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Show I- - THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE, UTAH PINE rELLOV TIMBER lmgeriE' Painful, feet sold from BILLION DAB NATIONAL ,n5-bI- kai-- - FORESTf dea,hT" e e Smith, JPhherj; Jam s yJ abom-- T marked 1 1 In Order to Get 'Timber Out It Will Be Necessary to Build Railroad 200 Miles Long. COLIN MKAY they-feare- Vnion iCews I r Secretary of Agrlcul-lir- . Washington. Houston has approved the disposal of one billion feet of western pine timber from the Kaibab in northern Arizona. In order to get' this timber out it will be necessary to build a railroad approximately 200 miles long. Such a and railroad will connect Colorado s Grand Utah with the canyon of the Colorado, which hither-- ' to has been accessible only from Nie yellow national forest - world-famou- south, For several years the construction of such a railroad has been considered by various capitalists, but it has ben stated that the lack of assured immediate traffic was an effectual barrier. It IS" pointed out,- however, that a conbillion feet of timber will a tract for pmcome commodity tor transportation which, together with tourist and local traffic, ill place the project - on a paying basis practically frem the outset. Chief Forester Henry Sv Graves mpde a personal examination on the ground, and this examination supplemented by the reports of i is forest engineers, induced him to recommend the sale of such a large body of timber In order that the country fnight be developed through the supplying of this resource. Mr. Graves, says, however, that the Kaibab forest is one of the most leautiful in America, and gives assurance that the marketing of the mature crop of timber will not be allowed to mar the scenic beauty of the region. a In accordance with tbe policy of the government timber sale the stump-agw ilL be disposed of to the highest bidder. In order to attract a sufficient investment to assure the build-Lunt i he ra llroa da n i the neces- sary lumber mills at least a' billion feet of timber had to be offered. The investment necessary to make this timber accessible will amount to more than $S,OOQ,000. By placing this quantity of timber before the lumbermen officials of the of the country-thicebefleve that the development of extensive areas In southern Utah hiay be looked for, because the necessary railway will render accessible resources which have heretofore been undeveloped. The whole region is rich In agricultural land, in cattle and shep range, and in coal anl copper deposits, as well as In timber. Bids for the timber w'lll be received up to thejniddle of June, 1914, and three years will ho allowed for the building of the railroad and .mills, and twenty-fivyears for the cutting of the timber. The stumpage rates, however, will bo readjusted at the endof r each period of .the contract, the readjustments being based on the then current lumber prices. - By the end of the contract period, the forest officers say, the young trees left on the area first cut over will be ready for cutting, so that by the system of lumbering which the government will require, operations can continue permanently In this lumber belt. The annual cutwill be not less than forty million feet, most ef which will be readily sold In the large consuming lumber markets In Utah and e g jf e v -- e five-yea- Colorado. theTnrV'V0 face-boar- - 11 - pow-arles- a to blood-thirst- y of-h- - s . - - tunned-for'aspa- ceT 1 - step-ladde- -- - -- face-boar- d -- -- side-boar- d -- 1 face-boar- -- S 1.775,464,096 Cash In United Statea Washington. The general stock of money in the United tSates on Janr 2, If 14 amounted to $r:,775,464,096.-whicJs about 28.000,000 more than the stock of the same article on Dec. 1, 1913. according to the treasurys monthly statement. Of this amount nearly wab In gold coin. Including bullion in the treasury. About f was In national bank notes and about 3565,000,000 In silver dollars. The treasury estimates the population of continental United States at 98,181,-Wand says the circulation per capi757,-010.0- 0, ta was 135.11. - Vaccination Law Invalid, Saya Farrar. -- Rocky Ford. In the case at Issue beta een the health officer and the parents of some of the . school children rgirdlng compulsory vaccination Attorney Genera Farrar has decided that the city ordinance passed several jears-agcompelling all children attending the public schools to be vaccinated is not valid and it Is believed that the fifty children whose parents refused to have them .vaccinated will be permitted to resume their studies. for Goods from Paris. Washington. Parisian goods apparently are In greater demand In the 1 nited Statea then ever before. lean Consul General Trackers at Pails fcas telegraphed the bureau of foreign &d domestic commerce that the declared values of exports from his consular district during 1913 amounted to 1.351,975. This is more than $500,- -' Increase over 1912, and the larg-s- t boess the district ever did with 0 Hoi ted. States inone year. 330,351,975 e yi of-o-ne. Kaibab forest is one of the most heavily timbered Jn the South-est, the stand of timber being broken only occasionally by beautiful . meadows or openings locally known as rarks. 