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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH STATE UTAH HUNGRY WOMEN Attractive Silver NEW YORK CITY HALL BESIEGE For the table makqahome Inviting.' a wise investment; so muchi. It finally used it nothing We becomes a priceless heirloom. sell the wars of the worlds great silversmiths. Our modest prices make the Commercial, clubs, Plata basin have consolidated. A farmers' round up was given. by the Utah Agricultural college under the auspices of the Grantsville High school February 26 to 2S, inclusive. All of-th- Good silver re e PRESIDENT TO DETERMINED PROTECT AMERICAN LIVES AGAINST SUBMARINES. The body of Leslie Baker, 18 Vears old, who was caught in a snowslide at the Z dugway in American Fork canyon Saturday, has been recovered. Residents of the Lucern valley, on the other side. of Diamond mountain from Vernal, are petitioning to separate from Uinta county and start a new county in that section. Reorganizatiorf of the citizens' military' training camp which won popular favor at Fort Douglas In August and September is assured for the coming pummerr it is announced. Bounty records show that R. W. Swingle of Ogden is one of champion huniov of the county. He killed daring the past year two bears, forty-eigcoyotes and two wildcats. Convicting evidence has been secured by the officers of Vernal that one business house in Vernal has received invoices since June 1, 1916, for whisky, which amounted to $2,345.15. Potatoes In Salt Lake City are selling at higher prices than in London. Onions In Utah have reached the New York price and are continuing so scarce advances are expected. Tbft postoffice and a general stock of goods owned by Louis Winchell at Cache Junction was totally destroyed by fire on February 24th, causing a loss of $5,000. The origin is unknown. Hereafter midnight will sound the death knell to music, dancing, drinking and other forms of revelry in Salt Lake hotels and cafes, according to an announcement made by the chief of police. Twenty-twburglaries committed within a period of three weeks in the residence sections of Salt Lake are charged by the police to Arthur C. Atkinson, 23 years of age, an electrician, arrested last week. , ' Louis Bell, Italian, 32 years' of age, said by thepolice to be one of the most desperate criminals In the west, was shot by a policeman at Salt Lake when he resisted arrest. His wounds - are not regarded as serious. , , Miss Maud Jones of Price stepped ifWV ICO MAIN STRUT SALT LAKE CITY M KN AD WOMEN. Now la ths time to learn the bar! er trade. Ban bera in great,! mand. Special rats now apeo for So day. Only ahnrt time required. Tools furnished and eotnmieslon imil hile learning. Call or write Moler Baber School, 13 Commercial 8c. . Salt l.ake fity, Ctah. WAMTFD President Wilson, on Washington. asked 26th, congress for auFebruary thority to use the forces of the .United States to protect American ships and lives against the German put lboTiation"tn ' a state of armed neutrality. The Immediate response was the introduction in the house of a bill, approved in advance by the president, empowering him to furnish guns and merchantmen gunners to American and to employ such other instrumentalities and methods as may become necessary; and providing for a $100,0110,000 bond issue, . to be used in his discretion for war insurance to encourage American commerce to brave the submarine peril. subma-finemebacet- hiDCD i MAKERS OF JEWELRY Vlolatlort of Rights and Intolerable Blockade Brings Chief Executive Before CongresiTWith Appeal for Authority to Act. DAY PAST REVOLUTIONS OF tr the Place of the,. Antiquated Methods of Mak'ng , Changes in Government, Education-Must-Tak- e . ht , r The presidents 'jwuw IVERNIA SURVIVORS AFLOAT ON A RAFT mxmnwM" i mmm ww f ac- long-expecte- tion, while received In the main with expressions of support, threatens to force an extra session of congress. Standing at the clerks desk in the ball of the house, grave, calm, speaking earnestly in the attitude now familiar, the president delivered hts address while congress sat in tense, respectful' silence, fully impressed with the soberness of the occasion. No cheers and applause such as have burst out before punctuated his sentences. By common consent the mem- Scene at New York city hall showing the fowl rioters, nearly all woiinm, mounting the steps In their effort to see Mayor