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Show V , , s THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLC. UTAH NevoNotec;; (' a Prtoiltgo to Utah tt mP &rM i. r C Lioo in - ' Upon 23,000 acres In KAYSVILLE Utah, . 3,312,000 bnshels of potatoes were produced in 1923, an average of 144 buahelg per acre. PROVO Tier are thirty jtstabHah-tnenin Utah engaged in the canning nd preserving of fruits and vegetables, sauces pickles, jellies and pre' ts 'MS -- 2 ei V'-, , c$If VJ? L- ,i :r " S fe'&T' c. iv ' r- L - -- j ' - . j ' v'V - " - S'? ' ! -- w ! Fn. i AA.n . ,irv r : irtPk:', vf s' t:C' .. 10-in- ch O l wtr k Mi4 fi on fth Avenues J?af?rptf'3ds Photo Ay M(rntoh( ELMO SCOTT WATSON Jy S THU annual . serves; OGDEX The first thunder shower f the' season occurred recently. The rain made residents apprehensive lest a flood enso. '.Highest temperature Sunday was 55. Lowest was 47, Aire Van de Praaff, .weather observer reported. A high wind prevailed several hours Sunday morning and then ceased in the midafternoon. SPANISH FORK At a meeting of the Spanish Fork dty council, recently a contract was awarded for 1552 cast-iro- n water pipe, feet of to replace the old wooden pipe on Scc- -' nd South stree'; from Third to Sixlh Ea-.- t streets. Cost will be 53500. This improvement is a 'continuation of.lba watersystem improvement, which was begun last year. Work will commence in the near furture. RICHFIELD A heavy storm which started recently added around two feet of new snow to the West mountain district where Slade Hancock, Telluride Power company lineman disappeared February 27, and for whose body an intense search is still being made by employees of the power company. There is now from six to fifteen feet of snow in various parts of tbe region, according to statements given out by officials of the company. OGDEN Gradmg of Zion Patk highway will be completed within two months, rays District Engineer.!). J. Finch of the United States bureau of public roads who returned recently from an inspection trip to that section. Engraders and three gasoline graders are being used on the project and three additonal graders will be put to work within the next week. All state highways throughout Utah are in excellent condition, Mr. Finch says. SALT LAKE The per capia consumption of tobacco in Utah is lower than-iany other place in the entire world with exception of India, where nivtine is taboo, according to GregLe president of the ory Grahgffn, Tobacco company of Louihvilie, Ky., whowaffhre Thursday. In the last few years the inctease of smoking by women has doubled the industry, he aid. The per capita consumption of snuff today is about the same as it was fifty years ago. ROOSEVELT The Uintah Basin Iidustrial convention executive committee which met at Fort Duchesne went-orecord as sponsoring a program for the beautification of the property along federal highway No. state line 40 from the Colorado-Uta- h to the Duchesne-Wasatc- h county line recently. The e mmittee plans on securing the services of Emil Hanon, . landscape artist of the U. A. CM and j the adoption of a program providing the accomplishment of definite por-- I j for tions of the work each year. SALT LAKE There are more than 4,000,000 bushels of grain on the farms in Utah at the present time, as compared with only 2,000,000 bushels at this time last year, Frank Andrews, agricultural statistician, announced re: cently. The grain is divided as follows: Wheat, 3,293,000 bushels; oats, 569.000 bushels, and barley, 300,000 bushels. Last year there was only 1,- 022.000 bushols on hand. The grain supply on tha farms throughout the United -- States is greater than last Easter dims parade Is staged In every city and town In (lie United Stutes on March .11 (which U the date of Tinnier this year), It Is estimated by experts In the United Stales Department of Ooimnerre that an Investment of somewhere between St.rillO.OOO.PKI and 2,(XM),(XK),(XKl In fine rnlment will have been displaced ly the rlil.est nation on eatth" on the two dress-updays of Iului Sun day and and Haster Sunday. What Is the mean lng of all this lavish showing of clothing aud . millinery? .The simplest answer U to point to the fundamental facts about Duster and see how those facts can be related to a development wbhh often1 jiv aeems Inconsistent with the real spirit of Raster. The essential Idea of Raster is shared bv (Tula tinn and pagan alike. It Is the Idea of resurrec-tlon,- " of revived life after apparent death. It mark the llmax of the year when all nature awakes from sleep, throws oflf the death like chill of winter and heglua to live anew. With all nu-- ture pointing the way hy bedecking herself In nw raiment. It Is only natural that mankind should also celebrate the' surge of 'renewed life fiajs by putting on new apparel. Fourteen