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LATEST NEWS EPITOMIZED FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORT! THAT COVER THE WEEK’S EVENTS. OF MOST INTEREST KEEPING THE READER POSTED ON MOST IMPORTANT CURRENT TOPICS. W«at«rn Ncwupnpar Union Newa Sarvlca. ABOUT THE WAR Hungary lost 839,000 in dead dur ing the war, according to information from Budapest. British prisoners numbering 158,431 Have been released by the Germans. Df these 8,047 are officers, 145,770 are &f other ranks and 4,608 are civilians. Revolutionist forces in Santarem, aortheast of Lisbon, having refused to surrender, government troops sur rounded the town and commenced a bombardment. The naval academy course, which was reduced to three years during the war, was restored to the normal period of four years Monday by order of Secretary of the Navy Daniels. The Swiss newspapers announce that two brothers of Leon Trotzky, the Russian Bolshevik Minister of War and Marine, who were interned in Prance, escaped into Switzerland, near Delemont, after shooting and wounding a French soldier. The republic of Luxembourg, which was proclaimed by the committee on public health, lasted only six hours, according to a report from Brussels which adds that French military au thorities restored order in the grand duchy. There may be 500,000 German sol diers still under arms, according to es timates of military experts of the British army. The situation in Ger many is very uncertain, however, and it may be that the men still with the German colors number far above the estimate. Bolshevist agitation in the United States shows no promise of reaching a stage of open disorder, according to Department of Justice officials, who have been observing the movement. So far the movement, evidently mainly in New York, is economic, rather than political in nature, they declare, and organizers have kept well within the law. WESTERN Demobilization of returning soldiers from other camps is now on in Camp Kearny in full swing. Twenty-seven returned soldiers are to be made Seattle police officers, when they pass the civil service ex amination. Forms for reporting incomes of $5,- 000 or less probably will be in the hands of revenue collectors for dis tribution to taxpayers not later than February 1. Ten thousand Japanese reservists will return home, according to plans announced at Vladivostok. The last of these reservists will have left for Japan by the end of January. Sailing of the steamer Senator, Pa cific Steamship Company from Seat tle on February 25, will mark inaugu ration of a cabin passenger service between Puget Sound and India. Plans for a “job drive” throughout Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and other states for posi tions for the men of the Ninety-first division are being made LawiVnce Wood, Seattle, federal tlirector of Washington of the United States Em ployment Service. A daring “cracksman” worked for four hours in the box office of the Salt Lake theater, just across the street from the police station, finally break ing open the safe of the playhouse and making way with S2OO in cash. While he worked the theater watch man sat tied to a chair with his back to the safe. Charges of assault and disorderly conduct were placed against eight of the alleged Industrial Workers of the World who were arrested in Seattle when police interference with a "red flag” meeting and parade here re sulted in a riot. WASHINGTON Attorney General Thomas W. Greg ory has tendered his resignation, to take effect March 4. Senator Lawrence Y. Sherman of Illinois, Republican, intends to retire from public life when his present term in the Senate expires, March 3, 1921. Senate Democratic leaders have de cided that the railroad problem must go over to the Republican Congress. The Democrats have given up hope of framing and passing railroad legisla tion before March 4. Orders directing Major General Leonard now commanding Cnmp Funston, Kansas, to proceed to Chicago to take command of the Cen tral Department were issued Wednes day by the War Department. The $27,000,000 rivers and harbors appropriations bill was passed by the House by a vote of 228 to 91. The bill now goes to the Senate in vir tually the same form as it was re ported by the House rivers and har bors committee. Senate and House conferees on the oil land leasing bill held another meet- ; ing, but were unable to harmonize differences in the legislation and ad journed until later. Service insigr.ia for members of welfare agencies on duty with tlte or ganized forces of the army overseas will be provided for in an order issued by the War Department. Representative Cannon of Illinois, former speaker, was named by Speak er Clark to preside at the joint me morial services for Theodore Roose velt, to be held by the Senate and House on February 9. FOREIGN ~ Field Marshal von Mackensen of the German army has been interned at Temesvar, Hungary, according to Budapest dispatches. President Wilson will avail himself of the