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Show THE RICH COTTV REAPER RANDOLPH. UTAH COUNTY uitkisecond-cla- TJlfc. Enured as ss REAP KB matter Feh at the post office Randcloh, Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3, 1879. Win. E. Marshall. Editor and Prop 8. 1929. 1.M SUBSCRIPTION In Advance ' vr Today and Tomorrow Tomorrow is not yours, and it is yet uncertain whether it ever will be. Today is the only time which you can with the least shadow of propiiety call your own. Of course we are all tinctured more or less with pessimism, but it is as bad form to talk about it as it is to be a whooping optimist. If it is your disposition to lead the parade, you will find a parade somewhere, even though small. If men didnt have to think and . worry over making a living, they would be handsomer. CHAPTER XIII 20 The door-berang. Winnie lifted the big bowl to the table, and as she was, with her apron upon her, she went to the front door. Oh! Oh." said Winnie. She reached for her apron and crumpled it In her thin hand. Tis you." For the dread which had seized her when Cathal came home on the night this girl had called him, filled Winnie again. Do ye seek me?" Yes, said Agnes. "Will ye step in? Agnes stepped into the neat little sitting room, where a few old, plain chairs and the table told that they were memorable, treasured things. She looked about, and met Winnies blue ll Understanding and Knowledge Knowledge, without understanding, is as ineffective as was steam before Watts discovered how it could be applied. Your friend is not the one who tells the trnth about you, but conceals some of it. Bless his loyal heart! People perpetually pursuing thrills give you the impression being hystericky or worse still-unbala- Continued of nced. eyes. Will ye choose a chair? None else is home, Winnie explained, seating herself uneasily, or Id call them. "You are the one, said Agnes, I Work and Values The wealth of the world is not its money; it is in what we produce by work. A woman has fathomless cour- wanted to see. age when she undertakes to engiMe?" said Winnie. Over him? neer a love affair between two Over him and myself, said Agnes ; other people. The right sort of a husband is and she waited, not knowing what next swollen with pride when his wife to say. Im pleased ye are here, said Winwoman at the is the best-dress- ed And why nie, trying to help her. should ye not be? Hes gone the many, many times to ye. Too many times, was it? she asked anxiously; for she was still puzzled. Not too many for me. Then what trouble came to him?" Winnie asked, crumpling her apron. What trouble this week and more? From the night he came home from the murder of that Lorrie, hes lived for ye. For naught else but for ye. He told you? asked Agnes. Wud he tell me? Ive me eyes; and the blind cud see ! . . . There was a time be never knew ye; and theres been the time since. As different to him as night and day. Whats fallen between ye?" Fallen? said Agnes. Nothings fallen. We mean to be married. party. If Youre Told to Alkalize Try This Remarkable "Phillips Way Thousands are Adopting to his desk after his grandmother bad gone; be stood half the rooms width away, staring without recognition at the open books and the papers which a few minutes ago had absorbed him. One meaning one, and none other was possible was declared in what Agnes Gleneith had done this day, and which Winnie had told him. Agnes had broken down the last false barrier between them; it existed in her no more. In him, what still held him? A lifetime of feeling the inferiorities Inflicted upon a little boy of no fortune and no birth but inferiorities which Winnie, from the first, so valiantly and steadfastly had denied for him. When Winnie had opened his door, he had been studying bow he might save from the penitentiary, and utter degradation, Philip Linsdale. This week another gentleman in desperate straits not a neighbor to the but certainly known to them had appealed to Cathal to save him from prison. Today, Cathal OMara of no birth and background had to refuse to take a like case. For banks in the city and about Chicago were failing; great companies and corporations conld not meet their debts; great men great names of the city dropped In dishonor. They who had held themselves above and beyond Cathal OMara were calling to him. What had Davis Ayreforth all but s done? How secure were Robert own fortunes? Cathal stepped to his desk; he laid between the pages, and Glen-eith- s, Glen-eith- paper-marke- rs ' On every side today people are being urged to alkalize their stomach. And thus ease symptoms of acid indigestion, nausea and stomach upsets. To gain quick alkalization, just do this: Take two teaspoons of PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA 30 minutes after eating. OR take two Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tablets, which have the same antacid effect. Relief comes almost at once usually in a few minutes. Nausea, fullness after eating and gas acid indigestion pains leave. You feel like a new person. Try this way. Youll be surprised at results. Get either the liquid Phillips or the remarkable, new Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Delightful to take ana easy to carry with you. Only 25 a box at all drug stores. ALSO IN TABLET FORM: temspoonful of Phillips Milk of Mag. gen-ni- ne rniLLIrd milk OF MAGNESIA h SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY O Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the nuumer mouths Radio tor Every Neon A : HOTEL Temple Square white-haire- I Rates $1.50 to $ 3.00 The Hotel Temple Square has a friendly atmoshighly desirable, phere. Yon will always find t immacand comfortable, ulate, supremely thoroughly agreeable. You