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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVTLLE UTAH eci -- STRENGTH a m S s $3t 3 e 1 ; MAKE SERIES OF NIGHT ATTACKS AND OF EAST MEUSE TAKE TRENCHES. Arkanaaa X Ru$-sian-s, 6 4'oloisdo Moimai ticut 7 Dataware X IHatrb't of Columbia X Florida 10 Illinois Lbndon. By a series of night attacks the French at Verdun have succeeded jn winning back positions east of the Meuse, lost tothe Germans on Saturday. These winnings consist of treneheirwest of the TMamotst redoubt and certain parts of the town of Fleury, Just south of Fort ThiamonL It was to capture these points that the crown prince threw in, and, according to the French official reports, sacrificed his Bavarian regiments . In ' the Saturday action. The crown prince evidently is determined to make another desperate jeffort to recapture the terrain, a of "redoubled violence, on 'Fleury and Froide Terre (Cold Earth 'hill), having begun. It Is still In . progress. The whole rich Austrian crown land of Bukowina 4,037 square miles has Tallen to the Russians. The Austrian stand at Kuty on Saturday was only a rear guard action. It seems for Sunday Vienna offlclall admitted a retreat from end to end of the duchy. The great southern Austrian army ds therefore, in flight along the whole 'line. bom-rbardme- , low K annas 17 Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland 14 15 20 21 22 2S 24 Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana n , whether the Carranza government would be willing to accept mediation in the crisis between the United States and Mexico. The Mexican ambassador said he would communicate the inquiry to General Carranza, but that he was not .empowered to make a reply at this . time. , Mr. Calderon failed to see Secretary Lansing on Saturday on the same mission, but announced that he expected to direct a similar inquiry to the American government. ambassador-designate- 2S SO 31 12 SX 44 SS 34 47 84 30 40 X 44 47 4X kO ' West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Total (a) No organised militia In Nevada. THE HOW Airman Fought Against Odds. Berlin. Details of the last flight of First Lieutenant Immelmann, the famin let- ous German aviator, contained ters from the front, show that he was killed in a combat with a British flyer, which was one of a group of three Immelmann engaged, despite the opposing odds. Alliance. It is learned on good Japanese-Russla- " Tokio. n au- thority that Japan and Russia are making favorable progress toward the conclusion of an agreement for protection of their mutual interests in China. The understanding is based on the principle of preserving the integrity of China. Rioting in Panama. Panama. Serious rioting occurred in the city of Panama June 25, on the occasion of the elections. Eighteen persons were wounded. There were no foreigners among them, however, No trouble occurred at Colon. One man was killed in the province of Chiriqui.' Aviator Falls to Death. Oshkosh, Wis, In full view of 10, 00 people, whom he had Just thrilled by looping the )oop and flying upside down Sunday afternoon. Aviator Charles NiTesorSan Francisco-Te- ir from his aeroplane and was probably fatally inJuredT UNITED 1.626 82 128 61 92 161 25 67 179 71 100 164 Douglas Columbus El Paso Rio Grando Preaidio Laredo Brownavlllo Ban Antonio 1X9 29 36 U7X AIM STATES MEXICAN ALONG BORDER. ! 109 792 94 162 71 116 194 31 79 206 83 118 466 23 1.444 10.097 1.329 1.644 973 1.701 4.185 454 758 2.731 1.197 1.793 2.898 690 . 123.106 avoids OPERATION DECLINES TO MAKE . RACE ON THIRD TICKET AND WILL SUPPORT THE REPUBLICANS. Medicine Which Made Sur geont Work Unnecessary. Astoria, N. Waa feeljng Y.r-F- or two years I ill tad took all kind of tonics. Ijwas ARMIES LINE UP 3,500 1,500 500 500 1,000 3,000 1,500 600 Glen Caaae Grandea Corralitos Ascension would ache. I was always tired. I could not walk straight because of thejiain Campaign When Colonel Makes Known His Attitude. Chicago. At the end of a stormy session here on. Monday, June 26, the national committee of the Progressive party, by a vote of 32 to 6, with nine endorsed members declining Charles E. Hughes for president, and the Progressive party practically went out of existence as a national , organization. This action of the Progressives came after a letter had been . read from Colonel Theodore- - Roosevelt, In which he finally declined the presidential nomination of the party, and urged that Charles E. Hughes be supported In order to defeat President to-vot- a - - Wilson. In his letter declining