OCR Text |
Show n EVENING NEWS FRIDAY DESERET REV. H. A. MAYNARD K STORY THE-EVENI- NG r T It had mu m MRS. PICKERING. T 4t " (Copyright. mi, ' by W. Wcrtier.) bi a At happy a day at Sarah face her huaband and brother.huat-anleast, aha thought. I needn't eee her 111 a In the again. make it point not to. hoeee, had begun by praising her Her heart swelled. "It's Incredible ,tO breakfaet. From, that part, of Aourae me how a decent family man like my It baa ph (tartly jtuxy to auceoad with husband can make such a fool of him, self over a woman like that! And hef Tnonilng'a baking. Than, for woif3erriIUa Souft aent homo her new Dudley, --too! But 1 shan't eay a dreaa on tLma..aod it.waa perfection word. The next morning Sarah - prepared or aomethlng ao Ilka to It that Sarah felt delighted. And aa thoifgh the the usual Sunday morning breakfast. fatea knew ah waa waiting for i She had convinced hereelf thet ebe chance to wear that dreaa, M re. Bll had seen the last of Mra Pickering linga Invited her In to apend the eva and she waa cheerful again. Hay. Dudley entered the kitchen. . . nlng. "To meet my old friend Nina Tick Sarah. he began. Mrs. Billings Just 'phoned uver to ask u all to go with erlng. Mr. flllllnga wheezed Into the 'em Lake today for dinphone, "You munt all coma. It'a going ner. toI Sohuyler knew you'd be willing, eo to be very informal,-- Just a gathering a It's fine day for a moof a few people-Ninuard to know accepted. tor trip. like your, husband and Dudley." Sarah tried to hold the platter In "Did tHey know her?" Sarah asked her hand steady. "Well, she said, In amazement. time do we start?" "Why. ye.1, Didn't you know? Mra "what "At 10 o'clock. Is that all rlht? - KiUioga wltaaaed tack, ..' You aak 'em. Sarah Tarried in the Why, 701'. She waa Nina Baxter." putting down her foot, aa Nina Baxter!. Sarah could not re- Itbreakfast, were, wtth each step upon her strong member ever having heard her name. Some old flame of Dud's likely. If he Inclination to stay at home. Sarah had no motoring togs, so she would not tell her. Eliot would. Dudput on what she had, a close black ley and Jlltot had been frienda-fo- r hat and her old black silk coat to keep Rev. Harrison A, Maynard ef To. many year,' before ahe. came Into the dust off her spotless shirt waist. Eliots lif Kan, who la returning te Erlvan, yeka, at When ahe came downstairs, At supper she told them of the inviArmenia, ta undertaka tha education the to find vociferous Eliots calling, tation. "fine said you uaed to know car waiting, ahe fell that ahe present- if tha future leadere ef Armenia In her when, she waa Nina Barter," ahe ed an She 'he near East relitf orphanages in tha inadequate appearance. ' . added. 19 the more felt keenly after she Armenian republic, a work with which "Nina B&rfrt, eh? Dudley laughed. had this taken stock of Mrs. Billings and "Yes, I should aay we did know her. Mrs. Pickering. They were done up ie hcc been prominently Identified In The only fight Eliot and I ever had In chiffon to match ! " silk and pongee was over Nina Baxter. And the funny the trim tines of the fine new car. Mrs. PrtJf it.waa ahe waa 10 yeara older looked tion had ahpped away revealing the than either of us. But It didnt seem handsomer than ever Pickering behind bar veil. scanty gray locks underneath .and tears and perspiration had taken the funny thyn. I haven't met Nina since She was very gay, very vivacious. I waa to and I'm curious to see what Harah and Mrs. Pickering had the top layer off her oomplexlon. She was developed Into" back seat with- Dudley, who was thin, Just a wilted little old lady who had So am- I, stud KHot. . between them. Mrs. Billings nat in no courage to bear pain. A little later when Sarah came front with her husband, who drove, the car after When they down In, hfr new drees and posed for Eliot had the liberty of the two extra the doctor did seme comforting things the .admiration of her menfolk, she seat. to the hurt finger Elliot and Dudleys felt that ibe looked as well aa ahe It wax 40 miles to 8chuyler Lake, manner both registered withdrawal. eve. had In her life. Sarah had tha where there was a very up to date Inn, They looked away when Sarah helped weight and the calm air of the average catering especially to motorists. to restore to Mra Pickering her cute woman of 45 who had lived leisurely, had .dinner, lounged for an hourThey on headgear and to cover her woebegone eaten 'heartily and taken life as it the hotel veranda, walked beside the face. came. She loved housekeeping, and lake, hjit did not venture upon It, for Sarah was washing her breakfast succeeded at it. She was an excel- the wind had arisen and It was pro- dishes next morning when Mrs. Billlent slater to and a de- nounced toe rough for pleasant sail- ings called her up to tell her Nina had voted wife to her'husband, and a sen- ing. Besides, Mrs. Pickering said the gone. He Injured finger had got sible mother to her two daughters. motion of the boat made. her 111. Sarah ao on her nerves that she could not attending a, near-b- y summer was terribly disappointed, whb.wprt for she continue her visit. school.