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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, ITAI! FA1EHIS TOU KILLED III IT TO EXPAIIO INCftA3tO CROM WOULD IMPROVE ECONOMIC ION.-tT IS SAID I," POSIT- Wif Alkaly Ta 'Rgmaln High; Eqwlpmtnt Pries Will Net Meke A PrtHl Cent Belt 'U S tiering. WsahlngUj. Dart expand. Tktt vii th u you Mtaaorea t Aaaure Tit!. cf La,',, Crntd by F.dtra! tj, mmant ,, tHt CoBa,e,.or e I ttoe .given U the farmers of tke eountvy by the United States Department et Agriculture la tta Important forecast ef (arm conditions for lift. Dee pit e the preeeert eorn ibelt Buffering and the wave erf farm eollapeea laoe the war, the taming inductry la tot la the heat general condition lnce 1120, the department atd. However, any general increaaea la crope weald tend to place the farm- the root ers la a leas favorable economic posiPittsburg, pa. Death baa again claimed Its grim ton In a mine disastion thaa at preaenL It warned.' Neither foreign nor .domestic del ter, II men are dead following an et- mand for farm product wtn IncruM1 ripeloo which wrecked rigtUtmtYNo: It aald. In face there may be a de-- t 1 of the Pittsburg Terminal company's mins No. 4 nt Horning. created demand. Trapped In n passageway 40 feet Farm wage will remain at leant as froS ths miss entrance, only two of high as they are, Che department said. men nt work fighting n bkie li fl Nstther will the cost of farm equip tbs mins escaped alive. They re Edmeat descend. Davit, n mine foreman And Louis Discussing the prosy sets of the ma- ward PoweJL jor crops, the department aald: Ths section of buft No. It, where , "A slightly smaller world crop of the explosion occurred, was walled wheat la Indicated, with world stock off in aa effort to exterminate ths at the beginning of the new crop fires. bodies remained within Blxt'seg year not burdensome. Domestic stock this while ..section, only three have re likely to be smaller, ecn recovered,. "Corn acreage tbs same as la 1925 was the aftermath of The with nverags market yields, wlll be n fire explosion mine which broke out the la sufficient to meet feeding and com- when n cutting machine broke mercial requirements a fully ns in n day vela Into g gts pocket through 1925. If last year's oatsacreage Is The 21 men went into bull No. IS, maintained, relaUveyrIow prlcea are 4000 feet' from the mine entrance, to likely to continual unless yields srt fight the blase. greatly reduced. "Tbs Immediate and long Time outBARGES RACE TO SEA look for cattle Is favorable. A reasonably constant demand for beef Is anCoast Scene ef Disaster In ticipated. The number of steers is Jersey Violent Storm ths lowest In many years, but present breeding stocks are nppsrsntly largs Ashbury Turk, N. J. Eight lives enough to supply ns much beef ns It were reported lost end three barges will pay cattls producers to raise. were known to have foundered on the "The outlook for the hog Industry coast In n snowstorm north appears favorable, with prices main- end 0 Jersey mils northeast gale that overtained at high levels. took a multitude of small shipping "Indications are that 1121 will bs a bound for New York. good year for the sheep Industry, and Two bsrges broke away from the ' further Increases In production may tug Thomas Howard off Scotland bs undertaken profitably In soma sectaccording to a wireless meslightship, ions.sage received from the coastguard cuter Beminole at the Sandy Hook IX KAISER MAY LOSE PROPERTY station. Each was manned by four men and one sank immediately, the Volts On Ts Psepls Expropriation other going ashore at Bandy Hook. No trace of the crew of this barge, and Thus Lessen Heavy Burden the Phoenix, was found by Captain Berlin. For tbs first time in Ger- Elwood Butler, who got to the ecene man history ths people themselves with e boat crew. The bargee were loaded with coal end were bound to will be called on to give the verdict New York from Delaware breakwater. In n political lawsuit. The word " poThomas Howard was reported ll t leal" means here that the case must The bound Into New York. be Important tor all cilltens. A second barge came ashore et AnAll German men and women over bury Park. It was believed to bs 20 are to answer the question wrhether unmanned. The tugboat Busan Moran the real and personal property of ths of New York had the barge In tow princes who were dethroned In 1111 when last seen at iea. The whereshall be expropriated,' without Indem- abouts of ths tug were not discovered. nification, tor lessening the poverty Seven Mile Tramway Te Be Built of the German masse. Moscow Immediate construction What the property Involved amounts eeven n mile of tramway from the to Is Indicated by ths fact that Wilmine la Tine Creek, In ConetUAtion liam Yon Hohentollern demands ons d'Alene Coeur the district, te the and billion marks (about 1210,000,000) Government of bead gulch, where do ths Duke of available for connections terminal art mand a. In addition to great personal to and smelmain line the swttlching 0 property, 170,000 morgen (about announced are by Judge George ter, acres) of the best quality land, Turner, of Bpokane, who ban Just rewith palaces, hotels, summer resorts, turned from the site of the proponed hundreds of houses, etc. Improvement According to Judge Such