OCR Text |
Show 1 i 1 I A for Men Shoes 1 s TH3 s MRS. HAROLD STAGG 10 v $2.50 Shoe roryrlht ifto a&d 1391 by Botunt Bodmt'i Son Metcalf & CompanyWIS. MILWAUKEf, FOB SALE BY William BQUaca. Golden Onto Cash THE Worlds Fair Route OFFERS THE BEST SERVICE POSSIBLE TO 8T. LOUIS. The Frisco system traverses THE FOLLOWINQ STATES! Winds Indiana Mississippi Kansas Arkansas Tennessea Alahnsa Misscurl Cklaksma Indian Ter. Texas. THE SOUTHEASTERN LIMITED, Htuyhli, Ulrmlnikam, Jark.onviU and all puiuUAtlanta, la U. Southeast. Eeoatlant Tonta t all paint. Worth, South, hiulwaii and South waat. tut, hltllti Uforwtdoi, ml, t S. W, MARTIN, Ocmi.al AatnT, OlNVCR, CPi. K. DRAKE, Bitr. hit'll Aacnr, SAIT Lari city, Utah. T. .A. JOHN, gtmttt AatnT. Sum. Mortar. Illinois Central Railway. tJmCIENTLT BEEVES A TABS TERRIITOKY By through aarrica to and from th. following citlea: Omaha, Nob. Chicago, Til, St Paul, Minn. St Loula, Ka Minneapolis, Minn roorla, 111. Xanaas City, Mo. JSYanrYille, lad. Memphis, Tenn. NaahTlllo, Tenn. Cincinnati, Ohio. Atlanta, Qe. (LouIstUI., Xjr. Jacksonville, Tit Naw Orlaana, La. Vicksburg, Mias Waakly through service botwaos Cbl oago and batwaon Cincinnati th. Pacific Coaat and Mootam Territory. Connaotlon. at thaaa tarmlnals too tha And EAST, SOUTH, WIST AND XQXTH. Paat and Handsomely Equipped Heated Train Dining Car Caro Sleeping Care Reclining Chair Cara Itaara Juffet-Llbra- ry FTao Aak ticket agents for tickets Tie ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD, apply to Tl W. End 8o. unique! siTstaa JI2ALTHFUL! 1 T1111 im Sw4 wtSMB rwA SALT LAKE HOT STRINGS Sanitarium Baths ssjkj rtnui 8uAp, Duut M Y TfS 5VKueE 2ST ., NnhbFiinliltedMtP lb Tak NHinRwta OC sad Lup 3l fcWV Hu t ' OpuMna feapim aud atudng thaaa hath. Ma t I Lta Opea tbs J. A. rOLBT, 8t. Salt Lake CUfb pgoyABLE1 Aaty j two-third- s Iatee Knu Tit; at 6.30 p. m. dally will taka yon tp Hprln.TuiU, Fur j e I torn. ul Mbt OS A Eleanor. I wish you all three live Harol l. rith me. 1 have pleDty of m rT for ! bin-if all. Silas ard Harold lvf,l be ! foir fl.a'arter, jou t Did you krow my brolher-inlato school .and you V3 be be asked, by way of drawing out ins urought up at home by your as other young ladle are. Interlocutor. A Uxk of Oh, yes; every one knew the surprise irradiated by a was the answer, with a Judi- fleam of phasure came over 10 face, cial delibeia'lon. He was a fine wiich was sureeded by her rave, a trifle anxious expression. inau, the pioitssor I in his roiif'i s aetordii g to my lad hern thinking, she said, of ( fi.ghty lights, ar d rot a!was knowirg as to luirg a teacher if I can get i place which side his bread wai buttered, in the town here, and the bo)cou!o but a real Christian gent! man, and 'tlend the public school six ;onths taking pointa from no one m his busi- in the year, and do work In th sumness, too, though he did plank out a mer months for the farmer! until good many dollars in them patents of they were old enough to go P colIds, that never showed him no profit, lege. and that would ha' come iu handy Nonsense, excfclmed Eleanor,1 tow, I reckon, for them that's left. Harold Stagg, as she paused n her I wont Thats a fine girl of his; she favors ledtaL hear of surh a her father, too. Going to stop long?-ThYou forget Im your incle; thing. driver as he asked this ques- your mother was my sister, anl 1 intion drew up before a medium-sizetend to provide for her chlldfti! house of It would be very nice, said pattern, gabled and of weather-beateshingle color, reflectively, "If the boys coull be with a vegetable garden on one side. looked after until they had t good Is Only a few hours probably. duration, but Ive quite set my heart this the place? on being a teacher, and Ive itought That's where he lived, sir, ever t all over and planned it out,' that fclnee he come here, said the man, I'm sure there wouldnt be ay trou muffling hi. speech again, by way of ble as to my getting along. j to the departed. I wont hear of it. What yoaneea, Harold Stagg passed through the my dear. Is less thinking and planlittle gate, and strode with a busine- ning, and more beef, wine and Iron, to ss-like step to the door, on which put color Into those pale cheeks of he sounded vigorously with the jours. Do you suppose yoq could knocker that took the place of a bell. arrange to start day after After a moment it was opened by a I can have your father's book! and small boy who looked at him doubt- such other things as you dont wish fully, as though he suspected who the to have sold stored or shipped D you visitor might be, but did not dare to In New York," he added. j