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Show ' THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH d tUn to tear little ffilM.fn t , si?' ,, 3 oU-t,eu0r sleep a day Me.idy "'x r. i tipple ' re; si ilrnppel hi, shears anJ " YwJ Y j- "j , it1J i l ri s' e r. f - v . i - - J ' i :'a '.7 I 13 - .Vvy . f 1 i- ) u '!. ' v V t ( n 1 t i - '.jt rlli - I . '' ! -y t a- - v m !t n w ! ''t,u' I !, L - vp'j r - to inifT''; ' i MBS, VAGENAAR 1 to kno" xvum " iT.! i'. attitude l. ul Jeud t - SAVED LIFE SAYS ' twenty-four- .1 Portland Lady Fell Off 40 Pounds, but Declares Tate Restored Her Fully. Horace Bingham v"' ' ' Livingston- gppypiOHT V OCOOOC H, DORAN " COMPANY ' ' ' ' - 1.. ' -- ' ' ' ' ' -' ' ' " I' '! t I '.O M' set e M !, or pro o -- ! '.! tie ! ' .te, ha u re e- .p'x U sexeitl lulunlos hen Is :Te child ought to to d ;Vo::,t-ei'!h .i i:m i on pas. ,.n in per at least once h xxek, hi to dark exes. u. o lor l.ps ' mox ed life" si,., .c.. pet "Wkt TT tr,e a:i broken clothespin and reached into ' vntHi! e !) hrc.i thcl. her pocket for Knottier ' I n't etv, ru' ! f..r iitx "1 guev.s likely xnj alined to lum, S' c xx, is nu: ng there xxhtn folks think he tva xoiir oin kM " T! id o..!.e m VI YntvM g.ithere Insinuated Mr. Woppie, testing the the h'v into her arms an kissed him. strength of hi old pruning s' ears. e gasped, "vpu'ere me IVurie, "Iaind, no. I nexor lalmed he xxa I 'most plea-,nut breathe. Hes mine eausc I adopted him nd softer, What xoii do It so haul for?" loxe him, nnd chum he hues me S1 e laii.l ed. Tier Xoiir baby Thats all there Is to It." heart1 I t peet I as keeping Mr. Woppie thought it's axxay." easy said, Mis Penfleld. but I'll bet aint anything hero Why. theres a lot more to It. Wherell x..u J II si you and me. get Thad, Mis Penfleld? "Sure enough,", she said.- - more With a quick movement she lifted "And xxe mustn't sit here, lightly the sheet and pinned It Into place. do ng noth.ng. Ive got to get to "The records ore for Thud when he work, an you trot along und play" grow s up." A few minutes i iter he came run "You got some .record, then?" lung to her in great glee "Mebhe," she returned, on guard "Set, l'etule, I lettnd somepn." lie I dont see what dlfTruncelt male.," held up a small ptn kage. Itxas flat. 1th coni. "Well. I should sav it made h l.y oblong, tied 'Course youd want to know what kind Where did you get that, Thad?" o folks be had. Might be things thut'd In your room-a- ll done up in crop out. Youd be the one to be di- paper."' "You shouldn't have touched It " sjointed If he was to turn out u She took the package, to carry It robber or murderer or somep n." ut back to her room; then paused In iT ThTTe Mrs. Ienlleld shook-oskirt and smiled. All you got to do, astonishment. The cords were fasMr. Woppie. Is to look at Thad once tened with wax; the seals had not and you won't talk that way. lie's been broken. She turned It over. It as sweet a baby as ever was, and was soft to the touch. On one able there ain't nothing In his face that was simply the name Bosley." That's never the family Jewels." ain't good and dear. If he exer turns out bad. It wont be his fault; It'll she thought, as she went Into the bedroom. "Next time I'll let her keep be cause I failed him." Ill bet It aint nothing "Shawl More like It'd be somep'n ItI "to home. In this house. want In his birth." Penfleld Jammed doxvn a Mrs. CHAPTER III clothespin with a violence that snapped It in two, but her voice was Th Invasion of Lettl. Thad's got past his still pleasant delivered the final order of Having and he four most birth by years, groceries for the day, Crink Penfleld varied monotony by taking a new route home, and was rewarded by a sight that made him stop suddenly and catch his breath with Joy. In a large lot, where he