- - She had seen a lot of beauty loved the water, and could pull aa oar At dinner Sarah told El$ot and Dudherself. perlah and that consoled her. ley. They received the news In siHer new gown gave her a little air 5 They started for home at o'clock, lence. And to this day they have not of importance which carried her Into Sarah being unused to motoring, was again mentioned Mra Pickering. ' Mra Billings' parlor. There, the cen- . ndy frcllng tired -- Moreover, her Neither has Sarah. ter 'of a little group, stood a woman spirits had sunk. Shs had been left In white. Her back waa toward the to herself, while the even door, and 8arah had a chance to take her own husband and Billingses,danced Arrange Night Letter brother, in the way her dress set and the build about Mrs. U. Service of her chestnut coiffure, poised with dance about aPickering as butterflies honeyed flower. glittering pins. Mra.PJckering was quits ak fresh SAN FRANCISCO. June 11. Es'Utfr Pickering! the hostess said, She taughbd, tablishment of a night letter service and the woman In white turned slow- told when she started. anecdotes; related instances of on telegraph lines In Mexico and bely. with her smile harrowing to a dig, nified -- smirk. She looked under the her extended travels, smiled and fut-- tween Mexico and the United States Eliot and Dudley am- has been taken up by ' the United softened light to ha about 29. Her tered and keptSarah In her corner pre- States Chamber of Commerce at Mexengaged. front was even more imposing than ply tended to be absorbed in the scenery. ico City, according to a report from her back. Ten on minutes their way ia began C. H. Lloyd, honorary commissioner Sarah was Introduced. Eltot and rain. The auto top must be raised. to that organization from the Han Dudley did not have to be' introduced. to chamber of commerce. The Within g few moments Sarah had Mr..B!Uings and Eliot got out to put it Francisco move is in the interest of facilitating withdrawn .to h, corner, leaving her up. Mrs. Pickering still continued to communication between business men, husband and brother oblivious of all talk vivaciously, though she looked little anxiously at the big drops else save Mrs. Pickering. Other women Whose husbands were doing the which were dampening her chiffon. Denver Doctors Purchase same thing joined Sarah. They said Suddenly she gave a scream, then an Large Piece of Radium nothing, but they glared at the en- other and another. She had carelesschantress, who. grew more and more ly laid her bare hand upon one of the DENVER. Colo., June 11. What is side braces of the top at the Instant arrogant of conquest. said to be the largest piece of radium At the end of the evening Sarah it clamped, .and The second finger-o- f left hsnd was - caught and in the west was purchased recently by walked home dilently between . her her 1$ leading doctors of Denver for $58,-50smashed. menfolk.' "I dont See, Dud, Eliot said, what released her as quickly aa posThey It Is to' be used In surgical and Nina's done with that 10 years. She's sible. And were five miles from medical treatment. - This particle of a remarkably well preserved woman. nowhere, asthey . Eliot expressed jt, Mra radium is said to of weight one-ha"Like things in alcohol, .' Sarah Pickering began to cry like a hurt There will be a plant built wanted to say, but she bit her lip and rabbit, with plaintive little peep and ain gram. Denver for the of this waJjed. It wrung Sarah's heart to valuable mineral, preservation costing about $5, Regular spellbinder. sighed Dud- squeaka consoto offer hear her.' She tried 000. The life of radium is estimate-e- d ley.'' That was some dress she had but there was nothing she at 2,500 years. on. I Understand old Pickering left lation, do of but the could undo swathings Approval of the government of the her a shnag of money. It won't be any the veil and. remove the intricate for which the radium were little trouble for her to get married again." motor bonnet and collect handker- purposes to be put bad to