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Show TIIE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH I calities, with an aggregate population of several hundred thousand. Four thousand eight hundred and sixty-nin- e homes connected for the first time with sanitary sewers. Four thousand nine hundred and fifty-tw- o homes provided with safe water supplies In place of contaminated water supplies. Radical improvement of 432 public milk supplies. Such results Indicate that the plan of the work Is both comprehensive and effective," continues Doctor Lumsden. They mean prevention of human illness, promotion of human health, conservation of economic resources. They stand In Importance to our national welfare second to no other results obtainable from equivalent Investment of public funds. The total expenditure for the sup3 port of the 72 local projects was In the fiscal year 1924. Of this sum an aggregate of $465,185.09 was provided from state, county and mu2 sources; nicipal governmental came from civic sources, such as local health associations, local Red Cross chapters and the International Health board, and $43,584.52 came from the rural sanitation funds of the public health service. Thus this Investment of federal funds was met with odds of over 12 to 1. The proportion of the expenses covered with funds from local sources Is significant; It gives some Idea of the stimulating effect of of the federal govthe ernment in this vitally Important nationwide field. Rural Health Work Reviewed Lowden Unwilling to Succeed Wallace Frank O. Lowden, former governor of Illinois and a national figure, is possibly the leader In the nationwide movement to promote marketing among the farmers. When Secretary of Agriculture Henry O. Walluce died recently and President Coolldge lntlmuted that he should be glad to hear from the nutional farm organizations as to the choice of his successor there was a general sentiment In favor of Lowden. lie headed off the movement, however, and I am aware that It Is often said that there are too many farm organizations. That may be true but I am sure that there Is not enough real, practical, effective farm organization to put the business of farming upon an equality with other Industries In this highly organized world. Farmers have the power within themselves to effect such organizations. If they can be persuaded of the necessity of organization they can now organize independently of the Department of Agriculture. If they are not so persuaded the Department of Agriculture can help but little. I am convinced that I can be of more service in helping to bring about the more effective organization of farmers outside the Department of Agriculture than I could In the department. For the head of the department must of necessity devote the lurge.st part of his time to administrative routine. Wyoming Again Blazes Political Trail Thirty-fou- r OUIIIIOII" OIIMln IIIOIIIKItlllll IMIIMIII IIIIIM milHIIlM MtMUl MHMIMUHil ago, Wyoming jears to territory felt sufllclcntly grown-uput on the long pants of statehood. The strangely assorted group of cowmen, homesteaders, prospectors and lawyers who framed her progiessive laws cudgeled their bruins for some gesture with which to demonstrate their superiority over the backward and decadent East. As a result, votes for women" was written Into an American states constitution for the first time. Today, Wyoming Democrats have blazed still another untraveled p trail. $73,-022.1- 30,-(X- x Military Camps Trained 275,000 The-turno- Widely read and well Informed as to political Issues and government problems, Mrs. Ross yet Is the perfect type of homemaker. She plans to keep house" for the state ns she did for William Ross, practicing the homely virtues of. rigid economy, neatness, orderliness and efficiency. She was born lnSt. Joseph, Mo., where her father was engaged In merchandising. She was educated there and In Omaha, where she resided when she married William It. Ross of Tennessee, a briefless barrister, who recently had hung out his shingle In Cheyenne, where he was a stranger. ut iiiwwinHiiiiwwwtmHHtwwMWtwwMiMWwmwiwtiwiiiiwtiwiMiwiiwiMWiiwiiiuHiHwwiwwHHumwwMwiwmuiMHmtmnwHwwnwiwmumnuwMwuiHWUwnwniniMniiuiiiiimmtniiumMmiMa coming step-daught- Austro-Hungaria- MfMM WWMIHMHMW iMMnnilMMIIIiaiimilMMWUniM w HlltHIIMIIOSnMn Radios 13,000 Miles Stanley Baldwin Now at British Helm France. A wireless amateur here has succeeded in establishing communication with an amateur in wave New Zealand, using an length. The distance being 13,000 miles. Nice, HimiWMHHiimwnmwMHW Steel-Maltlan- Pinkham medicines. I have used them as occasion required for twenty years, and my three sistershave also used them, and always withthemost gratifying results. During tne Change of Lire I had tne usual distressing hot and I am flashes, insomnia, etc., symptoms pleased to testify to the wonderful re- sults I obtained from the Vegetable Compound. I heartily recommend it to any woman and 1 will be pleased to answer