OCR Text |
Show Hi - MU - w If I. miw .f AS THEY ARE TOLD. PRACTICAL The Proper Care of the Body For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have AVigetable Prcparationfor Always Bought As- similating the Food andRegula-Un- g the Stomachs and Bowels of Bears the Signature of Promotes Digesllon.Cheerfuf-nes- s and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morpliine norhncral. Not Narcotic. jouiswuELPtrcmi JAmyJiUSeU- jflx Souta AatSm ' efg 1 WinmSMd- .iitsr rhrvm b, Use Ape fed Remedy for Cons ti nation , Tour Stomach, Diarrhoea WormsConvulsions .Feverish- For Over ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of I Thirty Years ft NEW YORK. 'Tr-WT- The Supreme Need of the Tuberculosis Patient. In the Journal of the American Medical Association Dr, Norman Bridge calls atiertion to the fact that the tuberculosis mortality has beeu reduced in the last thirty years from 14.25 to 10 per cent of all deaths. These results are not accidental, but are clearly. due to the Increased Knowledge of the best nut hods of treating this disease. In order to point out .the. best course he calls attention in the following words to some common errors still prevailing: "Men grow fixed In their Ideas; they come to regard their notions as immutable, and so are alow to discover and to change. It is somehow easier for ns to think that quinine or cod liver oil," creosote or a change of climate; some inhalation of drugs or a is good for tuberculosis, than it Is to understand that the great first purpose of all' treatment is to increase the physiologic power of the patient to resist the disease' and to destroy or circumscribe its cause within his own body. The sober fact confronts us that the one supreme need Is for more power in the afflicted body to restrict or destroy the tuberculosis process. For our present guidance this truth is so vital that It takes rank with a confession of faith In religion. We have given our patients some drug, and have neglected the half dozen measures whose tendency Is to Increase the power of the patient. Thus we have often thrown away the great resources of rest,, fresh air, outdoor life, changes in surroundings, and a systematic: effort ot Increase the nutritive forces the body. "There is no objection to the tonic medicines, always provided they are understood to be minor and subsidiary things, never of great value, and to be used only as aids to the general measures, referred to. To give drugs; while, the patient is allowed to go in an unhygienic course ot life without advice or correction, is an error awful in its results. "Every one of these patients should be constantly supplied with outdoor atmosphere in such abundance that every successive inspiration brings a fresh dose of air to the Jungs, and none' from previous expiration. Every one should have long hours of rest If feverish, the rest recumbent should be almost or quite constant, for exercise increases the fever. The digestive powers should be made to do their best, under the most careful supervision, toward improving the nutrition and possibly also the resisting power of the patient Patients have been allowed to stay Indoors without proper ventilation, and breathe a' poisoned house-ai- r s of the time. We have subscribed to the popular untruth as pitiful as it Is groundless that patients in a gentle current of air called a draught are in danger of colds and other harm, and so we have kept them breathing over and over again their contaminated air. The truth is, one never takes cold In any draught, even a wind, lfiiis body and head are kept warm by clothing. The advice of the profession ought to be to keep In a draught, never out of it; only it would lessen the business of the physicians while it would be of incalculable benefit to the people. . A consumptives body should always be well and equably clothed, and should never be hampered or restricted by garments. Snug corsets and conventional gowns are an absurdity for the tuberculosis woman; worn as they are by most such women, they frequently tip the scales In favor of death rather than recovery. anti-toxi- n v IJT , Compare Vitos with other cereals and you will instantly recognize PUlsbury i PILLSBURY ! PURITY' In the rich, white color ol which is actually the "Meat of the Wheat. It is the white heart of the wheat kernel, sterilized. Nothing added: , mnihing token away. Try this Common Sense Breakfast Food aricP yoirOPffl never change H Is HEALTHFUL-SUBSTANTIAL-ECONOMI- PACKAGE MAKES 12 POUNDS COOKED -- See the Economy nice 29 CENTS. Aik Tour Croat y A TILLSBU AY WASHBUR.N FLOUR. MIT,:. CO, Ltd, Minneapolis. Mins. -- three-quarter- FOR YOUR BAD DEBTS S-GAS-II NOTES AND ACCOUNTS, WE CAN GET IT! No matter bow large or old they are, or in what town, city, state or territory. If we did not know we could collect bills, we would not be paying out money to advertise. This business I no side issue with us. We do not sell real estate write insurance, or loan money, but we collect Bad Debts, regard less of lodge, politics or religion. Like hundreds of satitied clients that are continually talking for ns, this ad is sure to bring many claims to us for collection, and we are just as sure to collect these claims and make money in commissions t hereon. Why not list your claims today? We