OCR Text |
Show THE DESKHKT r NEWS FRIDA V JUNE 25 192U Just Unpacked! 1000 Girls Dresses Bought at a Great Concession Ginghan Dresses Chambray Dresses Voile Dresses To Be Offered in One of the Largest Juvenile Sales in Our History Tomorrow at . . ' -- $1.50 DRESSES 75c at $2.25 DRESSES at..., $1.88 : $2.12 at $4.95 DRESSES $1.48 at $3.75 DRESSES $4.25 DRESSES $1.12 $2.95 DRESSES $2.48 THE EVENING STORY PECKS ROSES. , (Copyright 11. Marilyn Wane came to her aunta house the evening before the great Marilyn was little and departure. sweet and young, and she lived over at Cook Centre and taught the Cook Hollow school. She had had to take care of herself ever since she was enough to do so. Mrs. Peck ' old never had put herself out to help her dead brothers only daughter; but then Mrs. Peck never put herself out to help anybody. Yet now when she was going to make the great adven lure of a trip jvest which she felt ahe needed for her healt h she called little Marilyn to come and atay In the house and watch things while ahe was gone. "You're welcome to use anything she paid. you find in the garden, "And theres money in the cupboard for your bread and milk and such. I guess youll get along. But you must watch things awful careful, last and year I had a lot of corn stolen And no end of grapes and things. You've there's my roses. Marilyn. go to put on a cast iron countenance there. They'll, be begging them for thing weddings and funerals and this and that, and you must say no and stick to it. When it comes right down to the point, its my roses I want you Flowers wasnt to watch closest. made to pick, but, to grow and look pretty. Marilyn slept soundly that night in a room that smelled abominably musty, but she opened all the windows and moved her bed so that ahs ould breathe In the scent of the oses that was Waited in. At S o'clock ahe awoke feeling that she had begun a great adventure as well aa her Aunt i Huldy, For the next three hours Marilyn was kept busy helping Mrs. Peck. But at last the cab arrived which bore her aunt off, leaning over the dour to scream A few parting injunctions "Roses was the last word Marilyn by W. Werner.) de mothers" Aa she watched them toddle down the etreet srtth thetr prises a voice, sounded behind hert a deep, rether rough old voice that yet was full of -- .. $3.48 Prices at which we offer this great assortment of Girls Dress- cs present an opportunity to buy dresses at less than whole- - at $4.48 sale prices. o c $$8.95 DRESSES at 1RTAei. O MS MEET IN 52 ((; . ' v.o. How Canoes Are Capsized; By McKee. : :T e Miss Wayne is very generous, he NEW LONDON, Conn., June 24. Yale said. Marilyn wondered how he knew who shs was "But thsn she has a and Harvard university oarsmen meet Whether in their d large bounty to give from. dual rowing re!?alth gatta here tomorrow. Three races com. L!lr the program the freshman and X suppose, the old woman said, pose eights competing over you're on your way-- doctor, -- to see Juniore 'varsity course In the forenoon and poor little Letty Simpson. Hows shs a the varolty crews over the four mile coming?" What tretch of the Thames river-- , late is "Slowly, the doctor sighed. she really needs is cheerful compan- the afternoon. Unless wsather or Wind ionship, and thats Impossible appar- cause a change in the schedule the preently. liminary events will be rowed down But why? Marilyn demanded. The doctor's gray eyes rested upon stream from Bartlett's Cove te the Nary her kindly. yard while the feature race will be Maybe you will let me show you rowed upstream from the railroad why some day," he answered. bridge to Bartletts Cove. Cant I go now? breathed MariThe annua return of the university addsome VAnd she roses, take lyn. oarsmen and their thousands of adhered. Yes, you mT. But let the roses ents has caused this city "to assume ite be pink, if you please. Pink roses are yearly regatta carnival dress. Every best for httls sick girls with bad where one turns either ashore of backs afloat, there are lively scenes of buetle Marilyn filled her own arms. Sh and preparation. Along .the fringes of beside the the river, on both sides, then went down the street bedecked gaily doctor and round the corner to a tumble-dow- n old house, la a dingy pleasure craft sre moored- whle the corner of which lived Dotty Simpson streets and buildings In this quaint seaWhen Ixtty, who waa so shrunken port are befjagged.and beribboned with and white and sad that she seemed to the. rival blue and ertmeon colors Inbe twice as old as Marilyn instead of terlaced wKh the 8tars and Stripes. the same age, saw Marilyn and the Not taking, any account of tho Inroses, the color vof surprise 'and the formal twe-mil- o tears of delight made her. face eo on tho Honsatonloraco which was rowed river In 111! and won lovely that Marilyn kissed iher. Then Tale has hsd a shade tha she piled the roses all about lotty. by Harvard. of better the oarsmen "You're going to get well," she said. ss the Blue hasrival Harvard over the line "Listen! Im going to beg, borrow, s winner i timesflashed while Harvard's or steal a wheeled chair and every tal of winning efforts number Is utto. of sunny day yop 're coming ovtr o sit 41 race rowed is the oeries inaugural, d SI years ago. among Aunt Huldys roses." Jc season this fear And that i I what happened. The Talaabegan the rnVInr victory over Ppnna'lvapis nn new tlncturd of hope end pleasure with