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Show t i i T RU T H. I t tj 4 are looking anxiously forward to the absent treatment they are to have through the warm months. Poor fellows! How we all pity them! They look so wretchedly lonely and sober, as the train pulls out. There are few Social Me. The tailor made a tailor maid, And for it very well was paid. 'Twas padded, curved and overlaid. people who spruce more lively, howYet. gave no sign of all his aid. ever, before a week has passed, ant The maid, who in it was arrayed, I hear that there are to be some gay Although but eighty pounds she bachelor halls kept by benedicts weighed town in here through the sumand right With perfect figure swung mer. There were a few disconso-lateswayed: in the winter time also whose For with his cotton, cloth and braid, clime the wives were i n I! mind by the amount of entertaining meted out to the people who chance to return to the city, where for years they were about as unpopular as it was possible to become. Not only are their digestive organs endangered, but they are placed in the peculiar position of being compelled to submit to being entertained (God save the word) by the people whom they themselves detest. ' i sunny jutting shoulder blade, of California.enjoying And wondrous plumpness she dis Jl played. Some people are clever enough to Thus, with his splendid He hid each f . . 4 . J tailor-mad- e The tailor made a recognize the real needs of a lawn tailor-mai- d. From Life. Jl The first open day at the Country club was last Wednesday, when each member was permitted to bring into the coterie two of his. friends. The tea table was in charge of Mrs. David Moore Lindsay, and she had chosen for her assistants, Mrs. Sturgiss of the Fort and Miss Stella Salisbury. Noticeable among the girls was the younger Donnellan girl, whose engagement to Lieutenant Falls has just been announced. The grounds were well filled and a number of pretty gowns for such wear were seen besides the ubiquitous shirt waist suit. Some of these were altogether too elaborate to permit of a really pleasant time either on the grounds or going back and forth to the car, but, of course, I could but admire t I ! . i ; r ii . t - 7 Ji i i them. t Jl J see Town Topics has a good joke about the wife who gave her husband an "Absent treatment by taking a six months vacation. This is the flitting season ' for Salt Lake, and there are a number of husbands who I " . v 1 v ' i ? & t i ; . . ' i, i i 3 ONE PRICE TO AIL mONDHY 1184 K LNCER5&LC WfilliG, ,An1. AT 9 OCLOCK. There was a close and secret consultation between tw'o of the best known of the seven bachelors. The matter brought up was as to the possibility of their taking one of their numerous admirers to the Tom show without giving Mrs. Grundy a chance to point the finger of discovery in their direction. After a brief consultation between themselves and a JUNE SALE! hurried conference with a noted attorney, they decided to go it alone. So Eaton and Leon occupied seats together in the parquet Tuesday even- tate Trade Circles all over Uteh. You never saw such a whole rale Price Crash. ing. WE SHALL COMMENCE OI K MONSTROUS THE SALE OF SALES A movement which will agi- Jl v marriage of The Miss Frances Howat and Mr. Odell takes place a week from today. The wedding is to were congenial souls on almost every be a big event in point of interest, step, and although there are many and all the girls are up at the Howat corners around the comfortable home, home this afternoon gazing in open there were not enough. Why wont admiration at the hidden articles of some of the other girls take the hint? the trousseau, the things which we can only guess at. The maiden 7nd the jl ji man are among the most popular of It w'as rather funny after the impar- the younger set, and many are the tiality shown by the Lady in inviting kindly toward thoughts tending all three of the disputants to accom- them. Jl Jl pany her on the trip, to see the one a new Theres who felt that he was It, left sadly rig in town, and if train. its the attracting attention that one by the rapidly departing scene. on wants in a drive its the the oclock Imagine Eight real, real a sunny June morning sees the para It cross is of sort between ty all gathered on the depot platform thing. awaiting the arrival of the captain. a buckboard and a hayrack, and parThe minutes pass rapidly, and no sign takes, I should judge of the comforof his gleaming countenance appears. table qualities of neither. The people At the sighal of the gong the train who are supposed by courtesy to be departs, and a moment later the florid enjoying the ride, sit along either faced captain appears on the scene, edge in a most ludicrous position, and but , not speech- the machine jolts them up and down, gazing in wide-eyeat the less, desperation merry party, sidewise, and backward and forward waving to him from the rear platform. in a manner calculated to cure even It has been stated that he has never the distressing indigestion of a Rockleft his room since his quiet and un- efeller. If thats enjoyment, excuse obtrusive return to the Post, but has me. awaited with anxious interest the re,4 Jl turn of the loved and lost from the becomingness of Judging J to some of the beauthings somber The really big event of the past ties cf the fair sex, one does not wonweek was the dance given by the der that the widows cling to their Donnellan family in honor of the weeds for a long time after they have young couple toward whom all eyes served the purpose of keeping green socially are tending just now'. The the memory of the dear departed. If affair w'as managed on a magnificent they are any source of consolation scale, and besides being a formal they should be allowed to remain in thing in one way w'as a really jolly one vogue after the alloted time. But I in another. The young people found doubt if they really furnish the conample opportunity for the gayety which solation, as Town Topics avers, that should enter into all events of the the singular form of the weed does kind, and the older people were glad to the widower. to welcome Mrs. Donnellan, who has JI JI been absent for some time, again to Teas are becoming more and more the city. popular among the women. They are Jl jl old fashioned pink kind, A charming tea was that given at not the the McMillan home yesterday. There known as Kensingtons, but a new and variety, seemingly a hybrid w'ere three women assisting besides species formed of the reception and ;he daughter of the house, who were, the informal afternoon party. Several Jie girls say, very good to look upon; of them have been among the funcMrs. Rice, Mrs. Mont Ferry and the tions of the few past days and there air visitor from Kentucky, Miss are some three or four ordered on Eliot. Then there was a bevy of the for the latter part of next week. younger maidens in the dining room, Jl JI who will shortly share the honors The bride to be is to be feted at if share is the right word with the girls already in the field; two of the the Country club tomorrow by a younger McMillan girls, Alice Good- uncheon given by Mrs. Russel Lord win and Lorene Leary. The whole Tracey. Only a limited number of the was one of the very swellest teas giv- ntimate girl friends of the bride and en since they became the rage. a few matrons are invited. ESTABllSMLO I8S4 D9!l TQ Alt NCV0 UMOC'SQl, gether charming that they forget entirely that it was only Ted Goodwin. Jl ,4 As pretty a wedding as has taken place in Salt Lake for a long time was that of Miss Ellen M. Gear' and Mr. W. C. Coulam, which took place on evening at the home of The bridesmaids were Misses Mabel Geary, Vivian Drew, Alice Cculam, Mary Watkins and Eileen Geary, while the groom Wednesday the brides parents. THE MONTH d, - i ; i ; party, and others never awaken to the point at issue till after the event is over. Now' there was a properly managed lawn party recently, and although there were cozy nooks galore., with cushions and all the other paraphernalia which usually goes toward making a success of such corners, there was no dazzling brilliancy of electric or other lights. The whole exterior and there was a good dea of it, was unillumined by any ray of lantern or of lamp, and the fun in consequence was much greater. There MTABUSHEO .4 s ' r ' j , 1 THE ONLY HOUSE IN UTAH Devoted Exclusively to Ladies Misses and : Childrens Furnishings : : Every department is complete. Par- : ticular attention is called to our new Millinery and Cloak Departments. They are unsurpassed in point of convenience and economy. The smartest creations of the world's most prominent design .rs find full representation here. 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