can therefore understand why this hotel la: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You can also appreciate why t fts a mark of distinction 'o stop at this beautiful iostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. At five oclock that afternoon the reception clerk at Cathals office looked across bis desk at a slight, little woman in straight, black-sil- k dress, new black bonnet and gray gloves. I wud see, she ahnounced stead-- I ily, Mr. Cathal OMara. Point me his door, and Ill .throuble ye no more. And Faith, now meself I see It forthwith she strode to It and opened It Winnie cried Cathal, rising. Whats happened? She faced him fair and told him. I had a caller today, Cathal. Agnes Gleneith come to see me over ye! Cathal could not bring himself back 1 j ' d See she weakened, "can we? that great gray crag down Cathal gazed Into the valley. there? It was noonday, and they rested side Nothing?" he denied for her. by side, far up on the flank of their Theres any one in all the world for mountain, at the very edge of the snow-linAbove them rose rock and you ! Kiss snow ; beside them a single stout little No," she said, very simply. me. dwarf pine clung in a cleft, a brave They went up together to the house, outpost of the forest below. where lights betrayed her father figThe Sun, herding his cattle through uring at his desk under the antlers the pastures of Time, had climbed to Her his and trophies of his highest slope in the sky; and his mother seemed to be upstairs. radiance caught the gray crag so that Cathal, alone, sought her father. it shone above the mountains shadow. Bob Gleneith "Hello, OMara. at the great rock, and turned on his chair. "You came awhile sheAgnes gazed followed Cathals feeling: Until ago?" The two men looked at that falls into the shadow at noon, Yes, sir. ns stay! Then we need never each other; and Cathal knew that her let count the days. Only, some day that father was well aware of why he was will rock tell us that we must go. not was And It there. he, Gleneith, And so they agreed on It that avoided it They were far in the west and the Youve Ormstead now, I hear, amid the mighty, majestic north, OMara," Bob Gleneith said. Theyve mountains ; and for five days they had charged him with fraud fraud and been married. (And Bob Gleneith had too. his taken for Hes prilarceny vate purposes, they say to save him- stood by his Light One in the service self two millions. Theyve caught at the house of the minister.) To be married, to take your place him; so hes come to you. In the procession of life, to realize Yes, sir. Bob Gleneith somewhat ruefully at. last how you had received your life smiled: You seem to be collecting my and how, if you willed, you would pass life on that was a solemn and also friends, OMara." Cathal said nothing, and Gleneith an ecstatically happy situation. And there were the mountains. suddenly rose. What can you do for them? Will Lord, thou hast been our dwelling-plac- e in all generations. Before the they spend the rest of their lives in a cell? They were good men. . . . You mountains were brought forth. . . . know I dont mean good, bnt they Before these mountains were brought had ability; they built things; and forth! now you stand between them and For a thousand years In thy sight are bnt as yesterday when it Is past, prison. He struck at the wall beside him, and as a watch in the night which resounded at the blow. SomeA thousand years ago, no one had times, OMara, I feel that even the ever dreamed of Chicago, and the walls we built must be of paper. . . . forefathers of the millions in the You came to ask me something. teeming city were to beget sons and Yes, sir. I want to marry Agnes. daughters and die, and they would She will marry me. bear children that would die through I supposed so ; and I suppose, six hundred years, before a generawhatever I say, youre both going to tion grew that would bear of this do it Well, one thing: youre not paAmerica. And the that per, OMara. Whatever else you are, now made or ruined so many men or arent yonre not paper. . . . what was it? A center of scheming When are you planning this thing? through a moment of time. Your "Tomorrow. stocks maintained their prices, in this Tomorrow? You waste no time, center of mens schemes, and yon OMara. . . . Well, Ive had one big remained powerful and great like formal wedding in my family anand clever and comfortable like nounced weeks ahead, a thousand Jeb. . . . They declined, and you were guests. This is hardly the time for disgraced like Philip Linsdale and that again; and Im willing that my John Ormstead; or you must destroy other daughter try another sort of yourself, as Arthur Linsdale had done, thing. Her mother wont be you and Davis had tried to do, in order know that But let me stand up with to leave a few dollars to Bee and the my daughter and give her away, even boys. . . . Thon carrlest them away as if its before a justice of the peace. with a flood; they are as a sleep. ' But the mountain would remain; the world continue to spin under the CHAPTER XIV sun, each year in the spring exposing Fools, they were; for they ate the to the sunshine for a few days that Cattle of the Sum Were they fools, great gray crag In the valley, and Imdo you think? mersing it again in the shadow until What were the Cattle of the Sun? another twelvemonth was turned. One new, reckoned year to add to the unAgnes asked. Days? countable ages of eternal Time. Days. They devoured the days the Cattle of the Herder of the HeavAgnes shivered a little. ens without counting them. He clasped her closer. Cold? Must we count them? Have we been mad, Cathal? Are You dont want to, either." we all Insane in the cities? I cant bear to! I cant bear to Here, he