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Show Jr UTAH the weekly reflex. KYSVILLE. HELP FOB IVORKING VOMEU Some Have to Keep on Until They Almost Drop. How MM IJ Why argue about how much to spend for a watch or a piece of jewelry, when it is admitted that you get greater value in a good jewels store than anywhere else? Our modest prices make buying easy. li' w Mrs. Conley Got Help. 4 Be fair to yourself Here la a letter from a woman who bad to work, but was too weak and too much to continue, llow sbe regained health : I aulTered so much Frankfort, Ky. With female weakness that I could not v- , - V, sW t BOYD PARK fouMocoiftoe uf-lere- d MAKERS OF JEWELRY loo main E.Fink-ham'- MFN ANn WOMEN how u thi time to learn the barter tra le Bm bent hj greatdeman 1. now open tor 90 day. Only short time rwimrej Teols fumlxhed and rommwsion hi !. lerI log. Call or write Moler Baber Bebooi 13 Co, tnereial 8t Bait Lake City. Utah. VHEff THE CrtlPGf SOX3 ARE BMWHG a Vegetable that Compound bottles and t I found all you to be TO I triedit. I took three claim. Now I feel as well as ever I did and am able to do all my own work again. 1 recommend it to any woman suffering from female weakness. You may pubMrs. James lish my letter if you wish. Conley, 51 6 St. Clair St. .Frank fort, Ky. No woman suffering from any torn of female troubles should lose hope until the has given Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal Ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigoratorof the.female organism. All women are Invited to write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for special dvicv--lt will be confidential That Was the Rule. A veteran cur conductor In Poston recently lost his Job and was obliged to take the next best thing lie could find, the position of sexton tu a church. He presented the collection box to a pillar of the church one Sunday and In fishing out some chunge from hi vest pocket the man brought to light two cigars. leaned over hint The and In the most solemn of tones said : 8lJJYJJ EHD OF OHE WEfinOrtETEl THE ALAFJ1. FftQjr How - orcli-ardis- ts up-to-d- ate fsE3f . 1 - "Smokin' In the three reur scuts on . ly." Nerves All On Edge ? Just nerve wear U a cause of kidney weakneac, to. u kidney trouble s cause of nerYouinesa.v Anyone who has backache, nervousness,- - bluet, headeebet. dizzy tpellt, urinary lilt and s tired, worn feeling,, would do well to try Doans Kidney rills. Thlt tafe, reliable remedy it recommended by thou-eand- s who have had relief from juat such troubles, A Utah Case Mrs. Diaries W. Adam, 2717 Quincy Ave., Osden, Utah, says: "Heavy lifting was responsitrouble ble for with my kidneys. My bach' got lame and sore and s dull ache in my loins kept me In misery.to When I tried lift, sharp pains cited me and I trot weak. very a The kidney were unnatural, too. Five boxes of Loan's Kidney i'ills effected a cure." Get Deess at Aay Stare, SO a Bon 1 I . w-- v, By Robert H. Moulton frArE& hWJCHMVJ)A the last two jeuyre another and a greater triumph of actentific Jiortlculture has arrived ; another natuani enemy of the things thnt grow nnd bring forth fruit has been vanquished. Jack Frost, long king of the fruit crop, has been dethroned. Fruit growers have literally built millions of fires under him, nnd burned him out Scientific orchard heating has made It possible to raise the e orchard ten to flf-temperature of a teen degrees with as much certainty as the janitor can heat the city mans fiat It lakes somewhat more labor than the last mentioned process, but the satisfaction and the profits of heating all outdoors" are surpassingly greater. Frost Insurance for the fruit crop Is now just as practicable, just as certain, and vastly more profitable for the money expended than either fire or life Insurance. Insurance by fire for the fruit grower makes vastly greater profits at a much smaller expanse than Insurance against fire does for the merchant or manufacturer. The little outdoor oil stoves and coal furnaces that have been sold by the millions to orchard owners in the last year and a half have banished from the fruit grower that annual early spring nervous prostration from fear of frost ; that periodic, paralysing fear that he may go to bed at night and awaken to find his whole years labor ITIIIN 1 ma-chlne- fj re a. d Every W oman W ants d'!klailL iUU'.'ftifll -- -- " wn twd-wtttn- a - n 45-18- 16. " v BOAT Divine 8ervfce Made Social Affair Is Finland, and Large Parties Travel Together -- clothes. Service lasts some hours, and wheq it is ended, the women turn up their skirts or more often take them off and make up the little bundles again, CFQFQFFEA& fHOfl A TE7THA77ZE OF TMEJXTV yielded from 20 to 75 per cent of a crop, while the yield of the protected orchards was frotn 95 to HJU per cent, so heavy that thinning was necessary in many of them. . Individual testimony to the efficiency of orchard heating In every fruit growing state couffl be multiplied Indefinitely. Fruit crops valued