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Show REPUBLICAN, woman-hatinge "f ating Slue eyes and employer6 patrician : at's with steelfeatures to remind one that he is hand-painted thrice-fired French china, and you are only the commonest of kitchen pottery. ‘J hanik goodness, that is all left! behind in the old real estate office in Chicago, and Hazel and I revel in our Uberty, eating crisp yegetables just from the - garden, devouring plump fried spring chickens and rolden, clover-flavored butter, and then w e bathe and fish to our hearts cantent. , 1 66 We are boarding in the dearest old farmhouse We couldn't afford to go to one of the fine Delevan icex> We said we hoped. our little white- 00 "But unges ‘their ‘note ae on string Baanenene Greener 7 n we put some one, we don't Une 1 up a os peas, good know f we sing and joke ae ith no | who yet, | ing They to get said up we such a might nearly 30 ours, and da red to in wantcorrespondence. easily get here? to Meadows." ed, The June anyhow 25th are gone. esting letters eager, ‘caught how realizing not would "We red be asked our we rose, and said ee ee red them, from Fa if" ; za eee some day this ean't pick out week, them to our see unknown if we corres- gown, and "We are | pondents "I'H go you know what Myrtie "Dear lavender going ‘Good let Jean:-We happens when we went |!ng room, and scrutiny we went, that we carn would wear ae coke two, sweet, is your after color ferns now. it?' |ashamed and that I consentingae and down of it. When with | tree |as ig two meet to strange young glossy my spinal green column leaves, as we "Your | I write we had expected, but Mr. Ried and | Dix Donahue, Hazel's long-time friend }and admirer, and each wearing a triuphant smile and a red, red rose. | "We saw how it all was in a minute. can | They had bought those berries, really believe they'd | cywept | Bids the = A! : a do | face, and Mr. handwriting had_ beat the very beginning. frightened until T was afraid | Sweet | XS all SS a = Z a = @ yp ; (ne 4 =- felt the my| an est. formation principal, to | Phone Bell and days and lie, your closes, soul, > -___--_ ES WEDNESDAY South : ee Seventh ae woe ae = teens asidyiin< apply to Miss Anna Swan, 421 South Seventa Hast 2013 Ny = @ DDODVRAGOOVIaA sweet compacted have virtuous -_-7- Corner Fifth | aeet lee : a ma TUESDAY angry e. and | = MONDAY hue, wipe his eye, vp grave, die of mus a sweet ae : VW a ke = -- the friend, Meadows." Ake seasoned timber, never gives; But though the whole world turns to oal, The chiefly lives. | -George Herbert. a p S happy Myrtle Spring, full roses nd am = Se GN happy, Rose, whose b TAVve rash gazer wees )_ = ey ae couldn't ae V UE. Day, 89 cool , 80 calm, so bright, bridal of the earth an da sky , dew shal 1 weep thy fall tonight, - r thou must d e. -- oy I had| "Well you can imagine how we |-maybe. I just stood there with hot blood coming and going in didn't my life to say, Reld's famil- PHILLIPS KINDERGARTEN | din- | derneath a certain particular old our | halfway between the farm and Highlands.' "We |The | phe found- 'read that note, ; jarity with my | trayed our plot, re- save thing we reached the old gnarled | A box whero sweets its rustic seat, bird-concert, | MEY ae ene yo i and /| hardly write at al "We wrote and asked those girls to eyes meet us last Thursday after noon untree "The re Sag spelen oa r to "And | Sink of a | not two pretty, half shy, blushing girls | Only Meadows." surprised sa Jast, and sorry that their womanly in- | could you be my maid o onor stincts had not prevented them from | tenth of next October, dear Jean? jand bye, dear heart Myrtle rae: se ogiuns 1eters to. strange Ung } hf ferret iar a ae eaten tne even yet, and hot, cold horrified, de| Thy root {Is eve rin lightful little chills and thrills ran up | And tt 10 must "The Lilacs,"' July 5th. "Jean MeIntosh, you'll never, never guess what a perfectly a\.ful thing has happened! T am so shocked and but we don't into the big hotel not a girl escaped selected if Meadows." 