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Show - 4r-v L, ( THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH. UTAH screen hid the cooking range, hut is the middle of the floor was .a large white enameled table and in one corner was a small square one, with a chair before it. On the small table was a glass stand heaped with folded Room paper napkins, a big sugar bowl of a: familiar variety, pepper and salt shak-- ' ers and, a typewritten menu. card. Felicia was garbed In white, wfth a Bj CLARISSA MACKIE large white apron, and there was a, I 5$J$55S433$5$$5S$3S$$ glimpse of a grinning maid similarly 1921, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) attired. Here in his own adored home During their honeymoon the New- was the atmosphere of the hated tons real poetry together. There lunchrooms, . and there was a crude would be so little time to do that on the wall, Watch your hat and when they were settled down and sign overcoht. ' . James had to hurry so much. And so, Felicia catne and peeked his cheek. during this blissful period, Janies Isnt it great?' So easy to prepared .Newton hi; reminded frequently things, so easy to serve and so easy shunning wife that to him food was for you to dear. Hurry, now, and) i mere incident of life. Had not old sit down. eat, Ransome has tele- - j Oakly Dinar said: phoned for you to meet him at the libe, with a Loaf of Bread beneath station at 7 :10 and go into town to ' , the Bough, some new show, and you can make it A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse if you hurry ! and Thou Hurry!. How James hated the Beside me singing in the Wilderness word. . , And Wilderness is Paradise enow. He smiled feebly and lqked at the Felicia Newton listened and loved card Felida gave him. She had been her lord all the more for his indiffer-sne- e faithful lo detail atid had not omitto the material pleasures of eat- ted one of the standard dishes fa4 ing and drinking. But of course there miliar to the peripatetic luncher-ou-t. name an end to the honeymoon, and 1 Griddle cakes," ordered James sportE. Montgomery Reilly of Kansas City, appointed governor of Porto Rico. 2 Train load of bodies of Amerithere was the exquisite pleasure of ingly. can soldiers, exhumed from Sedan cemetery, saluted at Stenay by French regiment. 3 Police along New Yorks the return home to the new house in James did not eat much, though the waterfront scattering pickets ofjstrik-inmarine workers. V lie suburbs, the little round of social new girl was a very good cook; he events, the novelty of getting a hus- was very thoughtful as he finished band off to catch the 8 :15 train to the last leathery bit of pie and, leav-- ; By a vote of 63 to 28 the senate last guards, offering to place these under week passed the emergency tariff bill. town every morning, the control of French authorities. and wrestling ing a tip on the table, he went out of 1 OF As for the reparations, Germany can Only one Republican Moses of New with the vagaries of an Incompetent the room. But there was a discour-- j cook. Hampshire stood fast with the oppopay, and she will pay if she is comaged droop to his shoulders and there to pay. But If there is any sition, and seven.- - Democrats were Within one short week after their was no pelled Fer in his of gait. hurry sign return home James Newton had llcia watched him anxiously as he way of wriggling out of paying, Ger- found with the majority. The senate ceased to quote Omar Khayyam, and went into the library and, calling Oakmany may be depended on to try It. and house conferees at once began Felicia suspected tearfully that he ly' Bansome up, he told him he could Only 111 Informed sentimentalists now their efforts to reach agreement, the was yearning for the flesh pots of his not go into town. He sat down to Germany, With a New Ministry, take any stock in the German walls of only radical difference being over the and currency revaluation To tell the truth, read the evening paper, when Felicia bachelor days. poverty and threatened bankruptcy ; and mighty few people have any re- sections, which were rewritten by the James was plainly dissatisfied. Com- came in, attired in one of her charm- Accepts Allies Ultimatum maining confidence In German good senate committee, which also made pared to the ruinous food that Biddy ing frocks. She kissed him and called Unconditionally. faith. provision for continnlng the war time lerved even the memory of downtown him dear old Omar, and he did not i white-tileBefore the end of May, It is be- restrictions on imports of dyestuffs. lunchrooms became endear- smile until the new maid demurely The house passed the army approlieved, the allied supreme council will ing. There followed days when he announced dinner and Felicia laughmenus of from his the quoted FRANCE IS STILL SKEPHCAL meet again, either In Belgium or Italy, priation bill, but It refused to recede quick ingly dragged him Into the dining to discuss the modalities for securing from its determination to make the lunch palace amid the skyscrapers, room to the dainty table set for dinthe reparations payments and to take army small. The measure provides for and Felicia for the first time learned ner. The meal was