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Show S- '- THE WEEKLY 'REFLEX, tfAYSVTLLE, UTAH 'Have you forgotten la tba AsrWJr wr nrtklal rwah? Cli !! Kelp yo ciOrder ajaty Yle fcy OF THE PAST DEAD comet the xiiataie fcJepboae, telegraph" will Ell the order, engrared, ' aad dipped tK By GERTRUDE day. MARY SHERIDAN at held a secret from her and what little she had seen on the surface concerning it bewildered and alarmed her. . 1 will not ask him, never! she No cloud Shall come breathed. tock hmuoa. faith 1 will believe in' him to the end.- - She beard her husband come in and Happy the bride whom the sun. shines on! quoted Mrs. Page, village hasten up the stairs.. She aw aited his busybody. appearance in the parlor 'dor nearly "Yea, and Clara is the kind of a half an hour, but he did not come. girl the clouds can! ecare w hen they Then Clara come," added her practical husband. somely up the stairs, I envy young Ervin Dodge his good Clara, opened the door softly.--Her and cheerful better half. husband sat at a table. He was "I hope he appreciates her. I hope, Beside in reading a letter. too. all that reckless past of his is him there were half a dozen other dead and buried." letters. His face was drawn and pale. Oh, Ervin is a boy, inMay I come in, dear? she asked sisted Mr. Page, heartily. .Love of gently, drink was born in the lad, for bis faeet Ervin Dodge sprang to his ther was a haTd one. "Ervin had his quickly. He included the letter in his swing in that line; pretty, patient hand and those upon the table in a Clara won him away from, it, and I quick grasp, sliding the mass into his believe it's permanent. pocket. Then, smiling with a tender This,- and in other way, all Cedar-vill- e gesture, he drew her to his knee discussed the wedding that-- made Looking over some papers, he said Clara Mercer and Ervin Dodge man casually, affecting calmness with a and wife. As to the principal con- mighty and a futile effort. Why, my tracting parties, all was sunshine and darling! what is the matter? roses. They had perfect, faith one in Clara could n6t restrain from breakthe.other. Their honeymoon passed ing down. A barrier seemed rising without a jar. They came back to between them. Her faith, her patience their home town at the end of two gave wav. .... . wemrinrdysisrio she sobbed, in the Oh, Ervin! It was arranged that they should re- midst of a wild uncontrollable storm main at the Mercer home until a lit- of tears, let me share trouble. tle cottage they had rented could be It is about that roan whoyour came here redecorated and painted. These were tonight it is about those letters you cloudless days. Clara was always a ere reading! Let me see them, let waiting for her husband at the door there be no secret between us two, when he returned from work. Ervin a ho must love one another always, was always straining his glance to just as dearly as now!" catch a first view of her charming He placed her gently In a chair facface as he came down the street. him. He regarded her gravely. ing One evening as Clara w ent out upon My dear, he aaid, there is no the porch, she drew back a little trouble. It ends with the destruction" startled as a stranger came up the of those'few letters. Do not ask to steps. His careless attire, the taint see them. They are a dead issue and of liquor on his breath, the leering there is nothing to fear and nothing expression of his bad, bold eyes re- to worry over." pelled Clara and she shrank back over Oh, tell me All! I the threshold, timid and half fright- know Ervin, please that you are bravely carrying ened. some terrible burden. Oh, let me 1 want to see Mr. Ervin Dodge, share it with you! spoke the man, gruffly. For a moment he was silent. He He is not at home, replied Clara. He met her glance sighed What is your business, if I may ask? with onedeeply. of infinite love and trusL Instinctively she feared that the "Remember," he said, I ask no ex- For Infants and Children. - The feaK AMI LAIN Cl TV JTH a Feminine Discussion. a oa debate the had club peace Our question. Well, first-clas- s which side won the fight? The Belter Glass TEAS , - less than cheap rich and strong, you use lees to obtain a given number et cups. Really coat you Teas. lor. being HEWLETTS Luneta Teas are in the Better Glass line. the impressionist school. Artist Believed in the Simple, and Unpretentious. A painter of the Impressionist ichool is now confined In a lnnatic siylum. To all persons who visit his