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Show V the Weekly reflex, kaysville. utah ARTILLERY OFFICERS ITALIAN OF ARMY ITALIAN CRUISER IN . T ACTION '"v i , v v I' ,v x ? - Xma3 'ii' 'il -- -- J. ; x. ' '- ' Cr The cruiser Merosin MORE r v' A. 1 v -- ' T he ltah supreme court has C ed that the 6 oclock closing lav t ' 5S o nfv '.r 1 unconstitutional. Provo must have a liquor election June 29, This is the decision ot th? supreme court of ltah Hundreds of youngsters have begun work thinning beets iu the fields near Spanish Fork. The ret ent heavy rains have delayed the work. Seventy-twyoung men and young women received tertificates of graduation from the Ogden high school at annual commencethe twenty-thir- T vyi STATE UTAH ; ..v v n jjfi it d . sa . JL a ment exorcisea. . i ;d ward Clark, indicted by the last federal grand Jury on a charge of funds, while postmaster at Manila. I'tah, has been brought to Salt l.ake for trial. Mrs Kmlly Clara Werb died on Sun-da- v iu Mount Olivet cemetery at Salt l.ake while kneeling at prayer beside the grave of her daughter, Clara, who wa-- . turied ATittle more than a year ugv Cernfittttes of graduation from the schools Weber county consolidated wre ronferred upou 128 boys and girls at the annual commencement ex-elscs of the county schools held in the Ogden tabernacle. F D Beall, aged 39, received a lraiture of the left side of the lower jaw and severe bruises and lacera-tionwhen struck by a runaway horse whiih plunged into a crowd on Mum street in Salt Lake. The work of building the large viaduct 'from. Grant avenue to Marsae avenue by Park City is now complet- ed, and is considered hy the local people to he one of the greatest improvements made there in many years. During the last session of the legislature the house of representatives spent $21,179 of the $35,000 appropriation made. The senate spent $1L30 and there is about $2,500 to turn back Into the general fund of the state. In the midst of his delivery of the baccalaureate sermon to the graduates of the University of Utah, Judge J. W. N. Whltecotton of Provo was stricken with s slight attack of paralysis and was unable to complete his remarks. About 300 members of the National Association of Real Estate Exchanges will arrive in Salt Lake from the east in special trains on June 19, en route to Los Angelee to attend the national convention ot the association June 21 '- - ., one of the crack tessels of the Unltim GERMAN RESERVES tu. firms ON her ::o. WAY ntiliimot TO r guns FRONT ri ITAUAN LANCERS READY FOR , BATTLE s. ,J foJV r- - ( , . p -- .' .K gkjMS V 1 po fi mm I ITALIAN ' vxwwy. '&& sa s tf x ' v? " ,?- -; v' . vv V- W V Members of the German landsturm, recently called to the colors, oii their for tho front and accompanied by mothers, wives and sweethearts. FINANCIAL way- - to a station in Berlan to eutrain MAGNATES AS M . V4. 3r to HENRI SCHORREMANS FLOTILLA J j - LJ' ' l -- - tK.-- VI " - v i . (S U . 'H . j - t A5.T V1' -- .. Some Idea of the seriousness with wblch the war is being taken in Canada may be had by the accompanying snapshots "made recently during the review of the Montreal Torces by the duke of Connaught. Men of large affairs are taking their military duty seriously and are drilling in the ranks as simple privates of the home guard. Beginning with the man at the right next to the officer with his back turned ia Sir Frederick Willlams-Taylo- r, general manager of the Bank of Montreal; next to him is a! E. llolt, general manager of the Royal TruBt company, and the next Jn line is A. D. MacTler of the Canadian Pacific railway. The officer second from the left is the duke ot Connaught, whose face is lighted with a smile when he recognizes 81r ' ' "V?. Frederick. ALPINE r..J..tfTrA'fflfTfWiwmfT,TnBfiiwinrnri Jtaly ia jnstly proud of her nary, which it powerful and up to date. photograph ahowa a flotilla of swift torpedo boata. ITALIAN FIELD GUN IN t tv' WV., ,3 - - The ACTION , j) '.'n Vj ; ik A, - Jlr Henri Schorremans, now chauffeur of the king of Belgium and formerly a dispatch ridec, was once the means of saving the British general staff from being ambushed. On recommendation of the British officers King Albert has decorated him with the Order of King Leopold. He recently visited his wife at Sheffield, England. Bit of Conceit. Our brave Joffre was examining a map under fire. The map was held by a young subaltern, a boy of sixteen from the military school at SL Cyr. went the marmites and Bang! Jack Johnsons and whistling Willies for so they call those shells, you know 'and the boy could not help starting and trembling at he held the map. and this lost our brave Joffre his place. The generalissimo was vexed when he lost his place three or four times, and he said to the boy soldier r ' Voila, ypu are too conceited, dodging the shells like that! Do you sup pose the Bocbes aim those expensive shells at you? You are only a little boy soldier. Do you take yourself for a cathedral Washington Star. r Bible Feast for Sealers. Officers of the Red Cross liner Flori-e- l. which arrived yesterday from St Johns, N. F said the vessel had been very unsuccessful and taken only 2,000 eala, against 27.000 taken in the win- ter of 1913-14- . Sunday on any chapter of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, the officers said. Fourteen fishermen arrived from St Johns to taka part In the fishing at Newport this summer. New York Times. 