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Show II i Saunterings ,,,. H Tho Non-Sectarian Charity league is going to I ' bust out, just like that, with a perfectly good I I tea dnnco this afternoon at the Hotel Utah irom H f three until six o'clock and the event promises H to bo tho real event of tho week. Tea will be H served and other things and the prediction is that H a handsome sum will be realized for the further H ing of the good work in which tho league is en- HI caged. There will be plenty of entertainment, H. professional, semi-professional and amateur, and H as tho Utah grill is an ideal place to hold such H' an affair it will in all probability prove a great H' attraction to every one. H By the way, Salt Lake is becoming so citified H and up-to-the-minute in providing entertainment H that the first thing we know a lot of people vill B stay at homo and spend their money instead of m having a desire to search for It elsewhere. H , ' H .Apparently the matter of the Country club M moving up on the hill is all off tor the present, M the inability of tho board of the present club to i I sell the present location making "it impossible to M accept the proposition of the Upland Realty cornel corn-el pany on account of the heavy debt in which it i would involve tho club. Tho suggestion is made H in tho letter of tho board of directors to Mr. B .Tackling of the realty company that if consistent fl that company proceed along such lines that the H club might acquire tho property at some future B time, which is a splendid suggestion and whkh B in all probability will be followed out by these H who own tho new ground, as it was purchased H for a country club site and those who own it H are really in a position to be generous enough H to be patient until such time as tho present club H can go into the matter without incurring a large B M H The annual election at the Weber club in H' Ogden on Monday night when A. R. Haywood H was defeated for president by Joseph Scowcroft H by the narrow margin of six votes was one of H the most spirited contest? ever held in clubdom H ( hereabouts and there was more life in that club H then in three hours than there has ever been in H a Salt Lake club in three months. It was a H battle royal from start to finish with more cam- M I paigning and the accessories that go with it than B any similar event ever recorded at the Weber. One little example will suffice to show how H warm the campign was waged. Some gentlemen B wishing to play billiards and be at peace with fl the world while the election was going on with- M drew to tho billiard room and in a tew mom- B ents a waiter appeared with three quarts of B champagne and glasses for everybody. One of B tho gentlemen turned to him and asked, "Who H bought that wine?" HH "Well, really suh," stuttered tho waiter, "Ah B can't just say. Doy's buying it so fas' in dahr B dat dah ain't no telling jes who is buying it." H Mr. and Mrs. George N. Lawrence were wel- B coined by their friends during the week and are B temporarily at homo at tho Hotel Utah. Mrs. B , Lawrence who was Miss Carrie Calvin has visited Bj hero a great deal in the past and in fact has H spent so much time in this city that she is H! scarcely a stranger in any sense of the word. Hjj A. large number of .events have already been Bf planned witi Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence as the B't guests of honor and their welcome in the younger H!j marriod set will he a most cordial one. Bf Mr. and Mrs: Samuel Newhouse arrived from Hl tho oast on Tuesday and are at home at the jBi Hotel Utah. Simultaneously Mrs. Newhouse's BB' mother, Mrs. Stingley, arrived from California Hi I KV and is with them. After a few days spent hero Mr. Newhouse will return to the east but iMrs. Newhouse will remain some timo visiting her mother and other relatives in this city. It has been several years since Salt Lake was favored with a visit from Mrs. Newhouse, one of the most charming and interesting women who ever graced Salt Lake society. In London she is one of the few untitled women who has gained and held a favored place in the ultra-smart set of the English Eng-lish metropolis. Her many old friends are hoping hop-ing that her visit will bo a prolonged one. Miss Edith Russell, the sister of Mrs. Charles W. Stimpson, who arrived from the east recently to visit Mr. and Mrs. Stimpson at their home on South Temple street was the guest of honor at a bridge tea given by Mrs. iStimpson or Monday. Miss Russell is a' charming girl of the type of her slsler.TTiss" 'Helen Russell, who visited here oBPv" BHHBIflilBL MISS EDITH RUSSELL Who Is Visiting Her Sister, Mrs. C. W. Stimpson. a year ago and the younger set has already taken possession of most of her available time. Several Sev-eral events havo been planned in her honor. A dispatch from Los Angeles states that after af-ter several weeks of domestic strife with divorce proceedings iniminent, Dick Ferris and his wife, of the footlights, Florence Stone, have decided to kiss and make up. Isn't it about time now that tho newspapers quit having a fit every time this supposedly belligerent young man takes it into his head to fight the world because somebody some-body looks crosswise at him or casts an eye at his wife? Both of them have had too much newspaper space and the trash that is published intermittently about their troubles is of very little lit-tle Interest. As long as the memory serves they have been quarreling and making up through the public prints or otherwise and to read the stuft any one would think that they were people of consequence. In honor of Miss Ora iMcDermott of Tucson, Arizona, Mrs. A. Fred Wey entertained at a large and elaborate reception and tea at her home on Monday. She was assisted by Mrs. Noble No-ble Warrum, Mrs. Thomas Marname, Mrs. Mary Bero, Mrs. Lewis A. Jeffs, and Miss Louise Wey. |