the nomination for president on the Progressive ticket, Colonel Roosevelt, in giving reasons for his favoring the candidacy of Charles E. Hughes, said: "It has become entirely evident that the people under existing conditions are not prepared to accept a third in my back and pains in my stomach. I went to a doctor and he said I must go under an operation, but I did not go. I read in 1 the paper about Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound and told my husband about it I said I know nothing will help me but I will try this.' I found myself improving from the very first bottle, and in two weeks time I was able to sit down and eat a hearty breakfast with my husband, which t had not done for two years. I am now in the best of he<n and did not have the operation." Mrs. John A. Koenig, 502 Flushing Avenue. Astoria, N. Y. Every one dreads the surgeons knife and the operating table. Sometimes nothing else will do ; but many time doctors say they are necessary when they are not Letter after letter comes to the Pinkham Laboratory, telling how operations were advised and were not performed per, if performed,did no good, but Lydia .Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was used and good health followed, If yon want advice write to "It remains for us, good humoredly Lydia E. Plnkbam Medicine 'Co. and with common sense, to face the (confidential), Lynn, Mass, AND Namlquipa Babrlcora San Miguel Madera everyday. 1 had chilla.my head Progressive National Committee Decides to Support Hughes in Com-In- g party. 122.204 IN MEXICO. 2,500 2,500 3,500 1,500 1,000 10,000 9,000 4,500 situation and endeavor to get out of it the best that It can be made to yield London papers are now smaller. from the Standpoint of the interests of the nation as a whole. Its easier to grasp some opportuniThe present administration through ties than it is to let go of them. Its three years of life has been guilty of shortcomings - more signal than Every man expects to become great :hose of any administration since the some day, but he keeps putting it off!. of Buchanan. days "In my Judgment, the nomination of Mr. Hughes meets the conditions set Pluck loses no time on account of forth in the statement of the Progres- tough luck. sive national committee. Issued last January and in my own statements. "How do the needle guns work? "Under existing circumstances, the Oh, nomination of a third ticket would, in my Judgment, be merely a move in The fatter a woman gets the easier Ihe interest of the election of Mr. WilIt is for her to believe other women son. "I regard Mr. Hughes as a man are unable to notice It. whose public record is a guarantee that he will not merely stand for a Every man has a sense of duty, but program of clean cut, stralghtout not every man has sense enough to utiAmericanism before election, but will lize it. resolutely and in good faith put It through if elected. Usually the early bird catches the "It would be a grave detriment to worm for the benefit of the little ones the country to Mr. Wilson. "I shall therefore strongly support who are in bed. Mr. Hughes. Sueh being the case, it is unnecessary to say that I cannot The Bible Is a good book to read. If accept the nomination on a third tick-e- you doubt it, brush the cobwebs off I do not believe that there should your copy and look into It be a third ticket. "In Mr. Wilsons case we do not But one doesnt acquire a taste for have to consider his words, but his deeds. His deeds absolutely contra- music by listening to the piano next dict his words, and for the matter of door. that his words absolutely contradict one another. A woman gets a lot of satlsfctioa We -- owe all our present trouble out of 'her belief that other women . ' with the professional her. element in the United States to envy Mr. Wilsons timid and vacillating Nothing puffs a woman -- up more course during the last two years. Aa regards Mexico, the situation than to have a seventeenth cousin sudwhich Mr. Wilson confronted was denly become nothing like as difficult as that which President McKinley confronted In conI want cut rates on this job. nection with Cuba and the Philippines What Is It? at the time of the Spanish war. my trees and hedges. Trimming I .wish very solemnly to ask the representatives of the Progressive Good Cause. party to consider at this time only What a leaden color your hut' the welfare of the people of the1 United States. We shall prove false band has, Mrs. Jones. to our Ideals- - and our profession If, Yesm; hes don got de plumbago In this grave