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CONDENSATION OF FRESH NEWS THE LATEST IMPORTANT 018- PATCHES PUT INTO SHORT, CRISP PARAGRAPH®. STORY OF THE WEEK SHOWING THE PROGRESS OP EVENTS IN OUR OWN AND FOREIGN LANDS. Western Newspaper Union News Service. WESTERN Approximately $8,000,000 is now available for highway construction in Nevada up to the end of 1921 through such sources as state revenue, state and county bond issues, federal aid, etc. Second Lieutenant Herbert Tucli borne of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., and Pri vate Allister Lima of San Luis Obispo, Calif., were killed at March field, the -army aviation field near Riverside, when their airplane fell 2,000 feet. Constitutionality of a state law de signed to curtail use of foreign lan guages in Nebraska schools as an Americanization measure was upheld by the State Supreme Court of Ne braska. A train loaded with 185,000 gallons of gin, valued at $7,000,000, was shipped from Peoria, 111., to New York. The gin must be beyond the three-mile limit at sea by midnight, Jan. 14, 1920, when the bonds expire. The gin will go to Havana, Cuba. In the train there was twenty-seven cars. Each car will contain fifty-nine barrels of fifty-five gallons each. The ashes of the late W. C. Bosch en of New York, famous as a swordfish angler- wpre thrown on the waves twelve miles from Avalon, Calif., one day recently by Capt. George C. Farns worth, his former boatman, to whom he devised a legacy of $25,000. This was in accordance with wishes ex pressed by Boschen. The second Pan-American Congress, scheduled to open in Washington, D. C., January 12th, has been deferred one week, according to a telegram re ceived from Carter Glass, secretary of the treasury. The postponement was necessitated by the delay of several foreign delegations in obtaining steam ship accomodations. Twelve warships have arrived at San Diego, bringing the number of war craft in the harbor up to seventy eight, said to be the greatest number of war vessels ever together in the Pacific under the American flag. Several of the more recent arrivals put on extra speed so as to arrive in time to spend the holidays there. Announcement that the national gov ernment is planning an elk ranch for the Yellowstone Park herd to be es tablished in Park county, fifteen miles north of the park, is contained in a letter to the Livingston Enterprise from Stephen Mather, director of na tional parks. The elk each winter have crossed the park boundaries and were killed by hunters or starved to death. WASHINGTON The Shipping Board has under con sideration the sale of all former Ger man passenger ships with the stipula tion that the vessels be run under the American flag, it has been announced In Washington. France’s national credit loan was over-subscribed on the first day, ac cording to cable advices received in Washington from Paris by the French commission. The advices added that the over-subscription had exceeded the most optimistic expectations of the government. Successful tests of a motor fuel de clared to be not only more economical than gasoline, but also easier on motors, have been announced by Otto Praeger, second assistant postmaster general in charge of the air mail service. The fuel consists of thirty-eight parts alco hol, thirty gasoline, nineteen benzol, seven and one-half ether and four tol uol. Ingredients making up the re maining one and one-half parts were not given. Large increases in the export of toreadstuffs were noted in the Novem ber report of the Department of Com merce, but exports of meat and dairy products decreased $10,000,000 as com pared with the same month a year ago. Breadstuffs exported in November val ued at as compared with $66,271,644 for November, 1918. For the eleven months ended with November the total was $865,552,948 against $708,127,113 for the corresponding pe riod of 1918. Meat and dairy products exported in November were valued at $61,948,690, and those sent out of the country for the eleven months period were worth $1,097,724,912 against $853,- 796,000 for the corresponding period the year before. FOREIGN The engineer of a freight train which ran into a passenger train, causing fifteen deaths, blew out his brains with a revolver after assisting