distinctly remembered a tenement house, there w only an enormous heap of debris. Cracky! murmured Crink. Want that o grand fire? Heres where I get busy. He hid his basket behind a mnss of shattered masonry and plunged Into exploration of the highest mound of ashes. Crink lived the life of salvage. A hit of human wreckage himself, he had an unfailing attraction for all the material wreckage that came within rang. Young as he was, the Ioy was an exjiert with a bent piece of Iron, flicking scrap heaps for those fragments which have been thrown out, not because their usefulness Is exhausted hut because their owners have been lacking In Ingenuity. Even as Mrs. Penfleld had rescued him, so had he In turn rescued countless bits of wood and cloth. Iron and tin, and pulled them back Into the field of service. Squirming to the top of the mass, discovered an Incredible piece Crink t of luck, the wheel of a dismembered sewing machine- - He grabbed It, but at the same moment another hand also grabbed a small, thin band. A pair of bright black eyes confronted Her Dark Eyea Blazed. Crink, the eyes of a girl' about his own age who had been conducting a series wont never get mixed up with It of Investigations of ber own from the again. lie didnt Inherit nothing that fear of the lot Im afraid of.x and one of the main Hey, leggo there, cried Crink. reasons Tmllvlnglsto gw that he Leggo yourself," retorted the girl. develops Just the way hea started. I got here first" "Shant It'a a good way; I like it; and If the You didnt neither. If you had, Lord spares me, hell be ready to ha taken It, wouldn't you? you'd meet the world face to face when For a moment the boy was staz hes growed np. gereL He had been prepared for acHer neighbors thin lips twisted. tion, but not for reasoning, and the 'AH Is, he said slowly, digging his latter had driven hhn Into a corner broken shears Into a post, I thought where speech would merely vfeakn uiebbe you'd like to know there's talk bla cause. 1 oil see, Ben Simmons started, By a quick movement Crink Tiffed come in t'other day and he saw the wheel, but the glrta counter-pul- l Tiiad. He said he couldnt get over lt back again' with a smart flopped It Thad looks so much like a kid he whack that sent a cloud of ashes If to knew about, a year ago. perfect the air. The contestants gulped, Image, Ben says! sneered, Ignomlnlonsly coughed, Mrs. Penfield - made no reply.- - A gla fed'ateachonierw Tth redder. eT flush rose In her cheeks, - but she eyes but with no diminution of will. placed her pins carefully In the last Now look here," began Crink, In a garment. voice Intended to be terrible, "ygo Well, Ben says this kid didnt hare aint galn'ng nothing." Thl,s here no family he could be proud of. Seems wheels mine." his mother run off somewhere and "Prove It, why dont you? died of it, and bis father was rested for somepn and " Gosh! he writhed. "Quit calling Mr. Woppie was gazing at the post, names, you little fighting devil. a and therefore did not see Mrs. "No xv you got my number, she rehis of speech. reception turned. Jnt you make me one bit Stop! she cried. and I'll show yon." niabhr, He looked np In Injured bewilder. IIowl! yn show me? ment. Mrs. Pehfleld was standing In Til punch you In'o purgatory front of him. The color was high In so her cheeks; her dark eyes blazed Htth ! You couldnt." dangerously. Could, too "You Stop ! she related In a low rclther." Couldnt, You look so small to me voice. that I rant scarcely see you ,t alL But if youre still there, youd letter Would you bke to ay ard let'" Third lay bold c.ronffTTijtflg; you !,ve w.th us, LettieT alone. Aint nobody !.uInes where who M folks were. be came from. (TO I;K CUVTIN.LKO.) And If yoa cant find nothing better looking . mr her i i bo-- v i I . 