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Show i THE WEEKLY KEFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAII SUFFERED SEVE ISWdll 3aTJLr-iefiS'jar- e LONG YEAR . A DIAMOND mtkec you look pronprrrttii and Titto4te; ita a food Investment, Our reaaotuibie price eaae lh way to ownermiap. Finally Relieved by taler Lydia E. PinkLW, BOYD Vegetable Compound JEWELERS BOYD PARK. BLDG KMJ MAIN TorsoTetrl TUvenamiod.W.Va. fear I Buffered from a fetnal W STItm that I was I consulted doctors seemed relief. tov0;! I read Paper about ji uA KihamsVV Compotajjy I decided to RED STREAKS OF HONESTY EXIST IN EVERYBODY found And thereby wr mllwt more Umn two hundred thoiimnd dollar yearly, 'turn In your claim awl wr ilTcnlled aome money for you. PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION G. I.uke, General Malinger Nat'l. Hank Mil . Salt Lake City Continental "Soute people don't like u" ENGRAVED WEDDING STATIONERY Announrement Invitation falllnc Card. out printer ia our repreiwutative a ml liaa nmji- - and pneei Janalayr-CoIlKlia- Engraving Co. ll CLEANERS DYERS. Clothes Insured. return postage. Myen Cleaner Farrto. I Work guaranteed. Wo pay Prt Hat on reaueek Dyer. 114 E. Broadway. Dry Cleaning by Parrel Peat. Bend your suits, dreeaea, eoala. etc. to u for "Master Cleaning nnd Dyeing." Salt's Lake's leading e loaner. " PZ return 0 ehargn. Regal Cleaning A K. 2nd So. Dyeing Ce., 14S-16- MONUMENTS. Write for catalog Standard Marble A Cranlte Co., 117 W. Broadway. for a real fond place to sat. follow the crowd te SHAY'S CAFETERIA Opposite Pot Office. Down th. marbla aUlr RUBBER STAMPS A STENCILS. Seal and r tag also mad. Send for mpla, prices, . Sait Lak Stamp Co.. 6 W. Broadway. 52.70 f n lol,r 'loaning and sliantponiug ruga. in furmslietl pec. elf, pudge llros., te K. Hist South, Salt Lake. Vat-o- She smiles and beams and beams and smiles. With tun and gentle showers , IlifA all her springtime wooing wiles. On grass and trees and flowers; Anddhen shf gets her live wires crusted And goes and fhrts tidth old Jack Frost, Although she knows the brute Thinks it smart and cute To full-pag- e e, H ' J i Ifc dll f. y; iTm-ln-i- l ej i. INTER-MOLNlAI- art-s- 1,1 pit-lur- V jL I4I J garment weekly: iur deep sorrow at the death . lie was the founder ami WO cold snaps this spring caused wlde-rSCREAM BOUGHT. Send tie your cream. Wmtarn Creamery Co.. 244 W. Fourth South. spreud dnninge to the fruit crops. FL The southern limit of the one at the MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS of every description on very eecy term. fW end of March was well Into Oklahoma, Write Balt Lake. Kentucky and Marylund. The one In Confetti, Balloons. Paper Hata. Novell!. Eta. April did not extend so far south, but Write for Prices. U 8 Wholeoala Co. Boa Z19I. overlapped the north line of the first ( frost. POULTRY BOUGHT, The northern limit of dumage 3F for boat rcaulte ship poultry, agg and gam to Fulton Mkt Correct In both runs up to the Great Lakes weight. Prompt returns. Write for pr ice. and lii MInnesota and New York and Whit Leghorn baby chick from guaranteed cleur to the Canadian boundary. Vermont, stock. May 111.60 hJ with order, balance the dunmge Is heavy In places. are C O. D. San Jo that CaL San Reports Ynrdn, Poultry Jose, For example, two experts of the crop rejiortlng DLDSMOB1LK DISTRIBUTORS. Car S tracks. service In Missouri estimated the damage to fruts Uaed ear bargains. A. K Tomeaen, 447 8. Main. and early vegetables at $10,000,000. Fiatnn Ring cure your motor trouble. The apple crop In Washington, Benton, and othGill i'wlou King Co,, 13 lut Sou th er counties In the northwest Arkansas fruit region REMILERS will be practically a total loss. Beaches and cherAdd thousand f miles to weak tira 80 blowout and puncture-prooEasily Installed. ries were killed and strawberries dumuged almost Agents wanted. Writ us lor literature. Wests era Rubber Sale Co.. 134 E. Udy.. Halt Lake 50 per cent Dispatches said about 05 per cent of the fruit ELASTIC STOCKING MFR8. in Oklahoma Is ruined. crop Manufacturer abdominal. Maternity supporter. Trues fitters. 