Look here, this is ptudio he says, the latest masterpiece of my composit- Grazed Suggestive ion." They look, and see nothlngbut an They ask: expanse of bare canvas. What does that represent? That? Why, that represents the pas8age'of the Jews through the Red , pardon, but where is the sea? "It has been driven back. And where are the Jews? "They have crossed over. "And the Egyptians? "Will be here directly. Thats the sort of painting 1 like simple, sugLondon gestive and unpretentious. Sea." Beg Tit-Bit- HI 4. or art literature is too good SL Nicholas for No This boys and girls. principle that St. Nicholas has lived up to for forty years. It Is hard to the Influence of this of all magazines. A glance st one. days letters received by the Editor of St. Nicholas shows the place this magazine holds In the hearts and minds of American children. The publishers' and others responsibility entailed by this fact is taken very seriously in the office of the Century Co. In these days of changing standards In literature. It Is a comfort to be able to rely upon a magazine that, though never namby-pambis as dean as a whistle. Many new features are to be adr ded tor the coming year. More space - than ever will be given. to articles on nature and science for young folks. The' Riddle Box,, the Stamp Department, The Book Man Department, and the Advertising Contest will be continued as well as the various depart-- , ments of the SL Nicholas League vhlch monthly absorb the attention of many thousands of young AmericAmerican for it te over-estima- . beat-love- d y, ana. Adv. One on tho Butcher. Bobble Will you send mother leg of mutton, please, Mr. Bones? Bones Yes, my boy. Bobble And mother says if ft's a as t as the man neednt he can put it through the let- skinny knock; ter box. the-las- Cleveland Leader. Self-Sustain- - Humor. How did Horum get his reputation a raconteur? His stories are not amusing wen. and he doesnt tell them very But he can laugh at them in that makes him sound like a Washington Star. No. a way crow," Enough. Teacher. What do you know about George Washington? Boy He never told a lie. ' Teacher Is that all you know - about him? Aint that enough? Hoy news. Chicago - NofToT Improve HisLooks. Homely Patient My face pains, . doctor. What shall I do? ctur Im sure I dont know. You t try a beauty specialist Tho Point of View, "Yia only a goat" murmured the as he strode into tho strange farm. . Tis butt a man," retorted the goat ent at It in a business way. Saved. Jones fell out of the window of 20th story office yesterday. ,r chap. When is the funeral? he landed building ho funeral. You see the top of the aszt door. 19-sto- She Knew. author (who has just d his latest story to his wife) here! Theres the best , thing ! er Struggling did fiI re wife Yes, dear. hall you send it to What mag Puck. first r ala-a- ys, planations it is Tjflbe-pBsrdeaa-- - -- , - - There was a trace of menace in the tones that made Claras pulses beat more swiftly with a nameless apprehension. Just then " she heard the brisk, quick step of her husband coming down the street .walk, and said. Impulsively: There if Mr. Dodge, now. Ah, good! smirked the unwelcome 111 head him oft and transvisitor, act, my business with him. It, wont take very long!" Clara stood where she was, in the shadow of the porch. A vague presentiment of Impending trouble overshadowed her. She had no thought of eavesdroppifig, but an " Indefinable sense of danger to her loved one held her practically oa guard. The low hum of voices came to her Published bearing, then the words: love letters make interesting reading. There was an-- , indignant responss from her husband. Then the mocking Youd better tones of the other: come and bring the money with you. Clara qnieted her emotions as Erthe walk.- - She was smilvin came-uing, caressing as ever as her husband reached her. Oh, Ervin, she said quickly, there was a man here to see yon a few minutes since. Yes, I Just met him at the gate, A matter of replied her husband. business. During the evening meal the Clara noted an unaccustomed restraint in Ervins manner. When he went up to their tooe. however, he kissed her more fondly than ever, as he told .her that he wished to get a light overcoat and would he gone on a business call for about an hour. Restless and anxious, Clara went up to their apartment after be had gone. She noticed a drawer in which her husband kept his private papers half open. The cover of the box in which she knew be usually kept some ready cash stood carelessly open and the box was empty. -- went Again her heart... sank.