delicious and an army of only 150,000 men, and an that corned beef hash and griddle James cared not that Felicia lectured Poles and German Clviliana Fighting up the problems of Upper Silesia. At that session of the council the United amendment was adopted which authorcakes, well cooked, were esteemed by him all the way through on the evils in Upper Silesia Senate Passe States will be represented, probably by izes the secretary of war to discharge her husband even above the peace and. of hurried eating. Emergency Tariff Bill House Ambassador refinement of his own home, where Harvey, who has arrived enlisted men upon their application Ive got to hurry now, he said; insists on Small Army-Sla- cker in England with promises of the close until that limit has been reached. It the table was spread with fine damask, ' she probably wont last long. List Given of this country In the is likely tbere will be a prolonged conwedding silver' and a centerpiece of Shes going to stay forever, prom; Out of task the affairs of test with the senate over the size of cut flowers. readjusting ised Felicia wistfully, and then her Europe so far as they affect America, the army, and possibly a veto by the Dear heart, sighed Felicia, who husband stopped eating and smiled at least This Is in accord with the President if the house wins. looked ravishing In a silk negligee with tenderly at her. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. I cant help loving a cobwebby lace cap on her sunny you better when Im not hungry," ha policy Unadopted by President Harding, Germany has surrendered again. a policy whjch probably will not be President Harding has fixed things head, isnt this heaps and heaps bet- confessed as he kissed her con has she and completely, conditionally changed by the attacks on It already so the administration can to a certain suter than a lunchroom which looks .like tentedly. of the allies, the demands accepted made by certain elements In the extent use Its judgment in appointing the inside of a refrigerator and all preme council, and has promised to being senate. The fight in that body was postmasters. He has issued an order kinds of smelly things cooking NEW YORK AS REST HAVEN of ultimatum the terms the out carry ' around? opened, by La Follette of Wisconsin, affecting about 13,000 postofflees of the without delay. who Introduced a resolution declaring first, second and third classes, authorJames peered into his cup of weak Almost the Last of this doubt little had Which been With There Thing it to be the sense of the senate that the izing the selection of any one of the coffee, stared at the petrified hot bisthe Vieitor Would Credit the result, but the trouble was to find a United States should take no part In first three applicants on the eligible cuits, sniffed at the greasy platter of the assume responcabinet that would Noisy Metropolis. affairs the Versailles under list as determined by open competitive blackened bacon and pushed back his European sibility and perhaps odium of yielding treaty, denouncing the pact and pointexaminations. Under an order of chair. to the inevitable. After several leadAn attractive young woman, wearout has been it that President Wilson the one at the head by Im hungry, Felicia, he said In a ing a repudiated ing Dr. Wirth, wedding ring and an intensely ers had declined the job, the senate and the American people. of the list had to be appointed. Presistrained tone. wornout look, sat by a window In the minister of finance in the Fehrenbach Ambassador Wallace In Paris last dent Harding said the new arrangehungry for food! Cant you fire the train coming down the Hudson from cabinet and leader of the Centrist parweek resumed his place In the ambas- ment was made to permit business cook and get another one, darling? and She was surrounded by' ty, agreed to become chancellor sadors council, which is trying to setI will send her away today, Jim- Tarrytown. training and experience to be considbags of various colors and shapes and foreign minister, selected the rest of tle the Upper Silesia embroglio; and ered, and so that the choice would not my, said Felicia meekly; but I am in to it had was somewhere and cabinet the acquiesce going a cloistered, Roland Boyden again took his old be based merely on afraid I cannot get another one. I 'evidently . for a while. the demands of the allies. Then he on which examination the scholastic commission, tried the other day and Miss Minchin stay might replace reparations As the train passed through Yonkwent before the reichstag and said, sult in a high grade in theory, but not Instructions from Washington. said all she had was a girl who had ers she pnder : and a contented other sigh things gave among worked In a lunchroom Janies Newa guaranty of efficiency In fact" . man beside turned to the middle-age- d There is no possibility for us other ton, as his face brightened, would her. Tie had made several vain At this writing the situation in Up'than acceptance or rejection. The vicPublication of the slacker, lists has you rather eat in that horrible white to start a conversation, but tors have decided. Acceptance means per Silesia appears more serious than dinour than in lovely been begun in