1 BTNOPSIS. Living tn a barn, converted Into a dwelling. Mrs. penAeld la manager of an apartment building known aa "The CusCluster originally tard Cup. Hw Income la derived Court from laundry work, her chief patron being a Mrs. Horatlua Weath-erston- e, whom she has never sen. Living with her- are Crink" and Thjid," homeless small boys whom he has adopted. They call her Thad - tells - Fenrle e Teriila. was Inquiring for her . man strange under her maiden name. CHAPTER 2 d'-- -- -- . , e. IVn-de- j Continued evrx-tldn- xx .i' ; u! A suffering from Ui 1 : p, . a i it a, :i was ? m, i .1 . r ' XX g , nt solid food. I forty pounds and was so weak I to'tercd like an Infant when 1 xxalked. Many rights 1 nexer tde;t a wit k, and 1 bad weak spell, xx to n I fa4n4ed 4md aw tty. - ' After spending oxer a thou sari dollar trying to get well, mv husband finally persuaded me to take the Tiudae treatment. Well, that was the turr.ng point, for all n,y troubles are gone no xv, 1 have utmost regained my lost weight, and Ive never enjoyed finer health. 1 will always believe Tatilnc saved my life and Im so happy and Lij by CrlnK during winter It was the last resort for when rains, drying clothes. It was September. The California summer was ill its glory; the days were warm and bright, not yet edged with the crispness of fall. Crink being In school, Mrs. Penfleld h as man aging alone. She bad taken np her basket of clothes and started for' the yard, when the bell rang. This was strictly tn accordance with the usual routine, because Mrs. Penfleld rarely finished She anything without Interruption. put down her basket and went to the In. A young woman stood outside. She was carefully groomed, smartly dressed, striking in sppearance without being exactly pretty. She and her husband lived In The Custard Cup, but no one could understand why. They were apparently free of all responsibilities and devoted themselves to good times; In short, they were everything that the other mem berg of the community were not I cant atop, Mrs. Penfleld. Im going downtown, and I wondered If yout let me leave this package with Its got a few trinkets In It, and Pd feel safer. Mrs. Penfleld hesitated. I halnt got any safe place," she said slowly, " "and Im In and out you. Gussle Bosley broke In eagerly. "Ton needn't feel any care about It. Nobody d take It, but Ive got a feeling Id rather leave It here. I put a newspaper round It, so txvouldnt look of any value whatever." She passed over a small package. Mrs. Penfleld took It with some reluctance and carried it Into her She was accustomed to all sorts of strange requests, but It was the first time she had been asked to guaid valuables. "I expect she thinks nobodyd look here," Mrs. Penfleld reflected; and with that she dismissed the matter altogether and went on out to the yard with her basket As she wiped the lines, she sang under ber breath In aheer blltheness of spirit. This was the happiest part of her work; she loved the air, the sunshine. "Morntn," called a rasping voice. "Why, Mr. Woppie, good morning! she returned briskly. "Aint It a grand day? Well, pretty fair. conceded Mr. Woppie grudgingly.. He never so far even the anything, encouraged It apto as unqualified give weather, proval. Mr. Woppie was a night watchman la some vague building near the water front; and no one In The Custard Cup questioned his being adapted to exactly that work. Watchfulness was the keynote of his personality; he sacrificed many hours f possible daytime sleep by bringing his professional activities Into the borne field. lts a grand day te;eated Mrs. Penfleld, quite as If she had reHow ceived more .encouragement are you feeling, Mr. Woppie? y "Jest middlin, he replied. In a voice. Ills small, beady eyes were filmed for a moment out of deference to this sentiment He