OCR Text |
Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH It J ILitS knew it was a German by the black .1 Wleather hoot nr crew used tap 'it ii . uoiii GjTDELL. . Tc!i I7 Hcrcrif. Her Sla. eerily Should I Other. vince - Cen-- AN AMMAN SOU ; WHO WENT For four years 1 Christopher, IIL tuffered from irregtdaritiea, weakness. nervousness, ana wss In m run down condition. Two of .1 IV FMTlFV oar best doctors failed to do me any food. I heard so much about what Lydia EPinkham's V egetable MACHINE OTBt,VBG Cl fUAHCE- - 1917 BY MTHutunrnpCY Com- pound had done for ! others, I tried it and was cured. I am no longer nervous, am regular, and In excellent believe the Compound will tol.1 Ifemale cure any EM PET AND HIS COMPANY If cotnpMcmUoni iiUt wrlt6 Ly21& E , Snowy Owls in Nebraska. The appearance of snowy owls, a rare occurrence, Is reported in Nebraska. These remarkable and remarkably beautiful birds come from the Arctic regions. . Only four previous visitations have been recorded in the ornithological history of the country, The snowy owl Is a bird of wonderful plumage, is about two feet in height, and Is more likely to be found roosting on a straw stack or a hummock of some sort than in the branches of ' trees. The Argonaut Lemon Juice For Freckles Make beauty lotion at CIrtal home for a few centa. Try Itl Squeeze the juice of two lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion whltener, at very, very small cost Tour grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion Into the face, neck arms and hands and see how freckles, sunburn and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Teal It Is harmless. Adv. She Remembered the Face. Now take this medicine, Bessie, It Is fine for the complexion ; it will make you have a beautiful face." But, mamma, Ethel took some of It yesterday." "Tea, I know she did, dear." Well, It made her have anything but a beautiful face," Tlxae tells on a man but he doesnt care providing It doesnt tell his wife. . UCZ2TJ CIET U:v;tT:r, r.:ct:rd Hr. Unlrtn ta Cool Utilih. tens, inds! Morning I was so slid and sore I could hardly get up," says A. C. Roulston, prop, blacksmith shop, 2S40 Washington bt., Roxbury, Mass.' The sharp pains through my kidneys were so bad I often thought I wouldnt bs able to get to work. I couldnt rest comfortably and turned and tossed from one side to the other, with a dull, dragging backache. There were puffy spots under my eyes nd I felt worn out 3 the time. The kidney e- cretions passed too often and were otherwise un- - -."natural. Tour or five boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cored me. I can honestly recommend Doan's for they have surely done me a world of good. Mr. HopMon gave the above statement in 1313 and in March, 1317, he said; My cure is still lasting. I take Doan's occasionally, however, to keep my kidneys in good working order. One can depend upon Doans to cure kidney ills. Pt CM tWi at Aar Star, C3c a Can P1LL3 DOiin,ri n,Dt,c,r Ik?. rcw7izHKii H ( 7 ' . Si CO, CLTTAbO. p 7 v" , irl v. CHAPTER XXI. 17 About Turn. J The next evening we were relieved th brigade, and once again by the returned to rest billets. Upon arriving at these billets we were given twenty-fou- r hours in which to clean up. I bad Jut finished getting the mud from my uniform when the orderly sergeant in- formed me that my name was in orders to leave, and that I was to report to the orderly room in the morning for orders, transportation and rations, I nearly bad a fit, bustled about packing up, filling my pack with souvenirs such as shell heads, dud bombs, nose caps, shrapnel balls, and a Prussian guardsmans helmet. In fact, before I turned in that night, I had everything ready to report at the orderly room at nine the next morning. I was the envy of the whole section, swanking around, telling of the good time I was going to have, the places I would visit, and the real, old English beer I intended to guzzle. Sort f rubbed It into them, because they all do it, and now that it was my turn, I took pains to get my own back. At nine I reported to the captain, re, ceiving my travel order and pass. He asked me how mnch money I wanted to draw. I glibly answered, Three hundred francs, elrf he jnst as gliblj handed me one hundred. Reporting at brigade headquarters, with my pack weighing a ton. I waited, with forty others, for the adjutant to Inspect us. After an hours wait, he came out; must have been sore because he wasnt going with us. The quartermaster sergeant Issued os two days rations, in a little white canvas ration bag, which we tied to our belts. Then two motor lorries came along and we piled in, laughing. Joking, and In the best of spirits. We even loved tbe Germans, we were feeling so happy. Our journey to seven days bliss in Blighty had commenced. The ride in the lorry lasted about two hours ; by this time we were covered with