various parts of the bear to now she seemed more responsive. ever, despite reports of an armistice that we declare our readiness . , country, but some newspapers already ing room? financial statements and near to the fine the leader of labor city, by in Its get big Korfanty, heavy voluntary Ive got to eat somewhere, some- she said. I needed this trip so burdens demanded year by year. Re- the Polish Insurgents, that an agree- have discontinued it because' It was I cannot eat Biddys much. found the lists as supplied by the war how, dear v fusal would, however, mean surrend- ment with the allies had been reached. inburned stuff. I cannot survive long I take it you have lived in New ering the basis of our entire industrial The Germans in the region and nehr department were woefully faulty, men who on the lovely table appointments or York I activities, and, as a consequence, disthe man. to make cluding the names of many forbidden the French before," replied by by, served their country patriotically In browse on the bunch of flowers, can commute, myself, but I can readily memberment of our economic body, al- actual war on the Poles, are making the war. Such honey ; Ill understand how lonesome I? Of course not good-by- , names, according to people must so greatly weakened, and the full use of their armed civilian forces a ruling of the department, cannot have to race for that train after all. become when they move away. from' ready life.". defeatto are and Industrial have our entire of reported thpre shackling removed from the lists without the So Jim raced for the train as he the ed the Poles In the Cosel district, east be city after being so accustomed to Thereupon the reichstag, by the rathoi the department afauthorization did every morning, and Felicia stood the noise and crowds. er small majority of 221 to 175, voted of the Oder river. At Ratlbor and ter the on the front porch and waved her persons have proved Injured Oh, I'm afraid you are mistaken, to accept the ultimatum. The German Rosenberg, also, there was severe cases at Washington. hand until he was out of sight. Then sir, she Interrupted. Ive never lived thqir ultimatum were The Poles to the using heavy As for the most offensive of ail the she turned back into the house and in New York before. My home is In government's replyat once to Premier fighting. and other guns they had capartillery G. C. Bergdoli, the war desank down on the couch In the living Haverstraw, but I got so tired of the was telegraphed slacker, all the wired It to from the Italian tured who plebiscite force, partment intends to keep after him unroom. Hurry ! Hurry ! Hurry ! all drudgery of housework that I had to Lloyd George, concerned. He then anand the Germans had batteries prothe time, she groaned. James wants come to New York to rest my nerves." governmentsto the house of commons, vided remittingly until it brings him back nounced it by the Italians for defensive from his food prepared here so he can eat Germany and punishes bim. New York Sun. use. news was the cheers. that the evident with It received which fairly Such is the statement of General and run in the morning and eat and were at least tacitly supporting March, chief of French In France satisfaction over the staff, to the bouse sit down and read at night an,d Im Le Sport." of Germany was lessened by the Poles, and there was reason to becommittee the escape of investigating going to give It to him. The news that the French governthe smallness of the majority vote In lieve that if the British an Italians the draft dodger. The Inquiry, which the First, she cried, which cleared a for minister ment has 'civilian German' ' appointed the reichstag and the feeling that the could restrain the Then she has brought out many acrimonious acatmosphere considerably. to encourage games and physWirth ministry cannot last long. The forces a temporary truce could be ar- cusations, seems to be narrowing down went into the kitchen, paid Biddy in sports, ical training, is interesting for sevFrench are still skeptical of Berlins ranged pending the settlement of the so that the blame for the escape of lieu of a months notice and let that eral reasons. In the first place, this good ftiith, and propose to maintain entire controversy by the supreme to she Bergdoli will be placed on Clarence damsel go. Then telephoned move must mean expenditure, and their forces on the Rhine at sufficient council or the League of Nations. The Gibboney, one of the slackers atMiss Minchin to send along the girl France is double already sunk a good deal strength to occupy the Ruhr until It Poles feel they have been The torneys, since dead, and the two serwho had worked In a lunchroom. into the financial quagmire becomes evident' that Germany will crossed by the allies, about Teschen, further in ' geants from whose custody Bergdoli rest of the day she spent shopping we are ourselves. Either, then, than out the terms of the ultimatum. about the Ukraine, about Danzig, and got away. .. carry town and working feverishly in the France can face now about Upper Silesia; and their bankruptcy with a Dr. Wirths reply commits the Gerwith kitchen pretty, smile or she has decided that health" to this course. In It