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LATEST NEWS EPITOMIZED PROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS HAT COVER THE WEEK’S EVENTS. OF MOSIJINTEREST KEEPING THE READER POSTED ON MOST IMPORTANT y CURRENT TOPICB. Western Newspaper Cnton News Service. WESTERN. 'A new 400-barrel oil well is report ed to have recently been brought in it Electro, Tex. Frankie Burns, lightweight of Oak land, fought a twenty-round draw with Gilbert Gallant of Boston at San Fran cisco. The "Jim Crow” law of Oklahoma was upheld by a decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis. One man was killed and ten persons were overcome by smoke when fire broke out In an apartment house in Pittsburg, Pa. Chief of Police Sebastian of Los An geles received a letter signed “Black mailers,” saying that F. Lewis Clark, Spokane millionaire, had been kid naped from Santa Barbara and held Tor $75,000 ransom. Jasper Webb, a farmer, who spent twenty-one months In prison under sentence to be hanged for murder, was released on $35,000 bond approved by Judge Porterfield in the Criminal Court at Kansas City. After causing nine deaths in Illi nois, Minnesota and Indiana, the most severe storm of the 1913-1914 winter Beason in the Middle West swept out over Lake Erie and up the lower St. Lawrence valley, brushing the north ern part of Ohio. Sheriff N. T. Moore was arrested at Hiawatha, Kan., charged with murder In connection with the death of Ernest Wallace, a prisoner shot while es caping from the jail there. Mrs. Anna Wallace, mother of the prisoner, pre ferred the charge. Reduced to poverty through busi ness reverses, Jesse M. Kelly, eighty three years old, once one of the wealthiest men in Springfield, Mo., died in a hovel on the outskirts of the city. His wife, who was eighty years old, died an hour later. With a counterfeit five dollar gold piece hot from the mould in his hand, according to federal officers making the arrest, Milton H. Lee, sixty-seven, was taken into custody at Salt Lake. Lee, who is white-bearded and bent with age, was arrested in a room in which a complete counterfeiting out fit was discovered, together with a number Of half-finished $5 and $2O gold pieces. WASHINGTON. After the physical valuation of rail roads, the Interstate Commerce Com mission asked Congress to appropriate $2,000,000 for continuing the work next year. The strike investigation committee to begin immediate probes of the Col orado coal and Michigan copper in dustrial troubles have been tentative ly selected. Postal money orders will be payable at any postoffice instead of only at the office on which they are drawn, un der a bill' passed by the Senate. It already had passed the House. The administration rural credit bills were introduced simultaneously in the Senate and House by Senator Fletcher and Representative Moss. The bills provide for long term farm loans. The everrecurrent appeal of the Mexican Constitutionalists that they be permitted to purchase arms in the United States on an even footing with the Huerta government may soon be granted. Exclusive rights for the government tp buy all radium ores found on pub lic lands in private exploration, and an appropriation of $500,000 foi ex tracting radium from such ores were proposed in an administration bill by Chairman Foster of the mines commit tee. Secretary Garrison announced that Col. George W. Goethals had signified his intention of accepting the gover norship of the Panama canal zone on April 1, to be proffered him by Presi dent Wilson. Garrison intimated that Colonel Goethals’ acceptance was un qualified. Mrs. Medill McCormick, as chairman of the congressional committee of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, wrote President Wilson declaring that the organization of which she was a member opposed no political party and would not join in any attack on the Democratic party. FOREIGN. Paul de Roulede, the French patri otic writer and politician, died at Nice after a long Illness, aged sixty-eight years. Gen Francisco Villa, military com mander of the rebel forces, disclaimed any ambition to become president of Mexico. The ministry of commerce made the official announcement that Japan will participate In the Panama-Pacific ex position at San Francisco. Cardinal Merry Del Val assumed the position of archpriest of Peter’s, succeeding the late Cardinal Rampolla, and a solemn ceremonial was held. Emperor William celebrated his fif ty-fifth birthday, halo and vigorous in body and mind and able still, as was shown by his recent wood chopping exploits, to undertake the physical work of a man in the prime of life. Mexico made her annual payment on account of the Pious fund debt to the American charge d’affaires, Nel son O’Shaughnessy, notwithstanding that the payments of other claims