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Show UTAH THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, 1IIEDUEII TWO Tl BUTTE- - PROPERTY IN CAUSES GREATEST, DISASTER IN HISTORY OF CAMP. BLAZE PERIOD OF LENIENCY ENDS FOR THOSE WHO FAILED TO PROPERLY REGISTER. - Level and Shaft was Soon a Roaring Chimney, Men Having No Chance of Escape from Flames. WHERE OILED HIGHWAYS PAY Fire Started In Government Set In Motion Machinery for Effective Enforcement of Penalties Upon Those Who Would Evade Selective Draft. 1 -- st con-done- 1 John Spargo, prominent American Socialist, who has resigned from the Socialist party because he believes It Is committed to a program that la 2 French civilians being deported to Germany, from and a photograph taken by a German officer. 3 Interned German sailors from the vessels seized at Philadelphia taking their morning walk at Jport McPherson, Georgia. 4 Naval Reserve gunners on the volunteer submarine chaser Lynx, owned by Nathaniel Ayer of Boston; and being used In a recruiting campaign along the New England coast, AUSTRIAN CITY THREATENED '' - W ? v BY ITALIANS - 4 V - y r j ,t - 'X f Mv-vyx- -' m iff r L N, f ... ',1 and-rescu- Cem-pulsor- Ai , i -- ot with-Venlc- 5 shlp-bulldl- o BILLION DOLLAR AIR FLEET. " me V- . y , OFFERS REWARljT FOR SLACKERS Enforce Registration Law. Boise, Idaho, A vigorous campaign to nm down the slackers who failed to register June 5 or during the period of grace allowed by the war department, which has expired. Is to be waged tn - Idaho. The governor has nithorlzed the payment of a reward of $25 for the arrest of any slacker. The total registration under the In this state went over the 33,006 mark when Adams, Elmore and Oneida counties were heard from., The counties unreported are Fremont, Idaho and Owyhee. J draft law Germany Holds American Prisoners. Washington. Germany has notified the United States that she regards "tin American merchant sailseventy-fou- r ors brought In by the raider Moewe as prisoners of war, ami that they will be treated as such. To Insure them of adequate care in the prison camp this government has arranged to supply them w Ith additional food and other" necessities., through.. SwitxerlandL. V e If I!? WUlUf . 'X , pi u " v' p Hi liJr t 'fcfHlifc-,- .' rf. 1 :1 a -- I ever saw. Roosevelt Talks to Telegraphers. Ph Hadelphia. Theodore lioosevel t, tn an address here Sunday, at the an- -' nual memorial services of the railroad brotherhoods and the Order of Railway ,x r 4 i', - r , r' " Telegraphers, asserted that new army should be on the French, th democratic, model not on the Prussian, the aristocratic, ' this-countr- A , X v v , A X . .w CA. tit IT rt Miss Jeanette Rankin of Montana, our only congresswoman, has added arboriculture to her list of amunpllshnients. "With the aid Of three movie photographers, a few congressmen, a handful of spectators and a pair of Pershing Guest of King George. diminutive trees, Miss Rankin added to the landscape on thq eapitol grounds. London. General Donahl R. McMillan who, It IS rePershing and She a fir tree and a California Redwood. planted X'nited States Ambassador Page took ported. has been picked up after font luncheon with King, George and Queen years In 'the Arctic searching for Crocker land which Rear Admiral Mary at Buckingham palace on MonBATTLESHIP PENNSYLVANIA IN ACTION day. The king invited the enlisted Peary thought he had discovered sevmen In General Pershings party to eral years ago. McMillan AndJJl.patty,. the palace-owere sentltuo, Gnf North in 1913 by Tuesday, the American Museum of Natural HisStrikers in" Battle. tory, equipped for a four years, stay, South River. N. J. Two strikers fa 1915 the George ,B. Cluett was sent were killed and ten wounded In a fight up as a relief ship, but returned after 'between idle employees of the Heran unsuccessful search for the party. mann Ankara1 handkerchief factory Last year the Denmark was sent np s and guards protecting' from Greenland, and after wintering in here Jane 11. North Star bay found Doctor McMillan and bis party. , -- - strike-breaker- i Dublin Inspector Killed Du.1 !ln Police Inspector Mills was bilk'd Monday night while preventing the hot.pru of meeting called to protea rainst hapnsoniuent of Jrlsh wg Mnu k with a suck or a air fleet Is on In earnest ar Representative Murray Ilulbert of New jfork. who, .with. Senator Morris Sheppard of Texas, has introduced a bill for the citation of a department of aeronautics as the first step In a comprehensive . offensive and defen sive program, had a conference Sunday with Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary, chairman of the national aerial coast patrol commission, and Howard E. Coffin, head of the aeroboard of the national council of defense, on the whole general aerial subject They mapped out plans for the creation of the department which Shall have exclusive control of all aeronautical matters and whose chief shall be a member of the presidents cabinet. The aerial sponsors also want, according to ilr. Hulbert