patience was exhausted. Those who Another crisis drew near in the the new girl, whose efficiency was is an essential service, and that the mans absolutely are informed concerning the treatment British coal strike Itfst week. The said: he , . somewhat dazed by her young mis- road to health Is inclined to are received paved with good athhas Poland German is The fully government tress astounding proposition. transport workers decided that no forletics. Secondly, it shows how public sympathize with her In this instance. eign, coal should be unloaded In the resolved, first, to carry out without reMeanwhile, James has reached the its maintained has. France opinion in serve or condition its obligations as de- Others look on her action at this time United Kingdom, promising aid In this lunchroom of his choice and enters as another example of the Impetuous steady trend toward an ideal of musfined by the reparations commission. to the miners and taking np the matto eat griddle cakes and coffee and cular r. The emergence of Latinity. and out to unruly behavior that has been ter with the- - railway workers. The and Second,' carry accept of the From bottom, acon and eggs. as an International figure had without reserve or condition the guar- characteristic of Poland In the past government was determined that the his heart he loathes the whole tribe an Immense effect on the general The allies are about to emphasize entry of antees in respect of those obligations foreign coal for vital purof griddle cake bakers. During his thought of France and fired idealism befrom the' their aloofness struggle prescribed by the reparations commisposes should not be prevented, and bachelorhood he had snatched hasty of les sports as well as of leg arts. " Natween the Greeks and the Turkish sion. began concentrating soldiers and sailbreakfasts and luncheons from these Manchester Guardian. Dispatches ors In the areas where trouble might Third, to carry out without reserve tionalists iiAsla Minor. white tables and he had hoped that the allied or delay the measures of military, from Constantinople say ' be expected. Robert Williams, leadhe was done with them forever. Now How They Love Ono Anotherl naval and aerial disarmament notified high commissioners, generals and ad- er of the transport workers, said: : he braced himself for the ordeal, en-- , ladies Heres a story for the to the German government by the al- mirals there have decided to proclaim The embargo will be maintained even tered and enjoyed a hearty meal. Mrs. Smith meets Mrs. JoneS, who Is lied the neutrality oPthat city and of the If disease results. The remedy is to powers in their note of January food of Beside Biddys wreckage Mrs. waist. new batiste a wearing Bosporus and the Dardanelles while stop the Importation1 of coal." 29, 1921, those overdue to be completed this was nectar and ambrosia. At Smith does not observe the waist. the warfare between the Greeks and once and the remainder by the preat noon he bolted down another meal You know, says Mrs. Smith, after Turks continues. Greece will be asked According to foreign correspondents, with less enthusiasm, and he began the conversation inevitably runs to scribed date. remove her warships from territorial the British to reto out without Fourth, carry government has offered to look forward to the evening with clothes, I simply cannot stand batiste waters and will not longer be able to the Sinn Fein leaders a new peace serve or delay the trial of war crimdinner table for waists. It looks so much like units daintily-appointeon base. Her as a forces the inals and to execute the other unful- use' city proposition which the latter seem and questionable viands. The roast derwear. , filled portions of the treaty referred to the Rrusa and Ismid fronts must be willing to accept Ireland Is offered Mrs. would be overdone and the pie undermeets Mrs. Smith Next day In the first paragraph of the note of supplied by way of Rodosto. all thq rights possessed by any done, but there was Felicia and home Jones again. This time she observes The difficulty In understanding the the allied governments of May 5. member of the empire, Inand cruiet. the waist. The chief stumbling block, hitherto, situation in the Near East is illustratfull fiscal autonomy and full cluding smiles. she a beautiful Evening came and home once more, Such waist,' in the process of disarmament of Gered by the news that the Russian soviet control of Its1 judiciary and police, he paused in the front hall and sniffed I think batiste Is so nice for waists. been the has authorities, who were supposed to be and the annual tribute of 18,000,000 of determination famany was that stifling, the air. What So simple, you know. to Bavaria maintain its supporting Kemnl Pasha, leader of the Will be abandoned. Arrangements foi miliar smell? organization.. It Is understood now Turkish Nationalists, have been plot- defense by the army and navy are left Easy! Griddle cakes! You're the Bavarian authorities have. promting against him with the object of open for discussion. A condition to The Footman Wake up! With darkened brow he entered the a soviet republic in Ana the offer is that both north and south clean ised that could shall