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Show - J ANSWER TO GOME9ENT ON PARK CITY GQUNOiL .S THE OTHER FEL- LOW SEES n f' SALOON IT, MORAL Bis .papers health destroying TRADE nor half as Ee Plain. will yoa syeiid the heated Where as at present. Neither do I behove advertising columns are the term?" that the consumption of lipuor per Pardon top, before I answer are business news of the communcapita was as great as the conyou a summer resoit sctil or an ity. If you happen to need a evangelist?" sumption of the swill paraded unis der the name of liquor today. new parlor carpet, you will be And again: I do not think that any 65 YEARS a lot mere interested in a car' OVE3 Government has got the moral EXPERIENCE pet ad. than in a paragraph right to abrfdge the individuals a freedom in regard to his daily about Jirn Jones newly painted S' If the bread nor to his drink. barn. Thats v.hy everybody and moral has a legal right in this vicinity reads this paTrace Marks to make bread out of his grain and ,: Designs we eat it, then where from do rr UU.iS' pers ads. Copyrights &c. jjtvi' a shed oh nr d description nia Anvnr.e derive our just rights to enjoin him TRADE MORAL u or Ireo whether ail Hilo C mrminiivi. Mr p Introducing the rnJpulv ,'nso.titn ut ieuu tuctlrciMBib.atiai. HltNRbOC ti. from making his grain into liquor ii f lor tu urti.r patei'M. fi ne. t hih'Ht upnt Ihtients tnLon turoULU Mumi L, to. buyer to the merchant is the and drinking it? How many men Without chart'd, iu the tpenal would empoverish themselvts drink purpese accomplished by our ciring pure whiskey at 10 cents a gal handsome !y lln.iratpd wUt. I.nadvertising columns. The inloih dor.a culation ot rnv .. ,n tai( Journal. ull yhsvfjmio bcLi Ion? A civilized society will not by yir: lour moiitne MiBrotdw & C3 Yc.rlt tegrity of botn are vouched for. force its citizens to swallow' poisons by making it imposible to get any ECONOMY leoplc who know buy the COAL with the highest number of heat units per ton. .Aberdeen coal has a greater number of heat un- n rm- For Sale By PARKER-WARNE- - - Ji mmm.i In a recent issue of the Times there appears an editorial comment on the action of the City Council of Park City raising the Saloon license to $300 per quarter; and since the Editor invites discussion' on the subject, I as a lover of fair play will attempt to show the other side of the shield, as the weakness of the Editors argument. In commending the actions of the City Council the Editor objects to the statement of a Saloon man that the action was unwise at this time as it would drive men out of business, depreciate the value of property in general and work a hardship on men in the business .In cases out of a hundred ninety-nin- e the American Cities boast of so call ed Business administrations, and ones imagination cannot eoncive a worse mess than that produced by the average American City Council and apparently Park City is no exception to the rule. liaising the license will never result in lessening the number of saloons nor the drunks, but in adulteration of the liquors. In other words: the higher the license the more deadly drug will the business man serve his A Saloon man ig just customers. as muth entitled to the iime of business man as a store keeper ainee either trade is for profit and the grocery man v ill sell us em- w ill CD. . to Kil thing else, but R LUMBER Scltnitfic JIisuri:ssi. A oocupation Y j ict-iv- e KEEFING coal-B- GOVERNMENT TEST ru-j- ii j other western its than any extend indivi- dual freedom to its members in rehabits gards to their personal not does wherever it injure society The United State as a whole. government saw a great source of revenue in the liquor traffic and so prohibited individual production of pure liquor and made itself an in direct accessory to the crime of trafficing in poison which undermine the health of the nation. As to the assertion that liquor is the groat est promoter of crime and that most of the income of a city is expended in protecting people ir m the criminal element that patronizes the saloons. 