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Show THE PROVO HERALD SGGOP reporter . ScoP Visits . tves-t- j -V f Been MouQHruPHEMi wre VP Bflfff GOHTESTV. Rum umt owa mby t AHA BOftMWA. AND BRtNfrrraPHERe. '' ' rt ?v'CK J Sack rtj Te ''' 't XS - - f- r- Iffii - tat By "Hop" VCt'i rSfRii J -- PROVED OF FORESTS VALUE J I In , Addition to "ConMrvnj) Rainfall; They Are of Other Aide' te ' ; Aprlculture. , CZWM MM vci .- -- ' While the "rainfall; of "any regioaW dependent on dynamic inflnencea to the atmosphere, and can 1e affected only la a very slight degree, If at alL by the extent of that region covered by foresta, It has certainly been shown t" that woods and foresta conserve "The "brlefesl consideration TndI- catea the likelihood that this must be so, because vegetation and the ground covered with vegetation absorb "WSte and aUovr it to percolate Blowly to tha lower levels, whereas on bare ground,"" tie rainwater runs qulcklj awayl to sea. But trees serve another purpose, la aid of agriculture; because, as soma recent experiments show, they act aa windbreaks and shelters to growing crops. The distance towhlch the pro tecUyeJnfluence of trees 'extends ta estimated ' at twenty times tfieuT helght, though complete protection, juch as might be afforded to growing wheat in a gale, extends only to a distance eight times the height of, .'tha trees. Partial protection-- ia : about twelve to fourteen times the height. They also check evaporation of raln fall, their influence extending-fiv- e times their height to windward and eighteen times to leeward, and pre -- HtfU5.: IN TWfc KIP very Fashionable Neighborhood a rww; ix.v.A- NOW FCH PAGETJITX3 ''' rain-faT- ' ; STILL SEEK TREASURE Household Hints Announcement PEOPLE OF SCOTCH HIGHLANDS FIRM IN FAITH. ifcso you Trill know what width maThe- pillow Advice"on home furnishing is given terial ti select. case Tradition of Buried Wealth Linger ns4oli&w3 to should have a good hem and be a and Is Occasionally Mads Stronger : a A bedspread maae ot quarter of "a yard longer than the. pil by Finds Some. Heavy Gold" plain cream scrim, trimmed with low. exOrnaments Unearthed. Before for be tablecloths know will buying appropriate heavy lace, your brass bed. The laceinsertion,-ahou- t actly the width and length of. the dinFor centuries the search for ancient three inches wide,' should out- ing table. Scotland furnishes mdst of line the top of the- ed, but .the spread the - unbleached, medium priced linen. treasure, has been pursued in the glens ehould be edged with the lace itself. It wears well and many people pur- and wild places ' of the highlands of Cut the corners so that it will hang chase it and bleach it on the grass, as Scotland, and sometimes unexpected "finds" have been made, writes the gracefully around the posts.... This it is moderate in price. German linen has a hard twisted duke of Argyll in Youth's Companion. will make an inexpensive but at the same time effective-anpractical thread. This makes it look coarse, For instance, a tradition that a treasbut for common purposes it does well-- ure was hidden at Inverary had long spread. . Use valances by all means across good rule in buying linen is to o been handed down. According to the the tops: of your French windows. by the firmness of the weaves rather legend, it would neverbe found except They should just cover the transom than by the weight or the pattern. by a stranger. Generation after genThe snowdrop and the check will be eration of children searched for without Interfering with the doors it If themselves. They will soften that found the most satisfactory for pat- a badger made a hole In the hillside them of the gray terns. Large designs require a longer the children believed that the baduglyop line. Make raw silk. They should be box plaited, thread and wear out sooner than the ger had the scent, and dug up his burnot gathered, with a broad hem and a smaller patterns. or old badger ever A good damask should be of fair row; tbut nooung beading. The net curtains may run on brass rods attached to the window weight, not' too fine, not too stiff, but came forth, with bangles on its neck or Us nose. The children watched or door frames. They can run on with a soft, pliable appearance. rabbit scrape or hen scrape to every table to will calculated a that be draw has so It' been it that easy rings see if animal or bird had been atseat will two four perthem either way.' yards, square Formerly cotton sheets were made sons and that every additional person tracted