Mltchel. The .first of the police reserves have arrived ami are stopping the first rush. Thousands of women from, the East side and other sections of the city opened a crusade against, the high cost of living and started ly raiding push-car- t peddlers who had raised their prices. They then marched In a disorderly body to the city hull to enlist the mayors aid in their fight against the rising cost of necessities. o mrnmmmmmamammmm bers refrained from demonstration. There were vigorous nods of approval from Democrats and Republicans who -, fNi! y... have been urging a forward course; silence and indications of reserved thought from those opposed. But at the Conclusion of the address, when the president spoke of, the fundamental rights on which are based the structure. of family, state and liberty, and Bald, I cannot lmug, ine a man with Amrelcan principles In his heart hesitating to defend these off a passenger train on the Denver '& Rio Grande and her foot slipped under-ththings, cheers resounded through tha chamber. car. Her foot was so badly manFor four weeks an unrestricted gled that her big toe and a part of her submarine warfare, the president told left foot had to be; amputated. Congress,- has seen the destruction of J. H. Davis, a mechanic employed by at least two American ships, American a Salt Lake automobile company, lost ' -A commerce driven in a large, measure sTr his Job, was arrested and lodged in "X v!S from the seas through fear of the jail on the accusation that he had ara rrfiraniwnrii afUif underseas peril, and a resulting com a a in thrown lire cat blazing furnace in the basement of. the garage. Crowded together on this small raft, pthese survivors of the transport Ivernln faced the Mediterranean in her gestion of America's vital Industries, John ONeil, 26 years of age, one of roughest mood before a trawler came along and rescued them. The Ivernla, a Cunard liner of 14,000 tons, was growing more serious every day. The e the best known and most popular sunk by a submarine in the Mediterranean recently while carrying troops. One hundred and men, in- fact that moreAmerican lives had not S3 members of man to the was The men last leave the crew, perished. the skipper, Cupt. William T. Tur- been lost, he said, was due to the of Eureka, died suddenly cluding ship young fact that German submarine comwho commanded was when ner, the Lusitania German a submarine. she, too, by torpedoed had He of heart disease. attended, a manders had exercised an unexpectand he at 10:30, dance, feeling ill, ed discretion and restraint, rathe! went home. At 11 o'clock he was ' IN ENLISTING THE NAVY than because of the Instructions under FIRE ON BATTLESHIP IN MIDOCEAN ... dead. t ... which they were acting. To bo urn Clarence Hendrickson, aged 23, a prepared, with congress out of ses cripple, haring, had both legs amput v sion, the president said, would he arseren has been tated '.Wi years ago, most Imprudent." Consequently he rested at Salt Lake, charged. with atc L .; asked , vr V for authority to act. wife t of a tempted .blackmail, the the course of his address, During comf if prominent merchant being the President Wilson told congress; 1 f plainant am not proposing nor contemplatint Salt Lake is the healthiest city in & vwar or any steps that might lead to the United States, the death rate avwar. eraging but 9.524 per thousand, comWar can only come by the wilful pared with 13.30 per thousand with . - 'fV. jr. acts and aggressions of others. V.. 4a cities f in the United other X' I must ask for your suporting auStates having a pouiation of 100,000 A thority In the most general terms. We or more. Ah; ' must defend bur commerce and the Transfer papers were signed in Salt of our people with discretion, lives ift v ' . f , .A v r Lake, last ..week whereby the six canwith but clear and steadfast purpose. ifning factories controlled by Senator ' I request that: you will authorize W. J. Parker of Ogden will be taken , , t Z 'Jr m to supply our merchant ships with over by the California Packing corport defensive arms, should that become A ' ation, the largest concern of its kind and with Lhe means of usnecessary, on the Pacific coast ing them, and to employ any other inFranklin Curtis Goudy, grand sire of strumentalities or methods that may the supreme lodge of the L O. O. F. of be necessary and adequate to prothe world, which numbers 2,225,000 tect our