disbandthat establishing he up How you body dining, room. It was dark and there dreamin. ed lnuvpdintely, though another report gora. The scheme was uncovered in Ireland nyist accept It ns a final setof $10,000? the He lortmie dinner. of opened no 83 sign time and many arrests of Bolshevik! tlement and must work together as has it that Bavaria is to negotiate diThe Maid By scrubhin Mrs. Mult-oxt If chen door and stopped there, dumb a united Behind. were mode Boston with n France civil necklace. diamond rectly concealing with amazement. Borne weird trans formation Usd taken place. A large .Jiobe. ! Felicias Quick r Lunch ? THE STORY OE OUR STATES By JONATHAN BRACE by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) i. MAINE , OBSCURED In that ' . the old Icelandic sagas record a voyage in 1000 by Leif, son of Eric the Red, who sailed from Greenland to Labrador and down the coast of Maine. The next probable voyage to this coast was by John Cabot In 1497, and later by his son Sebastian. It!- -' was, however, Capt. John Smith, the , , leading spirit of. the settlement at: Jamestown, who sailed as far north Penobscot and first drew a rough ; chart of It. In the grant by James I to the Plymouth Colony Maine was included in' their territory. Opposition to the Plymouth Colony arose among the kings courtiers and Sir Ferdinando Gorges and Captaiu Mason succeeded In obtaining for themselves rights to the country between the Merrimac and Kennebec rivers. This they divided. Gorges taking, the northern section. Meanwhile Gorges had sent over ai small colony to the mouth of the Kennebec, but this settlement was sooni abandoned. The first permanent set-- ; tlement was made in 1625 at what lsl now York. Massachusetts objected to Gorges claim! and finally annexed alii the territory up to Casco Bay and called this northern section the District of Maine. Maine was dissatisfied' with the rule of the mother state and by TS20 succeeded in being admitted to the Union as the twenty-thir- d state. Maine was the first state to adopt prohibition. In the beginning Maine was strongly Democratic. It was largely for this reason that she objected to being ruled by Massachusetts which was Federalist - Since 1856, however, .Maine has been decidedly Republican., It has six electoral, votes ' ' for President The name Maine was so designatedin the charter of 1639 in which Charles I granted this land to Gorges. It had already been commonly used by the sailors as distinguishing the mainland from the many islands along the shore. The nickname for the state is the Pine Tree State. Its area is 33,040 square miles, which is practically as large as the combined area of the other five Now England States.. . Mia-- as-th- v ; . NEWS REVIEW CURRENT EVENTS anti-dumpi- j d -- . - ' - Honest-to-goodne- MISSOURI ; WHETHER . t definitely known. The first authentic exploration of this territory was . by the French, Joliet and Father Marquette in 1673. French settlers gradually located in Missouri, in 1764 St.. Louis being settled. This was one year after Spain acquired from France the Louisiana Territory of which Missouri was a part. Colonization greatly increased after the ordinance of 1787, which excluded slavery from the Northwest territory, as this naturally deflected many to the territory west of the Mississippi who otherwise would have settled in the north. The slavery question continued to hold the stage in Missouri history. After the Louisiana Purchase In 1803 added this vast western area to the United States, emigration increased to such an extent that in 1829 Missouri formed a state government and applied for admission to the Union. Bitter antagonism immediately arose in congress against the addition of another slave state. On the other hand the slavery adherents pointed out that Maine had just been taken into th Union as a free state and one state would therefore balance the other. A final settlement was made by the famous Missouri compromise, which accepted Missouri as a slave state but prohibited slavery in the rest of the territory north of a line extending from the southern boundary ot Missouri to the Rocky Mountains. Indeed, it was this agitatn which, temporarily smothered at that time, burst forth in the Civil war. Missouri Is in the forefront of the Important states in national politics as it has eighteen electoral votes for President.' Its aretf Is 69,420 square miles. Those who have seen the Missouri river will appreciate the derivation of the name which comes from the Indian words missl-soumeaning great muddy." ' ' sur-read- er . , white-enamele- d :4"; f i ri . Gambettas Eye Preserved. Very few of the hundreds of spectators who have seen Gambettaa heart carried in procession through d ; civil-milita- . s actu- ally visited by De Soto at the time of his discovery of the Mississippi is not j Paris know that another portion of his body is above ground. Long before his death one of his eyes was so badly, damaged by a blow that It had to be removed, says the - continental edition of the London Mail. The doctor who performed the operation caused the eye to be specially treated It was placed in a to preserve it. smnli glass phial, which the doctor gave to one of his pupils . X |