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Show THr SALVAGE WORK ON SCUTTLED AID UTAHNS UTAH - J'- - stopped.ar ,t- Vrp e,, The annual campfire of Utah Indian war veterans was eohclmletl a(T - Spf.'fig-villiTt- after three Hlu, vs Aflgu&tr15j f reunion. veterans from various pdltirs of a most., enjoyable participated dai2he?cch tlie-'-sfa- -- 5 bration. Farmers of Bountiful held an ind'g-- , nation meeting recently at which slops were thkeiV to prevent: the further of itheir (melon .patches, .by luirties of autoLstafrom &il):1Lake.a!,'.d surrounding points. yiiile walking in her sleep at her in Salt .Lake,.lboebe, Jlroivn, 13 ... home years of age, stepped out of a side window and fell three stories, but escaped with a sprained ankle 'and a se vere' Shot-k-The school censusja the Tenth pre-- j einct. of. the . Jordan, ..fschQyl, district shows a decrease of 3S9, .vheneoin-- . pared, with last year. This has been caused' by '"the mines reducing their forces. Lieut. Cl. C. Nutt of the "United Stales'aviation 'corps iirdiis- - Del iavi-lanplane arrived at My ton on August lfi.'ihtfvta made a successful and uneventful flight l'hiin SaA Lake-CitApparently while trying to find his way by a short cut tfbwA Uiebottin of the canyon, SimeOii SCntt, Id year of. age, of jnet death in a fall over a cliff in JJjirleys canyon. Two men Viml a wmiiaiilirh lithYal Murray under $100 bail, 'each 'awaiting investigations of tlie eUariter(pf .fifty wine. found on the gallons-toftl'.repremises they occupy. Wuter-usiniand dwners' at Centerville are considering a new irrigation district with citizens of .Bountiful. More water,., especially for lire truck gardens, must be obtained. Reports of the state school census so far received indicate ,1 bat; then;, will lie about rO00 fewer, children of school age in the .state, this year than there were last year. A seminary, winch will cost $!HKKI, is to be built at Kaysville by the Latter-daSaints church, to lie owned jointly by the North Davis ami South Davis stakes. Kssential features of what promises to be one of the largest Labor day have parades ever held in Salt been formulated by the committee in charge. Field men who have been outlj, making inspections report that thensugai beet crop in Cache county will be licav-ier Ilian 1ms been anticipated for some 'Ci.,' time. The hay crop has been excel eh t in Utah, with the exception of a few isolated spots where the drought was felt exceptionally heavy. lias Stephen II. Love of Sait Lake Utah been chosen chairman of slate committee of the Roosevyit. Memorial association. v , The War Mothers' of "Utilh at their meeting held at Salt Lako unanimousthe ly sustained a resolution indorsing nations. of league Wbfei kill1-eMark Monolli of Sunnysldtf Fuel of tttetjtulr in the colliery but company when he Ml .across a , y. Sait-Lake,- g y ' o J It '.j'''' . Tells of RediCross-iWorke- r Mar-- r vels of Reconstruction Surgery. - , . EASY TO GIVE MAN NEW FACE . i ' tTi Smm r. 1 - Brotighfto Hospital ia France With Countenances .Merely Blurs v Sent-AwaWith-:Noy,;i n mal Visages. . - ' f New York. Miss Eva Hammond of the American Red Cross who returned recently from Europe after, nearly, .five years service with the allied armies, nnd who wears decorations' of the British ancL French governments, told of the Vbltderful results achieved. In reconstructive surgery by the surgeons of the American and allied armies. Miss'IIammonfl, Nvhose home is in San Francisco, was attnrhed to the staff of the American Red, Cross hospital In Nejully, Fiance. f It is surprising hoWmaii? things can be' done to h man ity n sliell and leave him still Uvipg, Miss Hammond said. Awl the.thiugs , that can be done to make it worth while for him to go on livlng hre even more surprising. I - u : 1 I... "Dental surgery is on6 profession that has gone ahead .from the Impetus of the war in leaps and bounds. The marvels' that the doctors, of. dentistry performed were not entirely unknown before the war, but they were There-waIn the theoretical stage. ltd chance to put these theories into practice,' except lu widely isolated cases. Tlie war proved that those theories were sound and