by anything shining under the with a seam down the middle, but the will take half a yard of space, or one sod or in the sand. Then drainage was introduced. Forcloth' now comes the width of the bed, more table leaf. Now that steading is popular, merly the glen was too wet to be culIn purchasing one must remember the size of the bed and get many are the various decorative tivated, except on dry elopes where schemes it lends Jtself to. Matting water could not gather, and a hand width for a double-bed- , width for a bed, rugs thus decorated are attractive. plow did all the necessary furrowing. widthior a single bed. Plain white matting is used and the j But now red tiled pipes wer put down and All sheets should be at least two and deeoraiions in stencil are placed on j t0 ,jrain 0f water from flatter ground," r and ljt was possible to sow in torn- yards long, J to tuck in either end of the rug. floor Porch screens, paratjveiy iVi paCes. well at the .bottom of the matress. cushions, Some housekeepers buy the un utility boxes, chair cushions, lamp and; One pretty piece of' grass land shades-- all as it soon turns are fashioned from d a cllff was poin(ed out as a good bleached'rmuslin, From the precipice whiterespecially if sent to the white matting decorated with stencils. bH for lowln tuo me u,. JS laundry. a uu.im,. above in longi had fallen gracrock ' The ..-- . .6t , .average polio w is 22 b,y 36. If charming and the cost comparatively tn . not lns' ' The man at the plow tail was a stranger, an Englishman. ,i. , He put a bag of powder uader the tramp Then Wondered. rock to blow it up. The explosion The first hobo of the spring season followed, the splintered rock arrived in East Cleveland. He looked heaved, and fellpartly on its side. Under even more dejected than the first rob-I- neath where it had been was a gleam and shivered quite as much. And of the lost treasure! There were three since then there have come other bautiful, heavy gold braceleets, two of robins and other tramps, all wonder- which had cups at their ends. 'The ing why they left the southland so treasure had been found, and by a soon, and all appearing bine and pes "stranger' as prophesied. slmlstlc. Those bracelets were beautifully One of them bum, not a bird i wrought; one of them had plain ends DAINTY LINENS. appeared at the residence of Colonel where the wrist was slipped through. Your linen is the most conaplcuoufc Bush the other morning. It was Sun- As for the pairwith the hollow cups, and the colonel himself answered an old tradition was recalled which feature of your apparel. It require day -mW"aTEenmnrTMfl" known military bearing at once and tnitted a fault could be forgiven unless It is particularly noticeable whether said: "Could you please help an old the cups of gold at the gap in the on full or dres not soldlerf properly laundered bracelets were filled with his peniten"Regular army!" asked the colonel. tial tears. There is just room for the shirts, fancy waists, collars ana cuffs and wash shirts. Such garments re- laconically. hose, like the wrist to slip in between "Yessir." the golden ends, and it Is possible to care the to skill and produces quire "discharged T" hold the cups under the two eyes. best results. Exactly right is the ver-di"No, sir; no, sir!" the hobo assured Sometimes Ignorant men who have on our work. Send for the wa- him. "I quit of me own accord! No, found such bracelets have looked on gon; we'll do the rest sir; they didn't discharge me." the gold as mere brass. In one case " And that tramp Is wonder- a number of bracelets found In an Domestic Steam Laundry ing yetprobably why he was' kicked off the Island of the Hebrides were used as drawer handles for an old pine chest 468 South Academy Avenue. porch. Cleveland-- Plain Dealer. of drawers. A peddler came to the KN iWH IS PURPOSE. cottage, found that the old chest had The Denver & Rio Grande will make very heavy handles, and gave 15 shila rate of one fare to Salt Lake City lings, or $3.75, for it He took It said "Yoknow," Bragg, 'fexpect and return on May 3rd, account and sold the old handles for away my vacation ,on a steam 20 each. Students and Teachers meeting. The toSpend ' ' yacht this summer." Such heavy ornaments as the bracedate of which has been changed from "How foolish," .exclaimed Knox. lets must have been a burden to a April 26th to May 3rd. "Why don't you take a rest instead of Celtic beauty. For a warrior the gold WJ1. H. MITCHELL, Agent. looking for extra work. Besides stok was beaten