years ago the world Above The photograph was made on Eaiter Sunday, 1915. Bo when mlludy appeals at chutch on Kaster In the blood of war, but when Eastertide came around, thoughts turned to was steeped a frock' In a new It new la and not hat. Sunday fjtho battlefield, atbut of tho Easter parade. Fifth mere human vanity expressing Itself. She puts -dressandfashlon,tothogloryLnot Eaiter-SundMotor cars a wltnossod mart of the fashion, queer proc$Ion-thavenue, I them on because she must She has responded to not had the streamline notice. made real first True, were then body yet Kt'arpear. attaining fundamental Instinct the by rcsKonllng thus to ance, but horses no longer snorted and stamped when a car chugged past In the parade Those the call of spring, to the message of renewed , on tho tidewalkt no longer stared at the peculiar horseless contraptions. Dresses were life. There Is an old British tradition that It Is ' were were decorated with Hats feathers. and big, bulky. gaily long, long, vory petticoats luck to wear good something new on Kaster Women wore high shoes, then, and gaiters or spate were the fashion. Fur neckpieces were day," but that Is a mere outgrowth of the esseo all elzee and women carried large and roomy muffs, a relic scarcely eeen these days. . . . tlal Idea of the Kastertlde. fourteen years, but set the difference In the A brief span In the time of tho world All of which. Is a simple and entirely logical on avenuo or in any other city thla coming Easter Fifth fashion of when trend eoclety parades reason for the feminine display of new clothes was made fourteen years ago, but one might well belook Then at It this only picture. Sunday. on Kaster du.v. Hut It Is by no means a comlieve It was taken thirty years ago. Tho world does move fast plete explanation for It dews not tell why there Below On this day the children carry little statuea of birds made out of pastry. They go has developed In this country such an expensive from houso to houso and collect coins. method of satisfying the primal spring urge aor why such a colossal sum Is spent on women's son back of the adorning; that orname rtfT not a clothing at this season, despite the foot that their Puutnp of Johns Hopkins university, lie says: aimplo "Instinctive" product, requiring no explanaclothing Is as scanty If not scantier than ev?r tion, hut that It requires lo be explained 'along with Th modesty theory hss probably bad tha great-e- t before. If the Kaster dress parade was entirely ' , clothing. havIn its modern civilisation, through vogue In keeping with the traditional Iden of "wearing The fourth theorr, wh'ch maintain that clothina been ao and into having ing crept popular religion was Introduced ptlmarily for purposea of protee-t'osomething new on Master day." It would be a connected with moral prejudice. Eve and her Its haa been In disfavor, because it has nothoes -newr hob clothes whhh might he lnexenleave edit trouble popular morallata and sp parade of ess y to aee how the most typical prlmitive'clMh-luin police regulation. sire as well s nos. Ihit the fact Is that It has really afford any protection. The costume of year. It may aound merely facetloua, but It la beth become an exhibition of national opulence and as the Eskimo protects from cold Heavy skin cloak TOOELE Plans for $300,000 worth metaphorically and literally true to eay that every or karoasea of other peoples are worn to protee of new school construction in Tooele such apparently more emphasis Is being laid upon time woman ehortena her ehlrte tha mbralrt from ratn and cold Sandals, leggings, arm bsndaae the word expensive" than upon the word "new." , ahtver. Yet thla ia not the only way In which ahe and similar paraphernalia are undoubtedly de- county are now being ptepared by haa frightened them with her clothea. Soma yXhie . In these days when the psychologists have an as from stones, thorns and Scott A Welch, architects of Salt veloped protection ago, shoulder puffs and baggy sleeves were debrambles. But these arc really minor detail In the Lake. The largest item on the proexplanation for everything we do, think and feel. and Indecent nounced ae ungodly. It may be well to go to those learned gentlemen development of dresa. is the new elementary school -- The ehuddere over the one. piece bathing an't . For most savages, and probably for primitive gram for an explanation of the Master dress parade. If in Tooele City, which Will have not yet subsided. In rpite of the valiant Is cold an building occasional man, protection against only you do that they will tell you that In order to work of Mack Srnnett.That bobbing the matter, and many race make no effort to protect j cost approximately $200,000. The pr- hair flaunted Indetency, threatened the foundation arrive at an understanding of the psychological bv clothng. even though inhahit-nthemaelve al deludesJ a gymnasium at of climates where cold i encountered, and et hes morality and endangered the eanctity of the must of to back you tbe go problem ctothlng to cost $3u,000; an He can remember even freehman borne the .