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Show THE BOX ELDER NEWS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY If wishes were realities most house- wives would own a MONARCH with all its conveniences and improvements. They would then realize what the Note. My reason for writing these few humble verses is, that others reading them may more fully realize how utterly lonely and how much old folks, bereft of their lifes companions need and Crave a few words of kindness and sympathy, and also how much good it does them to unburden their soul of their sorrow to a sympathetc listener. had actually been costing them. old cook-sto- ve bad-'Tw- THE HOUSEWIFE WHO IS PUTTERING AROUND WITH AN POKING IT FUSSING WITH IT TRYING TO OLD GET OUT OF IT THE SERVICE THAT NEVER WAS IN IT DOES NOT REALIZE THAT IT IS COSTING HER IN WASTED MONEY, TIME AND LABOR A BIG SUM WHICH SHE IS ACTUALLY LOSING EVERY YEAR FOR THE HARDSHIP OF DOING WITHOUT THE WOULD BRING HER. COMFORT THAT A MONARCH We can show to your satisfaction how it will actually, be money cook-stov- e or range, and buy a in your pocket to cast aside that old The time, money and labor saved daily will soon pay MONARCH. on the investment. interest a splendid I I I 1 E LITTLE MORE FOR A LITTLE LESS. JOSEPH F. HANSEN, Manager. Jensen, Barbara Larsen and Merle ANCIENT CRIME UNPAID FOR Stratton will entertain at a Valentine jldom, if ever before, have we been dinner in the High School Friday even- Murder 700 Years Ago Still Causes Annual Tribute to Be Paid by Ated to anything better than was ing. the Community. n by Mr. Ott last Thursday even- In the High School. The German circle gave an enterSeven hundred years ago some shep1 good sized and very appreciative taining programme Tuesday morning herds of the Valley of Roncal, in Nakience greeted Mr. Ott and many in devotion. varra, were murdered by shepherds of the Valley of Bareton, in Bearn, the case notes so e in that g busy taking Last Wednesday after our semester crime taking place on the high pasture Sir memory should not retain all lands of Arles, In the Pyrenees. reviews were all over, all the students $ good things given, they could It would have been difficult to bring ssh their memories, which, by the went to the gymnasium to indulge In the murderers Individually to justice, a matinee dance. and the Spaniards were preparing to y, is a very good thing to do. make war upon the valley from which from the very beginning, the speak-- I the French murderers had come, when was ball The basket to game that crammed his words with thought. the French village proposed that peace have been played here with Weber be maintained at the price of a yearly put an earnestness In his words was postponed until two weeks from tax or tribute, to endure for all time, at went far to demand the attention But the team played a team and this proposition was accepted his audience. His language was Saturday. of old stars. The school won by a without demur. lin and simple, his arguments were The payment of thi3 blood tax score of pvincing and to be candid in our originally three white mares, but later three cows of a particular breed and of our opinion, we will say It Tuesday evening the 1st year class color has been made ever since, the Is the best ever heard in Brigham, borne of the expressions heard after team played the Freshmen team of custom it is nothing more having Weber Academy, The final score was survived even the great wars in w liich lecture were, If we could only both France and Spain have engaged, in favor of Weber, IVe a talk like that each week." I and the storm of the French revolu- j tion. Cl like each person in the audience a The final number of the High School Yearly the representative men of st have determined never to treat course is to be given Febru- - the two valleys meet on the frontier, Lecture Aimy and Jenny as Mr. Ott said theey cry 19. Ralph Bingham, an entertain- - at a certain stone, remote from any treated in every-dalife. town, and go through the ceremony e hope to have more like Mr. Ott. of presenting and receiving the cattle. The order of procedure, which is I The Misses Marjorie Knudson, Edith Keep in mind the big Tabernacle elaborate and impressive, is fixed by a document bearing the date 1375. irg, Zillah Wight, Bessie Burt, Helen ' Choir Concert, Sat evening. Mar. 1. though the tax was paid a hundred years prior to that time. HIGH SCHOOL NOTES . 3 X lptSc. ail;; w,: 23-1- Tn n g,Si cot ; 9 F: as We had not met For nearly a year, And likely as not He had me forgot But wrong was my fear. Eagerly, almost Impulsively, He grasped my hand. He begged that he may Something to me say, If words he could command. HANSEN F0JRN A Twas on the street That I saw him. A little old man With trembling hand, And body wan and thin. His face was wan. And as he came I noted his aimless look. As interest In nothing took, But seemed sad and strange. His look impressed me, There was something not the cold, Twas not getting old That made him sad: But something else Had touched his heart. Something was wrong, Someone had gone. Someone of him a part. MA1JBLEAIBLE COOK-STOV- 13. 1913. 