any inquiries that might be sent to me through the publication of my testimonial' Mrs. H. L. Bradford, 109 Armstead Street- - Phoebus, Virginia. Consider carefully Mrs. Bradfords letter. Her experience ought to help you. She mentions the trials of middle ago and the wonderful results she obtained from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If you are suffering from nervous troubles, irritability, or if other annoying symptoms appear and you are blue at times, you should give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial For sale by druggists everywhere. Snow an Effective Substitute for Ice In some foreign countries, where natural difficulties have stimulated human inventiveness, it Is quite usual for snow to be collected during the coldest part of the winter and buried down in specially dug So intensely cold do these pits. blocks of compressed snow become under this treatment that after a few hours they freeze into solid lumps of ice, which keep almost indefinitely and can be dug up w hen required, says the Detroit News. Especially in very hot countries these pits are frequently situated on mountains. Macedonia is one of the countries which adopted this method of insuring an adequate supply of ice during the summer. It is a remarkable fact that an Ice supply laid down in this way at the beginning of the winter will last right up to the end of a summer consisting of many months of almost unbearable heat FOR OVER 20 YEARS n Stanley l.aldwia (portrait hcre-- " ith) is once more at the helm of the Lritish ship of state. The labor government of Prime Minister MacDonald. following Its defeat at the polls, signed. Mr. Rnldwln was summoned to the palace and received the king's request to form a Conservative administration. The personnel of the new Conservative cabinet, as approved by King George, Is ns follows: Prime minister and first lord of the treasury, Stanley Rnldwln; lord of the privy seal, marquis of Salisbury; lord president of the council and leader of the house of lords, tnarquis of turzon; lord chancellor. Lord Cave; chancellor of the exchequer, Winston Churchill; home secretary, Sir William .lojnson-IIlcks- ; colonial secre tary, L. C. M. S. Amery ; secretary of war, Sir Laming Worthington-Evnn- s . secretary for India, Lord Rirkenhead ; air minister, Sir Samuel Iloare; first lord of the admiralty, W. C. Frldgeman; president of the board of trad.', Sir Philip Lloyd Greume; minister of health, Neville Chamberlain; minister of agriculture, Edward F. L. Wood; secretary for Scotland, Sir John Giltnour; president of the board of education, Lord Eustace Percy; minister of labor, ; attorney general, Sir Douglas Sir Arthur Hogg. The cabinet contains two great surprises. Oue Is the Inclusion of Winston Churchill In the great office of chancellor of the exchequer. The other Is tha absence of Sir Robert Horne, the former chancellor, who is Mr. Baldwins greatest rival far the leadership of the Conservative party. The appointment of Austen Chamberlain as foreign min lster Is hailed with approval. Phoebus, Virginia. Having this opportunity I justcannot refrain from saying a word of praise for the Lydia E. Relief Sure FOR OJ Countess Catherine Karolyi, whose to this count r.v caused such a stir among Immigration officials, Is an Interesting personage. And she Is a personage, for not s'nce Louis Kossuth rode' down Rrondvvny amid the thunder of cheers has Hungary sent to the United States a more romantic exile than the countess. She Is the of Count Julius last foreign minister of the empire, and wife of Count Michael Karolyi, once heir to estates worth $30.(XX),(X)6, then President of the short-live- d Hungarian republic of 1018 and 1019, and finally a fugitive before the white terror" of Admiral Horthy. In a sense Countess Karolyi Is an even more appealing figure than was Kossuth, for she and her husband fought against odds fur more terrific than he had to face. The Karolyls had everything that aristocratic Hungary could offer. Their blood was counted with the best In Europe, and their social position was so high as to place them next to royalty. Countess Karolyi, moreover, was and Is one of the most beautiful women In Europe, and the and her husband have sacrificed these advantages for an Ideal the ideal of democracy. Recommends Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound well-presse- d Best Angora Doe at Southern Fair Countess Karolyi Is a Romantic Exile Hr. Bradford men to be graduated from these camps since they vere first established on a post-wa- r basis up to 70,000. Second Lieutenants Needed. It has been estimated that 10,000 young men must come into the corps annually as second lieutenants If it is to be kept at adequate strength, and the reserve officers training corps is expected ultimately to produce 7,000 of these young reserve officers a year, the other 3,000 to come from the citizen camps, regular army. National Guard and other sources. There are In the colleges and schools of the country 