injured passengers at Lille, France. Lady Ramsay, formerly Princess Pa tricia of Connaught, gave birth to a son in London. Princess Patricia was married to Commander Alexander Rob ert Maule Ramsey of the royal navj in February. During the fiscal year which ended June 30, 1919, Brazil imported SB,OOO, 000 worth of automobile and motoi parts from the United States, which is an increase of 35 per cent over the value of the 1918 imports. Premier Nitti of Italy, expressed the opinion that from 12,000,000,000 to 15,- 000,000,000 lire would be subscribed to the victory loan, the sale of which be gins Jan. sth. On his return from the visit he is to make to Paris and Lon don early in January Premier Nitti will undertake a speaking tour on be half of the loan. The Bolsheviki captured fifteen guns, 1,000 horses and 300 men after defeating the forces of General Mam ontoff and General Chelnokoff in the region of Staroniensk, according to n wireless dispatch received from Mos cow. The dispatch adds: “More than a thousand Cossacks were killed, in cluding General Chelnokoff.” The rebels in Eastern Siberia, says a Moscow dispatch, have completely several all communication on the Amur line and Blagovieshtchensk has been cut off. The dispatch adds that Galician troops, intended for the de fense of Kiev, have revolted against General Denikine, the anti-Bolshevik leader in the South and attacked the volunteer ai*my in the rear. Taiga has been captured by local Bolsheviki. Many trains on the trans siberian railroad west of Taiga have been cut off and Polish troops in that region will be forced to fight their way out. Fears for the safety of T. R. Hansen, United States vice consul at Omsk, and Joseph H. Ray, consul at Irkutsk, who are west of Taiga, are felt here. Nothing has been heard from them for more than a week. Herr Huszar, the Hungarian pre mier, stated in Budapest to a deputa tion representing those crippled during the war, that Communism had cost Hun gary eighteen billion kronen (nominal ly about $3,600,000,000), according to a report received in Berlin. The pre mier said that Rumanian invasion had taken thirty-six billion kronen more. The national assembly now had to re store Hungary’s finance from a des perate condition. GENERAL Statistics obtained show that 1,725 British girls married American dough boys. Os these only seventeen remain •to be sent to join their husbands in the United States. Judge A. W. Sanborn ordered 31,000 pounds of sugar, seized last week from M. Leach, Beloit, confiscated and turned over to the Wisconsin fair price committee Leach was fined SIOO and costs. Victor L. Berger, who was re-elected to Congress from the fifth congression al district, December 19th, following his expulsion from that body, said that he will go to Washington January sth to claim his seat. Uruguay has been linked to the United States through the All-Ameri can cables by the opening of a new line from Buenos Aires to Montevideo, putting New York and Montevideo in direct telegraphic communication with each other for the first time. Maj. A. E. McKeever, M. C., D. S. 0., one of the best-known Canadian aces in the great war and credited with the destruction of forty-five German ma chines, died in a hospital as the result of an operation at Toronto..ln an auto mobile accident near Stratford, Ont., some time ago, he suffered a broken leg and internal injuries. Purchase of 250,000 acres of Montana grazing land with 25,000 head of cattle has been effected by the Hill Land Corporation, organized by Walter J. Hill, son of the late James J. Hill, Jus tice Oscar Hallam of the Minnesota Supreme Court, 11. P. McClennan, wide ly known Montana stockman, and F. S. Dalrymple of New York. John D. Rockefeller gave to man kind a Christmas present of $100,000,- 000 —half to the General Education Board to raise the salaries of college professors and half to the Rockefeller foundation to aid in its work of com bating disease through improvement ot medical education, public health ad ministration and scientific research. 