OCR Text |
Show UTAH DAILY PAGE TWO. STATE JOURNAL, THURSDAY, APRIL SO, 1905. PRICE CONCESSIONS EXTRAORDINARY FOR EASTER Pi F gathered hundreds of just gU saving opportunities that we ever offered. i9 SILK SHIRT WAIST SUITS The Silk Shirt Waist Suit can be worn on any occasion. It is always dainty, so cool and airy and stylish. Nothing nicer for spring. We make a wonderful special of a d Chiffon Yaffeta Suit, perfectly tailored. Plaited waist, extra full skirt, $15 00 value for .. A wool Batiste in all the newest shades, can be laundered. lX.CJU Full plaited I I qo yO waist, newest model of skirt, for We are also showing an extreme line of Kedingote styles. and plain color, at $10.00, with one? 12.50, $15.00. At $15 at ; $5.98 Skirts, wide and airy, flounces of beautiful lace and embroidery, full under dust ruffles, starting at $1.25 and on up to $8.50. Corset Covers in endless variety of styles, starting at 50c and on up to $5.00. Handsome line of Gowns and Drawers. 2429-2431-24- 33 Washington Ave. S. J. 98c Neckwear, Easter Styles New silk ties atExquisite pieces cheaply priced. Pique Stocks, Linen Turnovers. Cuff and tached, Swiss and Collar sets in lace, swiss and linen. Many new tab effects. In fact we never had such a complete assortment at such small prices, starting at 19c, and up. you The t 7l! . you If you have not yet spent an hour in our Silk and Dress Good partment we want you to. then draw your own cuuvluHi.ni wb you find the greatest line and newest ideas in Silks and Dress Uooda Easter Handkerchiefs Prettiest assortment of fine linen and hand-embmidm- -d and real lace Handkerchiefs we have ever shown. What is prettier for In Easter greeting? Easter Veilings at isci Easter Hosiery Handsome lace and open-wor- k Hosiery, in black and full range of colors: in fact we can furnish you with any design of pattern yon may want. Lace Hose starting at 25c and up. The strongest line of childrens 12jc Hosiery in the city. nlgl whi Easter Hand Bags ed & 'v Easter Veilings, all new designs and in all colors, starting yard and on up to the handsome. Drape Veils. All our old reliable brands are now in, in all their spring beauty. All shades, all qualities. We are making an Easter offering to our shoppers this week of our staudard $1.25 Kid Glove for Easter sale .. BURT lllatcrialg ni!t Silks and Dress Goods Easter Gloves hand-embroider- Itcoi $75.00 full-weig- ht High Class Easter Muslins fully know how good these Suits aU' up to We believe there is no more complete line of Shirt Waists in the west. Dainty styles and exclusiveness and perfect fitters are here. A Jap Silk Waist, in white, full plaited, Valencennes lace trimmed, at $1.98. Other swell styles at $2.50 up to $7.50. A Sheer Lawn Waist, dainty tucks and hemstitched, at 69c. A Sheer Lawn Waist, lace and embroidery shaped yokes, hemstitched bands, extra special at 79c. A Sheer Lawn Waist, full plaited, embroidery trimmed, hemstitched tucks, at 98c. It is pleasure fur us to bIiow through our great line of Waists from the above prices to $10.00 each. .' To spend day in this stock and not put the same suit on twice. here are the latest New York and Paris models, and alone, here, Bain Coats planned after the host models of Paris. These are the useful coats. Besides having an absolutely rainproof coat, you have a general utility garment for all occasions, in Mohair, Tailor Cloths and Silks, at $12.50, $14.00. $15.00, $17.50 to $40.00 COVERT JACKETS, smart style. We have a special Faster bargain ' coat, offered by others as a special at 6.50. Our Easter special is $4 98. Others at $10.00 and up. Beautiful line of Silk Coats in many new models at $10.00, $12.50, $15.00, and to the most exclusive designs of the season. Never has such a beautiful line of Silk Petticoats been shown in Ogden, and you can match any suit at any price you want. We make an Easter special of handsome Taffeta Skirts of the best silk, four section flounce, extra wide, all colors, put on sale Tjffll Jacket Suits, new blouse and court styles, in Silk, Voils, Mohairs and li.rht Wools. You can a Easter Shirt Waists Petticoats tPir Mohair Shirt Waist Suits that could not be made more stylish, in fancy Fashionable Rain Coats Silk call Easter Hand Bags in all their newness; styles new to this season, and in all colors and styles of leather, starting at 29c and on up to $g, BROTHERS mi 2429-2431-24- 33 Ave. Washington l S f zed T1 Ijor FULL REPORT OF T CAMP WAS IN POOREST SANITARY CONDITION. Death Rata Haavy This Month, Dua Moat Caaaa to Pleura Pneumonia, from Various Cauaes. (By A. H. Heppner, M. D., Late - in As-alat- Surgeon, U. S. N., In the Reno (Nev.) Journal.) My flrat step upon arriving at Tono-pa- h waa to meet the physicians anil inform them of the purpose of my visit. There are about twelve of them who. with one or two exceptions, are of a quality which will favorably com- pare with the same number In any They are up