a vast sum, probably $1,000,000,000, to give the United States the geratest air fleet the world , S 5 Is on for Inauguration of AeriaMGeet In America. .Washington. America's drive for a Campaign blllion-dolt- i M 'Takes Steps" to V -- a s ' irrfM x A ,ik y?y V-- V Y S ' ? of Idaho -- A--; ' 4 -- Governor ' treatment The fire, which started on the 2400-foThe advancing Italian array Is only a few miles from the great Austrian naval base at Trieste, The photograph level, communicated quickly to shows a panorama of Trieste and was taken from Miramar, the home of the Archduke Maximilian, afterward emsmoke, which poured from the shaft peror of Mexico. .In the foreground running along the shore Is the Important railroad connecting Trieste e, the Ison so and Vienna. At the foot of the hill 1$ one of the fortifications. In the middle distance Is shown the break- tn great clouds, retarded rescue work. water harbor and main part of the City. In the background, fronting the bay, Is Servola, the site of Austria's great Miners from adjoining properties, or' ' naval dered up from underground as a preyard. ' caution; went to work as rescuing gangs, aiding national guardsmen,--whIN THE ARCTIC NOT LOST had been called to' the scene. RANKIN HISS PLANTS TWO TREES ev Oiled earth roads should not h gtirded as a permanent- improve 7F?7f but are much hotter than n earth roads, In tte opinion of Ws. , Gearhart, professor of highway g. u.y-neerin- roads do not Require so much dragging as ordinary earth run1 said Professor Gearhart, They shed water better and do not become so dusty. Although oiled roads are not so satisfactory as gravel roads, they may be a help In developing good - " roads sentiment. The best results from oiling are to be obtalneJ by applying the oil when J" "Oiled psjpfrS vsv. - w fA? v r s,Vv 'K . . Tftpp ' N a'-- x..;:- -- x. . vC A v yy 'X? f . TX , ( tt v ""han Water. ld X - Xh.tf " ;r;j if,. X - ?" I l FOR CANADIANS. y Premier Berden Present Bill for t Service. Military Ottawa, A bill for compulsory military service by Canadians between the ages of 20 and 45 years was presented In the house of commons June 11 by Sif Robert Borden, During the next seven months, to keep four Canadian army divisions In the field, the enlistment of 70,000 men Is needed, be said, and to keep five divisions la the field Si, 000 men are Reeded,. There la a greater number of ami table men to Canada, ,Jt Juts been jedded Chat they should be brought to arms by compulsion. AH Cana (dlansj ujjdef g law which had ben on The statute books for forty-nin- e years, are liable for the defense of the country and liable to be sent abroad t the government decides that In defending the country they should fight beyond Its boundaries. r I . i- - L'-n- Oil Sometimes More Soils ot pro-Germa- n. , CONSCRIPTION Better on Sand Than on Clay or o certificate of registration for war service was Issued (y the provost tiinr phal general on June 11 General Crowders orders in part ay : Quotas are to ho assigned to the several states ln proportion to their population ua determined by the bureau of the census and not In proportion to the registration. The result Is that every person who has failed to register Is seriously Increasing the burden of those who have registered. .Ample notice and every opportunity has now been given ami there Is no 'longer any argument upon which the can tie conduct of The period of leniency has now' passed. It Is requested that every ef Tort be now made to detect and arrest persons subject to registration who Lave not registered and to bring eaek case promptly to the attention of the nearest representative of the depart- went of Justice, The penalty for failure to register on June 5 Is Imprisonment for a year and enforced registration, but General Crowder immediately after registration day recommended that local registration boards provide further opportunity for delinquents. The department of Justice has noil-fle- d United States attorneys to release those already arrested for failure to register providing they hayo now reg-- l ' Istoml. (General Crowder had nearly completed n draft of regulations to govern exemptions and exemption boards and expects to lay It before Secretary Raker In a few days for approvul. The' general believes no class should he exempted ns such, but that local hoards Should decide on the circumstances In each Individual case. He favors use of some device such as a jury wheel for drawing the names of those to be examined by the exemption boards,- - Butte, Mont At least 200 miners met death in the Speculator ftnd Grau-ItMountain mines of the North Butte Mining company, on June 9, as the result of a fire in the mines. ' YV ed l he fi re was dl scoveml 412 men were in the mines. Of this number, 222 were rescued from one property and 60 from the other. Hope of finding any of the missing men alive has been abandoned, The fire started on the 2400 level when a carbide lamp came In contact with Insulation on an electric cable. The Granite Mountain shaft caved la for a