TUfc iStlfl: UMA1LA, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 14, 1!H. 2 i t LEFT JILTED GIRL TO DIE OF POISON trot to Jframa Alibi by Meant of Letter Befor Visiting Girl ' in Woodi. ADMITS IKPEOPIR RELATIONS CHICAGO. Fea. II. William II. Orpet. University of Wisconsin junior, who li itld to bare left Marlon Frances Lambert, whom he had jilted, to die of poison In Helm's woods at Lake Forest, a sub urb, was charted with murder to ds? and held In the Wankeran Jail without ball. Orpet. who Is 20 years old, is said by Ralph J. Dady, state's attor ney at.Waukegan, to hare admitted to' Vim that he nad been intlmat with the girl, who was hut 18 years old. He is said to hare stated fur ther that Miss Lambert had feared for four months that she was to be came mother despite drugs which fee purchased for her arid which wade her 111. , Make Trig. prpet. It Is charted. made a secret trip from Madison to Lake Forest last Tues day nlgM. Hs called the slrl on the tel. ephone end made an appointment which waa kept In the woods next morning. At tr. Inlsrvlaw Orpet aald ha told her he was to marry a Miss relestla Touker. It leseUl that she then took a quick-acting vdisen' and that Orpet saw her die. Frightened, be rushe away and caught a train tack to Mediaon. The next day (Thursday) the body waa found. Before leaving- Madison. Orpet la said to' have tried to arrange an alibi IIS wrote a letter to Mlaa Lambert and left It In the hands of a friend to bo mailed Wednesday afternoon. At that time he was on hie way back to the university. He bad left bis room at a bosrdlng house In a condition to subtest that ha had occupied it Tuesday night Neremal geaeat Teacher. iff Touker ta said to be an Instructor In chemistry at a normal college at De Kiln. TTT It Is said that she was a schoolmate of Orpet at Lake Forest be fore he went to the university.. The pris oner Is an ethletle-looking young man, 4r.ii fa. reaiiiatlon college garb. To a reporter he eaid: "I met her by appointment In the woods. I told her not to tell anyone I was coming-. I mussed up my bed tn the boarding house at Madison so my land lady would think I had bees there. I ar rived at Lake Forest late Tuesday night. I ealied bar by telephone at her home on the Jonas Kuppenheiiaer farm. I told her I would be waiting the next morning at the Beared Heart station of the Chi cago St Milwaukee nectrlo tine. I saw her when she passed toward the station with her chum, Josephine Darts. I was hiding behind a tree and beckoned to her. Soon she came back. i -- Tttswaga with He. fVe started walking. I told her I was threuga with her.' She cried and begged me not to give her up. We walked end tsifced In the woode about two hour. "Finally I told her thet-e wss no use talking sny longer that I had made up toy mind I was going to marry Miss celeetia Touker. I started away. T heard her cry out for. me to eome back. I kept en walking. "i was some distant sway when I turned train. J saw her fall to the ground. Z ran back. I saw she was dyin. ' I remained with her until I was sure she was dead. Then I hurried to the sta tion end took sn electric ear and earns to Chicago. I caught a train at Chicago for .Madison, Then I sent a letter to her. 1 did not tell anyone about what had happened beoause I feared It might reflect on her good name." O. E. Orpet, father of the prisoner and uerintendent of the Cyrus MoCormtrk estate at Lake Forest, retained James It wukerson, former United States district attorney here, to defend his son. Other Things to Be Cleared. state's Attorney Dady at Weukegaa said tonight; "We had tu charge Orpet with murder because It was the only way we could hold him. He is the man who was with the girl, but there are ether things to be cleared up. "We haven't tound where tbe poison came from and we have not fathomed why Orpet waa so careful so frame an allM." Miss Touker' hem called ever the long alliance telephone tonight, but elicited only the statement that she was too til to answer the telephone. Others in tbe house. Including her mother, Mrs. J. C. Touker of Chicago, declined to an swer questions. ' It was learned that Miss Touker was isaen in last But:. , Defectives Given Chanco to Serve (Correspondence of the Associated Preea) londox, Feb. l-Instructione have Issued to the local recruiting offices not to reject a prospective recruit simply be cause he ts unfit for general military service. Men who ere not up to the physical standard required tn active cam paigning will be accepted for boras serv ice. garrison duty at borne and abroad, and clerical and other sedantary army occupations. Also reservation Is made for men capable of helping to build roads and of working on defenses. This new order has come Into effect since the close of the original Derby enrollment scheme, end perhaps a large number of rejected Derby men will now have to be re examined. . UNIVERSITY OF KIEL NOW C0LLECT1NQ POETRY ON WW (Correspondence of the Associated Press) KIEL. Feb. 1. The University of Kiel has begun the collection ef all the poetry of tbe war which has more than medi ocre merit. Requests have gone out to all poets of reputation, to ail newspe. pera. megaslnes and publishers, to for ward to the university anything that may seam to them to be worthy ef a t'lwe tn the collection. Including prose rMLs, songs with or without music, nor. els and 0 Te Tfcrew Off Col S a and Pre vest ferle. Take LAXATTVJ5 BROMO Q.ITNINC It neatrtys germs, sets as a tonic and laxative, and bslpe to keep the system ta hecltby condition. There lc only one "BROMO QVIS1ST.." K. Y. GROVE"! !jfjtjre on box. ISc. AdvtriiemL. STORY OF MURDER RETOLD Grare of Alexander and Drat, His Queen, Killed Thirteen Tear Ago, Uncared For, VICTTKS OF A COITSTTRACT (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) BELORADR. Jan. I.-The last of the house of Obrcnovltoh, the murdered Alexander, lies In a little chapel In the Belgrade cemetery, forgotten hy con queror and eonqitered alike. Beside htm rests Queen Drags, the women for whose sake he broke off relations with his father and whoss Influence upon him un doubtedly led to the sordid tragedy that extinguished this royal line. The chapel elands In the center of a negieefed grave ysrd. It Is a primitive building, a larger sample of the typical Serbian peasant's cottage, without ems. mentation ef any kind. It la of brick. rudely plastered on the outside. Onl? a cross carved Into a tablet giving the dste of erection shows thst It Is not an ordinary house or even a substantial hem. Bullets here bored holse through two ef the plain glass windows, and hers made blisters In a half doxee places on the plain sheeMtvm doers. The street flrMlne; was a half mile sway, but the modern Infantry rifle has a long range, and the chapel stands on ground elevated somewhat above tbe scene ef the street battles. . A few Hungarian soldiers are Quartered tn a building 100 yards away from the chapel. None ef them had any Idea where the key to the chapel wss to be found. Ths Associated Frees representa tive finally crawled through a small hole In the wall, which appeared to hare been made by a ehetl which failed ta e. nlod. Prsttered bricks and mortsr lay on the floor Inside. eered eat meats Tore, The scene waa depressing. In the middle of the floor lay a box containing books, dust-covered and tn disarray. The high alter hsd been shoved back Into a smalt ante-room. Ths sacred vestments, soms of them torn and muddled, were strewn about the floor and on the altar. A pic ture of a saint. Its protecting glass splintered, lay faee down. A bullet had found Its way into one ef the crude moral paintings. Mortar dust lay deep ever everything. ! The correspondent had been Informed that the murdered king and queen were burled In this chapel, but there waa noth ing In sight even remotely resembling a royal tomb. Near one corner was a plain lettered slab, flanked by two wooden crve see. ' In Cyrllllen letters on the slab were the names of two of ths older mem bers of the Ohrenorttoh family. Right end left stood a crude Roman cross of wood. On ths c roes-bar ef the crass at the light was rudely lettered "Alexander Obrenovltch." The corree ponding bar en the cross at the left bore the name "Drafts, ObrenovHch.' There wag not an other letter on either cross, no date ef birth nor death, no word to Indicate that the persons buried here had once been kins; and aueen of the country. In the more than thirteen years that hare elapeed stnoe the murder, the crosses have not even been set upright. Tbsy ar simply leaned against the whitewashed weJl. A nickeled candlestick stands near the squalid tomb; at the ether aide la a tall, cylindrical sheet Iron stove, sole means ef beating