reoently collected $124 for Clark Bros., of Pleasant Grove. It was bard work, but we got it. No Specific Medicine for Tuberculosis. on the Prevention of the Charity Organization Society of New York, in its annual report recently Issued published the following resolution: There is no specific "Whereas, medicine for this disease (consumpcure, tion) known, and the and specifics, and special methods of treatment widely advertised in the daily papers are, in the opinion of the committee, without special valuq, and do not at all Justify the extravagant claims made for them, and serve chiefly to enrich the promoters at the expense of the poor and often ignorant or credulous consumptives; therefore, Resolved, That a public announce ment be made that it is the unanimous opinion of the members of this committee that there exists no specific medicine for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, and that no cure can be expected from any kind of medicine or method except the regularly accepted treatment, which relies mainly upon pure air and nourishing food. Dr. S. A. Knopf states very emphatically that consumption is cured "simply and solely by the Judicious use of Gods fresh, pure air, sunshine, plenty of good water, Inside and outside, and good food.. remNevertheless, new specific edies for this disease are constantly being exploited. A Paris physician Is now advocating Injections, of sea water into the tissues as a cure for An American doctor la tuberculosis. also experimenting with a compound of raw vegetable Juices in connection with othef diet. , Both of these remedies, however, have yet to bp horoughly tested. The Committee of Tuberculosis SCIENTIFIC COLLECTORS BANK COMMERCIAL NATIONAL TOP FLOOR OF BAD DEBTS. BLDG, SALT LAKE CITY. Some People Dont Like FRANCIS G. LVKE. General Manager. V. PRICE. TO CURE THE GRIP (' IN ONE DAY IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE to a dealer I wont .ell BACK. Antl-Ctrlpl- "HAS NO EtfJAt, FORHtSDACBE - r HALLS nv & - Nelden-Judso- n IF IT DON'T CURE, Cali for your MONEY It. w. M-- XL, Manufacturer, Mo. y, - Hpringfleld, Diemer, AND CANKER worn THE MOUTH, THROAT. STOMACH AND IOWILS.... AND NEURALGIA. who wont Ctuarnntre N DIPHTHERIA REMEDY EVER FAILS won BALE AND BY ALL DRUQBISTS BSNERAL TORSE....... Salt lake City, Utah. Drug Co., Benoral Agents. WE WILL SHIP TO YOU On approval, anything you request by mall. We have everything in Watches, Jewelry end Silverware Latest styles and guaranteed makes only. SALT LAKE CITY Q. C. HUNTING, Superintendent Established Great Western Iron and Metal Co. viiym MAINS Ilf CORPORATOR Paid up eapital 925 OUQ. Wholesale and RetaiL We pay highest prices for Scrap Iron, Copper, Brass, Lead. Rags. Rubber. Bottles. Hides, Pelts, etc. Bell Pbone felt a Independent 1&2L Hoe. 330 to 340 South First West Street) SALT LARK CITY, CTAE REASONABLE PRICES STORES IN .ALT LAKE AND DENVER When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. i HYGIENE 1 In Summer Emergencies. One of the most serious and frequent of summer emergencies is sunstroke. It might be termed "heatstroke," since it may occur in the in any place where the heat night,-oIs excessive. A "muggy day with a low comparatively temperature is morq. Injurious than a dry, hot atmosphere. Anything that causes a lowered vitality predisposes to sunstroke. Hence persons addicted to the use of alcohol are'ivry frequent victims. The Ingps-tio- n f large quantities of iced drinks predisposes to sunstroke. Constipation of the bowels l,s also a predisposing factor. A person jn perfect health can endure very, high temperature with-jlittldanger. It is only when the living machinery is doing imperfect work that sunstroke is possible. A sunstroke is usually preceded several days before by feelings of 111 health loss of appetite. indigestion,' constipation, scanty perspiration and indisposition to active exercise. The stopping of persiration is an ominous sign. When a person falls with sunstroke, he may complain of pain in the head or over the heart. The skin hot and dry, temperature very high 106 to 108 degrees, with disturbances of respiration and pulse, nausea and, vomiting, insensibility and stupor, weakness, or even complete paralysis. The patient should be removed at opce to a cool, shady place, his clothing loosened, ice applied to the head and spine, and cold water douches given; a cold bath can be used, also cold anemas. A very simple and effective treatment is the shower pack, which Is given as follows: An ordinary mattress is covered with oilcloth, upon which the patient is placed, wrapped in a sheet,- and sprinkled with cold water as often as the sheet dries by evaporation. Ice may be applied to the head at the same time. To avoid sunstroke, see that the general: health is good. Discard alcoholics and narcotics, use iced drinks sparingly, especially when warm, keep the bowels- active, and use an abundance of fresh fruit. A cold sponge bath in the morning, adding a little salt to the water, followed by a vigorous .rubbing, is a simple and valuable stimulus to the healthy action of the skin. Tpe treatment for sunstroke is cold applications, and' practically nothing . but cold. 1 1 Beds and Bedding. There are still bedrooms wherein can be found reminders of a bygone age In the form of