OCR Text |
Show V THE WEEKLY KEFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH :!thj ilrflrx 1 o'(p Will Watch Men. In accordance to the order," commanding officers of the organizations will carefully watch the men at drill, during calisthenics and at athletic games. Signs of stiff joints or flat feet in the men will mean their The deup for examination. fects discovered, the men will at once be sent to the orthopedic hoard where Lieutenant Lionel D. Prince will put them through a special course. In cases which cannot be cured it is likely that discharges will be issued, but not, however, until Uncle Same has taken his whack at the feet and joints. Webb Describes Work. Here is the manner in which Lieutenant Colonel William C. Webb, who has been chosen as instructor for the three regiments summed up the training today: The guns are kept going from morning to night. There is no breathing spell. A month at this and these men should prove excellent fight-in- g machinery, efficient officers and and men. dependable non-coActual firing of the three-inc- h field pieces should begin within a month. However, no orders have been, received for the preparation of the firing ranges ss yet Liberty boys from training camps throughout the Western states are now arriving at Camp Kearney at the rate of 1,000 a day. This number will continue for fourteen days, when Uncle Sam will check the inflow of the Liberty boys and concentrate attention upon their training. Kansas Men Arrive. The latest arrivals are 1,000 men from Fort Riley, Kansas, who breathed the warm ozone of Camp Kearney for the first time this morning. The officer in command was Major W. R. Pope. The Kansas men, mdny of them fine horsemen who have ridden the range for years, have warm spots in their hearts for Utah and her people. During their stops at Salt Lake and Ogden they were met by women and children who distributed fruit, sandwiches and other dainties. Their first words, regarding their trip contained thanks for the thoughtful people of the Beehive state. com-min- y riUlik4 TUI 7 PRINTING INLAND CO. , W. F. EpparMn, E4IUr A. Mppmtn, Acfeto Editor :t 'Entered u(CavnUto,a mttr Mcond-cla- at ,11. March A li. February Utah, unitor lb Idvartklnc rato 15, act of on application. 1.25 par yoar whan paid In ad SubooHption ranee i fl.St per yoar on overdue aubeortp whan or not paid tn advanoe. (tone TELEPHONES I W. F. Epperoen, No. 7 C A, Eppoiooa. No. 4v Offlaa. No. 1 . ittrkbirkbblrklrbbiibbitirkbbbrtr -- x YN WITH THE COLORS: . birtrtrtivbirtrtrb birtrtrtrbbtrirtrtrtrtrti WHIP UTAHNS INTO PHYSICAL CONDITION vldlers st Camp Kearney Being Tested for Possible Infirmities. K ECIAUSTHAS BEEN ENGAGED ''uSefeclnVUnie Remedied by Special Course of Intensive Treatment. CAMP KEARNEY, Cal, Oct, 30. Uncle Sams soldiers of the XL" . division must go forth to the battle fields of Europe without a physical blemish and when mendical officers have completed their series of exami , naitons, innoculations and minute - scrutiny of each subject, there promisee to be none but perfect specimens of manhood in the United States 1 uniform who will aid in pushing the American line into Berlin.. Lack of suppleness in the joints of 'Tie men and tendency toward flat" feet are the latent defects which will mt be permitted in the ranks, accord--M- g to an order read over by the Utah - , n this morning and originating at the melical corps headquarters of the division. Now the hussy, already half trained soldiers will not be discharged or such minor defects, but on these minor details .Uncle Sam will spend t thousands of dullaFS in loosening up Tue'jointff'of the' boys and in raising the arches of their feet. Following the motto an army is ss fast as its slowest man the medi a! officers have been notified to speed up the activities of the Sammies snd to allow no one to enter the ranks who Is likely to hold up the general progress. hoys T . f g- UTAH MEN AT CAMP LEWIS IN HIGH SPIRITS George Naylor Writes to a Friend Here of General Conditions. That the Utah boys who have been assigned to companies 3 7, 33 and 39 at Camp Lewis, Washington, are in the best of health and spirits and" are pleased with the theatment accorded then both on the trip and since their arrival is the word sent a Salt Lake friend in a letter received yesterday from