( Grantsviue race a college of sort characteristic develop clothing origins" and fake Into account fomv Important does not know, however, that not manv armIn nd to diUon the are probably too, leggiuga f elementary school at protector, theories as to those origins. They are as follow a: years ago putting up the hair on top of tha head cldental put on and discarded In conformity , with j Vernon to cost $8000, and repairs to wee also looked upon wltk fear and Indignation. First The modesty theory. This theory, fanill the occupations of tho savages Costume exist schools in the County, whch The obvloua failure of regulatory measures In quit said from these form of protection and a lar from the legend of the Garden of Kden. holds ill entail aa before the j expenditures of from $1000 obvloua the and patently-- w a- developed tl)ayjf certainty equally the.part, originally- donned toeonee,th to discard clothing 'entirely they will to women decide av-of most $5000' costume The J characteristic types of per school. from a sense of shame. modeaty or embarrass do aor, la spite of selectmen's ordinances and ag race, types which are believed to be truly J UTAH Warning Utah woolgrow- -ment of clergy and press, seem to convey no primitlve. are really represented hy the flg leave- ; " " lesson to the weaker brethren"-of th Bt Ionian legend. Skirls and apron of against hasty or panicky selling Immodesty tlcory.Thla maintains-he no bum of because of delayed contracting, n. W. and of leaves, proAs observable connection a the Uaves, matter gras In of give the . fact, the beginning. ns purpose clothing , that lection from cold neither do they protect from Harvey, president of the Utah State betwean clcthtn and modeetjr ia a simple on. Any to make the wearer a greater object of Interest to . thurna and'bramblea or to any great extent from, degree f clothing. Including complete nudity, I the opp9Blte rtex. , This Is the doct,rlne that the aun. Why., then, have these type, ofclothipg Woolgrowera association were bright modest) aa aoon a v become thoroughly perfectly been eo wldebsxnd primitively developed. If not for f for a good Utah Wool dip at prices familiarity breeds Indifference and that concealtaccurtonied to It. Conversely, any change In clothconcealment rfom the eyes of other people? j at least as high as last year. ment increases Interest Presi- ing. suddenly effected, may ha Immodest It It I 'of such a natuie aa (o ba conspicuous. It la merelj gar-- j The fee that the peoples whowear the Third. The theory, that clothing begins In the dent who has recently comHarvey the breaking of lit established convention vrtiUh ment put n eniphasla on concealment, hut at j aa desire to attract attention or secure survey of many of makes It Immodest , timea discard the garment completely, and tj, Tho primitive clothing, on this theory. Is con fait thal wher there Is a costume which cannot' Utah I largest flocks, states that the The'flrat and fecondthcrlea go down together b discarded in public It is spt to be some mn-- ! break in the weather along with the splcuous for ornamentation Thy re today no reasonable doubt that clothing conceal.'! nUlcl such as a string of beads around f.-- e that thA Boston market ls haa nothing intrinsically te do w It h modesty or im Fourth. T!it-- utility-o- r protection ..theory. The ' ' the waiuv, tWose of thm explanations, and anpar- 7' modesty. .aupporltlon that clothing had Its origin la atrtrcnfftnflljfljf.lllaicttwi that tt delay ntly legv nothing but lh iiuvaUBfActory adorn Is of adornment. The third theory, the theory tempts to protect the body from Injurious or In the j in contracting will be to the producers ment theory perplexing. It Involves the curious assumption that Man haa a group of adversaries from whom pro-- I advantage.! Prices Will be highest unpleasant features of the environment would adornment la self explanatory. The theorists rffer lection ta an acute red, especially in the warmer.' roun eem to be the. most obvious onehut for various more or 4es vague amplification of tha shearing time, he expects. in which nuuu.undoubtedly originated eoff tlon of adornment. In terma of extension of ietl"' reasons has had little standing among the live of in which ups savages today' large grt ALVlUPnnaT "distribution 'of ' oonatity," "aggrandisement" and ao on. but when of clothing, properly ao called, can! anthropological thyvrlsTs.i- rThe origin matter-of-fai to la down alfted their phVaaeology 3 taxes to the individual Is easy to ape tlnt neither the first, second then be ascribed to the human need for protection U1 statements, they havo really nothing to offer except was- - made last week ' by units other agencies, injf although unpleasant faetoisj nor fourth theories in- - regard toclothlng Is an the assumption that clothing la worn to make the further entered bav Summit county Farnsworth, j ' Agnes wearer conspicuous.