OCR Text |
Show DAILY S Sun UTAH STATE JOURNAL, Ihe Home Circle er, from the fireside where our wife awaits us, comes all the purity, all the hope and all the courage with which we fight the battle of life. The man who is not thus Inspired, who labors not so much to secure the applause of the world as the solid and more precious approval of hla home, accomplishes little of good for others or of the honor for himself. Do not moan or repine over lost op portunlties. Nothing will bring them back. But you live, and life means PHILADELPHIA PHYSICIANS TRY other opportunities, and hence rather press forward with full purpose to lose NEW TREATMENT. no more jewels than should bedeck your crown. Patient Givan Colored Light Bath in Pavilion Eepeeially Prepared Nothing la easier to form than for the Purpose. habit. The first action breaks a path through an untrodden wilderness, the a What U called by phyelclana the next widens It, the third makes When a young trodden highway. was ruby ray treatment for smallpox tried at the Municipal hospital, says man or girl drops into slang for fun which borthe Philadelphia Public hedger. Di- or, still worse, uses a word Is on a ders these feeling of profanity rector Martin, accompanied by Chief rerecoil habit but the first time; Medical Inspector Culrns, had previtbe moves and restraint, presently conously Inspected an especially or Improper mode of structed pavilion In which the new unfortunate Is used without conscious prospeech treatment will be given. To test. of an evil habit is beware The roof of the pavilion resembles a to as form a good one. as Important hothouse, except that the glass Is of a ruby color. Instead of being clear. As we pen this column especially in Some medical authorities, according interest of wives and mothers let the to Director Martin, contend that the us a picture that noble woman draw Arruby rays have a curative effect. had the courage to witness and look rangements have been made to accommodate thirty patients in the pa- upon with pride while the bravest vilion. Director Martin saya that of men hadj business calling theta should the ruby rays prove to be all elsewhere. How can we picture ourthat la promised more pavilions will selves a more touching scene than the be built. Believers In the treatment one which drew forth from our Lord There aay that Its greatest virtue Is that it these words of tender love: oxldlxea the smallpox sore. The pa- stood by the cross of Jesus, His mothvilion Is built In the open air in order er, Mary, the wife of Cleophas, and that the sun's raya may strike it at all Mary Magdalene, and with them was St. John. Truly a sorrowful and lovtimes of the entire day. Patients uncovered. He alternately ing band the only ones who in the on their faces and backs at given In- hour of shame dared to show their tervals. Should Director Martin see close personal sympathy with the that the treatment is better than the Crucified. Only one man amongst antiseptic bath method he will have them but there were three women Women oftentimes surpass pavilions with walls, roof and floor of there. men in courage, and they did on this ruby glasa erected on the new Municoccasion. St. Thomas had once said, ipal hospital grounds In the the Thirty-tus also "Let go that we may die with hird ward. He also. In that event, Him. But he did not go. St. Peter will conduct a aeries of experiments avowed had that though he died with with electric light rays through ruby Lord the he would not deny Him but glass. Besides giving their attention to the we do not find him at the foot of the cross. But the three Marys are there. ruby ray pavilion, Director Martin and his aids Inspected the hospital If by the publication of the Home CirThere are only thirty smallpox pa- cle column we gain the friendship and tients under treatment there at pres- esteem of the queens of our homes ent The number, according to Di- we will have no fears of being forrector Martin, la the lowest known in saken In times of trouble. two years. He said that while nearly Woman has yet to learn the purifyall of them were In the convalescent state they would nevertheless be ing and blessed Influence she may gain given a chance to try the ruby ray and maintain over the Intellect and affections of the human mind. Though treatment. she may not teach from the portico, nor thunder from the forum. In her Have You a Cough? A dose of Ballard's Horehound Sy- secret retirement she may form and rup will relieve it Have you a cold? send forth the sages that shall govA dose of Herblne at bedtime and fre- ern and renovate the world. Though quent small doses of Horehound Sy- she many not gird herself for bloody rup during the day will remove it conflict, nor sound the trumpet of war, Try it for whooping cough, for asth- she man enwrap herself In the canol-p- y ma, for consumption, for bronchitis. of heaven, and send the thrill of Mrs. Joe McGrath, S27 East First benevolence a thousand through street, Hutchinson, Kan writes: youthful hearts. Though she may not have used Ballards Horehound Syrup enter the list In legal collision, nor in my family for S years, and And it sharpen her Intellect amid the pasthe best and most palatable medicine sion and conflict of men, she may I ever used." 25c, 60c and 1. Sold teach the law of and hush kindness, Jy Geo. F. Cave, druggist up the discords and conflicts of life. Though she may not be clothed as the SUBJECT FOR CARICATURIST. Had I the knack of Caran d'Ache, embassador of heaven, nor the minor one of Punch's young men, I would ister at the altar of God, as a secret of mercy she may teach Hla make a fortune out of Camille Pelle-ta- n, angel will; and cause to aacend the humminister of marine, writes the ble. but most accepted sacrifice. Paris of London Let the young mothers at the family fireside endeavor