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Show Mrs. C. W. Streams section of the Ladies Aid society of the First Methodist church entertained, at a kensing-- : ton tea at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Stanley A. Curtis, 75 H street, Thursday afternoon at 2:30 oclock. All members of the church and their benefit card party will be given by Naomi Rebekah lodge Saturday evening at the I. O. O. F. hall for a member of the lodge in need of assistance. Prizes will be awarded and refreshments served. A friends are invited. will arrive home Sunday from California, where she has spent several weeks. Miss Theresa Winter Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Trent are . Dr. and Mrs. Walter Allen of Logan are spending the week at the Hotel Utah. Mrs. Allen was formerly Miss. Katherine Paul of thi scity. re- ceiving congratulations over the ar--' rival of a son, born at the Holy Cross ... Miss Bessie Jensen was given a surprise party by a number of her friends Tuesday evening at her home in the hospital. Mrs. Trent was formerly Miss Margaret Mcllwee. The program for the meeting of the Ladies Literary club Friday afternoon at the club house was under the direction of the Browning section of the club. Luncheon was served by the entertainment committee at 1 oclock, and the program began at 2:30 oclock. The program follows: Harp and violin duet, Prelude Valse au Regaudon, by Reynal do Hahn, played by Mrs. Marsh B. Booth-by- , harp, and Mrs. Jacob Kahn, piano; an address, Brownings Religion, by Dr. William Paden; reading, In a . Mrs. 0. N. Kelly of Dallas, Texas, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. C. W. Beebe, 303 Third avenue. Mr. Kelly will join Mrs. Kelly in a few weeks and they .will spend the summer in Salt Lake.. Mrs. Beebe is recovering from a recent accident. . Mrs. Lewis Telle Cannon entertained the Cleofan Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Annette Culmer discussed The Art of Benjamin West and Henry R. Hutchinson. An informal dancing party was given Friday evening by the Medical associa- Fosell. tion of the University at the Ladies Literary club on East South Temple street. The patrons and patronesses of the evening were President and Mrs. John A. Widtsoe, Dean and Mrs. Perry G. Snow, Dr. and Mrs. L. L. Daines and Dr. and Mrs. L. F. Schrack-ell- . Mrs. L. E. Macdonald and Mrs. A. A. Justice of Dodge City, Kan., are guests of Mrs. A. D. Pierson, Mrs. Macdonald is Mrs. Piersons mother and Mrs. Justice is her sister. Mrs. Justice will The committee in charge of arrangements included Miss Edna Miss Maude Hester, Myron Crandall, Joseph Worthen and Russell remain two months, but Mrs. Macdonald will make a longer visit. d. The Salt Lake Mothers club met Wednesday afternoon at Civic Center. Luncheon was served at 1 o'clock. Mrs. J. E. Jones was hostess. The Rev. Elmer I. Goshen lectured on PsycholMusic was furnished by memogy. bers of the Bryant junior high school. Blood. Miss Linda Jessup entertained thirty friends at tea Thursday aftemon at her home on Twelfth East street to hear Mrs. A. H. Parsons review Wallace Irwins Seed on the Sun. Orien-ta- l tea was served following the review. The hostess was assisted by her sister-in-laMrs. Douglas Jesup. ' at luncheon Saturday at her home Miss Emma Maddison, formerly of this city, who has made her home in Yokohama and Tokio, Japan, recently has gone to Manila to make her home, according to news received by friends in Salt Lake. Miss Maddison will be associated with E. W. Wilson, formerly of Salt Lake and now in charge of Pi Epsilon Phi sorority of the University of Utah entertained Friday afternoon at a kenslngton tea at the home of Miss Afton Greenwood at 1150 Herbert avenue. The committee in charge of arrangements included Miss Ann Howard, Miss Mary Ann Jones and Miss Ardella Hogan. boy? Caller: boy, either. Small Girl: havent any little What are yours? Mrs. W. E. Block left Thursday for fo me, Who have no substance to be To return the ashes of coal borrowed from a neighbor. when you can To buy an ash-siftobtain the loan of one. To pay more income tax than necessary. It isnt done, yknow. To say, My wife allows me to do exactly as I please. Always tell the er truth. HELPFUL HINT. Jones I want to do something big and clean before I die. PurBones Wash an elephant. ple Cow. IT IS CORRECT. of the STREET. Will Arent those fellows in Certainly not, the boss their lives for them. Bill dao-ger- insure! Ed I never see that old friend oi yours any more, although I used in run across him all the time. I mean that fellow who used to drink like j fish. Ned His reputation ruined him. Xo one can' afford these days to invite him to a party. To To enter a neighbors home in your shirtsleeves when you feel obliged to notify him that his house is on fire. over thrown. Cathedrals crash to rubbish, but my towers, Carved in the whirling and enduring brain, Fade, and persist, and rise again, like flowers. Amy Lowell, in Pictures Floating World. IT IS NOT CORRECT. think of the future is wise, Yet to scorn one man I am led Theres a faraway look in his eyes, And his cheques are all dated ahead. JIIIIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIimilllllllllllllllllllllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimillllllllllllllllllllMr: -- 1 SALT LAKE TMEATOE 1 Three days, beginning Monday, May 2 Special price matinee Wednesday THE I South State street, in honor of Miss Johanna Glissmyer, a bride of next week. ' grain. They fretted their full fandeB strong stone And stuck them on the sky. yet I gain; For bombs and bullets cannot menace . My dear, I 745 Mrs. David I. Stoddard has returned to her home in La Grande, Ore., after a visit to her mother, Mrs. Joseph Howell, in the Hillcrest apartments. Mrs. Stoddard attended the wedding of her sister, Miss Victoria Howell, and Ralph Smith last week. Those others laced their poems fr0Bl sea to sea And floated navies, over fields j Small Girl (entertaining her mothers caller): How is your little girl? Caller: I am sorry to say, my dear, that I havent any litttle girl. Small: Girl (after a painful pause in How is your little conversation): Mrs. Edward Stromness, Jr., entertained Friday evening at her home, Ma- refrain from entering a ct fe ing a raid by revenue agents. To WHAT ARE YOURS? on North State street, in honor of her aunt, Mrs. Theresa K. Werner, who has just returned from spending nine months in San Francisco. , with a policeman. Mrs. Grant A. Rasdall of Los Angeles, formerly Miss Jean Hutchinson, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hutchinson. Mrs. Leroy Dinwoodey will entertain w, the Philippine National bank at nila. Weiler apartments. The decorations were in yellow daffodils and pink sweet peas, arranged as a centerpiece for the supper table and throughout the rooms. A birthday cake held twenty candles. The evening was spent in games, dancing and music. A late supper was served. The guests numbered twenty. To move rapidly away while argufy t , . Balcony, by three members of the Browning section, Mrs. Edward Rosenbaum, Mrs. John Cain and Mrs. W. Cal-derwoo- i an extended trip east and south. Mrs. Block will spend the summer with her son, - James Block, in West . Virginia, and will later visit Dr. and Mrs. E. C. Fairweather in New York. SWEETHEART SHOP Harry K. Morton and Company of Fifty. Entire original ca? 1 intact. Worlds greatest musical comedy. En route to Chicago for return engagement after record smashing western tour. s Evenings, 50c to $2.50. Special price matinee Wednesda 50c to $1.50. Seats now ready. 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