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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH nSlIEXAllj- Everyone Should Drink Hot Water - OF PART OF MEXICO in the Morning Wash away all the stomach, liy. er, and bowel poisons be- - MOVEMENT 13 LAUNCHED BY VARIOUS COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS OF ARIZONA.- - for breakfast To feel your best day In and the Southern Would Straigthen Boundary of Arizona and Give California a Strip of Lower to coat your tongue and sicken your breath or dull your head; no constipation, bilious attacks, sick headache, colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid stomach, you must bathe on the inside like This is vastly you bathe outside. more Important because the skin pores do not absorb Impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do, says a physician. To keep these poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before' breakfast each day, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone ' phosphate in it This ylll cleanse, and freshen the entire alimenpurify tary tract before putting more lood into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from your druggist or at the store. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except a sourish tinge which is not unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every mo'rning to rid your system of these vile poisons and toxins; also to prevent their, California. riioonlx, Arlz. A movement launched hy various commercial organizations of the Mute to secure the annexation virtually hy purchase, of sufficient land from Mexico to extend the boundary of Arizona and California to the Gulf of California had been furthered hy Governor George YV. P. Hunt, who announced Tuesday, that ho bad written to Governor Hiram. W. Johnson of California, Asking An offer on the part of the United States to cancel all Indemnity claims for loss of life and damage to property during the Mexican revolution in return for this land, which would straighten the southern boundary lino of Arizona and give California a strip of Lower California, Is the plan of leaders of the movement. It has been pointed out by those interested In the plan that such an annexation of territory would give Arizona a port on the Gulf of California and also bring under American control the mouth of the Colorado river and tho entire Imperial valley irrigation system, with many thousands of acres of agricultural land In (he Mexican territory of Lower California. well-know- VictorEm-manu- el III of Italy Is a Scholar, Student and Family Man. But When the Call to War kw?jw cRowrmms?- - He Became at Once an - The man who praises wins the mothers Emile. ' President Decide in the DzizczzrfjwnuzxyZRfiCTOR EMMANUEL and student among Ford Dodges Committee. . Detroit.- - Ilenry Ford, leader of the jeace mission to The Hague, returned to Detroit Tuesday, but at the station he avoided a delegation 'of local citizens who had planned to welcome him home and present him with a floral piece in recognition of his peace effort. Raise Furnace Workers' Wages. Sharon, Pa. The Shenango Fur nace company announced Tuesday that pit employes wltl be given an In- crease In wages. It was stated that the advance would be general, affecting all furnace workers in the Mahoning and Shenango valleys, numbering about 5,000 men. Shocks Folt in Oregon. Newport, Ore. Two sharp earthquake shocks were felt here about 11 a. nx. Tuesday. Dishes rattled on their shelves and people rushed from their homes. No damage was reported. 'Earthquakes are of a rare occurrence on this part of the Oregon coast. Favor Pacts to Avert War. Washington. Commercial organiza- tions throughout the country composing the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, have voted overat a referendum Just whelmingly completed in tavor of international agreements designed to prevent war. Villa Execute Chines. El Paso, Texas. A letter received here from an American mining man ' in the Guerrero district of western Chihuahua told of the killing of seven Chinese, who were lined wp 'and ehot hy General Villa on Decem- ber 27. Married to Eight Women. Orvel Milwaukee, . Wls. Charles Pitcher was sentenced to four years in the state prison after having admitted to Judge Bakus in the municipal court that he had been married to eight different women. Linns Conviction Upheld. Chicago. The conviction of Robert Linn, a mining promoter, in 1914. on a charge of using the malls to defraud, was aflirmed In the United States circuit court of appeals here Tuesday. Kaiser Lose Voice. Pans. The Matin affirms, notwithstanding denials, that the German enrperor is sufterlug from cancer of the throat and Is no longer able to apeak. Rifle Expert a Suicide. The body of John San Francisco. H. De Witt, editor of the Rod and Gun department of a western sporting magazine, was found In his office 4 Tuesday night. 