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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH TAKE SALTS TO FLUSH KIDNEYS IF BACK HURTS! Form Uric Actd Say To Much Moot Which Clegs th Kloneyi irritates th ,d Bladder. f Moat folk forget that the k'dnerg, like tho bowel. et sluggish g ' fed and need a flushing ocras or.allj - else we have backache and du'i m . rv In " the kidney region, severe le4j aches, rheumatic twinges tori id Iner acid stomach, .sleeplessness and a!, aort of bladder disorders You simply must keep jourki! ,es active and clean, and the moment on feel an ache or pain in the kidney . region, get .about four ounces of Jal Salts from any good drug store herq take a tablespoonful in a g'ass ot water before breakfast for a few dais and your kidney will then art fine This famous salts i made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice com bined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate ,them to normal activity. It also neu .tralizes the acids In the urine B0 it no longer irritates, thus ending blad der disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; Inexpensive, makes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which ever) both should take now and then to keep their kid neys clean, thus avoiding serious com- j an-T- RURAL Xe wll Tilclin with trpuialioa. Fof work All ike anodaicl grade, ngmaa or millionaire from the famom 'Dollar Watch lo the delicate band-mad- e time piece (itmr Switzerland. Out mode pticea make huvmg eair. BOYD PARK EARN1ER MUIRS -or ' schools Illinois, ' learn arithmetic, marketing, Srrd that grciW, of course Vogeler't High C IcincU and Tested Atfalta. 1 imothy, Clovers, and Grasses foi fpeiial See that the seeds mixtures !astute for your vegetable and flower gardens aie Voseteia Also your Seed Potatoes and Dry Land Giatns. Vogeler Seeds look hke other seeds, but ' they never fad to make good Send for our Catalog It u Free for the asking. Seed Co. Voider tak Sail ak. ( But when It comes to shoveling snow a man always tries to follow the straight and narrow path. Dr. Fierce' Pellet are best for liver, bowels and atoroach One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic. Adv. in ths loves ths who man the of enemy as himself. There isnt much selflov "make-u- p . Tom Important Personage. Why were you so extremely to that old man? Is he a rich polit relative? That Is my prospecJack Shh-htive father In law. , ! Th Divvy. "How did Kid Jabb make out In hi bout with Battling McPug? Oh. the Kid got the gat and McPug got the gate receipts." . The Remedy. Would you like some tonic on your air? asked the barber. "I've got Dmething here that will positively " top It from i omln out said the man in it." "I don t believe The only thing that will he cbar top mv hair from coming out is a i Nolle Prosequi. Rastus had caught Sambo red hand "Ah m gwine hab yo arrested d mah chickens, yo Sambo stealin foh Washin'ton dats jess- - what ahm gwine to do," said Rastus. Go ahead, niggah. retorted Sambo. Go ahead and hab me arrested. Allll mek you prove whar yo' got dem chickens yoself!" ( FREE tf tha alvatosao et'hiMve ihftimtlve permanent 1'iuimh. Ut n m the Huih) i nni no more than kind Unit for kottuk ataloRua an I llooklet Kxpert kodak Kiniwhinif Ittef an frrte Special MlO enlargement, 2$ cent. Men! us a negath c tor a free sample print Salt Lake Photo Supply Co. Robert fl.Moul COPYRIGHT Y lr') little Johnnie Jones of Center, Cook county, ill , reaches the little red these fine mornings he does not place a big red apple on the desk of dear teacher. Instead, Johnnie takes a couple of fresh eggs from each pocket of HEN Nile school-hous- NCLtOM-IIICK- th, Almost every schoolhouse has been a social center for the rural community of which it is the center. Gas and wood ranges have Ibeen put in many schools and the girl pupils prepare hot lunches every day for all the pupils. They demonstrate tbeir skill In household chemistry, also, by preparing and serving on special occasions dinners at which their parents are the LAST of honor. Day after day the boys and girls bring samples of milk to school and test them with a milk RELIABLE REMEDY tester for riebnesa In butterfaL After a series cf such testa they are able to help their fathera RESTORES KIDNEYS decide which cow ar worth keeping and which e only unprofitable "hoardera." th parent of th puIn many neighborhood For tuny yers