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Show UTAH THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, One Iree Another Royal Suggestion -- DOUGHNUTS and CRULLERS From the New Royal Cook Book DOUGHNUTS! and wholesome more delightful than doughnuts or crullers rightly made. Doughnuta tablespoons shortening cup sugar 1 M K cup milk 1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon salt i cups flour 4 teaspoons Royal X i! t i t . - t Baking Powder shortening: add sugar and egg; stir In milk; add nutmeg. salt, flour and lng powder which have ' Cream well-beat- en been sifted together- and enough additional flour to make dough stilt enough to roIL Roll out on floured board to about BAKING - il H-ln- In thick; cut out Fry to deep fat hot enough In brown a piece of bread POWDER seconds. Drain on paper and sprinkle with powdered sugar. 60 ed Absolutely Pure Crullers shortening J cup sugar leggs I cups flour 1 teaspoon cinnamon U teaspoon salt I teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 4 tablespoons cup milk Cream shortening: Mrie from Cream of Tartar, derived from grapes. add sugar gradually and beat-e- d eggs; sift together flour, cinnamon, salt and baking powder; add addlf and mix well; milk and remainder of to make dry ingredients soft dough. Roll out on floured board to about thick and cut into trips about 4 Inches long and wide; roll in bands and twist each trip and bring ends together. Fry tn deep hot fat Drain and roll In powdered sugar. one-ha- i FREE lfew Royal Cook Book ch A a ch though a number of other countries are now plan the Idea. Rudyard Kipling once ' Ring to adopt ' g theae and (core, of other delightful recipe. Write for It TODAY. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. US Faltee Street, Hew York City wrote: Twelve hundred million men are spread About (Ids earth, and I and you Wonder, when you and I are dead What will those luckless millions do? If we change the closing linos of this stanza to read: And I and you. Wonder, when all the trees are gone, What will those luckless millions do? The kindly sarcasm of the Kipling humor dtaap pears and we are confronted with a question of vast Importance' for our consideration and action. The Importance of the broad problems would possibly be more sharply recognized if we view the situation from a somewhat less altruistic and intermit lmal standpoint and consider only the one hundred million people within the borders of the United States. Consider for a moment the ex tent to which forest products enter Into the com forts, conveniences and pleasures of many, tf not all of this vast multitude of people. You rise in the morning from your wooden bed and walk about on the wooden floor of your wood en home; you bathe with soap probably contain lng or produced In part with a product from wood, anoint your face with a lotion containing alcohol very likely produced from wood waste, out pn your hose manufactured from wood liber, step into your leather shoes requiring tannin from wood for their manufacture, and then proceed tp breakfast where you sit upon a wooden chair. In front of a wooden table and read the dally news received over telegraph lines supported by wooden poles from a paper made of wood pulp and printed with Ink manufactured from a forest product If reasonably prosperous, you now Journey to your office In an automobile with wooden spokes In the wheels, probably travel at least part of the way over a Wooden pavement and finally settle yourself In your office surrounded by wooden trimmings and furniture and dig Into the dally letters and reports which are again dependent upon the supply of wood pulp paper. It by chance, you have occasion to travel, you board a wooden railroad car (or at least one made Co appear like wood) and travel over tracks supThe food which you ported by wooden cross-Uewhich clothes the materials the you wear, eat, and supplies necessary for the comforts of your home and the conduct of your business, all are received lu containers, some of wood and some of fiber, but practically all of forest products. These accustomed comforts and privileges of existence are dependent upon a very wide variety of Industries, dependent to greater or less degree upon forest products. These supply useful and necessary occupation to some million or more itcople, They Include Q per cent of the 276,000 manufacturing plants in the country. The future of these varied and tremendous able to If a man Is big and fat keep bis mouth shut be can bluff almost anybody. i I , 1 4 I I s. f - dnstrieslsdcpcndentuponasurptyorraWina" ferial; their ultimate and greatest success dependent upon the wise selection and most efficient handling of this raw material. This means that authentic knowledge of the properties of the material and how to moat efficiently utilize them is. In the long ruiv essential to- thetr continuation' r on a sound economic basis. These considerations inevitably lead os to the forests, and here again wa are confronted with a demand and necessity for knowledge of the propand utilization of the' erties and possible-use- s many available epeclea of trees. Without it, it is impossible to know which trees to cut or which to grow, what la their value, how best to utilise them, or what to do with the enormous quantity . ', of waste material. broad such conceptions as these that It was led to the development of the forest products laboratory which was established In 1910 by the forest service. United States Departrnent of Agri- with the university of culture, in