Show c G < > Tc I < > T I j THE SALT LAKE HERALD ATJBDAt APKIi S 1893 j I SALT LAKE HERALD SALT LAKE CITY UTAH L BY THE HERALD PUBLISHING DIRECTORS R CHAMBERS President HEBER J GKAJT VlcoPreslflent P L TVlIXIAMS JOBK T CAINE E A SMITH A W McCTJKft J X RAITIINC B W Yororo J W JUDD GEORGE COLLINS SIMoN BAMBERGEI HOBACB G Wnmnsr FBANKIJS S RICHARDS VIrtL HrDt Editor CHARLES W PJ ROS1AIsistant Editor THE DAILY HERALD la published every morning morn-ing Monday excepted at TEE HERALD block corner West Temple and First South streets Salt Lake City TEEMS OF SUBSCBIWION Daily per year 51000 Daily sir months 500 Daily per month 100 SemiWeekly pc year 300 SemiWeekly six mont13 150 Sunday per year 250 Sunday six months 150 LL subscriptions payable strictly In advance ad-vance ALL communications should be addressed to THE HERALD Salt Lake City Utah SUBSCRIBERS Trill confer a savor by forwarding Information to this office Trhon their papers are not promptly received They will aid us to determine where the fault lies SUBSCRIBERS removing from one place to another an-other and deiiringpapcrs changed should always give former as well as present address ad-dress Communications trill not be returned Anonymous communications will not bo noticed THE HERALD reserves the right to append the name of ibe author to any communication and accepts no manuscript with a pledge to ithold the name from any person mentioned in the communication THE HEHALD is on sale at the principal newsstands news-stands and on all morning passenger trains leaving Salt Lake Orders for city delivery to either residence or place of business cay be made by postal card or through telephone THE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY H C BHOWNLEE Business Manager iIe D JJJ ii 5 J t 2 s yl B liJ1fit fJ 1 Jl III i fg J J rl THE JlfRM fi O t = I I I I Sunday Herald 20 Pages Even more Interesting than the last will be next Sundays issue of THE HERALD Of news foreign domestic and local it will have the latest The regular departments j I depart-ments will have all the elements ot completeness 1 com-pleteness and reliability and we call the I attention of readers to the following Special Features DICKS OUTFIT Her Is a delightful story about the events of one Sunday in a churchtoing region 0 i Middle Tennessee with two rival lovers In the foreground and the chief interests centering about the Widow CAWLET who owned her late huhands big farm which 1 was far from being her chiefeat charm 1 With a column cut UNCLE REMU3 The story of JOEL CHAKDIER HABBIS life and literary labors with how ho came to write his Unc e Remus stories an account ac-count of bin every day home life favorite authors etc Accompanied by a twocol umn portrait of Mr HARRIS and another of his home In Atlanta Ga > FIRST STREET CAR The preai ent of he JOHN STEPHTSSSON oar company relates tbo story of the first streetcar street-car or omnibus that was ever built and the evolution from that day to this the mode of manufacture the costly woods used etc With a portrait of JOHN SrtPH IJSON and pictures of the first street car built by him and of the modern American cars CALCULATING MACHINES A E KPNNEUY of EDISONS laboratoy tells of curious mechanisms that multiply and divide explaining NAPIERS principle of logarithms and THATCHERS sliderule calculating cylinder and relating an interesting inter-esting story of bow arithmometers work A COURAGEOUS WOMAN The romantic adventures of Dr EMIL HOLUB the African explorer and esrecally that or his courageous frau from the subject sub-ject of nn interesting narrative with liva illustrations including One portraits of Dr H and hs wife GRACEFUL DANCING AMELIA GLOVER the noted aesthetic dan souse gives some entertaining instruction on exercises to give the necessary body balance and make a dancer graceful with advice to society girls 1 his article is accompanied ac-companied with a large 3column illustration illustra-tion with five full figures in as many dune ing attitudes NOVELTIES IN THE SHOPS CLARIS i UNCK writes of silver cheese holdors hot wtaihur screens late ideas in coal hods couch pillows and a variety or easy mangles the article being illustrated with two cuts A GIRLS IDEA Here is a little story about a bright idea carried out by a girl not rich except inartistic in-artistic instincts and inventiveness It was of a dressing table to fill up an ugly bedroom bed-room space The result IS given in a verbal description and an illustration THE CONFEDERATE BAZAAR This article tells about the rally of southern south-ern Women to build a memorial monument at Richmond and establish a museum of war relics in the Jefferson it a vis mansion to commemorate the valor of the confederate confeder-ate soldiers and sailors in the last war It gives an account of how the plucky sisterhood sister-hood of Dixie are planning to perpetuate their fealty to the lost cause It has a picture of the White House of the Confederacy Con-federacy and is illuminated with nine portraits of the leading women connected with the Bazaar OUR FASHION DEPARTMENT Easter over it is generally supposed that the fashionmongers are taking a rest but inn HERALDS correspondence shows novel summer gowns with plates of handsome hand-some Dresden mulls for the World fair and some good styles in gingham We also give a batch of interesting hints relative to mens clothes as worn by fashionable people abroad There are besides tome excellent pointers on wet weather wear THE WICHITA INDIAN VILLAGE Prof JAMES MOONEY of the United States bureau of ethnology describes the pretty village vil-lage of the Wichitas a small tribe in the western part of the Indian Territory who live in grass houses and tells an entertaining entertain-ing story of the habits of this little band of not more than 400 souls Twocolumn illustration il-lustration COLORED RAIN N S DCAKE explains in a very simple manner why rain sometimes is colored giving giv-ing an account of the red rain that fell in the Hague in IGiVj and the Calnbrian storm of 1813 and of the blue and black rains of history FIREWATERS SHOT This is a thrilling story of Indian river in South Florida written by ALEXANDER H l OME FORD for the Youths department Two column illustration THE KING OF THE KITES Here is a tale by Lieutenant JOHN C WAL SHE f tho United States IIrmy that will set the boys just wild It Mis of TOM STEWARDS aerial journey across a gi rge in the Andes whereby a great engineering teat was accomplished by which TOM made 42000 Illustrated with two tine cuts BATTLE OF KINGS MOUNTAIN liihODOUB KoobEVKLT in a copyrighted article tells the thrilling story of the revolutionary revo-lutionary battle which was one of the de t she engagements of that conflict Two splendid illustrations |