the chapel. No guard rail separatee the tomb from the place occupied by, the worshippers. , Traa-edy ts sVeealle. The mean tomb In the little chapel re call the regicide that stirred ail the world, with the exception, according to the contemporary reports, of Berbla It eel f, In Jane, ISO. Trouble had been accumulating for year at the Berbiaa court. Alexander had alienated hie father Milan and offended various Dure pen courts by marrying Drag Maachln, widow ef an engineer and a former woman-tn-walting of Queen Natalie. Ne potism and general favoritism still fur ther embittered the old court party at Belgrade. Particularly was there wide disaffection among the army officer. What gave greater Impetus to the growing conspiracy against King Alex- snder was his act In suspending the con stitution on April T. 1903, declaring rold the mandates of the senator and council lors of state, dissolving the Bkupshtlna and setting aside various lewa. Including the proas law and the election law. Late tn the night ef June 10, ISM, a band ef conspirators, chiefly officials and army officers, and Including Colonel Maachln. brother of Prate's dead hue- band, overpowered or shot down tbe weak palace guard and forced their way to the deer of the royal apartments. This door waa blown down with dynamite and the king and queen were ehot or stabbed to death, and their bodies thrown out the window Into the small aarden sur rounding the palace. Harder Fleas Tern Dawa, Contemporary reports describe the mur der as taking place ta the old Xonak. The correspondent waa told here In Bel grade, however, that the tragedy eoeurred In a small garden bouse which stood midway between the eld and new Xoneks. This "murder house,' as It was termed, ts said to have been torn down at the order of King Peter, who did not care to have a perpetual reminder ef the tragedy before bis eyes. The mutilated bodies ef the murdered king and queen. It was reported at the time, were thrown to to rude wooden oof fins, carried to the chapel on the hand cart of a sewer cleaner and hurled un ceremoniously a few hours after the mur der. Thus ended the rule and the line of the Obrenovtteha, thirty-five years to a day after the greatest of the line. Prtnoe Michael, had been murdered tn the Top cider park weet of the city. Prtnoe Ale ssnder of the house of Karageorge vitch.. father ef the present Xing Peter, was thrice tried la Hungary for partici pation la that murder, but after a con vtctloa In one court, wae acquitted by two others. The conspiracy of laa was planned ta restore the Karageorgevttrh dynasty, and the murders of June, 1908, whether or twt they had that as thetr principal aim. resulted tn Its restoration: the Skupehttna eallsd Peter to the throne some weeks arter the tragedy. King Pater, who waa at ths time tn Genera, made a formal statement denying any complicity tn the Plot or any guilty foreknowledge of It. Nobody was punished for the murdens. Brief IViotslsaae. Tbe man who ta in krve with hlmeelf - . mv ie areuao. w,?"n never yc made a man sU'lt a fool than be was before he lA"? vWl!Lw"r 1 ina ht Place Jw ,f h th,na Somebody els Is in H. The man who ts slwsye ea sure that "'" a sooo thing when ha s It ts often taken for nu fclmaalr No man ever eels to be ee rice that he thinks he would be bappier U he didn t have eo much otoney. The mo who cannot handle today le no mat for tomorrow. It Is the man who Ooea his best that Ian t out snintng tr ha fails. Judse. UNI GIRLS REBEL AT BEAUTY PAGE Handsomest Tonne; Women Student! at Nebraska &efue to Pick Eight Loveliest. ALL OVTJt FLAX3 FOB ANNUAL (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, Feb. U-tSpeclaD-Ne- braska university girls lsst week declared their opposition to selecting eight of their number for a beauty section In ths university annual, the Oornhtisker. on the grounds mere beauty Is not In Itself standard of merit. t'titvereltr women have high Ideals of worth and service thst sre not com patible with dlscrtmlnstlon on the basic of physical charm. In th. opinions of ths Black Masques and flilver Serpents, the sooletlee who voiced the opposition of the oo-eds to the beauty section. nirls Tara It Devra. 