take the necessary physical examination and go before his local board for an advanced classification. This he did, and although in the meantime, the armistice was signed, General Crowder sent him a commission as major in the United States Reserve Army. HAMILTONS SELECTIONS ARE ALWAYS THE SMARTEST AND MOST EXCLUSIVE mssa&z 2I6S0UTHT1AIN'ST. |