'Lumbermen who have visited ii consider the country ldenlly adapted to logging. There are, altogether, billion feet of timber, of which more than one billion feet are mature end ready for cutting. ' d -- 4 face-boar- d . face-boar- -- I -- ftar-joar- d -- vr face-board- i s, light-heade-d. Cod-Seek- bot-touuu- ir-Y- CGD-SEEKE- R at Lolr Sha Harbor, Shelburne toun--Nova Svoua have Imprisoned in a capsized By a"od by "hunger, tortured by. thirst, steeped In a horror of help. But lien ahe lL'td farther But us lost con- - ehilo of before either less ness, -- a I over .rackedby she would inrn tub eiuiu.jsciousnehs snapped TomelBIng booties res'ottnent t was something giving way They got up on the side, and fate I knew fear, the fear that against thought-itu brain. The schooner's head, rove a lifeline between the fofe and the hair bristle, the syalna inmakes the rose swiftly, the -- water receded and ... . ... ... ... mouth turn salt, .and bitter, th,, perspi-- w e. found eurselves able-t-o breathe this I'usUio'u they were e posed Jo the cIamtny baJa on again. .Oh. but' the air Was good! scourge of the wind and spra), ami th beart almost stop Trembling, Wf now and then a heavier sea. making eTi dizzy, exhausted. Mr fimifK .,.1.1 DcftClQg, twi. stretched ourselves a clean breach of hulk, would stamp along the tale rentedand right over them. Put they held on, On . Wednesday. May- -9 and you may Imagine that after day- oi , What waa had this: tup happened sc oo er Cod Seeker, bound from Hal- - When the schooner yw hove on hef light they searched tbe howling seas ax Barrington, was running be- side the anchor chain, stowed In a bojf wlth eager eyes for alfu of a sail. As the morning wore on the buffet--- i ou deck, went overboard, and present- ,ale' Hr mam PKinttrty Fnillp Bhown; her crew num- as she swept along with the tld. IngS of tb eas, the numbing cold, hered fourteen hands all told. the end fouled the botton and drag- - began to tell on their strength, and - -- While before nine o'clock the-- ged her head under -- water. Then-about noon a towering comber lookout reported breakers ahead miracle occurred; the big link in the bursting over them swept one poor ap . i rown claimed that the whtte shackle otJhe other end near tbe tjrl- - fellow, Crowell Nickerson by name, spaces seen were only the reflections lass broke and allowed her head tp .fropi the lifelines, and he was drown of the Cape Light upon the ed bofore the eyes of his mates, waves; come up. again. and he kept her going, though some The schooner wallowed on her sldq. tq help hi m His body became lied him sharp-- She rose and fell to the heave of the entangled In some cordage, and bung ly for doing so. I didn't like the look swell, In a heavy, sickening way but to leeward. Of thlngspbutrt-wa- i N' ffiS-- t inofe thin ahe dltf not roil much. Often wo ai urn If yt hlstrsKed edt he a boy then. were ducked under; and the nolsep spirits of the survivors They watchThe schooner stormed along, grow- were frightful; roaring, snarling ed the towering surges rushing down ing wilder in her motions, but as noth- sounds of surf; upon them with a new fear' In their gurging happened I soon went down In- lings, the dull booming sound of hearts, each man thlnklug that perto the forecastle for a drink. things beating against the skin haps the next big sea would sweep Before 1 could raise the him to his death Itut toon they dipper to hold.' my lips the schooner gave & wild I was numb with cold, and awfully learned the calmness and the courage lurch and flung over on her beam-end- weary and before long, in spite of the of despair Will Kenney, as a re and I went sliding to leeward noises, the fear of off my qfiiem to the dead man to leeward, beslipping The schooner lay on her side, with perch, he horror of It all, 1 gan to alng:' dropped her spars flat on the sea, and the wa- off Into a doze. And as I dozed I Jesus, lover of my soul. ter roared into her through hatch-wa- dreamed the schooner .was hove down Let me to Thy bosom fly " and companions. Getting to while I was on deck; dreamed that I All the men Joined In the good old my feet I hauled myself up toward the saw my chum Will Kenney washed song. companion, and tried to get out I overboard and dived after blur. And then. Just as they finished the might as well have tried to crawl Cold and Horror. last Thirst, verse? Will Kenuey