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Show ir THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE. UTAH' STATE UTAH EMPLACEMENT OF GERMAN HEWS SUPERCANNON Ltnertj lotnl are not being accepted Ihis year In jmj inert of taxe4a Salt latke eounty. The Utah county authorities are at tempting to put flavoring extracts under the prohibition ban. ttahna will be expected to purchase bout nineteen minion dollars worth of fourth Liberty lun bonds. The total enrollment of the Ogden public schools up to Saturday .night was 5123, according to4 the reports received at the board of education, ' A truckload of canned fruit and Jelly, ns a contribution from the women of Ogden to the reconstruction hospital, was delivered at Fort Douglas one day last week. As n courtesy extended by the board of directors of the Utah State Fair association, all members of the Grand Army of the Republic will be admitted free to the exposition. Persons now employed In positions considered by the governV 1 toM ment will be looked upon as slackers, ' A 1 providing they refuse to leave such po-- , itlons and enter useful work. Nearly a quarter of a million bushels of grain In the Uintah and Du' chesne region must be hauled to the market centers before snow flies, to prevent loss to the farmers. The emplacement and platform of one of the German James Winchester, 87 years of age, a guns which have been bombarding 1nrls. This bnse wns discovered during the recent offensive on the eastern front. The gun guu bad beeu removed. The platpioneer of 1849, was run down and so Is 11 meters In diameter and 3153 meters high, severely injured by a street car near form his home at Salt Lake that he died an hour later without regaining consciousness. AMERICANS CHARGING THROUGH BARBED WIRE That a splendid reponse has been made to the countrys call is shown Jby the fact that 2S4 Bingham citizens a W are now In the military service. A large percentage of them were volunteers. Fifteen cases of smallpox have been reported to the city health office ntt Two girls with slight cases Ogden. Of smallpox, who failed to observe the quarantine law, are said to have caused the disease to spread. Reversing Its former attitude In to erection of the proposed new Vantages theater In Salt Luke, the state council of defense has formally withdrawn Its opposition to the construction of the new building. As a means of the activities of pie state council of defense and the Utah speakers bureau. Prof. F. W. Reynolds, of the University of Utah faculty, has been appointed a njember of the state council. Nick Suites was convicted at Salt Some American troops are here shown charging through burbed wire entanglements In pursuit of the fleeing Lake of having liquor In his possession. He explained to the court that the Iluns. liquor was Intended for tdfe friends at Bingham, to which the Judge replied, that his loyalty to his cronies would FIGHTING THE INFLUENZA IN AMERICA cost him $100. ' For the week ended September 14. , , the production of coal from Utah mines) amounted to 19$) cars, while the out-- , put from southern Wyoming collieries aggregated 3022 cars, a gratifying increase, according to the federal-fue- l f s non-essenti- al 6 v long-rang- e v- sN re-Fp- ct ' A, A administration. The Amalgamated Sugar factory at Brigham City this season will slice and make Into sugar approximately 70,000 tons of beets, according to Information given out recently by Superintendent Hunter, The local factory handled 78,000 tons last year. Bakers have been advised by IV. W. Armstrong, fowl administrator for of the substiUtah, that tutes required in any bakery product may be rye, with the exception that bread containing 40 pey cent rye need not contain any other substitute. Marine corps recruiting will be resumed on October 1. Applicants between the ages of 18 and 41 years will be accepted. Sixty per cent of die marine corps members are young men' and the greater portion of the enlistments will be taken from this class. One of the most Important arrests of I. W. w! leaders since the time of . W . - " ' effect at once. Dewey was convicted at Salt Lake on October 27, 1913, of murder In the second degree for the killing of Sergeant John IL Johnstc of the police furce, and sentenced i erve 14 years in the state prison. A distinct compliment has been paid the school of home economies of the Utah Agricutlural college by the federal department of labor, Washington, D. CL, in the adoption by the department of the plan for the training of teacher in the right care of child life as the basis for Its outline of this work in the courses for the Smifh-IIugh- r&k4 Can Perform Great Service to Coun-trby Helping Wtfrk of Clat fymg lective Gcnerat Allenby Fut Seventh and Eighth Turkish Armies Out of Business Huns Suffer Defeat on Four Fronts. lnoxt London. Disaster has overtaken, tho Teuton over all fields. In lulextiuo the Turks ate all hut uhsolutely the -- entente crushed; Ju AlxWedonnt forces are hart j mg their .foes and threatening them with similar disaster fin France the Uiitlsh nud French troops ulovvi.v, hut surely, are eating their way Into the lists of the German defensive iHMtlons, the collapse of which would result In liuiairtant changes all along the w extern buttle, front- - and lu eastern Slberiu the Japanese have made nddltiouul xtrhles forward In the process of retlnlmlng that territory for the Russians. Ill all the theatres of The war th entente allied lane the Initiative and ure pressing their advantage rigorously. The Germans and their allies nowhere ure able to do more than stand on the defensive. And in Ialestlne and Macedonia their efforts In this respect have proved sorry ones. crushed the Genotul AIIeuhy.hu Turkish