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Show aE, astrachan and displays a vest of black astrachan. The coat is simply fastened below the waist line at the point of the huge collar by three frog loops cord. of black Misses in their teens wear a mod- ification of the Directoire coat or a long ulster of fine cloth, trimmed with hand- some black passementerie braiding. The use of black or black as a gran- iture of children’s clothes is an tion of the season. inmoyva Black trimmings in special demand this season elapse for children’s wear.—Good Housekeeping. into their seats thoroughly exfrom the comparatively slight into which they have been forced love of business! Many minutes before taking sufficient muscular exer- A LITTLE LADY. heart is almost invariably a feeble heart. —Dr. William A. Hammond. Within a certain house I know, Which would be sad without her, There lives a lady four feet high! Cycling Down a Mountain The long seven mile coast Side. began. The road wound down around horseshoe curves and loops without number, and as it was on the east side of the smaller valley which led down at right angles to the Rhine valleyI had to ride on the outer side of the roadway in order to be on the (I tell the truth about her.) Her dresses do not sweep the floor, She does not walk demurely, She wears a sailor,_—but yet She’s a lady, surely. right side. At first, in turning some of the sharp curves to the left where I could see nothing ahead but air and the hills of Her voice is very sweet and low, Her words are always pleasing; She helps the little girls to play, She keeps the boys from teasing. “THE OVERLAND ROUTE,” The Only Line Carrying the United States Overland Mail. Makes Direct Connections effort to acc omplish the work required of it. I venture to say that of those who read these observations not one in ten the steps of an elevated railas slowly as he pleases withthe action of the heart nearly frequency. A rapidly beating Switzerland twenty miles away, I slowed up some, BETWEEN Denver, Cheyenne, Ogden, Salt Lake City, Sacramento, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, and all Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, ton Territory and all Princtpal Missouri River and Pacific Coast Points. She trots up-stairs, she trots down stairs When mamma’s head is aching; She helps papa to find his gloves, And Norah with the baking. She has a smile for every one; We call her our darling, Sadie. And blest is every house, where dwell So sweet a little lady! Youths Companion. a gem Rocked By Unseen Hands. On the east side of Marietta lives a Mr. W. M. Taylor, a _ carpenter to then 1 was totally ignorant, but faster and faster. One finger was sufficient on the brake at first, but after a few miles that one began to get cramped and two fingers were applied... Then the brake spoon began to get hot, but still I could not see the foot of the mountain. About half way down the water of the Rhine began to show itself over the edge of the road as 1 came to those sharp turns to the left, and then I knew where the bottom was. It actually seemed that, if I went straight ahead, I should land in the river, how many hundred feet below my blurred eyes could not clearly discover. Once I met a team and yelled, but the oxen were on THE Baggage Checked Th rough from all Points in weak but audible voice, said she wanted in the rocking chair, and she was from the bed and placed in the the little form being wrapped in a Persons present say that the child said: “I want some one to rock Her sister started to do this, but she took hold of the chair, to her astonishment, and to the of all present, the large astonishment chair began rocking gently to and fro without the raid of any person in the room. A person present said: “An angel seemed tohave heard the plaintive cry of the little sufferer, and with invisible hands rocked the child to sleep.” No one moved, but each intently watched the chair as it rocked. A gentleman caught hold of the chair, but it slid away some twelve inches and then resumed its swaying motions. After a while the little. patient dropped off into asoothing sleep and the chair ceased rocking. When the child awoke from its slumber and opened its eyes chair. began rocking again, which kept up all night. From. grow that the was hour the child began to better, and is now walking about . the house.—Ex. of Physical Inertia. An American business man appears to born. with a disinclination to walk. I have seen half a dozen at atime stand around the entrance toa hotel elevator, wasting several minutes in waiting for the machine to come for them rather than mount one flight of steps. As a conse: quence of this physical inertia most busi. ness men of the present day have weak muscles, that and should especially they be ' themselves to even a weak obliged slight hearts, so to exert degree their ‘limbs: become exhausted: and: tremble like “a reed shaken’ by the wind,” their respi- ration becomes hurried and difficult, and their pulses beat at the rate of 125 a minute, or even more. It is only necessary to stand at the cor, ner: of a-street: through:which a street railway passes and to watch the men and women leaving their homes directly after breakfast, and running a hundred so at the top of their speed feet or to catch an approaching car, as though it was the only one by which they could go down town, and their lives depended on getting into that the Eyes Beautiful. sight past recovery by working at a bench Cirectly in front of a window, when they should be placed with the back to: if. The light in front falls into the eye, which contracts to lessen what Pullman Palace ‘Sleepers and Modern Coaches on all Through Trains. FREE Family Sleepers, Through on all Mail and Express Trains. bear, with the invariable result of weak- varticular vehicle. How they OO eee Fireside Organ WEEKLY ever is the only published in Utah. It has been months only before and one its the public only three circulation is second to in th e Territory. paper For further information regarding the territory traversed, daily excursions, rates of fare, descriptive pamphlets, ete. 3 apply to I. A. BENTON, Salt Lake, . _ Agent of the Union Pacific Railway; the agent of any connecting road, or address kIvERY RY STABLE If you shaneendiret a first class Horse and Buggy at the lowest Ask your Postmaster wha t-the people think of It. READ The New possible charges goto The Old Market Stables, Opposite Herald Office. it cannot Special Attention Given to Boarders. ened sight. Lamps, gas jets and student lamps are often placed so near the head as to heat the eyes injuriously. The simplest shadestops this by making a current EK. Q. KNOWLTON, Prop. FROM Serial Story beginning this issue | THE PEN OF ALREADY WON AN IN HASTERN A UTAH PAPERS CHLLENCE OF WRITER ENVIABLE HAS REPUTATION THROUGH HIS WHO in THE EX CONTRIBUTIONS. of air between itself and the lamp. I quote from Dr. Jeffries’ highly interesting pamphlet on ‘‘Our Eyes and Our Industries." He speaks very decidedly on the injury to the eyes of wood engravers in cutting from photographs on the block, making the blurred and misty pictures too familiar in papers and magazines. The work is cheaper, but, oculists find, most destructive to the eyes, and the better class of engravers either refuse such work or raise their prices nearly double. The wear and tear comes of looking con- stantly from the photograph to the original picture hung before it and continually changing the focus of the eye. [am glad to know this has awakened attention, for I know that looking wood cuts is very So is the satiny, certain publishers fine impressions, done abroad upon at the soft, blurry trying to sensitive eyes. calendered paper which protest is necessary. for although finer work: is dull paper. Tue gloss and glitter of much of the modern Consequences be To Keep To have beautiful sightly eyes, we must have strong, sound ones, and avoid all causes of harm. Never read, write or. work with the light from a window in front of the eyes. Artisans injure their Oeeee5—weeeS-errnes»_—_ eee _ ESO OOOO ae WESTERN J. V. PARKER, General Agent, their own side and I went by them with a rush all right. Another time some’ Salt Lake. For several weeks his daughter, six years old, was at the point of death. children saw me coming and ran down the sides of the mountain scared out of. On Sunday night two weeks agoa few their wits. Still I went like the wind Thos. L. Kimball, J.S. Tebbets, neighbors called, as the child appeared over the same steep grade and smooth Acting Gen’l Mgr. Gy Pe& T: os as though it would not live long. A road down from top to bottom, without mishap, but with a feeling I never before gentleman present offered to pray for OMAHA, NEB. experienced in coasting that I was glad I the sick child. The little group knelt, was at the bottom. How long it took me and a fervent and earnest prayer was 12 come down I do not know, but I waited six minutes at the base for the Englishoffered for the restoration to health of men.—Bicyclist George R. Thayer in Ley the little sufferer. After the prayer, to York World. the surprise of all, the little girl, in a to get lifted chair, quilt. feebly me!” before OOo the East to Points Named. twenty or thirty feet ahead, and where it went Oe Nevada, California, Washing- for the road was visible for only after riding a mile or two down over roads su smooth that the running of the machine was scarcely audible, I let up on the brake a little and away | went WEEKLY. UNION PAGIEIG RAILWAY their mental cise. In such veople the heart. is suddenly subjected to a strain to which it is not accustomed, and it gives way in the can ascend way station out having doubled in <a> ~- they recover and physical equanimity. Not a year passes that the newspapers do not record several deaths that have occurred from this practice, and which would not take place if the subjects had been in the habit of are seen on terra-cotta red, gobelin blue and the dull empire and olivine greens which are pant and Diow and turn rea in the face, and gesticulate wildly at the conductor and drop hausted exertion by their WESTERN B. oe ScHETTLER, W. Wooprvurr, President. Asst. Cashier. Hion’s Savings Bank AND TRUST COMPANY, No. 68 EAST TEMPLE ST. Does a General Banking Business, Pays 5 per Cent. Interest on Savings Deposits. MONEY cidal.—Shirley this glitter One Year, $9.95. Six Months, 1.25. Three Months, _ 65. On Approved Securities at Low Rates of Interest house Address When she Yeturns home from an absence they await thing—their but one mother’s kiss, Whatever has been bought for them WEEKLY, Salt Lake City, Utah. sui- To Make Children Happy. “I try so hard to make my children happy !” saidta mother with a sigh one day ‘in despair ‘at-her efforts.: “Stop trying}” exclaimed’ a practical friend at her elbow, “and.do as a-neighbor of mine does.” ‘ And how is that?’ she asked, dolefully. ‘Why, she simply lets her children grow and develop naturally, only directing. their growth properly. She has always. thrown them, as far as practicable, upon their own resources, taught them to wait upon themselves—no matter how many servantsshe had—and to WESTERN 87 S. West Temple Street, Dare’s Letter. construct thcir own playthings. TERMS: TO LOAN decoration injures the eye by the broken reflections it is forced to meet on all sides. The varnished paint, the metallic finish of walls and fabrics, the breadth of plate ate? and painted glass are simply destrucye to good sight. They may enswer for foe who never read, like the Turks and Peleastae: but eyes overtaxed like those of our professional and many of our artisan classes are, quickly find SUBSCRIBE NOW! 113 Main Street, Ogden, Utah. |