'The Cornhuakr Mninmtif hmA eufed a joint meeting of the two societies and asked the girls to nominate twenty women students whom they considered the most beautiful in the university. Of this number eight were to be selected for the beauty section. But the girls rebelled, said that It waa an Insult rather than an honor to be naked to make the selection, and edvtaed the Cornhueker that the girls did not approve of the pro posed fsature of the year book. The decision of the girls at ft ret aroused a protest from the Comhusker staff, who declared that there would be a beauty section enyway. riaae Are Chastgsd. On second thought, however, they changed from this position, announced that the C'orfthtiaker should have only what the students wanted, and said that a "Nebraska girls' " section, containing the pictures of eight girls Known for their real worth of character and ability tn general lines ef student activity would probably be a part of the annual. Ghent University May Yet Become a Flemish Institution (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) BRUR8ELA, Jan. 81. The steps taken by Oerman Governor General von Bia sing to convert the University of Qhent Into a Flemish Institution meets a long cherished wish of the' Flemish popula tion of Belgium, As early as lsto, or only a decode after Belgium wes separated from Holland, a resolution wss Introduced In the Belgian Parliament for the establishment of a Flemish university. Nothing came ot this first attempt, but the movement never subsided. Four years sgo It gained such force that three Flemish members of the Chamber, representing each of ths three political parties, united in offering a resolution calling for Flemish university. Opponents of the measure argued that the Flemish !an guage waa net adapted to teaching sol- entlflo and high literary courses, as the Flemish people were without a literature ef their own, and even such prominent Flemings as U aeterlinok and Terhaeren were imnn, tknu iMflnanM hrouffht , against the ' propoltiour.: The political- economise, Xjedewyx ds Bast, wno pas died, sinoe the war began, ar gued, however, that the backwardness of the Flemings In social and poUtloal development . was due precisely to the fact that they had been without a unl varsity where they might study In their own language. Finally the so-called , Flemish rolks raad (people's council), appointed a com mittee to draw up a plan for transform lng Ghent Into a Flemish institution, and tt adopted de Raet's plan, he himself be Ing a member of the coremlslon. This plan received the united endorsement ot all Flemish organisations of the country, ana xne university question became an Issue In the elections held In the first half of 191 for' a part of the members of ths Chamber. This issue finally be came so acute that the premier. M. de Broqueviiie. himself representing a Flemish constituency, felt the necessity ef making conoeeaion to It: he promised that the government would take Into consideration the question of adopting Flemish at Ghent In eome form. Of Bourse the outbreak of the wsr left the whole matter tn a state of suspension. WOWEK Cf AUSTR5A AKE NOW DOING ALL KiNOS OF WORK (Correpoadee cf the Associated Press) VIENNA, Feb. 1. Not a week paaeeo In Austria without women appearing In some new occupation. Women teamsters are now to be seen on the streets, often performing laborious work. The big dairies are employing them to deliver milk to the retail branches, and they are also driving tee wagons. A ehoeolats factory Is sending out neatly uniformed women wagon drivers. Business motor wegons are being driven by women chauffeurs. In the big petroleum works women are doing all kinds of work, filling cans. loading them on the wagons, snd then going with the drivers and delivering the cans at houses, and collecting the bllla Culled from the Wire. The Utah progressive state committee, met at Salt Lake City and called the stale Convention fop A nr.) s hucUl nUon1 contention The OnlorlA n,.KH.- ..... tlon. whloh is to select delegates st large tO ths It&tlorj&l flonvanliAn 4m r'K (..