5 I questioned his health, I questioned his stay, But he seemed not to hear Questions touched not his ears; His thoughts were far away. But suddenly, as If thinking Aloud, he said: Gone! gone is my wife O, my very life My wife, she is dead. His eyes filled with tears. His voice began to tremble And tears blinding me, I could not see. Nor thoughts assemble. My pity went out As it had but to few. Oh, it seemed a sin To take from him. And not take him too. And so he spoke on. His voice near falling: Yes, my dear wife died, I was by her side As the angel came calling. Better I nursed her Than ten nurses could. But to me was plain Our labor was In vain To die she should. i Sere I y ft a s: ill l Hete pUR SPECIAL FEBRUARY Bee tress. st-- e What Is the Use of Letting Worry Get the Upper Hand in the Journey Through Life? After ..Economy Bargain Sale ' tl S Pee 1 I ie. STILL ALL IN ON OUR WINTER GOODS FULL MUST GO REGARDLESS Ladies Walking Skirts to $7.00 Ladies Silk Waists Ladies, Misses and Childrens Coats es )diit itt OF COST. $6.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 Wool ini f lh' BLAST $5.00 $1.50 ancei L. D. S. Cotton L. D. S. Garments At Half Price $1.25 $ .88 Garments All f underwear at a Great Reduction. . We are also offering Baby Hoods, Toques,- Head Shawls, Knit Gloves d many other seasonable goods at about one fourth their value. We are also slaughtering prices on House Dresses, Kimonas, Under-irt- a aad Night Gowns. It: edtf ef ui I it a AT tie r.ui! Hi & it litlci $ .93 $ .50 $.15 At a Great Reduction The new itufl f ire tube1 lor Mens $2.50 Hat Boys $1.00 Hats Mens 25c to 50 Ties Work Gloves n .fiV eie: lute deal e bargains we have added this week are too numerous to and gee. it will do you good. Many of our customers havo been asking for Spring Goods, as they inted to make them up before the busy spring time. For their benefit. 6 havie opened up a fine line of Ginghams, Poplins, Percales, Soisettes eluard, Silks, Etc. men-Com- WE STILL HAVE A LOT OF THOSE GOOD SHOES LEFT WHICH WILL GO AT HALF PRICE. ' iw ople' We still lead in Bargains. ;0 our ado 1 n' C. HOLST & SON Rea ?er me pice, MM Bis ok BeaWi cf Tabcnutdc. "Tis now six weeks Since she passed away. I am a changed man Oh! so lonely I am. I care not here below to stay. The star of my hope Like a meteor has fled. Oh! my dear wife Was the star of ruy life. Oh ! that my days were sped. LOOK ON THE CHEERFUL SIDE All, IThe following article wag submitted by W. H. Konis of Salt Lake, who Is interested in the establishment c fruit evaporators in Utah. Ed. (Continued from First Page.) Fife, Marco Madsen, Drucilla Keller During the season of 1912 just passMarguerite Wight, Jessie Brown, Preai dried peaches brought from ed, Kelsey, Edith Valentine, Mattie West, to 5c per pound delivered to the packLuella Jensen, Miss Murphy, Lucy ing house in Fresno, Calif. During Larsen, Callio Lund, Amber Hamson, 191 1( the producer was paid 10c per Hilda Hansen, Mary Starr, Vera Hanpound. In the year 1910, 8c to 9c per sen, Ray Hansen, Blanche Loughney, pound was paid for the same product. Sylvia Gleerup. The secretary of the Chamber of Messrs. C. II. Bryan, Charles JenCommerce of Fresno states that in sen, R. If. Jones, W. E. Davis, John 1907 Fresno County had practically Hansen, W. E. Worthy, Reuben Earl, the only decent crop of peaches In the Wilford Anderson, Noble Fiehburn, United States and that year dried Melvin Nebeker, Orion Jensen, Cliprlcy peaches sold for 11c to the packing Brown, Parley Rees, Earl Knudson, the farmer realizing from $400 Chester Knudson, Janies Ronier, John house, to $300 per acre on their crop. II. Lillywhite, Scott Nelson, Juius Dried apricots invariably bring big Standee, Leonard Valentine. William from 11c to 15c per pound. The prices, Brown, Isaac Hansen, Norman Hansen, Bert Dickens, Ernest Hansen, Lowell production of evaporated pears is very Mortensen, Kenneth Jensen, Wallace small and the price very high. Dried in Oregon bring usually about Johnson, Stanley J. Madsen, Emery prunes 3c per pound, dried whole with seeds, Rees, Merrell Valentine, John Olsen John White, p. C. Jensen, A. C. Cooley without any special labor in evaporatLogan, John Shyring, Roy White, W ing. A Denver paper, speaking of the iniII. Griffiths, Mr. Glaubitz. tiation of the evaporated fruit venture In Utah, in its issue of January 25tli, Have Catalogue of Star, At Cambridge, Mass., there now ex said that as far back as the editor lets the most extensive and valuable could remember, Utah dried peaches collection of stellar photographs in the world, numbering oer 240.000, had won fame on the eastern markets, and 100,000 or more of them have and that lie at a loss to underbeen secured at Han ai d University stand why the business had permitted Observatory at Arcquipa, Peru, at ar. to die. It Is true that 25 years ago elevation of 8,000 feet. The number of stars revealed on the different Utah dried peaches were shipped in plates depends, of com so, on th den earlots to the eastern and southern sity of the part of the sky limns pho markets, a considerabk quantity gotographed. and on the length of the ing into Texas. exposure, the longer the exposure the Messrs Blackman & Griffin of Ogmore stars, provided the light of the sky does not fog the plate. On one den are now buying the old fashioned plate alone, namely the region about dried peaches, which are of a little Eta Curinae, 240,000 stars have been knotty, dark quality, and paying 4c actually counted. per pound for them delivered in the same quality of gunny sacks that spuds WHEN MICROBES ARE BUSIEST are handled In. These peaches are dried in the sun. with no other care Although Never Doimant, It Haa than merely halving and seeding them Been