at $250 to $750 an acre were frequently saved at a cost of seven to ten dollars an acre. One Colorado grower. for Instance, with 50 heaters to the acre raised the temperature of his orchard from 18 to 28 degrees and produced 41 carloads of apples. One of the most remarkable stories of heater sift-cee comes from Missouri, A orchard located In a deep valley had suffered severely from frost every year and had not produced a full crop for 14 years. Against the advice of all two brothers from Kansas City bought It, and equipped It with 5,000 heaters of the controlled or graduated type. With 35 or 40 pots to the acre, the firing was done for four .nights at the time the apples were in bloom. They harvested a crop of 15,000 barrels, valued at $45,000, and It was the only crop In that territory. The net profit on each acre approximated $200. The first Cost of installing an plant Is higher, than for a coal or wood outfit, but the results ln tlme. saved and efficiency galned have made It the most popular fuel. Oil can be obtained In .quantity at prices ranging from four to seven cents a gallon, and It makes a quick, strong and easily controlled heat One man can care for from three to five acres of orchard for four or five hours and this Is about as long as It will be necessary to burn under ordinary frost conditions. The prices of the oil heaters range from twelve cents " for a simple type to 45 cents for one a of the controlled type, holding there gallons and burning at full capacity for ten or twelve hours, or even longer if regulated for. a miw blaze. 40-ac- re Constipation nw-- -- FAH77FE OFEEJEEVOUZHEAJIfc- - The Army of 1 i 200-acr- B nun cii rarann nr pi Uulllv sees UM " m 'X BY' and the churchboat starts for home. DOANS perma-nentlycu- ' r'- - W seore-tlnn- m " chilled to ejeath by a auddea frost TUe cumulative despair of losing three or four fruU crops in succession that has put fruit growers out of business and made them dependent on churlty or day labor is past An orchard with a reasonably Industrious and provident owner can be made to yield an avercon- age crop every season so far as the frost cerned. Scientific frost fighting with fire Is as much a fact as seed testing, Irrigation, fertilizing, K,DAr;T spraying or pruning. If is the last and greatest advance In systematic horticulture, and has placed F03TER-MILURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. the fruit grower abreast of the scientific farmer. Since the beginning of xommerctal horticulture, the fruit grower has been at the mercy of the elements. lie made all his calculations, all his plans, aU his business arrangements contingent on the hope that the frost would miss him. And before the development of orchard heating the chances la Crowing Smaller Every Day. against him were getting worse in the frost belt CARTERS LITTLE la the modern, commercial orchard, the land. UVER PILLS labor, spraying equipment and cultivation responsible they total as heavy an Investment as many manufacturnot only give relief ing enterprises. And when two or three crops in they succession Were wiped out by frost, the average Milgrower was completely bankrupt lions use Smudging, or the formation of a dense blanket V them for Wr Of smoke over the orchard, had been practiced with Bilionnn. varying degrees of success In some parts of Europe.-OrcharladigetUea, Sick Headache, SaDew Skia. heating proper was first used In CaliforSMALL FILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. nia, and the original California smudge pot is still Genuine must bear Signature successfully employed In many orchards. In the spring of 1010 several growers In the Grand valley of Colorado experimented with the burning of oil la simple potsLof the lurd pall'Ltype, with the result that they saved their entire crop on the heated areas and lost It oa the unheated tracts.- - The jprtng of 1911 saw the adoption of the .smudge pots on every fruit section of the state, and they reached the experimental stage In several other states. In the spring of 1012 there was not a fruit growing state without them, and many sections of several states were ns fully equipped as ColoFOR PERSONAL HYGIENE rado, Dissolved in wnter for doockaa steps Frost fighting la not an easy job. It Is necespalvic catarrh, nlcoratioa and to have a force of men. Industrious and caresary sat ion. Roeommondedi by Lydia E. ful and observing to the last degree. And It Is no Pink ha Co for too yoara. pleasant task to rush wit Intou the still, cold dark? A koaliag traidtr for naeal catarrh, to drudge the better part of the night to save uess and EcooomicaL throat tore tor oyea. your own or your neighbor's orchard. In the early days of orchard heating, a man was detailed to watch the tested thermometers that were hung In different parts of the orchard and at the farmn house some distance away from the fruit trees. the temperature "was not sinking fast, perhaps If kw. MtebMi Y "V ZMlwcW the rancher went to bed for a brief nap, setting his alarm