1 is estimated that Mr. Rockefeller’s public gifts now approximate $450,- 000,000. New York boasts of a new school boy tennis wonder in the person of Charles M. Wood, Jr., 14 years old, of the Dewitt Clinton High school. Play ing in the semi-finals of the junior in door national championships the youth easily won his match and displayed such powerful service and speed at volleying that experts among the spec tators were fairly dazzled. ARIZONA STATE MINER Southwest News From All Over New Mexico and Arizona Western Newspaper Union News Service. Over SIOO,OOO is spent, being spent, or about to be spent in improvement and extension of the Socorro county, New Mexico rural school system. The executive committee of the Southern Baptist convention of New Mexico, decided on Las Vegas as the location for the Baptist college, which is to be erected in this state. “A square deal for the farm boy and the farm girl,” is one of the slogans of the Boys and Girls’ club depart ment of the Agricultural Extension Service of the University of Arizona. > Officials of the Mesa post of the American Legion have launched a movement to secure for the post two sections of land northeast of Mesa, Arizona. The land is now held by the War Department. It was homesteaded ten years ago by officers of the Mesa Company of the Arizona National Guard and held as a military reserve. Giovani Estrada, a bright Mexican boy, 9 years old, is in the St. Mary’s hospital at Gallup, N. Mex., in a seri ous condition as the result of being burned by an electric wire. The boy climbed a pole to get a ball which had lodged in the wires and in some way came in contact with a live wire with the result that his left arm was burned off at the elbow, his right arm partial ly disabled and his body burned in several places. Four hundred and four forest fires have occurred during the past season in the national forests of Arizona and New Mexico, according to a report just compiled by the forest service. Fully 50 per cent of these fires were caused by human agency, and approximately 50 per cent by lightning. Among those caused by human agency, the largest number were set by logging operations, and the next largest by campers. These fires burned more than six thousand acres of forest land, caused damage of about $3,300, and cost over $6,000 to extinguish. One and one-fourth mil lion board feet of timber were des troyed. The Federal Monthly Crop Report just released for publication through the office of Field Agent It. F. Hare of the Bureau of Crop Estimates, shows that New Mexico has planted this fall 211,000 acres of wheat com pared to 182,000 acres planted last year. Last year’s crop passed the win ter and spring with an abandonment of only 3 per cent of the planted acreage. The condition of the present crop is reported better on December Ist, than was last year’s crop at that time. In the United States only 38,770,000 acres of wheat has been planted this year, compared to 50,489,000 planted last year. The condition of this crop is only 85.2 per cent of normal, compared to a condition of 98.6 per cent for last year’s crop at this time. This report shows that New Mexico has produced 681,700 bushels of apples this year, and 75 per cent of these have been shipped from the county in which they were grown. Chaves county reports having shipped 845 cars, San Juan county 200, Otero 60, and De Baca 12 cars. The Bureau’s investigation relative to wages of farm labor this year, com pared to 1918, 1917, and 1910, show that the wages of the farm laborer have kept pace in this state with high cost of living. The report shows that the average wage by the month with out board, was as follows: for 1910, $34.25 ; for 1917, $48.00 ; for 1918, $59.00 and for 1919, $60.00. This year, day laborers commanded $2.90 per day; last year they were paid $2.38; in 1917, $1.97 and in 1910 they were only paid $1.58. Arizona’s mines enriched the world by $174,559,388.86 during the year just closing, according to the annual report of the state tax commission. The min erals produced totaled 19,188,716.20 dry tons, and the average value per ton from the gross yield was $9.10. Copper production amounted to about 16 times the value of all the other min erals produced, gold and silver follow ing next. Copper produced amounted to 729,001,687.06 pounds, of which 682,- 323,226.61 pounds were marketed at an average price of $0.23291, or a total of $163,218,516.35. Gold production amounted to 249,259.08 ounces the av erage price