325 units of the reserve officers training corps, with a. total enrollment at the close of the last school year of 103,894 under training. From this source In the last The Important Thing five years, up to September 4 of this Mr. Rolling Pin I know youve been year a total of 9,817 second lieuten- mixed up with a lotta bad eggs, Miss ants had been commissioned In the but I love you. Will you reserve corps. The number actually Egg Beater, me? marry at the camps, 33.9S3 for 30 days, was Miss Egg Beater That depends on a big Increase over last year, while how much dough you can roll out. the number . of applications received The Grocer. Progressive amounted to 53, (XX). Of that number 44,000 proed to have the physical and other, qualifications necessary for admission, so that approximately 10,000 youngsters were disappointed in their INDIGESTION hope to go through a training camp course last summer. A phase o( the organized reserve corps work during the summer to which the War department attaches particular importance is the application for the first time of the principle of unit training to these organizations. Lnder that practice a very considerable number of reserve officers assigned to specific units of the organized reserve were given the oppor25 AND 75 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE tunity to get together with their comrade officers of the same units and to function as a team under their own officers In dealing with mobilization problems such as reception, organization, equipment and preliminary training of the men they would command haarlem oil has been a worldin war. wide on the face The Defense day test, remedy for kidney, liver and of official reports from all over the bladder disorders, rheumatism, country, served to bring out sharply lumbago and uric add conditions. the benefit of this unit training scheme. War department officials say. The striking success of that test, from a purely military point of view, it is stated, lay in the efficiency displayed .CAB 3 U L E 6 by these groups of reserve officers In handling the limited mobilization In correct internal troubles, stimulate vital their own areas. organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. n own. EXPERIENCE $583,-791.7- l Nellie Ross will be the first woman chief executive of a state, regardless of Ma Fergusons election In Texas. For Our Nell," as they call her In Cheyenne, was Immediately called upon to take up the reins struck from her husbands hands by death, filling Ids unexpired term before beginning her Co-Opera- tes pre-scho- said: rtlHtMtlMMIlMMlilllHMINHMMIIMHiMMHUUMIHIMUIUIMHIHIImMIIHtmUllMIlHIIlIXIK ministered to 9,514 persons in epidemic goiter districts. Forty-seve- n thousand two hundred and two visits to homes of cases of communicable disease to advise and show the nfflicted households how to Washington. The tremendous good prevent spread of the Infections. Five accomplished by the United States thousand nine hundred and eight vispublic health service In its by health nurses to prenatal cases with county and state agencies, In to advise with and assist expectant protecting rural United States against mothers In carrying out hygienic and disease, is shown by a review of the physiological measures making for work Just issued by L. L. Lumsden, healthy mothers and healthy babies. surgeon of the health service. The Twenty-on- e thousand and two hundred review covers the fiscal year ended and thirty-on- e infants and children of June 30, 1924, and applies to work age examined and over In rural sanitation which Is conducted home visits by health nurses 'or in support of and as a part of whole-lim- e health officers to demonstrate hygienic local health service. It does not measures for the promotion of the include ull activities of health and the protection of the lives the service In rurul communities. It of Infants. Thirty-on- e thousand eight Is shown that the federal service cohundred and thirty-sipersons Inocuoperated In demonstration projects In lated for protection against typhoid rural health work In 72 counties. In fever. 10 states. One thousand three hundred and The appropriation for the rural twenty persons treated effectively for health work of the public health serv- relief from hookworm disease and for ice In the fiscal year 1924 was $50,000. the prevention of the spread of the At the termination of the lisoul year Infection. Marked reduction in the 1923, $10,817.82 remained unexpended. spread of malaria lu hundreds of lo Thus, $00, 817.82 was available for the support of activities In the fiscal year 1924. ' Of this sum, $43,584.52 was expended In allotments for projects In counties and $4,403.55 was expended for administration, supervision of local projects, and special studies of the problem of rural sanitation. The unexpended balance of the total sum available was included In allotments to some of the projects which, because of local circumstances, could not be completed by the end of the fiscal year. The