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Show UTAH THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, Girls Love Them tU kt DIAMOND pnud oI RINGS win Ou abova almoU a vary th Udin, and aia thing Wc have Diamond, amall Of large, to auk nay taate. All guaranteed. Our modeit ptice make buying eaajr. el. S3 "BITS' 1 II you cannot coma Csn'Jy c&tnse your liver and a way. BOYD PARK rclUSMti FEAR to mail SALT llcat box. headache, biliousness, dlzzj. coated tewgae. foul taste and foul breath always trace them to torpid Brer; delayed, fermenting food In th Ski LAKl CITY boweto or soar, gassy stomach. nedsaaouts matter dogged in the In. TABOO" IS CONTAGIOUS tattw. ef instead thn system to Eddystono lalnndam Aacrlbo Their lilt to the Charm How "Cur" It a Get WKT MAKERS OF JEWELRY 160 hMH bowels while you sleep. , to make your own aeUc lion, wnie and we'll auggen being cast out into the Whoa this poison reaches ths tdkatn bnha tissue it causes a sad that duU, throbbing, Blck- - Mada. con-gestt-o Many Interesting facta with regard to the practice of leechcraft and tor eery, the Imposition and removal of taboo, and the belief In the Infliction and cure of dlaeate by rltea among the native of Melanesia were related recently by Dr, W. H. R. Rlyera In the second Fitzpatrick lecture on "Medv cine, Magic and Religion" at the Royal College of Phyalclana, tayt the London Times. In Eddyatone lalandi, "where Doctor Rivera apent several month tome yeara ago, nearly every disease is ascribed to the infraction of a taboo on the fruit of certain trees, esp dally the cocoanut and betel vine, the taboo aa well as the sign by which It ia known being called kenjo. When anyone suffers from epilepsy or other convulsive seizure which is recognized as klrengge he and his friend consult one known to hsv the power of imposing the kenjo klrengge. This. man visits the patient and ( strekes him from the head called downwards with four leave myou, some mow, aoot, and scrap-lug- s of wood, uttering the formuula: Stroke down and "Stroke away. Cease thou. Let the man away. live; do not. return. They have given The last clause of me a good ring. this formula and two in that used In removing the taboo refer to the fee, the chief money of the Island conBist- in pf arm rings. GOT STUDENTS THEIR MEAL Chinese Ambassador Furnished It t Sons of Mandarins, Though Not by Any Means Willingly. anecdote of the first week of the war is told by Herbert Adama Gibbons In his new book, "Paris Reborn." The wards of the Chinese government studying in Paris, mostly the sons of mandarins, according to Mr. Gibbons, finding themselves suddenly destitute of funds, applied to their ambassador and their conaulate In vain. Finally aa a last resort 60 hungry etudent literally forced their way luto the embassy, devoured the sppe-tilinmeal which had already been served in expectation of hia excellency and ended by raiding the pantry. While they were thus occupied the ambassador returned,1 but being told by the concierge what waa happening Inside he decided that prudence was the better part of valor. Accordingly be retired to a nearby restaurant and telephoned to the police. . There is nothing a Parisian enjoys better, even a Parisian gendarme, aaya Mr. Gibbons, than a good joke, lie reports that the police did not go at their, task veyy strenuously, adding, however, that in the end U took more than words to got the students out. An amusing g Sufficient. Hobby," inquired the mother, did you wash your face before the music teacher came? Vesm. "And your hands?" "Ves'm." And your ears?" Well, ma," said Bobby, Judicially, "I washed the one that would be next to her. A Hard Proposition. t "Hows the family?" a was asked. Well, my children are at a difficult age now." Difficult? Why, theyve all passed the measles and teething age, have they not?" Long ago. But you don't know a father's troubles. My children are at the age where, if I use slang, my wife says lm setting a bad example, and If I speak correctly the youngsters think I'm a back number. Which fond-paren- would you do?" , Caseurts immediately cleanse. ths remove the eour, undigested foul case, take the excesi bfto bom th liver and carry out tbe constipated waste matter and to the bowels. Caaearet tonight will surely stzafgb ten yes out by morning. They nhlto you sleep a box your druggist means your head dear, stemarlh sweet and your liver bonds regular for months. Adv. 11 10-ce- A little nonsense la always appreciated by tbe naff' who is not th target ef tbe joke. A GLASS OF SALTS WILL EED E KIDNEY-BACKACH- i Says Drops Exerts Kidneys and -- When your kidneys hurt and your bade feels nore. don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a tot of drugs that excite the kidney and irritate tbe entire urinary tract yonr kidney dean like you keep For six months; which he has 4ecnV4 as Keep mr bow d dean, by flushing them "six eventful months." he was the editor of a a harmless salts w hich re with mild, whose locality