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Show T1JE MOUSING mi i 1 EXAMINF1!, E T TEM PE RANGE DEPARTMENT CONDUCTED BY W. C. MRS. CLAYTON COOL1DGE MISS LEOTA NEW LIGHT ON COA- - COLA. There has bean much diciwkn aa ,1-t'- c l. . . ni cocaine Is the drink advertise under the name oC Coca-ColThe ouupaujr manulactui lug thia beverage, haa beau very allusive of the writer of this article because ah said that if Coca-Colla made of coca and cola, aa It name would Indicate, it must cuuuin co calne, because cocaine Is ths active principle of the coca leaves Why the manufacturers should be so indignant over such a statement Is matter for wonder, when they sell a drink under such a auspicious name. However, the truth about the cocaine In Coca Cola has come to light. Some month ago the Coca Cola company entered autt againat tha United Staten government to recover money paid during the Spanlsb-Americawar aa a tax upon their product, which was Hated by the government nn a patent medicine subject to war tax. During the trial, the attorney for the company stated that Cora Cola ia a little leas than half sugar, the liquid in which it ia held in solution being wnier. In each glasu there were, he naid. about 1 to lfe hundgrain of caffeine, redth of n grain of cocaine, and grains of phosphoric arid, with flavor, f ing added, and with less than of 1 per cent of alcohol aa a preservative. So the company haa, through Ita attorney, admitted that there is a small quantity of cocaine In each glass of Coca Cola. Whether there to as little aa the attorney stated may be a matter of doubt with some people. After the great show of rlghleoua Indignation made by the manufacturers when It was hinted that cocaine might be hidden away in their product, their word aa the amallnaas of the quantity, when forced to tell, may well be regarded as uncertain. Another point to: the composition of some porprletary medicines Jiff era widely according to tho part of tbo country, or tho world, where they are to be sold. For Instance, In Australia, a ehrm-1of good standing reported finding over 40 per cent of alcohol in a preparation which in Massachusetts contained 88 per cent; and in North Dakota, with ita ntriet drug law, only 81 per cent wan found. It would seem that proprietary beverages also may differ aa aold In different stales. In some parts of tha Sou la, it ia said by n prominent paper of the drug trade. Coca Cola drinkers call It dope and In Tennessee some vary careful, reliable persons say that this drink haa certainly a very peculiar effect upon those who imbibe. Cases were followed up of boys and girls who drank it, and they seemed to be in an unnatural condition, and wanted it In increasing quantities. a. a S AYE YOU MONEY BECRAFT TWENTY-FOURT- H n STREET. In a Few Days WE WILL MOVE ' one-fourt- h one-hal- Into storea - Occupied by ThomasHorne Music Co. 2414 Washington Ave. Two Doors North of Boyle Furniture Co. LOOK OUT BARGAINS st -F- OR- WATSON FLYGARE HARDWARE CO. All will grant that cocaine la a dangerous drug, even ia small quantity, as it has such a capacity a disastrous craving. But is the other ingredient, caffeine, perfectly harmless? Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief chemist of the United Staten government, wrote recently of caffeine in headache remedies, aa follows: Caffeine (or thelne), the elks, loidal principle of coffee and tea and of other plantn, in a drug frequently used in headache remedies, and Ha effect an a drug upon the human aya-tela so pronounced aa to render Ita use in headache remedies a matter of the gravest importance. Even in tea and coffee Its effect is ao strong that many persona drinking them late at night will hiva their sleep disturbed, or often pass an entirely sleepless night. Dut when caffeine la separated from tea and eoffee, and urd si a separate drag, it exert a much more specific actiuii upon the system than when in natural combination. Caffeine ban a direct stimulating effect upon the nerves, the brain, and the spinal cord; Its general effect, wben used as a drag, ia to Induct nervousness with deranged digestion and Impaired health." Wolfe hat shown that three grains of caffeine will Inpair the quality of tho gastric Juice, wnlch may make clear Dr. Wileys reference to deranged digestion. The attorney for the Coca Cola company laid that each glass contained from 1 to 1 Vi grains of caffeine. Will not impaired digestion result from drinking Coca Cbls throughout a season? The attorney for the government in the suit refrred to declared that Coca Cola should be classified at a medicinal compound," dangerous which will "originate, engender, cultidesire for stimuthe vate .and inflame Mrs. lants, opiates and narcotics. Martha Wood Allen, M. D to The Union Signal. to-for- B (Bmnssupi&tBim Four times the light at half the cost does. If yon question it, question us. Were only too glad to giro information and good service along the lighting line. Thats why we are Thats what electric lighting , . "Those Liio Men" . EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL AT Commercial ElectricCompany 2279 WASH. AVE. PRONE 362. The Springfield Fire & Marine Ins. Co. of Springfield, Mass. A8SETT8, 16,936,261.05. CAPITAL, 2,0OO,000.DO. SURPLUS, 93,171,124.59. -- ! . . .Losses paid since 1849939,478,834.66 Among which are included: , : .......... I 5MSI Troy, N. Y r ' Portland, Ma., 1844 CUesco. 