practicable ; It afforded them u means of, development. There Is nothing impossible in dental surgery now." hos- I have seen men come into that -s ! pital of ours wilh bloody blurs where their faces had been. Fed through tubes and kept alive, I have seen their remaining bits of skin stretched over the raw places, which filled with new flesh under careful treatment, and finally'- they Iin vA tgone out into the world with new faces. There was one man, I remember, who came in to us willi his entire face gone nothing left but one eye. We fed him through a tube; built-hia metal jaw. fitted with teeth, and made him look like, a human being again, except that he bad no nose only two nostrils. We found him a false nose and a pair of spectacles attached, hid-- ; ing jt jig scarred flesh around bis missing, eye, and making him look so mttch like another in a h1 that one would not have glanced at him a second time to note-- ' his deformity. Another pian came to us with the greater part of his face intact, but with no nose.- It had been shot off completely, leaving his flesh flat from chin to fofehead. We made him a nose to fit him. From the dace where his nose-h- ad joined to his forehead there hung a little wisp of skin. This was pulled down, stretched every day, and kept dry and healthy by an antiseptic powder. Finally It grew to the correct length for a nose. Then we opened his wrist and grafted a piece of bone to the place where his nose should have been, binding arm and face together until the operation was completed. Then we adjusted the skin, which filled out with healthy flesh, nnd ' there was a new nose ! Easy to Give Man New Face. A man whose face had been hanging down from below bis eyes, Miss Hammond says, was a simple case. Ills face was sewn back in place. ' I tnet him on the street in Paris. stoftisays. just two days before I sailed. and his face looked just as usual, except, for a slight scar which ran along .underhig eyes and across his I I V CLEARED OUT BOLSHEVIKI . - ; i 1a mlon. Boron t i J T j I j i i I T i J j f ':r ? ' i - ? He was assaulted, says Levey, tnoa, a class of beast by a that had been generally, sup- extinct.- posed Its color was light brown anil its body huge and bulky. There were no signs of wings, the legs were disproportionately massive, almost elephantine, and the three-toefeet Were simply ponderous," A small head rested on a long ostrich-likneck. The' moa ut- Ipred a deep, booming noise, ' says' Levey. 14-fo- e to-li- d i e you get it.: 1 I b?i j i j i .25 uarding. jj . -g- purity-proof preserving the delicious I the beneficial goody. t ! Vi Sill f I Uniunl . . . H,,' Zukauskux, commander iSilvcslriiH in chief of Llthmiiuin army, who lias cleared ills colinti-- of the Reds" alter liHK-h'- ' pit Abed fighting, and is now doing relief protecllng Americana Ini'ls says, work in Unit seel ion. General ZuknusUiis Is one of t he A most remarkable men In t lie war. hero of ninny buttles, distinguished In e war, successfully the ngnlnsl tin Hun, defended Llllninr-lnd alt r- ards the holslievlki. Russo-Jaimiirs- J 'A j t ft z .5 T I The Flavor Lasts "S ? rvv "Jt i SEALED TIGHT nose. In time it will almost disap, pear.- - A man who had been the victim of a freak shell which had ripped, out - - i building operations to a minimum during the war. For a time building virtually stopped. Funds that otherwise might have gone into homes, business blocks, nnd factories were invested in Liberty bonds. Nor have some of the causes which checked building operations disappeared with the; war; Materials' are almost ns scarce nnd in many cases more costly than they were during the Strugreduction of wages gle. Whatever may have occurred in some of the countries, there Is none In the United States, and ns a result there appears to he no definite program for the prompt and speedy erection of homes ir. the United States. ? dig w. fa , si His Idea of Bigness. the examinations at tlie close of school,, the fourth-gradteacher asked her history class to name the five most important men of war, i One boy, in all. seriousness, answered the question thus: General Pershing, President Wilson, General Foch, my big brother Tom