- - - - - - 7-7- T - s- asitw VUIirn' dune T, Is to be held In liiebln. Msv l! the state oeatral committee decided today. -rna runaraj or M. M. Reynolds, banker who eonunltted sulolds at Pauora la , was hold. Arthur Kevnnlda Chicago banker and a brother of ths dead man. and A. JL Reynolds, Coder Rapids, a eon. John A. Cunningham, secretary of the Pubuoua RetaJI Cmcora' Bunri.Mn made public cwlee of a complaint Mslnat certain mall ea,inr houses, which he haa eant to the Federal Trade oomntlaaion at Washington for formal lawaticaUon. Vntted Btatea Senator A. B. Cummins of loaa, reddidit for the republican presi dential Domination la the forthcoming Minnesota prtmerlea. spoke at the enuual dinner of the Lincoln club at St. Peul. Ha d tared himself ta favor ef the govern- naeui maatueotura or munitions. A tolnt rwsolatloa authorising the .nk mlsalon of a woma suffrage aottidUMHt to a stale elooUon. was adopted by ths Oklahoma house of repreaentativsa The i wm m 10 is. 0dch.ii una rasnlu tloo be adopted by the senats the amecul- rnen would be exibmlited, to tbe al at the August eaaoiioa "Immediate and Intensive afltloa en pre pardnae by Uie national eeverntnent" M advocated tn rvwululiuae adopted hy the annual conventKxi of the Colorado Me(J Miners' association at ler.ver. The roauiuuons also auacaed me jrvrrui nn- eral land leasing tHil and declared that. If enaatad. It wlil "impoee upon ths states If enaatad, ronuUnins put.lle land an lniuatlus nrnr beforw e.julll In ins legislative snnale j of ths country. WORK TO KEEP DP CREDIT Allied State of Austria-Hungary Hare Methods for Handling Financial Proposition!. HAND ONTO THE OOLD RESERVE (Correspondence of The Associated Prees.) VIENNA. Jsn. JO. Formerly the Amer ican dollar was worth hers 4.M crowns: now it sells at 7.i. Normally 1 crowns cost SO marks, while now one may buy them at about 70. Kven the money of Auatrla-IIunsary's allied states Is much above par. Tbe Dulgarlan lira, which In times of peaoe waa cheaper than the Auetro-IIunsarisn crown, stands at an average of 100 to I'M and the Turkish pound is worth ebout 17 crowns where formerly It was only 21. This depreciation of the crown. In some cases liesrly et per cent would lie a serious matter for Austria-Hungary were the causes of an economic nature related to peaoe, Instead of wartime conditions. The Austro-Hungarlan crown la tow for the reeeon that ths paper currency of the country, based principally on the na tional gold reserve. Is being deprived of Its base by the many purchases the country has made In foreign markets for which the actual metal, gold, had to be exchanged. With Its allies, Austria-Hun gary still trades on the normal basis of credit, resting on an exchange cf mer chandise, but In buying from neutrals and through neutrals from the enemy even, nothing but the actusl transfer cf gold suffkea. Bo far Austria-Hungary has been obliged to deplete Its national gold stork and reserve to exactly what the average of depreciation of the crown Indicates, roughly speaking 19 per cent Her Valae te Held I . The case ts analogous to tha( of Oreat Britain In Its relations with the United States. Aftsr having realised as much credit as posslbls by a transfer to Ameri can holders of much commercial paper owned In Oreat Britain, the value of the pound sterling la being kept up by ship ping specie to . New Tork. Austrla-ITun gary has been doing the same thing. though not with' the same euocese because Its gold reserve was never nearly as great is that of Oreat Britain. - The exchange In the Austrian ministry of finance, made recently la directly re lated to the problem of bettering the standing of the crown. Of the work toward this end, the limitations of 1m porta for which gold must be surrendered will be an Important part. At the out break of the war not enough attention was given this. It Is said. A stiffening up by the Austrian banks would have kept much gold In the country, but this would have taken a financial organisa tion which Austria did not have. The new minister of finance. Dr. Leth,' 's looked upon as the man who will supply this. Having successfully managed for years the Austrian postal savin ss tnstitu Uon. floated a number of large Auatrlan loans In the United States. Eingianl and France, and recently managed the three war loans which the country has raised he has not only ths confidence of his own people, but etso a high standing n foreign money markets. It Is said. Vlsune Are Uakaewa. Just what tactics he will employ s still unknown, but It Is expected that one of his first moves will be to close the Austrian border to foreign shipments for which specie Is demanded. . In this way .supply would become more eager for. business than demand. - In other words the foreign seller would find the