'know whether we saw or not, we're sure we didn't conquer, "We were all eagerness and "Finally 2 t 3 DNNDAADAUNMNDADOOOODDOVADDOOOe to each wear a red, | eee noon be on hand Thursday afternoon. "We were both glad and sorry; glad see them at that we were to really "We're determined to meet those every | girls yet, though, and I'll tell you Jater day, now ‘hey are staying at the | how we are going to manage it Highland hotel, and we want to get "You're in luck to have had your | Mr. Brown to drive up there with us brother giye you such a lovely dimity keep up the correspondence. "So, while it isn't just as we expectit will be great fun to fool them | sag, and Dix began by: laughiag I can hardly watt for their | handsome employer, you know || men, even if they were simple farmers. to come, and Hazel is just as | € gave me such a queer, piercing "We decided to give them a lecture look that I felt as if he could see for their lack of prudence when we |... don't like about "We get a letter we ie Ried Sas 7 behest my raise Iimp my took and forward his strong ones in a way that made my heart almost choke m act pee an such foolish them AANA ANNA AAA AAAAAANAAAAINIAAAANR ADA DAAVNADAAAAAAAA YY n a ay oy 19 20, 1908. their let- | judging from Somehow, as our strange | it. they were girls who thought ased their tables | ters, we out, purposely | wouldn't do such a rash and improper | out 3 Hazel thing; still, as they were s0 young and her foot in the tailor-made innocent, we hoped they would come, of one of them and stumbled girls y "We feel now that we never will be | right through our little sham, and I | met, and then be friends forever after. contented until we meet and have was glad to hurry out of his sight,| "So we put on our prettiest gowns made friends of them, though of barely returning his bow. because we wanted to make a good course they) are not doing right by "And that's all there was to reward | impression, you know, and went gayly corresponding with supposed-to-be us-no romance, no nothing but dis- | to our trysting place. strange men, That's the only thing | appointment "Oh, Jean, it's dreadful to think of affections entangled by regular adventuresses, and that we ought to be thankful to have fallen only into the hands of girls just graduated from school. we girls are end of love Myrtle Lilacs," UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER so sorry you can't have your] fined looking 2nd before August, but to come.here to board even/on out wae way vot. cat Dineen Lovingly, |skirt Myrtle Meadows." and apologized most gracefully in a | "The Lilacs" June 28th. | way which would have made an or"Dear Jean:-Thank you so much | dinary girl say something in reply. | for the books and papers and the little | "But that girl merely acknowledged | be- | turn-over collar that is so neat and| | the apology with a cold nod, and dainty it will always remind me of the |} gan talking to her friend again as un- | 'concernedly as if we had neyer ex- | thoughtful friend who made ‘Hazel and [ are becoming quite | isted. excited over our correspondence with | "Hazel blushed furiously and I felt | They are develop- | awkward and uncomfortable, and just | , those strange girls . © acros: ing wonderfully, and we find them pees eee there eaten eee very congenial and wonderfully inter-|room and sat Mr, eer Ried,re my | ‘w . 5 Wasn't » "I tell you we both felt rather small and mean and silly ourselves after we had read that sage letter, but we were somewhat comforted by the ¢ ‘losing and page that grew quite poetica 1 friendly, even if {t was unsophisticated Lake hotels, and now we are glad we }Such L correspondence with strange and school-girlish. couldn't. fe can wear our kimonas men but it will be ail right with girls. "And they assured us that they felt to our noontime dinner if we choose . ° How I hope some naug}ghty, aristoar rie r interest res relf aé friendly in our welfare, that we row on the lake, ride the fat old | cratic young ladies w ho would seorn a they almost envied us our busy happy horses Hazel even tried once to | cofhmon : and Stenographer