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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLR, UTAH April Birth Stone Glass .of. Hot Water t Is a Diamond, set either in gold or platinum. Ve make all kinds and style! of mountings. . Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit - . Ring compile, in handsome mountings, fiom and snappy $25 up. f Mail otdris perfectlyaW. ' BOYD PARK 1 ol stw o ' MAKERS OF JEWELRY HttU 6 SALT LAM CJTY Any size roll film 1I A developed) . . . U Any size film pttckrin developed . . . ZU !,(& ? CdltS CdltS (8 : Salt Lake Photo Supply Co. S. Ma'ti 15 Salt l ake City. I'tah Street r s Open sluices c the system each morning and wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter. Those of us who are accustomed to reel dull and heavy when we arise: splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach. lame back. can. instead, both look and feet as fresh as daisy always by washing the poisons , and' toxins from 'the body with phosphated hot water each morning. We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hut water with a of- - limestonephosphate in .it to tlusli front the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous days indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleanse ing, sweetening and purifying the -- - Cream Wanted CREAMERY CO. NELSON-RICK- S 359 Avenue s Salt Lake City I'tah en-.tir- before putting alimenra-ycanu- l TOUCHED PORTERS more food mto the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach Is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans mt all the Sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast and it Is said to be but a little while until tho roses begin to appear in the AT heeks. quarter pound of limestone phosphate t verr little at your druggist or from the store, but Is sufficient to make anyone who is bothered, with biliousness, constipation, Btonmch trouble or rheumatism a real enthusiast on the subject of internal sanitation. Try it and you are assured that you will took better and feel better"ln every way shortly. A dv. HEART George Could Notfake Money From Man Who WasX-es- s Fortunate Than Himself. correspondent sends us an' excerpt from a yet unpublished work to be entitled "A' Sentimental Journey to A . the Pacific Coast. will-cos- It was about seven oclock in the evening, relates Mr. Thornton, when the following conversation took place between myself and the porter, who, strangely enough, was called George: Well, said I, it has been a nice day. No noise, no dust, snjooth riding and An empty car!' Beggin yo pardon, suh,. demurred George, Ah begs to diffah with you, auh. Its been an exceedingly po day today, suh. Why do you speak thus, George? In de fust place, deys been no as you Bay. Dat means less brushing an less brushin means sjim tips. Deys been nobody on de cyah, as you remark. Dat means slim pickin. Yessuh, dats how she go. Ah " depends on de travelln public fo sub-- . sistence. Ahm de oldes potah on de line. ' Mah hald done grow gray In d . service, an mall life Is a failure, suh. I felt sorry, so I handed him a dime. I said: Im sorry I cant make - dt more, George, but this Is all I have. Im In the law business. Well, of cose deys always dose dats wusser off dan us, said George, brightening up. Ahm sorry fo you, ttgr CZAR AIR? By SE.RGE N. SYROMIATNIKOFF. Editor of Rossia. EW Americans have had the opportunity to speak wijh the czar, ex cept diplomatists and Mr. Melville Stone, manager of the Associated Wes8, but many would like something about him aside from political gossip and slander.. Does he live in a golden by elderly titled gentlemen of the court, Inaccessible to the people? 1 have been asked. I will answer this by giving a few established facts. To tell the entire story of his life would be to tell the Russian history of the last twenty-onyears. Three weeks after, his accession to the throne, November 14, 1894, he married Princess Allx of Hessen, sister of the Grand Duchess Ellsaveta Feodorovna, wife of his uncle. Grand Duke Sergil Alexandrovich. The czar rises at seven oclock, and before nine he has finished his modest breakfast and begun his daily work. He reads the newspapers, telegrams and other Information presented to him, and makes a note of all Interesting matter. The time from ten to eleven oclock is assigned to walking, but nearly always from ten to half past" oclock he receives the reports of the officials of his household special audiences to dignitaries or men who Interest him. and only during the time until eleven oclock does he walk alone or with his son, accompanied by two Scotch hounds. At eleven oclock he returns to the of his infantry regiment palace and tests the food or of his bodyguard. " of the soldiers' food in a locked, stewpan is brought to him by the chief noncommissioned "officer orlhe regiment After the test of the food the reports of the ministers beglnr lasting until luncheon. " A Days Activities. The luncheon Is Informal. There he meets his family for the first time in the day. Sometimes the officers of the suite on duty that day are invited. After luncheon the emperor receives officials and deputies, and from four to five oclock, he walks, drives, rides on a bicycle, or canoes and goes boating with his son or with his daugh' ters and the empress. From alx to eight (clock he works again in his study. From eight to half past nine he dines with bis family, and