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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX,. KAYSVILLE; UTAH U1 - , STATE II Salt Lukes branch of the Twelfth district federal .reserve bank will be opened on or before April 1. One of the new regiments of cavalry, which are to be formed under authority Just issued by the war depart mebt, Is to ,be "organized at Fort IXmglus. SoldieH at the front "ho ure mem bers of the Greeters of Utah, a hotel clerks' organization, will soon receive handsome enrd cases containing fully certificates. puid tnetnber'-hiIn iebruary the snowfall oer the entire state,, it Is said, wits below normal. Loth the January ami .February snowfall bulletins show that tbe'grent est deficiencies ore In the southeastern . cbtmties. , B nr Mtuuri to a total value of $123,-73weie sold in the state of Utah from the beginning of the thrift campaign up to March 1, according to the first Official figures Issued March 9 for ' Uus fcate. . f r , After a book's trial of the "otkday ju the shops of the Denver & Rio Gran do hallway company, ordels to go back to the eight-hou- r clay havo been leeched frOm company headquarters at Denver. That Salt Lake City will acquire a valurble tract of coni land lu Utah, es- tablisli a municipal coal yard and be In a position to supply fuel to citizens at a greatly reduced cost was intimated last week. According to a census just completed by the police i9 restaurants In Ogden will contribute to the pity finances through the license bureau, If Ibo proposed new restaurant measure Is mude a law b.v the city commission. Uecattse of blood poisoning, resulting from Infection In cutting a corn, David I. Thomas, deputy In the office of tfie county treasurer, at Salt Lake, has found it neeessury to suhfnlt to the amputation of his left leg above the knee. Equipped with an operating table, surgical Instruments and emergency medic ines, a first aid roon has been established at the Denver & IUo Grande shops In Salt Lake. Men In .the shops are, being trained In first ulcf work. ioi mission to increase Its rates from 10 cents to 124 cents a kilowatt hour hua been granted by the public utilities commission to the municipal light plant of Green River. The increuse la meant to add about $1000 a year to the revenues from the plants i G. Rain, Hindu farmer, brother of Munshl lUm, the Hindu under Indict- Vcr f - - - - ON GUARD 7 At this time of the year people feel weak, tired, listless, their blood Is thin, they have lived Indoors and perhaps expended all their mental and bodily energy and they whnt to know how to renew their energy and stamina, overcome headaches and backaches have clear eyes, a smooth, ruddy skm.Vutr feel the exhilaration of real good health tingling thru their body.. Good, pure rich, red blood is the best against ills of all kinds. Almost all diseases come from Impure and impoverished blood. It Is to be noticed in the pale or pimply face, the tired, haggard appearance or the listless manner. Drink hot water a half hour before meals, and for a vegetable tonic theres nothing better than Dr. Pierces Golden . 5 ce ten-ho- Medical Discovery, thT herbal remedy, which has had such a fine reputation for fifty years. It contains no alcohol or narcotics. It is made from Golden Seal root. Blood-root- , Oregon grape root. Queen s root, Black Cherry bark, extracted with glycerine and made Into tablets and liquid. Tablets sixty cents, at most drug stores. In order to insure pure blood and to build up the system try this tonic known as Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery. Get it now I Sweetness From the Hour. The bees sting only In but there are people who seem to take pleasure in uttering stinging speeches, wriAfixufDByARmqAL and they are not Those In who themselves the busy Univei extracting the Miss Harper Is a former student at out of sweetness In hour the every with associated been tbj sity of Chicago, who has have no time to waste In words Children's Aid society and with a night club tefr day that rankle and sting. Girls bookboys and girls In Boston ; who has taught with served who has binding in Haverhill, Mass.; the Massachusetts Infant asylum and who fitst came to deal w 1th cripples n helping Dr. Ricljard Cabot organize the Kings. Chapel bureau for Girls! Use Lemons! at the Massachusetts General hosof a she set Boston cripples There group at pital. to work making childrens clothes; their product Make Bleaching, was sold from coast to coast and at good prices. The work paid the workers commercially, as well Beautifying Cream as helping to restore their status as Independent, self-defens- e, a&jj ein-ploj- ment at San Francisco for alleged efforts to incite rebellion In India, la making a strenuous effort to get out 'of the Ogden Jail, where he has been confined for the past 50 da) a for drunkenness. Notice that the United States department of the Interior will ptobably change the name of the Mukuntuweap monument to Zion monument und that the boundaries