Reports to Major General reviewer cites the following accomHines Show Work of plishments In the year: Last Summer. Some Accomplishments. Public lectures presenting the principles and details of sanitation to than 250,000 Washington. More more than 270, (XX) persons. More than men received some degree of Intensive 155,000 sanitary inspections of premmilitary training under the War deises, with explanation of findings to partment's supervision last summer. oecupnnts or owners of the properties. The exact number shown In reports Physical examination of over 192,500 now before MaJ. Gen. John Hines, school children, of whom over 109,000 chief of staff, was 275,630, of whom were found to have Incapacitating 23,250 were officers and the remainder physical defects, with notification of enlisted personnel. parents or guardians of defects found. The bulk of the training was In the Thirty-sevethousand three hundred and sixty-fou- r recorded treatments ef- National Guard camps, where a total fecting correction of incapacitating of 130,515 men and officers were In of organized attendance. physical defects among school children, brought about by written noti- teserves amounted to 8,705, of whom fication to parents or guardians, mak- all but 492 were officers. The reing available proper clinical facilities, service officers training corps conand other activities of the county or tributed 7,012 to the grand total and Treat- the citizens military training camps district health departments. ments to correct Iodine deficiency ad 33,983, bringing the total number of Federal Service in Protective Measures in 16 States. FROM PERSONAL This beautiful animal was adjudged the finest Angora doe at the Southern fair this fail. She is owned by Floyd Harwood of Comstock, Texas, and Is two years old, with a dipping. S(M5 COLDS w24H0UR5 STAMOAPD j 5 LA0RIPPE"3 CD. Michigan; oEiaco. ztat and his colleagues that there had been a war In which Germany was defeated. Have Good Hair WAR-SCARRE- D That, however, was before the And Clean Scalp Twisted Mug society came into being. 4 Now its members ore hoping to build Heroes Who Were Disfigured by popular n soldier as ever lived. Is pres- - a special hospital and home for themSoap and Ointment ident. He possesses but one eye. an Shells Form Organization where the difficult treatment selves, Work Wonders v . aluminum a chin atm mushroom nose, in France. be Try OtirNew Shaving Stick. his cheeks are lined with scars and necessary maycan beobtained and where they always together, such of Paris. For a fraternal organization his eyelids devoid of lushes, yet no- them as are still celibate in a spot of to exist under the incorporated name body is prouder of his appearance honored serenity. of the "Twisted Mug society, com- titan Colonel Pieot unless k Is, perThey are possibly the only men in tils children. posed entirely of men with ugly an! haps,' world who take pride in their uglithe Marshal Ietain, who is honorary vvurped faces, might seem humorous ness, the only men to whom ugliness reduce Inflamed, swollen if It were not for the fact of its war president of the Twisted Mugs, Is the is a mark of the (will greater respect. flits. Sprains, Braises, With a large and vigor- only person nlldiated with the society association. Soft Bunches; Heals ous personnel, which Is not, fortunate- who can boast of resemblance to an Bolls, Poll Evil, Qulttor, to Last the Fistula and infected The rest are ly. in any danger of increasing un- ordinary human being ores quickly as it is a like of Colonel war Itself Plcot Montreal. When intrudes them and less another upon many Giuseppe Seraflni, positive antiseptic and the scarred soil of France, the Twist- much worse. One veteran has obtained youngest of the four Ilochelaga bank germicide. Pleasant to use: does not blister or bandits hanged here, walked to the ed Mug society Is as honored an or- the record of having his face operated remove the hair, and ganization as any that exists in France upon 62 times since the war; n:no scaffold he carried In the sole of a you can work the horse. S2J0 per bottle delivered. of them less than five times. Five of shoe three slender steel saws, it betoday. Book 7 A tree. the ugliest and needless to say the came known. The saws were discovAnd well it might be. Every memV. F. TOUNG, lac 510 Lynn St SpriagteM, Miu. the were when ered Italian's Versailles footwear was at present ber of It has an artificial nose or jaw, proudest or is so disfigured hy war wounds and when the peace treaty was signed as examined after bis body had been cut operations ns to make his face a piti- a special and honored guard for M. down. How the saws came to Sera-finl- s BATHE YOUR EYES Dm Dr. Thompson 'a Hyewater. possession ban not yet been ful caricature of the human counte- Clemeneeau and as a special and honBay at your druggist's or U Brockdorff-RantRiver. Troy. NVY. Booklet. M. reminder ored for Colonel Plcot, as brave and nance. i TWISTED MUG SOCIETY FOR FACES Guticura Hoed |