ships and our people fn their member will be the guest of honor at legitimate and peaceful : pursuits on w. jXM.' the seas. an Informal reception to bo given at I request also a sufficient credit to Salt Lake by the Utah Grand lodge -me to provide adequate means enable .the third week of Aprilof protection, where they are lacking. A case of alleged mistaken Identity Including adequate Insurance against Y- A- almost cost Mrs. Anna Jackson, 26 war risk. .,i I feel that I ought to obtain from you years old, a negress, her life at the : hands of an Infuriated Greek at Salt full and immediate assurance of the Lake. Mrs. Jackson was shot twice authority which I may need at any moment to exercise. No doubt I alas she unidentified by the foreigner ready possess that, authority without entered a room In which the man Is special warrant of law. said to have been quarreling with anOur own commerce is suffering other woman. rather In apprehension than in fact, From figures compiled "on the adbecause so many exf our ships are timBlaze on the battleship Wyoming at sea which was quickly extinguished vance in the high cost Of living from idly keeping to their home ports, than four reliable sources by the professors by the perfectly trained crew. Each man rushed to his arranged station, the by ships having been sunk. were closed and preparations made to flood the magaThis itself .might presently accomand students of the University of water compartments v in effect what the new German zines if plish The possibility of seeing actual necessary, "Utah, it appears that the increase Is service In the navy has speeded up re- submarine orders were meant to acnot any sudden jump ahead In charges, so far as we are concerned. hut that in fact great increases came cruiting In that branch of the military. complish, of the Lyman M. Law discase The THAT WILL GERARD BRING STEAMER HOME The photograph shows an applicant in closed a ruthlessnes in the prices In 1916 as compared with of method which .the Brooklyn recruiting oflice under-iroin- g receives grave condemnation, those of 1913." ' but was medical examinatloncircum stances The board of education of the Uinta aceompani ed- - by which might not have been expected school district Is holding meetings all From Foreign Lands. at any time in connection with the over the county in an effort to perof the submarine against meruse The man writhad young vote to the $130,000 suade citizens as the German government chantmen ten his an mother affectionunusually bond at the election to be held on used it has ate 1 letter. He was he coming home, Siarch. 6. The bonds 'wTHT TSTused "td I There --jnay-, be no recouraebutJta wgjj ldDjdOcO.JUuM)e3cl enlarge, and improve the school disof presents, among them a striped arraedBeutrality,wMch..weL6liaU..now trict. have to maintain and for .which there Japanese kimono. The mother got the is abundant American precedent The record price for wool In the sense pf most of the letter unaided, Uinta basin has been paid by John N. but, finding herself unable to grapple Mrs. Wiltons Sister Dies. La vis of Vernal, who purchased the with all her sons big words, she handVa. Mrs. Mathew Maury, Roanoke, entire 1917 clips of Walt McCoys 800 ed It to the visitor for a second is - fcJr? t ; . r if y sister; of Mrs, Woodrow Wilson, died sheep, Stranghams 3,000 head, George here Monday afternoon after an op E. Adamss 1,400 head, J. W. Daviss A striped Japanese kimono P the eration for peritonitis. Mrs. Maury, 1,400 head and T. T. Alexander's 950 visitor exclaimed, when she came to who was 51 years of age, had been 111 head at 40 cents per pound. that part of the letter, llow nicer but a few days. Nicer exelaimed the rendered old Ogden canyon has recently - been ' Two Americans Killed. the scene of a score of snowslilea You may think so, but will you iady. , dam-tell me to anf kindly which, while not. large enough London. The Cunard- - steamship to do' with what, I such a thing? I suppose.1 can keep Laconia, 18,150 tons gross, which 28 property to any great extent, covit tied up in the backyard, but what sailed from New York February 18 for ered the tracks of the electric railway j It is 'expected that Ambassador Gerard and his suite will. come back to on earth am I to feed it on with snow and kept a large force of J goodness Liverpool has been sunk toy a GerJ America on this steamer, the Infanta Isabel, a Spanish liner. teen at work clearing the way. only knows! man torpedo, and, two Americans UUedrit ia said. h. a X -- mi ;,(v? e -- Njr ar 1 sin i nVilY i . fifty-thre- , . - ... s - V - n . y S . BOYD PARK, KX , sixty-seve- buying easy. A s i y - 'Af vtf . 