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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYS VILLE, UTAH Her Engagement Rjng Is a girl's most treasured gem. - it should be a good one. It will cost less than you think. We have all sizes each one cer feet. Modest prices. FAILURE OF GERMANS TO SIGN PEACE TERMS WILL MEAN OCCUPATION. BOYD PARK MAKERS OF JEWELRY )erv Hitches Jake Treaty or Leave It, le Position of Victors, Who Are Prepared to March Into Hunland If Necessary to Enforce a Just Peace. uuiAicxcm HELP WAITED VI London. Should the Germans refuse "to sign the peace treaty, which does not seem probable, according to the latest advices received here, they can expect the allies to at once begin a march upon Berlin. And there will be many enthusiastic wearers of the uniform who Will be glad to complete the journey they began before the collapse of the Iiun fighting machine. It is declared thut all military arrangements hae been made for the allied armies to advance in exactly the aaiue way as they would have done had Germany not accepted the armistice terms. s According, to a dispatch from the impresxion gained by American officers through talking with Germans regarding the peace terms Is that many of them are bitter und sullen, but are Inclined to resign themselves to accept any terms, no matter bow harsh. No concrete plan of action 1ms been suggested In the event the German delegates at Versailles refuse to vav.'A.wmw SIMPLY PERFECT the treaty. American officers say the commou people In the occupied area lam widely divergent views, but that as a whole they appear more or less stunned. Many of them seem crushed, hut others are showing a spirit of braxado. One Ainerieun who had circulated freely among the clx Ilians retried that none of them expected thut Germany would actppt the terms. They said they could not see how the people would to pay the Indemnity demanded If their commerce was restricted and all their colonies confiscated, and, In udditlon, Germany had ft cede territorbelongtng to the mainland. ltut there Is one thing the Germans can hunk upon. .They will either sign t he peace Terms Or face an Invasion by the allied forces, who will tuke charge lit Uermuny and force a Just peace should the Huns decline to accept the terms offered. he-ab- le WORKING ON AUSTRIAN TREATY of Four May b Ready to Report During Week. Paris. The roundl of four spent the greater part of Monday on the Austrian boundaries aud completed the task of dfflnlpg tenj Motpjay afternoon In a session whit the foreign minCouncil ister. Such progress was made that the member of the council believe that the Austrian treaty may he completed during the week. President Wilson spent some time with the American commissioners who have been considering the various phases of the peace treaty. It was pointed out that there Are so many points of similarity between the Austrian ami German treaties that an enormous amount of time would be unveil by preparing the document relating to Austria at once. KING APPROVES PEACE LEAGUE Utah Senator Declares America Has Come Into Her Own. America has Tome Suit Lake City. Into her own. Under a league of we are not forming entangling alliances, but we are unraveling them. tVe are for the peace of the world. The league of nations is just as sure to he ratified by the United States senate as the sun Is to shine tomorrow morning. It has come to give peace to a distracted world. Democrats believe In it and so do most all others, These views of Senator William II. King were stated In an address dellv. ered here Monday night. ( im-tio- LINER DOCKS WHILE ABLAZE Passengers Show Courage When They Find Vessel in Flames. Seattle. Fire was burning In the hold of the Japanese liner Manila Maru when she arrived here Monday from the Orient with about 200 passengers and a cargo estimated to be worth about $2,000, Out). Passengers aboard the Manila remained calm, her officers said, when the fire was discovered while the ship was about 1000 miles from Cape - Wilson Defends American People. President Wilson, in his here Monday to the French academy of moral and political sciences, entered a strong disclaimer of the Idea that the American people were largely materialists or dollar worshippers. Paris. aa-dre- ss California to Oust Yellow Tenants. San Francisco. A movement to terminate the leaseholds of ' all except white tenants In California lands and to open these lands and vast reclaimed territory to white settlers, particularly returned soldiers, has been started. Labor Fights Pool Hall Closing. Amarillo, Tex. Monday, June 18. was tel in federal court for hearing the application of the Dallas labor tem pie for an, Injunction against the stat'e attorney general to prevent closing pool halls In Texas. IN THEORY Kitchen Management Left Nothing Be Desired, Except the Prosaic Fact of Cooking. to An experienced housewife, who has never taken any other course in mestic science than that afforded t,y wrestling many years with the problem of three meals a day, felt mnh Interested when her college-bredmigh-te- r told her that she was going to with a friend who spend the week-en- d was the last word in the highbrow world of the cooking specialist. . Mother, It was wonderful, ei. claimed the girl on her return. On one side of her white-tilelaboratory she doesnt call It a kitchen there Is the dishwashing machine and on the other the long tables for the cod Cob-len- sign " U BUC lowaa Bvd brbr7ioflij lor men over draft are. Barber, in eood aa officer commission Oet nreuaiU o few week. Call or write. Moler Bart. AS 8. West Cwllegw, Temple St.. Salt Lake Ot", d TD Be Erected at the nstructive work. The arrangements are perfect, and everything NationalGapital and Is clean aud shining. Tm Just erszy about It Not a bit like our haphazard kitchen." And I presume the food was equally wonderful" said the really sympathetic mother, ready to learn of the new generation. Tell me about It. The returned visitor looked though- Dedicated toOurBous WhoHaveFouaht.Suf fered and Given Their Lives for the Freedom of the World. tful. "Well, you