George Naylor, 1985 South Twelfth East street According to Mr. Naylor, barber and tailor shops have been established, which, together with the shower baths and company canteens, provide the boys with all the necessities of life at very low prices. The officers in tjiese three companies have Already won the admiration and respect of the men and the contingent is now well established and settled in military routine. The Utah companies are very proud of the flag which was presented to them by Chairman Alldrich of Garfield. The following Utah boys who left Salt Lake City October 3 are now acting non commissioned officers: Seargents Naylor, Romney, Warbur-toWheeler and Timmons; corporals, Stack, Simmons, Northum, Notti, Hughes, T. R. Smith, Merrihew and Battley. Fifty-seve- n of the Utah boys were transferred to Linda Vista to join the ranks of the 145th field artillery, First Utah. Tribune. ) -- up-to-da- te A Mobilizing for the War - Your Undo Earn is getting ready to fight. AH over the country, hundreds of thousands of artisans are busy with war preparations. Great warships are sliding off the ways; navy yards and arsenals are working night and day; resources of great mobilization camps are springing np as if by magic; everywhere the vast the Nation are being gathered together for war. AH ova: the BeH telephone system, thousands of employes are busily engaged in aH branches of telephone activity, to keep pace with the extraordinary telephone needs of the Nation. Everywhere poles are being set and wires strung, central offioe equipment increased, new long distance lines constructed between important points and telephone facilities increased. The greater and more varied the Governments war activities beoome, the greater wiU be the demands uppn the BeH system for service. With the increased Government requirements, then will be greater demands for commercial service. The scarcity of material and labor have set definite limits to the amount of new construction, and the needs of the individual must be subordinated to those of the Nation. It is going to be harder to supply new telephones, extension telephones and to put up wire to new telephone stations, because of the vast amount of telephone equipment devoted to the service of the Government, and because the BeH organization has contributed heavily to the draft, and many of our technically trained men have voluntarily joined the colors. When you use the telephone, we ask yotf to remember the patriotic service we are render-- . ' ing the Government, the extraordinary conditions we are facing, and to help us maintain good service by a conservative use of your telephone and equipment.' n, COMIC WAR SONG IS THE LATEST HIT The cabarets and orchestras of New York have a new sung which threatens to rival the recent Poor Butterfly craze. It is a comic war song, called Long Boy and is the firet of its- kind which has yet appeared. The song which was written by Barclay Walker anti William Herschell, tells of s patriotic Reuben on a trip to the front. It runs: - Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company He was just a long, lean country gink From way out West where the hopUTAH MEN DRILL IN TRENCH toads wink; . WORK AT CAMP LEWIS He was six feet two in his stockin CAMP LEWIS, Wash., Oct 30. feet Utah soldiers are going over the top An gettin thinner th more hed today. They are right in the front line . eat, threnchea snd are digging sway indus- But he was as brave as he was thin. triously to make them impregnable. When the war broke out he got right They are straining and sweating to in. get the . heavy timbers in position, Unhitched his plow, put th mule awajr, and they are stringing barbed wire Then th old folks heard him say: , on the timbers in front of the front Good-byMa! Good-by- e Pa! ' line trenches. Good-byeMule, with your old hee All this is happening not on the haw! French front but at Camp Lewis, I may not know what th wars about, where the men are being given, prac- But you bet, by gosh, DJI soon. find tical lessons in trench warfare. Repliout. . cas of the German and French trench- An, O my sweetheart dont you fear, es are being dug in the gravelly soil. 111 bring you a king for a souvenir; The 3G2nd infantry, in which there are 111 git you a Turk an a Kaiser, too, An thats about all one