make the first advances. "Day after she ejacuI take it you must be Harold Stagg lated, in a tone of trouble. j Baldwin, said the owner of the first "Yes, I am a busy man mysolt, and, of the name. of course. I'm anxious to get back Yes, sir," said the lad, with a glad, as soon as possible. It would be very nice for the eheepish smile. Well, I'm your uncle Harold," he boys, she reiterated, and its very, I very kind of you. Uncle Haroll." said, patting him on the head. That means youll start day after tuppose your sister got my telegram? morning, Yes, !r. She's expecting you. "Would you like to go to New Whereupon his namesake seized York to live, Silas and Hal? sle inthe handle of .the valise, by way of quired, with motherly solicitude. We wont go unless you go, Eleaevincing hospitality and hiding embarrassment at the same time, and nor, said the elder, stoutly. began pulling it into the entry. "That's right, said Harold " Stagg. As Harold Stagg followed him, a She has to go., larger boy and a tall, slim young Eleanor's eyes filled with tean. woman advanced from the threshold I suppose I ought, she said, Efter of an adjoining room. a moment. You mustn't think me "Ah, my dears! be said, grasping ungrateful, qwcle, or that I dont apSilas by the hand and embracing his preciate how good and generous you niece, "I'm glad to be with you. are, but it's hard to leave the house "Will you walk in, uncle, said Elea- and the place where Ive lived so nor, ushering him Into the room long." She wept softly for- - a few from which, the had eorae. moments, then wiped her eW and It was a cosy little apartment; Its taid. with quiet decision, wVftiall furniture and stuffs, though slightly be ready to start, uncle, day after worn and slightly were tasteful. I suppose you are ready "That'll do nicely, dear, replied for breakfast, she added, It will be Harold, who had been lawardly deready In a moment. bating how to deal with so unfamiliar "Yes, I am a little hungry. a factor as a young girl tears. "Ill Harold spoke cheerfully. An almos-spber- e telegraph your aunt Emma that you're of grief was Instinctively op- coming." pressive to him. Moreover, be felt The Journey was uneventful, but that he ought to' try to enliven the very Interesting to the boys, who family. Poor little girl! quickly regained their spirits and beHow pale and sad she looked, with came talkative under the Influence of dark places under her eyes, that told novel surroundings. of heart-achand loss of sleep! She Eleanor sat pensive and wan, unwas pretty, to, distinctly pretty, with responsive, and lacking appetite, a delicate, pensive style of face that thereby puzzling her uncle, who could matched well her willowy figure, but better have understood torrents of she appeared far from strong. He tears than this moping manwondered what Emma would think of ner of grief. He found that she liked her. There was not a trace of emto talk about her father, whose combarrassment in her manner, as she panion and confidante she seemed to did the hospitalities of the breakfast-room- , have been, ar.d toward the end of the offering him his choice of tea journey they branched off, on one ocor coffee, and providing for his other casion, on books, each surprising the needs with a serious composure that oher by discovering that their tastes was astonishing to him, from Its lack In poetry were not dissimilar. Harold of consciousness, and yet was In no did not pretend to read everythin respect girlish. He could scarcely be- (hat was going, but he knew the until he convinced himself by names of the prominent publications, lieve, Inquiry, that she was but eighteen. and It was evident that Eleanor was familiar with most of them. All she Early contact with the responsibilities of life had developed her In cer- needed, he reflected, was a little tain ways beyond her years, and yet knowledge of the way of the world left her a child in many respects. and a few suggestions as to her attire, How would she and Emma get on? in order to make him a proud uncle; What would Emma think of her? fer while so many of the young woI have come out here, you know, men In society were mere butterflies to take you all back with me to New or dolls, did not she possess, In addiYork, said Harold, presently, getting tion to & pretty fare, the charms of to the point at once, as was his wont. intellectual culture? Emma Aould It Is your aunts wish and mine. understand exactly how to transform be added, breaking the silence that this Inconspicuous cygnet Into a da followed his announcement zling swan. The two boys looked at their sister Here we