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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH Stop That PBESGRiPTiCH FOB WEAK K1DHEYS Cold At Once Hire it i. CASCARA R QUININE f m t i " ,i oi 1 1 T A I ? ufun L me 'ue-- , bem. A T f j j a- v I, - i No otl er t .. ' u ho art ! . t S 1 in "I t t!u Murn i u, for .I. 1. t th i ),H. s a trim or., tho I a r ' K - e t i , j i I ,1 n.hoot pti-flT- 1 i ; t t 1m- liorse nmi-It act mildly but quickly and good re-- I suits are lasting. Does not blister or remore the hair and horse can be worked. Page 17 m pamphlet with CJJ each bottle tell how $2.00 a bottle delivered. Horse Book 9 M free. ABSORBING JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Painfui Swellings, Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins; heals Sores. Allays Pain. WilLteii'you more if you write. $1 and $2. a bottle at h rt ir i of im i 'ii v it moth u r .1 V Ai or 1 n x el ee te- -ii t hi t rep, ly'mefs S i im;, lk np 1, 1 x a- i lie 1 n lf J ,t ,i nt rei mU .u1:, - hk : i t1- .- n ,n h h ' k iii, , I n h - n -t Dr. 0 -i t ih t pori ti" m i ( e ainl I tltl almoet pit; LAMENESS from a Bone spavin. King Bone, Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or sim.Ui ' t l.it- aAd- - ! , ree . ;i .1 au iy. troufel- ex-- " at oi n drop out Die rin i i rco-eno i not j aj ,t' ,ui ,l ' : i i fii - ? in tablet Th old family remedy form aafe, aure, eaay to take No no unpleasant after effect. Opiate Cure cold in 24 hour Grip m 3 Money back if it fail. Get the genuine box with Red Tap and Mr. Hill' picture on it 24 Tablets for 25c. At Any Drug St ora -- ul.r reisn-- i lJ't tii; are l I I ti mi' i , , i ir, ; vi I( . i t ie- - I'. kl! 1,, c I ,t, 1 -- hti Our policy of wilful waste in the past is bringing about a condition of woeful want Di. hho due to the lut tint, m.ni people di..i. it a! most even m-- h m overcoming k'duti, liver and bl older ailment-- , coin it- - i.i- tnarv trouble-- , and ntutrib,. the uric i - m ) au :: Alaska's great resources wlich causes rfieumxli-n- i. ou imv receive a sample botMe of Swamp Boo by I a reel d'o-- t. Addict 1 r i' Kilmer A ';rn on V V ..,1 1 1 Jiin.-h.-ur- 1 E people uf t he U nl t ed States are the most Inveterate aud wasteful readers of newspapers Liberal trial bottle (or 10c Kimpa Scaled er dellrered. la the' world. Not only do we W F. YOUNG. F. D. F..310Tma!StSortnofieId. Mss. have the largest papers for tho least money, but we doimunl an She nad a Kind Face. PATENTS.TKADE MARKS, COPY- extra edition almost exer hour, I PAKH. JR.. 1419 No. RICW4KDG. Agnewould Dir.HTQ iumt marry a K1UI113 STuaar.tvMuibtiiua ji.v. man to reform him. In the bigger cities of tin coun1 Lthel Well, try. Like griddle cakes, we like dont think myself them So. Missouri only when theyre hot, and harsh that measures JOHOHiltN,Unnlbal, are the best. I reprint for the wonderful pictorials for which the world has been scanned by the editors, are thrown aside after a cursory examination. Did you ever stop to think of the tltne when this lng supplies of the lake states for tho needs of tho middle West. Incessant demand for the print paper may not be met? Already we hear of the rapid Increase in the In addition to the principal price of pulp, which Is reaching a stage where, woods, spruce and hemlock. It has beeu found many of the smaller publications of the country from tests made by the government that at least will have to go out of business. Even the bigger 12 other species are suitable. for tho manufacture For Infants and Children. ones are feeling the pinch, and some are rulslug of pulp. Some of these new species are Engle-man- n their prices, others reducing the number of pages, spruce, lodgepole pine, white fir and oilier and still others are making the advertiser pay. cheap and plentiful coniferous woods of tho West. The newspapers have not been' the only ones to bo suffer by pulp shortage, for book publishers, too, N At least ten of these woods wen found to from made and for paper good enough newsprint, have had their worries. In fact, all users of paper, some of them was actually used ln editions of down to the schoolboy with his tablet, have had to several metropolitan new simpers. pay more for an Inferior quality of paper than was In looking to tho West for our 'future supply of ALCOHOL--3 PBHlibMpl the case a year or two ago. torAs I wood pulp It Is gratifying to noto that two other Avertable PreparationEcuta-- i In 1914, we used about 5,000 tons of newsprint elements that will make for the ready developsimilatin theFood by every day. Our present use has reached (1,000 ment of the wood pulp Industry are found ln tinthcStoroachsandBow. tons a day, and the demand Is increasing at the Is proximity to tho forests. These two elements 10 rate of about greatly per cent a year, which ro waterpower and coal. Throughout the mounla. excess of the rate of Increase ln population. tainous states of the West are hundreds of To supply our presses with newsprint requires ThcrtbjrPrcmoiiDesbM To wood. streams, the power from which, If conserved and annually about 3,000,000 cords of pulp Cheerfulness andRestfoata u harnessed, would operate with the minimum of meet our requirements for magazines and book sit. neither Oum.MorpMne -expense, the greatest pulp plants In the world. papers, stationery and business papers of all MlneraLyoTXAHCOttC The same Is true of our undeveloped coal fields conkinds, 4,000,000 cords more of pulp wood are ln Alaska and othr states. sumed annually. Production barely keeps up this In carrying out tho government policy of utilnewsthe Is estimated while It for consumption, izing the natural resources of the country withpapers will need about 888,000 tons for the first out Injuring them, the forest service last year six months of this year, the estimated supply Is made sales of public timber amounting to $1.7fl3, fixed at 030,000 ton. 000. These sales were made to a great number Ilut a few years ago this country was able to VanfvdS of furwidely scattered Interest, Including lumber yUufmmi supply all of Its own needs and ln addition and one companies, railroads, mining companle establishnish paper to foreign countries, but that time has A helpful Remedy the To mill. encourage Western paper passed. Now we must depend upon Canada for ConstipationandDiarrl ment of new mills and pulp plant ln the West, at least a third of our domestic supply, and this the government has announced that it will enter percentage Is rapidly Increasing. Loss of Sleep contracts for the supplying of timInto long-terOur forefathers, and even our fathers, looked swsafftind ihcrcfrom-- Infancy ber at moderate prices, and under such conditions about them, and saw apparently endless and InSinatoreof a are Jr t, both to the purchaser and the public. facsimile exhaustible supplies of forest trees. The woodman was not told to spare that tree," and they were ruthlessly, sometimes wantonly, destroyed. iBaCEOTAtmCOMP Where one tree was utilized for commercial purposes, two trees were allowed to remain as they -fell, only to rot away or bo burned In the first forest fire that swept over the devastated area. Today this policy has resulted in our privately owned supply of pulp woods being so exhausted that not more than 15 years' supply remains. Men have taken to the study of French with . Serious as the situation appears to bo, there Is th vrawn Go? of Wrapper. than women to knit3 no cause for alarm, If we wake upto our duty only a little lessa assiduity more trifle are Is shy about It, to be There to conserve our remaining supply. ting. They Leftover. sure. One does not hear them parleying" to any Guarding Against a enough" pulp wood ln our nattonal forest to meet Aunt Virginia Says: excuse is ther.e any think Do we puryou great extent ln public places, but they are secretly the future needs of this Country, and If To attempt to plan your life for a a In our waste for dog? much pleased with their achievement of a few pet kefplng sue a systematic course ln avoiding .year, a month, a week ahead Is just they-w- lll I hope Mr. Meekton, the Well. andencourage replied phrases, and, make no doubt alwut lt, plants as fooltft as It would be to commence FIdo for French the to girls and love which lands (of soon be able to make reforestation of our to add up a column of figures without they Iv ill let Henrietta keep with the be to hate conversation of end the states Id weeks northern their few a longer. keep up there are 70,000,000 acres ln the knowing what more than half of them biscuit to keep alone) we could easily supply the world. the eat to r.i. dog called pollus. were. to waste. Of course, It began with the soldiers and sailors, By following the correct practices of forestry, Justice to the Innocent sometimes It from going owned the publicly this eagerness to learn French. They had good and by conserving our supply, demands that we expose the faults of diswill last Indefinitely. States United In reason, and, besides, there were Invitations Pacifists. the timber With the our neighbor, but we ought to meet the themselves enroll to played everywhere for them The forest service has estimated that there Terrible about the Smith de occasion as an unpleasant duty, not as 300,000.000.000 natlonal forests InFrench classes and be taught this delightful ln the are ul -- opportunity. Isnt It? so many to 600,000, Is wood. equivalent This language without charge. There arent feet of pulp It pays to be generous If only for "Whats the matter now? men ln uniform, but we use all kinds of paper things offered free, even to young Oh they are constantly fighting 000 cords, and for the claim it gives us on the generosnot does to afford estimate cau This slight anything bearing that they 7,000,000 cords a year. ity of others when our time of need about which one Is the more peaceably Include the on available wood privately the gratis tag. 