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Show Bound Book TTqlntl TRUTH. JNji -- 5 c CM ROUND-UP- I The Greatest Dependable Sale in the History of Salt Lake. It is a magnificent success, the half-o- ff sale in the summer wah dress fabrics, in linens and in domestics. This includes materials for dainty, airy dresses, all white and colored wash goods, sheets and pillow slips, bed spreads, WASH GOODS SALS. Damask table linen, napkins, toweling, unbleached crashes and other staple necessities. All week the store has been crowded. Erery article in the department is going at half price. Our policy is to carry no stock from one season to another. In executing it we study the interests of our patrons as carefully as our own. Kesp in mind the half-o- ff prices. Investigation means 'T'PTTT PRFAT amazement then purchases. Main ough without any knowledge of the subject, trusted employes of the Salt Lake City doubtless, on womens clothes, would postoffice. It is understood that the 1911 many books, and the things he wedding will take place some time Idoes a not understand about them next month. The young people have nly Ivould probably make a full library. a host of friends in the city who will lN'evertheless, there will never come extend their hearty congratulations la time in the history of civilization after reading this announcement. hand' Ivhen men will not essay some the v J s ad- of criticism on apparel feminine. ii jlsort Miss Abell is spending a f Myrtle I take the liberty to once again e has fence, two of vacation months at refer to the matter of those maid, pleasant it to where she is beMerced, California, tife or widow veils, of which I spoke her g rather harshly some time ago. I am ing entertained by friends. a stm J Jt such gratified to see that they are 3f the row relegated to a very few, and yet Mrs. John W. Hughes and children, hose few include some, whom I should Clara and Samuel, have returned from ;e a six months visit to Los Angeles and glad to see discard them. 3 other southern California points. & o What a jolly affair that was at the inings. DECLINED WITH THANKS. st last Saturday, when the florid a iiced one gathered aroung him just to The various compendiums printed ter a""tough of the fair and unfair sex. how made his independence, and of the for the commercial, social and ethical for excuse an Dean Julia little etty a gkl guidance of the public at large, geno doing. Well, some of .the girls erally contain model letters for young tt- or ere awfully busy, elsewhere, any women to use in declining offers of itP if he marriage. These formulas are very not and could have gone ay, d asked them. MiiciaS handy where such offers are frequent, I4 or where there is danger of a girl ub last scratching her head bald in endeavors r given Major and Mrs. Myton will estab-- h to frame appropriate answers. The a new entertainment tomorrow has thought to improve on the writer ruing with a horseback excursion usual stereotyped, stencil plate J Cottonwood. It is supposed that in so often used iada own saddle niery one wpi carry-hi- s excuse his Irl and as a number of rather portly this connection; which is as a-- model 716s, the for following offering of tniSuj(rons are included, there may to be used wholly or in part, as letter, he trial gome sport. exigencies may require: ny girls; lout 5 has sen-ardln- g ; 1 Li one-eye- d rect thing. I gave the letter carrier an Elysian field smile for bringing me the packet. Women generally do smile at a postman when he shows up with mail. It is often not so much the contents of the letters themselves as the fact that somebody has brought them something, and the feminine heart pulsates accordingly in generous recognition. Well, I smiled on that postman, and his facial parchment creased in strenuous attempt at pleasant return. It was a good deal of a celuloid performance; but then he meant well. I retired to the seclusion of my room, mopped up a bucket of water that had leaked from the heater, expressed an ardent wish for an unusually high temperature of our plumbers postmortem surroundings, and then laying back in my rocker, waded through J your desultory efforts at popping the June 19. ilr. and Mrs. John Minor of 26 East question. Yes, John, it was real good Jacob Jones, John Esq.: of you to say such nice things of me; ightii South street announce the enDear Old Hoss Your loving, epis- to call me lovely as a chrysanthedement of their daughter Anna to r. G. Spence Chambers, one of the tolary exotic came duly to hand this mum. I used to dote on chrysanthe Kensington-Manor-By-the-Creeksid- e saidN damp, snowy morning, by the usual letter carrier. courtesy of our I am not the seventh daughter of a seventh daughter, and the Missouri river was never in danger of being fired through any powers of divination I might possess. But, say, John, you can just ante on your photograph that I knew what was coming when I saw the stamped sealing wax and the painfully directed face of that parchment envelope. I could picture the terrible stress of mental weather under which you wrote, and the number of 'sheets of paper you spoiled and ink bottles you upset in your nervousness before the letter struck you as about the cor- e, mums until I attended a college football match. The sight there of twenty-two mops of what the reporters called chrysanthemum hair, so discouraged me that I have not cared much for the flower since. It was real, real sweet of you to exclaim from the bottomless depths whole trellis of honeysuckles wasnt of copious poetic quotations that a in the swim with yours truly, that I was a sweet pea blossom, a beauty rose, and all that sort of thing. But mud-lade- n I fear that after reading this heart- less reply your comparisons will run rather to frostnipped celery, frazzled sunflowers and carrot tops. Then your references to the bird kingdom1 In leading me up with the attributes of feathery loveliness show a commendable knowledge of natural history, as well as a kindly disposition towards me which I appreciate. But you deal too much in generics, where specifics are called for. Let me tell you, callow young friend and admirer, that there are birds and birds, and in telling some other girl, perhaps, later on, that you could turn loose a whole ornithological dictionary over her, it might be just as wel to specify the birds used in comparison, instead of leaving the field open to all feathery comers. The supposition is that you had in mind nightingales, meadow larks, bobolinks, canaries and the like. But in bird-dod are also pelicans, cranes and flamingoes, swear. Most that parrots any girl would feel highly flattered to Imagine herself compared say to the last mentioned bird. Shall I have to own up, John, that I view with a disinterested interest your declarations of , red-beake- m long-legge- d |