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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVLLE. UTAH with nothing except myriads of Slav ou Jlnreary a bill introducing, it coast of Africa, the remaining defend-erof om resisted charges its first having crossed Into Spanish ter! passed reading In tfis house sticka in their hands. Jf commons yth sharpened by a large majority. The rttor and been In term'd. The army of was forced to faU back bill was finally signed by King George East Africa still resists the convergTwice It seemed the flower rapidly. of the May 20. ing columns of Belgians, French and raaris army would be surrounded, once British hut. shut off from Allies Get Together, " n the vicinity of Warsaw. nd again al-Their Its doom would ccm to be defeats the finally taught in the great battle near Vllua. sealed. that their efforts be must The taje of the taking of great towns Oil Aprils 25 Sir Roger. Case like their enemies. If they grew almost tedious. It seemed the were to Irish be war A new effective. knight, Iried to laud from a GerGermans .would never stop. Whether council, with all the ailles represented, man warship on the roast of Irethey did stop of their own accord or were finally checked by the Russians met In Baris December- 7 and a kind land, but was captured. The next day of International general staff was or- a rexolt In Dublin and other Irish cities is not yet clear. They settled down for the winter on a long line stretch-la- ganized. It Is known that General Jo- broke out nnd the center of the Irish seph Joffre, French commander In yapltnl was burned. The revolt wus from the Baltic just west of Riga chief since the beginning of the war, easily Quelled, the lrltl-- h announcing southeast along the Dviua river, and and the hero of the battle of the resistance had coast'd on May 1, then almost due south through I'olies-sie- , More successful was the revolt of Marne, Was the presiding genius. The the Iinsk marsh district, In 'the effects of were not to be the 'Arabs, led by the grand there fT, the council Roumanian frontier. seen for several months, but now' they ngatn-- t their Turkish overlords. MecReawakening of Russia. are being reulized in full measure. ca, Mi'tliua and others towns have been On September 8 Czar Nicholas took To check a simultaneous allied and are held still, probably enptured command of all his armies in the field, .which they dourly saw com- with British assistance, . sending his- Cousin, the Grand Duie ing. the Teutons decided on two atIn ths Air, Doings Nicholas, tq the less liujortant com- tacks of their own. This follows the Recent months have teen a cessamand of the Caucasus axiom of German mili- tion of Zeppelin raids ou undefended operations. With their Little Father" at thejr tary strategy that (ho best defense is British nnd French towns. The cause head, the Russians forgot their long, an of this Is somewhat of a mystery, as energetic attack. discouraging retreat Millions of new The first of these offensive defen- the Gcrmnn have claimed important young soldiers joined them, drawn sives was the attack on the French military results from their attacks. from Russias great reservoir of fortress of Verdun, where the works On September there were two beings, which produces three and were subjected to a whirlwind of fire raids on persons being Imddn, thirty a half million men of military age evbeginning February 21. The gains of killed nnd a proiwrtlouate number ery year. the first week wefe great, and German wountU d. , Fifty-fivwere killed by On September 10 the Russians won a critics foretold the collapse of the fieppellus In a raid on London October success near Tamopol and Treinbowla. French. Two of the defending forts, 13. and two days later they drove the Teu- Vaux and On January 20 the German dirigibles Douuumont, fell, and importons back 14 miles in Galicia. In other tant positions were taken west of the bombarded Baris, killing 23 and on parts 'of the front the Germans were Meuse river as well. February 1 Liverpool and other Engstill seizing large slices of territory, But Joffre rallied his men in splen- lish centers were visited and 59 sluln. but their enemies were regaining their did fashion and sold each On April 2 a Zeppelin killed 28 In yard of energy. On 'September 20 the Rus- ground at an awful cost In German England and wns destroyed on the sians