| OCR Text |
Show K i ' "' i ill il Uhe Heal TohirtQj and the Climbers. u, iii wt 5 I IE ril; Hffhii 1 If ill Ancnt Mrs. George Gould's article in the cur- EjJlf I I 'till rent "Club Woman" on Fashionable Life vs. Moth- ! i W I i 11 ' f M erhood, the smart set has entered into another ab- fl P I ' 'illS'i 1 1' surc dscussln relative to the abdication of the H i i m I I ' mother. But there aren't any more society women It lA 1 '1 I 1 proportionately who neglect their children than H '' i 111 women of any other clan, and while it would seem B ' 'Vi! ! " 1 ;na' we uavo a number of young matrons who are lillvl n0' over anx'ous 0 contribute to Zion's popula- B ' ; I i r i 1 1 tion, those who have children are devoted to them, H ' f lf: !l with the possible exceptions of one or two who H i 1 1)1 I ;i never had any affection for anything, no matter H p j whether in or out of the smart set. B ! lljl l & HHHl wla m v v fcV H II 1 1 And about that much abused word "smart." H L a i : Lots of people have asked why "The Smart Set?" j tl 1 j ; For the reason that there is such a sameness about H h I ; most society events that words must be constantly H 4 1? J coined or twisted or misused in order that the H ' p I ' old monotony may sound entertaining. Salt Lake H Mt f J society has not yet earned the title of smart, for H II Si it isn't. Smart when used in a social sense does B aS! 1 i I not mean smart. It means daring, eccentric, orig- H t I ft j inal, and while we have a few who very quietly H j i ft! i dare; while we have many more who are absurd- B' ' 1'fii: ! y eccGntric an(1 occasionally stumble into the B f1 ll! : rare ones wno liave originality and ambition B 'II If enough to carry out their ideas, Salt Lake hasn't m t:HHV ' tne rSlit to call its society "smart." But that is B J j ijj ; nothing against it, for there aren't half a dozen B s f:f; cities in the United States that may honestly lay K J hi m claim to the title. H lilt!1! x m t,, fgf . ' The marriage of Mrs. Hilda MacDonald Bax- ' ii if S ter and Ralph Hart in San Francisco came as a ! i II j great surprise to their many friends in this city, rH 1 1 ' , I though there should be nothing surprising in the B j it j j fact for the bride is one of the most stunning H m 11 1 I'l I women in San Francisco society, and has a per- B 'w 1 1 1 li f sonal charm that augured short duration for sin- B 't m ii ' gle blessedness. Mr. Hart is an artist-architect, B a r vffl lUf formerly of Chicago, who has lived in San Fran- K ''lM I h cisco several years, a clever fellow, and the right P?U? m sort generally. Their Salt Lake friends are HDB ii? lib ' H H Mmk I showering congratulations. Mrs. Harris K. Masters has returned from the East, and Mr. and Mrs. Masters are at home at 38 J street. Mrs. Masters is a veritable composite St. Valentine with a store of messages from Henderson, Hen-derson, Ky., for a score of men hereabouts. In her recital of these stories of the siege of Henderson, Hen-derson, Masters accompanies on the piano with his latest hit "Egypt." tJv vJ The wedding of June Mclntyre and Frederick Dern, which took place at the Mclntyre home on Tuesday evening was not a whit less beautiful j than we had all anticipated, and so ideal is the mansion Mclntyre for such an event, that more than one of the friends of the happy pair expressed ex-pressed a desire to bo married just the same way, with masses of beautiful blossoms about them, and their friends in front smiling approval at the charming bride, the handsome groom, and the ' man reading the sweetly simple marriage ser- ; vice. There has never been a prettier home wedding, ; here than that of the first daughter of the Mc- ; Intyres and the last son of the Derns. The bride was attended by Mrs. James Chambers Dick, the matron of honor, and Mrs. Elizabeth Mclntyre, the maid of honor. Mr. Frank Judge was Mr. 5 Dern's best man. The ceremony was performed by the Elmer I. Goshen, and afterwards the many J guests offered their congratulations, until the de- g parture of Mr. and Mrs. Dern who left at mid- night. They will be in California about a month. 1 & J & jl Outside of the bridal party at the Mclntyre- b Dern wedding, the tall blonde beauty, and her S handsome escort were the recipients of more than one 'second look, and neither of them ever ap- u peared to better advantage. She was ravishing J in white with blue posies tucked in the right g places, and the contrast to his dark eyes and hair g and skin was startling. 5 "Why don't they?" asked one man greatly In- S terested in futures, and a girl who knows her E well whispered, "I think they will." m |