druggists hvwtchd pils bar been organised Into agricultural clnbs record with much interet the remarkable and have begun to take an active and eager Inmaintained by Dr. Kilmers terest In nil the work of the school. On the long rembladder the great kidney, liver and wlntsr evening the parents and pupils have edy met tn one of the seboolhouses to take It is phymeisas prescription. mediwatch an and 'n spelling bee, part ii a strengthening Swamp-Roo- t Of 600 common words sent out at on h" lists toT based Ift. ? cine kidney. the beginning of the year, by th county superIt help,workthenature in intendent . bladder do the do. ebould tended they Especially Interesting and Important is the plan ha. stood th test ol year. Swamp-Roo- t keef thschools or at least the school activt-tie- s to on its merit and all druggiat told by It evidence all through the summer months. i It Ko other rmcy ess yoa With tlat end In view, a large number of garden a year ago, on n basis, id start clubs fere organized which would keep th children Interested, enable ' acquired knowledge. em a-- fre-quen- - INDIAN SLAVE DEAD Sohlckulash Pate Had Lived for Many Years Among Whit Popl In fttat of Washington. ZZJVgR G&OSS RAI3ZD BJpLKS, SZABS'XXZ'J omazf'i &UW7JY9 $97 pupil also kept an exact account of his expenses, after Including rent for the land occupied, and, and selling his product, figured his gross receipts net profits. The twenty-nin- e pupils of this school, whose ten gnd fourteen years, between ages range earned between them a net profit of 11,185.25, with total expenses of $191. The largest amounts earned by individuals were $105 10 and 4102.16, and It is noteworthy that In each case the successful pupil was a girl. Little Alma Kutz. thirteen years of ago, the first prize winner, made her money from the sale of of tomatoes and astera grown on and of harvesting All work the an acre. planting the crops she did herself, with the exception of the first plowing of the land early in the spring. She prepared hotbeds for her tomato plants, tnd made a covering of window glass for them. Next she bought 200 small flowerpots, and when the tomato plants wer well up transplanted them Into the pots. While the plants were growing she marked off Into rokrs thirty Inches apart, and a the one-eight- h plat short time later transplanted the tomato plants from the pot to th plat Tha next few week keeping the ah wa busy cultivating the plants When weeds. of free rows entirely had spread out so much that aha could not hoe them any more she went between the rows and pulled out the weeds with her bands. About the twentieth of June there were many nice ripe tomatoes on the vines and ahe gathered her first box, which she sold for $1. As fast as the tomatoes ripened she picked them and packed them carefully 4nto crates, and every day her father. carried them In to the Chicago market along with products from his own truck garden In all she gathered 225 boxes of tomatoes, which brought her 1113 On a part of her plat she planted asters late In the season and from the sale of these she realized $9, finding a ready market for all she could offer to the florist shops of Chicago.1 The flowers were shipped In fresh by parcel post each evening Her total expenses were $16 90 for the two crops, thfls leaving her a net profit of $105.10 This money she has loaned to her father at per cent Interest, and she expects next season to double the amount of her land and her income. cently for the garden club work don last summer. There were five prizes of (100 tn gold each, on awarded to that school In each of tha flva divlsioSS which stood first In th progress it bad made In agricultural education and in th result of it agricultural work. Thi money will be spent In the purchase of an agricultural library, a Babcock tester, a vegetable canning outfit, or some other agricultural apparatus which is to become a part of the permanent equipment of the school. There were also awarded tive silver cups, on for the pupil, boy or girl. In each of the five divisions who secured the best arfrt biggest .results in the actual agricultural work undertaken as part of the school course .It is a striklhg evidence of the cosmopolitan character of the population of Chicago and Cook county that the individual prize winners among the rural school pupils fof the year 1915 should be, respectively, of German, Italian, Dutch, and Hungarian