'While the Flortzel was on cruise the sealers had much leisure and the only reading matter on board was 14 eopies of the Bible and 17 copies of the Common Prayer book. By the time 250 REGIMENT ON No Encouragement to Trifltra. Do you think business ought to be kept out of politics? Not exactly, returned Senator A man ought not to go Sorghum. Into politics these days unldss be means business. Oil and Dirt Color. . . . FRONTIER . rrrrr AT'.t & . The duke of the Abruzzt is of the naval forces of Italy. - Rebuilding Bridges. ' Don of the most gratifying results of the present war excitement in Great Britain Is the action of the house of lords providing for a general strengthening of the bridges along the main roads of motor traffic. These bridges were mostly under the management of the big railroad companies, and the heavy truck traffic did not appeaj to them enough to cause them to expend either money or labor in strengthening the bridges. The heavy traffic in motor trucks for war department has tfoe British brought the question of strong bridges vividly before the people, and strong pressure is being brought by the courts, officials of. the government and the press on the railroads. The result is that bridges are rebuilt all over the country. - 4' ,r, v ', 24. Miss Sylvia Tborson, 16 years old. daughter of II. P. Thorson, a rancher of Dear River City, was" wading ' iu the Weber river at Ogden with several students. of the Sacred Heart academy, who were picnicking near the bank, when she stepped into a deep hole andjivas drowned. The annual convention of the tri- state aerie of the Fraternal Order of Eagles will be held in Salt Lake June 15 and 16. There will be about seventy-five delegates in attendance at the convention from the several lodges ot Utah, Nevada and Idaho. Arrangements are being made ta hold a meeting ot the larger department stores in Salt Lake and all of i'Ar :; ' PRIVATES C2sun , j w t. BOAT ' X i A sm..-- TORPEDO I i DUKE OF THE ABRUZZI 3t:v C famissammssm HTE NATION At KW5' 't( S 'fc. ft i vy, J the larger clothing and furnishing stores to consider a mutual agreement to close at 6 oclqck every night in the year, with the exception ot seven business days preceding Christmas. The migratory bird law, under whose provisions the killing ot migratory game birds and sectivorous birds Is held illegal by the federal government, has not been declared unconstitutional and officials ot the state fish, and game department in Utah have been advisedAo prosecute flolators. President John A. Widtsoe of the Utah Agricultural college has received s telegram from Hon. Jeremiah Wilson Sanborn of Pittsfield, N. H stating that he will be in Logan to take part in the big centennial celebration. He was tbe first president of the college. Jack Gammon, a railroad fireman, was fatally scalded and M. IC. Barton, engineer, received severe burns, though not necessarily fatal, when a locomotive hauling a work train blew up on colliding with an electric sand train on tbe Orem line, three miles north of Provo. When .the Southwestern Pacifle railroad, projected through Utahs southern tier of counties on the way from Colorado to the coast, will be built Is somewhat problems tlc&I"ae cording to directors of the corporation who were in Salt Lake City for the annual meeting. Mr. and Mrs. George Webb, pioneer residents of LehL celebrated their golden wedding anniversary .Monday, May 31, in the assembly rooms of the Lehi tabernacle. All their children, eight in number, their twenty-fiv- e grandchildren and seven were present' g "Mafife-in-Americ- Hin-denbur- g Fatalism of tha Orient Redd Isnt that the suit of clothes He called you 'Your Serene High- he used to play golf In? Greene Sure thing. "Prisoner at the bar, since Proviness expostulated the Grand Vizier. Had em dyed? Well, what of it T queried the suldence baa not seen fit to interfere, the the Florizel returned to St Johns the tan, Im as serene as any of the No; hes running an automobile sentence of the court will now be prosealers were ready to argue with Billy other rulers, aint I?" now. nounced. r - RAILROADS in parts of the desert lands In the West la one or two places these deMuch Potash in This Country, But the posits are promising, but these places are so far removed from transportaDifficulty Is in the Transportion and are no inaccessible at present tation of It that It will be