figures here srs only two Turner, who Is president ot the cases of at least twenty show that company. ths conflict affects all eltlsens and ths whole nation.. Nevertheless, four New Air Service Bill Introduced ot ths parties la ths government desire to Expansion Washington. avoid n plebiscite and they have pro-- . army air service was proposed in n posed the formation of a special court bill by Representative James, Rewhich .win decide all questions and publican, Michigan, designed to carry shall particularly furnish a gurantee out recommendations of the board that the princes will not use property beaded by Major Cenevnl Willis m given them for fighting the republican Lassiter, which studied the subject several years ago. form of governmenL . SSl2S"rtBt public house committee assured that hearings Drifting Bargs Has Lens Man Los Angeles, Calif. Officials of ths Universal film company reported they were somewhat concerned over the safety of Reginald Denny, one ot their start, reported lost at sea In his fishing yawl Barbartns. Two seaplanes left North Island, near Baa Diego, In search of the missing actor, It was reported at Balboa Beach. Business Men Support Drive Balt Lake City. Nearly 250 Salt Lake business and profesional men have volunteered their services for the "pledge week" activities of ths Balt Lake Council of the Boy Bcouts, and will end ther efforts to ralss $25,000 with which to carry on scooting In the local council for the coming year. The Balt Lake Council, of which Dr. Francis A. Coeltt ts president and D. E. Hgmmond executive, .embraces all of Balt Lake, Tooele and Summit counties and the south 0 half of Darla county. There are boys within the coundL Coal Battle Lines Tighten Philadelphia. Pa. Miners and operators buckled on tbelr armor for a fight to the finish in the strike la Pennsylvania hard coal fields, now la Its sixth month. 25,-0- Logan School Needs Are Met Logan, To relieve the congestion In the city schools that has necessischool for children la tated half-daschool-hous- e the lower grades, n wUl soon be erected and attendance distributed so that full-daschool periods may be provided, tt was decided by directors of the chamber of commerce and the board of education In joint session. Ths new house can be provided without bonding and win meet the echoed needs for n few years. It was shown y six-roo- y t Increase In Cost' ef Standing Army The army appropriaWashington. tion bill carrying 8339,581.924. an Increase of $1,017,199 above budget estimates and I6S5.293 above appropriations for the current year, waa reported to the house by the appropriations committee. Of the total recommended. IM1.02UC9 will be used for milt-taractivities, while ths remainder, )7&A00.755 is for nonmilitary actlTl-tlea- . such as maintenance and Improvement of river and harbor grd s,r S' GVGJXZP Miscrainr Jttmit fbixrif ?! Statehood and which J. MASON EOltGE WASHINGTON, to hi boyhood days, waa n surveyor, lit had much experience la that line and be was A highly euccemfuL neglected Beene of bis youthful, labor now ts demanding public at. tention the little stone office In which be worked for Lord Fairfax Is to become n show place of Clark county, Virginia. A hundred and seventy-eigh- t years ago George Washington might have been found there any day, figuring busily and poring over putstretchod charts nnd maps. In the neighborhood he made his first acquaintance, aa a surveyor, with' a country he was Inter to know as a soldier. Here he became aerustomod to hardships and privations such as were to be his lot In the Revolutionary war. The little office Is only some sixty miles or o from Washington, D. C. When the young surveyor worked there It waa on wild frontier. Lord Henry, Fairfax, was once his relative, William Fairfax, when George Washington w:as present" LawTenoe Washington had married William Fairfax's daughter. The great man took n fancy to the boy, Just past bln seventeenth birthday, finding In him abilities and attainments beyond bis 'years, be engaged him to surrey hi vast tracts of land In the rich valley of the Alleghanies. Washington set out tn March, 1743, together with George "William Fairfax; and, through Ashley's Gap In the Blue Ridge mountains, the west-trfrontier of Inhabited Virginia, they passed Into the valley. In the wilderness tn the Shenandoah Talley, about twelve miles from the present town of Winchester, they stopped nt a lodge where Lord Fairfax's land bailiff, or stewurd. dwelt with as many negroes as were necessary to farm the newly cleared land. This first arduous expedition lasted fire weeks, with results of soch satisvb-lt-In- - n Old-roy- us tin Indian, measuring six feet two Inches In his stockings and weighing 173 pounds" This stood him well during the Revolution. Long hours In the saddle could not tire him. He slept one under n tree with Its roots a pillow. The privations of Valley Forge could not daunt him. He rode a horse tq death to get to tht front at Monmouth, and stop the retreat and had breath left to curse Lee for his cowardice. Washington' s life as n surveyor made him 100 per cent efficient In the ways of the wilderness, where effII iciency means life or death. learned to e hair's breadth wbat a man could do with rifle, horse and boat, bow to run like n coward