to metropolitan city. date in theory and practice. Among them, however, there are one or two. according to Information I received from the others In a bodv, who must be held resimnsibW for the fact that the public at large became Impressed with the Idea that there waa an epidemic of a mysterious kind constantly Increasing In virulence, and for which thev were unable to either find a diagnosis or a remedy. This same body of men told me of operations that had In connection with been performed this disease which had neen uneuc . ressful. also of having stated to the the public at large that the key to cerwhole trouble was to be found In tain conditions appertaining to the bundling of meat at the slaughterhouse and In cold storage. It also apjiears that It was an omission on the part of the leading citizens of not getting together and frank'y admitting to the outside world Just what the trouble was. I was very cordially received by all the physicians, and was shown by them about twenty rases presenting the various stages of the disease, winding up with one autopsy. The first symptoms of this trouble Is a decided chill, the temperature goes up to 104 or 105, some pain at the bnfe of the lung, but not to the degree nor In the locality In which you would expect to get It In lobar pneumonia. There Is great difficulty In breathing from the first, with a tense fast pulse, TEA Good tea and tea are quite different; both grow on the same bush. Wiii Couquiiy, fr &U! " I K "wlnla IJlkiaA Look, A SthiDiug ft A bright anxioua pinched features. veil expectoration, almost auggeatlng an arterial hemorrhage takes place, quite different again from some cases that show more the prune Juice character of expectoration. Some few canes have from this juncture on proceeded to convalescence in seven days. I spoke to two such patients myself. Others go from bad to worse, showing now- - the symptoms of pus poisoning, particularly affecting the nervous systems that drive and check the heart With a pulse of 120 and temperature of only 99 an engorgement of the entire return circulation, they become blue, profuse cold, clammy sweat gathering, they present to the average layman's eye the terrible picture of "black death." while In fact it Is ply the mechanical disturbances In the relation of the outgoing and returning blooil due to pus poison. Here, then, is the explanation of the enlarged black liver talked of so much. It enlarges from receiving more blood than It can send out. .Now, considering that Tonopah has a population of between 4.000 and 9.000, the difference between the two a tenacious yellow, greenish mass of liver would not simply show to be a at the Mlspah club. pus, in some cases of an inch thick. The pleura sack contained Tbe about one pint of liquid pus. working tissues of the lung were comshowing paratively little affected, signs of venous congestion, but no A condition very simsolidification. ilar waa found in the sac around the heart and Its cover, while the - heart muscle itself was coffee brown, thinned out, and the left cavity of the heart was filled with a large clot of blood. These are the classical signs and effects of pus poisoning, such as you are apt to get secondarily in any infectious disease. The kidneys were engorged and enlarged, still more so the liver, this organ being about three times its normal aixe, but on cross section showed no signs of abscess, pussy condition, not even the first stages of an inflammation, Indicating that tne enlargement was an acute one and more of a mechanical nature. During life this man had been a notorious Inebriate, as all the organs indicated, and he had been sick a week without calling a doctor. 1 learned It to be a fact that those figures being the floating element, and disease have invariconsidering the severity of the type of attacked byIn thisstate or lowered vitala disease as above described, and fur- ably been such as livfrom causes, various condi ity all the thermore considering tions to be mentioned below, the fol- ing In unsanitary surroundings, peolowing death rate, while In Itself per- ple who have no home, but lie around saloons, or in other inhaps l.trge. seems relatively light. The In miners who had worked hard offstances, following table, copied from the icial records, about which there can he all day, getting Into a perspiration, then going out into the cold night, no doubt: 2 deaths contracted a cold, followed from InfecDecember, 1504 with pus making organisms. January. 1905 ;.... 