first opportunity between the meetings of the peace delegations to visit the devastated regions of France. The Southport Miners’ Federation has unanimously adopted a resolution demanding that miners in the British army be demobilized immediately and given employment. Princess Charlotte, sister of Grand Duchess Marie, has been chosen as the latter’s successor by the Chamber of Deputies, which met immediately after the abdication o$ the Grand Duchess was announced. The armistice, it develops, pre vented the use of a British naval gun mpule at Sheffield which would throw a shell fifty miles with ease and probably cause damage at ninety miles. The gun was eighty-three feet long and with its carriage was 124 feet long. Immediate withdrawal from Monte ; negro of all Italian troops is demand- I ed by the Montenegrin National As ! sembly. The assembly alludes to the I presence of Italian troops in Monte negro “now a part of the new state of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes,” as j “not dictated by any military neces- I sity, as stable peace reigns in the country.” I American and British representa tives will hold a conference with Ger ! men admiralty authorities at Treves fbr the purpose of acquiring posses sion of German and Austrian passen ger ships for the transportation of troops. The United States will be represented by E. N. Hurley, chair man of the Shipping Board, and Ad miral W. S. Benson. A regular aerial passenger service between London and Paris in con nection with the peace conference has been inaugurated. A number of air planes have been fitted up for the service. They have a comfortable cabin for two passengers, including cushion seats and a table entirely en closed with glass. The airplanes will make the trip in two hours. SPORT Michael McDermott of Chicago es tablished what is said to be a new world’s record for the 75-yard breast stroke when he swam the distance in 47 2-5 seconds in an exhibition match in Minneapolis. George Hallas, former University of Illinois star, and one of the main stays of the Great Lakes Naval Training Station football and basket | ball teams, will get a tryout for the outfield with the New York American j League’Club next spring. An affiliation between the National ! Federation and the American Indus i trial Athletic Association was accom ! plished at the morning session of the j annual convention of the federation in Cleveland. A working agreement will be arranged between the two organi zations. Francis O’Loughlin was a compe tent business man when his duties as i umpire in the American League did not require his attention and he had a number of paying investments. His will, filed in Rochester, indicates he left his wife an estate valued at least I at $25,004). The sale of the Giants to Charles Stoneham, Judge McQuaid and John ! McGraw was still being discussed. It j ranks as the gi%atest baseball deal lin history, and although the new owners and the retiring officials hav3 refused to name the exact sum in volved, it is said on good authority that it was $1,350,000. GENERAL A city labor party has been or ganized in Chicago and John Fitzpat rick has been nominated for mayor. James M. Cox, 47, a Democratic newspaper publisher of Dayton, Ohio, Monday was inaugurated governor of Ohio for a third term. Naval officers at Mare Island ar ranged to take over St. Vincent’s Catholic school, and operate it as a free hospital for influenza. Armour & Co.’s annual report, is sued in Chicago, showed a record vol ume of sS<> 1,000,000 for the fiscal year of 11)IS, compared with $575,- 000,000 in 1917, and net income of $15,000,000. The report declared that j record low profits were produced. America’s largest dirigible, the C-l, terminated its successful flight from I Far Rockaway, N. Y., naval air sta | tion to Key West. The distance of , approximately 1,200 miles was covered in twenty-nine hours, an average speed of forty-eight miles an hour. Prices for standard wide sheeting has dropped 12 V~ per cent, while huck ! towels, damasks and quilts were re- | i duced 10 to 20 per cent in New York. I Prices from three cents to four cents j less than asking figures for spot goods were obtained at an auction sale of burlaps ordered by the Textile Alliance. The Presbyterian Church in the ' United States has provided in its 1919 ! budget for a fund of $1,000,000 to increase the salaries of those among its pastors who are not considered adequately paid. This was announced by the national headquarters of the “new era movement” of the church in New York. One thousand workers, representing twelve unions affiliated with the metal workers, walked out in two shipyards in Aberdeen and one in Hoquiam, Wash. The men object to the Macy award of last summer. The yards expect to continue operations. The men are asking $8 a day for skilled workers. $10.40 for caulkers and $6 for general labor. Refusal of Northwestern railroads to supply cars of less than 2,400 cubic feet capacity for lumber carrying was declared