was postponed. The prompt action of the government followed a personal re quest made by the charge. The amount was about $43,000 Mexican. Cardinal Casmir Gennarl, prefect of the congregation of the council, died at Rome. His death was duo to heart disease. He is the third cardinal to pass away in the last two months, the others being Cardinal Oreglla and Cardinal Rampolla. Cardinal Gen narl was born at Maratoa, Dec. 27, 1839. He was created cardinal April 15, 1901. SPORT. Princeton's hockey team defeated Yale at New Haffen, 5 to 3, in an ex citing over-time game. The indoor track meet which will be held at the Auditorium in Denver, Saturday night, Feb. 28, is attracting the attention of the University of Col orado track men at Boulder. In one of the fastest boxing bouts ever staged at Silver City, N. M., Jack Herrick of Kewanee, 111., and A1 Smaulding, negro of Albuquerque fought ten rounds to a draw. Lincoln Beachey, the aviator, was slightly injured at Los Angeles when his aeroplane fouled a tree in a “race" with an automobile. The areoplane was smashed, but the aviator escaped with slight bruises. The Colorado state bowling tourna ment officials tiave arranged to start their tournament on March 2. The Denver alleys are to be used for the five-men teams, while the singles and doubles will be pulled off at the Over land alleys. Y’ale’s football schedule for next fall contains nine games, one less than last year. Holy Cross and Lafayette have been dropped and in their places will be University of Virginia and Notre Dame. Yale has never met the two latter colleges in football before. Frank Kelly, who won the 110- metre hurdle race at the Olympic games in Stockholm, and Howard Drew, the Springfield training school sprinter, have notified the University of Pennsylvania authorities of their intention to compete at the annual re lay races at Philadelphia on April 25. Robert Fitzsimmons, former heavy weight champion of the world, dis played much of his old-time speed and ring generalship at Williamsport, Pa., in a six-round bout with Knockout Sweeney of Cleveland. It was his first contest since he retired from the ring several years ago and pugilistic ex perts asserted he had “come back.” GENERAL. Mayor John Purroy Mitchell sent the Goethals police bills to Albany, N. Y„ where they will be introduced in the State Legislature. Suit for divorce was filed in Phila delphia by Mrs. Luclle Polk Carter, a member of an exclusive social circle of Philadelphia, against her husband, William E. Carter. Mr. and Mrs.’ Carter and their two children were among those rescued in the Titanic disaster. Plunging a fork in a baked potato, Roderick Peel, a rancher near San Diego, Cal., struck in the middle of the vegetable a sapphire ring that his wife dropped in the field two years ago and searched for in vain. The potato has been in Peel’s bin for sev eral weeks. The official story of how forty-one persons went to death in the chill wa fers of the Atlantic when the liner Nantucket rammed and sank the steamer Monroe, was brought to port by the eighty-five survivors of the sunken ship brought into Norfolk, Va„ by the Nantucket. County Judge Owen, head of tha Cook county election commission, ruled at Chicago that women must abide by the lawß if they expect to participate in making them. A dele gation of women visited Judge Owen asking that the state law providing that voters must give their ages be Bet aside for the newly franchised voters. THE CHEYENNE RECORD. No Rest—No Peace There's no rest and but little peace . _ regular kidney action and urlo acid for a person whose kidneys are out of fitJ r>. . , trouble. Thousands of grateful rccom order yl £vC.tyJr/CTUtt ill—— mendations throughout the country Lame In the morning, suffering orlcks JkJ/sAStoiy' |lf prove thelr worth in the back and sharp stabs of pain km* . . M | ■ eamiygtj - , ... rjrn with every sudden strain, the day Is LAID Ur lly OLD just one round of pain and trouble. I Gave Up All Hope of Recovery It would be strange if all-day back- -J ache did not wear on the temper, but „ , in nnt on 1 v on that Apooiiiit that Mrs. Frank L. Mann, 1000 *V. Alain St., It IS not only on tnat account tnat Vermillion, S. Dak., says: “When I was people who suffer with weak kidneys six years old I had diptheria and it left nrn nftrvnns. erosa and irritable. Ja my kidneys and bladder very weak. From TT~ir» i n fry nanvAa ~wMZr*W J ■— that time until I was seventeen years old. Uric acid is poison to the nerves, J _ r /J* 1 i iad kidney weakness, but as I got older and when the kidneys are not working /HNAs VvUkV' 1 thought I would outgrow the trouble. ] well, this acid collects in the blood V, \\T r ~// A*- 'v- didn't however, and as time passed I got and works upon the nerves, causing s£> iV /'£#/ W** ?wXn “nd I