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Show HAPPENINGS AND WHEREABOUTS f Now that tho matter of the celebration of New Year's eve has been thoroughly discussed and it has been decided upon to hold the celebration celebra-tion on the Monday following, the restaurateurs seem to be satisfied, but many of the celebrants are not and employers generally are very much adverse to it. Holding the celebration on New Year's night means that it will finish on a business busi-ness day and it will bo fine business. The thing to have done was to decide to celebrate Saturday night. That would give the revelers who feel that they must pr6perly celebrate two days to think it over afterwards before diving back into the office. Of course, a lot of people will celebrate cele-brate Saturday night and Sunday also and finish Monday. Not that there is any sense in it, but there are those who feel it incumbent on them to stretch, out a joyous occasion whenever an excuse ex-cuse is offered. In that way it will bo nice for the purveyors of pleasure in various forms to, as it were, double shoot tho turn. But now that Monday Mon-day has been decided upon Tuesday should be set aside as a holiday also. It would save a lot of grief and a job or two we know of. The Non-Sectarian League affair at the Hotel Utah on next Friday and Saturday will start the holiday gaiety in a way that will be unique in the annals of the smart set. One feature will occur oc-cur in the ballroom of tho hotel, which is to be made into a theatre with living pictures arranged by J. Will Clawson, Girard V. Hale and Gilbert White, of New York, and following this exhibition there will be dancing every evening and of course the usual booths where the generous who enter may abandon hope. The charity league gave one of the most successful affairs last season and from all indications this will be even a happier occasion. The leading society people of the city among the matrons and maids will be very much in evidence in the various departments both afternoon after-noon and evening, and there will really be little else of importance to occupy society's attention during the coming week. There has really been very little doing during the past week. Thanksgiving always calls for home affairs and family gatherings generally, and most of the day was taken up with events of that nature. Miss Gladys Post, of Chicago, who is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Kiser, was the motif of a delightful dinner dance given by them at their home on Thanksgiving eve. It was one of the smartest affairs of the week and was attended attend-ed by fifty of their friends. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Charles Miller entertained at a smart dance at the Tennis club on Friday evening for their daughter, Mrs. Charles M. Wal-son, Wal-son, who will leave shortly for Honolulu. On Monday afternoon Miss Marjorie Howard entertained at a tea at the Howard residence on South Temple street in honor of Mrs. Robert Mc-Donough Mc-Donough and Miss Marian Luhn. The third of a series of informal bridge teas was given on Monday by Mrs. Henry Stimpson and Mrs. Charles W. Stimpson, for Mrs. I. C. Russell, Rus-sell, of Ann Arbor. The Emanon Card club entertained at a progressive pro-gressive dinner beginning at the Newhouse hotel on Thanksgiving night. It was an elaborate affair af-fair greatly enjoyed by the club members. Nine courses were served, each at the home of a different dif-ferent member of the club. Among those who entertained friends on Thanksgiving day were Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Groes-beck, Groes-beck, Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Keyes, Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand J. Fabian, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Park, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Franken, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Glendinning, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar ;-3i e rii wiM.i-n.il ill jjgaui I, ,, i'Newhouse, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Mclntyre, Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Jackson C. H J 'V-McChrystal, and LeGrando Young. h Miss Margaret Mclntyre entertained at an in- H'' I formal bridge party on Tuesday for Mrs. Dale L. M i h 1 A Mrs. Henry Catrow was the hostess at a bridge 1 party given on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Schramm entertained at a H dinner at their home on Wednesday given for h Miss Marion Luhn of Spokane. H Mrs. Kean Miller presided at a bridge lunch- H con given on Tuesday for Mrs. Charles M. Wal- H son, who will also bo the guest of honor at a mat- H inee party and tea to be given today by Miss jH Edna Farnsworth. H Charles A. Quigley has returned from a busi- H ness and pleasure trip to New York and Detroit. H Dr. and Mrs. Will L. Ellerbeck and Mr. and H Mrs. James Clinton, of Boise, have gone to New H Mrs. L. Evans and children will spend the holi- H days with Mr. and Mrs. John S. Bransford in Los H Angeles. H Mr. and Mrs. John V. Lyle are now at home M at the Bcnner X. Smith residence in South Tem- H pie street. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are at the Hotel H Utah and will spend some time during the winter M in California. M Mrs. Walter C. Lewis entertained at an infor- H mal luncheon on Wednesday at her home in Fed- H eral Heights. Hj Mrs. DeWitt Knox has gone to Denver to visit M her mother, Mrs. E. S. Powers. M Mrs. J. E. Bamberger, Miss Dorothy Bamber- M ger and Ernest Bamberger left for New York on M Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bamberger will re- 1 turn early in the coming month. |