Austrian buyer less Inclined to do busi ness on a gold exchange basis. . Hand In hand with this would have to go a par tial reorganisation of the country's com merce ana industry, xne recent cnanxe has placed a rery capable man at the head cf the Austrian ministry of com' mere a, and the ; first essentials for the work to be done have thus been secured. it Is thought . . Whatever the other details of the pro gram may be, one thing is certain, and that ts that the new chiefs of finance and commerce will strive to make Aus try and, by co-operation with, and on the part of, .the Hungarian government, Hungary, more economically self-con tained than they have shown themselves In the course of the war. By doing this the gold stock will be kept tn the country, and the demand for foreign money snd credit will be decreased to such an ex tent that a further depreciation of Aus tro-Hungarlan paper will be warded off. Since the dual monarchy Is financially sound Internally, as the raising of the third war loan has shown, the task Is one which a few remedial measures ot the nature lnd1cete abcra will meet, ae- eerlr.g to the fakement of Interested clrcl' Rats Being Bred For Food for the N Animals of Zoo (Correspondence cf the Associated Press.) BTTDAPXST. Hungary. Fab. L Rate are being bred for the Budapest too in order to save the scant ration of horse flesh for tbe Hons and tigers, whose con stent roaring shows the extent they suf fer from the general ahortage of food, Eagles, vultures and the wild birds sre fed exclusively on rata. At times when horse meat has been unobtainable, goats and the less valuable animals havs been sacrificed to save the lives of the beasts that once ruled the jungle. But the herbivorous animals havs also gone through hard times, ss wild cheat nuts hsve been substituted for expensive hay. They have email liking for chest nuts. A herd of ten seals had to be killed, as rlo fish could be obtained for mom. ins seat roea. weni to. icea me wild beasts. Two polar bears were shot one because he refused to eat war food and the othet because he grew so wea on the new diet it waa deemed a mercy to finish him off. The bears added to tbe soo's revenue lu another way, as the privilege of shooting them waa auctioned off to local sportsmen, ons of whom paid y for tbe honor. NORWEGIAN STEAMER ALABAMA1 IS SUNK LONDON. Feb. 11-The Norwegian steamer Alabama of Stavaager, a vessel of S81 tons gross, has been sunk. The erew was saved. No details regarding the sinking ar available. Caw Uva la lrkmtah. NEW TORK, Feb. U. The Russia a ovammanL throuah re im-mmi uiuim made by membere of the Thuna, has given Mrs. Catherine BresnhofvaSy. the famous Russian political exiia. permission u live In the city of Irkutsk. Caatraet far law SLll4aa. WASHINGTON, Feb. U.-48;tectsl Ts!e STejn V The contract for the construction of the pubiie building at Waehlnatnn. la., hss been swaroed te the lieorte W. Miu, t'onetructtoa company of Chicago at tte.boo. MISSOURI BRIDGE APPROACH AFIRE Council Blnffi and Omaha Depart ments Called to Check Flames. CAUSED BY SHORT CIRCUIT A short-circuit that Is supposed te have i-veloped In one of the "pull holes" on the east end of the street railway bridge urned off all of the wire ceblee carry ing the electric current from ths power Plsnt of the Omaha Electric Light and Power company requ'red to supply Coun cil Bluffs and Its environment. About fifty feet of the wooden aldewalk above the point ef trouble wes burned off, call ing for both the Council Bluffs and Omaha fire departments. The break occurred at I 14 o'clock yes terday morning. The cables carrying the current are encased In steel pipes, three separate cables In each pipe and each set containing eighteen No. 10 oopper wires. The pipes are strung underneath the bridge and are about two feet apart. They are In duplicate to avoid Just such an accident as occurred last night. The pull boxes are located about 100 feet apart and sre necessary for drawing the cables through ths pipes. The short-ctreult, er whatever It waa that caused the fire, de veloped at the box just east of the street ear switch on ths east end of the bridge. The fifty-four wires carried In each of these pipes transmit, a current of ft,30t) volts, and when this was turned loose tt generated such a fierce heat that the copper wires melted ss If thsy were thin