be obtained, as the "I don't know when Ive talked to chiefs enough for Mrs. Pickering to government controls the rare a woman .that entertained me the way she-- , .did, She's had a cry in to. She cried all the way to said Eliot. full life, and she shows it. Shes got Hoy Bottom, where Dudley purchased QUAKE SHAKES HONOLULU. a bottle of liniment. A few miles farpoise. What say, Sarah? HONOLULU, T. H. June 11. Two I didn't speak, murmured Sarah. ther. on they came to Burn wood, sharp earthquake shocks rattled the She stayed behind to do eomething where there waa a doctor. By that time Mra Pickering pre- dishes and windows In Honolulu at to the porch fumituro while the two men went In. After a while ahe felt sented anything but a charming ap- 2:15 oclock Saturday morning, April . she- was calm enough to go in and pearance., Her chestnut transforma 15. No damage yas reported. ... M -- a 1 , V" seven-passeng- er - , r - 0. lf - t- -' !ti, fr 'k Mi" "' , Have you ever stopped to think how much time we spend in planning what we shall pot od and in our children's bodies and how little in planning what weabafl pot is their minds ? They go to school, to be sere but that is for only five boors a day for approximately 185 days in fits year.- - What of the years before they begin to go tosehool, what aftbedKxzrs and days each year in winch they are not tinder instruction? Have we any deliberate plan to --care for the minds growth-a- s e for the - bodys? wo-car- . It is jest 'as Important that children shall read i . good books ts it is that they should read stall. It would be bard to find any one who would declare-tbatiis unnecessary for children to learn to read. Yet reading in ttBeffia not the end we seek, but only a means to that aid. The goal of all education Is tbe enrichment of life, and a chDtTs reading carefully guided will deepen and strengthen his future ahOity to make the most hrm ..and his opportunities. t t ' d . tt To really love books so that they may be woven Into the ; warp and woof of his life, a child should have his own Individ-- , u&l lfbrary, which grows year by year with bis growth, yet which contains' friends to whom be will return, time and time ngufti, V ay- - r.t i t : t k- -f f f at J X fo FOR FUR COATS Hot - liar jp4 ever knoan. ho lived enf'her brother, Flood I 5 JUNE 11 1920 secure in the knowledge of a happy companionship full rf pleasant association. A large number of books is not essentia to have, but'a few shook! be addai each year and the standard cf choice-shoul' be kept high. : Seattle Public library. ' d e. DESERET BOOK COMPANY! "Tou should hear the reasons many working girls give for buying fur cos la remarked a merchant to the grealhumber of such purchases being maJe. "Ona of the commonest la, Well, if I dont get It now before I get married, , S never wilt aftereard' Tlie sight of ao many handsome furs coming to downtown office buildings has led to the report that girls are buying them on the installment plan. Not so In tha main, according to In qulry among merchants. furs that working girls buy On The I. Installments, one house prominent In this, class nays, are mostly of the cheaper grades, averaging in price around several hundred dollars Now and then, said the' proprietor of this concern, a working girl mak ing a good salary cornea in to buy a $400 or $500 fur. Her first payment on a purchase of this sixe Is required to be $150, $200 or perhaps more. Hhe has then tour or five months In which to meet the balance. The run of the stotes however ask cash In advance. True enough, many have their own Installment plan, but this is quite different from the deferred payment syntem usually aj soclated with real estate. These deferred paments are "before" rather than 'a'fter" getting the The working girl who sighs gobda. for a handsome fur can go to a num'-beof the big mercantile houses and select the coat ahe likes, make aa Initial payment and have It laid away while the is completing a series of regular Installments When she has made the last she gets the coat. Many of the expensive fur costs worn by working girls are bought by girls who ilva at home with their parents. It Is reported by furriers, and they add that frequently assistance Is given from father's pocketbook. While "now or never" may be the reason that leads many young women fin a salary to & fur coat, some merchants say that the high prices of other kinds of coats Is a very important factor in these purchases CHICAGO. Juna IL -- 0, te Weather i Clothing In a Great M .r. , V t f ; One-Da- y ! i V Sale Tomorrow v -A 4 -- A -- J i - 3 J I i . Court Cant Stop Crowing. .MINNEAPOLIS. Minn., June 11. The roosters early morning crow cannot be restrained by court order. Such was the decision of Judge W. W, Bardwell. In district coart hers, after hearing a petition from Dr. C. F. Dight, a former alderman of this city, seeking an injunction to restrain noises which, he said, came from his neighbor's house and yard. 4 I r rs sleep-disturbi- Bouw or Boose is Good English Word Declares Professor CLEVELAND. . Ohio. June ' 11. .hag Bad Its ancient and honorable ancestry In the English language uncovered here recently by Prof. William H. Hulme of Western Reserve university. Labeled for generation as an etymological outlaw and branded as such with quotation marks. Prof. Hulms finds "boose hag a pedigree longer than that of most kings. Its earliest spelling,"' according to Prof. Hulme, was "bowse. Later writings show 4l boose. waa bouse and finally Both as a ' noun and verb the Prof. Hulme said, written word. bowse In middle English literature as far back aa 1300,- - had the meaning To drink in excess. About 1800 the word lost the honorable character had and became a slang word. The Is recordsd as particular 'bousing early as 1629, and bouspr was used In English in 1811.- - i Booze Foot Caught in Frog, Girl Flags Trolley MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., June school Friedman, girl of Deephaven, a summer resort at Laka Minnetonka, recently saved her life by flagging a speeding trolley car with her red, sweater after her foot caught In the frog of a switch. The girl was on her way to school when the heel of her shoe jammed as she creased the in the frog tracks. In face of tha speeding car, was which coming towards her at rate of 60 miles an hour, she tore off her red sweater and waved It aa a danger signal. The motorman stopped the car few Inches from the girl. When all was over and her foot freed from the " rail, she collapsed. Italian Wills Park $8,000. EVANSVILLE, Ind., June IL Joseph Coppello, an Italian, almost every, evening would visit Garvlh park In this city, and foe hours 'would enjoy its beauty after he had completed his work In a cigar factory. In appreciation. Coppello, who died recently, bequeathed $$,000 to the city , for Improving the park. . BOOTH IS FISHERY DELEGATE. SAN FRANCISCO. June 11. F. E. Booth, sardine, fruit- - and vegetable canner of California, has been selected to represeat tbe American canning Industry at tbs organisation meeting of tbe International Chamber of Commerce In Paris this month. Booth is expected te urge that other countries lower their tariffs on canned products. V Palm Beach, Keep Kool and Mohair Suits Special as FoDows: $19.50 $22.50 $27.50 $30.00 ENLARGE CHINA'S Y. M. C. Aa TIENTSIN, 'Chins. Jens, 9. Enlargement of tha work of ths Young Men's Christian association In Chins ta ptanned as as outcome ef the International convention of the association just held ta Tientsin. A larrs number of new branches are to be established end 14 mere secretaries are to be recruited, y. ... ' ..',$17.50 .... . ... ... . . .4 ... .$19.50 r. $22.50 . $25.00 Values at Values at d TROPICAL WORSTED- S$50.00 Values at see , . ' c- V LIGHT WEIGHT GABARDINES $50.00 Values at .' , 4 i o t t ; - $ . : A .., , $12.50 Ad t- t J. . . .$12.50 SILK AND WOOL GABARDINES . :1 r $65.00 Values at . ... . . ... ... ... $55.00 Complete Assortment of Mens Palm Beach Hats and Czjgj at the Following Reductions , ,.$4.50 Values at $3.00 alues at r. - ... .$2.65 ('! If I. -i -- Saturday Mens $5.50 and $6.50 fiber Silk Shirt. Sizes 15. 16r 14, 15, snd 17 only. Extra pw Cotton" Pock jx 3 roa St dal st re 5e Light Weight i- - ... 50c Dropatftch Socks. $3.50 Percale Madras Shirts and- - 52.95 Fiber Silk Wash Ties ... Special , f 4FOR51.00 Fiber Silk Wash Ties Good grade . . 2Tm 51.00 Z. - Regular Pure $1.1 Thread-Bil- k AH eliea, Incomplete $1 21 ! Bocke color I but , Extra special ...... On brand: moatly white end belbriggans. F pe- to-eq- gc morrow, rHnxpriNE judge, to, resigns. MANILA, P. I, June IL Florentine Torres, TC yfears .old who has been an associate Justice of the supreme court of the Philippine Islands for II years, tod a tendered his resignation, because be said be believed he should have received the appointment os chief justice Instead of Vic tori no Map whom President Wlleon named for tbe position last week. Values at Values at C1 1 Mena AthletlS Unfen Suits elsee $4 te 44 95c Man's Athletic Corded Union Suits $4 te 41 only. Teryspeclaj $t 48 t $5 68 Muslin and MaTtas Pajamas. . ..... j$lK5itlO'B7ieKT.o .. 05c 52.75 |