being $20.43, and the total value being $5,092,706.43. In silver production the state had 5,126,054.9 ounces, the average price being $0.9727, and the total value, $4,986,- 140.67. In lead the state produced 6,- 622,052.03 pounds at an average value of .0667, or a total of $441,563.26. The government has approved plans and specifications for the Douglas-Ro deo highway link in Arizona, according to word received from .Washington by State Engineer Maddock. This means, that the road will receive $167,000 fed eral aid for its construction. POISON WHISKEY KILLS MANY 146 DEATHS REPORTED .FROM DIFFERENT EASTERN CITIES. DETECTIVES ON TRAIL GOVERNMENT AGENTS ARREST MANY IN HUNT FOR POISON SOURCE. Western Newspaper Union News Service. New York, Dec. 29. —With the known death toll thus far fixed at 146, and with scores of others dying or blinded by wood alcohol poisoning, caused by drinking a liquor believed to have been made in New York and peddled under the guise of whisky, federal officials have announced that the entire machin ery of the government will be called into action to trace down those guilty in the present wave of death and all other bootleggers and distillers of moonshine whisky, wherever they may operate. New York. —Working on the theory that the wood alcohol poison booze, which has caused scores of deaths throughout New England and New York, originated in this city, Col. D. L. Parker, supervising revenue agent for New York, and H. B. Dobbs, special federal agent, announced many arrests made in various parts of this city. Three of the prisoners arrested are Adolph Panarelli, a wine and liquor dealer; John Romanelli, an undertak er, and Samuel K. Saleeby, a druggist. Panarelli said: “I am glad you got me. I will tell all I know.” Federal agents have arrested five other men whom they asserted to be the heads of an organized band which has been responsible for the recent widespread sale of wood alcohol con coctions through five states. One of the men arrested was described by the government agents as “the kingpin of the ring.” New Haven, Conn. —Six men have been arrested in connection with the sale of wood alcohol “whisky,” which they are alleged to have shipped from this city to Chicopee, Mass. The ar rests were made at the request of the district attorney at Westfield, Mass., who telegraphed that the men were wanted for homicide in Massachusetts. Chicopee, Mass. —United States Mar shal Edward J. Lyden arrested four men on feedral warrants, two charg ing violation of the war-time prohibi tion act and two illegal transportation of liquor from state to state. The ar rests resulted from his investigation into the deaths of more than fifty per sons in the Connecticut valley since Christmas from drinking wood alcohol contained in a mixture sold as whisky. Five more deaths had resulted from alcoholic poisoning, four in Holyoke and one in Chicopee, bringing the total for the Connecticut valley, not includ ing Hartford, to fifty-three. Parade Against H. C. L. in Havana. Havana.—One man was killed and one woman and five men, including two policemen, were injured during a clash between the police and a crowd engaged in a demonstration against the high cost of living and excessive house rents. The wounded policemen claim that the crowd attacked them when they demanded to see the permit for the parade. Witnesses say, how ever, that the police fired on the peo ple without warning. Living Cost Increase 82 Per Cent. Boston, Mass. —An increase of 82.2 per cent in the cost of living for Amer ican wage earners between July, 1914, and November, 1919, is shown in a statement issued by the National In dustrial Conference Board. This rep resents an advance of 10.4 per cent since November, 1918; 13.5 per cent since March, 1919, when prices dropped temporarily, and 5.8 per cent since last July. The increase in the cost of the five major items in the family budget since July, 1914, was: Food, 92 per cent; shelter, 38 per cent; clothing, 135 per cent; fuel, heat and light, 48 per cent, and sun dries, 75 per cent. Predicts New Government. Ogden, Utah. —Inevitably there will be a conflict of the Russian peasants with the Lenine-Trotzky radicalism and a new government will develop in Siberia and European Russia, accord ing to Dr. E. P. Mills, American Red Cross surgeon in charge of the Irkutsk military hospital, who spoke in Ogden. MARKET QUOTATIONS Western Newspaper Union News Service. - DENVER MARKETS. Cattle. Beef steers, ch. to prime.. sll.oo® 12.00 Beef steers, good to choice 9.50@10.50 Beef steers, fair to g00d... 9.00® 9.50 Heifers, prime 9.00@10.00 Cows, fat, good to choice.. 