out until It was thin, for -ing is such a hot job." Minneapolis then it was more portable and A o A easily cream his at cafe nune. worked. Patterns of all , kinds could Spencer serves Ice be punched In it, so as ,to give a good In the evenings and with meals.' GOES HALF WAY. ' ' effect in front We can Imagine how : ogrand an old chief from Brittany or Howell Does ue take things philo Wales or Ireland looked with a shin-- 1 . sophically? on his conical helmet; - Powell Yes, but he doesn't part iDg yelluw band a broad of gold on his right with them philosophically. Womai's shoulder plate and on his left a long yellow Home Companion. mantle girt in hy the belt itself. ' Practical Hints Given to a" BrTde-to-B- e Students desiring to enroll in the Music; of the B. Y. U. Summer School should make -- - Dnde-tobe- immediately. . - ten-quart- three-quart- er n , Further Announcement -- Wenave . 7: mm large number Sciatica and Neuritis . - In bringing Nurito to Provo we do not want any particular We are in the drug business to make money, and if, in making money, we can also be of material belp to' the residents of Provo, then the knowledge of having been an aid to the afflicted will be, in Itself, sufficient compensation. Lest we did not make our statement of yesterday strong enough( and. because it may not have been understood by some, we agajri repeat that we Invite every person suffering from Rheumatism, Sciatica or Neuritis to call, send or telephone their order to ds for a J1.00 box of Nurito, hnd that if Nurito, if taken In accordance relieve with the directions, which will be found In each ox, does-'no- t the sufferer, we will refund the purchase price. Nurito should not be confused With a patent medicine which it .is not. Nurito ia a physician's prescription, free from opiates or narcotics and 13 absolutely harmless. It is used and recommended by prominent physicians all over the country, andl It Is because of its being so used that we were placed in a position to obtain It for Provo. If there i3 a skeptic In this town who thinks that In any' way we have overstated the facts who .thinks that his case Is of such long standing that Nurito xwlll do him no good let him, or her, come to see us and we will satisfy that person of the merits of this prescription. THE HEDQUEST DRUG CO. Compounded by the MAGISTRAL CHEMICAL CO., Flatlron Dldg., N.Y credit for ourselves. notice.- HER ... r BLOUSES Are the prevailing garment for the Athletic Summer Girl. WE HAVE THEM . IN ALL SIZES We are the only firm in Provo carrying a complete line of Mendel's Make Famous MIDDY BLOUSES., White and Blue ; also All White. Prices . SI 25 $1 50 and SI 75 Our goods cost no more, but look better , IDENTITY. William,!. Kvaits bad a fartii in at Vermont where swine wet? brd with: Interested visitor before porn-aito com-o- f especial care. He one sent a barrel Royal Academy exhibition, looking stranger Can you pickled pork to tlio historian,' IS 'this buitiful lady? rue tell who "I this with letter: Bancroft, Soorge am glad to send you two products of Stranger Mrs. Eustace Mon;g')ui. my pen today a. barrel of pickled' ery Browne-Jones- , Interesjed visitor O. really: And pork 8'nd. rty en lour on Chief Iuire er whp is Mrs - Kustace Mou'omery Cliai.' Christian Roginter' ' t RUNE S ; won-plac- Decoration Day is Mav 30th. You will wanti that monument erected before then Why notma'ce arrangements at once. . - . i .i e . :BO'TH WORKERS. - i' Stran"r iUTlph. COMPOSITION OF A LEAGUE.' wife is, a lecturer, and: I am an entertainer," said Hobbs. . "Indetd,? I, knew your wife ap-- Teacher (In geography class) tell the class what a pea.red in public, but I did not know John, you may "" K4- w.u Mt v.v. league U. avaf iln ' Lifai. haaeball Oh.: I don t. i stay at nome nuji John (pro m Lmnlneotta. la inh b r Wane Mir w w Puck", " VU.w rw .; aj entertain the baby." . SMOOT H S P A FFO RD J By and Granite Work- s- tha Tabernacle Provo, Utah. ptly)-r-Eig- ht shep-her- . ds of cannlmals Is called Arabs.' When they live In towns they are called atreet Arabs. When the cannlmal goes on a Journey it drinks A much as It can to last for many days. Such animals are called accqulducka. Those that "cannot carry enough are called inebriates." , unuea, nrougn uueraiure. More than one literary man owea happymarrlage to his iooks. Lonj before she first met her future husband had Elizabeth Barret felt herself drawn toward the author of "Bella 1 and Pomegranates," of which she makes the hero ofLady Geraldine'e v Courtship" sayrysome Pomegranate of.Brownlng'swhlch, If cut deep down the middle, shows the heart within of a veined humanity.' Nor wrTs Browning insensible to the,; chartn of the lady's work, so that the inevitable, thugh delayed, meeting, resulted In a love which, overcoming all obstacles, resulted ia the happiest of '' blood-tincture- d " unions. ' ' History as She's Told. When Jean Leon Gerome's painting of the dead Caesar was on exhibition In the Corcoran gallery a Chicago vis- itor heard this conversation between & woman and her son, who were looking at the stricken Caesar lying at the foot of Pompey's statue while the conspirators were disappearing in the distance. 