8. H. itowmar Co., Brooks Arcade It Is estimated that Nebraskas crop of early cherries, apples, pours, and plums Is a total loss. WELDING. AUTO RADIATORS S Machinery built and repaired. Beet and cheapest. Potter The early varieties of fruit In some eusteru Waldlng 4 Repairing Co., 6&1 South State. stutes also suffered heavily. TYPFWRITFRS The Baby Fo Weighs 8 It. Karly peaches, cherries, and plums probably Alt uiukrs rented Slid noltl. Utah have been killed In Southeastern Pennsylvania. ORlt-h School Suppl), Si W. Second south ht. The cold weather seriously damaged the fruit L. D. 8. BUSINESS COLLEGE. In the southern part of Ohlc, w here the fruit crop School of Efficiency. Alt eommerctal branches. was fur advanced. Catalog free. 0 N. Main St.. Salt Uke City. Thousands of Maryland fruit trees were In full KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS. Mourn when lilt by this frost. Growers in WashSpecialist in designing, making, fitting eorseU. Hemstitching, embroidering, braiding at wrdiou ington county, the center of the western Muryland and sid pleating. Button made. 48 E. Bdwy. peach belt, report the peach crop destroyed. VULCANIZING A RETREADING. Quality and The fruit crop In Kentucky apparently was service. Standard Tlr Works, 361 So. State, killed. Inventors Medals Mad. Key, kick and gun Therefore the following article, prepared by repairing. Knud-o- n Novelty Co.. 66 So. State. the United States Department of Agriculture, is SEE YOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER worth the attention of every fruit grower: Joos leaf binder, special blanks, reeorda of all lmh. Jl give Quality Sendee. The went her bureau of the United States DeATTEND UTAH BUSINESS COLLEGE . partment of Agriculture lias beeu nhle to discover Ultmtum. Boston Bhlg. for the weapon used by that old enemy of mankind, Juck Froijt, uml In a recent published report It blOLER BAR HER COLLEGE. Qualify M bar-b41 8. Wait Tsmpl Street. frw ws-itells the farmer and fruit grower Just what Jacks TUE EMBROIDERY filloV. 34 Clift Bldg. Invisible weapon K aiijl bow ynder ordinary conHemsUlch.ng. pleating, machine and hand era-ditions, the sprites own artillery may be used brvmivring.butiun mad, expert bead work. against hiy ARTISTS' MATERIALS Frost, of course, Occurs whenever the mercury C. R. SAVAGE CO IS South Main. Fin drops to 112 degrees F. or low. If much moiskodak finishing and anlarguig. Artnu' mature Is present iu the atmosphere this drop In terials, picture framing, kodaks and films. temperature Is manifested by the white crystals AkT CO. picture franv of frozen moisture upon leaf or grass Mem, and t supplies. 848 Main. lng, china painters and there la wlmt Is known as a white frost. If the KIVv N ulHit' ""H Yl K from POST CARDS temperature drops to the required degree and murii n qimiituics does not reach the point when water from the Souvenir Novelty Co, 31 Kicnurds hired. ulr Is condensed, there will be few crystals deSPECIAL RUSH BEKvlCE secured if yen mention this paper when writing abev fire. posited. nnd the result Is a "black frost. A freeze" Is the term applied to a condition of cold more permanent than a frost, and such a condition INFORMATION DEPARTMENT nmy occur when there are high wind. True Commercial Information furnished fr frosts" occur only when the surface ulr is relt charge. Catalogue supplied and tear atively calm. nsrtisl inquiriM cheerfully answered. Write any Brat above Do it aowt Temperature, like water, seeks a level. During the day the earth receives more heat thnn It can throw off, but at night this supply of heat la The Right of Search. Trouble at home! Inquired tho stoppl'd. During the day the heat brown off by the earth warms the thin blanket of air next sympathetic friend. the Meekton. ground. This blanket, as it warms, loses Ita "Serious, replied My wife went' through toy pockets last density and ascends. Cooling as