unwieldy bedsteads with their monster bedposts and side parts almost as large as bridge timber, and which afford convenient camping grounds for vermin. Such bedsteads usually have for their Jm mediate companions some of the old fashioned bed springs, which appeal very crude when compared with the elegant and simple springs now found homes. in all The simple iron bedstead, with its woven wire springs, provided with some of the later contrivances to prevent sagging in the center, represents the highest form of evolution in the line of beds. It is comfortable, readr ily moved about, easily stowed away, and, best of all, affords no lodging places for either dust or vermin. It can be readily cleansed If for any cause it has been exposed ot dangerous infective disease, and for its very simplicity and neatness is a suitable ornament for any bedroom. The passing away of the good old days has deprived us of much that was substartial and real, which has been replaced by the shallow and artificial, but it is certainly a matter for congratulation that modern civiliza tion has emancipated us from the pestilential feather bed- that used to be passed down from generation to gen eration as a cherished heirloom. The quilts which were recovered again and again at "quilting bees. gradually became liable to the same objection as the feather bed. It should always be remembered that bed clothes are not warm in proportion to their weight, but just to the extent that they have the ability to retain heat, and that this depends more upon the looseness of their texture than upon the amount of cotton that can be matted together and covered again and again with new quilting. to AJl bedclothes, without regard the material from which they are constructed, should every week spjad a few hours becoming acquainted with sunlight, and thereby have the additional advantage of thoroughgoing outdoor ventilation. WOMENS Native Servants in India Interpret Orders Much Too Literally. .Native servants in India have the generally desirable thought sometimes inconvenient virtue of the Chinese doing exactly as they .are told. The trouble is that they seldom use Judg ment.,, Roberts, during a campaign in India, had ordered his man to prepare his bath at a ei rtain hour. One day a fierce engagement was going on but the servant made his way through a storm of bullets and appeared at the commanders side. Sahib, said he, your bath is ready." . Even a better story conies from an unknown soldier, who was awakened one morning by feeling the servant of a brother officer pulling at his foot "Sahib," whispered tho nian--"- sa hlb, what am I to do? My master 6 told me to wake him at half-pas- t but he did rot m to bed till 7." Ird dlrtj- - shirt Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydl E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. . Ilow many women do yon know who are perfectly well and strong? IVe hear every day the same story over anil I do not feel well over again. so tired, all the time ; I an Good Wishes, , woman once sat at a boarding-houstable beside a re served and awkward hoy country whom she delighted to tease When she left she asked him to write In her The poem which autograph album. John G. Whittier wrote there, and ' which has Just been published for the first time, stands as a warning to other ypung ladies that she who laughs first at a seemingly dumb countryman may be herself laughed r. The quaint con many years later. eluding stanza is: "Thy life may nothing vex It, Thy years be not a few, And at thy final exit May the devil miss his due. Boston Transcript young e Came Near Finding Out. Among examples of American humor recently given In the Nineteenth Century and After is a story which a bright ornament of the English bench is said to have told more than once. A speaker in a Western town had started out to show that there might be great differences between nationHe had said, al and loral reputation. "A man can't always tell what his neighbors think of him, when he was interrupted by one of his hearers. near knowing "I came mighty lonce, said the man, with a reminiscent look, "but the jury disagreed. .. i , JJ More than likely you speak the satns words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. The cause may be easily traced to some derangement of the fe-- ' male organs which manifests itself in . depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere or do anything, backache, , bearing-dow- n pains, flatulency, nerv- ousness, sleeplessness, leucorrhoea. These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of suffering or a serious operation is tho inevitable result Tbe for all these symptoms is Lydia E. l'inkham's Veg , etable Compound. Miss Kate McDonald, of Woodbridge, y N J writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I think that s imian naturally dislikes to make her troubles known to the public, 'but restored health bos meant so much to me that I cannot help from telling mine for the sake of other suffering women. For a long tune I suffered untold agony with a uterine' trouble and irregularities, which made me a physical wreck, and no one thought I would recover, but Lydia E. link- hams Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me, and made me well and strong, and