parentage. There is not a Yankee among the lot. The prize rural school of the whole county Is undoubtedly that in Niles township. Every, pupil in this school, which was taught by 8eth Shepherd, Individually planted and took care of a garden or raised a field crop of some kind. Each llll , . . the-plant- s, 6-- i . , , , , , , , , t . t . r T r . American Patience Tried x iic its tr1' CIKAMCRY CO. Salt I ake City Utah S V0 he lea Avenue e his coat Behind a table at the front of the schoolroom the secretary of the boys egg club waiting. On each egg, a it I brought In, .1 written the number of it owner and the date it wa laid. And during each school day the eggs are packed and sent by parcel post to one of the club's customers In Chicago. . The arithmetic lesson In several of the Cook county rural schools now consists In keeping books on the receipts and sale of fresh eggs by members of the egg clubs Once a week. Instead of the old fashioned review of lessons. In which the pupils bad not the slightest interest, the weekly remittance for egg shipments is received and divided by the boys among themselves In proportion to the number of eggs each has contributed. To them th study of arithmetic has become a very real. Important and Interesting matter. All through the 150 rural schools of Cook county the same new spirit of life ha been put Into the dry bone of study. and girl are studying botany, for inBoy stance, by testing the seed co.n which their father are planning to plant, next spring; that brings In again th tudy of percentage. And when father la ahown that on th average, only 03 per cent of hi proposed seed corn will actually germinate, he 1 likely to get a new Idea of and new interest In tha country school. Thertf art few things of which Chicago baa a greater right to be proud than that tha rural schools of the county In which it Is located ar most advanced and progressive probably country school In the United States. The division of these school Into five districts, with n trained teacher, who I also a graduate of an agricultural college, at the head of each as director of rural life and of schools has proved a tremendous step In advance. bounty Superintendent of Schools Tobin, who persuaded the county board to make an appropriation of 110.000 to cover the salaries of the five rural life directors for the year, has Just received the reports of these directors covering the work done during the fail and early winter months To read them is to wish that one might be again a country-schoo- l boy going down the long road every morning to the little red school-hous- fjj Salt lake City Utah Main Street H Cream Wanted WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION 1 When the scalp is itching because of dandruff and eczema a shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water will b found thoroughly cleansing and soothing, especially if shampoo is preceded by a gentle application of Cuticura Ointment to the scalp skin. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept L, Boston. Sold everywhere Adv. ilr. I FREEKODAKERS SCALP And Falling Hair Use Cutlcura Soap and Ointment Trial Free. utV b Couldn't Evade Special1 A Lancashire man who has a hen froost near the railwaj was complain ing to a friend about having soma of the birds killed by puMiig trains Tha should bang 'em a timetable up in the hoose, and thin tluv could look when th' trams were booked to come past, said the friend said th Timet'able be hanged' other. They know weei enough when th ordinary trains 'II pass When Aw've hed one killed its alius bin wl a special. "London Tit Bits. ITCHING lAM. shall 1 plant? they V FOR iui What seeds by working out practical problems in everyday Jife Opportunity for n JEWELRY t household chemistry dairying and other important studies , smtu Kia mvi the Cook County local drugget says h sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe In overcoming kidney trouble whl!