the river at she put in Lotty's starved life gave over gehulyktll the American Henely Philadelphia distance of tho girl strength for tho necessary ? mile S50 yards The New Haven craw won scant 44 11-- 1 warm in E afternoon effort length vkry bright byte time. Three Liotty came to sit among tho roses, faster than Pennsylvania's two-miIn a race On the Inter while Marilyn read or talked to htr weeks Houoatonlc river. Tale gayly. And there, too came tho won by more thsn Derby, Conn., from Colneighbors who had seldom heretofore umbia In 1 7 Columbia's time beeet foot within tho confines 'of Mrs. ing lS'li. Tale's only other race fl Good-waa on ; nubHe this year Pock's picket fence. And Dr. Carnegie lake, rich, always kind, though weary and Princeton, when she finished last in n fifty-secon- What do you mean by giving away you aunt's roses, child? tha old voice demanded, but the old eyee twinkled approvingly. "Dont you know that she guards em choicern lion the guarded Una but mebby you never heard that story." "No, I never did," said Marilyn, smiling in response to the old lady's twinkle. "But if Una was half as lovely as Aunt Huldys roses shs must And I have bfeen worth guarding. dont blame Aunt Huldy, only I think she made a mistake in putting me in charge." "How eo?" Marilyn's dlmpls ran away with her smile. "I shall be disobeying Aunt Huddys command forty times a day. I want to do it now this minute. I want to give you that biggest Paul Neron there. The old women laughed. Well, give it to me, then. I love rosea But I never have any of my own because I live In upetalrs rooms and my windows won't grow anything finer than a red geranium.' Marilyn ran to pick the flower, but when she saw that the rose was set in a cluster of three, and that the whole spray Indeed waa a flush of fragrant color, she felt an Impulse to give a great gift to the old woman who had no rosea. After all she had made no promise ahe had to break. She had merely given her word to cere for the rosea and she won Id do that certainly. But why let them shake down their lovely petals wituouA doing any one r any good or even r.Vt'.iering them the sacks which were already burstleaves? Aunt ing with dried rose Huddy might havh alept on had so many. would, she she if leaves Marilyn brok- - iff the whole spray anjd returned wltlj It to the old worn- - rie heard. Marilyn drew a deep breath and sat down on the steps There seemed to be cart loads of roees Marilyn never had seen so manv rosed in her 'life. ahobldnt think ahe would she want alt of them for herself. and-thes- $6.95 DRESSES an, who had boon Joined by another a tail, fine looking man passer-b- y with a smile that seemed to call the out of her. She had never hes:t girl's before sedu eo kind, true, and beautiful smlia. Look at that Dr. Goodrich. cried the old woman, as shs receivsd her roses. "Aint they 'beautiful 7 I guess they'll be better than any of your pills for keeping away rheumatism, eh? f thought. Down the walk outside the picket fence came a weep air t girTa, who lagged and looked pointed at the rosy v Marilyn niggled uneomfort-wbty- r display.Flewera-warsjnae If they hadn't had as looked any too much brightness in their brief lives "Oh. dear. ahe said aloud. "I never was so tempted In my life. Suddenly she found herself moving, irresistibly toward a great pink Cleo roee bush. Twice she put her hands behind her. but at last each clutched a rose and broke It from its stem. With a rose extended in esrh hand Marilyn ran forward. "Here." she parted, giving the roses to the babies. "Taks them and run home straight to your $5.95 DRESSES at KiliBv-- T. MRS. 2 to 6 Years-- -6 At to 14 Years, And Up to 17 Years , two-mil- f D le -- Toud be surprised if you knew how many people are drinking -- Instant POSTUM instead of coffee There's a Reason came, too, to sit foren hour and in ln W (nd Tale rone nd, third ,n tiiriably to carry away Harvard alas raced In sweet memories of the girl- - who three public 'rare ttv events and fin- ished second In alt of them. At Annan-elt- a gave It. en April ? tha Cnttd Platen NaWhen at the end of five weeke Mrs. crew beat Harvard In a val Peck returned home ahe found her two academy mile race by four length, tha of. garden far more beai,fuf thn Kan fcll time ennounoed being New, ; the had left It. "I never saw so many Harvard. I . . A week later it s, never roses "ThS cried.j bridge Princeton beat Harvard at IX shs of a length In bloomed so lats before. What have miles hr S.4T while the Crimson crew beat Pennyou dons to om, Marilyn? second place hy three sylvania Marilyn was as dancy and gay Aas a lengtha After a lapse of three weeks not h away, oarsmen were beeten bv them sunbeam. ",1 gars Harvard I In race on twe a duel at miles srtewered, (Cornell honestly. Huldy. shs time tor Genera, theIS respective gave every sins? . one sway that I Lekacrews 47 and lfl.il. being could Jgy my hands on. And. Aunt the ' Hudly. listen.' 1 gave myoeif 1away, MORMONS AND THE THE sre too. W Dr. Goodrich and THEATRE. rose garden going to have a great big . of our own." An Interesting compilation, form" " j. ing tbo history of theatricals In Balt Bank work, county work, office Lake, by the lata John 8. Ltndaay, work, legal work, quick wrk. our for sals at tho Dooerot News Book specialties. Deseret News Job Dept. Store. i7. lt-4- Cam-flower- tbree-ouarte- fr Job Printing SSm Deseret Pto Let Us Bid On Your Work |