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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH REAPER THE RICH COUNTY DESERVES A PENSION Entered as second-clamatter Pet). office RandolDh, 8. 1929. at the Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3, 1879. Caller Now theres what I call a Wm. E. Marshall, Editor and Prop, fine servant. SUBSCRIPTION Hostess Yes, hes been In our $1.50 Per Year in Advance family four hours. ss Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,niiniiiniiiiii.nillllllllllllllilllllllllinilllllllllllllllll,llilllinillllllllillIIIIIIIIIIIIllllll,llIHi?i! pst THIS BIRD HAS SPEED At widely separated points on the prairies, says Nature Magazine, you find outcrops of sandstone, forming cliffs or buttes, and here you are sure to find in the portholes or on ledges eggs of that most splenthe brick-re- d our birds of prey the of all did A bird of marvelous falcon. prairie , This safe; all family doctor dur- aches, colds, Ferrys are sold only in fresh biliousness. Get a 25c box.. AH druggists'. sa AC" UlVlj Quick relief for acid tion, heartburn. Only 10c. WATCH FOR THIS CROSS It Means the -- REAL ARTICLE GENUINE Of Bayer ASPIRIN Manufacture When you go to buy aspirin, Remember this for your own just remember this: Every protection. Tell your friends tablet of real aspirin of about it for their protection. Bayer manufacture is Demand and stamped with this cross. No get Genuine tablet without this cross is BayerAspirin.jS GENUINE Bayer Aspirin. Safe relief for headache, colds, sore throat, pains of rheumatism and neuritis, etc. Genuine Bayer Aspirin Does Not Harm ihe Heart Antiquities What antiquities of Egypt pressed you most? The trolley cars. Im- MEMBER N. R. A. Had Its Uses Grandma, the bustle must have been a useless contraption. It was useful in skating. Whose Fault? The Boy or Girl Who Refuses to Eat What have I ever done to deserve a child who refuses to eat, and is just skin and bones? The mother who asks that question might be surprised to learn that she alone is to blame. She knows a lack of appetite is the sign of a clogged system, but does the wrong thing to remedy the condition. A violent cathartic that upsets the stomach pulls down a child like a spell of sickness. It often forms the laxative habit. A more sensible way of regulating children is explained in the column to the right: Its a lucky girl whose mother knows how to regulate her childrens bowels without some strong, evil- tasting cathartic that upsets the system and ruins their appetite Whenever sluggishness coats the little tongue, makes the whites of the eyes a bilious yellow, or a child is headachy and fretful, just try pure California Syrup of Figs. The senna in this fruity laxative is so agreeable to take, so natural in action! Get real California Syrup of Figs at any drug store. The bottle should say California. 1 Do you want to EARN MONEY? 5,000 7,500 15,000 Salt Lake Citys you can say yon hara no wmc& you wm pay ANSWER PROMPTLY Immediately AFTER receiving details of a YOU SAY, WITH proposition PROVIDING, YOUR OWN LIPS, the pro position la clean, aquare and constructive, and offer you the greatest opportunity ever presented to you to make real money right In your home community. You may urn one of the 05 contest rewards ranging up to S5000 cash, and an appointment In your district good for earnings up to 5,000 or more per year. Give details, your age, family, education, experience, occupation. No selling experience necessary. L 1 Men or w omen WNU Service, Frances Parkinson Keyes vegetable laxative NR has been as dependable as a ay dated packages. When you buy Fer--' rys Seeds you are sure of the finest quality available. Adv. ILac By Frances Parkinson Keyes LIFE LONG'FRIEND" Keeps Them Fit at 70 ing their trying afterNRforty1 speed and indomitable courage, this years. keeps wild freedom the falcon little typifies them regular after year of the Great Plains. Less frequentaithfuliy with ly you come upon the eyries of the never any need to the dose. majestic golden eagle. The nests, increase No wonder their which are often used for generations, evening of life is so free from complaints. of people welcome the aidof this reare added to, year after year, until Millions liable corrective. For Natures Remedy the material composing them would strengthens and regulates the the poisons that fill the body of a wagon. bring on headSeeds Aimes flDineem M , CHAPTER XII Continued 30 Oh, no, thank you. This time Neal was standing above her, his weight heavy" against her . weary shoulder. Bad news again ! I knew It ! "Youre holding your own. Holding my own! Good G d, Ive got to do more than that I You will, darling, you will Would you not like a cup of cocoa or something? No No dont leave that tele phone. It may ring again at any mo- ment. But It 'didnt The silence, like the darkness, grew oppressively heavy Dora came in and suggested that It was past dinner time Anne shook her head and Dora went out again. . . . Roy Griffin, who knew so many law yers; George Hildreth, who was state master of the Grange; Ur. Golden burg, whose one small shop bad growD into a great chain with links all over the state; Low, who had appointed Neal to the senate, and who had political wires running In every direction from his gubernatorial seat; would they all do their share? And, if they did, would it counterbalance Stetsons strength with the labor vote, where Neal had no strength? The Wallacetown Bugle and the other weeklies a great many of- - them