fine, white dust from the road, but didnt mind, even If we were nearly choking. we At tbe railroad station at F to who white an a had officer, reported band around his arm, which read R. T. O." (Royal Transportation Officer). To us this officer was Santa Claus. The sergeant in charge showed him our orders; he glanced through them and said: Make yourselves comfortable on the platform and dont leave; the train is liable to be along In five minutes or five hours. It came in five hours, a string of eleven match boxes on big, high wheels, drawn by a dinky little engine with the con." These match boxes were cattle cars, on the sides of which was painted the old familiar sign, Homines 40, Chevaux 8. The It. T. O. stuck us U into one car. We didnt care; it was as good as a Pullman to us. Two days we spent on that train, bumping, stopping, jerking ahead, and sometimes sliding back. At three stations we stopped long enough to make some tea, but were unable to wash, so , w here we when we arrived at 55 were to embark for Blighty, we were aa black as Turcos and, with our unshaven faces, we looked like a lot of tramps. Though tired out. we were happy; We had packed up, preparatory to detraining, when a R. T. O. held up hi hand for us to stop where we were and came over. This Is what he said : Boys, Im sorry, but orders have Just trm received cancelling all leave, -- If V r . IIw at the engineer of that train; it was all his fault (so we we blinded reasoned) ; why hadn't he speeded up a little r been on time, then we would have gotten off before the order arrived? Now it was no Blighty for us. That return Journey was misery to us; I Just cant describe It. When we got back to rest billets, we found that our brigade was in tbe trenches (another agreeable surprise) and that an attack was contemplated. will never Seventeen of tbe forty-onon to another chance leave; go get they were killed In the attack. Jnst think if that train had been on time, those seventeen would still be alive. I hate to tell you how I was kidded by the boys when I got hack, hut it was good and plenty. Our machine gun company took over their part of the line at seven oclock, the might after I returned from my bear leave. At 8:30 the following morning three waves went over and captured the first and second German trenches. The machine gnnnera went over with the fourth wave to consolidate the captured line or dig in," as Tommy calls e It. that foot to hang extra bandoliers ot ammunition on. This man always was Jmndy fellow; made use of little points that the ordinary person would overlook. The Germans made three counterattacks, which we repulsed, but not without heavy loss on our side. They also' suffered severely from our shell fire. The ground was and machine-gu- n spotted with their dead and dying. The next day things were somewhat quieter, but not quiet enough to, bury the dead. We lived, ate and slept in that trench with the unburied dead for six days. It was awful to watch their facet become swollen and discolored. Towards the last the stench was fierce. What got on my nerves the most was that foot sticking out of the dirt.' It seemed to roe, at night. In the moonlight, to be trying to twist around. Several tiroes this impression was so strong that 1 went to It and grasped It In both hands, to see If I could feel a movement. I told this to the roan who had used it for a hatrack just before I lay down for a little hap, as things were quiet,' and I needed a rest pretty badly. When I woke up the fooj was gone. He had cut it off with our chain saw out of the spare parts box, and had plastered the atnmp over with mud. During the next two or three days, before we were relieved, X missed that foot dreadfully; seemed as if I had suddenly lost a chum. I think the worst thing of all waa to LIFT OFF CORNS! r-l-- t is f Magic! I f i V i fa if i, f -- ? r ft. ft. A kk J .." fn BMl vradkal, IwStl M, BnUl lot (IwM I LJt Aoa bvk. Lanir wnJii. atnpan. orr L;pe Abo fafatf iwnrf, ammal in n b4U plot, ml detifti, all trl? traamrd nrttb nntr npptootw ltd-col- or a iliw cW Awwn. and m. All iumm omdt nock IWdi or li,b tnJ) nock Lor Fokiet On colon) thowm MaMnali tot ire at on $1.25 the suit If poor dmW cannot wppb pan we will tend lhn,chrn pnptid oarooo('dpnoc.41R5oncb. KOVTRA11S A NCW SUIT 13 13 PR if THEY RIP Bowart ollainticm. took tor Ika label UT AfeAfa LEVI STKAUSS A LFVUTRAlSS&Ca mm nAx Q- cal,. ca, Sea Frudace Mfrt.o "FmnAMwAite Um new tor Try Freezone Tout druggist sells a tiny bottle for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, without one particle of pain, soreness or Irritation. Freezone U the discovery of a noted Cincinnati genius. 