I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women What a splendid medicine it is. " If you are ill, dont hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. linkham's Vegeta- - ble Compound at once, and write to Mrs linkhain, Lynn, M ass. ,.for special advice -- it ia free and always helpfuL t Find New Rubber Tree. It is reported that a new kind ol t rubber tree has been discovered In the Island of Madagascar, said to contain much caoutchouc Juice, which coagulates upon being boiled, producing 89 per cent caoutchouc of good quality. The tree Is called "Pirahazo. by the natives and attains a height of over forty feet It is found in groves in the northwestern part of the, island . near Amboyo an dis marketed in This caoutchouc has slight mineral ingredients. ' , ' Dont Get Wet) , ' I TOWERS SLICKERS , will keep you dry as nothing else will, because they are the product of j -- the best materials, and seventy years experience in manufacturing. " " Boo-lola- NO TONGUE CAN TELL How ' Buffered with Itching and Bleeding Eczema Until Cured, by Cutlcura. 'lOWDjj a. j. tower CO., . vfyfBKjUQ TOWeaCANAJHAROO. Toronto. Cla. , lOi Boston, U.S.A. ' Ml'' I W. L. Douglas 3Jo&3?SHOESSf. No tongue can tell how I buffered for five years with a terribly painful, W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. itching, and bleeding eczema, toy body and face being covered with sores. Never In my life did I experience such awful suffering, and I longed for death, which I felt was near. I had tried doctors and medicines without success, but my mother Insisted that I try Cutlcura. I felt better after the first bath with Cutlcura Soap and one application of Cutlcura Ointment, and was soon entirely well. (Signed) Mrs. A. Etson, Belle- VJ vue, Mich. Thousands of miles of southwestern Alaska are covered with primeval forests of yellow cedar and white spruce and balsam fir. KutabUshed Jnly 6, 1878. W.L.DOUCLA&MAKFS AHD SELL 3 MORE MEN'S $ 3.60 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER , St Jacobs Oil for many, many years has cured and continues to cure RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA LUMBAGO BACKACHE SCIATICA , a SUFFERINGTHESUREPENALTY Whittier's A time-honore- d What He Wanted. Most people would rather take a few bottles of some drug periodically. In hope of thereby counteracting the bad ; effects of their unhygienic habits, ,than reform their course of life The Mothers and I life healthfully. Journal contains a suggestion which such would do well to ponder: A certain dissipated youth, on con suiting a noted physician in Paris, wqs given a set of hygienic rules, and assured of a speedy cure. But that was not at all to the young gentlemans liking. Any fool, he said, would know hed get well if he did that, bpt thats not what I came for. want medicine. He wanted to button nis coat over NEGLECT SPRAINS BRUISES SORENESS STIFFNESS FROST-BITE- nnn tin V UjUUU I to anyone wh can disprove this statement REWARD W, L. Dougla $.1.50 shoes have by their excellent atyle, easy fitting; and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest tale of any $3.5 hoe In the world. They are Juet ae good aa those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 the only difference Is the price. If I could take you Into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the ianreet In the world under one roof making men fine hoe, and how you the care with inch every pair of Dougla shoe U made, you would realiz why W. L. Douuja $3.50 shoe are the best flhoes produced In the world. If I could show vou the difference between tt4 shoes made In mv factory and those of othei makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market today. Douffta Strong Mato Shooa for A Mon , $2, BO SV.OOa Boys' School Dross Shoos,$2,BO, $2, $1.7 6, 1.50 CAUTION.iuRit upon baring W.L.i)oug' las (lbH8. Jake no substitute. Iso ue genuine IV. La without his name and price stamped on bottom. WATTED, A shoe dealer In every town where TV. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line ol samples sent free for inflection upon request. Fast Color E yeiets used; tney will not wear brassf. Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style TV. In DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maas. S Price, 25c. and 50c, UTAH etDOlbC-M- rc, COVON FELf MATT Of 55. '.03, Thlsisthe Maura you read about. Made Id Are tifferent grade. Prioes from $SUU to $16 00 Ask furnTtnre for IL If genoiue, our Trade tour ia on tbe dealer tag. Utah Bedding & Manufacturing Co. Utah Salt lAki Ct. FOR WOMEN troubled with fils peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously tno? cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease genus, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness. Paxtine U m powder form to be dissolved in- pare water, and is far more cleansing, healing, eemuudal and economical than liquid antiseptics for alt TOILET AND WOMENS SPECIAL USES ' For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. VL Thi Paxton Company Boston, .O i ASSAYER'AND CHEMIST, v Bpeclmen prices: Gold. Bllrer. Lead, $) ; Gold, ftlk Ter. 75c; Gold.Soct Zlne-oCopper Si. ('Vnidetdta. Balling envelopes and full price list sent on appitew tion. Control and Umpire work solicited. Lesd vilie Colo. Keference. Carbonate National Bank. |