from that time to twelve or half past he works again. He never rests during, the day, yet keeps cheerful and unwearied. Sometimes, when he finishes bis task earlier than usual, he reads to the empress at her evening tea. Before going to bed he prays. The czar works about ten or twelve hours a day, of which he spends no fewer than four hours alone; he sleeps not more than seven hours, and only about six hours are given to meals and relaxation with his family. On the eve of holy days the czar goea to the . -- cage,-surround- he handed me back my dime." Cleveland Plain Dealer. And ed well-dresse- well-dresse- . d see through it! mple A-sa- v New Road to Riches. Some time since a little girl who lived In a rural community appeared at the back door of a neighbors house with a small basket In her hand. Mrs. Smith, said she, as the neighbor her timid knock, mother wants to know If you wont please .lend her a dozen eggs. She wants to put them under a hen. Put them under a hen? was the wondering rejoinder of the neighbor, I didnt know that you had a hen. 'We havent," was the frank reply an-swer- ed - of the little girl. "We are going to borrow the hen from Mrs. Brown. Workings of Conscience. g Individual in a Chicago saloon turned from the eounter, where he had been hdping himself most generously, and said to A seedy-lookin- - free-lnnc- h the barkeeper: - evening church services at half past seven oclock, and on holy days he goes to mass at eleven. The rest of the time on holy days he works as on - Friend, can yon trust me for a lass of beer till tomorrow ? 7 "No, said the barkeep. "I am sorry to hear that, said the seedy one. It seems kinder mean to eat the amount of tree 'lunch 1 have and not buy nothin. week days. How Nicel Phyllis "Arent the new Boston traffic rules Just lovely for us girls T Ethel How so? Phyllis Why, didnt you know they were going to have sophomores 'stationed at every downtown street Transcript. corner? Art of , art of may be considered to have made a considerable advance when someone brings out an autobiography without aa 1 'In It Judge. The Elusive Scissor. - - ribbon tiedVlq scissors will give many minutes that are oth- crwlse spent In looking for them. A piece of ribbon is pretty nearly sure to show where the scissors are half hidden under papers or sewing. V Worth While Quotation. Strong impulses are but another name for energy. Energy may he turned to had use; hut more good may always be made of an energetic nature than of an indolent and Impassive one. John Stuart MOL -- Every evening, at home or abroad, the emL peror writes his impressions In his dairy, a clear and Possessing an excellent memory method of thinking, the czar writes in a clear hand, qnickly and without erasures. His thoughts are expressed simply and briefly; he does not like arrange a brilliant Christmas tree. On Easter the czar kisses three times each of Jong phrases and foreign words. He always on nearest his even to the officers, servants, who congratulate him upon this his orders, writes great holy day, tbeempress giving her band to the block notes with pen and Ink. The embe kissed. Durlnc the first three days of the peror does not like to speak by telephone, and In Is One the In Easter his none holidays the czar has to kiss more than placed study. there is ' 3,000 persons and present ech one with a small room of his Servant Sometimes he directs his or hts secretary to transmit hi ' Easter egg of gold, silver 'or Ural stones. The czars hunting Is in charge of a special adorders verbally or by telephone. The persons In event of the Imperial hunts, this office beadvance. in the ministrator notified are concerned set In of the the time be should change ministry of the court. The grounds any there ing part that are In Spain, Province of Petrokof, aSkemevit-sy-. for andiences or for receiving reports. near. Warsaw, and in BielovleJ, hear The tables and settees In the emperors study ' lie do not but state with are covered they papers, t There are private hunts, when the emperor goes there long; questions are decided and carried ont at once. The emperor always knows where the alone or with a few Intimate friends, and great required papers are. He puts the reports, after -- hunts, with a large number of hunters, patterned after an old elaborated ceremonial, with prickers, he has read them, In envelopes and seal. He beaters, hounds, hunting horns, torches and bonreads easily all handwritings, even the most difffires. He shoots deer, bears, hares, pheasants icult Italics of the seventeenth century. - . and. In BielovleJ, blsons. The private charity of the emperor is extensive. noi Is bnt thousands The by cautious, very He gives emperor strictly observing only the rules, and never allows himself a shot which and ten thousands of rubles. The difflcultwQrk of the government the czar might hurt the beaters. He Is an excellent shot does alone hfe has no private secretaries., Hef and his bag Is always filled. Once, near Vyborg, Finland, he killed a fox. . The Finnish law rehas some help from the officials of ills household wards a hunter with five, marks (31) aa a premium and the officers of his suite." .Officers of the field The czar for each carnivorous animal killed. chancellery decipher and cipher telegrams and said be received the premium and issued a receipt for but once, quit make drafts of letters, five marks. This receipt Is kept tr (he Vyborg I am doing three