1 wtrt gWoirJlk1- Inflamed, swohea Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Boils, Fo3 Evil, Qulttor, FUtnla ao4 Infected eores quickly as it is a potaive asticptie and rermaide. Flc4JUi.it U am doM not blitter w mm the ban, ca4 rtatat waffc tan. S&Mfer bo la. Book. 7 K tree will reduce Spent Yeast Put to Many Uses. The spent yeast w blch collects in and distilleries Is put breweries through a process which turns it out in the form of buttons, doorbell plates watch the rats, at night, and some- and knife handles. Formerly this times in the day, run. over and play material was considered to ABSORBINE, JRn(kc aatuaww BtbntM lor nwakM. about among the dead. he a bothersome waste ; now It tf util Ulna PalataL (naUca Vata Wen. 4rtiat INaiaan Near our gun, right across the paraMCt pal aad laSaanattoa. friot Sl.tf pat borne at ized, every bit of it. As it is gath detwra er drUrered. Witt B pen nn U fan Orft pet, could be seen the body of a Ger- ered from the vats the yeast Is of m Litoral Trial Santa tar tar In rramaa. W. F.YOUNQ. f,0. FntTaitlL.Ser!ngl!14 Bant. man lieutenant, the head and. arms of color, ' The first opwldch were hanging into our trench. dirty, eration is to it and then to work The man w ho had cut off the foot used It over until dye assumes the form of it d conver. to alt and carry on a Into can be hot and pressed powder satlon with this officer, used to argue ' called worm. In it is this any stage and point out w hy Germany was in the be ernollth." It may saved, scraped, wrong. During aU of thla monologue turned to an filed, drilled, engraved, never hits out heard of I say anything Science 1ooular and polished. edge the way anything that would have A HLTfttofttft flk All iPftfftftPtft. Wfct n Ointmfto Monthly, hurt the officers feelings had he been He waa square all right; alive. Discreet.. The- -wouldn't even take advantage of a Is a fraud, w aShe dealer lie That of dead man in aa argument. Te civilians this must seem dread said the parrot knew a lot of words. K, Registered lleMaybe they are words he fub hut out here one gets so used to Derr ford n Cxcleetvwly of in to doesn't like the say presence awful sights that It makes no Impres78 food, rerlatrrad lady. Boston Evening Transcript. sion. In passing a batcher shop you bails far sale V.IUT CA are not shocked by seeing a dead turAll In the Expression. r.::::x v;;:e:i key hanging from, a hook. Well, in In a fight? Why, I thought Glbbes France, a dead body is looked upon l of Think Feotory Pries Wxe- - KanarrlMatbalmUiiwM he was a pacifist" from the same angle. Than write to for aotabs; a. AMERICAS IUU Mru. CO., Santee, k . Tcs; only he calls it a But, nevertheless, when our six days were up, we were tickled to death to be relieved. Our machine gun company lost woundseventeen killed and thirty-oned in that little local affair of " Ktrulghtenfng the Une,ff while the ether companies clicked it worse than we did. , er gray-brow- n Itching Rashes one-side- Soothed Vith Cuticura flft Ilcreford Corporatloa wycsisi cyjrs run ycj pass-a-flst- ." e After the attack we went into re- -- it ur Ixty-fou- s, per-for- st m dilmd The For tbe first six months of our operations , the Food tinder Administration, ending1 Swift & Company paid for April 30, 1918, DRESSED WEIGHT LBS. live stock 1,553,600,000 $323,300,000 For the same period in 1917 1333,300,000 it lion-tam- er $210,400,000 Increase in Wright 16V2 , 220,300,000 , Increase in cost 54 $113,400,000 The Consumers Bill for Meat er , Packers Bill for Live Stock . lion-tam- must necessarily have increased as Live Stock prices and meat prices fluctuate together T correspondingly, - 'r When the producer- gets - high prices for his live stocl the consumers meat bill must necesbe larger. sarily- Yeir Doci day-ligh- t L:; trust: va f -- tf h on or C Nota-i (Lube bnA cnmUtwn. bld in bW In itmnn. and (onwino blun and rha that touchy corn, Instantly it stops aching, then you lift the corn off with the fingers. Truly 1 No humbug 1 ou rrcr Arcruf tv V, fi r Th Just drop a little Freezone j I ft?.u.s.rt.off Keep Kids ICleen I only a few cents I M f Doesnt hurt at all and costs serve billets for six days, and on the Crossing No Man's Land without seventh once again we were in rest biclicking any casualties, we came to llet. the German trench and mounted our ' guns on the parados of same. HAPTER XX! L I never saw such a mess in my life bunches of twisted barbed wire lying Puniahments and Machine-Gu- n Stunta. about, shell holes everywhere, trench Soon after my arrival in France ; In all hashed in, parapets gone, and dead fact, from my enlistment, I had found bodies, why, that ditch was full of that in tbe British army discipline is them, theirs and ours. It was a regu- very strict. One has to be very carelar Inorgue. Somi were mangled hor- ful la order te stay on tbe narrow path ribly from our shell fire, while others of government virtue. were wholly or partly buried la the There are about seven million ways mud, the result of shell explosions cav- of breaking tbe kings' regulations ; to ing In the walls of the trench, One keep one you