newspaper In a southern town, ores urinous waste and tbs body's I shall not give here, because of certain client stimahdes tbtaa to their normal activ- was case. It There stances connected with the The function of tbe kidneys is to another crusade against a municipal ring and By. ffSter tbs bloodL In 2d hours they with another case of being compelled to edit tram U 08 grains of acid and revolver In the hand and also to walk with a fan strain se v can reatfily understand waste, waa exceedingly handy. The ring erentnally On vital importance of keeping tht broken into bits, but meanwhile Mr. WooOey had jrw f mm fit' i6ai6!rWAAw66ww. By EDWARD B. CLARK. NK of Washington humorist I t '"f" rVvIfc ' de- clared once upon a time that the reason so many newspaper men are appointed to positions In the United States treasury Is that the scribes heart desire Is for once In their lives to get next to a lot money. One gets next to much money In the building containing Uncle Sams strong box, but be doesn't get hold of any great amount of It, although the salaries paid are in a general way more than fairly comfortable. Robert Wlckllffe Woolley la one of the latest of America's well known newspaper men to be appointed to a position In the treasury department. As someone else has put It, Woolley makes more money than any other man In the United States, but the personal difficulty la that he not allowed to keep the proceeds of his manufacture. He la the director of the mint, and everybody knowa that the province of the mint la to turn out money for the multitudinous uses of the people of these. United States. There ard not' many newspaper men In the country who are better known than this present official of Uncle Sama government Woolley looks about thirty yeara old but he can add quite a number of years on to that and giVu no lie to the date of hla birth. He baa been a reporter, a sporting editor, a managing editor, an editor, and a writer of magaxine articles, and today he can pick up any one of hla old jobs and dtrlt Justice, and It the whirligig of politics In time shall thrust him forth from the portals of ths treasury department, he probably and very naturally will turn to tread In the old accustomed ways. The writer-this has known Woolley for a good many years, and worked with him side by side for a considerable length of time on a great Chicago dally. Willey was then a sporting editor. He Is an outdoor man, who loves the things which all Americans love, and, he knows how to write about them, whether it be as a close finish on a Kentucky track or a 14 Innings so far 0 to 0 at the National league grounds In New York city. Woolley loves sport for sport's sake, but It must not be supposed for a minute that sport ever occupied the major part of his time. From boyhood until this day the present director of the mint has been a student of sociological conditions, of economics and of the ways and means of legislation to get for the people what seems to the progressive minded the things which, they ought to have. Convictions that certain lines of procedure were the right ones to follow, and a determination to follow them, have given Robert W. Woolley many strenuous and exciting hours during his long newspaper career. It is not necessary to explain to the people of the United States what a political ring Is, nor Is It necessary to explain what an Invisible government is. Certain brave spirits In newspaperdom have been fighting rings and invisible government for years, apjj it has made no difference to the courageous ones whether the ring was composed of men of their own party, or whether the Invisible government likewise was tinged with a. partisan color of a hue ordinarily deemed admirable by the crusaders. The director of tjte mint is a Democrat, but be has fought Democrats when they were trying to exploit the people for. 1 -- Of more-pve- r, Placing th Blame, First Literary Genius. Jones tells me ke caru.ot get anyone to publish his new novel Second' Literary Genius. Is that selfish ends. owing to the war? Not long after, he entered newspaper work the First Literary Genius. No; I exof the mint had a time of it," which director to novel. the pect its owing tested his courage and the sincerity of hia convicPrecision. tions. I am not going to mention the name of the he place where a certain thing happened, but "Do you go In for aviation?" unquestionably the, scene of it will be recognised asked the Boston beauty. No; Bot for aviation. One goes in by many and the details will be remembered by for sea bathing, but for aviation one men who have not yet arrived on the borders of middle age. goes up. Judge. Down in the South, and not very faf In the Logical. South, either,. Robert W. Woolley waa once 1 see the law permits the sale of managing editor of a newspaper of prominence horse meat now." in a city of considerable sixe. The chief editor Im not a bit surprised. First they of hia paper and the mayor of the town were killed the horse racing