'pulp comes. inclined. lands of the West. owned Then there are a great many attractive young a made It ought to be penitentiary Is at present made onr all of pulp who pucker their mouths up quite bewttch-Ingl- y women Practically offense to thrust upon the radiant hap-Cumulative Expenses. costs run where stumpage from northern woods, ln teaching the novice how to pronounce the lovers the plness of It costs three cents to send a let- from $2.50 to $3 per cord, standing In the forest French "u. A pretty American girl as a teacher cheap, coarse cynicism that It wont ter." West timber suitable for the manufacture In the of French is a temptation to' those who would not last. the man who has been to cents "Yes 23 $L25 replied from there In ranges price pursue learning for Its own sake. Of course,stern Some people Imagine they are disci- - sued for breach of promise; "and If of pulp In , that these-va- st are some supplies fact Tbe cord. and "of teachera are ali kinds per dining their chlldren when you are 'not careful that three cents the West have not yet been developed is due to But most of them seem to have a teachers' just something starter. them brutally for doing a day may be only the uniform several causes. Lack of transportation has been pretty good Idea that the young men in the tenth time that they have been Investments the and at Mollere then or large Corneille a to read big handicap are not wanting allowed to do without protest nine in the paper mills preclude their moveQuite True. words that may help the know to tied up bnt presentt just times before. Farm Life. Snlffklns. that insufferable swell is ment while It Is possible to secure timber nearer gn(i tbclr wqy around In Fjrance when to eat or boasting that he saved a human life at hand, even St vastly higher prices. they are off duty and ask for somethinga little furAn Objector. of geographical location was at Atlantic City ' the he and when standpoint From it go like they that, things I never allow young men to kiss "So he did. He saved hH cwn by gad transportation to the majority of the paper a fewwill , them at least to start a conversation ther help those of one me. are You The mob Oh, I see. users ln the ee&trsl and eastern states. with the French of both sexes. getting 6ut of town before the two broqd belts. conscientious objectors, too." tato fall simwoods him." Western paper caught Easy French and other little books with a i foujvd The first Is available to tldewatershlpn)ents from iany ilarly anurtng on .,1omen - barbers,, hair dresaera and T Nearfyail beautiful things are ex the'Paclfic coasCWog" "principally on the" west' khaki the out for study pocket and are pulled in Oregon and manicurists number over 4,000 in New elsewhere. One young man with a single or slope of the Cascade mountains women. train Including to pensive. York city. ' Washington, including vast areas tributary bar on his shoulder covered the English part of seaboard the of a result and along healthy np the sound is running FACE A PRETTY Puget the menu with his hand In a restaurant and read COBuiUQEU pb)e&2Ai JOUR BOYS IN FRANCE AND Alaska. There are 70,000.000,-00- 0 In southeasterly' aloud every article on the French side to his cwn Beauty is but skin and hemlock ln the national was of feet spruce HOME PROTECTION it greatly deep yet great satisfaction. The only sad moment and the In many alone. respects clear Alaska a of on French best forests depends when be gave his order ln hts The men on the firing line represent complexion, conditions fonnd In Alaska duplicate those of waiter said, "Beg pardon, sir. the In and wrinkles One the pick of pur American youth. from of the world in the country the leading Norway, refour of our boy at home was sick, Young men who are not .la uniform .are taking,, hollow cheeks. 14 by Ahose who here know when jected because of physical deficiency, always paper Industry,, It i th Ileal up French, too. Of course, they never of studied the country that the forest of Alaska will wealth iiaay femes tne kidneys were to blame. brings they may be called. If we wish to prevent old age coming States than beauty. A healthy rr?dnc. more wealth for the United on too soon, or tf we want to increase the system Also, after tbe war even one wlll want to go as state and valuable eten her gold or her coal, vast our chances for a long life. Dr. Pierce of Doctor with comes to France and wont want to leave all the talking the 8urglcal Institute, Buffalo, N- - , says those commodities. are Pierce's Favorite to the military chaps, who will be puffed up that you should drink plenty of water The second timber belt of Western paper woods Prescription. Its a a daily between meals. Then procure at enough, any way, French is going to be such medicine prepared the northern Rocky mountains, extends through Tour nearest drug st6re Anuric (double tboee ailment it cures drives the uric for woman strength). This which weaknesses that ft wonld be bad form for an American to be add out and cures backache and rheuma- derangements and miserable. off from water transportation tan hut belt This hfe womans' tism. make out of it altogether. source of supply If we wish to keep our kidneys in the You can overcome most bodily ids, hardly be considered a practical Two young men were having a discussion as to a Is but health logical build up your for the eastern states, a diet of milk and vege- escape icknesa. et condition of .paper which It would be more advantageous to study, tables, with little meat once a day, storehouse of raw materials for the paper ret the most only suitable. Drink plenty of or Spanish, If an American wanted a secFrench The Rcky Pure water, take Anuria three times a day quirements of the Mississippi valley. Spanish will b ond language st hJs command. for a month. mtuntalns contain a number of excellent paper once or twice