cried. Isok! . through a sluice-gateThe rush of Then I woke up to find myself Look! A sail! the water splayed my fingers apart. under water. It was was The schooner sank into a trough Soon the bows plunged downward, struggling still pitchdark and for a moment or The men waited, their hearts in their and the water whelming In with greatI had no idea where I was. As mouths. And when she rose again er force swept me out of the compan- sq head my 'came above the water I all saw the sails of p schooner swing-- , ion. struck something hard, and down I lng out ofthe mist hardly half a tulle I fell down on a heap of wreckage went again, before I could get . my to- leeward on the side of the ship, struck my lungs full of air. Half stunned I strugKnew Nothing of Rescue. bead against, something and It was lEeTMatchiesST' and IhTTneF When I got through a small opening, so small on her had already sighted the wreck my wits I was standing up with my that could not get my shouldera Tack by tack she beat feet in the mouth of a berth and up to windward through My mouth was just above and then her .big seine boat was the against ship's side, and the water ,water. When 1 tried to Btruggle manned It dropped under tha lee xf up to my armpits and a raffle of floatthrough the openlng, the thing resting the wreck, and the men were picked ing wreckage about me. upon my shoulders would lift a lit- off by being hauled through the sea In a few seconds mpre I was strug- tle and then press me down till I with a line about their waists. gling In a whirlpool of Icy waters, could not breathe. I struggled franThe Matchless pteke up her boat beating my hands against the flotsam tically, and the harder I strove to without mishap, and then, because of the forecastle, unable to see anykeep my mouth above water the more It was blowing a gale of wind with a thing or to get a footing. As the ship I seemed to be forced down' heavy driving mist making It linpossl-H- t moved, the flood In the forecastle, I could not Imagine what kind of a to see any distance, she was hove rising rapidly, surged back and forth, trap I had got Into, and my imagina- to 7 for the night. and once I became entangled In some tion waa mighty active; Just as they Next morning, the weather having halt floating blankets and nearly sucsay of a drowning man. A moving moderated, she made sail and at three ceeded in drowning myself. Like all picture of my whole life seemed to oclock In the afternoon stood into fishing vessels she had a large fore- flash before me. Every deed of a sin- Clark's Harbor with the Stars and castle down in the bows of her, in the ful nature I had ever done seemed to at her. masthead asa utterdarkness I could not tell .my rise up against me, crowding out all Stripesto flying those on shore that she hail algn whereabouts. hope of salvation. accomplished her mission. At the same time ,my mind was Imprisoned In Capsized 8chooner Meantime Atwood and I, Inside the For a time I was too frantic with wildly searching for an explanation knew nothing of this rescue, and hulk, fright to think of getting hold of any- of my plight, and at last, when J was nobody suspected that we were alive. thing. I only thought of keeping my nearly done for, it struck me that the ' Aa Thursday dragged along we behead above water. thing that was drowning me was the gan to feel the pangs of hunger and r But presently the ship seemed to of the forecastle-gangwathirst, and our flesh to feel begrow quiet for a lltller and I thought That was it;, the ladder, waa floating, numbed, the- result began of our frequent 1 of getting a grip on something. Strikinand had got niy head between the cold- baths. But we dared not move g-out I ran against a wall with an steps. I knew what to do then, but from our In I under slope, felt around, realized that It was not easy to draw my head would fallperches. and spite of It all dream of the asleep It was the deck and, as there was down and out, for tha bevel of tbe disaster, or of home and loved ones nothing to hold there, I turned about steps held my head as in a trap. and then awaken with a start to a r.nd swam to the other side. But at last I managed It, and hook- keener fear and horror of our plight. i I paddled about for qult a time. ed my arms over the boating ladder The time dragged along and, aa the But at last, stretching my hands out till 1 got my wind. thirst took a fiercer grip on us, we of the water, I managed to catch hold . I yelled for Sam, but got no answer. ceased to feel the pangs of hunger. Of course I could not tell what part of Our hold of the edge qI a board the tongues swelled and burned; gripof tbe weather, bunks. tbe forecastle I was lnbut I paddled took ua by the I ing pains As I held on, taking breath. the wa- around and finally v as sea lifted me tau8cle, ached a ,f