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Show THE WEEKLY KEFLEX. KAYSVILLE, UTAH the bard and called a striae. She UIrrkhi Srflrx by THE INLAND HUNTING CO. W. r. EJI'KRSOV, K4ilr C. A. EPPERSON. F.ntrrJ 191, at March g, nru-cl- Ski p Karil,. la's. Adwtulaf ArnroU Editor mMr SVrry 1J, Utah, ondrr L' ratca an Mtlhralim TS tpparwa, C. A. Offtro, No. No. 114 1 STATE KOA! umts of the state highway at night a most distressing condition exists. lift ui take the most dangerTo all ous notice, iz: The of light on buggies and wagons after nightfall. The autoist is forced by a state law to block his front lamps so ki not to confuse other user of the highway. Another law requires all luggies and wagons to display a light when using the highway at night Yet apparently neither law is enforced in the slightest degree. Nine out of ten cars on the highway have no dimmers of any description; their lights are as blinding as that of a locomotive. Ten out of ten buggies and wagons display no light whatever. Two of our local citizens were victims of an unlighted wagon on the Centerville highway last evening, which the writer witnessed. The cars were more or less smashed and one driver hurt considerably. The driver of the wagon made a neat Everyone is quick to blame the for all accidents, but how little is said of the murderous unlighted vehicles of the night. Another disastrous condition that exists day and night along the state highway is the parking of cars on the cement. In time this practice will be punishable by a stiff jail sentence,, for it is nothing short of criminal for one to do this. Let anyone who doubts drive ten minutes on the highway and see the terrible danger to all vehicles where this is done. Tires are changed and all kinds of repair work is done while the car or truck is parked squarely in the path of oncoming vehicles. The newly erected road signs are proving to las a great source of danger. In the writer's opinion they are placed entirely too close to the concrete, Also a number of these steel light posts fail to flash their signal at iight when needed most. Nothing more dangerous could be constructed four feet from the highway. The state vehicle laws that are on the books were designed to protect the users of the highway, hut of what earthly use are they when their nonenforcement results In death and injury to those who travel the concrete road? Perhaps when a sufficient number of people have been killed or injured as the result of ment of the highwsy laws, those who remain alive will awaken to the dangers that exist and provide the necessary officers to strictly enforce these laws. It is only a question of time when they- - will have to be enforced Why not start now to do it? II. L. GLEASON. get-awa- y. au-toi- st non-enfor- EXPENSES ANI) TAXES Charles J. Bullock, professor of economics at Harvard university, will arrive In Salt Lake' the latter part of the week to confer with the members of the Utah commission for the revision of the taxation system in Utah in regard to the tax problems rvt m M GlclfcwSbjuiiAcd, J HEW WEBSTERS IIITERIIATIOIAL DICTIONARY Is an tciuhef, a universal question answerer, znado to ipeet needs. It is in daily usojour by hundreds cf thousands of sue- - eukiul men sad women tbs world orer. 4M 00 Words. 7700 Pafirs. 0009 Illustrations. I J.0U4 Biographical I 40.000 l.oiiraphijd Subjects. CBtVD PEI7Z. (H.fVst Award) . , i anama-- i siUic i.ipoa.uua. and nxu EJmas. W RITF Priimwi Parrs. FREE Maps u you asms lius paper. tretua C. & c. rim MERRIAM CO., bpringfielj. Mass., L. S. A. j u-- od j's s Overcer-'m- . Wh. never I screws or naiN tuod, He's It. One can't help wondering whether the man who would reform the world ha sin ceeded In making one man jierfeet. I.milsv'lle ' V W'm W ,4 W W w Ww W r MW I p f ?'' ut fVnd move them Is to of I araiiiu to s... around them. Nve. y, That Require. ., A young-pin-- j log aide to name - onh half Is to he the name ef .Transcript. M M W W .. A.. C p 1 t- p-)- t' w'lr - w1 r - ,r,f! 1 14 u'r 7 tk m1 . LET US HELP YOU FIGURE YOUR BILDING WANTS FOR THIS SI MM EE Labor Is Down Building Material Is Reasonable Nothing Too Large or Too Small Plans Furnished Estimates Free Can-nin- Phone lpe HEYWOOD & WIGGILL 30-F1- 2 Layton, Uufc , X X I 4 SULLIVAN ELECTRIC SUPPLY i 1 D. A. SULLIVAN 1 lx i j ml js. Wiring, Fixtures, Lamps, Appliancei Ranges, Washing Machines General Repair Work PHONE 28- - N 2 LAYTON, UTAH be-fe- w UN light Mr. fcouac Mr and V jesterJ y Bish Walsh News Co., Inc. jure d Jovstor BAMBERGER STATION .The ist Students, we have your School Supplies. We also take orders for any periodical. And dont forget that I box of candy you promised her. La; It rep! a destroy An John KAYSVILLE, UTAH W. Walsh Joseph, Tuesda eorthw 27 mor Pres, and Genl. Mr. : ti dU,. j Optician Manufacturing Street 352-24t- gnn: 1C Ogden, Utah h I cr Davis County, Utah, is practically the celebrated Salt Lake valley, famed the world over for its wonderful fruits. It is a rare blending of scenic beauty and social advantages. Davis County forms an ideal community, one of those rare settlements for