of the monument reserve are to be enlarged was received last week by the state board of land :J Ir!! !il AT hWKWrLP TOlCf BLAKE. Alt means wrecking chemical and physical and moral wrecking. And It is the wreckage of men that Is most distressing to those who see the war at close range. Houses can be rebuilt The farms of the Oise and the Alsne can be cleared. The factories at Clmunes can be restored, or else razed and erected alt over ngnin and made modern. But what about wrecked men? In France I have heard an Ironist say : Yes, he was a hero for ten days and now he is a decorated ruin; a cripple for life. Yet even "nujtlles can he patched up. They can he provided with a Jambe Amerlcatne and an arm fixed with all sorts of joints and springs that make It practical. Last week. In the train to N n, I sat next to one such mended hero; he showed me his arm with real pride, and explained that for the present he had yvork In the municipal markets of l'arls; hut that he hoped to get transferred to something more esthetic; he would prefer to be a sort of subcurator In a picture gallery. See, Monsieur, I can hold a fork like this or By BARTON honey-maker- s. a i and respected citizens. Is a The chief of the bureau of would It I woman. think feminine a woman, and seem to the antebellum American mildly diverting if he could cast his eye over the list of equipment which, at for the Red Cross farm of Miss Grace our Harper permitthis point of Jalk, ted roe to see: tractors! plows! harrows! extirpators and. Canadians (whatever Canadians are she told me but I dont remember) ; rollers, drills, manure distributors, horse hose, mowing machinery and I dont know how many machines more 6 horses, 15 cows, 1 bull, 100 sheep, 20 pigs, 15 chicken pens (comprising 1 rooster and 6 hens each), 6 Incubators (210 eggs each), etc. Under war conditions, Miss Harper resumed, some inutiles are promptly In a position to earn good wages In munition works at wages which they will find It hard to equal once normal conditions are restored by the return to peace. We must, therefore, walk rajbpr, carefully. If we are interested in the return to peace conditions, and In what happens to the mutlles in the readjustment. What interests us Is that 63 per cent of farm laborers Included In the list of mutlles and we must reach them, or at least some of them, promptly. We must get these men started on the road that leads to the land while they are still under psycotherapeutic or surgical care. For that reason, if for no other, the Red Cross must combine Its agricultural with Its surgical This the for future must betraining enterprises. gin during convalescence that is, before discharge from The army ls granted. ' Do not think that the American Red Cross, In Its plan for specializing upon .agricultural disparages or undervalues the fine work of the institutions which have preceded it In the field. But It cannot overlook the fact that France Is an agricultural nation and that, after the war, almost all the world will, for a time, be somewhere near the edge of hunger. Did you see this last evenings Evenement? concluded Miss Harper, handing me a clipping. : I had not,but I read IL 1'ir The commission 'charged to study for the radl-cparty congress the economic reorganization of France has adopted the following conclusions," the g The Juice of two fresh lemons strained Into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a w hole quarter pint of the most remarkable lemon skin beantifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be tak en to strain the lemon Juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice Is used to bleach and remove 6uch blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and Is the Ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautlfier. Just try itl Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage It dally Into the face, neck, arms and hands. It naturally should help to soften, freshen, bleach and bring out the roses and beauty of any ffkln. It Is simply marvelous to emoothen rough, red hands, Adv. commissioners. Not to be outdone by the merchants of Salt Dike City, those of Mt. liens-an- t have decided to go their big city I can itrasp a glass ; the thumb Is exaggeratedly brothers cue better. On March 11 the long; I have to get a special glove. . . . Salt Dike merchants began to operate Yes, the nmtlles features can be molded Into under the one delivery a day system. something like a human semblance, where it's the The merchants of Mt. lieusant abol- face that has suffered But that is hardly enough. ished deliveries entirely. It Is not enough to make the hero for ten days, the a Governor Lumber ger has cripple for a lifetime, look like a man. He most be restored to real living te a part In the world A Mercenary Mind. proclamation designating Saturday, Is for or of That the sake of when have helped you most? "What books Belgium,, War Industry. the Win as C, Day," April "To tell the truth," replied Mr. each Individual In the state