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Show EUREKA, UTAH. j Miss Genevieve Sullivan is out from I Salt Lake for a few days" visit. Miss , Sullivan- has been attending the Uni- vc-rsitjj of Utah. . j -t '! 1 Mrs. Frank Presley and children are visiting Witlt Mrs. Dennis Sullivan at Salt Lake. , James MorM11 returned Tuesday from a businffr 1 P to Utah county towns. He m;e the trip for the purpose pur-pose of purch fcdng horses for his stables sta-bles here. ' John Sulliva , of "Ogden, was in Eureka Eu-reka during t' .early part of the week i visiting relath 1 and friends. Mr. Sul- j livan.is a brcMJer of the. late Dennis, i Sullivan, who Pj -d as the result of an j accident in th'HBullicn-Beck initio ten . years ago. Q i John Normclt'and Miss Ella O'Xeil, ! popular youncjjcople of Eureka, were -j quietly joluedjni marriage on AVcdiTis-r i day of last wej k. but the news was not j made public fntil after the bride had j departed for I brief visit with friends-at. friends-at. Butte. M.ol?. "The ceremony' was! performed by 'ilev.' Father .ODouuhue ; :'.; ' in the presence of only the necesary witnesses, and even the most intimate friends of the couple were not aware of their marriage until a few days later. Both the parties are well known and popular in their social set, and will start out in married life with the best wishes .of scores of friends. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Con O'Neit of this city and a sister of Mrs. N. AV. Ilanley, who was elected city recorder at the recent election. Mr. Norman has been employed as bookkeeper book-keeper at Heffernan K- Thompson's store for over two years and is a very promisng young business man. Upon the return of Mrs. Norman from Eutte the couple will be at home to their friends at their residence on Leadville Bow. What We Talk About. AA'hen the woman went home, from a "tea" and her sister asked her what they talked about her answer was. "Sin. sickness and death." Pleasant, wasn't it, and profitable, too? And that is about what a good deal of ordinary "pleasant", conversation amounts to. The horrible details of a terrible operation, the varying symptoms symp-toms of some mortally- ill acquaintance," acquaint-ance," the meannness of some neighbor, the sweet morsel of scandal, the last divorce, the surmise of "Plow ever does she do it and he working on a salary?" The miseries of one or a dozen kitchens, with a few dressmakers thrown in, with their misfits and mis- ! statments, are topics impressed upon us when we associate with our kind. The memory of these things make us mental pictures which, for all of . their liiviality, rise up to haunt us when the leas are forgotten and their givers are dust. - - If there is anything absolutely profitless profit-less and at the same time outrageously outrageous-ly tiresome, it is to hear a woman talk about her "help." Doesn't every woman wo-man of us say' in her heart of hearts, after she has shaken off the bore, "Would. tk heaven that woman had to do her own kitchen work forever and ever. she wbnldnt have time to tor; ment .other folks with it?" Of course we do, and some of us have learned a lesson and vowed vows in relation to it until wild horses could not drag domes-tie domes-tie details from us. Catholic Union and Times. |