recaptured Lutsk, but were driv- blood. the crown rrinces British const as it returned. On March en out In' a short time. On October 20 men Step by step pushed forward, but today they 0 13 were killed. they recaptured Czartorysk, but they are still more than two miles from the On April 0 It wns announced that were not able to prevent the Germans hulned fortress town and the resist- the fifth Zeppelin raid In six days on storming llTuxt five days later. Czar- ance of the French Is as strong as the British const had been made. The' torysk was lost and again taken by ever. Germans declared that war munition the czar January 8. factories and supply depots had been Austrian Drive Checked. Meanwhile the conquest of Serbia, The second Teutonic offensive was destroyed. the greatesftragedy of the war,, exSince then Englnnd apparently hns organized" by the Austrians In, the cepting only the massacre of 800, Out) Tretitlno, and they struck in the d! been Immune from This Armenians, was being enacted. , reel Ion of VIeeuza With the object may he due to the large number of Invasion of Serbia. of cutting off the northern end'of Italy dirigibles liyt. or to the outcry against The real Invasion of Serbia started from the main portion. On May 20, the Inhumanity of the practices of th In the first days of October. A great ns the result of several days vio- Germans which wus raised In neutfat diplomatic battle had been fought In lent artillery fire followed by infantry countries. One other Important moral defont So(la, nnd the allies had lost. On Oe rushes, they were able to annouuce the was sustained by the Germans when tober 7 Bulgaria In an ultimatum to capture of 24,000 Italians. King Peter of Serbia, peremptorily de General Count Cadorna hurried they hurried Edith Ciivell, a British nurse, to fxocutlonr.ws announced b'y mandedthe Immediate cession of the about a hundred thousand men Macedonian lands in dispute between ears to the scene, while many more Brand Whitlock, American minister of the two countries and then in the pos- arrived on foot or trains. Just when Belgium, art October 22. - naval -- engagement of session, of the Serbs.., it Seemed the AustrlimSniTlST TeaCQ In of men engaged number history After a general bombardment the the lowlands the counter-attack- s were and Dumber slain was fought June 3 Teutons crossed the river boundaries delivered. . . near the Sknggerrajc, In the North sea. of Serbia in many places on October 8. On June 30 Rome announced a splenTwo days later they occupied Bel- did victory. In bloody fighting the The .result was inconclusive, each Bide a great victory and the regrade. On the thirteenth Bulgaria in- Austrians, perhaps weakened by claiming widely in estimates of vaded her neighbor at three points. drafts to bolster up their Russian ports varying tw-sides. on losses the The successes of the Teutons and the front, were driven from peak to peak as the If Germans, they assert, seriwere almost unbroken. The almost to where their lines had stood Bulgarians British the grand fleet, crippled ously a vast forces of consists invading throughout the winter. we will probably soon see them come amount of heavy artillery, with small delivered In March the Russians They vast, but futile attacks on the Ger- out of Kiel again, to finish their task. infantry supporting forces. shelled the Serbians out of position man front at many points, probably to At present, however, the British block after position in an avalanche of steel distract attention from Verdun. The nde is broken only by the merchant to which the Serbians could make no Germans seemed to have been lulled submarine Deutschland, which reached Baltimore July 0. ' reply. Into security by these efforts, which Kaiser Yields to America. Small forces of French-anEnglish they prohufely considered the best the The year has also been the culmilanded at SalonlkL a Greek port to czar could do. But the tens of thouwhich Serbia had certain entry prlvi sands of Muscovite bodies lining the nation of the submarine dispute be leges, and did something "to cover the Germans barbed wire were but a pat- tween the United States and Germany, retreat of .the Serbians by engaging ter of rain compared with the storm which terminated In the kaiser's capitmerthe Bulgarians In the South. that was brewing behind the Russian ulating and promising to warn before chantmen attacking. At the