Seventh and Eighth armies. His cavalry hus closed every exit except one, which cuuuot he reached by many of the enemy, and In a wide encircling movement hi horsemen broke dowu all attempts to put up delaying rear guard fights. The cavalry captured Nazareth, Nablus, Belsnn and Jenin and have secured nn enormous quantity of valuable booty, and we have not hoard the last of their efforts. Two Turkish armies were put out of business, 40, (XXI Turks being killed -- brll-Uaut- ly or captured. From north of Jerusalem to tho Sea of Gullle, lu the territory lying between the river Jordun and the Mediterranean sea, the Ottoman forces have been caught by the swift drive of the British armies and virtually annihilated. Added to the heavy casualties suffered by the Turks, hordes of them were taade prisoner und many more nre wauderlng, bewildered, without leaders, In the hills, eventually to he brought la to pwell the great total. Advised to Hold Wheat Washington. Farmers, who have keen selling wheat below the government guaranteed price because of railway embargoes placed on wheat shipments In certain localities, are advised by the food administration that the embargo soon would be lifted and that If they held their wheat the government will buy It at the guaranteed price. SOLDIERS HARVEST FRENCH CROPS wlg-waggln- g More Than Offsets Ship Losses. Deliveries of complet Washington ed vessels from shipyards In the United States during July and August, shipping board reports show were more than enongh to offset the submarine losses of America since the beginning of the war. ' Regulations fer Oil and Gas. Washington. Regulations re being Loyalty Is that quality which prompts a person to be true to the prepared by the fuel administration unIt means def- der authority granted by President things he undertakes. inite direction, fixity of purpose, Wilson for the licensing of person or steadfastness. Loyalty supplies pow- -, firms engaged in the transportation er, poise, purpose, ballast and works and distribution of oil and gas. Nature helps ; for health and success. the loyal man. If yon are careless, Oregon Registers 106, 988. 'slipshod, tndifferenmmture assumes "Washington, Complete returns rethat you wish to he a nobody, and ceived Monday by Provost Marshal grants yonr deslreTSuceess hinges on General Crowder show draft reglstra Be true to your art, yonr tlon In Oregon 10C, DSC, against an estl loyalty. Loyalty. ' " "vrvf - f - jK 0 4 s business, yonr your employer, house. Loyalty Is for the one who kvyfel.-rIt - - a- quality IZlIulerV:i.tTa .the gruwingof Lite flluC through the very fabric of ones corn in Utah will receive impetus being, and never a thing apart. Loyadminthrough the efforts of the alty makes the thing to which you istration encouraging growers to comare loyal yours. Disloyalty removes pete for prizes offered for the best It from you. Whether anyone knows fair. product t the Utah State of our disloyalty Is really of little Dcms F. Terrell of Salt Lake faces moment either one way or the other. trial on the charge of having shut a The real point Is, how does it affect boj, Lay Cowan, on the night of Slay Work Is for the worker. ourselves? 17. He claims to have caught the .Art Is for the artist The menial Is youth stealing a rahblt from his premn mart who is disloyal to his work. ises. ,uk! notified flint he fired low French shows harvesting All useful semi e Is raised to the This French official photograph to im.k sure of inflicting only a seasons sector. Oise in This the lines front of crops plane of art when love for task loythe back In the fields minor injury. The boj legs were to feed than safikteat French more the soldier. and excellent alty Is fused with the effort. lira. been kave peppered with Llrikhot. hour. - ; fd -- - soldier-farmer- s 1 y Se- Slarxlml General Crowder public a conmnmlci.tlon to employer of labor and other renWeiitiiiex of Industry throughout ttiecountry concerning their share of rexponsIhUity In the crnssith-utloof the new registrant under the se- luix made Influenza Raging In CampsT Washington. Spanish Influenza has made Its appearance In at least 2 army camps over the country. The surgeon general's office announced Monday that the total number of cases has Increased to 20,211, including. 2225 new cases rejxirted Monday. The motor corps of tlie National League. or Womens Service Is underhuous army training at Fort going Totteullhe women have decided to abandon home duties and social affair and prepare for real work. This photograph shows Lieut. Catherine Fred from near the top erick of a flagpole at the fort. Under the Service Act. Registrant Cal'fomlt Flyer Wins Honors. General Perahlng flan Francisco. war Informed the his department that Lieut. A. F. Bonnnlle of San Francisco, sn American attached to the royal ntr force, has been awarded the British distinguished service order for heroism In an air fight August 13. - To successfully eombat the Influenza, which has stricken a number of our army and navy boys, a special camp has been fitted up on the grounds of the Correy Hill hospital In Brookline. Mass. This picture shows one of the nurses using a mask as a protection against the disease, which Is es training of teachers. One hundred and eighty members of the local painters and paperhangers union left the Jobs at Salt Lake on .Honda yp demanding an Increase of 1 --gents nn hour for regular ork. and cents an hour for scaffold work. The wage scale for both classes of work lias heretofore been 75 cents an DISASTER OVERTAKES OTTOMAN FORCES IN PALESTINE WHEN BRITISH FORCES ATTACK. List Industries Suited for Womon. labor Community Washington. the boards throughout country were notified Monday by N, A. Smythe, director