are, said Harold dtagg, in a doubtful, bewildered sort of way. as the carriage stopped betore a one She was evidently thinking. residence. A flood of light from the That would be very pleasant, diorway uncle, and It Is very kind of you to dazzled Elearor's eyes, and she wonsuggest It; but as we have to support dered at the flawless Individual who ourselves, wouldnt It be wiser for supervised their passage Into the hall, us to begin here at once where we until her uncle said: are known? she said, in her calm, Parsons, has Mrs. Stagg gone to You see, papa bed? dispassionate tone. left very little property nothing, ex"No, sir; she Is awaiting jon In cept his patents and this house, the drawing-room- . answered ihe butwhich Is mortgaged for half what It ler. "She was about to retire, sir, Is worth; so that we have no money when your telegraphic message arto live on. Papa talked It all over rived, he added. In a lower tone, inwith me as well as be could, the tended for his master's ear. Supper Cay before he died. He said he had Is quite ready, sir. been meaning to Insure his life durWell, were ready for It. arent ing the last year, but he hadnt the we, boys? Twenty minutes of twelve! ready money to pay the premiums. I Mercy on us! he exclaimed, as be told him that he mustn't mind baring closed his watch with a snap. I dare spent bis savings In developing his say you were never up so late before. inventions; he had believed in them, Now, dear. If you've finished prinkand it was his duty for our takes as ing, .he said gaily to Eleanor, "111 well as his owk to try to make them take you In and introduce you to your successful. We should be sure to get aunt, on somehow, and probably some day Eleanor blushed vividly, and- - turned the patents woudl prove eery valufrom the hat! mirror, before which able she had instinctively paused a moIt was plain that sbo wished others ment In order to straighten her bonto believe, as she did lmpllcity, that net, that she was conscious was her father bad acted for the best is awry. Her uncle stood laughing and everything. Doubtless, some one bad chuckling at her confusion. Just then made already disparaging comments there was a rustle, of a robe, and a as to the cause of their poverty. tall woman came speeding down the " I dont think yon understand me, stairs, exclaiming: CHAPTER II. win a f. - d of quaint r, Bradley n e dry-eye- Tsi o glad youve come! J beard one of the children crying, and Id gone up just for a moment, thinking I should be sure to hear If you came In." "Yes, cherub, here we are safe and sound. Eleanor, Silas; Hal, this Is jour aunt Emma." How dy do, my dears? Im very glad to see you. said Mrs. Stagg, kissing Eleanor on the cheek, and beaming kiDdly on the boys, who, between the butler, the electric lights, tie spacious hall and this new splendid relative stood confounded. You must be tired out, and well go right in to supper. What do you sup Emma, I caught this young woman doing just now? Pa)t!fying herself In ths glass! Its New York air. I wager that within a week she'll have been inside of every dressmaker's and milliner's shop in the city. Whereupon Harold Stagg laughed gleefjlly. I imagine you bae discovered by his time that your uncle's a sad tease, said Emma, who was leading the way, having already, in a Bingle riance. the capability of which poor Eleanor realized, comprehended the of her niece's ideas on t.othes. She reflected that had Harold been a malicious man he could not have thought of anything more Invidious than to call attention to the poor child's toilet, to say nothing of the fact that Eleanor was, and must remain for the present, in deep black. Such lack of perception on the part of her better-hal- f prompted her Jo turn and link her arm sympathetically n the young girls, while Harold, to whom it had suddenly ocurred that his allusion to millinery was the reverse of followed behind, endeavoring to conceal his by vigorously rubbing the shaggy heads of his two nephews, and trolling a bluff glee the burden of which was that his heart was true to PolL An hour later, the Baldwins were comfortably ensconced in the blue suite, and Emma was hearing from the-lipof her husband an account erf the journey. Although she had mapped out In her mind a probable programme, she had waited to see ths children, before giving her imagination full swing; but now that they appeared to be very much what sh had hoped, all sorts of thoughts were churning in her brain regarding their adaptation to her household and the proper exertions to be made In their behalf. The boys were of just tha right age for