'Death was caused by a bullet wound Offer Trophy for Aeronauts. "Washington. Offer of a $5,000 aviation trophy, to be comfor annually by aviators of the peted -frestenr hemisphere;" was announced on Tuesday by the Aero Club of America. - rTr III, the scholar present-da- y mon-arch- the sovereign of quiet family life, when the call to war sounded, became at once the first soldier among Italian soldiers, says the Milwaukee With a unanimity of sentiment more complete than at any time in a generation the nation rallied around the king as the bearer of tho national flag. Socialists, liberals and republicans not only forgot their special doctrines and tenets, but vied with one another in becoming more loyalist than the monarchical followers -- themselves. A first natural tendency was to exaggerate, with a wealth of detail more or less Important, the simplicity and democratic character of , the kings life at the front A little of this, however, goes a long way and the Italian press has been prompt in putting a stop to the multiplying of little homely tales which are liable to carry with them an element of triviality. A. few letters from soldiers to heir families suffice to give all the Information of this kind about the kings dally life that Is considered Important to be known, as an insistence upon them might naturally lead to the Inference that tn this form of existence is comprised the monarchs entire activities with the army. Such a letter is the following, from Private Francesco Menegoto, addressed to bin father: 1 recently found myself near the king. In an observatory which I had helped to build. As agile as a hare, he moved around from one corner to another. I assure you that ha is exceedingly brave. He ate lunch with us and divided his portion of ham and cheese with us and afterward- gave us tour Toscano cigars and spoke with us as It he had been himself a simple solThis private dier, asking us many questions failed to note In his letter the fact that he was one of a company who had distinguished themselves by a brUiant achievement which was Important in the days military operations and that If he and his companions had been signally honored by the king. It'waa not because the latter mingles on all occasions more or lee familiarly with his privates, but as recompense and encouragement for duty well performed. The king himself Is a soldier and Is consulted by General Cadoma, the chief of staff, on every movement of Importance and regarding the dally line of endeavor, but he leaves to the commanders the performance of their various functions, and the stories told, in a mistaken zeal of exaggerated loyalty, by some correspondents regarding the actual direction of artillery tire or Infantry movements by the king himself are protested against by all serious persons as deInfeating their purpose, besides being literally -' correct The press of Italy today dwells only on such Incidents as may be considered symbolic, such as the event narrated in a letter by Soldier Franco Tumlnelll when he wrote: The Kings Presence Cures. Of much influence on the minds of our soldiers Is the presence of our beloved king, and In this regard 1 wish to tell you the Incident that Vinhappened to a sergeant of artillery named cenzo Sanitra. a native of Vallelunga. This poor fellow, after fighting for a long time, was severeamly wounded in the arm and was found by the When condition. unconscious an in bulance corps he recovered his senses we observed with distress that he had become dumb and that he had lost the power of speech. It happened that at that moment our sovof ereign was in the neighborhood and. learning with his hastened customary the sad case, he paternal solicitude to the bedside of the Injured man. So great was the emotion experienced by the soldier at the sight of the king that speech suddenly returned to him and he was free onfrom ,toy the nervous crisis that had been brought the sudden terror he had felt on finding that he was wounded and risked falling into the hands 31 the enemy as a prisoner. The first cry that Issued from his Ups was. kloglL. TongTlveTtaty! Tbe sovereign, touched by tbs words, patted the i Oh, Very Weill Biggs What is your idea of the longevity of the ancients? Diggs Well, I think being an ancient must have been a healthful oc soldier on the nead and said: My brave boy, you are a true Italian. " Victor Emmanuel comes well by his martial qualities Scion of the proud dynasty of Savoy and grandee n of that doughty warrior, King Victor Emmanuel II, he was born cupatlonr Not Worth Envying. In Naples on November 11. 