'Mamma," said the boy, "what l W the matter with the man "When you get older," answered the mother, "you will read all Jtbout it tn, history. The man ia Julius Caesar. He has JuBt been shot by Mark An-- , thony." . r ."The thermometer Its "My oral. 13 much like mea " .. one respect"'. ' -. u."What Is thatr;. 1 1'When it once . begins to take drop, it falls by degreeg,", . ;". in" -- :Uartii al f . - I tiT" " 1 - - the camel: "The cannlmal Is a sheep of the desert. It la called a backterla because' It has a hump on Its back. The canal-mIs very patient, and will lie down; and die without a groan, but when It Is angry It gets Its back up, which la called taking .the hump. The MIDDY J REVEALED ' About thY Camel. In a school In the South of Ireland a schoolboy of tender years Is ald to have produced the following essay on' . j ' y to interest the majestic adult. It la true that you find a delightful J)aby, la Homer; that in Vergil there Is glimpse of a little girl, and up and down in the classics you may, meet half a doien other pleasant shadows of children. But they are only shadows7 only at the most charm ' lng pictures." they give you as much, as If they were painting or sculpture for In children's bodies art has ali , ways had Interest enough only what a child looks, like; the pretty weak- -' ness, the Instinct for play, the native, gesture and movement. Not till the "return (o nature," not till the spirit' of romance moved on the waters. fttr the end of the eighteenth centurrdo you And poetB beginning to telfof the thought and faith in a child's mind, the mysteries of the child's heart, the fancies that are dreams and the fancies that are visions. You may think that they have gone too far, that a read Into childhood the laborious philosophising and sometimes the labored sentimentality of the adult But no one who loves children will den that the best of the children In nineteenth century bpoks have a far richer reality, a far fuller life than any thai were born In earlier words. And some ' of the best are In Dickens. ' -- ' PRODUCTIONS. ... others. HE WAS SATISFIED. THE' FUEL SUPPLY. "I think," said Mrs. Cumrox, who "Nature always maintains a bal- was" arranging a musical progiarfi, " "that we will have a" metjo-soprahance, declared tne country editor her- .- bdsband. t As to how in particular?" "Don't bother me about it. Co ahead t "Spring poems begin coming la just and see ' as the coal run short." Denver y Star. i ' .. Times. -- oPEN to When we made- this announcement in yesterday's Herald calling attention to Nurito, a physician's prescription for which we had secured representation for Provo, we had no idea that uur statement would meet'with such Teady response. There are a great .many more rheunjatlc sufferers' in Provo than we affstt.H ""to hear from we had any TSea of, and:, 'pstjuiably, a of monuments tablets and headlstones all: finished except the i inscriptions, that we can put out on short -- SrSasrly RHEUMATISM ' s Children were only found yesterday. Before the nineteenth century the child mind and the child heart wer hot supposed to have enough In them SUFFERERS FROM , " - ) -- y . Century Addi- , t j of the Nineteenth Responsible for Valuable tion to Literature. Writers PROF. C. R. JOHNSON, Vocal and Public School Music Supervisor. sessions of each day. le . TO THE CHILD GIVE REALITY This Course begins June 3, and Piano Students must be in attendance at either the forenoon or afternoon ? i " All Grades, PROF. M. S. GUDMUNDSON, 7 -- -vi5iinand Orchestra. , e ture ordinarily lost. Finally" their influence heats both air and sollr Increasing the diurnal range of temper ature by as much as tine degrees Fahrenheit. Faculty: er three-quarte- . .aerva''aS'''iiMlMM4ftjpe9-entrf-l- PROF. C. W. REID, Piano -- eight-quart- , Get It now while you can. . We hava plenty. : Telephone 17 . a, . . |