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Show V t p THE WEEKLY .KEFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH HOSPITAL IN VENICE DESTROYED BY THE GERMANS BRITISH GIRL MUNITION WORKERS PLAY FOOTBALL FOR RECREATION h i ''J lJ" UVt VJ i a V 4 , v V ; v ; v; N Aw s Xa 0 WtM Nnriwpf llnonv v6 aPNV'ffvTWrwVV 3j 1 3 " Girl workera in tin munition factories of England have formed soccer football teams and engage inK contests to relieve the monotony of their labors. The girls have evidenced great interest in this sport and the interfactory games are keenly fought. Recently a match game was held between the teams representing the Humber factory of Coventry anti the Vickers girls from Crnjford, which resulted In a tie. The photograph shows the I lumber girls lined up in their smart black and white uniforms. t Here Is an example of the Huns utter disregard of humanity and decency In the prosecution of the war. photograph shows the Interior of St; Johns hospital in Venice after it had been bombed byGerman aviators. AN AMMUNITION DUMP BEHIND THE LINES AT VERDUN FOR JACKIES HAMBURGER HOW GERMANS TORTURE The PRISONERS vs fV 1 - , - X'' ? fcifc&wix; ' yzrtt' w ' , x X, ' , TmCSE, , XnM , V .'"'' W4 Wl A j V ' WjhfcA A a ' W 'V . v V' ? i a :. - AZ&:' ... , y.. O V tA a v dSSV t 3-- 0 VP35Sin 'XS?4trVo', I' Of, vx&mt,. v.wAh" X v .yNA l.tr X,1 ' v y : i V v . Vv-- O V'-- a ' e.4 4-S- y - x. -v j t,7i . 'T',''' k Vr'.v Vvytsi . vV )(!' "v V TV i -- ' vt. . of shells of various sizes for use of the French artillery on the Verdun frout. A reserve NEW MASK FOR FIGHTERS FOUR FAIR FINGER-PRIN- EXPERTS T AcV4rfi Union'- Newspaper is Under the instruction of an expert chef at the cooking school for naval recruits In New York the boys are learning the art of concocting the delicacies of the kitchen. These lads have tempting hamburger steak. . TSWT 'U Wt V 5W u( Mk v ' 3. Jo LkZ',41 IlC'. .'!' "Cfr Jr'vZ - haMtaecv s v4V 'ss: yMWiMMlMlleaMIHINnMiMMV v r y.s vAWy x n vn v ?' Xvj.'"' it '" un-- i y 'rvKr' v V'.'Sk ; wx fsnbl3 ' - Mk V w.X , - e . "'vX , VHS IWMI x v V n A v V. tiiOvJw.SVwXvAVO This new mask Is now used by soldiers. It protects the face of the fighter. The eje protector can be drawn back when not in use. Some sort of screen wire Is arranged so as to see through when aiming the gun, llol-gla- u t riGaduiagriFenria to It can be mu . .. o:o&.-a- .s.vwtvsycs'OXvsSXsN'xyN-tXsx1--.Ny- . .V.V, sis The four girls in this photograph are the United States navy fingerprint experts. They have recorded, classified anil filed an impression of the dieits of every man in the navy from the rear admirals down to the rawest recruits. They can do the Job they are working on now In five minutes, and In another five minute they can tell whether his print has over been made before in the Menartment. Claims Improvement in Violin. patent recently granted to an Illinois Inventor covers a radical departure In the deslgn of the violin, the body of which ls cyTl ndrleal iu sha e and much more compact than the Instrument. The sound post A THE LAST THING IN CAMOUFLAGE war-riors- f' Who Wakes the Bugler? ' Thilosophers who piped In rosy peace days on Which arrived first, the egg or the chicken? might well train all their wits, now thatwarls about us, upon the cantonment mystery: old-tim- and t Who-wake- s ' you eonsid- - cred the problems which his job A ; en- -' tail s ?.