unreasonable by the Inter state Commerce Commission in sus taining complaints of manufacturers in Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana. Several shot sacks filled with coins of various denominations and a bundle of yellowback S2O bills, totaling $4,- i 000, was found in the trunk of a re cluse, William J. Tinsley, who has just died of tuberculosis at Americua, Ga. The discovery was made by his only I brother and heir, Jack Tinsley. I THE CHEYENNE RECORD. COLORADO STATE NEWS Vntern Kt* w*pnp*r Union N**wh Service. The Chamber of Commerce at Mont ose is starting a strong movement o secure for this city a dehydrating •lant. The resignation of Colonel Frank Vdams as superintendent of the State department of Safety was accepted >y Governor Gunter Monday morning. A gun club will be organized in •'ort Morgan if a number of the crack hooters of this vicinity succeed in arrying out t!heir plans as per sched ile. Under the direction of the City federation of Women’s Clubs a vig >rous campaign will soon be started for the establishment of a • modern lospital in Sterling. An organization, known as the Vista Stock Sales Committee, s hot on the trail of stock-selling :oncerns and agents who sell stock jnder misrepresentation. Telluride is battling a new wave of nfluenza and a number of new cases been reported lately. The city luthorities have requested discontin jance of public funerals. Summit county during 1918 bought Var Savings and Thrift Stamps of a otal value of $45,910.75. The coun y’s quota was $40,060. Dillon and ireckenridge are banner towns. After seven years of successful op ;ration Longmont today owns, free from debt, its municipal electric light Diant, the last SIO,OOO bonds having Deen paid by the city during the year 1918. The new issue of War Savings Stamps, costing $4.12 this month, are >n sale at the postoffices and other igencies. The stamps are redeemable January 1, 1924. Colorado’s quota is $20,000,000. Orders for the dismantling of a najor part of the Colorado Midland *ailroad were issued by the State Board of Public Utilities. Sixty days ire allowed before the order is to be •arried out, in the hope that the gov •rnment, the state or industrial agen nes will take over management of .he road and endeavor to malce it pay. Denver may obtain the annual con tention of the American Medical As sociation, w’hich will be held in June, 1920. The Civic and Commercial As lociation has received an inquiry from :he medical body asking about accom modations for delegated to the. con tention and for the convention itself .hat can be provided by Denver. Officers of the Great Western Sugar Company state that beet growers in Northern Colorado in large numbers are signing contracts for the 1919 season, many of them increasing their acreage from 30 to 100 per cent. The sugar company officers believe that more sugar beets will be grown in Northern Colorado this year than ever before. By a unanimous vote, former Gov ernor Ammons was re-elected chair man of the Agricultural and Livestock Bureau of the Denver Civic and Com mercial Association. Other officials elected at the meeting are: W. N. W. Blayney, vice chairman; Lee A. Reynolds, treasurer, and David W. Thomas, secretary. Mr. Thomas was secretary of the StAte Council of De fense. Drilling on the property of the Bed Rock Oil and Gas Company will be resumed this week. No drilling has been done on this property since No vember 16. The property is located thirty-five miles south of La Junta and the well is down to a depth of 970 feet, and the company expects fo •go about 1,300 feet before pay sand is struck. The well had been cased awaiting the arrival of a new cable. A service flag for Institute District No. 1, comprising the counties of Lo gan, Morgan, Washington, Yuma Phillips and Sedgwick, is shown ir the office of the county superintend ent of schools. The flag bears twen ty-eight stars and represent the num ber of teachers in the district who en gaged in war service. The flag is the property of the six counties in the district and is sent to the superin tendents of the counties in their order Because of the drop in lead an£ copper, since the armistice, the mines at Rico, heavy producers of those minerals, have closed down. The Board of County Commission ers of Grand county have sent to thi State Highway Commission a protest against the construction of what is knowm as the “High Line” section of ! the Fall River road, between Estes ! Park and Grand county, and urginp the commission to reconsider the rout- i ing of the highway at that point. Fort Collin, citizens have oversub- I scribed the SIOO,OOO bond issue foi j the and improvement ot their street railway system by 50 pel cent. Instead of offering the issu« to Denver or outside firms, the citj council decided first to give local peo ple a chance to purchase. The result is that $150,000 have been spoken foi in that city. The Federated Trades Council at Colorado Springs has decided to pro ceed at once with the