- intojts adequate explanation for the Kater parade. If J The final treasurer. eeek to We the human the distribution tendency may grant "anyone of the four can he logically applied It So there you are! Judsiug from this psycholo and we may limelight, the desire for $15 and ,513.59, must be the third the theory that the Kaster gift's remarks on the third theory of thw origin giant the Influence of tbl In the development of of clothing, not even thU one may Pe applied to tributcd among the various units as parade In to attract attentloa or secure prerlotblilg and adornment. But that conspicuousnrss follows: State and stae highschool, Is a(tnned- by1 adornment when every member of eminence, especial, since "the primitive clothing, the EusLer paiade. At lu!tv It ran t, the group wears the same attire or ornaments canon this theory, is conspicuous fooroa mentation." done so "loglcully." Then how in count foi It? i $S3,506d!2; state bounty, $505.55; stale not be granted. cattle fund, $132,28; Park before However, assuming (hat 'thla theory la IVihaps, after all the ensicst way to account tubercular, It the si in p i deelr for conaplcuousnesa wet $?,126 CCr'Coalvilie City Cit'y I the final explanation of mlludy '$ desire (o mw proper, It has who to made that ehould omit the Individual Master for the say, milady operating, the Kamas tovn $991.-8$2,548.73; raiment at Master time. It nfyy be well to hear otiiament would b the moat euccessful. tv would. proper, a national Institution lietause she vvnuti. parade t doesu be most In the but ehe Park fact, conicuoua; a discussion of the-City $23,145.47; theories by one of tbw' to." A for the logic of It well, she doesn't have do It. South Summit Sche , $!2.439.Ctrand smlncit. psychologists of the ceunicy Dr tialg'it te be hgkal uulcs sko wauta to." doc she? It la reascnablt to conclude that there la a r Notth Somm t school, $20,117.50. r!?M jC6 " :r t y T. -- zP ter Parade in ffolfand Jin Children's stomachs sour, and need Keep their systems Bn sweet with Phillips 1111k of Magnesia i When tongue or breath tells ef add condition correct It with a spoonful f Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener more mothers should invoke Its aid for their children. It Is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes mere add than the harsher things too often employed for the purpose. No household should be without it Phillips Is the genuine, prescriptions! product physldans endorse for generl use; the name Is Important. Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. P. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co. and Its pre decessor Charles n. Phillips since 1873 anH-acl- L 2 . PHILLIPS Milk -- of Magnesia- - Hanfords Balsam of Myrrh . A Healing Antiseptic Utmtr Wcfc (Srat kettle II art eulUd. LIIMm. Tha Exception Sweedlepipe It takes tome brams to succeed in society. Tweeillepunch Why, you always seem to get on well enough. Brown-WillTamso- ' . v-'-Ci- Sweeter are saying: 'Tinkhami Compound keeps me fit to do my work. I was nervous and all run down. Now I eat better and sleep It helped my thirteen old I took it bedaughter. year fore and after my baby was bom. "I am gaining every day. Women better. n ay. ... T Voice Evidently Hi First (in the dark) May kiss Voice You wouldnt get angry If I klbsed yon. would you? Do yon Answer My goodness! want me to promise not to bite? What Will mm tv-- - n, I r you? Complete silence. w -- g 4 J , J' d- -t- . hat-clothing s -- e ! I " -- -- -- rt-ms- te T'c6 'It V ct tax-fiu- uv - -- - fat-hio- , 3; e - j I t When your Children Ciy for It There is .hardly, a household Jhst hasn't heard of Castorlal At least fir never without It. there are children In your farallr there's si most dally need of Its coo fort And any night may find you veryt thankful theres a bottle In the or a few drops, and that colic constipation is relieved; r diarrhe checked. 'A vegetable product- ; a boi'7 remedy meant for young folks.- Casteris ever Is about the only thing you have Intent heard doctors advise giving t to Stronger medicines nre dangerous way they harmless tiny baby, however Good old Castor s. be to grown-npor Remember-th- e name, , and re mem T a to buy It It may spare you always lessanxlons nlghL-ILl- s always safe to use; In emercencleet for .everyday ailments. Any hour nw day or night that Baby becomes no was , Cnstorla ful. or restless. more popular with mothers than 1L today. Every druggist Las T million homes tre hen-Jus- s. mkv |