1869. and bore the title of prince of Naples till his accession to the throne on July 29, 1900. Married in Rome on October 24, 1896, to Princess Helen of Montenegro, he .became the father of four children Princess Yolanda, born In 1901; Princess Mafalda, born in 1902; Prince Humbert, heir to the throne, born on September 15, 1904, and Princess Glovanna, born in 1907. The then prince of Naples entered the Italian army in 1987 as sublieutenant; he became colonel in 1890, major general two years later, lieutenant general In 1894 and general In command of the forces at Naples In 1S97. King Victor Emmanuel is honorary doctor of laws of the universities of Oxford and Pennsylvania, honorary commander in several foreign armies, a Knight of the Garter and an authority on numismatics. A volume public he" by him on this subject was recently crowned by the Institute of France. An exceptionally happy Incident, which has made Its due impression on a people of such artistic tastes as the Italians, was the recent discovery, or. rather, rediscovery, of a war lyric by one of Italys great poets, which is being adopted as appositely made for the present struggle. When Victor Emmanuel of Sardinia had- - undertaken the redemption of Italian provinces,, over half a century ago, Glosue Carduccl had composed a noble poem, with the title To the King A National Song. By some strange fate It was neglected and then forgotten. Its every line Is today appropriate to the work of redemption of Italian provinces undertaken by Victor Emmanuel III. - War Fixes the Nation's Attention. The king's name should not be bandied. about is the declaration of an Italian writer, made In The marvels of activity, of courage, , the Tribuna. of abnegation, of heroic and smiling fatherliness shown by King Victor Emmanuel, says this writer, marvels constantly renewed and constantly rising to heights unattained by others, have now become like the pure air one breathes and the pure sky one contemplates for the calming of fears and the exaltation of the spirit It is impossible to succeed In giving adequate account of them and It is dangerous to weave a. crown of anecdotes. Some might be led to form a mental picture of the king through an anecdote which should not ,and cannot be regarded otherwise than as a symboL Let us bow reverently, he says; let us not try to build up Images- - that would only be inferiorities, that would sound as profanations. Let us keep in our heart with regard to the king a religious sense, a mystic feeling. In a correspondence from the front a noted French writer. Mr. Jean Carrere, after describing the king's Ufe in the field, dwells upon the degree to which Victor Emmanuel has become popular with his army and his people. Before the war, he says, Victor Emmanuel was profoundly respected by all, admired by those who had Ihe honor to approach him. beloved by those around him, but perhaps, tn the precise and broader sense of the word, he was not absolutely popular. This, be It remarked, for reasons which are profoundly to the honor of the monarch, in' order to be popular In the time of peace a sov- -' ereign must have certain external forms of exuberance, a certain predilection for jwmp and show and. If one may adopted a modern t4nn, a certain capacity for bluff.'' All these were repugnant to the straightforward, sincere and to some extent democratic nature of the king of Italy. He would certainly never have consented to lend himself to any of those displays and -- theatricaUUeabxwhlchcriiafiUlfit.EOvjereIgn loved to put themselvea in evidence. the baby Mot Grey Hatrt bat Tired Eye make us look older than we are. Keep your Eyes yoling and you will look young. After the Movies Murine Tour Eyes. Dont tell your age. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, Sends Eye Book on request. Field. :: :: , tack. n formation. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became saturated with an accumulation of body poisons, begin this, treatment and above all, keep it up) As soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and purifying, so limestone phosphate and hot water before breakfast, act on the stomach, Uver, kidneys and bowels. Adv.- Sounded WILL AWAIT FULL FACTS. Not to Take Hasty Action In Persia Case. Washington The government will await full details before acting in the lVrsta'case and will not be rushed action. This into hasty or decision was made plain at the White houso Tuesday? It was pointed out that the following must be established to form a basis for official action: I The fact that the Persia was torpe doed. 2 The Identity of tho subnia rtne. 3 The circumstances of the at da; out to feel clean inside; no sour bile In the United "States, 174- persons have incomes of more than half a million dollars a year. Probably not one of these could eat half a pumpkin pie without regretting 1L New York MalL - xm? victor Leeds the Simple, Laborious Life. In Italy, where all are so intimately simple where domestic life is a passion. It pleased him. the first of the nations nobles, to lead the simple, laborious life of a great bourgeois and to give the example of the domestic virtues, and yet these qualities, however appreciable in normal times, had. so to say, the Inconvenience of not being visible from near at hand and of making no sensational impression on the Judgment of