'C' Jl If yv :v u - --n- The. machine gun and the high explosive shell hnve ended the days of; successful revolutions, according to Stanley J. Weyman, the English au- thor of The House of the Wolf, A. Gentleman of France and Under th. Bed Rohe. . According to Mr. view no rebellion by the peocan ever hope to be successful In. ple . Wey-mu- ns -- the larger nations now. "Agnlnst the muskets and ennnon of old days naked hands ami makeshift) ' weapons could prevail If fury lent strength and numbers were sufficient. But today, when half a dozen machln guns, handled by twice as many experts, can mow down hundreds In a. minute; when even a Blngle shell can wreck half a village, when everything that has to do with these weapons, with the monitions that feed them, and the airplanes that guide them. Is technical to a degree, of what avail are the scattered rifles and barricades of the people, the regiments hastily levied and Scahtlly armed? Of none. Before the muzzles of a few machine guns the tollers of Ghent and Liege and Antwerp, cities famed in the past for their turbulence, are hurried Into slavery well-nig- h un--. resisting. For they know resistance to bo hopeless. And so It Is, and must be. " As long as a mere handful of men trained In the use of these engines remains faithful, despotism may sit secure, be the people never so Irnpa- tlent Only from outside, only by ths use of equal weapons, only by other nations, can the yoke be broken and the people be freed." . high-explosi- , STERN CALL ON ENGINEERS Italian Army Had to Fight Nature as Well as ths Forces to Which It Was Opposed. f A recent message from the field headquarters of ths Italian army says that ths transportation romance of this mountain front set down in cold, hard figures, reads thus; 2,443 miles of ffttlroad rebulU hr repaired ; COO mlle4 of new railroad built ; 150 miles of airline cables stretched for the teleferlca system ; 30,000 mile; & telephone wire put up; 10,000 new troop, hospital &hd freight buildings erected; 200 miles of narrow gauga railroad laid In or behind the trenches ; 10 new bridges thrown across rivers and precipices to accommodte 2,040. miles of operating road. if The work is credited to 12 civil engineers of the government department of public works, atdqd by army engineers proper; likewise by 200,000 workmen and 100,000 army mules, hitched to 50,000 wagons. The foregoing Is the first official record of the exact extent of the construction work on this front, carried on steadily for 18 months, despite enemy artillery, avalanches, snowfalls rains, floods, frost, lack of material and all of the other ills by which en-gineerg are beset 450-mil- e ; Do Away With Middlemen. ; The English Whole- sale society is one of the largest man- ufacturing enterprises In the world,' has factories scattered all over England, in which almost every variety of useful irtlds Is made, .and owns Its own, farms, dairies and . creameries.1 Most of the other wholesale societies carry on more or less manufacturing. The English societies have $30,000,-00- 0 invested In homes built for their members. The two great wholesale1 societies of England and Scotland,, created by consumers societies, be- gan manufacturing and now produce $500,000,000 worth of commodities) yearly. The largest tea warehouse lxr the United Kingdom Is that of the cooperatives. where 25.000,000 pounds of tea are yearly distributed from, their, own tea Jands In . Ceylon. London ; . o - sea-farin- i... g .tJCS waanwaS. . ,) 1 ,1 : iTo Extend Potash Production. The bureau of soils Is. with cement mills, blast furnaces, andj with the object of enabling fhettrtd recover potash as a by--' wool-scourer- s. Ijrodacrwher commercially feasible. bw f ; ' Dally Thought As actions are of much more significance than words. It must be a much more acceptable .worship of God," him In ail the actions of our common life, than with any little forxa of words at Arty particular times, William Law. , Ben Franklin's Philosophy. Gain may be temporary and uncertain; but ever while you live, exy Is constant and certain; and It !j easier to build two chimneys than t i keep one In fuel Franklin. ! |