Wisconsin. Federal appropriations maintain, the organization and provide necessary supplies and equipment Theuniverslty provides Unbuilding and light, heat and power. The forest products laboratory Is called an institution of industrial research Its object is to acquire, disseminate and apply useful knowledge of the properties, uses and methods .of utilization of all forest products. This ts a broad field of almost unlimited scope; the surface has been but partially scratched. It has been said that rescan h Is primarily a matter of men who work upon the frontiers of knowledge, conquering the new domains. may be done as a matter of fact is done Individually, separately, disconnectedly and progress of some sort will undoubtedly result. But to - Re-searc- h been married lose all Inte- Pleasures are the commas used to No man has the courage to woman what her mirror docs. punctuate llfea sad story. ( V After a couple has two weeks the neighbors rest in them. teH i If you would flatter a man tell bln; Only a fool man will light a lantern and start out to look for trouble. proof against flattery. he Is Kill That Cold With and direct such organize, correlate, effort must, tn the long run, bring greater prog ms, Ip less time, with less expense and with greater saving' Work of this character requires the services of specialists along widely varying lines. The foresters knowledge of tree growth is necessary to the engineer studying the mechanical properties of various trees ; to order that he may wisely aelect for study those species which are, or pay become, available for use. The engineers knowledge is necessary to the physicist engaged In problems of do ing wood In order that the effect of such treatment on the mechanical properties may not he overlooked. The pathologists knowledge Is necessary tyoth to the englneejr and physicist In order to determine the effect of decay on the properties under Investigation and equally hi his knowledge necessary to the chemist pursuing his work on the development of durable t glues on preservatives to prevent decay, and on prevention of decay In pulpwood and wood pulp. The knowledge of the dendrologist Is necessary to all In order that the Identity of the species under study may be determined with certainty, and tn order that peculiarities of their structural anatomy may not be overlooked. An organization of such men provided with proper equipment, materials and facilities for work cannot In the long run fall to secure results of value, it Is such an organization that we ave attempted to develop. I shall make ho attempt to describe It In detail. Suffice it to say tiat prior to 1017 It comprised a personnel of approximately BO, expanding during the next mouths to 600, and st present Includes slightly less than half that number. The aggregate ex- penditures over the entire period are la the neighborhood of twomtHton dollar e yearly average of about $200,000. This. Is but , fir. slgnlflcantsum wben the breadth e magnitude of the problems are rtwiaidemL results of much of the work cannot, of n rw-i quoted In dollars and cents. Certain t.-- y results, however, enable the use of iuth a yard measure, and a few of them will. I am sure, sene to convince you that organized Jnduatrial highly-traine- d water-resistan- ll ten-yea- r t. -- research"! a paylug profit ion. ex-- " The building and construction trade,-f- or ample, uses annually approximately At and a half billion feet fer structural purpose where strength It Important. Tbls material 4a worth roughly $200, 000,000. Investigations at the forest products laboratory on the mechanical properties of American woods has given knowledge permitting a 20 per cent increase in allowable working stresses in structural timbers. This means a pos-- ; slble saving of $40,000,000 annually; if results are - actually applied to only 10 per cent of such material. the annual saving will equal $4,000,000. . The claims for loss and damage to commodities 'pi shipment Actually paid by the railroads amount to $100,000,000 annually. Proper nailing developed and recommended by the forest product laboratory, and adopted by the National Asoocla- tloh of Box Manufacturers, and through theta by many companies and shippers. If conservatively estimated to save but 1 per cent of thhi loss means a total saving of $1,000,000 a year. glues and plywood for Work on on the at carried laboratory during the airplane war emergency alone saved the War department $6,000,000 tn the procurement of such material during a 12 months period. Investigations carried on at the laboratory dun-lnthe past year regarding th use of hull fiber cotton Unters for pulp and paper, and second-cu- t has made available 200.000 tons for this purpose, and has resulted In the establishment Of hire plants with potential production of 300 tons per water-resista- nt day, and an annual sales value of over $13,000,000. Improved methods of turpentining developed by the forest service resulted In increased yields and less Injury to timber with net savings aggregating $1,000,000 per year. These few samples alone show combined annua Increases In production and decrease in waste aggregating $30,000,000. They should serve to crystallize for you the value and Importance of Industrial research. Results, of course, cannot be obtained overnight. Patience Is required and efforts are not always quickly crowned with success, but it cannot be doubted that over any reasonable period of years, economies resulting from organized research so greatly exceed the expense that there can be no