said, it seems so. But .know when this must come to an you and I are going back. Not before we must! Oh, why do end. It will never come to an end, Ag- we ever leave here? nes, whats between us." All my He looked down at her. No; but you must go back to the life, Ill remember how you said that I people that need you. So many peo- And a thousand, thousand other ple that so desperately need you What magic youve made of my And youre so young so young I She days ! You think I have? It seems to me caught his hand and kissed it; so he caught her to him; and for several youve done it all. Ive merely moved, moments both of them forgot about Cathal, into your kingdom. the Cattle of the Sun. Then he said, Mine? he said. Mine? We wont count them, With your words, that night, yon defiantly: either. Well throw away the cal- made its walls! endar and never mark the days." (TO BE CONTINUED) me. e. gun-roo- et In-su- ll, be-ya- nt Each tiny tablet ia the equivalent of a But, stock-mark- Who? Cathal your grandson and L Whist! cried Winnie. Whist! . . . What l hear, did ye say? . . . Ye and he! . . . Hes a bit of a book, with every word of ye and every pitener of ye pasted In. I looked. Sure it was printed for all the world to read; but he pasted them all together. At last ye returned from the sea. He goes to ye; then he goes no more ; and he passes me, these days, niver speaking. Is that because hell be married to ye? Thats it, said Agnes; and no longer could she sit still. She arose, and Winnie arose. He thinks I wont do It; so 1 came here. And still ye will? said Winnie, so proud of him and humble for herself that tears came to Agnes eyes. Winnie whispered again. Whist ! He was born beyant us all. Far, far beyant most men. Scarcely thirty he stands now, a single score and ten; and men twice his years the great men of Chicago send for him In their And they lay their throubles need. on him. Well, as a lad he was like that; he wud see to us all. Small as he was, he wud see to us alL Niver fear he will fall to see to ye. Oh, 1 know him, too! Agnes cried. Not yet," said Winnie proudly. Not yet the half of him! Not yet neither how strong nor how tinder he can be! Once sit down. Miss Glen-eitLet me tell ye ; sit down. Far away, a school bell beat; and for the first time, it meant nothing to Winnie; and Agnes heard nothing else at alL So the back gate had swung, and the children trooped Into the kitchen, before Winnie remembered them. The cakes that day were never baked; for Winnie had left them in batter; but there was the hot fresh bread to cut and butter and hand about with the mugs of cold milk. So Winnie OMara did that this day with Agnes Gleneith helping her. one thing left to us to da Go on from this moment together. Theres nothing else," she said, "for Great Names of the City in Dishonor. Dropped closed his lawbooks. One last moment he hesitated; he pressed his buzzer. Ask Mr. Parry, he said to his secretary, if he can step in here. Then: Jim, Im going away for a couple of weeks. Now? said Jim. On what case?" No case, said CathaL But its two weeks before I have myself to be In court. You can carry on for me till then, cant you? You see, Jim, I hope I hope to be married. North from the city, he drove; and no doubts dragged upon him. He drove, pilfering his dreams for a practical plan of that which Agnes and he Agnes and he I might do. He never gained her door; for she awaited him by the road just within the gates. It was dark. Clouds floated below the moon, clouds not of storm but of concealment; but in the dark he saw her white figure before he pointed toward her. He switched off his lights and stepped down. She said no word ; nor did he. He grasped her hands, speaking then her name ; but his breath went from him : and she whispered there in the dark of the lawn, clinging to him: Youre here youre here ! He released her so that she could lead him toward the lake. They descended, cautioning each other of the steps, to the shore; and no one else was near. No lightning threatened tonight The lake lay calm. Ripples ran up on the beach, which sighed as the sand released the wavelets and let them retreat over tiny shifting shells and stones. . Dare you do it? Dare you? What? He swept her up In his arms. "The ' 1 Doctor Gets Queer Hauls Fishing for Foreign Substances in Patients "Fishing in Food and Air Passages is the duty of the doctor who is confronted by a patient suffering from a foreign body accident in the throat. Many a strange hanl is made when the physician angles for foreign bodies. When the child is sleeping, dozing, running, jumping, laughing, crying or sobbing, it is extremely dangerous to hare In the mouth any substance that may be swallowed or inhaled. Carelessness In activities of this kind has common pins, coins, jewel- caused many foreign body accidents. Safety-pine In older persons, hasty eating with ry, hardware, foods, bones, holders and even a cap from a catsup little mastication produces many forbottle have been among the items in eign body accidents. Even though the butcher is careless in breaking a bone the physicians catch. Drs. Chevalier Jackson and Chevalier and the housewife is careless in preL. Jackson in Hygeia emphasize the paring food, no one should swallow point that children get foreign bodies foo so rapidly that the object is not into their throats through Imitating old- detected in the mouth. er persons. It is only natural for children to put coins In between their teeth Origin of Expression If mother does so or to keep safety-pi- . The expression, fits you to a T, Is - in their mouths while dressing probably an allusion to a mechanic's dolls if mother dresses the children in by which accuracy iu uiuU like manner. ing angles Is secured. s, cake-candl- |