see, we didnt go very deep into cookery. She never does. We had dinner made In the flreless cooAnd the rest ker, some sort of stew. of the stuff she gets at the delicatessen. NwYork World. V. EN of 17 and 701 The men of 1917 have maintained the legacy left by the men of 1770, and have pnld the debt Incurred., The odd coincidence In numbers stands as the symbol of a real bond. Washington borrowed of France the men and the money that saved the day for the freedom of the colonies. Wilson sent back to France the men and the money that saved the day for the freedom of the nations. We repaid Lafayette with Pershing. There is a universal eagerness to build a fitting memorial to the heroes of, the war of wars. Monuments will spring up all over the United States to But individual men, ofllcers and. organisations. there in an JjiM'Tent demnud for one great national memorial. The only place for It Is, of course, the capital of the couutry, and Washington has been and will be In a large sense the capital of the world. No memorial will be appropriate which has not a lasting value and a dignity of usefulness as well as beauty and splendor. No statue or group of statues could be reared which would express what this memorial must express. No column of melted cannon, though It were made of steel barrels a mile high, would convey the message. An imperial arch would Imply nothing more than a gntewayjor corn querors and would act simply as an obstruction to traffic. The right memorial must be a temple, a temple of architectural grandeur, a museum for statues, feiists, tablets, archives and Interesting relics, a place of dally resort, and a meeting place for national gatherings. It I an amazing fact that Washington the sent of our national government, the center of world activity, the mecca of congresses hns no large and dignified meeting place, no convention hall of any dimensions. The memorial described will therefore meet a pressing need. What ideal should this memorial most vividly express? Of what religion should the temple be? Surely, the religion of freedom, of democracy, of equality, and of opportunity. It should express the triumph of the ideals of Washington and the founders of this Republic as those Ideals have spread through the world and united In the recent bloody victory oxer the spirit of autocracy. By strange good fortune these ideals can be Immediately realized. Construction can begin at once. Since George Washington would accept no money for his servicer to the notion two gifts were voted to him, one consisting of a sum In cash, which he disposed of as an endowment to the university now known as Washington and Lee; the other a number of stock certificates valued then at $23.000. The latter, amount he set aside In his will to be ued as a cumulative fund for the diffusion of knowledge. In the vicissitudes of time the stock he bequeathed lost Its value and the dying wish of the father of his country seemed likely to remain forex er unlulfilled. Recently a movement was set on foot to fulfill cht-- w l.sli. The George Washington Memorial association was formed and various projects ere among them the foundation of a university. Rut the cquntry had now fully blossomed with universities, every state haxlng its own. Mn Henry F. D.mock, sister of William G Whitney, who ns secretary of the navy won the title of Father of the New American Navy, was elected president of the association. . With characteristic energy, Mrs. Dlmock has set about the accomplishment of the ideal. A national committee, including eminent men and women from tdl section of the country, has been formed and nearly half a million dollars already collected, lu addition to a still larger amount pledged. The association ha procured from congress the grant of an Ideal tract of land whkt. was formerly occupied by the Rennsylvanla station, and at present covered In pan by temporary buildings of the war department This Is almost the ouly desirable site remaining unoccupied In Washington. A competition in designs for the building was pnrtkimted In hy a dozen of the foremost Amer- d. Dickens Levs of Humanity. Dickens love for humanity, his desire to right wrong and relieve suffering. were some of the reasons gives by Sheriff Lyell, a talented member of the Scottish bar, speaking before the Glasgow Dickens society, for the admiration that writer had won. The Barristers of Dickens was the speakers subject ne referred to Mr. Voles, Eugene Raeburn, Tommy Traddles, Sidney Carton, Sergeant Buzbuz and other characters well known to Dickens readers. One must leave behind the spirit of criticism and give oneself up to a enjoyment In reading There might, at Dickens, he said. times, be exaggeration or forced sentiment, but There Is also genius. I dont know why he made Tommy Traddles a lawyer, unless It was to show that we barristers are not all as black as we are painted. Dickens was at his best in depleting deep and genuine pathos, free from sentimentalism. whole-hearte- lean architects. The committee of award selected from these a plnn of such Impressive beauty as to silence criticism. Thl majestic structure wilt be spacious enough. to house a multitude. The main auditorium occupies a floor space of 38,500 square eet, with a gallery of 10,000 square feet giving a seating capacity of 7,000 persons ; It will furnish room for Inaugural receptions, national and international conventions and conferences, orchestral concerts and celebrations. Several small halls are grouped about It to accommodate meetings of smaller bodies military, patriotic, scientific, educational, and similar conventions. , On the second floor Is a banquet hall with serving rooms, seating GOO people. "Here also are rooms 6et tlonal character, to meet In this country; for the natural place Is Washington. The control and administration of this building. wben.crected,w llLbe. the board of regents ofjhe Smithsonian Institution, of which the president of the United States Is the presiding officer, and the chief Justice the chancellor. Such a building will aid in advancing the cause .of education, patriotism, science