1171 Boston. 1171 Haverhill, Mass, f5,MS.OO JacksonvUla, Fli. 1801 Paterson, N. X. Baltimore, 1804 Rochester. M.T 1804 Taranto, Can.. 1804 IS?,.'? JHlI'lw 84,88.00 Lnn, Haa. 1888 Ban Frasdacc 2 .'!. WW7I48 1808 J. M. Forestall, AgL Robt.G. Agee, Mgr. Phohes2 8SS Of fee JUNE 1, RM7. 15 T. U. tall, iu i!i km.; rim. lih mu- (Miu;it''i.iiiu to lii. rfilvuMagi- of the busses Ij.i aii .ini :!i,-are iu.w endorsed, lii-auil u.asoru are up agsii.-a !vnh;um iu coiibinieiioa. They : liut they me dmuuiii iub am .ii i'Ii'-- . in ; .1 - t to j t hi Want Your n'; the eud lu the ui.Mitiuie Ihey have proieu miiv more Thai their union are aud reactionary. N. Y. COMMITTEE EDITORIAL CPU. GRANT AYE. AND II. SUNDAY, n:i'ti 1 H. ETA ii J 1 Electric Fans G ALL KINDS I CiN OGDEN, MABEL M. CHAR PIE KENNEDY MISS S. The mayor of W ich It a says : There is no saloon in operation in Wichita, and very little aelltug contrary to law." DUMB NEWSPAPERS. Here we have ninety counties In Kentucky without a saloon, towns prospering as never before because xuoney formerly spent for Uquor Is now expended in legitimate line of business. Homes that were formerly bare and desolate are now rejoicing In peace and comfort, end the merchants of these towns era doing twira their former business, and not a paper will publish the bare facta. We do not ask them to give arguments or reasons, but to give the facte and let the people draw their own deduct ions, but they are dumb aa oysters on these newa point a. . . .God's Kingdom can not advance further In this stats until satin, enthroned In the saloon, the distillery and the brewery, to driven out. a Clod give uu courage, wisdom, and grace to eease not day or night to work for thia great end." So writes Mrs. Frances B, Beauchamp la tha Kentucky White Ribbon. perss-verane- A BOOMERANG EVIL. The United Slates government makes as much out of tha rum t raffle aa you would make as a merchant if you aold a knife fur one dollar, and after he bad paid you tha one dollar for the knife he should thrust tha blade through your aw'i heart aa much aa if you Bold a box of matches, and after the customer had paid you for the matches he opened the box and with the first match set lira to your dwelling. T. DeWItt Talmage. If strong rug-g- to-da- women. Elizabeth aud Emily Black-well- ; the former after repealed efforts to enter several medical colleges, succeeded In being admitted at Geneva, X, Y., la 1847. Twenty years later In conjunction with her sister. Dr. Emily Blackwell, shs established the Woman's Medical College of New York Infirmary. The elder slater. Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, returned to England. and in lt49 founded the lavndon School of Mediclna for Women, which was a pioneer establishment. Of tho thousands of women who have graduated In medicine In the past forty veers it la curious to note that In Who's Who about twenty women physicians are mentioned, these almost without exception the pioneers of the profession. Women writers, artists. educators, and librarians are liberally catalogued, hut women doctors era disproportionately few. The practice of women physicians until ths last decade was quite gene rally confined to treating women and children, but the admission of women into tha medical department of many of tha great unlveraitiwi of the country haa brought about A great change. ORCHARD'S g S r business method up-to-da- i 'Dollar-for-Dolla- ment mean anything to you, youll bring jour In surance to my office If you are too basy to call, phone and I will be glad to talk the matter over with you. Remember that I '! r companies prompt and courteous treat- ilo handle Real Estate, and hare a large list for jou to select from. Whether you want a farm, city property or a building lot, rail and aee what I hare to offer before you buy elaewhere. GEORGE Iv HORN As" REAL ESTATE INSURANCE LOANS FIRST NVT1. BANK Phone Ind. 721 CONFESSION. A (remedoua revulsion of feeling will take place among Haywood's sympathisers If Orchard's story can be corroborated by competent and disinterested witnesses. men Union throughout the country have swallowed their differences to hold mas The meetings of protest against the proceedings against Moyer, Haywood and ePttibone. Sympathy forms a large part of tlia stock la trade of strikers. The sympathy of a general public" which to large cities to run by public wrvica FOR SOCIALISTS TO ANSWER. corporation la not wit hoot value. Tha counts, however, to the The slate of Maine dlffera mostly sympathy that n of union ami sympathy from other of the older alatea In only who see their clans people working one thing,, namely, la