Ftoved They Have Special and permitting them to stand open to Hours of Activity. the attack of the flies and elements. A' celebrated scientist has made the By first sulphuring this fruit the Interesting announcement that there are more microbes in the air at nine color would have been preserved, the oclock In the morning and at nine flavor retained, and it would have oclock at night than during any oth- hindered molestation from the flies, er periods of the day. He has also discovered that the percentage 6 1 mb thereby bringing the producer a very crobes In the atmosphere Is less at much larger return, and by the adopthree oclock in the morning and three tion of artificial evaporators, a still o'clock in the afternoon than at any further improvement In the quality of other times. The explanation ad- the fruit may be secured, and a corvanced for the partiality of the microbe for nine o'clock a. m. and p. m. respondingly increase in the market is con- price obtained. is that the "microbe hour trolled by the movements of people, J. L. Wilson, Ogden, has been evapFrom five to nine in the morning they are going from their homes to their orating his peaches for years and sells working places, and from five to nine them in competition with the high In the evening they are again Jour- class California evaporated fruits. Our neying through the streets, either people may do the same. The proposhomeward bimnd or in search of ed packing house where the fruit will pleasure. He noted that at ov about six bring cash on delivery ought to inoclock every morning and evening terest our fruit growers. there were indications of. the approach of the microbe rush hour. From that time on until nine o'clock Refinement In Trades. the atmosphere became more and The world as it progresses becomes, more crowded with germs of all If not more refined, at least more kinds, some bad, some good; and delicate in its phrases. A generation then, immediately after nine o'clock, ago the became dressmaker a the tide began to ebb, until it was modiste" and the ready made tailors always lowest round about three shop a clothing emporium." oclock. According to his researches, We have to thank America for such after lunch is the safest time for a Improvements as ready to wear for footwear" for nap. ready made clothes; boots and shoes; "neckwear" for colFOR SALEA 4 choice building lots, lars and ties and doubtless for many $73 per rod. H. C. Christiansen. others. London Mail. j 4c s J . u s I ! K 1 !,i - t r- - i . t i t Can a man forget A companion of forty years? Ah, then, think of my wife. we worked in life, Did you ever cross a room while you Together were busy and worried and catch a Together shared joys and tears. sight of your face In the glass or win- Oh, man I am so lonely I know not what to do. dow'. Nine times out of ten your jaws are We were truly one set, your eyes are hard, and the ex- In all that we done; pression of your face would discourage the most enthusiastic optimist in Oh, I loved her so true, the world. The next time you catch yourself And thus to me looking like that, stop and ask your- He unfolded his Borrow. self what' under the shining sun are His heart strings were torn, you sulking about. He was sad and forlorn; or of sense a has humor, Everybody If they have not they should have; so Sympathy he wished to borrow. call it into play at once and talk to Too full to speak yourself, and keep on talking until I could only sigh, you begin to laugh at yourself and the He saw my look, great big trouble that made you look like a scowling dog. What will you He understood, It did him satisfy. talk to yourself about? Oh, any merry little thing that once AIVASONA occurred in your life some pleasant surprise, some happy day anything will do. Finger Stall for Child. This is no foolish advice I am giving mother of a small son knows Every In you, for, seriously, there is more how well nigh Impossible It Is to keep this looking cheerful than you can a bandage on his finger. Also, how dream of. It is not half as feeble frequently little boys fingers are In minded as it sounds. Try it for a few need of bandaging. Before throw-inweeks and prove it for yourself. old kid gloves cut off the good away Don't overdo it, of course, but let fingers for "finger stalls for the boy. your face express good will and cheer Cut the under side short, but let the and comfort, and the first thiug you top run hack to the wrist of the know you will feel it. glove; then spilt this strip to form You cannot entirely forget your to fasten around the child's straps cares; nor would it be right to do so. wrist with a small safety pin. These Every one has cares; they are good stalls will be quite large enough to for, ns. The real God sent cares that cover the bandaged finger of a small test the etrangtb of our souls aii of child and will save endless time and us have those, too; but let us meet worry, says Mothers Magazine. F real weBn. Chicago larger children use fingers frens a thorn like Tribane. macs glftrc. Opera House Wednesday, February Ed. W. 1 Rowland and Edwin Clifford, Inc., offers A GREAT PRODUCTION OF HUMAN INTEREST THE The Great New York, Chicago and Boston Success.. ROSAR Y FOUNDED UPON AN EMBLEM OF PURITY BY EDWARD E. ROSE PLAY A CAiT HEAT Written and Staged by SERMON PRODUCTION the Author Playwright Prices: In of more successes than any other the.Worid. 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 li i |