It rises, presently It encounters air of Its own temperature, and night" there It stops. Meanwhile Its place has been And you are highly Indignant?" taken by other colder air, which Is In turn warned a No. She L, She didn't find With the ground. This exchange goes contact by Star. thing." Washington on until, at sundown, all the air of a wide layer above the earth has been- wanned, and the htgh-cSuspicious. A Cleveland heredity expert tells us temperature Is felt nearest the earthy that the world la either ruled by Earthy Squanders Its Hast. blondes now, or soon will be, and we Now, with the sonnet, old earth begins to suffer wonder whether he la trying to jolly from a bit of aeriiil trickery. All day long he some., little body, or . tec boom the has been patiently passing out heat to one cold atr layer after another; night comes, and with peroxide market It the loss of his source of supply, hut do these Saving Hit Energy. warm upper layers pass hack any of the heat they So you are for prohibition?" begged during the day? They do not unless I am," replied Uncle Bill Bottle-top- . they are made to. The layer close to the earth does, and thus they lea vO their coldest blanket For what reason?" Rgnlnst the shivering earth 'while they sail about The simple reason that there Isnt 40 or 50 feet above their late benefactor, serene ny more use of arguing about it" and warm amTseltish. little caring that the spendWashington Star. thrift earth Is freezing his toes lelow. As the earth .becomes coUlorthc air blanket Forceful Advice. next hla brown old skin becomes colder, too, and lie What did your father aay when heavier as It becomes colder, so that the colder It you told him that my love for you waa more tightly It fits, and .he has little the grows like a gushing brook? off his chilly coverlet to seize chance of throwing ExShe He eald ; Dam Jtl" wanner zone. The eurth, too prodigal of his change. Daynce-Beeb- udt." sable-rule- d You will nip bud, blossom, fruit It' relief One Hopeful Feature. Inn? Christopher Morley reprn Vew York Evening Tost the fnlloj And then she smiles the same old smile And works again the same old guile On all the kind To beat the band. Ain't Mature grand t J. V. S. At great continued uairig it until I had tap eight bottles. Now I am very can do my own housework. I cangw recommend Lydia E. Pinkhama riei&f to suffering women. Mrs. Ba? Licking, K. F. D.r Ravens wood W.u The ordinary day of most housewjJ ia a ceaseless treadmill of waahjp cooking, cleaning; mending, sweeH dusting and caring for little ones. much harder the tasks when some if rangement of the system causes h,, aches, backaches, bearing-dow- n and nervousness. Every such woS should profit by Mrs. Liering s emem&er this, for over & ence.' years Lydia E. Pinkhams VegetiL Compound has been restoring heakO MERCHANTS Fraiu-- tn 3 and before bottle was goth - st By kindling numerous small fires this may be The hot gases done. from upward rushing each blaze lift and toss layers until a wanner mixture is applied to the earth. The hot gases serve to assist In warming the chilled atmosphere, but the effect of direct radiation amounts to very little. This difference In heat quality Is very well Illustrated In our homes; radiation Is the sort g of heat given off by the parlor stove when its hot sides are glowing on a cold winter night, while the hot gases given off by combustion ass up the chimney. This method of preventing frost Is very efficient, nnd each year It saves much money for American fruit growers. Just how. It Is best applied, how many fires are needed to the acre, and the form and style of burner giving the best results, are well discussed In the Weather Bureau Bulletin No. heat, regrets his generosity of the sunshiny hours. On rainy days, when the cloud strata has cut off the suns heat, the earth Is not much warmed during the day. If, during the night, the clouds blow away, the earth Is apt to go bankrupt. That Is why, when the season Is passing from spring to summer, or