and the arts, as well ns providing a lasting evidence of our loyal devotion to the memory of our boys who emulated the example and noble character of our greatest commander and first president. o, ORGANIZATION, PLAN OF GEORGE WASHING- TON MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. President Mr. Henry F. Dimock, Washington, apart as the permanent national headquarters of societies of veterans, of reserve officer and other patriotic societies. The third and fourth floors are planned to accommodate a museum and library for the care of precious relics, souvenirs, historical documents and the personal histories of our soldiers. A spacious chamber has been set apart for the exclusive use of each sovereign state of the Union and our outlying possessions. The plans have received the Indorsement of the v highest authorities. President Wilson writes: D. Dear Mrs. Dimock: I have noted with genuine Interest the plans of the George Wash- Ington Memorial association for a memorial to the boys of 1917 os well ns those of 78. No one could withhold approval from such plans. They undoubtedly express what the heart of tfie whole couutry approves. Cordially and slncer'ly yours, g ei-eclall- . Washington, D. C. The National Council The president. The vice president. The cabinet members. Members of the Supreme court. Members of congress. Governors of states. Prominent and representative leaders from of activities. Including thejhurch. edu- catlonal Institutions, commerce, finance, literature,' the Arts and the stage. State Organization. The governor as honorary chairman of the state My WOODROW WILSON. Committees of prominent men and women representing patriotic societies are collaborating. Collective and IndlxViunl subscriptions In large and small amounts are being received. Every child who contributes ten ceuts receives a button carry This pin means a brick In the Ing the legend: memorial building.' The name of each donor will he entered on the records. - Such n building is very much needed, and If erected would contribute very materially toward the process of conference, consultation, discussion, awakening of public Interest and conscience, recom dilation of views, recognition of abuse the peoprocess through which a great ple works mit Its problems and reaches its results. No better tribute to the memory of Washington, who led the men of 78, and to our boys of 17. who maintained the freedom which he established, could be devised than such a national memorial; ThsSsumber of associations and organizations, permanent end occasiouaL which seeks tu bring peo-pi- e together for worthy objects In this couutry Is J enormous. nfbst Is a suitable meetof the heeds One urgent for and International national ing place societies and conventions in Washington. Under existing conditions we are justified in Inviting large socle-tie- s and congress, thoe of an Interna-- G Treasurer Mrs. Frank Northrop, New York. Trustee of Permanent Fund Charles J. Bell, Famous Fleet Street. writer has called Fleet street the Street of Adventure. and the name is a good one, writes A. A. Methley, In A Childs Guide to Lond- the -here- on,-for" the and world Is gathered together, crisscrossed Is overhead of sky strip with the telegraph and telephone wires that bring tidings of warfare . victories, revolutions, and marvelous Inventlqns and discoveries. The road certalhly deserves ts title, but. In medieval times as Froissart says, the Londoners when, A modern were lhe'perilou3estpeople In the world, and the most outrageonsest, the name would have beeD even more P" proprlate. Then the adventures themselves actually took place here; and again and again In history we wild stories of tumult . . . fought out on the rough cobblestones of old Flete Strcte." , , pres-Iden- L mation of Governor Johnson. Tbe occasion marked the opening of th thrift congress, held tt the Panama-Pacifi- c Soexposition by the American ciety for Thrift. Thrift Magazine. Christian Unity. of He who takes hold of one end W brother th litter on which a hurt t prone must not pause to question cam and affiliation of th roan take hold of the other' end. Th -- Christian Herald. . Hats ns Bedroom 8Hppra. Old felt beta which are too far to bo worked over Into hats again bow utilized for bedroom slippers. Mt ftv Them Dont Xmt-nskIs it always ho husbands n tnagtslne advertisement. of course, there are some things -- s which husband never bad anyth ng do. But they nr rare. Kansas t Btar. - rs FREEDOM. What Is your idea of freedom of the sons? A chance to make a trip across without being shut up lu my stateroom with seasickness" -- First Thrift Day. The first "thrift day ir. America was August 11, 1915. That was the . first time one special day . was ever 7 officially set aside for the purpose of encouraging attention to thrift. The day wascelebrated In California thrift day In response to a procla- council Mayors of cities. State senators and representatives. County school officials.' City and Town Organization. The mayor or nominal head as honorary chairman of council.4' Council of departmental heads of the actual working organizations, locally paid by municipality. Including teachers, firemen and policemen. A general committee In each city acting in cooperation with the qbove councir will includo the leaders in all local activities which are In contact with the mass of people. This will bring In labor unions, commercial clubs, civic and other organizations. and churches, fraternal organizations and clubs, as well as organizations having national connections. Also, prominent men and women who will engage In this work of honoring our first our Illustrious soldiers of the past and our victorious soldiers of world redemption, who will be the bulwarks of our future economic position. The children w ill be locally organized under the care and guidance of neighborhood groups corresponding to parent-teacheorganization. d Gat In Bamboo. Natural gas conveyed In bBK tube was utilized in China Tfr and one of their writers men boxes which repeated tbe sound 0 P" sons voices that wer dead 8 . -- |