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Show m "y Society E&ent.f of the XOeeK. V i H And now about these oath-bound bachelors W f who have entered into a bargain to marry within B a year or forfeit five hundred ice clad simoleons. Hk They must have something cinched or they would Hff never get so rash. And it must be understood that Hf engagements don't go, as at least three of the wife H hunters have been engaged, according to the town Ht tabbies, any number of times. But this time it HJe - must be real live marriage, and the anticipated Kf proposals should cause all sorts of flurries in K chiffon circles. The market should be bullish on H the Easter hats and gowns, and the rivalry of anx- B ious mothers in the display of their more or less Hf beautiful progeny, will doubtless be a sight for HB the gods, and a suffering public. K yV (V (5 Hf But will the bachelors choose at home? It has J been the fad of late to move away to find her, and H the suspicious trips of George Lawrence which H I have been reciprocated by the fair one, have driv- WM en all hope of catching the handsome attorney, B i from the turbulent breasts of willing mammas. M ' Acocrding to the aforesaid tabbies George has IE been engaged many tlmeB, but has trifled. It is HI ' said, though, that it is sure this time or he would Hi ! not have agreed to the Ave hundred proposition. Bj j You know George isn't Will. HLi t5 5 5 HR George Smith is another of the "try, try again" Hl variety, found so frequently in this locality. He !has been extremely devoted at more than one home where one or more daughters have been considered eligible, but his indecision or some B i I thing else has postponed the happy event on the H ' several occasions. H & & & H t( Professor Eaton shouldn't have much trouble H j finding the right one, situated as he is in the midst m I of such a bunch of American Beauties. But then H ' he may not choose from his immediate surround- H ings, for he has probably studied "them" all winter, and knows them too well. As Elbert Hub-H Hub-H bard says: "I would rather appreciate the thing H i I do not have than to have the thing I do not I appreciate." H 5v v w B ' But what do you think of Walt Shoup wo-H wo-H man hater? Walt is the quietest man in the H bunch, but he has evidently been sawing much H wood. Has she answered by mail or by the Ed-Hi Ed-Hi ward Bole patent heart to heart method? Or is V Walt just beginning the hunt? H' Walt will make a good husband, but the girl H? must like home better than society or the barris-H.i barris-H.i ter will not stand hitched. S. B. Leon need not look long. As a German Ger-man leader, few can equal him, and he has a crisp wit that is magnetic. t tv t WaltherWolf hasneverbeenaggressive enough, though he has been "placed" in the running at least three times. He has raised before the draw on a pair of queens a number of times, but in each case someone else whom the public imagined was four flushing butted in with five diamonds and won out. One lady has said that Walther is not sure of himself, and when he has a girl and heartsease in an immortal cinch, he leaves her side in sadness, thinking he has lost out. But he'll have to make good before Jan. 1st. v tJ William A. Wilson ("Tug.") has heretofore been considered invulnerable. When examined for life insurance his heart was found to be entirely en-tirely encased in Harveyized steel plate, with every ev-ery possible vulnerable point projectile proof. The maiden who gets through it will have to make some awful funny cracks. But even Tug has an eye for the beautiful, and will probably make his selection some windy day. V tV (W The Walter Filers will build a summer home in Idaho this season, big enough for a gay house party every two or three weeks. The invitations have not been issued yet, but their friends are thanking them in advance for good times ahead. &V &V 5 Some missing members of the smart set now sojourning in the shade of the sweltering palm, in Honolulu, were entertained at luncheon there a few days ago by Mrs. Albert P. Taylor. The Honolulu Hono-lulu Advertiser says: Mr. D. E. Burley, Mr. D. H. Peery, Jr., Mrs. Louis Lyman Terry and Mrs. William Akers, all of Salt Lake City, Utah, were the guests of honor yesterday at a poi luncheon given by Mrs. Albert P. Taylor at Kegaulike-Pa. Jt t An old woman who wants her photograph to look like a coy maiden, has forgotten that death is as natural as life. The Philistine. This is not Salt Lake correspondence. & A limit is to be put on the number of members mem-bers to be allowed to join the Country club. That |