crisis of the nations maam. life, we permit ourselves to be iwerved from the one prime duty of Speedy. lervlng with cool judgment and Does that new watch of yours keep devotion the nations so-s- o. Total 34,500 These men are etretched along a front of 1,800 mile. Thia makes the line average nineteen-meto the mile. Total 12,000 These men are stretched .along a front of 250 miles. Thla makes the line average forty-eigh- t men to th mile. Organised National Guard of the United States (mobilized) ..145,000 AGAINST THIS FORCE CARRANZA HAS In Sonera under Callea 12,000 In Chihuahua facing Pershings front ....40,000 At other points along border 15,000 n Total 67,000 Condition of the National Guard in the Various 4 States According to the latest war department records, the condition of the National Guard Is as follows:: Alabama Medical department, good ; field artillery, poor; Infantry, fair and good. Arizona Medical department, good; Infantry, fair and good. Arkansas First Infantry Companies B. D, F and K, poor ; others good or very good. Second Infantry Companies C and K, poor; others good or fair. Medical California departmenL good; cavalry, fair; field artillery, very good; coast artillery, good and fair; Infantry, fair or poor by company. Colorado Medical department, good ; corps of engineers, fair; cavalry, good ; field artillery, poor ; Infantry, good and poor by companies. Connecticut Medical department, very good ; cavalry, good and excellent; field artillery, very good; coast artillery, good and very good by companies ; infantry, excellent and very good. District of . Columbia Medical department, excellent; signal corps, fair; infantry, fair, good and excellent by companies. Florida Infantry, very good and good. Georgia Medical department, fair; Infantry, fair and poor by companies; cavalry, good ; field artillery, very good; coast artillery, good and. poor by companies. Hawaii Medical department, very good; infantry, good and fair by companies. Idaho Infantry very good and good. Illinois Medical departmenL very good ; engineer corps, fair; cavalry, excellent and very good; field artillery, very good and good; Infantry, very good and fair by companies; Seventh and Eighth Infantry, Chicago, excellent and very good, Indiana Medical department fair; field artillery, fair; infantry, good and very good by companies. Iowa Medical departmenL field artillery, good .n4erygood-bycompanl- ; fair; Infantry, fair S. Kansas Medical departmenL very -good; field arHUeryrfu!r;lnfjuUryr very good and good by companies. American Aviator Killed in France. Mqdlcal department, Kentucky exParis Corpora Victor Chapman of fair; -- Infantry, fair and good-t-o. companies.. New Yorkr-- a nvember-o- f cellently Medical Louisiana department, flying corps, was killed Frigod; field artilday at Verdun after bringing down very good; cavalry, od, fair and lery, fair; Infantry,-gothree German aeroplanes. Chapman poor by companies. was 22 years 6f age. Maine Medical department fair; ' coast artillery corps, fair and good ; inFound Dead in Car. fantry, good. Nevada, Mo. Major V. O. Williams f Nevada, Mo., chief surgeon of the Maryland Medical department very Missouri National guard, was found good; infantry, very good and fair by dead in his motor car a mile from th companies Massachusetts state training camp. Medical department, Apparenty h had suffered a stroke of apoplexy. excellent ; cavalry, very good ; field ar " - 12 24 12 14 IIMIIeMOl Washington ... 44 ' 4 Vermont Virginia 46 The militia of all the states were called to the colors in the following statement addressed to the governors of the various states by Secretary of War Baker: Having in view the possibility of further aggression upon the territory of the United States and the necessity for the proper protection of that frontier; the president has thought proper to exercise the authority vested to him by the Constitution and the laws and call out tlieorgunlzed militia and the National Guard necessary for that purpose. "I am In consequence, instructed by the president to call into the service of the United States through you, the following units of the organized militia and the National Guard of the state which the president of directs shall be assembled at the state mobilization point (or at the to be to you by the designated place conynundlng general, eastern depart-- 4 Texas 43 fair; field artilcoast artillery, poor; Inlery. good; and excellent very good. fantry. New Jersey Medical department very good; cavalry, good; artillery. Very good ; Infantry, fair to good. Medical department New Mexico excellent; Infahtry. artillery, good; very good and good. ment fuir; THE CALL TO ARMS; 96 21 20 127 12 24 10 23 36 Rhode Island -- South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee 41 1 Qreat Balloon Feat. Buenos Aires. The Argentine aeronauts, Captain Zuloaka and Engineer Bradley, have succeeded in crossing the Cordellira Andes in a balloon. They left Santiago, Chile, at 8 oclock Friday morning and descended about five and a half miles east of Uspallata, near Mendosa, Argentina. The voyage occupied five hours. 