may fall | life : in the country girl that they felt sure help milk the cows, but she made an | into e our trap . that at heart we \were good and brave ian , awful it. and whistle 1 "Thenmess we ofread : = | le: ; rgb you come up for a week at! and true men, and finally consented and ia "Iam ‘vacation | be sure Nd oee messenger might fall into the sushing and sentimental as - or two sweet maidens ‘fancy- | what do you think? They Free and begged if it should that they | lecture us on our impudence would write to us Ve read the note to Mr . Broy f » |g > fat den sbcok ona aa aorta | give >h ; ene é at the sentimental young men. so now we're ex eat i | bushels of fun out of it opens "If any giris at one of the big hotels | should happen to buy that basket of | berries and answer ‘that note aout |they feel t : y for anything <¢ they find out how they've been fooled? | Of course, we wouldn't have gotten up SALT LAKE CITY. } : THE STRATAGEM OF MYRTLE MEADOWS INTER-MOUNTAIN ‘Dear Jean What a dear you are to answer so promply, and such a bright, brezy, newsy letter! Why I felt as if I had | been having a jolly time in Chicago myself, when I had finished reading jit You were perfectly right in disBY LAURA LL. RITTENHOUSE, We missing Howard. A man who were helpj drinks Mr "Dear Jean:-IL wish with all my | Some baskets ene 5 Ber. Brown pack | to excess befo re marriage, isn't apt : heart that you could be here with via: l‘clous st, st to quit afterward, and it pays to stand ekberrles blackberrle , j you firmly by one's principles. I'm sure It is simply glorious-the freedom, | Your life when 1 was clea. with pa the restfulness, the thought that one idea, and H tgel and. wroth the a an I shall always "Of course it is easy to be good may spend long, beautiful, lazy days | ¢St and mushiest gush of a not that we out here on the farm where there are with nothing to do but be happy " |could manufacture aa : pra two) no signed that retempations only-but, j grim, type-writing machine |™en's names to it-John Hastings minds me, actually some staring one simple out girls of contenanece, a/| Dalyrimple ana Frank Huntington did find the note we put in the blackconstant reminder of monotonous | &iving the Delevan post office as ait it-the duty and work unending. No | address. reat tA gar and answered Red. : OIAE : VRALOADOOLLDADILOIDDIOOINDADDOLNDIDGLDDD D DODDS HOAADOAOODOOOOAA THE T ;| 4 An Event That is Looked Foren of Fashion ward tory the Wom ative in faithfully portraying the as being the most authorit most thoroughly stylish of all that is beautiful in the millinery Never before has our millinery room reveled in such a world. wealth of beauty and magnificence. The choicest conceptions well of European leading fashion creators will be exhibited as Amer= talented foremost the from ons producti skillful as many icans--also striking reproductions of original Paris models, that bringing into prominence many new and charming ideas ing --claim produce could artists talented and only high class s supreme style and elegance that stands foremost in fashion' favor, altogether - aD YS ALAA NE SCLLSO 7 Bz GY Y . EZ EE, "a OT making It Has One of the Most Inexhaustible Gathering-Together That City the in Ever Been Placed on View nash ay Ne oS from the most Almost any desire you may have can be gratified, ey a on ae ae that has set Paris, Directoire the as well ue--as ly picturesq : ee an a" An in bewilderment. cuessing and Dame Fashion to hold her hands nas grand success, for mever before dict for this, our Autumn opening of 1908, a amblItion been so great It's a fa Viewing We Know To Our You'll Fully Appreciate In conjunction with our Opening Display of Millinery, we Suits, Opening, will have on display and sale the most complete showing of Costumes, Waists, Skirts Furs, Gloves, Hosiery he to a well equipped accessories . appertainiSng ae wardrobe-t ANG | é all otherTY ACCES ing in the city, S AAAAAAAAHHADAIGSADOO Autumn 1908, You're Invited most comprehensive and most complete show- NNMNN Ne NN AM HHH) ADA A AA A AHAMAAANAMAAANAAA AN |