the crowd, which Is always fond of a certain amount of the theatricaL Scarcely had the great upheaval of the war come to call forth from the depths of the popular soul all the great qualities that were there latent than Italy In Its entirety drew Itself up before its new destiny and then, all of a sudden, the people remarked In their king the most vital qualities of Italy Itself and recognized in him their true leader. This king, to whom the most captious critics could only reproach a certain- - want of military display, at once made the finest of all displays shine around him, namely, that of courage, of royal love for the people and the army, of Intrepidity In the presence of danger, of kindness for the woes of the humble. That chivalrous prestige which wars and great human crises cause to Irradiate around the truly noble souls, irradiates now around Victor Emmanuel. He has proved today that the best means of be ing a popular king in a great country Is to show that one deserves It Private communications are not held directly with the king, even at the front, but through the Intermediary of his staff. On certain more Important occasions Count Cadorna, the generalissimo. Is the mediuxi. Then an opportunity may be accorded the public to read as interesting a letleir as the following, from General Cadorna to the editor of the Idea Nazl-onalwho had written to announce the offer of 60,000 lire ($10,000), made by a Mr. Cleric!, for distribution among the soldiers who may capture the first Austrian flags. " The Italian commander wrote; A Letter From the Chief. I have had Mr., Clericis generous anc offer communicated to tte troops under patriotic my command.' In my name and in theirs 1 beg you to express to the donor our gjatjtude for the munificent act. a new proof of the admirably rivalry throughout th. country by all classes, from the most conspicuous to the most humble, in enveloping the army with Ctme of affection and confidence, the army which, with Italy In its heart, offers every day with serene Joy the of the most elevated spirit of sacrifice. 1 example am personally grateful to you for yofir noble and flattering sentiments and for your good wishes, which I rev turn in the name of our brave soldiers. Signor Clericl could not have chosen a more worthy messenger than you, whose untiring work as a militant apostle contributed so much to bMten the hour of national and vtndt awakening cation of rights, through which the dream sighed for .by our fathersr is about to be trans formed, by the force of arms and of national e, vlr--tue- s. beio vedl in 0 vm soldler-thl- n Rule. , Ironclad I tell you the advance has met with l check! bawled the war corresponYou can bank on it. dent 1 bank on nothing of the Itlnd," said the. censor. "All checks must be cerLouisville Courier-Journal- .tified. Modest Petition. In a deeply religious family of Elgin, son had been taught the to ask a blessing at the table. One afternoon there were a number of women asked to luncheon, and the kiddie, being a bit embarrassed, made the following brief petition: w Oh Lord, forgive us for this food. eight-year-ol- d LACK OF MONEY We a Godsend In This Case. Is It is not always that a benefit A lack of money A lady In Ark. owes her health to the fact that she could not pay la advance the fee demanded by a clalist to treat her for stomach trouble. In telling of her case she says: Thad been treated by four different stomach physicians during 10 years of another on trouble. Lately I called who told me he could not cure me, that I had neuralgia of the stomach. Then I went to a specialist who to me I had catarrh of the stomach aa said he could cure me In four months, but would have to have his money necee down. I could not raise the 1 wa sary sum and In my extremity led to quit coffee and try Postum. The results have been magicaL j now sleep well at night, something had not done for Along time; the P In my stomach Is gone and I a . different woman. stop Every time I had tried tobeadac fee I suffered from severe so I continued to drink it, altb,0E?nl had reason to believe It was to me. But when I had Postum . shift to It was different To my surprise I did not ml fee when I began to drink nd zumr Coffee had been steadily full , killing me and I didnt I ? what was doing it until gi changed to Postum." Name Postum Co.. Battle Creek, comes In two forms. Postum Cereal-t- he 25c P .must be well boiled. 15c and Mica-Poetu- Instant Postum A soluble dissolve quickly to a cup of nsa ter, and, with cream andInstantly- A delicious beverage and 50c tlna. u.Hdo ; Both . kinds, are equally ks and cost about the earn per into a radiant reality." mor any other army today the i, on battle cry. the word Epurref Savola, It Is the dynastic name of the . . . hnuso m?l ohis At a Theatrical Lodgings. Oh, mum! The Zeppelins ave come! Old Lady Well, tell em weve already let the rooms to the Brothers Egbert! London Opinion. , Servant di Laaa |