mens work. 1 wish truly: work at least do the to bow knew jdCadeL, everyone p Boston A colored - r-gives d of two. Sounds like a modem business man s ; complaint. The chldretrof the czar rise as early as their father,, but spend their mornings in the upper apartments of the palace and generally meet him for the first time at luncheon. But the emperor sends them to bed, kiss s them good night and blesses them with the sign of the cross. Before and after meals be and hie family make the sign of the cross, and the children thank their parents after meals. Five o'clock tea Is served also In private. During meals service talk la not al-lowed then reign Jokes and merry tales. After dinner the emperor likes to read aloud Russian classics, chiefly the work of the humorists. He Is fond of Gogol and of the works of Gorbunov, a famous actor, writer of humorous stories, whose books the father of fhe remperor,- Alexander III, also enjoyed. He Is a student of Russian history and an admirer of the father of Peter the Great,-th- e most gentle czar, Alexei Mlkhailovltch. Ills A state Is strong and powerful only motto Is: when It worships, the covenants of the past." He Is president of the Russian JIlBtorical society, organized by Emperor Alexander III. The children adore their father and obey him absolutely. Jle plays with them, gives them simple toys and comforts them during Illness. Hts love for his son Is boundless. He not onlywalks. with him, but he takes him to military shows, bullds sand anLsnow fortresses with. him, dlgs ditches, cuts wood, breaks Ice, does carpenter work, arranges boating parties The emperor Is a good sportsman. He Is a great walker, rider and bicycler, plays tennis and nlnepihs and Is a good oarsman, swimmer, diver and shot At family dinners the czar prefers Russian cooking. He llkecold boiled suckling pig, beet soups, gruels and pancakes and drinkrthe Russian malt drink, kvas, the old recipe for which was taken, from the monastery of Sarov. The champagne served in the palace Is always Russian. The period of Lent is strictly observed. Dur--. ing the first, fourth and seventh weks and on Wednesdays -- and Fridays of other weeks Lent lasts seven weeks even fish Is excluded from Imperial meals. Only vegetables are served. During his holidays In Crimea or In the Finnish archipelago the czar enjoys walks of from ten to fifteen miles, visits farms with his children and picks mushrooms and berries. He Is so tireless that only two officers of his suite, Komaroff and Drenteln, could accompany him in his mountaineering In Crimea. The Imperial family lakes part In the Joys and sorrows of their servants. ' The female servants leave the palace only In case of death or marriage. In the latter case they receive the right to visit their masters. As examples of the most devoted servants may be mentioned the servant of the empress, Kondratleff, the attendant of the heir apparent, the sailor Derevenko, and the nurse of the Imperial children, Maria Vishnlakova. For them and for the soldiers and offlcersof the regL ments that bear their names the Imperial family . " Nearly Transparent. Just aa the football match was getting Interesting it began to rain. A man In the front row of the stand Immediately raised his umbrella, which was rather the worse for wear. As Boon as it appeared, however, ths people behind him began to grumble that they couldnt see the game. The individual at once turned to them and said in a supercilious voice: I er beg your pardon! But cant you see over my umbrella? No, replied a voice from the rear, we cant see over, but we can nearly Brest-Lltovs- ; J CZARMA AM DAUGHTER e suh. A Mature Apprehension. "When I was a boy my father forbade me to read dime novels. . You saved a great deal of 1 And yet sometimes fear It resulted in saving np my appetite for sensational fiction till my time was father more valuable. time.-Maybe- w - -- CZAIZFVITCIS--' by-hundr- eds -- . k. The czar and his family like the opera, particularly Russian, but they also like Wagner. They prefer the ballet and comedies to other dramatic TENDER SKfNNED BABIES performances. Likes to Play Domlnoea. Only Intimate friends are invited to the Infrequent evening parties In the palace. The emperor never plays cards, but plays dominoes sometimes and likes billiards. The daughters of the czar like dancing, but now they have become helpful nurses In the hospitals and take care of wounded soldiers. The czar likes the balalaika orchestra, Cossack choirs and dances. Once after seeing a vivid and animated dance of the Cossacks the czar said, thanking the soldier dancers: The blood runs quicker. It seems as though one .could smash everything looking at them." The czar has a strong telief In the heavenly origin of his power. When saying In his maniJune 3, 1907: "The Lord God has festo us with the czar's power over our people and before his throne we will give an answer for the fate of our empire," he expressed his conviction on the religious origin of the Russian monarchy. He has church services, cld rites, old church hynins. When meeting priests he kisses their hands and they kiss his. lie confesses bis sins and receives sacrament twice during the Great Lent before Easter, and a third time before the anniversary of his ascension to the throne! The-czIn Crimea once he Is a good soldier put' on all the equipment of a soldier of the Six teenth regiment of sharpshooter! and took a Jong walk