-S- he dark to a stole and stairs back down corner of the parlor away from her mother and the others. Her husband p ever-watchf- NEW ENGLANDS FOR SUCCESS WITH FIRST POET POULTRY - Of Anne Bradstreet, New' Englands first poet, it is remarked that her poetry was not so bad as it .might have been. But it Is also remarked that the was the first to put forth even these little hard green buds of the new rhyme in that region--oworld which was afterward to be a center of poetic glory for - so many years. She was furthermore the first woman to' enter the ranks of American authorship. The chivalry of tho times is perhaps hinted in the generous estimate which pronounced these the firstlings of New England as tenth muse. She was the wife of Simon BradstreeL a. governor of the colony. One of her bocks was reprinted in London under the title, The Tenth Muse, Lately Sprung Up in America. And a Boston admirer, John Norton, pastor of First- Church, said that if Virgil could have. read the seraphic poems of Anne he would have thrown his heathen doggerel into the fire. ' Her father waa the grim verse makw, Thomas Dudley, who was associated with Winthrop as deputy governor of the Puritan exodus of Massachusetts. Tbs Monitor. f - - Brad-stre- et Investigate Tree Sep. Recent researches on the freezing points of the sap of plants made by experimenters In TYinity college, Dublin, may result in better extracts of herbs and plant organs in pharmacy and the arts. To press sap from the living untreated organ, even when the cells of the tissues are completely crushed, does not result in so concentrated a solution ms when the tissues are made permeable by chloroform, heaL or liquid air. In the current Notes' from the botalical school, of Trinity college several studies of osmotic pressures in plants may for-nish practical suggestion to brewers1 and makers of drugs. Bears tho 1 k s Trap nests are' the best to success. They point out the hens that are doing good work, and expose the drones They not only tell you how many eggs each Individual hen laying In a year, but they also point out the color of the shell and the shape of the egg. The time Is near at hand when hens will be sold on their egg records, and prices governed ' accordingly. It is an eooepte-- fact that the phi way to build up a laying strain of hens ia to breed from those giving the best records, saya the Farm Journal. By annually picking ont the best of the flock. It is possible each year .to increase the average of the flock. In line with the introduction of trap nesting came the question of the laying, hens giving a better percentage of fertile eggs, as well as receiving an extra allowance of feed. It la more difficult to overfatten a hen that is doing steady laying than it id t A Signature Promotes Digestion, Cheerful ness ami RcM Contains neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral guide-poet- Not N ah c otic . 4 'riurns AWWr I. 4mtj - Hmrm IVt Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. 'orms .Convulsions .Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP lion . Fac Simile The For Over Signature of ntaur C NEW-YORK- Thirty Years Company. . , t- Guaranteed under the Foodaij Bsact Copy of Wrappar. c ?. BMMBV, BM fBBN 1 Mum With All That Wat in Him. 'Mose waa a hodcarrler, black as tar, bandy-leggeand glad of 1L He was Young Lady's Reason for Choosing relating to some white men on the rear Escort Not Exactly What Ho Had of a car the results of a flght he re-- . Imagined It to Be. cently had Indulged In. Dat nigger tole me to keep niuh-hairMr. Blank (weve pot to cH him HIS BUMPED SELF-CONCEI- T d IhaibccauHtTTie'sroariy' avrrydficcnl fellow, and hed kill us If wp told his real name) is first tenpr In a glee club, lie sings in a choir, too. Everybody likes him. The other night a bunch of young people met for a social session st a certain house in the suburbs. They ate and danced and they sang. And when It waa the prettiest young woman there she hadnt been escorted thither by any chosen cavalier said: - I walk home, but its a lonesome walk and Im afraid. .There have been holdups in this part of town, go I choose Mr. Blank to see me safo On the way home Mr. Blank home. was considerably swelled up. The prettiest girl had chosen him from a crowd of personable bachelors, and were his feelings of excusable. He couldnt resist saying: Why did you think I was the strongest and bravest man there tonight? 