circulation of pe titions seeking the recall of Mayoi Charles E. Thomas. This action was taken in lieu of the general strike voted some time ago to enforce the demands of the local fire department for higher wages and the reinstate ment of the men when strikebreakers were employed. The firemen declarer the strike off some time ago. That 78,623 more sheep and 24,971 more cattle were grazed on the na tional forests of Colorado in 1918 thar during the previous year is shown bj a report just compiled by J. 11. Hat ton. chief of grazing for the forest service. The, total number of styeej grazed during the last year was 1, 111,097 and the number of cattle 393,- 933. Colorado still has unsold 3,113,60' acres of land belonging mainly to th« school fund, but also the property o: other state institutions such as th< penitentiary, agriculture college, stab university, public buildings and inter mal improvements. COLORADO NEWS NOTES. Denver. —The “Victory Show” of the National Western Stock Show As sociation, which opened at the stadium Df the Denver Stockyards, is the most pretentious offering ever staged by this organization. Its size and scope ftnd excellence have kept pace with the growth of the cattle raising in dustry in the Rocky Mountain region, where stock now grade higher than ever before— a fact which is in no small degree due to the standards es tablished by the show itself. Folio ing are the number of entries in the livestock division: Breeding Cattle — Shorthorns, 275; Herefords, 268; Aberdeen-Angus, 33; Galloway, 37. Single Fat Steers—Shorthorn, 4; Hereford, 6; Aberdeen-Angus, 9; Gal loway, 4; grade and cross-bred, 18. Dairy Cattle—Jersey, 26; Holstein- Friesian, 122; Guernsey, 21; Milking Shorthorn, 29. Breeding Swine— Berkshire, 15; Poland-China, 188; Du roc-Jersey, 268; Hampshire, 35. Breed ing Sheep—Cotswold, 2P; Leicester and Lincoln, 6; Hampshire, 58; Ox ford, 2; Shropshire, 22; Southdown, 22; Rambouillet, 151. Single Fat Sheep—22. Horses—Percheron, 61; French Draft, 6; Belgian, 31; Clydes- I dale and Shire, 105; registered breed j ing horses, 4. Mules and Jacks—16. Cash funds of the state of Colorado are at low ebb. Since September of | last year more than $1,500,000 of state I money has been invested in Denver | water bonds and Liberty loan issues of the government, with the result that the incoming treasurer, H. E. Mulnix, finds it impossible to distrib ute state deposits through the banks of the state as formerly and confronts the necessity of trimming ship closely in order to keep abreast of the de mands for cash. The bonds were bought for investment out of the sur plus accumulated in the state school funds from sale of lands. Colorado has joined the ranks of the states that have ratified the amendment to the federal constitu tion providing for nation-wide prohi bition. Senator James C. Starkweath er called the resolution up for third reading a few minutes after the en grossment committee had made its re port upon the measure. No speech making preceded the taking of the vote. Less than five minute-3 after Senator Starkweather had moved the adoption of the measure, the vote had been recorded and announced. For the first time in two years the mines of the Cripple Creek district are .working full-handed. At one of the large mines there a few days ago seventy-five men applied for work in a single day, a portion of them being given employment. Miners who left the district for rosier fields during the war, when men were in great de mand in other metal mining camps, are returning. They assert they find conditions there much better for labor. Sixty-three head of young Jersey heifers, all high grade animals, rep resenting the generosity of the cattle and stock raisers of Logan county, were billed out for Denver. These two carloads of cattle will be shown in the exhibit of A R C cattle at the Stock Show, and if they prove winners, will be sent to other shows. They have been donated by cattlemen and fed in the local yards by gifts of men of the county. Claiming Lake county, with 586 sol diers and sailors in the war out of estimated population of 10,000, holds foremost place in the state in furnish ing fighters for Uncle Sam, several public spirited citizens at Leadville have banded together to secure con struction of a memorial monument on which the names of the entire roster of military men from the county will be lettered in bronze. The Board of County Commission ers of El Paso county in their last session passed a resolution appropri ating $3,000 to be used in payment of debts incurred during the influenza epidemic. This is the county’s share of the expense, and it will prevent further delay of payment of bills due to the exhaustion of the Colorado Springs city treasurer’s appropria tion of $5,000. One of the biggest real estate deals that had occurred in Greeley ir. recent years was consummated when Fred Schick bought the ranch of Steven A. W is well at Keeneiburg. The ranch is one of about 11,000 acres and the con