prtcke(1 wKhSt ter rose and lifted my head and shoul- I got hold of, the hunk and pins. Having swalloweg so much salt ders into the mouth of the berth. hauled myaelf up Inside the bunk. At- - water, I suffered more than Atwood, I hastily .scrambled on. to .the .Inner wood was till sleeping. I touched and that afternoon I grew so wild him, but he did not wake. I got hold cut the ends xf side, then the top side, of the and sucked my fingers of some pieces of boards floating Just the blood. ' But that did me no good. While I waited appalled, for I knew below me, and propped them across When came we not what, I became aware of a moan- the mouth of the berth to 1 would were halfSaturday morning with suffering. stupefied Who's not fall through, and soon I guess I Several times we talked of ing sound, and cried out, dropping went jo sleep again. thatr into the water and drowning ourselves. " ft was Sam Atwood, a young fellow Tha Yanks 'Captain Voluntaara. And always the temptation to drink about my own age. He was lying on When .the schooner waa '.flung on the Balt water was strong upon us. his stomach on the inner or top side her beam-endone dory took the wa- But we kept our heads; we of the of what had been ter right side up and somehow Capt. against hope that we would behop resa lower bunk. When the schooner Brown, Nat Knowles the cook and cued, and determined to hold out aa was hove .down be had been asleep John Smith managed to get Into 1L long aa we eould. In his bunk, but somehow he had Whether they tried to row back and . .That afternoon, the long JS well began managed to cling to the pick off any of the other men left to aubalde. The schooner grew quiet;though the mattress and bottom clinging to the weather rail I dont er. and ceased to duck us, and tbe boards Jiad been rolled out Into the know; probably it. would hare been fever of our bodies dried our clothes forecastle. A man can' face death madness to bare tried It In the sea The fact that the awell was going better with a friend near him. 1 grew then running. Anyway, they drove down brought us fsce to face with composed and began to take stock of before the gale for several hours, and new cause of fear the fear that aoon the situation. then, after passing through a quarter there would not be sufficient The schooner had settled as the wa- of a mile of surf, landed on the south- to the sea to cause the main trough ter got in her and, happily for us, the ern side of Cape Island. How they to blow, and give us fresh air. hatch bows were the highest part of her. managed to live through tbe surf hag But we did not worry greatly over We learned afterward that she had always been a mystery; but they d!A the prospect of being stifled for lack drowned two men In, the after cabin. and were sooa at the house of Pelick. of oxygen; we had about exhausted ; The way she lay, the round of the Nickerson telling their tale. our capacity for fear; we were too bow was the highest part ""Nickerson soon carried the news to ick and miserable generally to be of her, and we were in the after tier Clark's Harbor, and tbe hardy flshar-o- f much troubled by the appearance of bunks, built against the bulge of men of that place were roused from a new periL the. bow. .But our position was pre-- their slumbers to consider means of After Saturday noon It waa lust suf-i u rescue. The American Ashing schoon fering and endurance. We seldom . er Matchless, Capt Job Crowell, was talked; our parched throats and Sluggishly she rose and fell to tbe lying In the harbor, where ahe had swollen tongues made speech pmlnful . . . ifralrf come for shelter from the gale, and arfi fif thA swell tnd ve oio when told of Uto'dltaster her skipper was quite as ready to go to the rescue as the mea of tbe port .. tils crew was scattered, but there D Jerk, and her head was drsgged down- - were plenty of men ready to rolun ward, while the water In the forecas- - teer. So, by the first streak of dawn. tbe Matchless p4tb a picked crew JiTea surged afterward. aboard was standing oat to sea under time, felt aa If we had suffered Mightily alarmed we sat on the and pressed onr double reefs, bound on mission of through eternity. W were growing nosea against the skin of the ship in mercy. Into the teeth of the gale, the angle made by patting her bows under to lb loreThe Spook of the Derelict knee of the deck beam. We found a mast every plunge, they drove her out .On Sunday afternoon the schooner little air Imprisoned there after our to where they expected Jo find the Ohio of Gloucester, Edward shoulders and the backs of our heads wreck, and then for long hours they O Dor, was standing upCapt for the Cape were under water. But her bows con- tacked beck and forth, straining their Shore when ahe sighted something tinned to . swoop downward and soon