1 will state that I lived in Bingham many years, when the peace conserving force consisted of one lone Constable, while no comunity could boast oi more saloons in proportion to population, yet I hardly eer lock ed my doors and never had five cents worth of property stolen, and people will tell you that theft and unknown robbery were almost crimes in the early days of Bingham, nor was a Penal institution ever recruited less by a community than by Bingham, yet it has always been what you cal! a wide open town, where gambling and dunking were going on without any I am not deattempt at secrecy. fending the system by any means, to placing the blame balmed beef or any old adultera- but I do object ill in society on for almost every tion if there be profit in it even of form traffic in mans one though he knows it wil injure our just I mainatain that And necessities. health, as unscrupulously as the is as legitimate Saloon man will sell deadly drugs the saloon keeker instead of pure liquors, liaise the and as honorable a business man license for the store keeper and he as the rest of the business fraternity has come will raise his prices and sell us Again the saloon to extent the to a be large very Raise adulteration and shoddies. in a great and mans club, the license for the Saloon man, and working no other there are he wi'l not go out of business as a man' places made for his entertainrule, but sell drugs and water if he provisions cannot raise his prices. Yet society ment unless you call the average dance hall or fourth rate theatre uphold the former, abuses the latter but where do you draw the line? with fifth rate shows and even they availible to the man on The average American farmer is are not When society proves shift. fupposedly engaged in an honorable night itself capable to provide cleaner, accupation, yet at least one third ot his time is devoted to grain produi J healthier, more attracthe places of tion for the distilleries and- brew- amusement with a refined and eries. We have over production in moral atmosphere for its workers then aud not bill then should it nearly every staple article for with what now exists. meddle which we are now' vanily shelving When Society will shore its tv paIonian markets. And would be in r )vide an honorable occuto the some fix in regards to grain rity were it not for the liquor traffic, pation for the Saloon man whom it raise the price, and instead of pure has made mentally and PHYSICALLY unfit to hold hi own ui grain liquor the Amiricau existing in the tr will swal'ow poisons in even the fierce competition then slave let it impose remarket, greater quantities, for he will not form until but then it. let Baber up because a Legislative body to the re on t Lastly as Impowes higher duties on liquors as citizen able to intoo deceit being even prohibits their public sale. hale of the the dooii, atmosphere Personally I am opposed to the listen to the and oulear vun.uular liquor traffic but am equally oppts of the drunkard, that vouY. tidy ed to the traffic in what we eat anil wear as in what we drink. I hate apply to innocent children except all fake mearures and tfm one in in a few eases in this state of ours with its unicr:l balot for the question is nothing else. Were the truth known, the ( itv Council pro- citizens is no otter ti an her croa-t- i. n. And men or women who bably raised the license, not with n reforming object, but for the through ignorance, or i"i!u,,ii(y sake of revenue without increasing which ever you please, sup; or' s taxation direct, knowing how a system which rc luces men and women to drunk-Misgamblers and Tne easily the people are fooled. fit to live only iii the are prostitutes statement that liquors are poison and responsible for most of the social hall uhico they ireafe. Yours for Justi e ti a vils in the world, is a very broad 0. E. Parsons. ne to cay the least since some of our very ab'est physicians declare that liquor has saved more lives The Drawback. In early than it has destroyed. Miss Pc There is one bail t these chic Chanticleer fu&h.o days wl en man was allowed effects. his o vn to males liquor, Miss Smart What's that? he drank tm pure stuff Miss Pert They won't be loft to i, and I do nr i cliovethat the con- yeans? girls. All the old hens wid c wire' half as bad eating them. sequences - JWertisiag Pates I uoiumn Inch F'Or ed 1 . Arthur ASSISTANT P. Ji - h Greeley FORMERLY COMMISSIONER CF PATENTS U. Stand I J FORTY N TEARS . IN S. , tin-abou- 1 v FEES REASONABLE 'AMD' EEST DVICE'ALWAYS GIVEN. RES VZ'I.r OF ALL INTERESTS EXCEPT THAT OF CLIENTS. BUSINESS' CONDUCTED UPON HIGHEST PROFESSIONAL PLANE W LUNDER PERSONAL SUPERVISION OF MR. GREELEY AND MR. MclNTifT.. INFORMATION AND'ADVICE FREELY f 12 11 500 inches 11 10 1000 inches 10 WASHINGTON. cents per line cents subsequent. ' W Reader, with heads, 7 cents 1st insertion; 5 cents subsequent. 7 10 1-- 2 h fi fa' A! Utgii State Press Association c.y hi! I EBasst'J f u FliE LATEST. Pi D. C. ft. i GIVEN. 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