clock to wake him at intervals through the feettnr go'td tail, Wgnr Nowaday tfe-bqu j n.nuit y 19wui alarm thermometer frost lea the of vine security, ii ts im t.tickie emt. 83 tHwnrchr for lriror;This:electrtc;watchman has forMLkoHM Fut. 94.63 Set tfwwr Wee, C CwwWe fts business end incite orchard a specially made IS W emkKtt T. uBtontv v vaccik ao nvw h thermometer, with a fine platinum wire fused Into U i Ox IT. ImuT OK conok Wrdw iffin L mercury at the freezing point or at whatever the wey, tMWwale jj la considered CrttwJjfcerrtwT. the danger point As soon as the below this wire, the circuit Is broken sink mercury pd the alarm at the head of the orchard boss bed rings out its warning. Any interruption of the cprrent causes the bell to ring so that If Hie apparatus should be put out of order it automatically tells on Itself. Kqt the orchardlst Is usually forewarned, even , Ml-M I Bnf Rxf. ye Maouutours. Defare he goes to bed, and makes reudy for the J tray. Late In the afternoon he notices great fleecy W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. , J , CHURCH Attending divine service in certain parts of Finland is a social affair since the churchboat is an institution In that northern possession of the czar. This craft Is of such size that in some cases no fewer than 100,persons may be Towed to church at the same time. Twenty or thirty take the oars to. gether, and it is deemed the proper thing for everyone to serve his turn at them, since the church is frequently quite a distance from the houses of the parishioners. In the event that the boat has a long distance to travel. It is not unusual for a party to start da Saturday night Then may b seen the peasants going down to the waterside in the evening, in order that they may be ready at the time appoint ed. With them they carry little bum dies, in which are contained their best smM. wems protect their crops and laugh at the ghost of bankruptcy -- by using smudge pots to drive away killing cold during the blossoming period . ( . SAUMiacrry WAKTf D do my own work, had to hire it done. I heard ao much about Lydia ynmi tf& THE OTHfZ FHOJTAlAXri Of ss 240-acr- clouds hurrying from the northwest, chased by a bitter wind which seems to have been Intended for January, rather than this April night lie goes to the post office for the day's mall and in every window sees the warning of the diligent local gov- wise-acre- s, ernment weather forecast: "Freezing temperature tonight." Hy seven oclock the government thermometer Is at 37 and falling fast As 7 :30 oclock he telephones the weather man and gets the reply : Bitter cold all over the country; temperature Is In many parts of the already down to thirty-sevevalley and will drop to twenty degrees on the western slope of Colorado tonight By eight oclock It has fatten to 32, his alarm begins to rinfe and he knows that King FTost with his warriors Is marching on the camp. Steam whistles are beginning to shriek all through the valley to warn the growers of the siege. Farm wagons laden with coal and oil rattle past giving evidence thnt the laggards who have been hoping to the last are beginning to get their heating machinery Into action. Already the early ones are firing heavily. Clouds of smoke hang low over the trees, and the little spots of fire beneath punctuate the blackness with rays of hope. The orchard firemen dash for the trees, a torch In one hand, and a gasoline can to aid In quick lighting In the other. Dashing a few drops of gasoMONKEY FLESH HIS ONLY MEAT. line on the oil, they apply the torch, and the blaze Is at work. The lighting the Too proud to. beg, and finding himself on the men can walk through the orchard, leaving a trail of starvation because of the Impoverishment verge of smoke and fire behind them. In fifteen minhis of noble family In Europe, Count Franz Lazar-Inn- i, utes each man has his tract of orchard transformed a remittance man well known In Central l" Into a sea of flame under a cloud of smoke. went to a Jungle near Managua, Nieara America, Theu comes the first period of rest The men and kept himself alive for five months by eat gua, gather In the packing house or barn, for lunch or Ing moukey flesh and roots and berries, according smoke, making occasional trips to the thermometo reports to marine corps headquarters there. ters to see that the fire Is doing Its work. By 9 :3t) A party of United States marines while on oclock the thermometers outside the orchard regbig game hunting expedition discovered the titled ister 28, and those iu the area of heat show a comforeigner and took him back to the Nicaraguan fortable 37. Then the frost fighters know that the capital battle Is half won, for keeping up the temperature . The count, half starved and nearly mad beIs a good deal easier than raising it when it has cause of the privation he had suffered, once reached the iltuH. The rest Is a matter of fought his rescuers and begged them ts let him remain in the vigilance. If the heater Is of the regulated