beginning of winter, Novem- lines. sank the liner Arabic AuA ber. 22, the Serbian soldiers crossec At the beginning of June this storm their western border and struck the broke with full force and, following gust 20, two Americans being among more of our nationals e trails of the dreary, the principle of attacking the weakest the slain. Two wns torpewhen died the num Hesperian mountains of the coast Great point, the Austrians holding the line doed 1( November On 0, on September cold of and hers perished hunger from the marsh district southward the way. On November 29 Germany were forced to bear the brunt of 1L several Amerlns died in the torpedoing of the Italian liner Ancona. II proudly announced that the Serbian Russias Big Push. Is thought two Atnerlrnns were lost in met 'With campaign had ended, having Millions of shells, manufactured the sinking of the Iersla in the Medisuccess. complete largely in British, Japanese and terranean Jununry 2. The crisis was Two Blows to the British. American factories, blasted away wire, March 28, when the BritThe winter also saw the humllia trenches, dugouts and observation precipitated steamer Sussex ish chnnnel ferry tion of the British In Mesopotamia Then the hordes of Sibe- torpedoed without warning. Two hunpoints. The Indian government recklessly rians, Cossacks and others swept dred and thirty-fiv- e persons were pushed a smalt poorly supplied expe- over the field. The Austrians could killed and several Americans were indition up the Tigris valley and actu- not withstand the Impact and they jured. ally penetrated to within seven miles gave way steadily. ThIsflagrantvlolatlonjDf the rule Gerof Bagilad. Here the Turks, with June 6, General BrusIIoff "announced of war caused Iresldent Wilson t man officers directing them, adminis- the capture of 13,000 Austrians; June press Germany for sweeping assurtered a defeat and ,the Invaders fell g, the number for the three succeed- ances, which were glve in a note May back with the enemy harassing them ing days alone wak 43,000, and the 0 on condition that the United State where numbers to the town of kept mounting until on July force Great Britain to conduct bet they were besieged December 10. 20 General Shoovaleff, Russian min- blockade legally. Mr. Wilson anAnother expedition, also Insufficient ister of war, estimated the number of swered he would accept the promise .was was sent to relieve the first a st 270, but without the proviso. prisoners beaten off with .large losses .a few 000. The killed and wounded are unThe nyiny times heralded Turco-Ge- r miles below Kuf aflood of the iriver told, but the number must be large man invasion of Egypt has not yet maand swamps assisting the Turks, ant enough to bring the total loss well terialized and probably never will. On on April 30 the 12,000 .defenders of over half .a million I the other hand, the Russian grand Kut capitulated by .order of the BritGerman support was rushed to the duke has added to hts laurels by cap ish higher command. Austrians, but the foe captured Lutsk turing the Important inland city ol A further British humiliation was and Dubno, and reached the Stokhod Erzerura February 17, Bltlls March 4 the evacuation of Galll pall peninsula, and LI pa rivers in Volhynia ; overran and the seaport of Treblzond April where the British held on .doggedly all Bukowina to the Carpathians and 19. month after month, losing perhaps sent patrols of Cossacks into Hungary counter-attac-k in The Turks 200,000 men. until .they were finally to ravage the country. back the Russians in Persia, pressed withdrawn in confession of tfallure the That the czar is anticipating further but recently the czars men have ad first week of January. great gains of territory is seen from vanced rapidly In the northern part ot These two British 88009 were what Russias action In mobilizing the Asia Mtnor and the resistance of ths was needed to arouse the sluggish males of the Island of Saghallen, Tur- Turks seems to have been broken. fighting blood of John BulL They kestan, and one other district to build Exploits of the Moewe. war finally brought England into the roads, dig trenches and do other work Only one German commerce raldet to the of organizing the ground won. fully and uncompromisingly, a submarine distinguished itsell net same extent as the other great powin the year. The fast Moewe sank Allies Drive In Somme