to instill in the tender minds Intrusted to their care the gospel of peace and the evil of war. Better mothering would help to restore this country that is hastening away from its first honored principles. Our Pilgrim mothers did not spend their time in idle decoration of themselves and their homes, but helped their husbands to develop a new coun try and establish homes on the rock of solid worth. It Is Just as Important for the wives today to stand loyally by their husbands, and encourage and help them to earn and save and rise above the hindering things that bring bankruptcy and disgrace in their train. It has been said that thous ands of men would today be In the poor house were It not for their wives. And that other thousand are there because of their wives. Which horn of this dilemma would you choose? Will you train yourselves Into Intelligent, managing, capable women, or will you choose those lighter accomplishments that add nothing to your stature as a woman and win no love that will last when your pilgrim here Is over? There Is no kind of pleasure so enduring as that we find In doing our duty. FOURTH OF JULY. We are soon to celebrate the great est of our national holidays, the birth day of our nation. Arrayed in all the beauties of the year the Fourth of July will soon visit us. Green fields 1 the correspondent There Is no better subject for the caricaturist's pencil in all France. From my corner In one of the galleries of the Palalr Bourbon I have been amusing myself with watching the minister as he shambles about In the open space between the tribune and the benches, 'ills hair Is a thick tangled white bush. He is untidy and slovenly as Dr. Samuel Johnson, to whom In some of his movements he suggests a whimsically odd resemblance. With a great red hand on his hip, and with the other lastly stroking his chin, the minister lounges about In his baggy, crumpled breeches, and too unhrushed capacious, News. frock coat. The deputies of the center and right would cheerfully consign his excellency to a warmer place than Jerlco. Their eyes flash Irritation and scorn upon him. His excellency, stroking his chin, surveys them placidly, leisurely, curiously, as he would Mr. Rostock's menagerie in the Trocadero. Then he shambles off for his pipe and his drink. None but Prime Minister Combes can match him In calm Indifference to his friend the enemy. In all ages woman has been the source of all that is pure, unselfish and heroic In the spirit and life of man. It was for love that Antony lost a world. It was for love that Jacob worked seven long years, and for seven more. What muat have been his emotions when on the morning of the eighth year he awoke and found the homely, scrawny, Leah, Instead of the lovely and beautiful presence of his beloved Rachel. Poetry and fiction are based upon woman's love, and the movements of history are mainly due to the sentiments or ambitions she has inspired. There Is no aspiration which any man entertains, no achieve-- ! ment he seeks to accomplish, no great I j ! ' and a ripening harvest proclaim It, a bright sun cheers It and the hearts of freemen bid It welcome. From the lisping babe in the cradle to the aged warrior whose gray hairs are fast sinking In the western horlxon of life, every voice will that day be turned to the accents of liberty, Washington, country. The American constitution is the purchase of Amer lean valor. It Is the rich prise that rewards the toll of eight years of war and blood. The constitution is the great memorial of the deeds of our ancestors. On the pillar and on the arches of that dome their names are written and their achievements recorded. While that lasts It will carry down the record to future ages. Great Britain had carried the fame of her arms far and wide. She had reached her arms across the eastern continent; had humbled France and Spain and given laws on the banks of the Ganges. A few scattered colonists did not rise up to contend with such a nation for mere renown. They had a nobler object, and in pursuit of that object they manifested a courage, constancy and union that deserves to be celebrated not only by every reader of the Home Circle column, but by every poet and historian while language lasts. It Is fitting as our nation's natal day again approaches that mothers should present their mothers with a word painting of the little ship Mayflower. It was in the cabin of this little craft that the charter was established as the rule which would govern the Pilgrims upon their landing upon the bleak and desolate shore of Massachusetts, was the germ of our constitution, was the seed which, though cast in a rooky and forbidding soil, has grown and flourished until it has become a tree whose branches and shade have overspread this continent, whose fruits are Bulled by the eager hands of the patriotic all over the world, that they may be planted in other souls and bear fruit In other climes. Let us look forward with happy anticipation to the dawning of Fourth of July morning and teach our children to propery observe the day. GREAT PAPERS COMMENT ON MILITARY RULE IN C0L0RAC0 (Omaha Dally News.) Upon the eve of that day when and editors and preacher and teachers will talk of the founding In the new world of a new kind of human liberty, the great constitution, which was built of the very flesh and blood of the colonists, beginning in 1774. Is being sorely tried in Colooaa-to- rs the preamble, lows: which reads as fol- SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1904. Our Big June Sale ' BUT WE CAN STILL GIVE YOU The Best Wees and Goods JzL C M I in the City by the bonds of brotherly love. In Colorado, Instead of this perfect union and accord, there are three great organisations made up largely of men of who have delegated nlne,-tent- i hs The Overland Route their