9 212 41 am gnoo; uuunirj. cx eitcm. w. in by coin pa New Hampshire Medical depart- get-ingwo- rse 14 46 Pennsylvania 1 Refugees Tell of Terrorism. New York. One hundred American refugees who lied from Mexico to escape the reign of terror there arrived here Sunday on the Ward liner Esperanto. They told of the condition of anarchy that Is spreading ruin over the land and forcing the cessation of all Industry except that dedlcated to preparation for war. r 13 Nevada (a) New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon 25 2.3 11 Nebraska .. 27 a 81 34 18 23 13 15 24 tm 34 24 13 48 Massachusetts 20 24 S3 79 77 lfi 15 ENDEAVORING TO PREVENT WAR Mnister of Bolivia Suggests Mediation In Mexican Crisis. Washington. The governments are endeavoring to prevent krar between the United States and Mexico. Minister Ignacio Calderon of Bolivia, speaking for several South and Central American republis, on Saturday asked Ellseo Aredondq, Mexican . Indiana I3 9 14 37 10 13 iho 14 e I Hawaii IX a - 33 a U - ft, 23 4 14 39 24 31 .' Whole of Bukowlna Taken by it Being Claimed the Great Southern Austrian Army is in Flight. , Latin-Amerlca- 1.... 3- 1, ! I Alabama 3 I B Btatea and Territories. H 3 C norm gl OF THE NATIONAL GUARD -- I ' tlliery, excellent; coast artillery, good and very good; Infantry, good and very good by' companles. Medical Michigan department poor; engineers corps, fair; signal corps, good ; cavalry, good ; field artillery, poor; Infantry, good and very good. ' Minnesota Medical department field fair; artillery; very good; infantry, good and very good by companies. Medical department Mississippi poor; Infantry, fair and poor by companies. Missouri Medical department good ; cavalry., very good ; . artillery,- - excel-lcn- t; Infantry, very good and fair by companies. Montana Medical department very good; Infantry, excellent and good. Nebraska Medical department very EVENTS LEADING Brig. Gen. A. L. Mills. ment), for muster Into the service of the United States. "Organizations to be accepted into the federal service should have the minimum peace strength now prescribed for organized militia. The maximum strength at which organlza-Win- s will be accepted and to which they should be raised as soon as possible Is prescribed In section No. 2, United Tables of Organization. States Army. "In case any regtmenL battalion or squadron, now recognized aa such, contains an insufficient number of organizations to enable It to conform at muster to regular army organization tables, the organizations necessary to complete such units may be moved to mobilization camp and there inspected ( under orders of the department commander to determine fitness for recognition as organised by the war departmenL "Circular 19, division of militia affairs, 1914, prescribes the organizations desired from etch state as part of the local tactical division, and only these organizations will be accepted Into service. TO MEXICAN CRISIS re-ele- ct L -- German-Ameri-ca- n -- near-famou- s. - single-- minded The following brief chronology constitutes the highlights In the political history of Mexico, starting with the Mudero revolution against Presi- dent Porflrlo Diaz, November 13, 1910, culminating in the present crisis, as 7 follows: 1910. 23 Francisco 1. Madero pro clullus hliuself provisional president, nnd two days later Dtaa resigns, sailing with his family for Europe NOV. May 31, 1912. Second revolution der General Felix Diaz. later .he Is captured and uprising troops crushed. OUT. 10 - started un- Two weeks federal apparently by 1913. FEB. 21 Third revolution takes place and Vlctorlano Huerta proclaimed provisional president Gustavo Madero executed. FEB. 21 Fourth 'revolution, this time against Huerta, started by Carranza; governor of Ooahuila. OCT. 14 Huerta proclaims himself dictator and abrogates constitution. 