Region. ers. . ..Almost. a month to a day following many allied , ship off ..the coastol On ACgUst 10 Grat Britain starter the beginning of the great Russian of- Africa and reached a home port !t her national register, or census of all fensive French and British opened safety March 6. On February 2 a Germen of fighting nge.The result showed their drive in- the vicinity of the man prize crew brought the Appam, s a vast reserve of man power. Certain y British capture, into Hampton Roads Somme river. They have gained consections demanded immediate official the re having come ail the way across the Attoutsteadily,and successscription, but they were not lantic with her. The ownership of thh attackof losses the the assert Instead the earl of Derby was portsare ful vessel is still In the American courts smalL ers comparatively commissioned to start a vast recruitTwo more nations have been drawn allies of the that claim It is also the a numcan be ing campaign. This produced the war. The entrance of Buloffensive Into Franco-Britisthe , ber of classes of attested men," who up at ft present rate indefinite'-ly- garia has beca described. On Marct bound themselves to . come Into the keptand will not have to be slackened 10 Germany declared war on Bortugai groups.. But ranks "with their-ag- e for lack of shells, guns or men. The Portuguese- and German troops hac there were still hundreds of thousands of progress is much greater than dashed in Africa some tine befon rate nnrenehed. and the public began to at Verdun, but the coun- and, Portugal had Jufit seized the Ger GermaAs the see that it was discriminating in favor The ae try traversed, is less difficult. On the man ships in her harbors. of the slackers" and the coward. Induced were of the tions assailants Verdun bj republic the hand, other On December 21 David she prom to which a from of according treaty attacking the baTe advantage the minister of munitions and assistIn the outside of a curve, while the lses to come to Great Britains so. do to from whenever now ance greatest man the war has produced attack British requested and French Great Britain, declared the country The British lost the equivalent m the salient they have made in Inside efforts unless greater faced defeat offenseveral Verdun army corps when Lord KItch the line. Meanwhile the were made. A week later be threatwas ener drowned June 7 In the sink continue. Germans of the sive unened to resign from the cabinet Germans have lng of the cruiser Hampshire by the of Outride Europe less conscription was adopted. but lost their Cameroon colony on the west mine while oa tic way to Russia. Conscription was fiercely fought, a More Territory in Esrmany Holds Did Twelve Europe Than It Months Ago. g loser hi other respects Entente Allies Now Hammering Teutons Hard on AH Sides, - well-know- SEEMS WEAKENING AUSTRIA British Naval Blockade Still Effective hu-.ma- After Great Battle of Jutland-Ch- ief Developments of Year ia Terrific World Conflict. val ri.no powers. Britain (Asquith's Great 4,500,000 statement less losses) 2,500,000 France definite known)7.000,000 Russia (Uttle jtiy .. , . .... ................. . .1.000,000 150,000 Belgium 200,000 .. ...... ....... Serbia Practically none Montenegro definite (Uttle Portugal 75,000 known) officers at (only Japan 300,000 front) .,. Total, entento allies.. ...15,225,000 6,000,000 Germany Austria-Hungar- 1,500,000 700,000 Turkey Bulgaria Total, central powers. ...9,700,000 TOTAL KILLED. WOUNDED AND PRISONERS. (In considering the losses It must-- , that many lifted an wounded are only slightly hurt and return to the front. Some are wounded several successive tlmes-aneach time appear In the casu- 7 alties.) 5.500.000 Russia France (about 900,000 killed) .2.300,000 00 000 Great Britain 400,000 Italy 180,000 Belgium 230,000 Serbia be remembered d Total, entente Germany, (estimated killed) Austria-Hungar- .