sideration was in the neighborhood of $100,000. C. A. Bowman was elected chair man of the transportation bureau of the Denver Civic and Commercial As sociation, other officers being elected as follows: R. L. Hearon, first vice chairman; Burt Coldren, second vice chairman; William A. Weigele, secre tary, and Fred S. Brown, treasurer. Dr. Lory has been accorded the j highest honor that the men in the j same line of work as he is engaged j in, could confer upon him. He has been elected president of the Ameri | can Association of Agricultural Col leges and Experiment Stations. The state auditor has notified Mary C. C. Bradford, state superintendent of public instruction, that there is available for apportionment among the school districts of the state out of the public school irtvome fund the sum of $323,928.92. Aliens in Colorado, Wyoming and Idaho are taking a fast-increasing in terest in becoming Americans, and in getting an education, according to Paul Armstrong, head of the Denver division of the United States Natu ralization Service. Dean of Women Mrs. Gilpin Brown of the State Teachers’ College at Greeley, has issued orders that no girl student of the college shall re ceive callers at her boarding house except on Friday and Saturday. There is every indication that the Arkansas Valley will have plenty of water for irrigation during the ap proaching season. The slopes of the Sangre de Christo mountains, which conserve the winter snows that sup ply the eastern slope \>f the continen tal divide, are covered with the deep snow. Louis Meining, young Larimer coun ty ranchman, who' was arrested last fall by Sheriff Cooke on the charge that he had intentionally injured his foot to escape military service, has been fully vindicated by the military authorities, has been released from custody and restored to duty. ANARCHISTS TO BLAME FRENCH AMBASSADOR NOULENS SAYS BOLSHEVIST CAUSED ALL TROUBLE. NO PLACE IN SUN GERMANY MUST OVERTHROW THE ONES RESPONSIBLE IN CAUSE. <V««t«rn Newspaper Union News Service. Paris, Jan. 20.—The two notable events of the day were the meeting of the Supreme Council to consider the Russian situation and the gala lunch eon to President Wilson at Luxem bourg Palace. The meeting of the Supreme Council was attended by President Wilson, Secretary Lansing and representatives of the other four great powers. An hour was given over to hearing M. Noulens, the j French ambassador who has just re turned from Russia, where he person ally witnessed the changes which have been taking place in the government and conditions there. What he told the council was not disclosed, but an authorized state ment from M. Noulens sums up hit views thus: “The Bolshevist power is the enemy of the entente. It is re sponsible for the Russian defection from the entente. It furnished Ger many with food during the war. It protested against the terms of the Ger man armistice. These acts show an uncompromising attitude of hostility against the entente. Until the regime falls, a development which 1 hope the allies will actively seek to bring about, Europe will continue to be ex posed to the severest risks of agita tion and war.'* Paris.—Germany, Austria, Bulgaria and Turkey cannot be admitted to th« League.of Nations at the present time, but they should be allowed to join as soon as the league is satisfied that they are entitled to be ranked among the trustworthy nations of the world Food Shortage in Germany. Berlin.—The food shortage is pro ducing a vast number of cases of in sanity and various mental disorders in Germany, according to a report to the commissioners of the Third army. The report says that Germany needs great quantities of fats to bring its ration to a point where it will sustain the people’s health. The death rate of in fants is alarmingly high, and the lack of food is affecting the general health, tuberculosis being particularly preva lent. Owing to the shortage of coal American army officials have orderec residents of Coblenz to cut down theii consumption of electricity 50 per cent Announcement was made that th« Rhine will shortly be opened for trans portation of supplies to the Thirc army through Holland. Indicted for Treason. New York.—J. Willard Robinson formerly a stenographer in the offici of Jeremiah A. O’Leary, is accusec of carrying messages between O’Learj and German agents in Holland ir 1917, in an indictment for treason re turned here by the federal grand jury Robinson, the indictment states, wen to Rotterdam on an American tank steamship in April, 1917, and deliv ered to Frank Richards, alleged to be a German agent, correspondence froir O’Leary. In June of the same year it is charged, Robinson arrived here with secret correspondence. The mes- 1 sages, the indictment’ states, were ir invisible ink, and one from O’Leary and Ryan asked the German govern ment what assistance it could give th« fight for freedom for Ireland. (Cotton Workers Strike. Bombay.