prohibiting Interests Involved in every strike anil the liquor traffic. Thia being av we wish to ask our contribute fund accordingly. Socialist friends few questions. Employers know that any strike Why to wealth mure evenly distribut- against must came to a siveedy ed in Maine than in any other state end at them their terms if they can deIn the Union? tha elaaa feeling that foima the Why haa Maine more people who stroy own their own homea than any other strikers' principal haao of supplies, the past when ether methods failatate even than stales of much greater la ed It was only necessary to goad tha population? airikera to acta of violence, Why has Maine fewer women and children employed in public works, When by experience and organise than any other atate, aotwithaUad-ln- g ttnn, union wen acquired the faculty that it to a great manufacturing of peaceful idleness and starvation it atate? became the part of the other aide to Why baa Maine more teachers to tha furnish violence and by it at the number of pupils than any other ntate, doors ofthe unionists. This has been and why does It rank ao high in acarc-It- y done withthea vengeance. Corporations of Illiterate children, (Kansas only have bean caught la the act of firing ranking higher)? their own proiierty. The Ban Frannot has Socialism brought Surely, polk-report many inetanci-thin about Prohibition does not have cisco strike-breaera smash their where a to depend alone on Ita admirers fur own cars when hoodlums do not do defense. Government statistics apeak it for them. louder than theory. With 850,000 chlldrrn of school ags Many facto point to Harry Orchard only 1.400 are employed In any gain, aa one who served aa trouble maker ful occupation, or one among every between the mine owners and the W. 178. of M. Tha police and military of When aome state has tried Social- F. State of Colorado constitute a ism and produced better results to- tho committee whose power to vigilance and ward distributing wealth, settling the means of transportation and comnothto difficulties of say the labor, munication cannot bo ing of education and morality, than How then could a slnblt Individual Maine haa done, then It will be time pile up a record of crime end lawlessness such aa Orchard's without aid (Continued on Page Fourteen) from tho powers that be? S. IR. otor Bicycle non-unk.- THIS IS THE GREATEST e a k THE MARXIAN CLUB (Continued from Page Twelve.) BRICKLAYERS AND CONCRETE. A little knowledge may be a dan geroua thing, but a Mttla authority may bo worst. Waa Orchard tho tool of mine owners or mine workers holding a commission authorising him to commit any crime in the calendar? Did he get beyond the Jurisdiction of hie principal! in crime when he left the Slat of Colorado to Bmaalnete Bteunenberg of Idaho? DU he do the bidding of his principals in crlro a wben he murdered Steun-enber- g or did he do so to satisfy a grudge be entertained on the score of losing g share la the rich Hercules mine? The sentiment for end against ia due in part to the kidnapping methods used upon him and to the sensational capitalist press which dropped all pretense and branded him a murderer before he had a hearing. Such methods are subset alve of all law and order and leave little room to hope for a square deal. Eternal vigilance Is the price of liberty and a square deal. AMERICAN The demand of the bricklayers' unions of thia city that concrete work be done by union men, to an attempt to save the mason and bricklaying industry from practical extinction. This la apparent from the two striking features connected with It, namely, its avowed purpose to control concrete con struction In two interests of the endorsement bricklayers; and the given to the demand hr the Mason 1 Builders' Association. These would profit from a strike against the user of concrete; and the qpocesa of the demand would mean the preservation of their capital from competitive dent ruction. move to arWhether this two-folrest building trade evolution and preserve capital in the mason industry, will redound to the benefit of the bricklayer, remains to tie seen. The prubaMIKiee are that it will fail. Concrete being dependent on unskilled labor can easily he pushed. And aa It Is pushed. It. will displace more bricklayers than there are Jobs for in the d DUCHESS E ON TIIE If you want something absolutely sne and sure to take you to your journey' end, come aud see u. Our National Double liar Ilicyrle lend alt othera. We ore closing out our Raaeball stock and you get It at cost. Rare your Lawnmnwcr abarjHmd aud adjusted bo graaacuttlng will be euay. H. C. Hansen & Son E. F. BRATZ Real Estate Bargains In any part of the City and County. Loan on Improved City and Farm Property Promptly Negotiated. Fire, Tornado and Plate Glass Insurance d Let (he prosecution conclusively prove that Haywood had s hand in a single murder and no class of men will, repudiate him more thoroughly than the union men who have championed hla cause. On the other hand, If, aa the defense la