- y 9,410,000 700,000 4,000,000 2,750,000 600,000 60,000 - - - - 655,900. What ths War Is Costing. The war la now costing in direct governmental expenditure $110,000,-00- 0 a day; $4,680,000 an hour; $76,000 - a minute; and $1,270 a second. plenty, Is battering on the east and has the Teuton lines already won back square miles. Great Britain 4,500 boasts five million men In her army and navy. France fights as strongly as ever- - Italy is increasing her formidableness. Austria appears to be losing heart and. efficiency. end Russian fronts. offensive power. Bulgaria refuses to to the west or Turkey shows slight navy, following the naval battle of Jutland, till shuts off Germany from use .of the seas. - One German merchant' sub marine has reached America, but the foppllea which can be carried over w the will besieged nations in of little account. Germany and Austria both feel the P ot hunger. Their armies are Efficiently fed, but their industrial Workers complain of lack of nourish-present harvest is watched anxiety, and if it fails or is only klr size, famine will stalk Into the wtuatlon next spring, or earlier. much-disput- U-bo- " tb" Seek "Rwoonfible Peace; German chancellor three times . n the relchstag has offered peace to oo tent e. On account of this, opposition has arisen to him Jorne lthough he Is the kaisers other self." His friends are rallying 0 s defense, and on August 1 of the .ft 5 hegfns the curious coun-7-rilecture campaign to prepare minds of the hitherto docile Ger-- o people for a reasonable peace." .. ohile, with the sky brightening, entente allies reaffirm their resolu-take- n in the dark hours of last a to cease their efforts till 'Germany fc crashed. The Teutons not ' t0 fKEinst b beaten in war, according vw l.lied fonnulav but must be economically for many years 5 the signing of a treaty of peace. August 1, 1915, the Germans and Austri; de er,-nev- re-ess- i'f?. ( daintyjuncheonj. T' Imltfn Libby' at your i wears p3 Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago c Drill Amenitlea. Major John Purroy Mltihel said ut dinner in New York:1-Th- e memories of camp life are a very pleasant thing to any soldier Even the little vivacities of camp life seem In' the retrospect pleasant enough. Tims 1 often laugh about n hunker who wus being drilled olte day ut riattshurg by a Whatll you give me. said the an old Yale ond. If Iiake that hump off your buck V Til give you.' the hanker answered, with u tart hiiigljsoniething to ltiuke your luilr grovcf surge. broker-sergean- broker-sergean- t. t, Important to Mother Examine carefully every bottle of CA8T0RIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and toe that it Bears the Signature ot In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria The Ladies Are Learning. out speeches. Mls Mary Gur- rett liny, chairman of the Womans Suffrage party, Is rejtofted tJhuede-iiinile- l at tfie recent meeting vrju-the clerks were overworked recording subscriptions to the new canijudgn fund, Cut out the speeches; money talks best," this wise chuirumu Is said to have declared. The late blind Boss Buckley of 8au Francisco, however, gained nothing in public esteem when he told ids work er upon an occasion of funds allotment: Dont waste this good dough buying talk, but results." New York Sun. Tut n pre-electio- at snow-cover- - w-- a Crusted With Dandruff Yield Readily Ao Cuticurs. -- Trial Free. llUaut campaign against Russia. The ncers" were closing in Irresistibly. t day Lublin, an important city in ootbern Poland, felL aceQseIb with Galicia con--c eu as PresslnS northward, while a north side of the Polish salient a riindenburg bore with Lis host warriors. ' guns, without ammunition. - grad-unl!- h - Lloyd-Georg- e, STffi 5 , SIM. l, SlU, M. B.mralal, aoa ..slot, It Slf on. u orus m.tal, Bat mii m vwi I Bnkmamd (MM, lr loam, IM 9t Salk 111 rlklii. Allocator apraaa m4 ortMM I1A 17, IDT. Womon as well a IT TQ vv man or mada mtor- TT abla by kldnay ond bladdar trouble. Thou-I- T nta recommend lr.I A ATI? SwampKHmar'S Root tha creat kidney remedy. At drugfifty-caand dollar, atjes. Yota gists In may receive sample also bottle by Bared Poet, Uo pamphlet telling about IL Address Ir. Kilmer & Co., Hlnghamton. N. Y.. and enclose ten nu. Also mention ASOLO n nr Am., Or liJ DLXiUL nt this paper. N.U.rSal t Li ke W. C ity. No. 32-19- 15. j Daughter's Ides. Sirs. Brown was In the habit of big daughter ns, This Is June; she Is only fifUvu youd never think it, would you?" At lust the girl protested. It's mean of you to tell everybody how young I nm. I could have a lot better time If tn-- r didn't. Perhaps you could. But I dont pro- u pose to have people saying, after you've been out i u"h el et y n coupie of seasons, Dont l me Jane Brown Is only twenty why, she was a grown girl years ago." Just ihe same," retorted the daughter, you wouldn't like It if I Introduced you to my