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Show oo 000 MAJORS EDITS PAPER IN FRINGE From France comes a copy of "Le Petit Voix." a little newspaper pub-lished pub-lished by the members of an American Ameri-can engineering regiment Bob Majors, Ma-jors, a former reporter on the Stand ard, is editor of txlfl paper. He is a son of Mrs. W. W. Browning of Ogden and very well known in the city. Mr. Majors joined the engineers and left for France early last fall . The issue received here is the Easter Eas-ter number, printed under tho dato-line dato-line France. March 31. 1918 In his "lead" editorial. Editor Bob says . Back Home Today. "To every mother, brother, sister, friend or sweetheart back home who may chance to pick up this humble ex-pr ex-pr -sion of a company of American engineers, we send our sincerest Easter Eas-ter greetings. Nestled in a little picturesque pic-turesque spot in Franco we are doing our earnest 'bit' for that Utopia beyond be-yond the waters. As the bells ring out from ocean to ocean announcing the Sabbath day. it is time for ever) man of every Christian denomination to think of Him who rose from the dungeon of injustice unto a greater life. Symbolical to His ressurection we should pray that this wearily world I . will soon rise from the poisoned mire of brute domination to the highest life of a glorious brotherhood of man." Private Majors z a member of C company of the Twentieth engineers. He formerly attended the Utah Agricultural Agri-cultural college at Logan, worked on: the Standard, was for a time a writer of photoplays, and at the time of his enlistment was juvenile man with an Ogden motion picture company. The publication has an editorial column, col-umn, poems of uplift, personals and stories, the scenes of which are laid in and about the camp. |