if they were all friendly to Neal, would that make up for those two big papers of Fletchers, which were hurling denunciatory editorials at Neals head? Spring came, glad and golden, magnolia-scented, to Washington, and Anne, asking herselt these troubled questions, shook the beauty that was all about her impatiently from her con sciousness, and strained with eager ness to reach Hinsboro, raw and windswept, and bleak as It was. But this was the year of the Long Session, and Neal would not be at liberty to go home early in March. It was actually mid-Jul- y before adjournment came, at two oclock o'ne torrid morning when ugly feelings had been unleashed by fatigue and ugly words spoken by lips which were merely the mouthpieces for overwrought nerves. Neal, who had been steering a filibuster, lost his temper that night and said unforgivable things to men who had been his friends for years. These nnforgivable things were printed In the Record, and circulated through the country. Were they unforgetable, too? Junior wanted to go to a camp In Mme. Estavl was the Yellowstone. little her taking family to Europe for the summer and had invited Nancy to accompany them. But both children were kept at home. They added im measurably to the picture Juniors more and more famous smile; Nancys sweeter and sweeter manners, made an favorable impression on Indelibly who came to the constituents wavering house and so much had to be jammed into such a short time that not a single consideration could be overlooked. Neals enemies had been at work all the time he was chained to his chair in the senate. And now only August, September and October were left in which to tear down what they had built Of course the children must do their share, even though tt was a ust tiny one. Anne must make them never let them forget how much that share might mean to their father. And she must do her share, too. Must shield Neal, spare him, save him. But see-m- HOW? ' She went everywhere that she was asked, even when she was faint with fatigue. She picked up the threads of her old association, with her church, her historical societies, her pupils; she wore clothes that were spotlessly needs no further comfresh, delusively simple. She was gra known that it this is not the story: Besides, ment cious, cordial, democratic, dignified, to which numerous fa- Conrad of Neal all did it What decorative. tireless, mous biographers have already failed, amount to? How much Influence, to do justice. It Is the stdry of his' fran in this after all, did a wife have wife. of polihideous struggle tic, powerful, And of his wife as the only hostess tics? Probably very little. Perhaps her had done achieve a real salon in Washing- to none at alL Still, she she feel not as the only American woman' did Neal if and ton; best, only whose dress drew forth royal com--i had failed him, It would not matter at Buckingham palace; as how But mendation else what anyone thought would he fee) toward her If he were the only this and that In various connot elected? She remembered the spicuous capacities, enough has also hard months after his campaign for been said. Her dresses and her dinthe lieutenant governorship, when he ners have been described a thousand had been defeated. Was It going to be times. Why, therefore, attempt to de- like that again? . . . scribe them again? It is neither the Hello Hello Senator Conrads Beauty nor the Belle with whom we nouse? The polls have just closed are primarily concerned It is the woman . . . The woman who, on a here In Weatherby. Allen, first selectman, speaking yes two to one for certain hot afternoon In Neal We are banking on him, Mrs. boarded the congressional express with Conrad, to come through Id Belford her husband, bound for the great national convention In New York. yet . . Would defeat In the long run be The lobby of the Waldorf Astoria, such a calamity? She saw herself livas they entered it, weary after theiij ing in Hinsboro again, m the house she warm and dusty journey, was sd loved so much and Into the build jammed that they could hardly wedge Ing of which her very soul had their way through It to register. With happy, unworried no every step that they advanced, some more calls to make; no more appear acquaintance stopped and seized them, ances to keep up ; no more ad shouting at them excitedly. With' mirers to contend with; time for her every turn they took, placards and children, her music, her real friends posters of rival candidates most of How much simple satisfaction how whom had their headquarters in the much real Joy she was denied be hotel crackled above their heads. cause she could never find time for Scurrying bellboys, distracted room these things. Would she not be hap- clerks, helpless assistant managers, pier, do longer deprived of these homestrove in vain to perform their normal ly pleasures? functions. Laden elevators sank and And yet, even as she asked herselt rose in the hopeless, endless endeavor the question, she knew that she would to convey the mass of humanity which' miss the insidious charm, the fascinatbounded into them like a phalanx from ing excitement of political life as much one floor to another. It was nearly an as Neal. She could bear that philohour before they reached their suite; sophically, but because of her own and Neal, mopping his brow and feeling, she could gauge his. He must, snatching up a glass of ice water, muthe must go on. tered as he drank, that he was inShe slipped to her knees. With the fernally late for the cursed