s'hoei! headache, dizziness, languor, an In- i My back was so stiff 1 could hardly bend cllnation to worry over trifles, and a over and I was laid up in bed for over a onaniplniiq «hnrt t*»mnpr Hfflfflff lull month. I lost much weight and in spite suspicious, -snort temper. MUmiimmmm l lOf the doctors’ medicine. I didn’t Improve. Rheumatic pain, neuralgia, sciatica, UM j I Dizzy spells came over me and my sight lumbago, neuritis and gravel are fur- 91 fJfln y* 3 ®- ffe^ ted - Finally I ninno errtn imionninff tors in despair and life certainly looked ther steps in uric acid poisoning. blue. I didn’t think I would ever be well Don’t neglect kidney weakness. An again. When everything else had failed, nohin* hack with unnatural nassaees ' a friend urged me to try Doan’s Kidney aching DacK, wun. unnatural passages pniB and 1 d id. After I took the first of the kidney secretions, is cause — mT-JhIJl j box, I noticed improvement and gradual enough to suspect the kidneyß. Use ly the aliments left me. I picked up In TVmn’R Kidnpv Pills a remedv which * weight and strength and by the time I Doan s luaney Jfius, a remeoy wuxeu , ~ had used eight boxes of Doan’s Kidney has been used for years, the world Oh, I shall go mad. Pills 1 was £ ure d. I have never had anj over, for weak kidneys, backache, ir* sign of kidney trouble since." I "When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name" fraP 1 JItDQAN’S KIDNEY PILLS « 501(1 hi! Dealers. .Price 50 cents. Foster-Milbum Co„ Buffalo, II Y„ Proprietors Unlucky Result. “They seem to have quarreled.” “Yes. I am afraid their marriage has thrown them together too much.” —Judge. Going Way Back. “How far back can you remember, Elmer?” asked the Inquisitive caller. "Oh, ever so far,” replied the little fellow. "I can remember when I was so little that I couldn't remember any thing.” Public Pests. The Woman Who Never Has Her Change Ready. Have you ever noticed how many women go to, a ticket window in the subway or on the elevated, ask for their ticket and even expect to have it in ‘-their hands, before they begin to look for the nickel to pay for it? Have you ever waited in line while a woman in front of the ticket seller opened her shopping bag, took out her handkerchief, groped for her pocket book and, when she found It, linger ingly searched ..through its compart ments for a flve-cent piece? A woman is unfortunate in having no convenient pocket that she can dip into for small change. Her money is usually Inside something that is inside something else. But isn't this all the more reason why she should have the consideration and forethought to get out her change in advance in order not to delay others? Needless to say, the woman who holds up the line at the subway ticket office does the same thing when Bhe buys theater seats or railway tickets. Hers is a prominent place among public pests. ANOTHER COFFEE WRECK What’s the Use When There's an Easy Way Out? Along with the coffee habit has grown the prevalent "American Dis ease"—nervous prostration. The following letter shows the way out of the trouble: "Five years ago I was a great cof fee drinker and from its use I be came so nervous I could scarcely sleep at all nights. My condition grew worse and worse until finally the phy sician I consulted declared my trou bles were due to coffee. “But being so wedded to the bev erage I did not see how I could do without it, especially at breakfast, as that meal seemed incomplete with out coffee. “On a visit, my friends deprived me of coffee to prove that it was harm ful. At the end of about eight days 1 was less nervous, but the craving for coffee was intense, so I went back to the old habit as soon as I got home and the old sleepless nights came near making a wreck of me. “I heard of Postum and decided to try it. I did not like it at first, be cause, as I afterwards discovered, it was not made properly. I found, how ever, that when made after directions on the package, it was delicious. “It had a soothing effect on my nerves, and none of the bad effects that coffee had, so I bade farewell to coffee and have used only Postum since. The most wonderful account of the benefit to be derived from Postum could not exceed my own ex perience.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Write for a copy of "The Road to Wellville.” Postum now comes in two forms: Regular Postum —must be well boiled. Instant Postum —is a soluble pow der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious bever age Instantly. Grocers sell bothkindß. “There’s a Reason” for Postum. Changeful Conditions. “What’s the matter with old friend Tomalio Caloriflco?" asked one citizen of a small republic. “He seems ter ribly restless.” „ "Politics doesn't move fast enough to suit him. He hasn’t been dictator for three or four years and he’s tired of waiting in line for another turn.” — Washington Star. TAKES OFF DANDRUFF HAIR STOPS FALLING Girls! Try This! Makes Hair Thick, Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful —No More Itching Scalp. Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderlne you cannot find a single tract of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not Itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at UrST— yes—but really new hair —growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No dif ference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is amaz ing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an Incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’S Danderine from any store, and prove that your hair is as pretty and Boft as any—that it has been neglected or Injured by careless treatment —that’s all —you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a lit tle Danderine. Adv. Never trust a man whose dog crawls under the house when it sees hifn enter the front gate. Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’* Why You’re Tired—Out of Sort! —Have No Appetite, CARTER’S LIVER PILLS will put you BARTERS in a few ■ITTLE stipation, ~ —* Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature DAIRYMEN Cut down your feed bill end increase your cream check ftIICBIICEVe by keeping llUCKNotlhe Write for free literature. GUERNSEY CLUB, Box X, Peterboro, N. H. Famous Thompson Saddles Bu y direct from the ma- Bkpsnmm ker. Special designs to or \!&nnFv\FnF™ der. Send for complete, KfgpyQl J illustrated cptalog. ihr' A W. R. Thompson Co. ' II ll Rifle Colorado ItchingVids i|M4H^ia33igariBh Iff Beat Conch Syrup. TaatM Good. Uh Kd Id in tim*. Bold by Drufciats. Rtf Sprains, Bruises Stiff Muscles are quickly relieved by Slo&n’a Liniment. Lay it on —no rub bing. Try it. Ankle Sprain and Dislocated Hip. ** I sprained my ankle and dislocated my hip by falling out of a third story window. Went on crutches for four months. Then 1 started to use your Liniment, according to directions. 1 must say it is helping me wonderfully. We will never be without Sloan's Lini ment anymore.”— chat. Johnton, Lauitzus Station. N. V. SLOANS LINIMENT Kills Pain Splendid for Sprains. " I fell and sprained my arm a week ago and was in terrible pain. I could not use my hand or arm until I applied your Liniment. I shall never be with out a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment.”— -Mre. H. B. Springer, Elizabeth, JV. /. Fine for Stiffness. "Sloan’s Liniment has done more good than anything I have ever tried for stiff joints. I got my hand hurt so badly that 1 had to stop work right in the busiest time of the year. 1 thought at first that I would have to have my hand taken off. but I got a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and cured my hand." —Wilton Wheeler, Morris, Ala. At all Dealers. 25c.. 50c. and $l.OO Send for Sloan’s X. wB free, instructive book on horses, r cattle, hours and poultry. Address Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. BOSTON. MASS. | | FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS If you feel ‘out of sorts’ *run down* ‘got tl»e iilubi SUFFER from KIDNEY, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASE! CHRONIC WEAKNESS, ULCEUS, SKIN KRUITIONS, I’ILXI write for FREE cloth bound medical book ol these diseases and wonderful cures effected by THENEW FRENCH REMEDY No.lNo 2N0.3 THERAPION zzsstrxz the remedy for your own ailment. Absolutely FREE. No‘follow up’circulars. No obligations. Dr. LkCi.kro Med. Co.. Havkrstook Rd.. Hampstead, London, Eno. WE WANT TO I’IIOVK TIIEKAI IoN WILL CURE YOU. Dyspepsia Tablets stop Intestinal Fermentation, Immediately. Relievo tias and Distress after Katin#. One sl/e only, 50c. Money refunded If they do not help, or write for Free Sample Box and TRY them first If you wish. Business Furniture Steel Filing Cabinets Complete Public Build ing Equipment. Prompt Shipments. Write foi THE HINE DESK CO. t Denver. Colorado ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Write us for anything electrical; new or second hand motors, telephones, wireless apparatus, tree stump blasting outfits rented. Write for catalog. Cahn-Forster Electric C0.,532-53814th St„Denver,Col. HOWARD E. BURTON AS ohem”9t N ® J Specimen prices: Gold, Silver, Lead, tl; Gold, 811- ver, 76c; Gold, 60c; Zinc or Copper, 91. Mailing envel opes and full prico list sent on application. Silver ••rosettes" mounted (scarf pins, bat pins, cuff but tons, etc.) Lkadvillk, COL. Ref. Carbonate Nat. Hank. Dll DTI IDF CURED in a few days flWrlUllli without pain or a sur gical operation. No pay until cured. Write Dll. WRAY. SO • Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb. niYFUYA Wnt.on E.f'olemßii, Wuflb rAlcnlo W. N. U., NO. 6-1914.^