Icicles, fusing all cf ths 10 wires Into a ooupls cf long copper Ingota It te Aatoaaatleallr Recorded. When the short-circuit developed in the line used for service It automatically re corded the faot In the power station and the duplicate set of wires were cut In. In ten minutes these also went out end the current for the whole town waa shut off. About this time the watchman on the bridge reported the fire and both Omaha and Council Bluffs departments responded. The Omaha firemen laid a Una . of fire hoee from the . wast end of the bridge, but the Bluffs men got there first with a oh em leal stream from No, automobile truck. ' The fire -was extin guished after about thirty feet -of the wooden sidewalk had been burned, but about fifty feet was torn up to get the fire., which wes burning underneath. The ereosoted planks burned with a fierce heat and only stubbornly yielded to the chem- loal stream. Men were set at work Immediately to repair the break and they worked under benumbing conditions from 8:30 o'clock In the morning until fl:10 in the evening, Manager A. L. English snd Charles Han sen of the contract department were on the ground all day. The break caused all of the motion picture theaters In ths uiurrs to suspend their afternoon pro Weather-Proof Any man with a title to normal health may hurl cheery defiance in the teeth of the weather, even in its wilder moods. It's wholly a matter of blocKl-current and tissue cells, and everybody knows that sttirdiness and vigor in these regards depend largely on good, nourishing food. - Much of the food in the ordinary dietary is lack ing in certain vitalizing elements which Nature has designed for sturdy growth and resistance to disease. Especially is this true of white bread and white flour foods, because in making flour white most of the ener gizing mineral phosphates of the grain are thrown out in the milling process. ITiesc vital elements are retained in the scientific ally prepared food Grape Made of whole, wheat and barley, this food pro vides all the nutriment of the grain, including those vi talizing phosphates that mean, everything in building up and maintaining a robust, vigorous body and keen intellect. A ration of Orajie-Nuts along with the other food has worked wonders for thousands. , Ready to eat, economical, appetizing. ' "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts Rold by Grocers everywhere. rams and lnterf erred seriously with aome cf the more Important Industrial enterprises, Including all of the grain elevators, some of which use eon horse power for their dynamoes. It came at a ertlra! time for the Sunday morning edition of the Nonpareil. The big press had been running only a few minutes when the power went off. The mail editions hed been printed and Just few bundles for the carriers. The press, could not be started again until after s o'clock in ths evening when the edition was completed and ths carriers at sited out. The cause of the trouble Is at present a mystery to the electricians. Whether the current rot fire to the bridge or fire thst started In the pii.e planks that com prise the sidewalk caused the troible is not known. Either explanation la avail able. The fact was clearly established that It waa not due to any defect In the cable housings. The fact that ths steel ptpee were Intact eeems to Indicate that the fire came from the outside. The pipee had been heated te a high point for a distance of many feet. The "pull holes" are protected with a heavy iron covering and cannot be reached without removing soms planks from the sidewalk. Arrests Curtail Agents' Activities (Correspondence of the Associated Press) SALONIKI, Feb. 4. The arrest ot the members of the consulates snd the agents of the Central Powers, whetever the point ef view ot International ethics. had put an end to an absurd state of affairs here. Before the agents of the hostile powers were driven out, the al lies were In much the same position ee if their enemlee had free acoess to such bases as Calais, Boulogne cr Havre. Salonlkt now occupies the sams posi tion with reference to the Anglo-French troops as Lisbon did to Welllnrton over a century ago In the Peninsula cam paign. Tet before the recent orders were carried out, enemy agents Aid not even take the pains to oonoeal their activities. Germans, Austrians, Turks and Bulgarn had as much