nnd Andy Sullivans brother Pat. e the-recen- t .3 ft - During S.VJ .r 9. KEPT RIGHT. i a i0 n' f .?n - IMT! t GfrlV'tfeart. Mfcdlrn The modern girls hpartpls gn apgrt-mehouse! A number of young men ft. r- Thigflegjefr-thoeitup iebriifim demand for space, the higher rent she ' charges. . goiqqtimes the accommodations and living conditions become unAnd then Vconies the Inspeakable. evitable building boom. A new' apartment house goes up across the way. of the All but one or maybe two renters move out. One or both may has then retain' possession until--.tenpiled .up past 'all hopes of collection in full, when marriage ensues Kansas City Star. x nt 1 The Last Word. Mistress Now, Bridget, theres no use of further argument as to how the dish should be prepared, but our ideas on the subject are so different that it Is evident one or the other of us is n The Albatross, .i crazy. Tlte albatross spends its life, with Bridget True for ye,:: mum an sure it isn't yerself d be kapin a crazy the. exception of . a few weeks given cook. Boston Transcript. each year to nesting,- entirely at sea, and is on the wing practically all the ' ,J time. ' Furthermore lt does not proLonely 'Ab. You want to get away from peo- gress by flapping its .wings, as most Your bird! do, but seems to soar at will, ple," said, the doctor wisely. nerves are in a badly shattered con- rarely, If e'?r,giving a stroke of the dition.' ' You must get somewhere you wing, seeming to heed OO impetus. At nesting time, which; is: early in the will be entirely alone. "Alone! exclaimed the patient. year, the albatross repairs to an iso You have me wrong doctor. Im a fated Inland,' jilictL its one of flhe Crozet islands, in the southern Indian ocean, night watchman. or Tristan da Cttft.hn, n;the South . oeenn.., Deduction. a ,H i. J if .4 ' Whats a polyclinic, Jim? ' The quietest people often create the I dont know exactly, but I1 guess J". ,t Its a hospital for parrots. biggest, uoisfiam; At-lpt- . ; -- Mc-Ado- 1 o. IMtld tents and high cost of materials prevented People in This tlie construction of houses which the natural growth of population rendered Country Today Ti:an Ever necessary. .Then ennie Secretary Before: appeal for the restriction of Washington. The United Slates today Is facing the greatest shortage of houses sinee man ceased to live in caves nnd lints of brush and made for himself nnd family tlie hearth and heme that became the temples of civilization. During the recent session of lie National Association of Real Estate hoards, in Atlantic City, Secretary Rodfleld of tlie department of conimerce, declared Hint tlie .lation will require 1,000.000 additional homes during the current year to care for the growing population,' for whose speller no provision was made during the four years of war in Europe. In addition to the needs of tlie United States, Secretary Redfield declared Hint, in December, England, France and Belgium also will need 1,000,000 homes, not., to mention the requirements of Russia. Austria, Italy, Serbia, Roumatiia. Turkey nnd other nations in which millions of buildings were laid In ruins during the period of hostilities. War Caused Lack of Building. The perplexing situation now existing in the United States Is said to lie due entirely In the war. During Hie years of liostilllies, the scarcity and high wares of labor and iho scarcity con- - ? every one of his teeth, leaving him otherwise; unharmed, was supplied with new gums and a complete set of upper and lower false teeth. I have even seen a man with his brain bulging down over his eye from a jagged cut in his. skull., - The brain has been cnrefuliy pressed back in place, ''and lh head, fitted with a metal plate. This operation leaves the patient perfectly normal so far as his mental condition' Is concerned. He is,- however, unable to go about much In the hot sun, os strong heat affects him, and lte'canfifit drink because It irritates ' v Is the brain." Sometimes, Miss Hammond said, a patient would be brought into the hospital with his leg smashed to pieces. Instead of making a hurried amputation. every effort was made to save the injured limb. It was put into a frame, and in a short time the smashed bones would take a position,' knit, and begin to grow together, while the splintered lilts would gradually work their way out of tlte leg through the flesh. B Hence the sealed package J .. , it -im- ? fore:Houss!e:s Great Scarcity and High Cost of Materials Check Building Operations Little Work Done During Past Four Years. r ' I' good, we i Million Homes Needed in U. S. SITUATION, DUE TO THE WAR O'- - rl must KEEP It stood until t Munchausen, lie Daily Express, is rein- car.