&Js only trouble Adv well-know- SQM) SCIENTIFIC plications. A American or Swiss The friendship of the United States Is on of the greatest assets of the British, according o Sir Gilbert Parker, who hi the course of a recent Interview had much praise for the American government and tha policy it hat adopted in th present war. Ha said In part: -- "Thera has never been a war In modern times when n neutral nation did not challenge a belligerent nation because of Its Interference with neutral rlghta. The Uuited States has certainly been greatly tried by our orders in council. There has been. Indeed, a series of difficulties. In thia business of neutral rights the American people have been called the pedants. There may be pedants among them, but beneath all Is a d respect for International law, for the keeping of treaties, for a perfect observance of the rules of civilization. From the beginning ! have thought that the United States took a course almost inevitable In her position. Here is a conglomerate population. The war wr-European business What did we do in 18"A then friend, set npo- an people oly an deep-seate- 1 a - At Hoqulam, Wash., Schickulash Pete, believed to be the oldest man In th Northwest and the last of tha Gray Harbor Indian slaves, baa Juat died at tho age of one hundred and ten year. Another of the slaves. John Kettle,4 died recently at the age of one hundred and five, and with the passing of Pete they have all now gone to tha happy hunting grounds, the New York Sun state. The old Indian, better known aa Uumptulipa Pete from the fact that for more 'than thirty years he had lived in the Humptulips valley, was a .sklent of Grays Harbor for 75 years, vr since 1840. when he came with a war party of Indians from the Columbia river to attack the harbor Indiana. Tha Invaders, a larga band, cam .rio tha harbor in canoes and landed it James Rock, about alx miles west ?f Hoqulam. There they camped for he night, pulling their canoes high ip on tho beach to b out of reach of he tide. During the night the Indians of tha harbor attacked the Invaders and tha last big Indian battla of tha Graya Harbor district was fought there. Most ot the invaders were either killed or captured, only a few escaping. The captives were made prisoners, and among their number were tha two Indians known after the white men came aa Humptulipa Pete and John Kettle. Both were freed by the Governor Stovens treaty with the Grays Harbor Indians. A Crying Demand. certain family in , a small Kentucky town is notorious for Its lack of domestic harmony. Late oife summer afternoon the small son of the house wa leaning against the dooryard gate, crying with great energy. A Old Mrs. Beals passed. What's the matter, little boy? won't take me to the movie show!" he howled. Do they ever take you when yon cry like that?" they do an sometimes they dont, but It aint no trouble to "Th-the- y ; ylL" ed 8tates were being Influenced against us by evidence provided by ourselves.. "They are not averse to their government bringing pressure to bear upon Great Britain In regard-t- o the blockade and all the questions Involved in It; but war against Great Britain baa never been In tbeir minds, while at the tarns time there wer circumstances which might very easily have drawn them into war with Germany after the sinking of the Lusitania. They have not forgotten Manila and what the British Beet did there, in aid of Admiral Dewey, to defeat German purposes against the United States. I think the governments of both countries have preserved the very highest traditions of diNever has diplomatic correspondence plomacy. been maintained on a higher level, and never the firm thing said with greater good feeling on Hr Drug Prics are a Still Searing. fw prices of drugs used largely In medicine, Just before th war and today, as quoted by th Journal of tha American Medical association: Acetanilld, 20 cents a pound; today, $3. Calomel, 50 cent; 1140. Carbolic add. I cents; 48 cents. Cod liver oil, $18 a barrel; today, 887. Phenacltln, 50 cents an ounce; today, 815. Quinine, 50 cents an ounce, today, $17.50. Early Mall Communication. San Francisco's first regular ovep land communication with th East was established by pony express In 1860, tb charge for postage being $5 for half an ounce. both aides. We have tried our friends in the United State greatly; w have tested their confidence In South America, In us to the fuIL, "Pedro, you're two hour? lye shall do well to remember that the people dinner." "Ye. Chir of the United States must, sooner or later, b elution to-?t a vast controlling factor in the destinies ef mod JthO wti S t 'the population; r' enr nations, 14 wealth: t.- 1 W war OCCK-- . tV . i V It i eUventh battle, ar 1 4 Civil and who vn. wiea an employ Itself Cr r vorld. It will .TtnUc j cf tl a prettrvlng Crs ndL 3 the- - l; r , f- - TJU,' Ltth vral'', '4 t 1 ' |