8.75@ 9.50 Cows, fair to good 7.00@ 8.50 Cutters and feeder cows... 5.50@ 7.25 Canners 4.50 @ 5.75 Bulls 5.00@ 6.00 Veal calves 8.50@13.00 Feeders, good to choice... 10.00@10.50 Feeders, fair to good B.oo@ 9.50 Stockers, good to choice... 8.25@ 9.00 Stockers, fair to good 7.50@ 8.00 Stockers, plain 5.00 @ 6.50 Hogs. Good hogs $13.001413.60 Sheep. Lambs, fat, good to ch.... $15.00 @ 16.00 Lambs, fat, fair to g00d... 14.00@15.00 Lambs, feeders 13.00@14.50 Yearlings 9.00@10.00 Ewes, fat, good to choice.. B.oo@ 9.00 Feeder ewes 6.00@ 7.50 Dressed Poultry. The following prices on dressed poul try are net F. O. B. Denver: Turkeys, No. Is 38 @4O Turkeys, old toms 34 Hens, lb 20 @22 Ducks, young 25 @27 Geese 25 @27 Roosters 12 @l4 Live Poultry. Turkeys, 10 lbs. or over 32 @35 Hens, lb 18 @2O Ducklings 21 @23 Goslings 22 @24 Broilers 32 Cocks 10 Springs 19 @23 Eggs. Eggs, strictly fresh, case count $21.00@23.00 Rutter. Creameries, ex. Ist grade, lb. 70 Creameries, 2d grade 62 Process butter 59 Packing stock 42 @44 Rutter Fat. Direct 73 Station 69 Fruit. Apples, Colo., box $2.00@3.00 Pears, Colo., crate 1.50@3.00 Vegetables. Beans, navy, cwt 8.50@ 9.00 Beans, pinto, cwt 6.00@ 6.50 Beans, lima, lb .25 Beans, green, lb 16 @ .17 Beans, wax, lb 16 @ .20 Beets, new, cwt 3.00 @ 4.00 Cabbage, new, Colo., cwt. 5.00 @ 5.50 Carrots, new, cwt 3.50 @ 4.00 Cauliflower, lb 15 @ .17 Celery, Colo 1.00 @ 2.00 Cucumbers, h. h., d0z.... 2.75@ 3.50 Leaf lettuce, h. h., doz.. .75@ 1.26 Lettuce, head, doz 1.00 @ 2.00 Onions, Colo., cwt 5.00@ 6.50 Potatoes, new, Colo 3.10 @ 3.75 Radishes, round, h. h 40@ .50 Radishes, long, h. h 35 @ .40 Turnips, new, cwt 3.00 @ 3.50 HAY AND GRAIN. Grain. (Buying price (bulk) carloads, f. o. b. Denver.) Corn, No. 3 yellow $2.85 Corn, No. 3 mixed 2.80 Oats, per cwt 2.65 Barley, per cwt . 2.70 Hay. Timothy, No. 1, ton $28.00 Timothy, No. 2, ton 27.00 South Park, ton 27.50 Alfalfa, ton 24.50 Second Bottom No. 1, ton 26.00 HIDES AND PELTS. Denver Price List. Dry Flint Hides. Butcher, 16 lbs. and up $ .35 Butcher, under 16 lbs .35 Fallen, all weights .33 Bulls and stags .18 Culls -15 Dry salt hides 5c per lb. less. Dry Flint Pelts. Wool pelts $ .30 Short wool pelts .25 Butcher shearings .15 Bucks, saddles and pieces of pelts ........ .13 No. 2 and murrain shearings .10 Green Salted Hides, Etc. Cured hides, 25 lbs. and up, No. 1 $ -20 Cured hides, 25 lbs. and up, No. 2 .19 Bulls, No. 1 .15 Bulls, No. 2 .14 Glues, hides and skins .12 Kip, No. 1 *3O Kip, No. 2 .28 Calf, No. 1 -^5 Calf, No. 2 -43 Branded kip and calf, No. 1.. .20 Branded kip and calf. No. 2.. No 1 8.00@9.00 No! 2 7.00 @B.OO Headless, 50c less. „ Ponies and glues 3.00 @4.00 Green Salted Horsehides. Green hides 2c per lb. less than cured. Part cured hides lc per lb. less than cured. METAL MARKETS. Colorado settlement prices: Bar silver, $1.34. Copper, pound, 18@19c. Lead, $6.75. Spelter, $8.27. Tungsten, per unit, $7.50@12.00. EASTERN LIVE STOCK. At Chicago. Chicago.—Hogs —Bulk, $13.50 @13.76; top $14.00; heavy, $13.45@13.80; me dium, $13.50@ 13.85; light, $13.60@13.80; light light, $13.00@13.50; heavy pack ing sows, smooth, $12.75@13.25; pack* ing sows, rough, $12.25 @ 12.75; pigs $12.25 @13.25. Cattle —Beef steers, medium and heavy: Choice and prime, SIB.OO @ 20.50; medium and good, $11.00@18.00; common. $8.50@11.00. Light weight; Good and choice, $13.00@20.00; common and medium, $8.00@13.25. Butcher cat tle: Heifers, $6.25@15.00; cows. $6.00@ 13.50; canners and cutters, $5.00@6.0Q Veal calves, $16.50@17.50. Feedei steers, $7.00@12.25; stocker steers, $6.09 @10.50. Sheep—Lambs, $15.25 @ 17.35; cull* and common, $11.50@15.00; ewes, me dium, good and choice, SB.OO @10.25; culls’and common, $4.50@7.75. CHICAGO PRODUCE. Chicago. Butter Creamery, 56@ 6 ° Eggs Firsts, 65@66%c; ordinary firsts, 64c; at mark, cases included, 64 V, 66c. Poultry—Alive, springs, 26c; fowls 1 x fii) 27c turkevs. 40c.