obviously trying to prove. Orchard's crimes were ao tuated by a clique of unscrupulous mine owners, the tow should be im partially enforced. MOTOIt-CYCL- MARKET TODAY. . KANSAS DRUGGISTS. s' lu view of the complacency with whK.ii American place theuisrlvc in advance of oihtr peoples In the mailer of iHilitene to women it la essential in the dispatches noted, into stale for the latter to know that women bad nit uts such aa A large part of ike to take tha inUtlve in all the at people of Kansas were 'ill' that were necessary to increase AU Kansas used the same uieulciue staiuie as unite la the body polUr and whiskey, etc., aud the their The following bit of history' (row sales of liquor through druggists were itic. the Daily People 1. to the point: greatly increased, because tbo joints It ia interesting to note. In view of have been closed." A report from the Kaueaa State the advanced position which American women profesTemperance Union says: Thera is a sion thatoccupy in the medical probably the moat determinvery great decrease iu liquor sales ed and to effort establish ainc the brewery ouster suite wers that place was mads by two English begun." advanced and heterodox. To the the impatient per aon who complalne of the slowness of nature and humanity. It la appropriate enough to propose colonisation In the wilderness. But the evolutionist, the believer In lawful and natural method! of realising his theory, haa every reaaoa to resent the suggestion aa idle and a little arrogant. If the SodaUat ought to seek aome reservation, why not the single taxer or even the milder reformer? Logically the advice should be tendered to qvery citizen who has any new ideas at all on social and political organization, to any critic of existing Institutions and arrangements. The intelligent and sensible reformer is quite an desirable a citizen as A CRUSADER GONE. the man who tmnlu the world in right ae it la Ho has the duties, ImmunMrs. McKinleys name appears on ities and rights of other citisens, and the Canton, Ohio. Honor Roll" of tem- he wishes to do his part In the existperance crusaders, aa prepared by the ing order of things He to eager to liquor dealers In 1874, a copy of which propagate hie ideas, not to become a He voice crying to the wilderness bangs in the reception room at National W. C. T. U. headquarters. Our or- does not care for Isolation. There ganization, in common with an organ- would have been precious little progisations of women, pays loving tribute ress In the world if reformers had to this gentle first lady of the land," always shaken the dust of their counnow translated to the realm where tries off their feet and sought desert there to do mors pein. (ales or waste ptooea Chicago Recent alleged newa dispatches from Topeka and Wichita to Chicago dallies have wilfully misrepresented the facts in regard to prohibition tow enforcement In Kansas. It la more than suspected that these dispatches emanated from the liquor interests. The facta In the cam are that, since the recent period began. druggists of Topeka, Wichita, Kansas City, Kan., and other pieces, who had. formerly been dispensing liquor without the permit required by law, have hastened to secure these permits. The same wholesome respect for the tow haa caused them druggists to keep the required records of Baton of liquor, and the disease for which It was purchased. , Because of thia unaccustomed conformity to tow, jn some cases the number of druggists' permits to sell liquor have increased, even though the number actually selling has decreased. Similarly, though the number of drug-gistsales ia lees, the number of recorded sales mar have Increased. These facta have been misconstrued. WOMEN AS PHYSICIANS. Written In Strong and Safe Companies at Lowest Rate. 416 Opposite Reed Hotel 25th Street rnOXES: 420 AND 420Z. CHAS BEVERIDGE F II. KEDDINGTON $e GGa BGa WINS A (Continued from Page Nine) copied from q picture of one in old Rome. the Another striking feature of new Floors will be the magnificent wrought Iron and golden gates at the entrance to the ground. These are to be complete by the end of July and are costing. It to said, 150,000. They have been especially designed and bear the national emblem, the thistle. Interwoven with the rase and shamcrest and rock, while the Innea-Ke- r tho ducal coronet further embellish them. These galea are being mads somewhat after the style of those recently Introduced by the King at Buckingham Palace, but they are far more elaborate and. expensive than those at the royal palace. These new gates wer most urgently needed, the existing ones being several centuries old and distinctly dilapidated. HAYDEN CHURCH. to be n marble bathroom, Printers, Bookbinders Manufacturing Stationers Office Supptics We handle the largest line of Loose Leaf Devices in Utah the best workmen that money can We guarantee every job turned out of our office. We employ only hire. Offiroand factory, Entrance Twenty-thir- Twenty-third and Washington avenue. street, Tarry block. d op-stair- |