9 deaths tionEven the few of the better classes 3 deaths February, 1905 who died were, while living in better During January and February they surroundings, men who had worked had the typical dry winter weather in too hard, keeping late hours, employed Tonopah. while In March, when the in stores where sunlight and fresh air .ve;i t her heroines milder, there was are wanting. some rain and considerable thawing, What in a lower altitude, under the death rate Jumps up and we have proper surroundings, would sitnply the epidemic, resulting In seventeen have been a cold, In Tonopah turns In addition to these there Into the above described disease. deaths. were three deaths from operations and In looking around the town, from one from smallpox. Among these sev- one end to the other, carefully inspectenteen cases there was one case which ing all the surroundings, taking due came In deathly sick from a distance notice of the filth which naturally acof thirty miles and another died nine- cumulates where there Is no sewerty miles out of town, his body being age, and a dormant health department brought to Tonopah for burial. Now, I cannot help hut say that as a whole observe that the history and symp- eonilitioiis are no worse than I have toms In lioth cases were exactly like seen them In the tenement distrlets of those who die In the environments of New York city. Of course It will de Tonojiah pend uimn the point of view that you Among these Is another case who will take. A man used to the luxuries took sick at Goldfield, going to Tono- of life, living on dainties, would conThat people sider these conditions simply horrible, pah for treatment. should contract this trouble thirty and hut the ninn who Is training to acquire ninety inilea out on the desert. Isolated a fortune, three hundred miles away as they were, without the possibility from rivillxution, Is supposed to bring either of contagion or Inrectlon, makes along a constitution and a state of one seriously reflect whether all these mind that, after looking over Tonopah (insanity conditions of Tonopah have aa I found It, would say. This Is a more than an indirect bearing on the pretty fair town." If the garbage, which Is now being subject. During the sixteen days of April removed, and the vaults, which are there were twenty-on- e deaths, with all being cleansed of their contents, were tbe Indications of belter conditions for the source of this epidemic, you would the balance of this month. The nu be bound to have primarily disturbtnpsy which I witnessed left abso- ances of the digestive tract. There lutely iio doubt ns to the causes of would lie diarrhoea, typhoidal condl death. The covering of the lung, the tlons, with vomiting, headache and pleura, was found lo be covered with bilious disturbances, anil the enlarged low-gra- I de one-eigh- th They not only passive congestion, but perhaps an In- contemplate, but execute all such flammation. If there was anything in means as will cleanse the town. I do the theory of meat Infection you not believe that thla will have any would have the same thing. In my direct bearing upon the present dishumble opinion we are dealing with a ease, but will surely prove a blessing mixed Infection transmitted by the air during the coming summer In keeping Into the respiratory tracts, sometimes out' enteric diseases of all kinds. producing a condition more like the There are some sporadic cases of common lobar pneumonia, or In other In a. mild type, at smallpox, cases this severer form of pleuro- that the healthpresent officers are not properpneumonia as we find it now at an ly taking care of, nor are they atelevation of 6,200 feet, differing in the tempting an effective quarantine. Vacsymptoms and modified by various cination Is Indicated for every one gosecondary complications, according to ing into the camp. the virulency of the infection and Its During my Investigations I had the type. of meeting Dr. Garrett I pleasure During the middle of the day you Hogan of Los Angeles, Cal., who had would be uncomfortable wearing an practiced In the Montana mining At night and overcoat In Tonopah. for fifteen years, and had seen camps in the early morning It is extremely similar epidemics. He told me that chilly. There is an Immense amount thla epidemic at Tonopan snould be In a itself lung irritant, classified as a mild tyfre. He Is not of alkali dust. continuously stirred up oy vehicles. Interested in any way, being a visitor Take these things into consideration in Tonopah for the purpose of making as predisposing factors for lung trouto be published In sciThere is many a man who Investigations bles. He will occupy a entific journals. spends his night at the gambling table professorship In the medical college of Instead of being In bed. Another who Los this fall, and I know he drinks whisky by the quart after a ranks(Angeles a scientist as well as a as high day's exhausting work, Instead of eat- practical physician. ing & square meaL There are very I explained to him I was reporting few who wear clothing during the cold for the Journal, and he kindly offered durworn from that differing nights me over his signature, the following ing the warm day. There are many of his Intended paper for synopsis whose bed is the sidewalk, and who do not take a bath from one years end publication in the Journal: "The situation may be summed up to the other. Such, however, are the elements naturally to be found In a In a very few words. The disease la due to mining camp, and we should not won- essentially infecreand lowered staphylococci streptococci the at consequences, der sistance to disease. Inability to fight tion, invading the pleural cavity and off the enemies of life maks them an pericardium. Death occurs from sepeasy victim of the first attack of any ticaemia, or more strictly speaking, pleura-pneumon- disease producing organism. The treatment by the local doctors, who act In perfect unison. Is of as high a standard as their methods of Investigation and diagnosis. They have employed various kinds of serums, according to indications. Not relying on these latest methods, they have used Internally and externally everything that rould be suggested by the keenest theraputists, sni they have not lost more than 20 per cent of all cases, and could have lost less had they always been called at the outset and were belter equipped with hospitals and nurses. The trouble in now evidently growing less from day to day. and I say to those who contemplate going to Tonopah that If they go there In a robust stale of health, willing to live right, not dlsslpnte. to spend no more energy than what they can replace, who will not live In dugniits or overcrowded hotels, who will eat plain food and be out of doors most of their time, they are as safe there as they The would lie anywhere on earth. underfed and the overfed, the overworked and the aged, , should stay away. Don't blame the rnmp for the follv of men exposing themselves and lowering their vitality while they live there. Not a single rhlld has died, and only one woman during nil these months. The citizens of Tonopnh are now getting together, meeting every night anti-tox- ic ia, from heart failure .from Careful study of many cases convinced me that the lowered vitality. resulting from alcoholic excesses, poorly ventilated cabins, general unsanitary environment, etc was unquestionably responsible for the high death rate, through failure of the body to resist gerin Invasion. "Persons In good health and following good habits need have little fear of contracting this disease, tbe Infectiousness of which has been greatly exaggerated through Ignorance and fright." In accepting the commission of the Journal to goi to Tonopalf and repor Its condition, I knew I would be criticised In certnln quarters for placing before laymen a report that should be rendered to a medical Journal only and In precise scientific form. I herewith cheerfully accept this criticism as long as I may feel to have done some little good to somebody. I have nothing but praise and appreciation to express for the treatment and courtesies I received at the hands of the professional men of Tonopah, as well as to Dr. Lee. the state commissioner, who was with me during my investigations in the camp. raw oft PITIABLE POM i i Wt ibo Ni( lHei i I wet I API !iUt II 8T0RIE8 TOLD GLAND AT NEW Ilf EN- PI CONFERENCE. no pri Salaries of Many Methodist Range as Low Miniitwi be lx Ui $125 a Yoar. III NEW LONDON. April M.-stories of poverty among minion were told to the New England MS odist conference by Presiding Elder 1 I. Bartholomew of the NorwW die trlct, which includes til the H0 I churches In Connecticut east I Connectlrutjiver, five In church Mamsr 1 Rhode Island and two in said Bartholomew Mr. setts. Vnj report: Our constituency of the old uF and grows constantly smaller, the churches, of necessity, show church "Last year thirty-tw- o district x in the sixty-sithe or less in money for pastoral Mm of these are In charge two churches, so that pastor urn so poorly paid as would at Pl" nppn-Man- Nevertheless, during the ry year twelve pastors have ln from their charges 1400 or lens parsonages Including not aries, received only $200, and one r . 1 1185. "Of the small churches 8D0 tloned. eighteen are In emun which there is no other Protetnt nomination, and in I flee"n Romt there communities Catholic church. constants In these places we are .&rf for theJe,,??-.or- k responsible of all the people. perneed the preachers of stron communities ality ln the very sm we are paying pitifully onWf the To the man of 1114 dplrlt and genuine this facta here given make oppor m to be shunned, but 8 the to (unity always attracts of metal." Saved by Dy"8"!! c Sometimes a flaming by dynnmltlng a P'e can't cross. Som,J,e Mved lire u?ll hang nothing boj on so long, you Graf cup - wfe W dynamite wouldwr't '"'..j,wWrh kepj Calhoun, Go.. cough very aggravated her awake nights. could not help her King's New tlon, Coughs and her cough. gave Strictly facial cured her." Hairdressing, shampooing, La snd , ' i..nnhitia massage, manicuring and electric beau ty treatments. Edith Raise, 412 26th street. Bell 'phone, 23uiZ. 19 -- t,Mr took pr. .,c ctmsunP "htch eaj and nentlfl At or ll.N1, |