—One hundred thousanc cotton mill operatives here are or strike. They demand an increasec war bonus. There has been no se rious disturbance apart from stom * throwing by non-strikers. Prince John Dead. London.—Prince John, youngest sor of King George and Queen Mary, died early Sunday morning at Landring ham, the country palace of King George. The king and queen were at ! his bedside when the end came. They had been anxiously attending the boj for days. The boy prince celebrated his fourteenth birthday a week age Sunday. The prince was possessed ol exuberant spirits. He was the prime favorite of all classes and the idol of the servants and tenants at Wind sor. It is said that he was the favor ite brother of Princess Mary, whe loved to romp with him. The prince was born at Sandringham January 12 1905. Killed in Elevator Cage. Chicago.—Policemen and firemen worked for hrflf an hour with a gas torch in extricating the body of an unidentified woman accidentally caught between the elevator and the steel shaft on the lift on the seven teenth floor of a downtown hotel. Part of the elevator shaft had to be burned away with the torch before the body could be removed. She died shortly r.fter being taken to a hospital. Paris.—Returns of the election for the German National Assembly for the Third Electoral District of Baden show the 'majority Socialists have won five seats, the Centrist party five seats, the German Nationalist party one seat and the German Democratic party three seats. The votes caat were: Majority Socialists, 362,948; Centrists, 380,644; German National ists, 78,786; German Democrats, 226,- 811. In the Karlsruhe district the majority Socialists cast 34,887 votes; the Centrists, 14,570; the Nationalists, 883, and the German Democrats. 24 t -803. HUSBAND. SAVES WIFE From Suffering by Getting Her Lydia E. Pinkh&m’s Vegetable Compound. Pittsburgh, Pa.—‘'For many month* I was uot able to do my work owing to a weakness which EIJIIIIII caused backache \ ■Kill and headaches. A M friend called my V attention to one of your newspaper [“ advertisements and Ci immediately my yl husband bought pill three bottleß of i . Lydia E. Pinkham’a . * >’ Vegetable Com pound for me. After taking two ** bottles I felt fina and my troubles caused by that weak ness are a thing of the past. All women who suffer as I did should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. Jas. Rohrbehg, 620 Knapp St.. N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Women who suffer from any form of weakness, as indicated by displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, backache, headaches, nervousness or “the blues,” should accept Mrs. Rohr berg’s suggestion and give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. For over forty years it has been correcting such ailments. If you havo mysterious complications write for* advice to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicino Co., Lynn, Mask Stop Losing Calves Yoa can Stamp Abortion Out Of YOUR HERO and Keep It Out tßy the use of Dfl. DAVID ROBERTS* “Anti-Abortion” Small Expense Easily Applied. Sure Results*. Used successfully for M years. Consult DB. DAVID ROBERTS about all animal ailments. In formation free. Send for FRER gopy of “The Cattle Specialist" with full Infor nation on Abortion is Cows. DR. DAVID ROBERTS- TtT ERIN ARY CO- 100 Grand Ave- Wsakeska. Wise. Cutlcura For Baby's Itchy Skin All dross in ts; Bo*P 25, Oint- X; ment 25 and 60. Talcum 25. >/ Bam pip each free of “Oatt \vn sars. Dept. M, B—tea." DRAW POISON THROUGH SKIN Baltimore Physician Believes He Has an Effective Cure for Rheuma tism in New Idea. Dr. Fred Pridham of Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore has devised a treatment for joint affections, such as rheumntism, that is being used very successfully at the military hospital* where it has been introduced. Ho uses a mineral, double nitro-peroxide,. which actually extracts tfoe inflamma tion. The snlt is mixed with a starchy substance which holds its action until It is placed orf the skin over'the dis eased bone, from which it extracts the Impurities, the germs and their poi sons. The material is sprinkled on lint or gauze and placed on the skin over the diseased bone. When the doctor removes the dressings, from six to twelve hours later, there will be seen blisters on the skin. If there is no infection the salt will not affect the skin. How It Turns Out. “Love is blind,” launched out the chronic quot Cr. for the ’steenth time. “Quite true,” agreed the henpecked man, glancing furtively about, “but after marriage a man has his eyes ORenod and a woman develops a keen of touch.” The Underworld. • Silas (in a whisper)—Did you git o peep at the underworld at all while you wuz in New York, Ezry? Ezra —Three times, b'gosh ! Subway twice an’ ratscellar once.—Buffalo Ex press. Save Sugar by eating Giapefluts as your cereal dish This standard i food needs no added sweet ening for it: is rich in* itrs own sugar, developed from wheat: and barley by the special Grape-Nuts process of cooking. I "77»r»j « Reason “ I