game pnd now engaged in a row. fcfr the mayor. It was believed, theyre going to cut the stake horses was connected with a municipal political combination which, as the editor viewed it. was far sip Into horse steaks." from being an institution intended to benefit the ' Cause for Worry. Finally the lie was people of the community. I wish youd take Johnny to see passed, and the lie la. or waa. anyway, a sure the doctor, dear. Im afraid he'a not fighting word In certain communities. well." One morning Mr. Woolley went down to the What makes you think o?" newspaper office and found the mayor of the town "He hasnt broken a single one of and his son, each with a gun in hand, heading the his Christmas toy yet" , f Ovdjr Salta, Particularly If Bladder Bother You. lost his newspaper. For a short time thereafter Mr. WooOey waa the editor of the San Antonio Light ta Texas. Then he went back to New York sad entered upon a really notable career aa a magazine writer. He waa sent on many assignment tkroeghort the country for some of the beat magazine la The Building la Uncle Sams New Money Factory, and Below Are Employees Counting Hia Million. entire business office force of the newspaper prisoners behind their counters. The intruders were threatening to shoot anybody who attempted to leave. Woolley had- no gun. He'entered the office and proceeded to address some remarks made up of words ordinarily considered of the fighting kind to the armed intruders. Woolley reached for a telephone, took it off the receiver and was laughed at by the gunmen, who told him that they had cut the wire. Woolley stood there with the receiver in his hand for a minute while red hot verbiage was exchanged. Then Woolley walked straight by the two armed men and went out of the door, and neither one cared or dared to Interfere with him. Later it developed that while the receiver was off, although the wire had been cut, the chief editor of the vaper at hla home had taken off hia own receiver to call up the office, and found he could i X get It. But aa only one ire waa severed he heard a large part of the conversation In the office by .means of the uncut wire connected with the office telephone. What he heard afterwards a as used In evidence, for court proceedings were brought. Now, It Is just here that an ordinary newspaper man would have become disgusted with the pro fession which he was trying to follow and would have thought that the whole world was out of joint The mayor of the town and his son were editors of a rival newspaper. This rival stood, of course, for the municipal ring, and It was things which appeared In its columns which had caused the other editor, Mr. Woolley's chief, to put the He In print. While things seemingly were still at white heat between the two camps the mayor and hia rival editor, whom he was ready to shoot, or be shot by, matte up their differences, combined the two papers, and thus Woolley, who had dared everything for his chief, was forced out, and In the parlance of the street, was "left to hold the bag." In other words. Bob Woolley stood for right and principle and then lost his - Job. There was a celebrated law case that attracted world wide attention. In Kentucky After the municipal ring episode and Mr. Woolley had lost his place as managing editor, he became a reporter and he bandied thla case. There came down from Chicago at this time two newspaper men who since have become widely knewn Eugene Bertrand, now of the New York Herald, and William E. Lewis, the editor of the New York Telegraph. They had been sent down from- - Chicago to work on the matter Woolley had in hand, and they became acquainted with him. They found out a lot of things about him which appealed to their newspaper sense. They also dls- covered that he was fond of America sports. They went back to Chicago and a short time thereafter Woolley, who knew nothing about their Interest In him. received an offer from the Chicago Tribune to become a reporter in the sporting department of that paper. He went to Chicago, and it. was not long before he became the sporting editor of the newspaper whose staff be joined. , From Chicago the present director of the mint went to New York, and. for a long time was employed on the New York World. A little later, as somebody else has put it, "he yielded to the temptation of a beautiful fruit plantation in Texas. The fruit was not altogether golden, as far a the proceeds from the sale of the crops were concerned, and Mr. Woolley went back into tbe newspaper profession. -' the United State, and then he became we of the Washington correspondent of the New Tort World, a position which he held foe abort twn years. Then again Mr. Woolley tamed to zine work, and In the year Mil he became the chief investigator of the congressional committee appointed to look Into the affairs of tbe United States Steel corporation. This committee was known as the Stanley committee." effects, it is Because of its able that a magazine article