which the real home-seekhas been searching for years. The wonderful advantages offered by this marvekiusly rich valley have drawn into its confines a remarkably high type of American er Davis is primarily a fruit and agricl-tur- al district, apples, peaches, pears, strawberries and cherries being produced in abundance and to a degree of perfection unequalled elsewhere. AU the grains and grasses produce in great abundance and all the vegetables of the temperate zone excell in quality and quantity of yield. Potatoes of excellent quality form no in- - flJWe are prepared to give you any information you may wish on plumbing fixtures and Private Utility pumping units, ' J. B. GALBRAITH o considerable item, large quantities of which are shipped Annually. Situated at the base of the Wasatch mountains and bounded on the west by the Great Salt Lake, killing frosts in Davis County are nearly unknown. An abundance of water for irrigation, fed from the snow fields of the mountains, make it independent of fickle old "Juniper Pluvius. Soil and air drainage are almost ideal. In Davis County there are some 30,000 acres of land, good land, awaiting clearing or draining to become at once highly productive and capable of the most intensive farming. The cost of clearing will vary according to density of the growth of brush and drainage on local conditions. Electricity for lights and manufacturing purposes is furnished and distributed by the Utah Power & Light Company and is available in all parts of the county. A Few Facts About Davis County la crossed by the Oregon Short Line, Denver & Rio Grande Western and Bamberger Electric Railroads. Davis of Population County, 12,000. Acres under cultivation, 41,000. Tillable but uncultivated, 30,000. Planted to apples, peaches, pears, strawberries, cherries, apricots and other fruits, 3,000 acres. Rainfall, 18 inches, mostly seasonable. Best culmary water in the world --all cities and towns have modern water works, supplied from canyon streams and springs. Principal streets of cities paved, concrete road bisecting county. Electric lights and telephone systems cover entire county. Transportation Rail, and truck service on highways. Excellent grade schools, modem high schools .public libraries, churches and women's clubs. Manufacturing Plants: Five fruit and vegetable canneries, sugar fattory, flour mills, ice plant. Seed nursery and one of the largest floral concerns west of the Retail stores compare favorably with those of much larger cities. Mississippi. Ample banking facilities. Dairying and poultry raising. Up-to-da- te garages. Lagoon resort "Prettiest spot in Utah. Municipal play ground at Kaysville. Additional Information Gladly Furnished by Commercial Club KaysvilleKAYSVILLE, UTAH 1 Phpne Hill 26, Kayswlle, Utah i $ Made of Choicest UlahWheat Milled in the Most Modern Mil Known Everywhere m THE VERY BEST Kaysville Flour m U your opportunity to inturo rmbsrraMina errors In tprliinc, pronunciation sail poor choicr of nord. Know th mranins of puuling Increase your efficiency, wr term wUcb results in power sad success. os St.c ke. Aconite and (auid.or are the prinIn the manufaccipal chemicals e acn!ie serves Tt v of ture to prevent ravages by rul-- mid mice, and the camphor insures h steady fire when the sticks ure burned. The aroma Is supplied by many odoriferous drugs used In the manufacture. lop-side- JoWtn Suiaxil? Her s therefore that the public is to Rates were redded with .the idea of The following items Horn The Reflex of ten years ago will be of evssitated the wage reduction and interest to our readers of today. hence for the strike. This is a very superficial view. Mrs. Chailes Turner, SrM of Farm- jCar.al company, the purchase of which Rates were reuced with the idea of ington cell bratedj her CMh birthday. j is contemplated by the Electric Bond Irostcri-- g r.crmal crrr.roercial condi- All of her children and sixteen of her jar.d Share company of New York, is tions. It is noteworthy, however, that ibaing valued by. a committee whose grandchildren were pres nt. the railroads did not strike. On the The addition to the Adams & Sons duty it is to search the records ef i contrary, they accepted the reduction company new store at Layton i rap- the company and ascertain the co-- t because it was orderethjiy a lawfully of the same. It is thought that the idly nearing completion. established government tribunal and to team ball will. go The Lajton purchase price will bring a profit of mar-- 1 jtqey did it at a time when their Downey, Idaho, to play two games. above, $100, bOO to the company. revenue over expenses was William Thomley has taken his gin of The games will be played Saturday small. and Sunday. sisters, Mattie and Norma, for an outBut the employes went on strike, Saturday the Layton ball team ing to Fish lake. though a lawfully established govern-- 1 g The new plant of the Kaysville took North Ogden down the line with ment tribunal had ordered a wage red a company at Syracuse will be 'score in favor of Layton. duction and they did it in spite of the Barkdull 4nd tried out Friday. T. A- - Phillips, 'Bud