gazed at Mrs. Penfleld with a new shrewdness which she would have sensed at once If she had been less occupied. "1 see Thads pot a new rig." continued Mr. Woppie, In the manner of one who delivers a preamble. "Tea, bless the baby ! laughed Mrs. Penfield. I finished that up last Bight Im sorry Its pink, cause- - It dont go with bis hair the best ever, but that nice gingham couldnt go to waste. I expect Thads lucky to get as tenchs that" Mr. Woppie now be- fan on the main argument Sure. lie was a little disjointed "bout the color, cause be aint struck Ith pink, but that's good for bim bed-roo- eml-nentt- die-awa- y 1 xx !- -. tnoll Si o' LLkI v Instead cf Kahomlnc orU'all Paper Huy Alabavtine frxm your local dealer, white and a variety of tints, tridv to mi with cold water and apply with a tmiabe bruxh. si h ni ligr h the cron and iiule pimtrd in ted. liv mter nnxirg AUoaitine tint you cn aecuratrlv match drajifiiri and room. rug and obtain individual treatment id 1 tih Ifn'i fur sfireimt wffeifSni anJ laUti color combination ALABASTINE COMPANY 1647 CnaiiiSi An CrwJ MkW iXiiUHWut IIOIUH6.H hK Spohns DistemperIxuk Compound Thirty grateful that 1 Just cunt help praising it." Tanlnc Is for sale by all good druggists. Over .ffo million bottles sold. Advertisement. !s fo ' Vi get oral a kive bcau'.ful results. juurvvI! to ti to Urrak th ' cough amt In fondUum tn th-- mid 'MVJIN (rttnv Couh rultiof num- - 8 nnd with thtr anti ianta. pluMtortu. nnt fell illnrskr of ihm throat, n v i rr r nt , acla tvjually nml aa a cQt luarwUxualjr a two antra at nil drug atorra nt , right . , vx door. Good morning, Mrs. Bosley. Come . v I I ( Above these rooms was a loft, once gsed for hay but now entirely cut It could, off from the ground floor. however, be approached by a ladder on the outside and was so - -- dec-orat- or. lew n and, oh, its m- -t ; t; ,,nn l h, t d SI rdo the p.iHi tttld m'sei y I t tx turctl. My stoi,.ath xxas so ti sZ'dvted I ci'itM re dn a mer-.- i ef f p.i 1, e I1 br i i!,-- , r., ' im till Lexer ' xxcil. "1 a ( re . reek f"'! tu a i ' ' ' ' I Upper a LETTIE 'o s' e n .rv W.i! r.'ur, -- V-44- ' T!ue T-'- w 1 otnmcmi a practical If you arc" unable to secure one you can ! the work yourself, thTtin and stenciling J ' x - ASK your local dealer to rec- - M nflunn kiuiin Mum.a iumi anv (tie their quiutel" bx'fore In komikn. Indiana they ate begun. MIPATIflDEI Important to Mothorw Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOlilA. tint famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears The Slf".U,re..r fake a pood dose of Carters Little Liver Pills then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after.They RTER cleanse system of all waste matter and ITTLE RegulateyourYour Rowels. Mild as easy to take as sugar. Gmalnt bear tlgnaturtyfi Small PilL Small Dose. Small Price. UL- - a In Use for over h" Teats. ChiMrcn Orv for I'lctt licrs ta.storia VEH PILLS A gossip that tolls the truth iloos the most damage. Gives Charming New Shade PUTNAM FADELESS MIXUP THAT WAS AMUSINQ considerable Hsltlon and !inirtnnce confesses, with a merry Humorous Nova 6cotlan Unlntantioiw twinkle In his eye, to a serious htow to aUy Vary Gravely Mlslsd Sarlous- Ms reputation from an unexpected Minded Glasgow Newspaper. A man of Littla Paula Explanation of Hia Had a Somewhat Humoroua Tinfla. Little Paul had been lifting till by the window for so long tliut mother began to get suspicious. "What are you doing, Paul?" she asked. No reply." Paul, answer me! mother ordered. "Nothing, was Pauls enlightening reply. Mother suUl nothing more for a few minutes. Then: Paul, you must lie doing something What are you so Interested in out there?" Paul turned to reply this time, his dignity highly offended. he exclaimed. mamma!" Gee, Cant a fellow sit here