of the service, to prepare and have published lists of industries In which women can be substituted for men. The boards were urged to hold up to public shame nay man who continues tn work not essential to the prosecution of the war. " one-four- th the federal raids In July, 1917, was made at Salt Lake last week, when Joe Rogers, secretary of the local I. W. W. organization, was arrested, charged wlth distributing seditious handbills. Elmer L. Dewey was last week made a free man, the state board of pardons commuting his sentence, to take Paramount Duty to Aid. Work of Sc'outivfi Boards. mate of 84,404. r Nab Sfstkanr. Venezuela; Although they fled from California through Ccutral Amcrica to Venezuela to eede the draft, Uoh Anard E"nJamfn Livingstone of geles have been apprehended by amenta of the American gmemnient. Panama. I.s Will Feed Hungry Abroad. Ten million occu-Washington. pants of the German occupied positions of lYnnce nnd Belgium will be Z'tppl.eil ftl;h food during tho next 12 months by the eonnubsloH f.,r the relief In lit lei UIIl. ed n if UjKe xor( t 01, . General Crowder says: Ime noticed, Ip the general s of the public attitude whhh remti this office; two frequent features which lend me to the present comments. One of these features Is the belief that the proeess of awarding dereferred cln sx pen tlon to quires merely the filling out of the quest h unit Ire, nnd thut the selective service horrd will oreelve the propriety of tanking the deferment, without tjie nsststmiee furnished by the registrants formal claim Indicating the deferment desired. The other feature Is the employers failure to realize his resismslhiiity to Intervene In aiding the board's determination, and therefore to Inform himself fully o 11 the considerations which should affect the decision as to deferment 1, As to the first mentioned belief, It must he pointed out thnt If it Were universally acted upon, the proeess of lnsslfientlon would he seriously hampered nnd delnyed. Someone must Indicate that tlw Individual case la one which should arrest the speclnl attention of the hoards In respect to the registrant's occupational status. The hoards do not possess a superhuman - 1 ex-lres- io omul sconce. Board Will Make Examination. The hoards w 111 do nil thut they possibly can, on tlielr own Initiative, to reach a Just derision by a complete examination of the questionnaire, even where no claim Is expressly made. A registrant Is therefore at liberty. If he sees fit, to trust to the scrutiny of the hoards to discover the necessity for his deferment. Nevertheless, the honrds will welcome and will need all the old thnt can be furnished by the Indication of a claim made for deferment. With this aid, the process will become a simple and speedy one. 2. Why should the employer, or other third person, In such rasps, make the claim? Because the employer to this situation represents the nation, because (In the statutory phrase) the maintenance of the military establishment .or of national Interest during the emergency" require that anme third person should look after that national Interest, which the registrant himself may not have sufficiently considered. It Is often forgotten that lha aelee-tlv- e draft Js only one element In the depletion of a particular Industrys A second and large element Is found In the voluntary withdrawals for enlistment ; how large this Is may be seen from the circumstance thnt the total Inductions by draft have reached some 2.000,000, while the total enlistments In army and navy amount s to some 1,400,000 'nearly as many. A third element, very large, but unknown aa to Ita precise extent, ha been the transfer of labor power from one Industry to another, namely, Into the distinctively war Industries offering the Inducement of higher wage, now relatively small. In actual effect, has been the effect of the selective draft la seen In the fact that, for all the occupations represented tn the 8.700,000 classified registrant of January, 1918, the percentage of the entire industrial population represented by the class 1 registrants amounted to only 6 per cent. It ran ns low ns 8 per cent for some occupations, and correspondingly higher for some other occupations: but the national average was only 8 per cent. Any notshlv larger depletion In particular Industries must therefore have been due, partly to enlistments, and In orohsblv greater degree, to voluntary Tansfers Into other Industries. Musf Remember Nations Needs. These other Influences are therefore to he kept In mind by employers and others, In weighing the question whether the best solution. In the national merest. Is to ask for the deferment f Individuals or groups of men. Such ''ferments may assist the Immediate I tun tlon In the particular establish-icn- t ; hut they merely force the army nd the navy to seek elsewhere for the nine number of men thus deferred. of the The quantitative needs nilltnry forces are known and Imperative'; and any given quantity of leferments will ultimately have to be made up by the depletion of some other occupation. " Thus It- - becomes the employers duty to consider these aspects of deferment, in seeking that solution of Ids own problem which best with the national Interest comports " cessation' of " ittLshiihits 'Tp henceforth protect industry ogulnt uncontrollalila and one Irregular source of derangement It will correspondingly throw upon the selective serv be 'system the greater respom for an Intelligent and discrimcf inating selection made In Lve Industrial groups of wtctL rj. Ta I : fill tills resjxc,;bi:::y U-- J ' prepare tker. lyi v' i .x 1 fully than the botmls herrt r Ij ' with t)c3 tJ U J L well-advise- d man-powe- r. three-quarter- -- -- , lit r t.. 'j -- |