-- . J I c JjbT Vye n allow ed a n aln rm riock. Ills only harbor is the guard. And the guard is human. It Is more Measures. Under a sketchy little thing" exhi- fcited by Jones there hangs a printed card which bears the words: Do not touch with canes or umbrel- Half-Wa- y j j j j i 9 - ..t x , . ' v' . . x, . A 'r: 3 ., i vr-- 5 Only the Echo Answered." I know what I am." petulantly ex- . claimed a dusky young Nashtille Mle fCVi- in answer to an extended and enustje reprimand from her mother, who had j bfpn provoked bv the daughter's flaWhenever a Trench balbattleplane spies a captive German observation of defiance certain consocial loon he naturally does his best to grant constant riddle it with madiine-gufire. The ventions. destruction of their sausage balloons has to Germans the compel!! "I knows what yoabni, was the er observers with machine guni to protect thefflselves from attack,proid Tl11 But what ahm most unusual uqtelchng rejoinder. W of shows a photograph German the in observer gondola to' vhen yo shm? sausage balhwn with for action. gun i , t As'St-kfrf;- 5' iTfiii j ,y'Wrtrt" iiinrtMuwriiira n las. .An appreciative small boy added the Sell owing postscript : Take an ax. Christian Register. are i , No in a modified form r conventional construction. The pe-a slmplficatton culiar form TtTlThwnode o r" m a rm fnerrrr- - n n riTd mits of Instruments being made almost wholly by machinery, while still possessing excellent tone quality. -- Jta-jme, , bass-ba- necessarily' retained. .The instrument hj.proied,,w Lth..a. chin.rest.so shaped. ns to be extended laterally while in ami of folding against the tnstru-inte- nt when tot In use. The nnce of the violin Is most extraor-- d n a r yTTtu f'l ssa fd"! haFTTK'" q u aTffy f nnd volume of tone Is the equal of f that found n hand made ioiins of tl horrible to contemplate than what would have, happened had there been around when the stars ami the runs and earths -wings' for the When their act you wish to and hack beyond wakes the guard! i GERMAN BALLOON OBSERVER AND HIS GUN ed the ordinary helmet and .. gives the aipearance of ancient .... the bugter? Ilave I That we have much (o learn from the French when It cones t ctunon- flage Is evidenced by tiiis photograph which shows not only a dummy gun, but dummy soldiers as well. I t V of-wa- r, -- wimw x. The lower picture was taken by a French prisoner of war In the German prison camp at Sennelager bel Taderhorn tu November, 1914. It was brought out, sewed In the lining of his coat, by W. J. Prendergast, a private-ithe Dublin Fusiliers, captured in the retreat from Mens, w ho Is shown in the upper photograph. Prendergast was educated at the public schools of New York aad Chicago, and has returned to this country, having been exchanged and honorably discharged from the British army because of his wounds. Of the tied to tho pole are British prisoners who committed no offense whatever, but were put there 'for fighting aga1nsfThe' Germans. The wooden shoes which they wear were given to all prisoners and their own shoes taken off them. .The men at the pole are tied up with their soup put In front of them and left for 4S hours at a time In raih, snow and hail and without food. I have been tied to that very pole for 48 hours myself. en vSH . . How Motors Helped Out Allies. Several times during the war vehicles have dramatical-save- d the day for the allies. Hordes of. London motorbusses carried the Tommies to and from the battlefields in the early, anxious days of the war. The swift transportation by tnxl of the- army defending ;nrb helped to win the v Ictory" of the Marne. Thousands of motors rushed the Ioilus to the saving of N'owr comes the erdun. victory at Gaza, In which tanks played a prominent part and of which It was long ago written. In the Book of Judges, that, though the triber ofJudah took the city, --it could not drive out the Inhabitants of the valley because they had chariots of Iron Thanks the to( these modern iron chariots, tanks, the odds have at last favored the invaders, The Philistines' have been clean'd out hy the onslaught of the tanks on the sands, am? the attack of the monitors on the shores, of Gaza. jits ready A. |