without being bothered .and watch the cars pass pro and con?" Kansas City Star. I Straight Silica Glass. dejsmlt of silica mineral of volcanic origin ha been found In Czechoslovakia, which ca:i be used directly in tbe manufacture of glass without the need of adding any of the oilier common Ingredients used In making up the glass bntch. This silica mineral Is said to resemble lava ami It Is understood that tbe deposits are very lurge and that steps are being taken to utilize them commercially. Chemlcul Trade Journal. People who weigh their words speak lightly. or tints as you wish DYES-d- ycs Mads His Own Deduction. SMALL BOY FULLY EMPLOYED A to Old Lingerie . quarter. Ills smull son returned from school R. M. MucGregor told the following his father with the at a luncheon of the Scottish story quctitloti, Father, what ure you? curlers in New Glasgow ; A Near What am I, my boy? Why do you Glasgow shipping firm was having ask? built a steamship on the Clyde and .Well, father," wav the reply, Jen- gave It the name of Mlemae, The odd kins came up to me In the dinner hour it jr of the name aroued considerable und suhl, Whats your father? curiosity. The Nova Beotian captain And whut did you say? asked his wan asked the derivation of th name father. Good hiduredly the captain replied 1 didnt suy any thing, answered that MIc was for the Irish and the boy. f Just lift him." Mac for the Scottish. Next day the captain was astonished to And this The Popular Pharaoh. explanation of the name featured In "Since the Tutankhumen nffnlr, the leiuld. lie sent for the reporter Insaid the attendant at the and explained that Mlnnne" was the hus a of been pos- name of a tribe of Indian In Nova stitute Art, there itive rush for Egyptian relics. Scarce- Beotia. To Ms further astonishment ly a ierson cornea In here who doe the following day the Herald carried not make Inqulrle. nnd want to oe a correction, rending a follow : what we have, and to express regret "We were slightly Incorrect In gtr that-w- e haven't more. I firmly be- lng the derlxutlon of the name Mlc lieve that more peopl j have assidu- lime' In yesterday's Issue. We now ously read hook und articles dealing learn that the ship I called MIcuihC with ancient Egypt since this Luxor after a tribe of wild Indian In Nova Kent In, who are half Irish and half affair than ever before." Scotch. Rtd Flag of ths Romans. The signal for battle of the Roman Couldnt Fill 'Em. consisted of the unfurling of a "I hit bed my husband with my flag; the wlilte flag ha always been Ideals. a sign of truce or peace. I see, nnd tbe clothes didnt fit. Boston Transcript. Ambiguous. It used to be the "darkest befor "Mr, I am a woman of my word." "Yes, but which one?" Boston day nntil ell the smokestack began 0 a. m. operating Transcript. and confronted - 1 iH-tro- nl alut ElfMilkwto live beera mssisi people deny themselves the comfort hot drink with meals, because they find coffee and tea detrimental to health. For many, the drag element in coffee and tea irritates the nerves, retards digestion and often prevents MANY natural, restful sleep. If this fits your case, try Postum. This pure cereai - beverage supplies all the pleasure and satisfaction that a hot mealtime drink can give invigorating warmth, fine aroma and delicious flavor. And you can enjoy it in the full assurance that it cannot harm health. Rummy-dummy!- " , PoStUm Pen-field- Theres a Reason -- r nr FOR HEALTH -- - BEVERAGE lit f J toAT I jO Your grocer sell Potumln two forms: Instant postum (in tirsl prepsreJ insur.tly in ths cup by ihs addition oi boiling water. Postum Cereal (in packages) for ihoss who prefer to v sks tbs dnok while the meal is teu-- pc by boiling fully 29 aanuiea. pared, f Fcsr, cds Mads by Posiuro Cereal Col, Inc, Bet'--l Creek, Mich. f V |