committed same simplicity, with the same ardor, meeting and that he must be off at that she had prayed on her wedding once. night, she prayed again now. For Neal Committee meeting? Tonight? for Neal for NeaL . . . Anne asked in astonishment. Why,1,., Still pn her knees she reached for after ten now. its the telephona Probably shant get In before three, "Headquarters calling again. Mrs. he informed her hastily. Well, goo-bConrad. Weve heard from the last Better order yourself an orangeade five wards in Belford (Oh, God let and a chicken sandwlsh and have Dora him win let him win!) you must see you unpacked and settled before get your husband to the telephone." she goes to bed. Try to get some She spoke to him. Her voice sound ed strange and distant, like that of a sleep. Youll have a hard day tomorrow. foreign woman calling from some far Refreshed by a bath and a cooling shore. drink, Anne slipped into the lacy nightYou will have to answer, Neal, this which Dora had spread out for time. (Oh, God let him win let gown and settled herself for slumber. her, him win let him win I) She pressed the receiver Into Neals Her hopes for repose were, however, hand, threw her arm around him. entirely unfounded; a party of men From the wire she could hear the who were occupying the next room, and who had apparently met In secret crackle of laughter the tumult of triumph ; and staccato sharp the words conclave,, were either unaware or unconcerned of. the fact that they could that were being spoken: be overheard, and that they were disYou old crape hanger you! What b in ls the matter with you? You turbing the public peace. Their voices reverberated through the thin walk have the handsomest margin Their lack of harmony rent the air. What do you call a handsome margin ? Neal shouted through the re- They were it appeared delegates from Chicago, In revolt against their ceiver, clutching at Annes shoulder. boss and violently distrustful of each Well, If fifty thousand doesnt look handsome to you Come on down here, other. When Neal returned, haggard and hollow eyed, about five, he found you old son of a gun, and celeI I Anne sitting up in bed, taut with brate nervousness. Neal, dear, Just listen to that racket I CHAPTER XIII It hasnt stopped for a single instantj I cant stand it I Well have to go to With Neal Conrads Senatorial career some hotel where its more quiet. every reader of any daily paper Is a At national convention! Quiet! familiar. There is the tariff, which Good G d, Anne, you dont know what bears his name; there Is his speech on about. There isnt any the British debt funding plan, which youre talking Those fellows arent really obquiet is used as a model In elocution for jectionable. Theyre just having a every schoolboy; there Is his unshaklittle friendly argument You should able stand on the League of Nations have heard our committee. Turn over, which sent him, at the head of a speold lady, and go to sleep. cial senatorial committee, to Geneva. I cant sleep. All this, and much more, is so well (TO be mid-Jun- e, gone-comfor- table, y. ... 1 CONTINUED.) j . - ADDRESS P.O.BOX 065 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION Send stamp. JUDGE LEHMAN - - Humboldt, Kan. RELIEVE ECZEMA Dont suffer needlessly. Stop the itching and induce healing begin C to use 3BMM Sea Cooks Are Now At sea for generations past the ships cook has been the butt of the crews humor. The dishes that come HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM $1.50 Just oppotile Mormon Tobtrnodt ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. from his galley have never been exempt from criticism. Now, says the Montreal Herald, has come a day wheD the abilities of the sea cook are no longer derided. For the crew of a modern merchant vessel knows when the cook signs on that he has prob ably graduated from a special training school The biggest of those . schools is to be found In Dock street, London. Here an old gives Invaluable adsea-coo- k vice. And It is advice which coaid be obtained at no ordinary school of cookery. The Instructor when presenting his recipes, is careful never to men . Up on the Art tion ingredients that do not figure In the standard stores with, which those ships are supplied. His pupils learn all about the making of soups and gravies, pastries, cakes, and puddings, omelets, and other egg dishes. Gravy, this authority claims. Is particularly Important, as tt gives more nourishment than almost any other kind of food. He will show the budding sea cook how to perform some wonderful conjuring tricks with a pot of vegetable water. The old sea cooks young men are also tanght how to turn out an edible meal under the most disadvantageous conditions. As a result of this teaching the modern sea cook is very different Indeed from his predecessor, who was often given a post in the galley because he was considered the most useless member of the ships crew. Social Title The titles of Mr,, Mrs. and Miss are several centuries old. In books of the Sixteenth century, Mr. was read as Master and Mrs. as Mistress. The title Miss is merely an abbreviation of Mistress, and formerly any, woman or girl was addressed as Mrs. whether married or not According to Edwards Words, Facts and Phrases, at a time when men were generally called by their Christian and surnames only, the word Mister was probably applied as a sort of title to those who had learned a mystery or trade, and who would be looked upon as of higher rank or position than mere laborer or husbandmen, v |