considerable distance. The city has gone Into mourning. and all public Hags are at half-maamusements have been suspended because of the disaster. Twenty-seve- n men, rescued alive 2400-folevel of the Specufrom the lives to the owe their lator mine, heroism and resourcefulness of Manus nipper, or tool Duggan, a boy. Young Duggan, displaying rare presence of mind, showed his older fellow workers how to bulkhead themselves from the dangerous gas and preserve their lives until their rescue. The Granite Mountain shaft, 3600 feet deep, was soon a roaring chimney, and with the destruction of its supporting timbers the ground was caving, compelling all work to be directed from the levels connected with adjoining mines. The Speculator, another shaft about 800 feet distant, connects with the Granite .Mountain on the different levels. That shaft also was In danger, as water from, the levels was running into It and had caved a portion. There was no fire 'In 'this shaft, however. Tens f -- water was poured Into the Granite Mountain shaft and from points on connecting levels with adjoining mines as near as It Is possible to get to the scene of the accident. It is believed that the mine damage will exceed $1,000,000. While the morgues were being filled with bodies, a dozen or more men overfrom the come by gas workings were revived at the mine Itself by first aid methods and a dozen more were removed to hospitals for , Washington.- - Orders for tin nr lost evety man between tin ages of 21 and SO, Inclusive, who can hot show n ts 2400-fo- ot 1 sad e found it one-thir- one-quart- er jr 1 MOISTURE FOR ROAD MAKING There Is Certain Water Content at Which Soli Packs Hard Remove Alt Grass and Weeds. wrnmmm Road making Is largely a matter of moisture eontrol. When soil contains too much water It becomes mud, and when it has too little moisture it becomes dust. But there is a certain moisture content at which soil packs hard. And this la just about the amount of moisture that a soil will hold readily.' This usually can be maintained in road that has good drainage, that Is well crowned so the water will run off when It raln and Grab-I- s free from grass and weeds. These If allowed to grow, will w1 draw the moisture out of the soil and so remove the binding material. -- tt CONVICTS ON PUBLIC WORKS In Proportion on Road Improvement to13 , '1.3 From creased Nearly Per Cent Since 1S35. , - The proportion ot convicts emid0 of on public works instead of on leuse Shortage- of Food Container. 1SS5 trocs contract since has increased - Washington. Growers and shippers of foodstuffs were urged by the de- S3 to 86 per cent and the proportion road work alone from 1.3 to neany partment of agriculture on Saturday to or vT 13 per cenR according to a report order immediately all barrels, crates, based the federal public roads office o hampers, baskets and otner containers on a survey of many prisons. Sta needed for the season. A shortage may .mther lbancounty .supervision of Tlct labor on roads li the warns." - -- v devebq-vmlew-demar!t- ea lv department .i- Indians In Montana Restless. Helena, Mont. Governor Samuel V. Stewart has received a telegram from Forsythe announcing- - that the Obey, n&e Indians, who refused to register for the selective draft, are holding war dances and threatening violence. - 1" Numerous Villages Destroyed. According to various K;m Salvador. cepn ts 'of him. vs. the road Is hard, smooth, dustless, and without any ruts or pockets, according to Professor Gearhart. Where there Is a pocket In the road, wnter will gather after every .storm. Oil works better on sandy soils than on clay or heavy loams. Loam soils may be helped by sprinkling a light coating of sand over the died surface. After the first year tt Is better to ap- d of a to ply from gallon of oil to each square yard of surface In the spring and the same amount again in the fall. For laying the dust on city streets, oiling may be as economical and more satisfactory than 'Water, particularly If the soil is sandy. When city streets are oiled It is best to cover the cross walks with dust dirt so that they will not be covered with oil. When the oiling process Is finished the dust or dirt may be swept away. Surface oiled streets are not satisfactory If the soil is clay or loam, for the oily dust blows about and Is earrled into build-.-.. Ings and upon walks. ' model. , His Own Record. Bank saved that womans life from the undertow, and then she married Macadam Treated With OIL flut she wis ted la-- 4 rovmd wtek in t! ti here the earth pnhes stroyed mntr-'- t vd-l.iae- s, dop.trtm.-n- t er vlllig x of svhn E, I r i'ivr. Easily Converted. to It Is not at all difficult the owner of a new automobile to t s theory, If be Is caucht the moment when he Is trying worm his way through a freh h Improvement, two miles and a fcS long and running from fence to - , , good-road- New Position for Goethals. aCC Major General Goethal. has ft! the nvly c"catel ixct of st3':e v gr.per ofNew Jersey. 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