personal and property rights to some executive committee; there is a union composed of dollar-meand there Is a secret society called Citizens' alliance. Each one of these three Is disregarding humaq liberty In tak ing the enforcement of law and order out of the bands of the properly con stltuted authorities. To establish Justice Justice can only be established by the willing obedience .of a loyal people to the wise rulings of upright courts. Yet, in Colorado we find some and labor union judges, judges, others corporation Judges." We find Judicial officers compelled to resign their positions to which they have been elected by the votes of the people, because the Citizens' alliance, backed by a mob bearing ropes, threaten to string somebody up. To insure domestic tranquillity And we see the union miner of Colorado with cartridge belts and repeating rifles crouched behind boulders and doing battle with the represents tlves of the sovereign power of the state. To provide for the common de t PATRONS PF THE Union Pacific Rairoad are assured that all human Ingenuity has been adopted to protect them against Hons of dolaccident MU- - n; lars have been Union -- fense And In Colorado we see the militia, recruits from the black-leg- s and thugs of the slums, captained by a man who has openly sympathized with one class In the state and who has declared his Intentions to run another class out of the state of Colorado. To promote the general welfare And we see a great labor union, whose members were enjoying the most peaceful and pleasant relations with their employers, strike against those Innocent employers, causing thousands of dollars loss, In order to some other empunish and coerce ployers who are supposed to be maltreating their employes. And secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity" And we see the mine owners and the Citizens alliance drive men from their families and from the homes which they have bought and paid for; order them to never return to the state of Colorado, of which state they are voters and citizens, tax payers and property owners; in which state they have built their homes and where they have paid for the building of schools and employment of teachers in order that their children may become citizens of Colorado. And who shall be blamed? Let not union labor deny that the bullet and the bomb have been employed on that side of the controversy. Let not the mine owners deny that they have placed the rifle In the hands of hired assassins, that they have cor- rupted the legislature and that their bribes have thwarted the popular will as expressed at the ballot box. Let not the Citizens alliance deny that behind its smug and pharlsacal (Continued on Page 7.) It Is Up to the Doctor. lady wrote us from Winchester, Va., that she had been under a doctor's care for four years for dyspepsia. The pain, which appeared to center under the left shoulder blade, was so severe at times that she could neither eat nor sleep. She had lost faith In her home doctor and asked us to send her a sample of Dr. Gunn's improved liver pills, which had been recommended to her. We sent her two pills; in a few days she sent for a box. Now she A writes that the pain under her shoulthe people of the United der has left her entirely, she enjoys States, In order to form a more per- her meals and she never sleeps less fect union, establish justice. Insure than eight hours every night and this domestic tranquillity, provide for the has all come about in two weeks, and cost her 50 cents for two boxes of pills. common defense, promote the general She says the doctor charged her 150, welfare and secure the blessing of and that she told him he had better liberty to ourselves and our posterity, take the $50 and invest It all In Dr. rado. do ordain nnd establish this constituGunn's Improved Liver Pills and The republican form df governtion for the United States of Amerbuild up his practice. Sold by drugment. the virtue of democracy, are on ica." for 25c per box. Anyone having trial The great cornerstone of AmerIn order to form a more perfect gists bilious spells or sick headdyspepsia, ican liberty la the constitution, and union" a speedy cure by the use ache canget the essence and aim of the constituThe writers of these words contemof these pills. For sale by the Wallace tion was embodied by Its authors in plated a nation living In sweet har- - Drug company. We. Over Is LMUJu. spent by the Railroad Com- Pacific pany In the of its equip line is renown trains C I II Rwrw mporovement This ment 1 ed for thelr and. its fast arrival on time, and the general superiority of its service. TJnion.RVNI Faoiflo Three trains daUy to the East the fastest trains arriving many hours ahead of all competitors. Full information cheerfully furnished on application to 0. H. CORSE. riDC TWO GOOD TIMES FOR YOU U A good time to leave Salt Lake City for St Louis at 2:15 p. m., when the Burlington routes dally through sleeper leaves. No hasty breakfasting; no hurried packing: no running to catch early morning cars. Is St A good time to arrive in Louis is at 7:19 a. m., when the Burlington routes dally through sleeper gets there. Streets not so congested; hotels not so full; places not so hard to find. Drop me a postal and I will write you all about it Ticket Office, 79 W. 8s con d 8outh R. F. NE8LEN, General Agent, 8alt Laks City. St DC Going East? IT WILL PAY YOU TO 8ECURE COMPLETE INFORMATION ABOUT THE NEW SERVICE Union Pacific and Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Line INFORMATION IN REGARD TO RATE8, STOP-OVERWILL BE GLADLY FURNISHED. ETC, C. S. WILLIAMS, 106 West Second South St, Satisfactory Tailoring S, Commercial Agent, Salt Lake City, Utah at Satisfactory Prices. Th la exactly why ws do thfl Tailoring Basin of ogd Anderson 282 Twenty-Fift- h Street, Ogde Vtah. |