1914 ... Paymaster and seven sailors arrested In Tampico by Mexican sol- APRIL 9 Though released a few hours later, R ear, A d m nvL M n y o demanded an apology, punishment of the Mex teim'offl eer Tn c h n rg e and a salute of twenty-on- e guns. This was the APRIL 21 Untied States marines oc- cupy customhouse at Vera Crux and take charge of city. JUNE 24 Pence protocol signed by diers. 1 "A B O mediators at Niagara Falls, Ontario. JULY 15 General Huerta resigns as provisional presidenL AUG. 14 Carranza, by agreement with , General Obregon and General Itur-bidnamed provisional president, to succeed Francesco Carbajal, who held office one month after Uuertas e. resignation. The outbreak of hostilities , NOV. 11 between Carranza and Villa take place. 1915. JAN. 5 to MARCH 5 ing between Villa forces. Sporadic fight- and Carranza MARCH 9 Secretary of State Bryan warne Americans to leave Mexico. Two days .later, John - McManus murdered by 'Zapatistas In Mexico City. AUG. 8 First big fight between Mexicans and American ranchers takes place In Cameron County, Texas American soli. SEPT. 17. Six Carranza soldiers killed In figh with American sol- dlers near Donna, Texas. OcL 19 United States formallly recognizes Carranza de facto- - government Wild jubilation in Mexico City. NOV. 26 Three American soldiers wounded Iq fight with marauding Mexican troops near Nogalea, Arts. Forty Mexicans killed. 1918. JAN. Villa atrocities against Americans become dally. JAN, 13 Fifty, Americans massacred by Vllllstas near Chihuahua City; JAN. 15 Fight between American troops and Mexican soldiers near e Fort Hancock, miles east of El Paso. JAN. 171 ills orders his troops to shoot ail Americans on sight JAN. 23 Eight Americans hanged by Villa's orders at Carnejutla; Mexico. ELI k. J S O ffici a I repo rt made to. Secretory of State Lansing disclosed that total American murders In Mexico numbered 146 in three years. MARCil 1 Sporadic raids by Vllllstas across border become almost daily. MARCH 9 Columbus raid by 1,500 Mexican rebels under Villa. Seventeen Americans slain. MARCH 19 American troops under command of Colonel Dodd enter Mexico as vanguard of General Ptr shing'a punitive expedition. 1 fifty-thre- needs. "Mr. Wilson and his party have In ictual practice lamentably failed to safeguard the interest and honor of be United States. They have brought js to Impotence abroad and to dlvi ion and weakness at home. "Mr. Hughes has shown in his career the instinct of efficiency which rill guarantee that under hinrthfr gv-rnm- ent will once more work with Igor and force. He possesses that labit of straightforward thinking vhich means that his words will be orrelated with his deeds and trars-ateinto facts. His past career b he warrant for our belief that he will e the unfaltering opponent of that ystem of invisible government which inds expression in the domination of be party boss and the party machine, lis past -- career- is a guarantee that vhatever he says before election will e made good by his acta after elec--oMorally, his public record show im to be a man of unbending integ-ity-; Intellectually it shows him t e a man of original and trained abll d -- -- good time? You bet It does There Isnt a clock in town that can' keep up with It?" In this Matter of Health one is either with the winners or with the losers. Its largely a question of right eating right food. For sound health one must cutout ..rich, indigestible foods, and choose 'those that are known to contain the elements that build sturdy bodies and keen brains. ty. We have the alternative of contln ting In office au administration which taa proved & lamentable failure, or of jutting into office- an administration rhlch we have every reason to e will function with efficiency for be interest and honor of all our ' I earnestly bespeak from my fl-o-Progressives their ungrudging tipport of Mr. Hughes. -- Grape-Nut- s - be-tev- peo-tle- w $r Daily Thought. To be bright and cheerfup often re- quires an'effort. There "is a certain srt in keeping ourselves happy; n this respect, as in others, we require to watch over and manage ourselves almost as If we were somebody else ' 1 Avebury. De Uncles Unjust Suspicions. pictures I sees in some o da lummerbooks, said Uncle Eben. Tnake me s'picioua dat some foolish people learns to read right rrite. an is a wonderfully balanced food, made from whole wheat It. contains all the, . and barley nutriment of therain, include tng .the mineral phosphates, indispensable in Nature's plan for body and brain rebuilding Grape-Nut- s is a concen- trated food, easy to .digest. It is economical, has delicious flavor, comes ready to eat, and has helped thousands in the winning class. There's a Reason |