question of its deI&voIy? i sirability. g The lumber and Industries represent some of the greatest and roost Important manufacturing and industrial developments of the country. Of the nations Industries they rank second In Invested capital, first In labor employed, and second In annual value of products. The forest products laboratory Is the only Institution of organized research engaged upon the problems of these Industries, and those problems yet untouched and unexplored are many and of Importance. What, for example, of the possibilities which may result from the development of permanently durable and water-proo- f glues or adhesives and their application to the use of material too small or too poor a grade for other service? What of their application to forest economies through the Increased value thus given to small second growth material? What of the sulphite-pulliquor problem involving the possibility of utilizing the 33 per cent of the w"d fed Inf the pulp digesters, and now What of the lost tn the waste aulphite liquors f packing, boxing stt of mtieu; wood-usin- CASCARA QUININE FOR AND La Grippa CoHi, Coughs Neglected Colds ere Dangerous Taka no chancae, Eap th! standard moody handy for th fint iwoa Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Rellva Excellent for Headache Grippe in 3 day Quinine in this form does not effect th heed Ceacare is beet Took Laxady No Opiete In Hills. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT Tres Saw All. Presidents. The Morse elm at the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street in Washington that has seen nearly every inauguration parade, has been nominated for a place in the ball of fame of the American Forestry association by the Washington Evening Star. The old tree has cast Its shade over famous men for a century, for It was the meeting place, being at the Willard hotel corner, of these famous men In the years gone by. Tm To Raise House Plants From Slip. To grow a house plant from t Hp branch aDd cut 1? take a half-rip- e 3 Ihree Inches long. After taking off It plant two, leaves except the upper th In wet sand, exposing only half of moist. slip. Th sand should be kept When the roots begin to grow, trine ordinary plant the slip into a pot with and IT oleander as such soil, plants will root In water. Paradoxical Result Did Sue succeed in her Yes, and yet she sweet mess of it. r A Predicament, In a predicament "Whats the trouble? Tm running for office. "Welir "I cant make up my mind what to da You see, I cant think np any real caramd-makin- g mad be awfully hard on a ft? old bachelor to have to live In 0 same bouse with a clever child. It must A ipan stands high with a girl I should be elected a and I hate to conduct a she refuses to Introduce him to r who. Is prettier than she Is. campaign and spend all my time sod cuaittw.!;- - a foiand people why'thYother fellow: transportation when conservative rsthuates show shouldnt be. Detroit Free Press. JJ Tie individual who gets a hwiMs theoretics! annual saving to tbs coundepression to way of habit giving hundred million dollars? What of th try of threw Why does It take so much brood road to ruin. need for Improvement and ths method of treatto sell soap If Its true that clean- the ment and handling of piling and dock timbers in liness Is next to godliness? you-cabuyJ ,-Wilber, water Infested with marlns borers which destroy If y bill18 months within $2 after the piling placement and The trouble with the average $18 trouble with a license. cauxe an annual replacement aggregating millions umbrella is that about In s of it v marriage of dollars In th various harbors of tho nation? Its cost is for the handle. What of tho waning supply of hardwoods and the A man Is a success when need for authentic knowledge of the properties It is easy for a man to behave after one thing as wrell as or a of South American and other foreign wooda as he breaks Into the class. than anybody else. . compared to those of our own country for which nuimnBHtiuiuinttmuniiiinttunitfliiiiimiqnnnpniintnmumniiugaittiiuiuuttuitniinCg they may ultimately be needed as substitutes? Slight progress and success applied to only a small per cent of even the limited field above suggested, will result la annual savings greater than the total expenses for the entire forest products laboratory for the past period. Such . saving. of course.. will .not. result onlj from research within the confines of the laboratory, but will necessitate the dissemination and application of thse results In industrial service. The log yard shown in the phothgrapb reproduced herewith has probably held more species of wood than any other in the world. The logs are cut by an electrical sawmill. Another photograph shows the main building -only of the sir needed, to bouse the experimental equipment of the laboratory. The third photograph gives a glim; proof the apparatus used tn making cattle food from sawdust. The sawdust Is being raked out of the Fifteen minutes cooking ta treating cylinder. this cylinder with dilute add under steam pressure converts a part of the wood Into sugar and render the remainder digestible. Feeding expert-meaGrape-Nut- s are now In progre-- s and show ts-- t th cows thrive on a o..eqnsrttr sawdt good reason why mud-sllngln- nuf g tell-tftgl- he -Yes- n nine-tentb- has-bee- n ten-ye- tfafeBw0wHaBreiB ar -- " si!l!CS . ts Rich and Nourishing - A blend of wheat and malted bai ley that costs but littlo.'yet vides a food of most attractive flavor, ready to serve direct from the package. Needs No Sugar |