eyes Into the gloom of tbe flying mlsL black Boating upon tbe waves. Some fh aa ovar mr farM. I When the waa hove of her crew took tt for a dead whale of down, the line of men who had been others said tt was a wreck- - and a 51 I felt aa If my head would bare on deck were left clinging on under heated argument ensued To settle the rafl. they 'held on there for a I U, the captain hauled yfith the, Intolerable pressor. up to laves ti-i p Set lug that It was a vessel Played No favorites. The Tramp Ek pliant (m jungle n . he Beiit a boat to try to find oot hor name, and see If they could (aurant may bring me a bale of hay, ' Garsong! B.xhnge anything '1 lie iiitt r G'raffe Yes sir. Clover pn m ml i thought 1 ..heard home J , unusuaL noiMsT'and ioum iF my m If Thi'JTramp .Elephant iliaUghUly ftom lnv lethality to listen In a few minutes I heard k fmund like the clang 1L doesn't- rxuuti r wlmli liu not paid Im k. of iron on, iron, a man cutting at the to tnut rrTiy fpoutl bi.imj'. nx lanyards of the foi erlgging yyitti an had lilt tile turn strip of the deadeye ITCHING TERRIBLE ON LIMB T h e re o r i e b o d v out ride," 1 fcani. shaking Sam 'll. F. 1 "No .t, Cl.u kill id, lilOB-- My But he showed no interest trouble van of long sminjing lt It a oniy something w as!Ungabout started with some BtnalpTt-d-and-yet- JheholiL he answered low epulajiboiiUthmsunjif a pm head ' Let s shout, anyway," 1 said, and ou my leg and every utot mug there yelled aa hard aa I could: was a dry scale on top covering the "Help! Help! Help!" affected part and w hen those-sca- les Oyer my head there was au answer- Were falling off the itching was more ing yell of startled fright, then foot than I could stand at times 1 he first steps pounding aft and a voice cry year I did not mtnd it so much as It in: was only Itching very badly at times, She a haunted Get into tha boat, but the second year tt advanced all for aake!" around my leg and the Itching waa And that chap so frightened tha terrible I bad to be very careful to others that they pllad Into the- - boat haye my clothing around the affected and started to pull away. But, after part very loose. At night time I often recovering from their fright and as- happened to scratch .the sore In my tonishment, they grew ashamed of sleep Then I had to stand up, get out themselves and came back of bed and walk the floor till the spell Meantime 1 h a d got hold of a at cX w aa oyer and was rapping against tha aide I bought lots of salves and tried 1 Soon 1 heard rapa on the outside many different kinds of medicine but gave h ree ra pa 'and there w ereTTiree without any success 1 got a cake of raps in answer. We kept that up for Cutlcura Soap and a fifty cent box of a few minutes. Then we heard a man Cutlcura Ointment and when. I had walking forward on the outside, and used them I was nearly over Jha.itcle soon & yoice called' lng. But 1 kept on with the Cutlcura In the name of God, .are you ghosts, Soap for six weeks and the cure was living men or the devil ?', complete." ( Signed) 8 0. Gorden, We shouted that we were living Nov. 20, 1912. men, and asked them to get us out, Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold or we would not be Living invu very throughout the world Sample of each long The yoloe asked no questions free.w Ith 32 p.' Skin Hook Address postfor a few mluutes as If incredulous, card Cutlcura, Adv. Dept. L, Boston and then some of them got to work with hick uer our heads, while the A Failure. boat went hack to the Ohio 'tor more Was nur joy ride a success?" men and axes "Not a bit of It Everybody we They worked like Trojans, and cut met got out of the way. right through a frame bolt to make & hole to get at us When they broke Untested virtue Is the cheapest comthrough, the eruption of Imprisoned modity in tho world. The universe Is air acted like a whirlwind, and the full of men with good intentions. water leaped tiuough the hole a' solid stream fifty feet into the air Only One IIROMO QUININE Thai la I AXZJ IVK lllloMi) (Jt ININH lax finali st icks w hlch had been floating IIW Mximinronf H W I'urv a Cold luUIH In the forecastle whizzed ur Imj, Curtw unp mTw.i(.lloVB by Iwya Wo hea ds.Ona nuu wan- knocked over-ai- t if-- by an Good Intentions should have asbesexplosion. They fold ua afterward that the released air gave off tos wrappora-r-foreasons unnecesa sickening stench sary to mention. gate WRECK. OF THE . 1 I -- 'I 1 1 fl r The schooner settled two or three feet, lurching as if she would turn turtle completely, and the men chopped away with redoubled energy. They soon had a hole about nine inches by eleven Inches. Rescue at Laet. Atwood, being slim, was pulled tiuough without trouble, but when I got my head and one shoulder through, I Rtuck. Four men got hold of me and pulled, and at laat when I thought I 'would b pulled apart 1 catne through, minus my vest and several strips of skin. The schooner which four days before had been taut and trim was now THIS WOMANS SICKHESS Quickly Yielded To .Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. I am more than Baltimore, Md. glad to tell what Lydia E. rinkhama Vegetable Com- for me. almost bottom up, lying with her keel rund did dreadful six feet above the water and her pains and waa very weather rail nearly a wash. Her irregular. I became mainmast was broken off and, far bealarmed and sent for low tbe Surface, 1 could see a faint Lydia El rinkhama shadow of canvas. We thought then ComVegetable ,we .were, the only survivors pound. 2 took It regWas It any wonder thanked God ularly until 1 waa for my deliverance? without a cramp of (apt. ODor said. Come, my boy, pain and felt like let me help you to the boat," and took another person, and me by the arm. I thought I, could it has now been six months since 1 took walk, took a step and went tumbling any medicine at all. 1 hope my little If it hadn't been for the captain I note will assist you in helping other wowould have slid Into the sea. men. I now feel perfectly well and in Aboard the Ohio they had made the best of health. Mrs. August ready fqr ua. The cabin tablo was W. Kondner, 1032 Hollins Street, Balloaded' with everything to eat. But timore, Md. we "werent 'interested lnx food; "we Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Comwanted water by the bucketful. They made from native roots and pound, gave us a teaspoonful, and that only herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful put an agonizing edge on our thirst. drugs, and holds the record of We pleaded wildly for more. being the most successful remedy for But they had realized our condition, female ills we know of, and thousands and kept ua waiting for about fifteen of voluntary testimonials on file in the minutes, and then only gave ua an- Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., other spoonful. After what seemed seem to prove this fact ages of raging agony they began to . For It has been the stand- - . thirty years give us a spoonful every five minutes. ard remedy for female ills, and has reNeedless to say, when I waa carried stored the health of thousands Af women home my 'parents were beside who have been troubled with such ailwith Joy. Aa they expressed It, ments as displacements, inflammation, I was at one risen from tbe dead. Tha nice ration, tumors, irregularities, etc. news of our rescue spread up and If yon want advice down the shore, and was generally reto MedPinkham write wllh LjdlaJl ceived unbelief. Many people would not believe we had managed icine Co, (confidential) Lynn to live ao long in the capsized vessel, Maas. Your letter will be opened and hundreds came long distances to read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. see us. After 1 reached home I developed a high fever and my feet began to pain me. I had no desire for food; In fact I scarcely touched food for two days. . But I was still raging with thirst I Can quickly be overcome by wanted water all the time milk or tea was no good. I as allowed a glass of CARTERS LITTLE water every half bour. but tt was four LIVER PILLS. Purdy vegetable days from the time. we were rescued act surely and before 1 got over that awful thirst. on the gently But my sufferings- were not over uver. Cure , then. My feet pained me terribly, and Biliousness, I couldnt sleep without a narcotic, and Headthen only for a short time. Dr, Clark ache, who attended me said ten drops of tbe Disci- narcotic would kill tbe devil, but I ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty waa so crazy with pain and lack of SMALL FILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FXICE. Genuine must bear Signature sleep that I used to ery tor a big dose every few hours. And one afternoon, when mother waa out and the spasms of pain were wracking me, I crawled on my hands and kneea, got up on a chair, took the BQOTH-OVERTO- N bottle of narcotic from the shelf and drank half the contents. Then I navito Idtwaoal gated my way back to the lounge, Selim Uu and liletiM after Katin. On crawled up on It and wont K thnjr do WnoalftHn Mvmqr refunded to sleep. That was the deepest, the aatSntp, orwrtto for re Sample Boa and TKXfOaai Satll jon wUli. beat, most blessed sleep I ever had. iftcsar The doctor and everybody thought I had gone to eleep for good and all, but 1 came round to twentyilx hours, feeling fresh and flae. But I continued to suffer great pain In my feet for two TamiM. Dm j tMOmVirm. a.ukr weeks, and It was a month before 1 eould walk. 1 to-da- them-elve- y s special The Wretchedness of Constipation - - Dyspepsia Tablets half-wa- y t cpcnnm'iaM (Coprrtcht. to JUdway Co.) i 'l r IS |