of Utah France, or Britain, or whatever his country may I never got a great deal of will devote all of his energy to doing be; it Is also for the man's own sake. I to reto ventured out Miss a that with Grace had Miss talk have point I out Harper There is more of books. just Harper, help something useful, something beneficial, chief of the bureau of the show there are 31 agricultural centers la ports of mutlles nain scenarios." to the money something directly helpful operation in France, but Miss Harper was Inat American Red Cross headquarters In Paris. tion In winning this war. clined to shake her head. She would not quarrel milme shown estimates for She has that every Nothing Is new under the sun! Used garments and shoes will be lion men .with In my figures, but with the Impression they crecounts havon field France the placed How desabout the 1918 weather records! the for America collected through ated. (X)0 mutlles 5,000 of them a to care x 50, for ing titute of Belgium and France In the month. And this figure does not take account of No doubt, she said, but yon most remember week beginning March 18. Of the fxXX) the that, Judged by American standards, France is not and and tons which America must send, fitxl yet In the forefront of scientific agriculture. do not quote those figures as our own," Please tons has been set as the quota for the says the cautious chief. They ore the best estiFrench economists, whose minds are now more Lost 65 Pounds in Weight and mountain division, composed of Utah, mates we have been able to secure, but they are than ever busy with the facts of food production,' are New Mexico, Wyoming and Colorado, exclaiming at the sad truth that Germany,! Had to Give Up Work. Has Been estimates. with a less and Inferior farming area, should, beThe state road commission, after a France is working miracles In making over Well Since Using Doans. fore the war, have exceeded France in agricultural maimed men, Miss Harper goes on, but even at meeting with ' v of Weber, and other prominent citizens production. the close of 1917 the work of reconstruction! has "Being exposed to extreme heat when working as an engineer, and These thirty-onDavis and Boxelder eouutles, decided not yet caught up with the destructive forces. Unagricultural centers of articlebegins. then going outdoors to cool off, you speak of have opened their doors for "It Is by agriculture that France can, and must der the French system the wounded soldier passes to draw up a plan for road Improvecaused my kidaey trouble, says but they lack necessary equipment, and , mutlles, renew Itself, for this Is the base and source of ment in those counties, which shall from a Post de Secours to a base hospital, and Karl Goerlng, 8513 N. Orkney St, the canny mutile looks In and, too often, passes life. later be submitted for approval and thence to one of the eleven existing Centres de Philadelphia, Pa. "In cold withon. Small wonder, especially if you reflect upon er and when It . was At that ceuter he receives surToo much encouragement ennnot be given to tiv e agreement and method of Physlotherapte, damp, my joints and his eagerness to gethorae, to be free of discipline gical treatment, or physiotherapy,. prjrotb, rhyslq agricultural production, . ..Henceforth the .ut .work,.. muscles would swell . because Is Is Irksome It that three in (after mechanical or most and electrical meaning students of years labor should be provided massage. possible quantity therapy Utah Agricultural college and ache and often my a half of war) stilt discipline. to agriculture by the mobilization on the land of limbs were so badly aftheir senior year are to be Immediately Here he receives also an artificial limb, and his "Thtriohler 'military' Classes" ahd"bf agricultural Spefected It was only with France Is teaching her mutlles small trades7coi enrolled In the military service oOTie Industrial" training Is begun to fithira fora new great misery I was able cialists. . . bling, basket-makintlnsnritlilng, machine work, United states, according to Instruc- place In the social orgnnlsm. to get around. For a J'j of centers are French what Cross The Red state The should wants the but enpaabove all to etc., physiotherapy encourage the construction tions received by Governor Bamberger week I was laid up inM less than 25 per cent of the do Is to In the agricultural movement and use of agricultural machinery especially tracbed, hardly able to from General 11 II. Crowder. They will ble of receiving 5 s schools of are the are tors. . . Scientific agricultural stations should able We who for our will mamove hand or foot. undef be Happily and 5 agricultural be placed in class Another trouble was from Irregto take care of some of those mutlles who must, be created in the principal Regions of France, chinery must provide motor tractors and other methe Jurisdiction of the quartermasterular and scanty passages of the link ing the one to the other by means of a central chanical equipment for t he schools of d u cation. perforce, forego the physljtherapeut les, kldueyseeretions,l- - became-du- ll my I am talking to you In terms like these because station at Laris. Also, we must give expert Instruction In tbe rais- and weak and had to give up A record has been. completed ofhethe our the blg one, tng of Thntrsn politician's document, nnd you have work. Headaches and dizzy spells qiouttryrrabbitsrhees- .