have to break another. dead German was lying on Ids hack, The Worst punishment Is death by a with a rifle sticking straight up la the firing squad, or against the wall," air, the bayonet of which was buriec as Tommy calls to the hilt in his chest Across his feet This Is for desertion, cowardice, mulay a dead English soldier with a bul- tiny, giving information to the enemy, let hole la his forehead. This Tommy looting, rape, robbing the dead, forcing must have been killed Just as he ran a safeguard, striking a superior, etc. German. his bayonet through the comes Then the punishment of sixty-fo- Rifles and equipment were scattered front-lin- e trench within the days about aad occasionally a steel helmet out relief. During this time you have could be seen sticking out of the mud. to engage In all raids, working parties At one point Just In the entrance to in No Mans Land, and every hazardous a communication trench, was a stretch- undertaking that cornea along. If you er. 'On this stretcher a German was live through the r days you - lying with a white bandage around his are indeed lucky. knee, sear to him lay one of the stretcher-bearerthe red cross on his arm covered with mud and his helmet Empey and hls comrades make filled with blood and brains. Close by, the deadly machine guns sitting up against the wall of the all kinds ef tricks to the trench, with head resting on his chest, of Fritz. The neat discomfiture He was the other stretcher-beare- r. how the Gertells Installment seemed to be alive, the posture was so man gunners are fooled. natural and easy; but when I got closer I could see a large. Jagged hole in his temple. The three must have (TO RC CONTINUED.) been killed by the same shell-burThe dugouts were aU smashed in ant Got Their Lively Time." timbers knocked about big square-cu- t toils of a queer A famous splintered Into bits, wails cared in an i Christmas present he once received. It entrance choked. was a consignment from a friend and abroad of three learns a after trench, Tommy, taking to his sorrow that the hardest part of five alligators, With Jims best wishes and for a lively time." The the w ork is tc hold desired. time wife the so. his be to case lively our got la Ua proved The German artillery and machine Ee says : - I shall never forget how annoyed 1 gtms had,. us taped (ranged) for fair; was to worth was Lie when, during the night, two of the It expose youryour self an instant alligators broke out of their boxes In Dont think for a minute that tha our bedroom and began exploring. , I Germans were the only sufferers; we could not find the 'matches, tad I and were clicking casualties so fast that my wife remained on top ef the bed you needed u adding machine to keep canopy till rooming. Luckily, my wife never thought of the thing that wortrack of them. .Did you ever see one of the steam ried juft.' . I . was fizaLjL the ahigii&rs. to shovels at Work on the Panama canal! might call on the so and Well, it would look like a hen scratch- wkh them a Merry Christinas, tf a Tommy "digging in wi. a them tp tixj I" ing along-id- a while under Crs. Ton couldnt see ? t f;r Children. throu'h, tie cRudn of dirt from tad teen three tours earlier you j-, :x, btfure they are old vrrnld Lave gotten away. Just stay in his shovel. 7t: c. L After lcJr t tlrre cit tlx men of ez t -- rirg J E i r ' it is I back. Rations C t trzii, o 6AK0MaltNS.Mt -- - ! left-ov- . -- r 'IN TOP Synopsis Fired by the sinking of the Lusitania, with the loss of American lives, Arthur Guy Empey, an American living in Jersey City, goes to England and enlists as a private in the British army. After a short experience as a recruiting officer in London, be is sent to training quarters in France, where he Bret bears the sound of big guns and makes the acquaintance of cooties. After a brief period of training Empeya company is sent into the front-lin- e trenches, where he takes big first turn on the fire step while the bullets whis overhead. Empey learns, as comrade falls, that death lurks always in the trenches. Chaplain distinguishes himself by rescuing wounded men under hot With pick and shovel Empey baa experience as a trench digger . fire. In No Mans Land. Exciting experience on listening post detail. Exciting work on observation post duty. Back in rest billets Empey i writes and stages a successful play, pinkbam Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mass., for suggestient in regard to your ailment. The resalt of its long experience is at your service. Hits THE COSTLY BUT SUCCESSFUL ATTACK. symptom of weakness or tome functional derangement, which may bo overcome by this famous root ana herb remedy, Lydia E. Finkhams Vegetable Compound, as thousands of women have Sound by experience. AEZL OVER ' lira. Aung trouble. Christopher, 111. Iimxx, Nervousness Is often a GO - j One-- of ta J- - . c f m . .1 crr.t cn SiC.C j- cJl' |