nnd come back like n brave man; how to use Morgan! riflemen who came In response to his hurry-u- p call; how to get the lay of the land and ptek hi battlefield. The old office has been left to the ravages of time and the elements in recent year. It te almost hidden from view by n long stretching arm of a giant locust tree. One window is concealed behind a screen of bashes, nnd over Its roof n dinging creeper climbs, dnxqtlng like n stray lock over the front Its corners are chipped. Its windows broken nnd Its shingled roof ts leaky In spots. But repairs and restoration are now at fr hand. A committee has been formed, of which Graham F. Blandy of New Tork la chairman, to rolled funds for the roof, relaying the floor, the Inside and repainting the endoslng outside walla By spring. It Is thought all wUl be In readiness for visitors. , That Washington, as was the cus- y -- , - Proposal that a meeting of the land commissioners ot the seeral public land states bo held In Salt Lake os , March 1, was made by Clark V. land commlsioner of .Washington x&z&murT waj, In a communication to John T. secretary of the state land If not disagreeable consequences, from The suggestion w'as in reply to board. the latter while both descriptions are query by Secretary Oldrovd asking in the occupancy of the same proprietor, it not being In my power under support of the Smoot bill pertaining the tenure by which the dower negroes to title to school lands rectntly introduced In congress. are held to manumit them. And wherefreewho those will receive as, among dom according to this demise, there BEEKEEPERS DISCUSS PROBLEM may be some who from old age or bodily Infirmities and others who on Stats Tax Dselared Inadequate Ts account of tbelr Infancy that will be . Needs; County Urgea Fee unable to support themselves. It Is my Inspection. will and deslrs that all who come under the first and second description Salt Lake City. That the atate shall be comfortably clothed and fed requiring- payment of 11 per by my heirs while they lire, and that resuch of the later description os have apiary of beet does not meet the difficulty of the because no parents living, or If living are un--' quirements, was able or unwilling to provide for them, met with tn collecting the tax, Harden by the opinion expressed shall be bound by the court until they state commissioner of agricushall arrive at the age of twenty-flto lture the Utah Btate Beekeepers yean, and in cases where no record Ilo euggeated that th association. can be produced whereby their ages sn4 can be ascertained, the Judgment of fee be collected. by the county f He fee. the court upon Its own view of the need aa an inspection to method this should tides that subject shall be adequate and final state collectios "The negroes thus, bound are (by adopted, necessity forwhich heretofore their masters or mistresses) to be would he eliminated, an undesirable expexah baa taught to read and write and to be And proved of tb 1 administration that brought up to tome useful occupawould he more efficient tion, agreeably to the lawa of the -- Dan IL Hillman, atate bee Imp commonwealth of Virginia providing made the following report la VA tor, for the support of orphans and other do hereby ex- relative to the Industry. poor children and-eob There was an Increase of 10.18$ forbid the sale or transportapressly tto of onto of bee In 1925 over that tion out of ths sold commonwealth total of any slave I may die possessed ot preceding year, making the C as under any pretence whatsover, and 57.852 colonies up to date, ths when I do moreover most positively and 17,827 colonies in 1919, which is n Savld-ge- tom among the landed proprietors of Virginia nnd other southern states, was n nine holder la well known. UU faction to Ixxd Fairfax that be him- view on .slavery are not so generally self moved across the Bine Ridge understood and while It may not be a soon afterward, taking up his quar- surprise to many that on his death he ters et the lodge. He laid out a freed his own slaves, the provisions manor for the place, which be called of his will In this respect are of much Green way court, after bis ancestral interest. After providing that his wife, borne In England; but the bouse was neror built. The toaster himself slept Martha Washington, shall have the la n wooden structure about 12 feet "us and profit and benefit of his square. On the lawn nearby be built whole estate, real and personal," dura office, where bis deeds ing her life, there follows this clause: were drawn and Lis. quit rents col"ITEM I pon the decease of wife lected. There the boy Washington did tt 1 toy will and desire that all the his work, remaining for three years slsree $hlct 1 hold In my own right In the service of Lord Fairfax. Many shall receive their freedom. To nt the now famous (data of his sur- emancipate them during her life veys and subdivisions were made un- would, though earnestly wished for by der this roof. me, be attended with such Insuperable Washington's life as a surveyor, difficulties on account of tbelr intergsve him a splendid physique. When mixture with the dower negroes as be had his growth he was "straight to excite the most painful sensation one-stor- since beet orado and Arixona. cszs&rxstr ctxaw By DEWITT hue found to