weekly, fcnch s one tive business for most the of profitable the language Step into the drug store and ask for jnice of sloes, and made of woods, and with proper development should supone Anuric 90 cents a package) or send Dr. is asserted. and America," South of local that ns, consumpJppjed Pierce 10c for trial pkg. Anuric. many root of jslap, ply both' the paper required for drnrgwts years Doctor rIoctf- sThere will be some business to be done with the dlmlnlsh- to times more potent than lithia, eliminates replace necessary and tion as known and Pieree A uric acid as hot water melts sugar. Pleasant Pellet. Get them today! hort trial will convince you. enilmc ten cent; mention thnrpiper. Large and medium size bottle1 tor sale at 'all drug stores. Adv. al-- o r trikl offer pulp-supplyin- g Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears tho Signature of I gj?- - In kr Use : For Over m Thirty Years r er s, at-lea- st oyf 1 s, -- newly-marrie- d 1 they-puni- sh UUes-ar-to-- - free a Y-- An-u-r- v ic Msy-app- sugsr-ooste- 11 cut-ove- r" BOYS IN KHAKI AND SOME WHO ARE NOT QUICK TO LEARN THE FRENCH LANGUAGB fyt Puy-ster- p T cut-ov- A-J- Experts report that It Is entirely practical to manufacture newsprint ln Alaska and deliver It, through the 1anama canal, to New York, at a cost of not more than $33 per tosn When It 1 considered that current prices fW similar paper range from $00 a ton upward, It Is evident that n new' Industry could bo built up ln Alaska that, would be an. exceedingly profitable one. While no definite plan? have been tnnde to that end, it Is possible thj$r before long Uncle Sami may find It profitable to erect his owa mill la Alaska to produce print paper. Such a mill would! cost about $2,500, 000, and It W9uld pay for Itself! wltfitn a few years. Tip present attitude of tha government ofllcluls Is that If private manufacturers of paper cun be Induced to meet the demands of the country It would be unwise for tha government to enter the field, but If our present threatened shortage of paper materializes, auchi a plant will doubtless be constructed la Alaska. Another phase of the wood-pulIndustry that la being considered by the government expertsj Is to more fully utilize the vast quantities ofl wood wasted annually by the sawmills of tha country. This waste aggregates something over CO, 0t 10,000 cords a year, a large part of whfchi j might be saved. If we are to make our paper Industry a perma-e- nt one, It Is necessary for us not only to conserve our present supply but to plant lands, to Insure a supply In the years to come. Denuded lands can be planted with 1,000 young! trees per acre at a cost of about $10 per acred Koine of the large paper companies are nQiySr Ing this, and their efforts are being encouraged by the government In addition, the forest serf ice is carrying out a definite policy of reforestation ln various parts of the country. r -- be the French, replied the other. No, French will be all right as an accomplish! ment and for social purposes, but Ill bet there wl be more dollars for the man who speaks Spanish Spains a foreign country to me, but France 14 my kin. Me for the French language. Aside from the American volunteers who hare to feel learned enough French at home qualified to pass it on there are many French persons who are exceedingly glad to exchange tha knowledge of their mother tongue for the useful American dollar. To the taunt that Americans could never really talk French a man, conning a book on Frenchl Idloma. retorted, "Well. I bet we can beat Tommies out Good as a Rslsai of Wages Isidore Kantoris Mistake. Some amusing stories are coming out of thet draft exemption boards. In Chicago one of those! called for examination claimed exemption on thet ground of supporting his mother. I save $6 a week out of my pay and give it toi my mother, he said. Weil. do you know yotr can save $3 o3t of yourf" ' army pay and give It to her? "Is that so? Sure, you can take me, then. Itflt Just as good as getting a raise. Of a different nature Is an Incident that occurred In New York. They were testing the eyes of Isidore Kantor, who claimed his sight was very poor. After placing him a little closer to the eya chart one of the examiners asked: Now can yon see? I see, said Isidore, "nothing but a blur. Thri) they took him .closer yet,.. ' "Mow now? Everyting," said Isidore. Is like a fog ln front of me." Far across tb room an assistant examiner held! aloft sn oblong bit of yellowish paper. " "Whoever tells me what this la can have It," yelled. Isidore turned and took one short look. I got It!" he announced.. Its a.tea tolisyrs ! was W4 $10 back, but the 'That 'particular promised Isidore that hts Uncle Sam will give him three like it every month until the war U over, On Man Considered Enlistment ! , MOTHER'S OVERSIGHT. Olive was teasing to have a party on her birthday, which came in the winter, so she could invito the little girls whose parties she had attended the previous summer. But as the weather was severe to give at that time she was told she wculi wc..d te able It up, as none of her little frU.-Jc to come on account of the cold. C 3 er over !: and finally this, slderably t i i er, why didnt yon ask God to summer time? tin d i- |