with rifle and knapsack for the purpose of trying out the soldiers outfit. He ordered that he be enlisted In the rolls of the first squad of this regiment and received a certificate In the name of soldier Nicholas Romanoff. The life of of the Russian army and navy and the the Russian soldiers and sailors are objects of his strenuous concern. Ho chose a simple sailor, .Boatswain Derevenko, a peasant of the Volhynla province, to be the attendant o. his son, The union of the czar with his soldUrs and peasants Is his purpose To have a legal way of hearing the voice' of the people the czar established the state duma, or house, of representatives; In his speech from the throne May 10, 1904, at the open-Inof the first duma. he saldto the representathe St, Georges tives of his people, summoned The solicitude for Salle of the wlntei palace: of the fatherland. Intrusted to me the by Providence, Induced me to convene the elects of the people for help andjegislatlve wprh. With ardent faith in he bright future of Russia I wel . come In your persons tho best men, whom I have ordered my beloved subjects to elect. - Difficult and complicated work la before you. I believe that the love for your country And the fervent desire to serve JUwllLrouse and .unite. yqu. Asjor a ar well-bein- g -- ' well-bein- g myself, I will defend the unshakable Institutions granted by me, in Itrong belief that you will give service to your all your strength and country TnrascertafnlngrthSieediof the peasants, so close to my heart; in educating the people and remembering that for developing their the spiritual greatness and prosperity of the state not only freedom, but order' based on right. Is necessary. May my ardent desire to see my people happy and to transmit to my son In Inheritance a state strongs well organized and civilized self-denyin- well-bein- . be fulfilled. May God bless the work before 'qae in union with the state council and the stat duma, and may this day be marked as a day of renovation of the moral countenance of the Russian land, as the dag of the revival of her best forces. Begin with Reverence the work which I have Intrusted to you, and Justify the confidence of the czar and the people, May God help you and me!" In October the cz&r and the czarevitch visited 'the trenches on the southwestern front, and the czar was many times under the artillery fire of the enemy. As this bravery, by the tenure of article 7 of the statute of the military order of SL George, entitles an officer to a cross of 8L George of the fourth class, the council of knights of SL George of the southwestern armies resolved comto ask the emperor to accept this crossr-Th-e mander In chief of the southwestern armies also asked permission to confer upon the czarevitch a silver medal, with a SL Georges ribbon, for 'bravery In having visited the wounded at the station Clevan, in the aphere of the enemye artillery fire. . With Rashes and Irritations Find Comfort in Cutlcura. Trial Free. -- Babys tender skin requires mild, soothing properties such as are found In the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment Cutlcura. Snap lssosweet, pure and cleansing and Cutlcura Ointment so soothing and healing, especially when babyl skin Js Irritated and rashy. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept I Boston. Sold -- everywhere.Adr, The Last Man. Say. paw, who do you suppose will be the last man on Little Lemuel : earth?, Iaw Some shoemaker, probably. , FRECKLES Now la the Time to Get Bid of Tbeao Ugly Spots. There no longer th lightest need of aahamvd of your freckle. th feeling, 1 olhlna double preaOMptlon ttrength guaranteed to rmuv homely pola M, an ounce of othlna doubt Simply get strength from your druggist, end apply a little of It night and morning and you hould soon ae that even th worst freckle have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than on ounce la needed to combeautiful pletely clear tba ykln and gain elear complexion. ,. Be aura to ask for th double strength othlne, ae this la aold under guarantee of money beck if It falls to remova freckles. the Adv. Social Inanities. know, Mr. Jones, I much older than you are. thought you Ho Oh, no; not a bit, I assure you. f - Sho-rY- ou T SALTS IF BACKACHY OR KIDNEYS TROUBLE YOU Eat Lass Moat If Your Kidneys Arent Acting Right or If Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers You. When yon wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region It generally means you have been eat-- ' ing too much meat, says a authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in thelr effort" to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your" kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them like you well-know-n relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, 'sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather Is bad yon have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and yon are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. ' Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous .salts is made from the acid of .grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids ln'the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts Is a life saver for regular meat eaters. If Is inexpensive, cannct Injure and makes a delightful, efftx r vescent drink. Adr. Uthia-wate- Good-BBirch. Is the school Jill Yes; they use an twitch in the building. - y Bill elctrlj |