years before th, potash The United States Geological found there can foe utilized. la still continuing Its work in Borne of this potash la found in hunting for deposits of potash la thi brine taken from salt mines. In other WHintry. The geyernment places it is in the form of a mineral. a sum of money for this purpose Great quantities of potash are found d a great deal of work kas Iren in the kelp and seaweed along the PaPotash Ui keen found ta a cific coast, and It is well known that deposits, mostly in California and many of the granite rocks throughout TOO FAR- FROa sur-ve- p appro-ia-te- d rr-r!r- New England contain fair amounts of this material. In none of these places, however, lias potash been found In such quantities that the price could' compare with the potash from the German mines in;time of peace. The latest deposit is found in the mud of Columbus marsh, in Nevada. This has an nrea of thirty-fivsquare miles. Considerable' potash la found in this mud, hut, as ts the case with other deposits, there ia not enough of It to. warrant handling it e FOSSIL BACTERIA DISCOVERED Petrified Ancestors of Modern Disease Germs Found in Ancient Limestone Rocks, , tial-lati- n Marvelous as were the discoveries of such prehistoric monsters as the mammoth, the mastodon and the stegosaurus, they are bow eclipsed by recent investigations which show the most minute microbes and bacteria in fossil form. The ancestors of our mod-urInfectious disease germs snd mi n . Shortly after F. T. Sam. a Chinese Alpine regiment of the Italian army herbalist was held to district court at Austrian frontier. Ogden on a charge of having practised medicine without a license, Thomas EL New Name for Cigars. opaque cups, should have been reward-- Browning, investigator for the state In one of the German papers re- ed for his loyalty by one months Ira- board of medical examiners, bronght about the arrest of Y. Hop, another cently there was a reference to BisChinese herbalist on the same charge. marck herrings, Bismarck cigars, etc. also Bulow are A Salt Lake miss of seven summers. It appears that there Bismarcks run the which Hie Tip. herrings, Mary V. McAllister, is creating quite Flatbrush Wbat can I do with a furore in the east being entertained very close in popularity, and also It Is suggested that those chickens that come into my gar by President Wilson at the White Bulow bams. to den and eat up the seed? the failure of Bethmann-HollweHouse and spearing as Malden AmerBensonhurst W ell, Jt you have a ica in a series ot moving pictures in associate himself with any comestible is due to the length of his name. But gun this is the open season for chick- behalf of the pro an enthusiastic admirer of Hlndenburg ens. gram. has been selling cheap cognac as J. H. Burrows, of Weiser, Idaho, suischnapps and grog as HlnAdmitted., cided on Main street in Salt Lake by Mr. Bacon They say General Grant denburg tea. Also a doubtful mixture himself through the heed of various intoxicants has been chris- accomplished a great deal without shooting with s revolver.' "As he reeled backIt seems opening his mouth. tened Hindenburg coffee. ward from the ' shock be cm hed Mrs. Bacon Of course; but you rather sad that the vendor of these a Death was almost were sold in must remember, John, he was a man! through window. . which concoctions, instantaneous. J Seventy-fouentertainers, musicians crobes have been found in tossila of named after the great American ex- and lecturers, will appear on the UtLh the earliest life on the earth. Fos- plorer .Gallatin. The, bacteria con- Chautauqua assembly program tt.J sil bacteria have been discovered In sist of Individual cells and appar- year, not Including teachers and divery ancient limestones collected by ent chains of cells which correspond rectors of the Junior Chautauqua tlrt Dr. Charles D. Walcott, secretary of in their physical appearance with the will be held in conjunction with t- - 9 the Smithsonian institution, in cells of micrococco, a form of bacteria larger event, according to an secIn 6f today. The world has believed that nouncement at Cgden. Montana thin county, tions of limestone from the collections bacteria were modern forma of lira, Professor Mosiata Hail, in 1914 the microscope now shows hut now we are made to realize that oo in "pee tor, dec these very minute forms of life, some they existed In the dawn of world hist Spanlfth mirvt tw enty to thirty million years old. The tory, many million years ago. U ceb ' ' r bacteria wee discovered In three sec. tie i. Poets are born, not m- tions cut from an algal form Included tbe under the genr''c name of Callat'nia, - A Square Deal. When the jury of a western court found the accused guilty of the crime charged, the prisoner rose in the dock and dramatically exclaimed: May heaven strike me dead If I am guilty! The judge waited a few mlnutei, and then said: . 1 birthj-a'J''nt,"-- l a |