1 I didnt,answered the girl. picked you because I knew you could holler the loudest! Cleveland Trap Nests. ia one that ia not laying. It remained for a man by the name of Albert Angelt, Jr., to strike the proper idee in this direction. Briefly stated, this system consists of a house and yard divided into two One aide ia large unequal parts. enough for IS hens, and the smaller side is for the cock. In the house are tVap nests with two openings. Every night the hens are put in the larger house. The cock stays permanently In his own quarters. Every hen that lays sn egg or enters a trap nest goes out into the apartment with the male. When night comes, the laying hens are all with the male and they then are returned to their own side of the house and yard, to go through the same process each day. .In the morning the male bird is alone. , The trap nest Is made by simply fashioning two light doors, using mesh The door to the nest wire netting which the hen enters to lay is hinged from the inside, and is pushed open by the hen, and closes hehlng . her. The door in the rear of the nest opening out into the cock's yard, is hinged from the outside. When thehen eu-ters the cotks pen she can not return, as will readily be seen. These doors, or gates, are llghL and work easily, and should be the alze of the entrance of the next box and hinged to tbs top. The illustration, a popular make of trap nests, such as is used on many of the large poultry farms. A shows trap nest turned to open nesL B .shows nest closed after . hen has entered. C shows trap seL When a hen is through laying the will stick her- head cut of the nest and tackle, and should thea be released. Oa the leg of each hen is placed an aluminum band on which is stamped a number. Upon opening the door of the trap the hen is picked up nd her number ascertained. This is then written on the egg, and at night a record Is made of these numbers. all-ov- one-inc- h - - er -- - ERUPTION DISFIGURED nig-ga- Unpleasant Encounter. was told young Staylate had quit an encounter with Maude Brokn'n I father? -- Yes. ' Jle did. He.tnet the old mis r. In the Lock Box 35, Maurice, la. spring of .1911 our little daughter, age five years, had a breaking out on her lip and part of her cheek that we took for ringworm. It resembled a large ringworm, only it differed tar that it was covered with watery blisters that itched and burned terribly,' made worse by her scratching 1L Then the blisters would break through and let out a watery substance. Bhe was very cross and fretful wbil she had it and had very little rest at night When the eruption was at Its worst the teacher of the school sent her home and would not allow Jier to attend until the disfigurement of her face was gone. I wrote and received a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, which we used according to directions, and they gave instant relief, so we bought some more." It gradually grew better. We kept on using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and In three or four months the child was entirely cured. (Signed) Mr. Henry Prins, OcL 22, -- offendatpl aaid, but de boss done tole me to fetch em In, an I suttlnly were gonter fetch em. So de big coon ups and takes hoi of muh ahra and says, beat' It, he says. Did you' beat it? came sympathetically from a listener. Did Ah beat it? Cose At dldn,. Ah Jos rapped dat coon on de Jaw. Did you hit him hard? waa another desultory question from thw white men. Htt lm ha'hd? Man, 1 jes naclter-l- y put everything in dat lick GawA Amtghty evah did gimme. It was agreed that it was some blow. tacking home from the club Juat as he wss leaving and In trying to avoid one another they both fell down the terrace and broke a $7 garden vase. And now the old man says he was assaulted by two burly ruffians, aFd Staylate doesn't 'dare to go near the house for fear he'll be recognised as both off FACE them." Plain-deale- , Long Forgotten, But In Her Time Her " Work Wsi Most Highly Thought Of. - Always Bought BUR CFNT ALCOHOl AYcc table Preparation for As vnnUiting l!x Food arvi ReOula fins' the Stomachs ami Bowels of $ Practical Way of Building Up Laying Strain of Hens Is to Breed Those With Best Records. and buried, like my own mistakes long since, and he handed her the letters. With a grasp, Clara regarded the open one. She swayed to and fro, white t6 the lips. I I did not write them! she faltered. But they are