feller could do. many Utah men, is doing the work. The boys enjoy the task, hard Croup. though it is, and the novelty and reality of it appeals to them. . If your children are subject to crou Adjutant George S, Brison, French get a bottle of Chamberlains CougL hero of the Marne and Verdun, arrived Remedy, and when the attack comes on be careful to follow the plain printat Camp Lewis today to act as in ed directions. You will be surprised structor in trench warfare. at the quick relief which it affords. Mrs. - e, Smith Chambe- Recommends rlains Tablets. t I have had more or less stomach trouble for eight or ten years, writes ij Mrs. G. H. Smith, Brewerton, N. Y. When suffering from attacks of indigestion and heaviness after eating, one or two of Chamberlains Tablets have always relieved me. I have also found them a pleasant laxative. These atblets tone up the stomach and enable it to perform its functions naturally. If you are troubled with indigestion give them a trial, get well and Btay well. Adv. MYRON W. PHILUPS BAKERY and CONFECTIONERY UTAH KAYSVILLE, 1 ,- NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estaie of John George Linford, de, ceased, Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Kays-villDavis County, Utah, on or before the first day of January, A. D. 1918. MARY ELEANOR UNFORD, Administratrix of the Estate of John George Linford, Deceased. First Publication Oct. 25, 1917. Last Publication, Nov. 22, 1917., .,. - e, Anna Held in Follow Me at Ogden Orpheum, Thursday,' Eve., Nov. vv Reflex Ofice The Strength of Business Advertise in The Reflex. : TT Butter Wrappers depends largely on the banks. A bank that is not strong, well directed and thoroughly able to give the best service to its depositors is a hindrance rather than a help. 1 1 Bring Your Deposits Here n, r and be convinced that we can and wiH be of help if courtesy and judicious accommodation is of value. Your business will be better for it w : . Tnon State V BOUNTIFUL, UTAH V ; U? 7 A -- V v 1; Only the Reliable Advertisers Ose I) r' We are offering the best Steel Plow which we can fit to any plow, at the following Lays, bargain prices: Steel Plow Steel Plow Lays 3.50 Steel Plow Lays 3.95 vye alsQ save y0U. m. cent en 12-In- Starof.maic1,e!y? n4 lwn,cofhcr gorgeously heaatiee, ip Fellow Me "Miss man-neris- in which she returned to the American stage last season at the Casino, New wk, after two years spent in war relief work in France. Despite the! arrows tht txs encountered, she re--1 asJ vivacious t' n t 2 ua a fascinating actress. The marquis has a marquise, but he loves to browse md gratifies his whim to the limit Strings of pearls and huge bouquets of costly flowers are seme of the trib---1 uts he lays at the beautys feet, hut F- - ' results and all is well. . Anna Held is the sole owner of the production, and it is therefore not surprising that it should score as a fashion show also, for such it is ss well as a highly antsrtaki&f musical Helds' ' ideas of dress and scenic creations have always been a factor in the at-tractions in which she has appeared, designed all the Bcenery as well as the gowns, and the result is an amazing harmony of color, whicn runs riot with clean fun and numerous 6ong hits throughout the three acts, the scenes of which are laid in Paris and in which chorus girls of exceptional beauty disport themselves in an almost endless procession r 1 r Reflex - Save Money on. Plow Lays & latest music al cq im?ay uccmvcommg to iht Anna Held, bringing those famous offering. The French star, whose his wife learns of "his actions and yes that just wont behave, and her artist with her numberless little proceeds lo check lhem She goes to which have endeared her to the actress, the object of his blandish theatre, Ogden, next Thursday the American public. ments, and from, her learns the art night, November 1st, in her latest "Follow Me tells of a marquis who of winning mem She tries the scheme musical comedy success, Follow Me, has fallen a victim to the charms of on her husband with most satifactory Tb ch 14-In- ch 16-In- ch Jn pr CLEVISES, DOULBE TREES, SINGLE TREES, BUGGY - TONGUES and SIIAFTS. and many more articles used farmers. by CUSTOM BLACKS MIT II ING and haiSed cash acquane an HORSESHOEING 8ave a portion of your S. NIELSEN & COLIPANY, Kaysvib 'rr ,u |