have mineral value Vnder supreme court rulings, It us asserted, the government may tu retabt such areas. Senator Smoot, Republican. Utah, presided OTer the meeting, hich al was attended by members of congreia representing Utah, Wyoming, Califor nla. New Mexico, Nevada, Idaho, Col- (cjJteJtZZZr - Con-stltuti- Would be M uf Legislation already u deal with, the problem tr. I another bill has been drafted by tram the public land, state., Jo Democrat. New Mexico, r, , , nth t reduced a bill under mhuh u.e a! government would rel 0 ;Msh claim to these land, and a mm., which has been drafted ..ulj the government's centebt tt, the title of lands already granted to th- - sut within six years after the uti9 hd been passed over to the sut. W. Halverson Farr, deput attorney general of Utah, was one of thoe tending. An effort will be made to agree os legislation to prevent arhdraval by the government of h.n,U Minted .t ? 110,-00- 1 mute an Chairman Sum.... - ' Conference Washington. Aa re.uli ot th, tho oeaats and acting committees will be a.ked to kol? Joint hearing, on the ably next week, and to qu.iHa I Wr tative. of public land, state rn,r New Britain. Cons. 61 men are fcaowa to have been croaked te death, aleyea others, some to a serlous condition. are at the New Britain general hospital and tea are unaccounted for aa the result of the collapse of a brick wall at the foundry of North 4 Judd Manufacturing company on East Mala Street. The dead were not Identified. It wae first thought that the wall was rased by aa explosion In the foundry, This theory waa abandoned and now It la believed that the building caved la from the weight of enow on ere rJ bV0' representatives Pennsylvania Ceal Mine Blast Trap Twenty-OnMen; Sect ton ef Mine Walled ON te Exterminate Fire Cki(; Stay .Just SEN. SMOOT PRESIDES FERENCE ATTENDED MANY RUSHED TO HOSPITAL IN IN A SERIOUS CONDITION WHEN WALL FALLA NOT - mighty chime of 53 Vila, given to the Park Avenue Baptist church by John Rockefeller. Jr la memory of hi New York's first carillon was of mother. Recently Its first notes were nature's making. More than 200 years beard , when without anprevious ago the French established a fort on nouncement, ,f i hells were rung. the creek through which the waters The other six had not been connected. Sf Lake George flow Into Lake ChamIts music was not long unidentified named It Fort Carillon They and for blocks shoot the church plain. because the music of the fall remindmotorists and persons in ed them of the chimes of hells la tbelr their home heart) and enjoyed the homes. Later this name was given up pioneer concert on an Instrument unfor Tleonderogs, the present name of common In this country, yet aald to the city. Now the city baa ll-unsurpassed la completeness by Hew York's Carillon e - Ben-Alo- v coo-r- most solemnly enjoin It upon my executors hereafter named, or ths survivors of them, to nee that thin danse respecting slaves and every part thereof be religiously fulfilled at tha epoch at which It Is directed to take place without evasion, neglect, or delay after the crop which may then be cm the ground are harvested, particularly aa It respects the aged and Infirm, seeing that a regular and permanent fund be established for their support so long os there ore subjects requiring It, not trusting to the uncertain provisions to be mads by individuals." There follows a dauee prodding for his personal "mulatto man" giving him his Independence at once, if bo . report was made, of 82 Vk per cent to the growth ot industry to th past six years. Millions Starving In China tfnuti Hankow, China. It Is k pop of out that a million persons startttl are million latlon of sixty the province of Hupeh. In ce of Hunan, a smaller Tbtf the popnlaca la to distress. foodatxxCT of plentiful supplies Honan, but owing to the tieup railway because of th military tlon. they cannot be sent stricken districts. There U a freight lying on the' eidings - ehipment to tax th fuU the railroad for six months. so desire. militarists who are to The actual reading of the above tins are demanding $G00 for not including th clause throws an Intimate light on they release, Washington's extreme thoughtfulness, freight charges. showing, as It doe, the consummate care exercised that his wlshen might r to In no manner bo misconstrued. The Washington. A bill 7 of . provisions regarding the aged and Infederal Inspection W ( appeared firm. the children, can was only nerve table exports committee. more firmly to endear this great man boose agriculture who, leaving no children of his own. proposed by Secretary J t Is so proudly railed the father of am aald anch legislation 7m(.rica. entire nation. cover exports to South I any of Its kind finder Magazines. ta the world. Pith Important Food in East Rice in the busk Is termed paddy. u Urdy grown tn subtropical and as sn article of food It ee-,0 countries the puts similar to that occupied oy wheat tn be countries of tl temperate xuca. t was brought to North America near Seventeenth centurj and first grown In South Carolina, tfceo a British colony. " rw-flo- 7 Pacific Coast StwmLa Ban Francisco. A. was buffeting the Pacific m more than a thousand one shjP length and at least wallowing and helpless leeth of ths hurricane. T . . FxU, rjfi-thoop- .r. t |