in your handwriting' and your initial C. ia signed to all of them. They, are harmless, pleasing, girlish notes, but the scoundrel who probably got them from the other scoundrel to whom they were written threatened to publish them- For your sake 1 secured them from him. Destroy these evidences of an Innocent flirtation and let us forget all about It It waa a foolish piece of business, I wrote those letters, aaid Clara. dear, buL for a girl friend, Corinne Dunbar, long since moved away from here and happily married.' She was a poor writer and begged me to help her. Yotf see, our initials were the same. She was fascinated by the stranger, who soon flitted' away t have some letters that she .wrote me where she referred to her silly whim. Two sounds Interrupted pretty I Want to Boo Mr. Ervin Dodge. Clara. One was the harsh tearing of the troublesome letters to shreds, the fellow might be some reckless ac- other the echo of a kiss long, clingquaintance of the old dead days, and ing, fervent. her heart sank. , . Oh, my dear! cried Clara, let ua Ill tell him, was the insolent re- never have a secret between us! sponse. with a soft of a coarse (Copyright, 1913, by W. G. Chapman.) chuckle. Hall understand you Have ou -- d A Kind-Y- Advance Information. . Young man,- we need brains In - our business. I know you do. That Is why I'm looking for a Job here. A simple remedy agxinxt coughs snd all throat irritation (Lugh Drupe Oc ate Deans Mentholated at all good Druggnt. There la no need of guide, posts oi the road to ruin. A brunette may be fairer blonde in some ways. Wo Want than Salesmen To Incrssssour salsa faree w offer ax trs liberal contracts feo ao-t-gand appear me 21 to U raara old. who can furniah good refarm as. Pleasant, profitably wark. Y ou are ewa baas but oiwito on ear eapluL Ns wxpenane Ml rur la C:, Z0" -- waorli oaai Wark aeowa aaaarand profits bat pianaMpfrsa. ta seen manth, Our !U la alaar aw Kin a axpena-a- . sow to jrow Btata, O d aatabllalwd, territory any-- bi Ua. WnUstanaator a! wa 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each Skin Book. Address postfree, with card Cuticura, DepL L, Boston. Adv. Tbs busier the hens the better they will be. 32-- Guineas are in great demand. Why All Is Fiah to the. Net - " Catch sot buy a few? ' ' anything while you were blustery, away on your vacation?" Sure,-- ! did. It weighed 28 pounds. Sunshine should have a large place in the ration of every hen. catch anything? I told you I would. She 130 and her dad's worth half weighs of a street railway company, an electric lighting plant and two brewer- Never expose fowls in snowy weather. You Ub-hu- Roots of all kinds can be fed cooked or raw, but they should he chopped ies." atlmalato tha torpid Hrer, atraagthaa tba digeatlv errant, regulate tba bewals. A ra- adr far sick haadaeba. laiqidtf as aa LADIES COMPANY, flue. MEDICINE. ANTI-BILIO- Elegantly sugar coated. Sadi dose.Prtca, Ua 1.1 BOX tlmatutodollant rtlcla used hr all fm-1- 0a for tawplns wbiela dollar., PKTTY fk 7 7, POHTCANO, OKX. Found a Flaw. OTHERS! DON'T wmWORK tOR Btnif. riog bortMM. yor Little Pierre had been taken to the fetan bMifirv (im. . Grit and shells are cheap, neverthe- seaside and expressed himself on his less very important in the proper care return as with the ocean.1 disappointed REAL ESTATE of poultry. What's the matter with the sea? SALK FOR 40 A.. ALL CULT.. asked his surprisel father. Isnt It Millard Co. Utah; water rightop Dont forgef to sprinkle lime, on big well, i r hae. IX Loveland. Hlacktry, Utah, enough, my boy V drop boards, not too much, for it is Ye but It has only one shore." rOK BALE OR TRADE FOR CATTL OR hard on the chickens feet Sheep too a. deeded, 100 a. desert land, to Adams Co.. Colo.; S20 a. cult., all tillable, f Borne men are almost as much r. bouse, outbids, orchard, etc. Wall IrriThe poultry houses must be a scene of microbes as some women are gated. W. H. Lppaeaaa. Res 7S, Brora. Cato afraid of constant eu'ort to prevent lice and of mice. W. N. U- - Salt Lake City, No. vermin from this time until spring. Mra. Winslow's Booth I ng Byrap tar Children i.. .When wood ashes are strewn over teething, softens the gana, reduce lnSsamw "T the hen bouse floor the manure will UeaUafs puweuw visi eolKAc tatkls Has Ceh Sgrap. Tanas Oaad. i lose much of the ammonia by the mix-- , iattoe. SaM hr Omari m A teaspoonful of gossip will taint a tare. I kettieful of pure truth. M ADJOININO-Blncklrf- 52-1-91. i r- r 3 . , |