from summer to fall, a three days rain Is so often followed by a frost. The first clear night presents lieat, hills to the earth which lie Is unable to pay, and Jack Frost, natures sheriff, places bis crisp seal upon the Improvident old fellow. The farmer looks out across his blasted fields in the morning and sighs, A killAnd this Is because the old ing frost last night. earth, already gray with age and exjicrlenee, hasnt yet learned how o save up for a rainy day I" The most common method for frost prevention Is to establish a sort of savings bunk for the, old fellow eurth. Ilest assured that hell spend his reserve If he can ! Glass makes the best heat savings hank. It has, the curious property of allowing the heat from the sun to pass through to the earth, but It will not allow the radiated heat from the eurth to go hack to the eager air. Glass Is exjH'iislve, however, and can he used only for the protection of comparatively small areas of ground. Wood Is also a good watchman to set above the ancient profligate. Though It will not allow heat to puss from the sun as glass does, neither will it allow It to pass outward from the earth. In sections of the South a lath network Is ueil to cover crops during the danger periods. The wool--euetwork holds down a large amount of lieat. UUd when a frosjt occurs It helps the frozen plants by shading them frdtn the direct rays of the morning sun nnd allows them to thaw gradually. Quick thawing of the frozen water particles ill plant or fruit Is fatal, as.it causes he cellular tissues to break down; If the thuwing process Is very gradual the plant may reabsorb the tluiil and the dunmge don may he surprisingly slight. Various Methods Used. Is of less value in consmdng heat thnn Taper is wood, though It Is more etllclent than cloth. Uloth allows that cold mendicant, the air, to penetrate to the eurth and steal the last degree of heat from him. So a cloth covering must he quite heavy If the frost Is a hard one. Iron or metal jtots are not at all good aa bankers for the earth they allow the heat to pass back Into the air almost as readily as the earth Itself. ' There'Ts another method that is employed to Rave the spendthrift from the sheriff. The presence of moisture In the air makes the radiation of heat difficult and helps greatly to conserve the heat which the earth already holds. Also, If the temperature drops to freezing each drop of water gives up a bit of latent heat before congealing, and all these Any contributions help to keep the " e n -- surface air wanner. t or river will usually bring this wet blanket, and It can sometimes be supplied to an artificial manner by letting water Into Irrigation ditches. Results not so good may be had by building dump smudge fires In the or- -' chard. Cranberry growers often save their crops by flooding the area with water. In the event of extreme cold It is often possible to submerge entire areas grow lng this crop. This gives absolute protection. Less prodigal than earth, water keeps Its reserve heat for long periods of time. Forco Air to Be Honest. The third method of keeping the earth solvent Is by adding heat to the air layers near the surface. Tills Is done by means of many small fires of oil, coal, wood, or orchard refuse, and Is a method well known in sections where fruit growing Is a specialty. It Is sometimes scorned as an attempt to warm op all outdoors," but that Is We know that at not what happens, exactly. night, the sir above the earth Is warmer thnn the air directly against it. Therefore, If the lower and colder strata eould be lifted and mixed wltt the upper air, a higher and more equable temperature would result. A breeze from ocean, lake, o- - zor of the company, which w.Urf tinue to bear his tame. Due tos jiscontlnuance of business for a wc there lias accumulated an enons stock of suits and coats which t will dispose of at an unusually price. This is an opportunity ,ou cannot afford to miss. w The Maoris of New Zealand, at time cannibals, now subsist