-ed in tlie person of Ivan Levey who describes an encoun- tor Witii a prehistoric moa in tlie wilds of North Island, New Zea- ' land. say- - I VRIGLEYS Prehistoric Bird ; ; t not enough to make Explorer Attacked by I f " flavors. Three ' 1 - , r iOldi'eVs !F -- asspu Doctors Remake Wounded Heroes - , i - ol tlie salvage work being done by the British on ilie war vessels winch tlie German crews scuAled in Scapa , ... The. fifth annual' instil ute of thd In (ermountain ClH'islIun Workers, uiuhT the direction of the Christian Workeis' council, which includes tlie Bap- , Moth-tist, Congregational, odist and Presbyterian churches, will., 27. be held at Salt Lake, August 20 to Because tlie public domnln In the stale Is under control of t lie, federal government, Utah Is annually losing more than $1,500,000. This sum would uccnm to tlie states treasury if tluf I!) acres of public bmd in Ulnli were under shite mumigemout, It Is f i. fip ,A - - t-- IP ff 'I - r glaimod. iWRIGLEYSJS. t - JF year. the Deposits In Salt Luke bhnks for Ihosi seceded i 30 year ended June for the umT period of 1D1 S by $0.008,'e FLEET GERMAN .we mining machine..!'.1 While bunting chicken in Baradisi canyon. John Burt of. Brigham Citj was accidentally shot in the arm lj ; si ray buek.Jliof. as tin,, looted si been .has Salt Lake next plage of meeting for the Utah Federation .of Women's Clubs, Octobei 13. H arid 15. Tlie seliool census 'of Salt Luke, jus! for the present year, show a decree ofHH-- from tiiat (rf Iasi U00. TTTATT resi-jent- -- in 'fTOTTT CrTY M OESEEH W TsTpERFEtT GOH e men with teams, of llain fi l y and 'Wanvn' went hi a body to the farm of Mrs. J. Milkman, whose husband was killed tit t lie Ilarrisville crossing a month ago, dug the potato crop, jacked them and placed them on the railroad ea rjf at Plain City. The establishment of a clearing bouse for the relief work of the'cl'f.v' atul county to be under the direction of the Weber county chapter of tin American Red Cross Is planned by the members of the relief societies and organizations of the churches of Ogden and Weber county. Utah business men and farmers are , fielder wages, ,fOi their stenographers, salesmen and farm hands Ilian they are the men and women to v. bom they are entrusting the education of their children, according to O. X. Chib?, state superintendent of public instruction: Bennett, aged 13, was killed Iroyel at Antelope when he was'1 nfniovt by a 'wagon. The boy was hitching a team to it wagon whyn one oftlie horses became frightened and kicked Flow,., him. lie fell under theVagonkwliftdi be ran over him fief'di'e Seventy-fiv- MAMMOTH RFCORD V ja.-- . n; ljU jrLL'.t- This Drink Doesnt ' Change Its Price i ,'J ll - A Its quality doesn't vary, and it doesnt start a headache. -r ' ; r t Mi The Original VILLA RUNS FIVE MILES DAILY is pure and drug-freIt will agree with you, and its rich, robust flavor Mexican Rebel Leader Takes Up Physical Culture to Keep From Getting Fat. e. Francisco Villa is a culture recruit. he wns at Villa Ahumndn en attack Juarez, he was seen by of that little town doing set tlnv-uexercises every morning in front of tlie home of Jesus Ysletns, which '-- had appropriated ns his headEl Bn so, Tex. physical When route to residents makes it a big favorite. ' I. Postum is a real part of any meal for old and young. quarters. J ' H -- After fifteen minutes of this the rebel lender would run (he full length of the main street of Villa Aliurfimla twenty times to cover the five miles he set ns n task for himself each day. Keep tlie slomnch from getting fat. It makes riding easier." lie said to ou of tlie Interested specie im-s i 1 r i ntii There's a Reason tt |