that the new scale of wages was On Thursday, August 1, the super- fact "Home Run Robbins starred for the from 29 to 90 per cent higher than Laytonites. The score was 4 for Lay-to- n intendent of the Kaysville waterworks in 1917. and 2 for North Ogden. published a notice forbidding the use Blame for the strike therefore rests The Riverdale hydroelectric plant of water for other than culinary neither on the public nor on the railof the Davis and Weber Counties roads but upon radical labor leaders who gave the workers unwise counof Utah. No doubt our state, city and the habits and inclinations of the sel. county officials are In need of some thrifty family. It was well said by some one during During his visit in Utah we would the war, and it will bear repetition expert advice in in this direction Professor Bullock may advise them like to have Professor Bullock carry as peculiarly applicable to the strike, soundly. Taxes in Utah are entirely some of our officials back to the fun- that if the kings and kaisers, empertoo high and any information which damental principles of taxation. We ors and czars had to go into trenches will tend to reduce the burden should would like him to teach them the re- and endure the suffering and privalation which exists between public tions of a soldier there would be welcomed. There are certain of our govern- expenditures and taxation. It might wars; and that if the paid labor leadmental units, however, which will not not even be amiss for him to show ers had .to walk the streets jobless and them the effect that high taxes may profit by the visit of Professor Bulhungry and endure the hardships of m state or community in its a striker, there would be few strikes. lock If they hold to the course which have on future development. If he does not they are now pursuing. What they need is some practical advice on the get down to these fundamentals, w Buttercups and Gold Mines. telr he may be misunderstood, tof spending of th people's money. They With many readers brilliancy Of is are yet to lgarn that public expendi- unless this side of the question for affluence of thought: passes style tures make taxes and that when gov- clearly presented, the tax authorities they mistake buttercups In the grass ernmental units undertake extensions of this state are likely o derive no for Immeasurable gold mines under and Improvements which they can- practical benefits from his visit. the ground. not afford, they are extravagant. The fundamental principles of economy Clearing Wine of Sediment WHO IS TO BLAME? which apply to the individual also The newest way of removing sediA controversy has arisen as to who ment from bottles of wine before beapply to the unit of government. Individuals who live within their is to blame for the strike of the rail- ing sent to the market Is effective and more economical than the older methmenns are usually successful. Those road shop crafts. , od. It consists of allowing the parDue to insistent demands by the who spend more than they earn are ticles to settle In the neck of the bothot. Debt which cannot he met by public for lower rates, the interstate tle while in an Inverted position and the earning capacity of the individu- commerce commission made a reduc- then freezing teat part of the conal destroys hope, ambition and initi- tion in freight rates. tents, whereupon It la easily blown 4 ative. When the wise individual is It was' well understood at the time off. confronted with a .condition which that freight rates could not be rethreatens the future of himself and duced without reducing wages of railNaval Smoke. his family, he curbs his desires and road employes. In the old days of the navy all devotes himself to necessities, enthe United States pipes sailors rarely smoked tobacco Subsequently his "debts to labor at railroad deavoring board, after an exhaus- In any other form were lighted from liquidate the earliest possible moment. He tive investigation, issued an order re- a lamp hi the forecastle, and the hours owes this to the children who will ducing the wages of. certain classes when smoking Is permitted are still allive after him. Public officials can of railroad employes, among them the Indicated by the use of this lamp, the modern sailor is permitted though gain an insight Into the ways and shopmen. The leaders of the shop to light a mutch when he desires to means of reducing taxes by studying craft refused to accept the order of smoke. j ? Cua STATE)'' USSCClAia I).vsci:us (U' TIIK Ten Years Ago Today eonunen-tajor- j Subscription $2.00 per year In advance TF.I.EPIIOMH p. Kpperwfc, Ne. It is contended by some t Packed in the Neatest Manner Every Dealer Has It Kaysville, Utah ' .iT-- .r - Ih the Geed Old is the ideal time to paint the outside and inside. The wood is ready to completely absorb the paint and thus preserve the wood for a long period. Theres a common sayffl tnat a bnck housenever needs painting. e n? rn But take window frames and porch ceiling conVce t.1;h?yillecd a coat of paint today Call Briganee and he an d0 the WOrk- - The Pl''CC' fa 3MV.When J. P. Brigance KAYSVILLE, UTAH |