type, jungle, the reports say.. The marines overpowered with enough fuel to. burn through the night or him, however, and are now attemptlhg to nurse him a few men are left to watch and open longer, back to health and reason at their commodious barthe burners wider If a later sudden fall of temperaIn the American legation. racks ture shows thnt more fire Is needed. If the heaters . are. of. the uniform single-burntype, "they may need to be refilled when they are nearly burned out,' Tree Stump as Lamp-PoIf the frost battalion should come back for another rasadena, CuJ.. front yard there stands an ,1 Charge. The outside thermometers drop to 24. and 'old sycamore stump about ten feet, hU?h., tiuWom the6rcfiard'stond at 3d;tW'danger mark the top are the stubs of two branches. k,b, The of the orchard frost fighter. The heaters are owner of the property Jatelv conceived thtrbw opened wuierrbr refilled tf burning' low, and' theMlBS theump for a lump-posand la the ton of " " The eight degrees of , mercury shoots up to. S3. frost has been driven away, and If the oil supply is plentiful, and the labor unflagging, the orchardlst may now consider the battle won. When the sun has shed his rays over the trees long enough to make the outside temperature more nearly that of Lifes Little Worries. the orchard, the heaters are shut off by merely tend?r 8 easily molested. vL,fei18 f putting on the covers. always that goes amisc Vni 1011 "I"1.8 .,lK W vexutipus ,aln ,n,etlmi but than that of the year before, and proved more 1r The smallest and slightest IrnpeAm-- , iciai than evpr jhe fiiost piercing; and as little letters most tire he The crop in the Colorado fruit area tor 1911 avereyes, so do little affairs most ffiwwrb 55 about aged per cent The untested orchards tuigne. fruit-growin- n all-nig- g lard-pail- fire-are- - st -- t, ' 1 Plays With His Nalls. Playing talking machine record with his Anger nail Is an accomplish ment perfected after long practice by George E. Niasen of Chicago. His skill at this, he writes In Popular Mechanics Magazine, affords spectators much amusement and delight at social gatherings. The record ,1s placed over a penholder or pencil and supported by the left hand. It Is revolved by tho fingers of the left hand and the nail of the second finger of the right hand Is applied to the record. Practice la required to obtain satisfactory results and an old record should be used In practice, as the beginner will scratch and ruin many disks before he be comes jexpert. Alluring Little Vice. Of all the pleasanter vices, the Ideal- Istlc Interpretation of the middle agel is perhaps the least noxlons and the most alluring. One turns but too glad-ly from the controversies that rags around our own day to the graces and Immunities of medieval charity. Here are no economics, here Is no organization. Men gave from Impulse, and liked to think of those who received only aa the blessed occasions of good will The sick poor were the sore - -- 1 -- men-bers- Christ" A er con-clnsive- ly Why Flour Explodes. Records of the last ten years show that about twenty explosions have oo curred in cereal flour and feed thillz, with the loss of $2,000,000 worth of property, as well as the killing or injuring of over two hundred employees. Investigations regarding the causes of these explosions and subsequent Ore ' have not proved conclusively what art the difficulties to be avoided. In eight cases the explosions are believed ts have originated from the sparks produced In the machines during tho grinding process. Tiny particles of gravel or metallic substances coming into contact with the plates of the machine may produce enough sparks to Ignite the dust within the machine. Another possible cause for cereal dust explosions suggested Is the use ol naked flames. Even the leper begged with the halo of the Gospel around him, and tha dukes of those days took warning front the Dives of the Miracle play. On Guard. Your post extends from the sentry box to the gate J70 yards on your lefL You are to march up and down in a smart soldierlike manner, not to quit your arms, lounge loiter or converse with anyone, nor leave your post until yod areTelieved, whlch wlll be In two hours, time. Corporal corporal Private - Pottum Er couldnt I do It in a taxi? Passln Show. - Necessary Weakness. . . He The . trouble wlth you . Is that you have 'too much tlon." She I dont know. didnt imagine you men were a lot " of .us JCnL-eve- r ter than yen marry you." Boston Transcrip A are--bob- s -- Employed Her Employer. Dinah, who went home nights, ar rived too late one morning to cook tbs breakfast and her mistress told her that for each breakfast missed thers would be a reduction In her weeks wage. Dinah passively assented to this, bat next day the mistress heard the maid next door say to bei "Fe1 to me you got to work mighty late. "I gets to workwbea J.gpts reny was the reply. How do you manage Oh, I P?s da bout de breakfast?" 2ot tniKsns to cook de hreakfiis1." Evening Transcript. |