entitled, "The Plunderers of Washington," was the asost contribution to the "news and Information ef the day which Mr. Woolley ever wrote This article was preceded by an Intimation that anyone tioned and who chose so to do might know that he bad recourse In the courts, la other words, the information upon which the article was based was tested in advance This article was called by the press of the time "fearless." It dealt with some of Washington's big bankers and real estate men and with a good many officials. Woolley was writing Just ns he wrote when he was attacking municipal rings la smaller towns of the country- It Is not too much U say, perhaps, that the article largely was responsible for a complete change In the manner of men appointed to positions of high trust ia the cipal government of the city of Washington, for Washington in a way has municipal government, being under the yule, of course, of congress, bast having a board of District com misnomer responsible heads. In the year 1912 Mr. Woolley was the editor and compiler of the "Democratic Text Book." and was chief of the campaign of publicity hnrenn of the Democratic national committee. He also piled the text book of 1914. Hla political affiliations at this time, however, newspaper men believe, did. not have anything to do wftk his appointment to office. His efforts along liberal sad progressive lines bad attracted the attention ef Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Woolley was appointed first aa auditor for the interior department, office which, despite its name, is under the etmtrod of the treasury department. Then he was given his present position as director of the Be wide-reachin- g . i - J is filling it. ' 1 am writing this article with feelfags of per- sonal admiration and liking, perhaps even ef affection. for I haye known Woolley tor years. He la a tried man. He ia one of the newspaper bn ternity, and after nearly a quarter of a centory of close acquaintance I know that I can any that-hIs an honor to it. Robert Wlckliffe WooGey Urea Just outside of Washington ta Fairfax. Ta. it is this little town which has possession of the wISs of George and Martha Washington, art parts of the bill of rights of George Mason. If is a good place for a Democrat ofsczosgfy progressive tendencies to live.' Mr. Woolley married Marguerite Trehofm ef Winchester, Virginia. . They have four ck3drra all girls. The family life to of the hind counted Ideal In the books Mr. Woolley to frt down as Robert Wlckliffe Woolley, hut newspaper men from coast to coast and from the rw tv to the Gulf know him much better as "Boh. kidneys active. Drink lots ef water you cant drink ; sis get from afly pharmacist abort fear ounces of Jad Salts; take a tabacepoonful In a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidney will act Can. This famous salt Is mad from tbs acid of grape and lemon Jades, combined with lithla, and has for generations to clfean and clogged kidney; also to nentrsBze thn adds ia nrine so it no longer to a aonree ef Irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. to inexpensive; cannot in- Art I a delightful effervescent Btllawnter, drink which everyone tkte also keep np the water drinking, a 'Xf toko mow and then to'keep thdr kidneys cfleaa and active. Try doubt you will wonder what of yemr kidney trouble and tartwtf Adr. Tbe offer we grow the greater ths lack ef knowledge we discover ia ocher. THE PROFESSORS STATEMENT. TnL Ang. F. W. Schmitz, Thomas OIL, writes: 1 was troubled with year. tor about twenty-fivtoll f bad BrightS Disease toI tts last stages, EUchachs When e tried Dodd Klb gey Pills. After1 urtng tWO 1)0X6 was somewhat m bored and I stop the treatment yd La the spring of the next year I bad another ah OodTs Kidney Fills and they relieved mm 1 ssed three boxes. That e to now three yean ago and my has not returned in Its severity, and by string another two boxes a liv Go later os. the gala left altogether sad I bare bad so trouble since. may zey statement. I recommend Dodds Kidney Fills when and wbsr -- Lack-ach- se everlesa." Dodds Kidney Pilto.Medf per box at yonr dealer or Dodds cine Co, Buffalo. A MARINE JOY RIDE. Motor Boatet (to passenger) Did yon sen i cut down that fisherman ta the skiff? Passenger Sure! Say, this to almost as sock ton as' autamobiling. It T Adr. the onward march of clrflito ton ofpertnnities arise .for TTfeh fadfli opotart te Examine carefully every botti CASTQZLLasafe and auresee mmv. aad children, and Casa Bo GfgJikaTyre ff -- la Use tor Over CbUfrea Cry Tears. . Fletcher Castor If yen cannot look on the ride of thing, better keep y closed as much as possible. maftrt tat Ttort wiser thsawj SAFETY FIRST IN ALL THINGS. "Why do you always carry your amhrefto. ere when It Is not raining?" "So someone else wont carry It when ft to raining." Pennsylvania Punch BowL 3 went for m-- v art V , fcw. fcyeSlot ft to far better to nay thaa look Dt Krti britf Kr",, Eye be bent on cm extravagance. Fbn-M- rt Pe& " |