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Show 9 THE CITIZEN ae For Food Values In The Foods You Buy r nt oil cannot be happy unless ou are healthy, and you cannot be healthy unless you eat food with real nourishment in it. IS3IEAD food of foods-!3T Iflour and milk and com0.00 pressed yeast combined into :?a loaf that has an appetite satisfaction in every slice. Bread is your Best Food i jEat more of it. Your neighW 0 borhood grocer sells ROYAL 1 BREAD ING Royal Baking Go. Here .1 your opportunity to insure against embarrassing errors in spelling, pronunciation and poor choice of words. Know the meaning of puzzling war terms. Increase your efficiency, which results in power and success. VEBSTERS NEW INTERNATIONAL nsr m DICTIONARY is an teacher, a universal question answerer, made to meet your needs. It is in daily use by i cessful man and women the world over. 400.000 Words. 3700 Pages. 12,000 Biographical Entries. 30,000 Geographical Subjects. QUID PRIZE, (Highest Award) all-know- ing hundreds of thousands of suc600011-lustratio- Panama-Pacif- ic REGULAR ectkal Eftt and ns. Exposition. Editions. DVDIA-FAPE- R WRITE for Specimen Pages. FREE Pocket Maps if you name this paper. i G. &C. MERRIAM CO., Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. renin gi niiiiniiii isk for use sil- - ' ii !. t j &89RMMmUS(HniRoS MgflBgHeeeeeeeeieeeiieeeieeeeei pa- - J. R. Sabres lar is H. W. Lane SEBBEE & LANE D t I i Mining and Industrial s 8tocks and Bonds i Liberty Bonds Bought dent dent dent ihlsr ihler Wasatch i i 14 i IISliaiMIlF Ml 4010 Exchange St., Salt Lake City. I AMONG THE NEW BOOKS 8 illllijiimiiiHl.iM...m. A PRI80NER OF TROTZKYS. By Colonel Andrew Kalpaschnikoff. Published by Doubleday, Page & Co. . Prisoner of the Bolshevik! for five months, the author of these memoirs nursed many hatreds and suspicions which he imparts to the world. It is an absorbing narrative by an intelli. gent observer who gives the impression of being entirely honest but inclined to suspect the worst of those he dislikes. He devotes much of his attention to that notable American radical, Colonel Raymond Robing, to conduct himself in such fashion while in Russia as to make himself a mystery. If he was guilty of all that the indignant author ascribes to him he was, to say the least, an active aide of Lenine and Trotzky. The colonel recalls one incident that will not be forgotten by the American public. Early in the Red regime our own ambassador, Mr. Francis, was accused by Trotzky of trying .to supply the enemies of the revolution with arms and other supplies. The truth was that his aid had been enlisted in an effort to send Red Cross ambulances to Roumania, but Trotzky made a great to do about the affair, misrepresented it and talked of slaughtering all Americans who opposed the revolution. It was Colonel Robins, if the writer is to be credited, who gave into Trot-zky- s hands the American embassy papers on which the charges were who-mana- ged founded. His sojourn in prison the author also attributes to the activities of Robins; so does David R. Francis, who was our ambassador in Russia and who has penned a foreword to the book. Francis indicts Robins inferentially as a sly intrigant whose meddling in precarious moments of negotiation hampered the endeavors of the ambassador to stay the frantic Muscovites on their road Jo ruin. Robins found the Bolsheviki congenial while the ambassador abhorred them, and there are evidences that their friendship for Robins was of no mean benefit to the allies in a crisis. One has a picture of him in Mr. Hards transcription of his experiences, sitting on the steps of the rostrum in Smolny institute, mitigating by his presence there the speeches of Lenin and Trotzky to the revolution. They depended on him to explain them to the allies. General Judson, the am- bassadors military attache, says unofficially that Colonel Robins was a big factor in the outcome of the war. By his efforts to connect the Soviet government with the allies he deferred to the great the peace of and disadvantage of the enemy; through him a German army was kept waiting on the eastern front when otherwise it would have been available for fighting in the west. Brest-Litovs- j ' . i Colonel Kalpaschnikoff comes of a famous family of Russian soldiers. He himself was secretary to the cabinet of ministers and was an attache of the Russian embassy to Washington before the war. He enlisted as a private in the Twenty-firs- t Flying column of the Siberian corps, becoming later its commander, and after several wounds was made assistant to Colonel Anderson, chairman of the American Red Cross mission to Roumania. He was married, after the armistice, to Miss Celia Campbell Higgins, an American woman, and is now living in New York, his considerable Russian property having, been confiscated by the bolsheviki. The Colonel (Kalpaschnikoff) began to suspect Colonel Robins even before his arrest on the night of December 20, 1918. He had been trying to transport to Jassy, in Roumania, a hundred or more trucks and motors, donated through him by elemosynary Americans, and he had found Colonel Robins attitude toward that enterprise unsatisfactory. After his imprisonment Ambassador Francis asked Colonel Robins to request his release by Trotzky, but Colonel Robins said that it could not be done. Trotzky, Robins explained, had unearthed a plot showing Kalpaschnikoffs connection with General Kaledin, the Cossack commander of the south Russian forces opposed to the soviet. That very day Trotzky in a speech in the Grand Opera house, had denounced the American ambassador and Kalpaschnikoff as conspirators to overthrow the soviet government. In his speech Trotzky read extracts from the secret correspondence of the embassy, available only to. the ambassador, to Kalpaschnikoff and to cried At last, Raymond Robins. Trotzky, the American ambassador must break his golden silence. He (Continued on Page 14.) Automotive Machinists and Electricians Workmanship of the Better Class we go anywhere 333-3- 5 stop wosrthiu about the grief and troubles of your ear. Bring it to me and I will band back you I sar more satisfactory thas i i you can imagine. . Particular Work for Particular People. 1 My Customers Gome Back. Edward Moyle Successor to South 3rd East .1 I. - HARRY E. EATON t i i Expert Auto Mechanics i p I In Our New Home 170 So. 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