- We must divorces grauted In Weber county-town country, too, must realize something of the In horticulture. When the spring not read in for of all concluded go Miss nearty blinded me and I went from training it, as she found It is tottd Harper, Nothing 265 to 2U0 in weight. past two yeurs. In the ait the are we and 191S we he should a has in new of took come, hack up against, problem to the support position-. spaper clipping ; but the prindoomed was me I felt Uiat last y ear had nine ca ses ie'--s thaU that must be given to the American Red Cross if and I helped show you our agriculture center IhT full blast,-filLciple Is there, and it is justly enough expressed. 133 In to being suffer. there the preceding year, w e are either Jo Herearticle. "Edmond Jg of .much help JoFrance, or ter lug a. p&Ehr&OeA&t. of the gteahamLX have menAt last! had the' good fortune to. m "pji as 'against" Ht In this business of making men out of ourselves tioned. And that farm of about 500 acres will be in Le Matin of Paris, concludes an hear of Doant Kidney Pill and beThery, writing mora show months of July and August I want you to realize that the . situated in one of the richest farming areas of But them. I sooa g(t wars wastage. gan on article Our taking Agricultural Production with the tne decrees granted than any of the other Red Cross did not corue to France just to sttfily. my strength and weight and words : France, very dose to one of the great psychotherakoine, other and rheumatic pains months of the year, I, for one, have been m Paris since March. 1917, The indispensable agricultural policy for ns to peutic renters. That Is all I can very well tell troubles left. I have rennuna It that claim no visited is and center now. have of every there large practically you Although pursue from now on has been perfectly defined by cured." Sworn to before me, l d fiMBiT flf t tKfl TTrdHrttllniiiil iqork in yrtt W1L IL' MMUNN, Notary Pubm the was leap y voted bv tha whole problem of the war mutile. At least. It will chamber of deputies at its sitting of October llT became engaged to Mary trilson at her small ones; not all, by any means, for nominally storage a B of nnsUer 103 them. The Cross Red the of made-iare take continues- jat all times there n careof 2l)0jmutlles. It will have and it can he summed up In two clauses : mobilizasolicitation is been leased for three years. Dairies, shedsTcow tion of agricultural labor, mobilization of chemical AmeFISTiTgTrrTImduTniuier of tVrtru.e. to sfudyThe new dev eTopmentsrthe new demandsFOSTER-MILURN CO, BUFFALO. N.T. for when the Ameria forge, machine shop, fertilizers. barns, sheepcotes, In the SiO.tXX) damage imw brought In the field of can army has its full share of casualties the Red So you see, concludes the chief of the bureau carpentry shop all these things figure In our calagaiiist him by the Bilsou girl. whose first task 1s to back up that army, work of culations. Cross, construction indicted By was for and the spring, "bo of mutiles, that the AmeriDmi Jiiigduhl. J. berfefit by French and British experience. can Red Cross, In seeking to give France more repair wtU have been accomplished, quarters for Mauh 9 by a Chicago federal graud mustour Frwnptlf treat Coach, cold.' real program for helping In France has But men put up and some of the work will have been recruitskilled agriculturists, through Its scientifi- c- arid" bronchitic and aimil.ar Inflated awi jury on chaiges of obstructing inter- now advanced beyond the stage. of study. contributed by the mutlles themselves. It is not mechanical instruction of mutile farmers and farm diUona oT U threat witba teatedremec- Jing eneour iging disloyalty and A superficial examination of our field hows only more economical. It Is better so. And they laborers. Is only undertaking to express practically fering with the prosecution of the war, In The France will get two francs a day wage these mutiles; is this; already training provided what I renclr deputies and French economists dehie nt of Salt Lake and a ir. 4,ne Industrial training, or the preparation of disfive francs a day when they are themselves clare to be a vital necessity for France, and there- new r,f a local on paper ed 4 ; soldiers for such jobs as stenography. fora for Frances wannest friend In aif the world charged r. , p 'f-sfl- war-blinde- d war-craze- war-deafen- Pen-wigg- WAS DISCOURAGED al ners county-commissio- e co-ope- ra . g, mu-tile- s. te world-famou- re-o- -- - probk-m-ls-Mie- -- d-beeattse -- live-stoc- k, -- ll. - - j KAw DOANS. pig-stie- s, inniTATiriG 1 c -- - ". E coughs le, -- |