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Show j SACRED HEART ACADEMY. Roll of Honor. I Senior Department Misses M. Don-aghy. Don-aghy. C. O'Donnell. D. Maginnis. D. Maloney, N. Frost, S. Iverson, J. Murphy, Mur-phy, C. McCardl? M. Shephard, A. Hill, K. Eminersoii, J. Tarter, M. C man. R. Smith, ( Ritter. K. Kam, M. Kane, V. Ellett. P. Biel. E. O'Neill. P. Gleed. E. Gleed, I. Platfort, M. Nied-erk5on, Nied-erk5on, E. Wattis, M. Brown, S. Mos-sey, Mos-sey, M. Ryan. F. Downey. Junior Department Misses J. Hague, A. Messlin, B. Roberts, E. Bachman, B. Bucher. A. Conroy. M. McNulty, E. Dumas, M. Maginnis. M. Miller. M. Morox. M. O'Connor, M. Vallereux, L. Currier. C. Hibbard, S. Jackman, B. Lambert, I. M?sslin. N. McCIane. G. McNulty, F. Maginnis, M. Pitts, M. Murphy, A. Wall, A. Harrington. K. O'Brien. L. Clause, E- Leadbetter, M. Schuster, G. Kohl, E. Biscomb, J. Calagan, H. Treloar, R. Cook, M. Anderson. An-derson. C. Ragan, G. Draper, F. Moore, S. Ludwig B. Brown, R. McKinnon, P.. Cawley. F. Dermoody, E. Platfoot, W. Hutchison, G. Malone, R. Scott, W. McCIane. Minim Department L. Murray, R. Ragan, Z. Harvey, C. Cohagan, M. Toy, L. Watts, V. Carr, J. Fitzgerald. B. Devota, W. Chambers, N. Conroy, J. Conroy, H. Tracey. I. Hickel, A. Becker, T. Becker, V. Becker, R. Hamblin. B. Hutchison, F. Brerton. L. Runyon. L. Dufus, H. Freburg. G. Patterson, Pat-terson, E. Rowe, E. McNulay, E. Cook, K. Dermody, A. DiGiacomo, G. Lomar, M. McFadden, E. McCormick, V. Cos-tello, Cos-tello, H. Thorpe. OGDEN. Mr. and Mrs. P. Healy and daughter daugh-ter Nellie are back from a trip to Cuba. Mrs. W. E. Quillinan pleasantly entertained en-tertained a circle of friends on Monday Mon-day evening, at her home, 2907 Grant avenue, complimentary to her two brothers, Joe and James Bosen. Thomas Feeney last Friday received a telegram from Circleville, O., informing inform-ing him that his mother was critically ill. Mr. and Mrs. Feeney left immediately immedi-ately for Ohio. Mrs. Feeney is 80 years of age and the message held out very little hope of her recovery. Thomas D. Dee, 'with his daughter, Miss Margaret, and Joseph Geoghegan, accompanied by his two daughters, left for San Francisco Saturday, and early next week will sail on the steamer Siberia Si-beria for Honolulu. They will spend a couple of weeks on the Hawaiian islands, and Mr. Dee and Mr. Geoghegan Geoghe-gan will investigate the sugar refineries refiner-ies of the islands. The party will be absent about one month. PARK CITY. Frank Cunningham is recovering nicely from an illness with erysipelas. Mrs. S. J. Wilson returned to the city Wednesday after a brief stay here. i Margaret Shields came up from the city last week to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shields. -. Mrs. M. J. McGill visited in Salt Lake the fore part of the week. Mrs. Michael Kogan and family, and Ciarence Gates left Thursday afternoon for Butte, Mont., to join Mr, Hogan, who has been in that city for two months past. Their many Park City friends wish them God speed and happiness hap-piness in their new home. Clarence will be greatly missed from this; office, where from time to time he cast his lot as a typist, and became a general ra-I ra-I vorite. Mrs. Annie Rainey and Miss TJdith Bellon accompanied them to the Montana metropolis to make their home. EUREKA. Mr., and Mrs. James P. Driscoll. Mrs. H. Deprezin, Mrs, G. M. Hays, Colonel John T. Hayes and C. E. Huish of Eureka are at the White house. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ostrander and children came in last Tuesday from Butte en route to Eureka. Mrs. "Dan Martin visited: friends in Salt Lake during the week. Mrs. James P. Driscoll and Mrs. Pat Donnelly, who have been in Salt Lake for ten days, returned home Tuesday. Timothy Downey has gone to Butte, Mont. Michael Sullivan and Mrs. Ben Goodman Good-man of Eureka and John Leary and Mrs. John T. Sullivan of Mammoth are in Ogden to attend the funeral of John W. Sullivan, who died in Salt Lake last Thursday. Hugh Heffernan was the victim of an unexpected gathering of his friends at the home of Mr. and Mr. Alex Mc-Farland Mc-Farland Saturday night. They brought refreshments, and the evening was greatly enjoyed, both by the involuntary involun-tary host and his guests. TEA AN "IDEAL" STIMULANT. (Journal of the American Medical As- I sociation.j Every little while there is an outcry against the practices of tea and coffee drinking. Lately it has been allged that the degeneracy observel in the I lower classes of Great Britain is largely due to the immense quantity of t'ea which is drunk in that kingdom. Without With-out any doubt a few people do drink too much tea and would be better without with-out it. But tea drinking, as in China, may be the salvation of a people from much greater evils. The decoction has at least the advantage of having been sterilized by heat, and water drinking in China has its dangers, as many an old traveler can testify. The' immense quantities of tea used without apparent damage by some of tthe most robust peoples in the world other than the Chinese, Chi-nese, such'; for example, as the Russians, Rus-sians, the Hudson Bay .voyageurs and the lumbermen of the north, does not testify to its evil effects on general health, under proper condtions. For a cold country it is almost an ideal stimulant, stim-ulant, reviving the energies., even after almist apparently complete exhaustion, and affording a feeling of comfort that hardly anything else can give, and this without any noticeable uncomfortable after effects, z zz zz zzz Of course, in our civilization there are some who take too much of many things for their , own good, but even in these cases it is hard to say that the evil is as great as sometimes claimed. The practice of giving large quantities of strong tea to mere infants, which is common among certain of the poorer classes of our cities, of course cannot be too much condemned; but it is astonishing how many infants seem to thrive on it. There should be some discrimination dis-crimination in the general condemnation condemna-tion of such stimulants as tea and coffee. cof-fee. They probably do more good than harm, and we should welcome their use if by any means or to any extent they can be made; a substitute, for things that are worse, and if the habit were universal in some of our unsanitary communities we might find it the safeguard safe-guard against serious evils. |