Mr. Sampson, as she had expected, and in the autumn, after a summer by the sea side, they could be packed off with brand-neoutfits, and she be saved from further responsibility, except in vacation time, for several years to come. As to Eleanor, she was agreeably disappointed. To be sure, Harold had written that she was a quiet, unobjectionable sort of girl, but she had not been able to dismiss from her mind a haunting Idea of a showy, slangy young person with gushing manners, and mourning bedizened with Jet, until the real niece stood before her. Emma congratulated herself that she would have very plain sailing; Eleanor was dowdy, unsophisticated and retiring, but a single season in society would work the necessary changes. She was rather pretty now, and she would be very fetching, Indeed, when she learned to hold herself properly and to dress her hair with some regard to what was becoming. How preferable to have to deal with an unobjectionable child who had no preconceived ideas, than with a bumptious coquette w hose bad manners were already formed. (To be continued.) Phtonix OP AMERICA. yourself agiiast sickness and Alto Life Insurance. Installment Plan. ... Ton pay a little each month. AAAAAA l&ffur aedde&tx. psr fwrthcr information stmts to tea, til. WHY HE SAID PANTS U. A. KELSOH, m Deseret Newt Bldg. Sessral Agent, LAKE CITY, SALT THE SCENIC NT AN. LINE TO Glenwead Spcisgs, Aspen, Leadville, Pueblo, Colorado Springs, Dearer, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, &Ld all pOUltS Bait -- Short Use CwmscBng at tgden Unloe Depot with ill Setrthtra Pacifls tnrf Org Trxfris. tfco snip TMnsoootiaontal Um patting rflrsctl, thrsagh Bah Lake C?t wed-time- s Indemnity Company, tgotmn 3SPLBYDIOLT Dtattaet 9etle 06DEN AND DENVER ftentee. Through Polhaan and Ordinary Sleeping Cara to Dearer, Ease oe City, EL Louis and Chicago without change. Pres reetisrlag ebndr ears. Personally Conducted Excursions. On ssSttk, Xttnfetg Gars, service a la Carf e on all through trains. M MS, foMerw, (cm tlluscnMd booklet. to., inquire ol year ataswt OtftetaceM, paUylnt tb Bto O rend rout, or iV1rw L salt lake city d A. ROTES, G. Ai P. X Rswsnsa, 0 rouring youi trip east that thb Oregon Short Line RAILROAD . E. BSRLir, TJM ar.eT.a A A SHMCEJt. AaatT.t i HMCr 1 1 CONNECTION TTTH THi UNION PACIFIC THB OVERLAND ROUTE VHKH B THB raPULAJt CCMBJKNG it TO ALL FCOTB XOLTTB 6 f AST SPEED COMFORT SAFETY GTMHKfflE 201 BAU SI. ACIFIC UNION D IT ROGRESSIVB I sear umgb cm. nest (THB OVERLAND ROUTE ) ROBERT E. FICKLE Rather Fine Distinction in Language Used by New York Tailor. CONFECTIONERY NOTIONS ... Gates, of Amherst college, says the New York Times, A NH Um tl Neuw a Tb Mfyart sad beat tok AMtSeant was a man with three salient characW a at OouMkhn, la M r- - CWrn. Tobanoa sad ft- AU Bnokr' Vm!....i teristics belief In compulsory worjuarfne I MM., ship as a means of grace, nicety of Deo w pxt Laandif. Tfsy ora&A language, and a fondness for bargain hunting that was almost feminine. As illustrative of the latter It is told that on a certain occasion Mr. Gates bought for $3 a pair of trousers that had been marked at $6, and had them charged. The first of the month the bill came in: To one pr. pants, $3. MXKCtnt T IMS CARD !Mr. Gates crossed off the "pants" QJlL UkXM Mia! ....1:0 Fairfleid ....IB rfLMv then and substituted trousers, East the bill. The first of the next Id! Leave J. A. JACOBS, Gen, SmMger, ,...3(rur Belt Lake City. month another bill came in: Jot...Jktt jlara To one pr. pants, $3." This time the bill was returned as before, but with the following legI am Deer Mr. Thompson: end: always careful about the language I use, and like other people to be the same. The first of the third month Mr. Gates received a bill: To one pr. pants, $3." This time he went in person to visit He explained his poMr. Thompson. sition. Thompson looked at him a moment, and then replied: President Gates. I've been in the clothing business for 33 years. An during them 25 years everything In my shop above $5 has been trousers and everything below $5 has been pants. It's pants you got. and egad, sir, ite pant youll pay for." lttyo-tatdl- - ta LlRCa Salt Lake and Mercur Railroad A Futy Appraisement. j rides himself n understanding the value of money. And thats where Mr. Sprlggins makes a mistake," said the liberal He expects a dollar to buy man. two or three times as much as It has any right to, and Is continually being annoyed and disappointed. "Mr. Sprlggtbs A philosopher says It is better to be alone than in bad company: but some men are In bad company when they are alone. f . |