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Show THE CITIZEN gram followed the dinner in which Mr. Dixon gave several numbers. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Beason entert- ained Monday afternoon at a prettily arranged luncheon at the Alta club in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Forsythe of California Mr. Forsythe is a well known artist and will leave directly for southern Utah where he expects to spend some time in painting. The luncheon also honored Frederick Dixon of New York, noted pianist, who has been the motif for a number of social affairs during his stay in Salt Lake. Mrs. M. E. Wilson entertained at an attractive luncheon, the second in a series, at her home on Second avenue, on Saturday noon. The twelve guests were seated at one table which was centered with freezia and acacia. I .Bridge followed. Mrs. Laurence Fox entertained at the first of a series of bridge luncheons Tuesday t at her home on Fourth avenue. The table was gay with bas-- 1 kets of Afrigan marigolds. Eight second guests were bidden. The luncheon of the series was given Thursday at her home to which an equal number of guests were invited. have returned from Honolulu where they have spent the past few weeks and are at home to their friends at Mr. their Third avenue residence. and Mrs. F. C. Richmond and Mr. and Mrs. John Tonkin who returned from Honolulu on the same boat, are' visiting for a short time in California before returning to Salt Lake. John C. Howard, who was also a member of the party, will remain in California another fortnight. Mrs. Clyde Early and small son have returned from a months stay at the California beaches and will soon be at home to their friends at their new residence on Yale avenue. Only two babies were reported on February 29, just passed, while there were three. Mrs. Rufus Elben gave birth to a baby girl at 1 a. m. on the morning of February 29, at the L. D. S. Hospital, and both are doing well. Her first birthday will come in 1932, and should the present calendar be changed to thirteen months in the year, there will be no birth days for these leap year boys and girls. M. Elben is the photograph printer at the Wilcox studio. i ) j j 1 With the Travelers Mr. and Mrs. Ellis C. Freed have returned from a four months journey to London and Paris. While in the latter city they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Hudnot at their villa on the Ri- viera. Mr. and Mrs. Freed are now at home to their friends at the Hotel I Utah. i Mr. I and Mrs. Lafayette Hanchett PHONE EMPLOYES The telephone using public seldom thinks of the trained army of workers who keep the vast telephone facilities of the Bell System ready for instant use at any hour of the day or night. The average telephone user may have seen a few of the 93,000 plant employees of the Bell System 9 stringing wires along the roadside or feeding cable into a manhole, but he seldom sees any of the 155,000 telephone operators who make his connections for him. In addition to these there are some tenances of our machine civilization given us more leisure, more content, more freedom and joy than the savage Philippine pygmies possess? Think it over, friends. March 45,000 Western Electric company em- ployees engaged in manufacturing for the telephone industry and 56,000 others who perform the innumerable miscellaneous tasks connected with the telephone service. Altogether, there are about 350,000 men and women in the Bell System, most of them highly trained for their special duties and all devoting their entire energies and skill to the task of furnishing the American people with the best possible telephone service. HAPPY LIFE Life is a continuous picnic for the pygmies that inhabit certain mountainous forest regions of the Philippines, according to John M. Garvan of the University of California who spent twenty years among. the Philippine tribes. These pygmies, according to Garvan, are about four and a half feet in height, perfectly formed, nomadic in their habits, houseless and farmless, but the happiest and merriest little men in the world. Life in the jungles is quite effortless and is usually a round of feasting, marrying and visiting back and forth, a lifelong picnic, says the observer. We have ' houses, farms, autos, radios, telemechanical phones, refrigerators, steam heat, movies and a million other things. If the possession of an endless variety of material things bring happiness, we should be the merriest, most carefree of mortals. Are we?. Have the countless appur- - SPRINGTIME t Means Time For Beautiful NEW RUGS We have what you Want at the RIGHT PRICE 9x12 Axminster Rugs $34.50 27x54 Axminster Rugs $3.85 36x63 Axminster Rugs $5.95 Modern Fnrnitnre Co. 234-23- 6 . daisy milk and cream is Pasteurized in one of the CLEANEST, MOST MODERN DAIRIES IN SALT LAKE COUNTY, located in Draper, right in the heart of the finest dairying country in the state. Thoroughbred herds produce DAISY MILK AND CREAM. Its pure and sweet as a summer morning. South State Trade With Your Friends Hotel Alexandria will win your hearty approval with thoughtful aeruce. central location and famoua cuisine. Some special features: Franco-Italia- n dining room, Peacock Coffee shop and Indian Grill cafeteria. 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