friends ns, This Is my niother. Shes only forty-eigyou wouldnt think It, would you? tc-l- ht Judge. Simplicity of the Fathers. Mra. Everett M. Raynor of New York, president genernl of the Daughters of the Revolution, said a lunch- eon: There are many anecdotes in lustration of the simple living Il- Une of our country's fathers had occasion to call Cutlcura Bonp to cleanse the scalp of on of his province, and' the governor dandruff cru stings and scalings, and to was tuvtted to luncheon. stay Cutlcura Ointment to soothe and heal Luncheon and a liveried) began, f betItcbings nnd Irritations. Nothing moved busily nbout, serving servant ter, surer or more economical than the wine, carving the fowl, and so these emollients for hair forth. and scalp troubles of young or old. " The guest watched the servant for Free sample each by mall with Book. some minutes, and then say to him Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept L Irritably: Boston. Bold everyw here. Adv. " What are you dance, dance, dancing about the room for, man? Cant Ail But you pull up' a chair and sit down? Dear Mattel, do you love me?" Surely there's enough for the three of I" Oh, George M Dont you, Mnliei? Just a tiny lit- us. super-cream- y 4 tle bltr Gi'orge," your mother kc?p away from us, except when I Invited her?" W-e-l- l, s, And would Khe And your brothers and sisters, hy. certainly, George." And. of course, the old gent would V settle tny debt?" Of course, George." Darling, will you marry me?" No, Georgrf!" He Meant Well, but Guest Distinguished (speaking at bunquet) Your beautiful little city appeals to me.- - As we eutne in on the train I remarked to my wife: "Ah, my dear; you nnd 1 ought to be living on the top of one of those magnificent hills." Toastmaster (In hoarse whisper! Go easy; weve got only two hills In town. Th IftKHiie asylum Is on one, and the sewage works on the other. Out-of-Tow- -- - Maybe. Reforms are being carried on everywhere Just now," have, reformed Yes, nd after-Avsome of our reforms we will probably have matter In. pretty good shapa e- woutd,Corge." too?" Kut-el-Amar- a. AuStro-IIungaria- DAISY FLY KILLER n ITCHING, BURNING SCALPS - The British . V eal Loaf, to erve cold; Cooled Corned Beef, select and appetizing. Chicken Loaf, Ham Loaf and Ve&l Loaf, delicately seasoned, .Vienna Sausage, Genuine Deviled Ham and Wafer Sliced Dried Beef for sandwiches and d The end of the second year of the great war finds the Germans in possession of more of Europe than they held on August 1, 1915, the first anniversary of the start of the great conflict, j This Is practically the only respect In which the situation Is more favorable to them. Russia, her vast man power at last organized and. furnished with Implements of destruction In ' 8 -- 1793-18X- war 7-- In-mo- tor Turkey Bulgaria .. ....... Total, Teutonic allies.. ,L.. .7,300,000 Grand total, killed, wound.....16,710,000 ed, prisoners In the Napoleonic wars, 5, 1,900,000 men were killed; in the American Civil war 494,400; in the Russo-Japane- n ' .......2,500,000 y Hot Weather Meats n e and namilitary present OF THE WAR- FORCES - n The- Crime. "You dont mean to sity the sheriff has done arrested the hoys that made up that lynchln party?He sho did." "Name o goodness! What for?" Sheriff says he lows the laws got to be respected ino round here, an them boy used a tree In the grounds an tramped all over the lawn right where there wu a plain sign Town sayin Keep Off the Grab. Topics. - Succinct. Whcn the big shop of a Lancashire merchant was burned, and while he stood by the pile of ashes, vainly seeking to conjure a good phenlx therefrom, he was handed this message from Ids family In London : Telegraph particulars of fire In shop. Seizing s pencil, he wrote : "No particulars. No shop." , man wojxld have Many a suited better had he let hla wife attend to the Job. self-mad- e 5 again." x - Tea and Coffee ; For Children? These beverages contain drug elements that hinder development of both body and mind, especially in children. Nowadays, for their children, wise parents choose P0STUM This delicious table beverage, made of cereals, has a wonderfully satisfying flavor a flavor much like the higher grades of coffee (but without any of coffee's harm.) Postum is a k that true, pure has helped thousands to forget the coflee habit food-drin- e Theres a Reason. Grocers everywhere seiircrru:: J |