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Show it SA UNTERINGSby baron chevrial ml, Even though this is an anniversary edition society's esoteric sys- flp tern needn't suffer a shock, for it would be a task too great to even at- iW tempt to review the changes that have taken place Since the doings of IB those who play about were first chronicled here in lighter vein. A's long as it would be, a resume of the doings of the good and y f i beautiful, and the bad and handsome since the century began would i be too much "They knows they knows what they knows" and so do :;j I lots of others who in martyrdom or in certain interest have occasion- !i ally perused these columns is as good, even a little better, than the average in cities of this size, though hundreds of those comprised in t; its lists, whose mental equipment is greater than others, have seen " 'J their opportunities and moved elsewhere, while less fortunate ones, df M some mental endowment, have been obliged to stay in the trenches ji and fritter their talents for lack of opportunity. The field is not wide, ri I but all things considered, it's a pretty good place and each year the I;4 return is noted of many a one who has gone away to conquest and come back to splash a bit in a smaller puddle. li The wedding of Miss Erminic Id ah Calvin and James B. Austin ,' will take place today at St. Mark's Cathedral and will be a big surprise to society, for very few are in on the secret, but their sudden decision i to have a quiet wedding has not been known to many. None but , J those in the immediate families will be present at the ceremony, which II will be performed by Bishop Paul Jones. A wedding breakfast will l I follow at the Hotel Utah. After a wedding trip of several week's dura- I j! 1 tion the young people will return to make their home here. HT'. J The smartest affair that has been given here for months was that WM 1 in honor of Miss Adelc Blood, given by Mrs. Edwin Francis Holmes Bar1! at the Amelia Palace on Thursday evening, a dinner dance for forty SHIl'l people, which, in every particular, was the most enjoyable event at Hllj which this hostess has ever entertained. That is saying a great deal, m LlP or se ls amous fr affairs at which she has presided. There was f' pr something about it, however, totally different. It was hard to imagine, ,. Eh during the dinner and the dance which followed, that it was being k Vi given here. The exotic decorations, the way the guests entered into ' " the spirit of the occasion and all else contributing to the general joy. J ' Mrs. Holmes was the hostess at a luncheon at Oakwood on Wednesday Wed-nesday in honor of Miss Blood and tonight at the Country club the Ij same guest of honor will be given a dinner party. Li . Yesterday afternoon an elaborate reception was given at the town 1 ' , house of M;rs. Holmes and there hasn't been a day or an evening since i the arrival of the distinguished guests which has not been used for i her entertainment. Assisting Mrs. Holmes were Mrs. Jay Tarvin 1 Harris, Mrs. Harold B. Lamb, Miss Blood, Mrs. Walter Lewis, Mrs. of San Francisco, Mjrs. Benner X. Smith, Mirs. Frank Jennings Mrs. Charles Walker, Mrs. L. L. Terry, Mirs. J. W. Houston and Miss Houston. Col. C. A. Quigley will entertain at dinner this evening for Col. ' Joel L. Priest of Idaho, who will arrive here with the National Guard I of that state. He will be in full uniform and everything, and his com- ' ' ing is anticipated with unusual pleasure by his many friends. Colonel Priest has never soldiered before, and a rousing welcome will be given j him when he arrives at the head of his rough walkers. It is said that ! the Idaho men are asj fine a body of guardsmen as there are in the Unit- i ed States, a condition which Colonel Priest attributes to the fact that " TJ 1 J Idaho is dry. 1 1 ' The striking beauty of Mirs. John Reynolds, who is visiting at the ' fill home of Col. and Mrs. E. A. Wall, is a subject of much comment and ' admiration among those who have seen her. She was one of the great- li1 est attractions at the McMillan-Lyle wedding soon after her arrival I I" here and it is pleasant to note that she will extend her stay for a fort- night, during which she will be the recipient of considerable social attention. 1. Mrs. George Y. Wallace gave a beautiful luncheon at her country home, Bonnie Brae, on Thursday to a number of pld friends. The Wallace home is one of the prettiest in the country and was particularly particu-larly attractive on the day of the entertainment. Mrs. W. E. Bennett, formerly of this city, with Mss Grace Bennett Ben-nett and Miss Kathcrine Nagle, of New York, have arrived from the east, and will be entertained this evening by Mrs. Katherine C. Belcher, Bel-cher, at a dinner at the Country club. Mrs. Bennett will be welcomed by her many old friends and with two smart girls in the party of the beauty and charm of Miss Nagle and Miss Bennett their table will probably be a center of attraction. it On Monday at the Country club Mrs. Lewis Cecil Robinson and Miss Mayme Noble will be the hostesses at an elaborate luncheon to be given in honor of Airs. Robert Gould-Smith, their sister, who recently re-cently arrived from San Francisco, and will spend a month or two here. Mrs. Gould-Smith, who was formerly Miss Edith Noble, has a host of friends who will entertain her during her stay. ' I Bi MRS. JOHN REYNOLDS, A BEAUTY OF COLUMBUS, OHIO, WHO IS AGAIN VISITING THE MISSES WALL AT THE HOME OF THEIR PARENTS, COLONEL AND MRS. E. A. WALL |