mainly i potatoes. J Do you Dl-re- day-tim- of m J know you can roll wood-burnin- 4 SO 1, rigarel lOcts from bag of 1CKKI. Many a fruit grower has nursed an expensive orehard to the point of liearlng only to "see his reward vanish In a single night. But more and more we are discovering that. If we cannot defy certain natural laws, vt may still nullify their results through a better understanding of tlieir principles. This is what the fruit grower does. He cannot eliminate frost, but he can use its principles to protect himself from its effects. Tips to Orchardists. , The weather bureau bulletin treats the methods very thoroughly, and the pamphlet should be particularly useful to anyone who owns an orchard of who contemplates planting one. First of all, the exports point out, the orchard owner should determine whether his crop will pay the expense of protection; If it will not, then lie had better move to a less erratic climate. Certain truits will stand a lower temperature than ahers, and the experts furnish a temperature chart to show this. Here it Is: Temperatures Endured by Blossoms for 30 Min-utor Less. well-deserv- ed te frost-preventi- Fruit a r rips I Bull Durham on es tii-ti- Ohi-m- i GENUINE s TOBACCO TG DEATlI COLD MEDAL Fears ... Plums ... Apricots lYunes .. Almonds Grapes Charts which show in fires should be distribute, These ba reproduced. studies made In successful orchards and are the result of the lest methods In use inr this country. Overhead costs are discussed, as w ell as the care of the apparatus. Records Should Be Kept. Once an owner decides to fight Jack Frost for his profit It Is most lm;ortant that he keep records of the battles, so that he may refer to them when the next skirmish threatens. The knowle wind will prevent frost when edge that a the thermometer la at 40 degrees F. at sunset may apply to only one fruit farm, but It will save that owner the expense of lighting hia fires If he does know 1L Records, If he keeps them, will tell him this. Several blta of home-mad- e apparatus will save the frost fighter good sound dollars, and the pamphlet tells how these may be made and used. The effect of soot from the II flames upon the fruit blossoms la made clear to the reader in an account of experiments conducted to determine this problem. As a matter of fact, soot does not hinder the pollination of fruit blossoms, nor does It Injure them in any way. From first to last, the United States Department of Agriculture Farmers Bulletin No. lOPff ia filled with valuable Information for anyone who la attempting to grow fruits or vegetables In areas. It Is an Invaluable manual for ary jerson who may be apjiointed as temporary receiver to staml between a slrvering. bankrupt world and Its ungrateful creditors. As stated before, this mundane sphere. In spite of a hundred thousand years of cold toes and chilly night, has never learned to save in the sunshine of plenty against the night of w ant. And it never frost-fightin- g Tli world's standard remedy for kii liver, bladder and uric arid trch! Famous since 1695. Take regularly keep in good health. In three 6iJS Guaranteed as represent druggists. rS leak far th name Gold Medal e and accept M imitation Kill All Flies! Ftoooi anywhere. DAISY FLY KILLER fcU fltea. Nnt, etaan. ornamental, etwap fcilii ten. , ; rf Lt nuiteeiUarWr s I will FLYDiUV ten-mil- at year .f I bv FTPRES. JWte4. SI A. YASOLD BOMERS.U4 lMKai8Aa.iaMklr 5 LadiesKeepYourSfe ' frost-visite- d 1 When the body begins to strand movement becomes painful is usually an indication that kidneys are out of order. R these organs healthy by Cle&r, Sweet, Health With Cuticura Soap t and Cuticura Talcum j UAiULLHS HAIR BALSAM, Color ry -- , 11 HIKDEHCOnNS ? . etofx I twin, eraurra Ioom. . . era wa iter hr , t Cira. Kieeea Cbrautraa W rx rftiew. "1 - -- -- r-- PATENTS r. ; lVta-EPtlrt It C. ltT' a f AJrie Bira reeaonabl. Lirhtu rxfeiea. 126 r.IAAIMOTII frJAjJ I ha a -n tor LOWS I W. L. Letter Jtepida, la VY. N. U t Salt Lake City, No. I |