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Show mE CHA TTERBOX j f K mmumm u m .,,' 1 4 r 1 H y j ANY well known members of the , j' I 400 celebrated the downfall of j f many on Monday, and from all H f ; counts the bubble water and the H j peering "three fingers" were as pop- i1 t' Alar as the tri-colors. Many staid M I J business men made friends that day M 9 (of the feminine persuasion) whom M I j they failed to recognize the following B i morning when accosted by the fair K J ones. One prominent business man B jl I j was decorated for the occasion with 8 J III a top hat, a frock coat, a red carna- H, tion in his buttonhole and trousers so m M I gay that they made the leopard's spots H J pale. From the ground floor to the m 7 ( crown of his bald spot he was il- !7t. luminated as a Christmas tree. The m hi following day, when, about' noon, he M 1 was able to creep slowly to his swivel H ' chair and begin the routine of the H i, 1 afternoon, he admits that he had a H I feeling of being detached from the 1 work-a-day world and his visions were filled with showers of bright confetti . intermingled with fair forms who sprinkled him with talcum powder or f tickled his ears with fuzzy-wuzzy j ticklers. The members of the bar, too, were well represented at the bar that day all right, and from 9 a. m. until the wee sma' hours of the day after, convivial spirits gathered and dispensed spirits to their friends and . acquaintances. A steady stream of ! visitors tracked up and down the long hallway to the popular office where certain well known legal lights J presided at one of the "most success- H ful affairs of the season." Late in H ) the evening a couple of the more dar- j ing ones cake-walked with pretty girls H u at the impromptu dance on Main H ' street and they do say that one un-H un-H usually pretty wife sat back in her j automobile and watched friend hubby H cake-walk to his heart's content, but H it's safe to say that tne following day H I when all the fun was over she made H him cake-walk to another tune. I I A DELIGHTFUL affair of the H week was the prettily arranged I luncheon presided over by Mrs. Grant H ! Rasdall (Miss Jean Hutchinson) at H the Hutchinson home on Third avenue H on Wednesday afternoon. Luncheon H was served at 1 o'clock and the table was prettily decorated with a green t pottery bowl filled with deep yellow French marigolds. The afternoon was I , delightfully spent In knitting and the ' guests included Mrs. Jerome Lily, H Mrs. Rank, Miss Helen Letchfleld, Mrs. Ross Hutchinson, Miss Dorothy I Letchfleld, Miss Dorothy Colbourn, I and Miss Myla Kenworthy. TlyjriSS MABEL HOLT entertained at LVX an informal tea on Monday afternoon aft-ernoon at her Holt home on East First South street in honor of Mrs. E. G Stapleton, a recent bride who has been the motif at a number of small informal social affairs during the past month. The tea table was decorated with late autumn flowers and eight guests were delightfully entertained. MRS. JANE CANN and Miss Nan Gibbons entertained the members mem-bers of the Tuesday Afternoon Embroidery Em-broidery club at their home on Third avenue on Tuesday afternoon. The living rooms and the tea table were effectively decorated with garden flowers and the club members include in-clude Mrs. C. C. Crismon, Mrs. Fiank Fisher, Mrs W. F. Jenson, Mrs. L. B. Wattis, Mrs. A. J. Gibbons, Mrs. Arthur Ar-thur S. Sullivan, Mrs. Charles A. Quig-ley Quig-ley and Mrs. A. W. Cowan. THE death of Mrs. Robert Butter-field, Butter-field, formerly Miss Hazel Oswald, during the past week cast a gloom over the younger society circle. Mrs. Butterfleld was the only daughter of Mrs. F. L. Oswald and was one of the most capable and popular of the younger society matrons. MR. AND MRS. W. W. RITER have closed their attractive country home in the Cottonwoods for the season sea-son and .with their daughters, Miss Claiie Riter and Miss Maye Riter, will occupy their home on East First South street for the winter. MRS. JEANETTE SHARP FERGU-son FERGU-son has returned from Bancroft, Idaho, where she has spent several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Irving Young. Mrs. Young was formerly Miss Mildred Ferguson and her marriage was one of the Interesting matrimonial events of September. MR. AND MRS. THORNTON GIL-mer GIL-mer have welcomed a little daughter to their home. Mrs. Gilmer was formerly Miss Helen Obendorfer, the youngest daughter of Mrs. Joseph Obendorfer. MRS. A. T. MOON will leave during dur-ing the month for Pueblo where she will visit with relatives for a couple of months and early in the year will go to New York where she will spend the winter with her daughter, daugh-ter, Miss Yvonne Moon. MAJOR JOSEPH H. TYLER of Fort Douglas left on Monday for Fort Oglethorpe, Ga , for a six weeks' detail. Mrs. Tyler, formerly Miss Virginia Whitney, will romain at the Tyler quarters in Fort Douglas during her husband's absence. Mrs. John Cain has returned from Rocholle, 111 , whore she has spent the past six weeks with relatives. 4 Mr. and Mrs. S. Abbott Maginnis has as their guests Mr. Maginnis' sisters, sis-ters, Miss Lizett Maginnis and Miss Daisy Maginnis of Ogdon. Mrs. Reed Wimmer accompanied by her little daughter, Geraldine, has returned re-turned to her home in Wyoming after spending several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Ira D. Wines at their homes on East First South street. Mrs. J. D. Wood will leave early in the week for Venice, California, where sho will spend several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wattis left early in the week for Poitland for a short stay. Cards were received during the week from Denver announcing the marriage of Miss Hazel Dell Kendall, daughter of Mrs. S. J. Kendall, to Alfred C. Potts of this city. The marriage took place in Denver, October Octo-ber 31. Mr. and Mrs. Potts are at home at the Plaza hotel in San Francisco. Fran-cisco. Mrs. "Russel Coe Woodruff announces an-nounces the engagement of her daughter, daugh-ter, Adelaide, to Lieut. Geo. W. Bridie, Bri-die, Jr. |