right to ths streets as the British or French soldiers. They watched and mads note of the landing of troops, guns and supplies, sat In cafes and lived tn hotels freauented by British and French army men. They freely wrote, telegraphed or took the train Into Tur key or Bulgaria, where their Information could be safely and promptly sent to Vienna and Berlin. They used to stand along the ancient quays and openly com' ment on the peculiarities of the British) and French warships, the equipment of the men. the quality cf the supplies. Now, transports can land their men and goods with some pretense of secrecy. At least, spies will no longer feel the same protection In being In a neutral port as before this neutrality wss qual ified by the "recent arrests. Turn old furniture, r.ousehold goods and clothing Into cash with a Bee Want-Ad. 'Nut 2 .,y. 1..,.....,..w..i..yYv.Y.yv,......i.k,ivi -serve likeiMs $1 3 Orange Trifle H bel aelatltia er 1 Uhlwtmnes raasisterf ltlae. lepol4 mur, H ee Holllna ester. I et !"'. I ee iue. (t.Uh! naJ 1 orBse,l Uhi pnott lemo iaice: whte from 551 u mrm creea. Make an aa Charlotte Hmmm, aad III: t Bik onuise Ml it. aoior both fruit red. eot bov I Ina nf mnaka Mi-h inoa e-eet chill aad ibn Arm Sil with Oraeev InBt eurtare Cool remalnlnalellr If ballot Mn. eml in fat, B4 seralal Sil stare, bnllow seralah El bees 01 swaie. a, Vi luiddst i Celifornia'a Selected Oranges Jelidous, juicy, sweet, s sad lees navsla are oa sale by all goad dealers. Order Now. Write for free book "SnnkUt Sal ads and Desserts." Savm wrapper for eifoerttfars. California FraH Crew era Exckaase Ca Mnertlva Ena-pteSt setters IWeartmt IIS N. Clark Street I i feAM(22E PLASTERS Tkt Wtrlft Grtnt Bxttrml Rnudf. Coughs aad Colds foe cheat and aeother WeskChests, Any Local pin. . . lxrtst as HaWac ALLCOOCS. DEAD ON , -tp aV betweaaaaoaider n ' iiiri mi" ' rr 1 HIS FEET ( OOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules will brine- new life end otiickly relieve that stopped-up congested feeling. They will thoroughly cleanse and wash out the kidneys snd bladder snd gently carry off the ill effects of excesses of all kinds. The keeling, soothing oil soaks right Into the walla and lining of the kidneys and expels the poisons 1n your system. Keep your kidney , in good shape., by" dally use of OOLD MK UAL Haarlem Oil Cap sules and you will have good health. - Clo to your druggist at once and secure a package nf this time-honored, world wide remedy. - It Is not a "patent medi cine." It la passed . upon by the U. S. Government chemlats and declared pure berore coming Into tnis country, uoiii MEDAL is the pure, original Haarlem Oil, Imported direct from tbe ancient laboratories In Holland whore It Is ths National Household Remedy' -of the sturdy Dutch. Look for the name OOLI) medil on averv oox. , acceDt no auD- atltuta Tour druggist . will gladly re- a4 fund your money If not as represented. 11 Advertisement. 11 Virgin Oil. of PmexY Absolutely relieves your COUGH and COLD For Sal at all Druggist. AMfgKMKWTS. JDevoted Brtaiaat atasloal Bnrleeeae m easjasisjueav Mat. Today TWICE DAILY wV? WOKLD'S OltBATBerT OOVTSXBV. TXOJT TO BUBXZSQVB. -VAX BJrTE4BT'B MERRY ROUHDERS With the. Two Oaaaha Favorites, ACE REYNOLDS & GEO. F. HAYES m TO HOX.B IX SrrxOTAO- PfcaUs MaoyrTUOB SWEETEST CHORUS Dear Reader t Here a aurely a sarlae ear show at Say eoara prtoM. Cor UameuK anS (as anas slitter, eitlr the Nw Terk Hts- r.lrome ekaw of (era It acooaliloe aad aoa't auaa the oae that plr hare a taw aaaaua aao. either. If taae eoa't poaltlTalr ettitfy yon. ta balt te tha BiOTtee. ft. L. JOHNAON, Ugt. Oayatr- Bvealags, Buaday U Holiday lse, ase, soe aag 70. wr; MATSTiSc an- 25e triZ 0 ,11a tt iw Ilka due aa aaKktof. T,AXIlT' iftc rT WBBbT. TlCKItl 'U1' DAT aCATraTEB Baby Carriage Oerare la toe booty 0RPHEUH Road Show XMreettoa SCABTXaT BSCX. Perfect Vaudeville ALL THIS WEEK. Marlaee Patty, I BDfl Kor THS UTTLB FOYS. FATJMA. Nm" The Leithbuut leored a CoareS, Fiaiena A rxinh.m, a May Jefh- un, Orehauia Travel Wntkly rrlcw-M.lliw, Canary. 10c, Beat WU (. evt aeturdaj saa Sued;), kie. Nicaia. wo, lac, iM eat 1o. , Today ffH EW-v Tenlte 2:30 HesRUHael 0:20 Verts. Brothers Stock Co. TEiyBT AJfO BOTJaXaTB. JITriPV TAXI J I UUI WER. Ml Turpln's School cf Dan:!ni I Tweaty-eignut m sarwa. er ai t List your nerae aoe. Private iaaaons aa V