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Show s 'll tt xvu KAkSVILLE, LAYTON ANI) FARMINGTON, UTAH, THURSDAY, JANUARY NUMBER 6 4. 1923. BUREAU (Will Protest Lack jLIVESTOCK MEN FARM AND CITY ALEXANDER ODD DEVINE ADVISES of Phone Servicc OF ARE OPTIMISTIC DIES IN ALASKA EMPLOYMENT OUTLOOK GOOD flOLDS ELECTION PRISON INMATES MRJI I ,Kpnt Officers Are for Cliosen to Lead Another Year. officers o bureau wi of the organization . incumbent a3 the County Farm . yfar Farmington, w e a of two years as president, served &&j of Bountiful, vice A.T. Waddoups ,. fnr a like period, yvere re- H.Jt h Ho-RlDe- J I 1 A. L. Wilson, who Treta-treasurerfo- Union Pacific Magazine Completes First Year r The officers were given a rSWk for their past work by the bureau, who met .The Union courthouse here. Omaha, January J. 4ftl Davis county eleven official at the met Pacific publi magazine, cs men delegates Pacific the Union the cation of election, the system tk. Following each made a brief talk, and W. which was started last January under on the the direction of President Carl U. Payee, county agent, spoke to Gray, completed its first year with 0f the past year. women delegates, in separate J the issuance of the December number. elected Mrs. W. F. Ilogan of fiik-ne . Bountiful as chairman; Mrs. adventures of the late Andrew ciadt of Clearfield, vice chair- water, for many years city engineer one and Mrs. D. M. Hunter of South of Omaha, who was a member of tsntiful secretary for the coming 0f the fipst surveying parties that Mrs. undertook to find X pass across the ir. 'Following the election, The party Ctudst&e Clayton of the Utah exten- - Rocky Mountains. J with Indians who op work battles took project up frequent service, pa se-- 1 posed- - the extension of wA the women,' and the work was I kded for the coming year. Some of across the plains. work was spring millinery, con- - j George Palmer Putnam, the well - known New York eradihealth work, the of fly publisher, contnb cation The Rough article sad gardening. a cooperative humorous niton Lunch was served at noon by Mrs. Writers Go West, describing a re-J. Thayne, assisted by Misslara cent trjp over the Union Pacific to Talker, Mrs. Nephi Palmer and Miss the pendleton, Oregon, iToundup, of Martha Millard. During luncheon L party 0f authors which included scsic was furnished by the Brimley George S. Chappell, better know as and by Miss Geneva er.fcestra, j)r Walter E. Traprock, explorer ?hitaker, who sang a Farm Bureau Charles Hanson Towne, novelist and fc'.g, followed by community singpoet Wallace Irwin, author and humir led by Arthur Anderson of Syraorist( Ruth Hale, critic, Walter Truutus. bull of the New York Herald, Hub- baring the afternoon session Mrs. bard Hutchinson, novelist, John Held, ttritine Clayton of the Utah exten- imustrator, Frederick OBrien, famand lioa service spoke on the willingness 04a for his South Sea stories, I if thr college and government to help Charles Wellington Furlong, F. R. G !k residents of Davis county. SheJ g ( author of Let Er Buck. pKblimented the farm bureau on the J was . When the Lucm Gut-UEre&a and extension work done in , , --of a title the picture is Bombers of ' I , I Kose-B;nc- . I ?, I I That a most promising future is in store for the cattle raisers "of the country were the tm ssagt s carried' by James Brennan, manager of the Ogden Packing and Provision,, company, and John Painter, president of the American Hereford ass.n iation. to the stockmen of eleven states at the banquet of the Ogden livestock show at the Weber club last night. The basis of the optimism was tlu action taken by the government Iasi ! rulay in calling upon the people of the iuntry to eat more meat. In speaking on the message of the government, Mr. Brennan said the people were asked to eat twenty pounds more beef a je.,r per person. He said this would mean a consumption of o.omi.tkM more annuals per year. The speaker said that as the result of the sudden unmnation of the war the country found an overproduction and undi r consumption of meat, because the government had asked the jnople dining the war to conserve. As the result conditions found in the country at the termination of the war, Mr. Brennan said, sad hurt the indutry To afford relief the government had loaned the livestock men money or made arrangements to assist them through their banks. He said the industry had received the money, but the stockmen as yet had not been able to sell their animals to pay off thier indebtedness. It was up to the government to help. This help is now' forthcoming in the request to the people to eat more meat, he said. live-stoc- Entertains Men ti - ?& S - . 3.d national vAVZp 1 farm bureaus were doing. i !witotack 1 St , Eii i j j j f I j ! lter jty officers ol West, how the first town tjje now orderly and were notorious cjty 0f Laramie, Wyo., and dive keepers. They gUn men out- the present year. He advocated pur- were finally strung up by an chase of purebred chickens just as raged citizenry under the leadership Purchasing true strains of com. He j 0f the late N. K. Boswell, sdvised the San cooperative buying of baby Pasadena, Crown City of hkks articles ' in featured Gabriel Valley is H. ' and Dairy Report Made. by William Dunkerley A. B. Barton, county dairy commit-- 1 Hall, which describe particularly the each New fesman, reported that his committee Rose Tournament held d tested all persons 300,000 J About the cows in the southern Years day. if of Davis each year, attend county, by grouping are expected to into articles on community corrals. He said The first of a series of Pa-j committee was assisted in this I Presidents of the Union pagt o historian ky the county agent, the local I cjfic Leonard, O. by L. tt&mitteemen, bureau presidents, and j the Union Pacific system, is a i But er United States department of J ography of the late William Union industry. Mr. Barton said Ogden, First president of the he hoped the rest of Davis county Pacific railroad, Euid take up this work. The need Los An . . The recent opening of the eoiurty cooperative bull associa- ia described by N. gtock was pointed out by the speaker, On the Loa Angeles. P expressed the hope that such an there were received fiftyI be cai of cattle, eleven of sheep mi?ht formed in Davis I nde BCevn of hogs. Fourteen comrs F. Hogan I at . reported that.m mission firms are now represented form and dress construction .. 0rk the 5"r3 women of Davis county had j magazine Is dis$1205.90 Union Pacific The i r during the year. She mnloves e o , that vork had been tributed among and L jirliler is the extension in health, a of the system, 5-Commerce, Mst.Hc.UoS col schools, ewtinued. r cieties, clubs, libraries, ry the te in and newspapers iTUm Adams spoke, on the j leges ' nion millinery which was done j served by the u d ;a sale at news women, expressed the is on Pa sengers to on trams f this should be continued. !? Are One of the most pleasmgsur read- - X. Hyrum Sessions reported on Ihe work of the extension service in culling poultry during the year, and continuation of this work during Last Thursday evening the mein bers of the Bay View club enter amed their husbands at a sumptuous banquet at the home of lr. and Mrs. A Nick Bonnemort. unique feature was the of the affair serving of a the lunch to guests imfour course Assist-iarrival. their mediately upon Melba Miss were serving mg Miss and Olive Miss Harvey Thornley, the guests, sitVera Galbraith, ting at six tables enjoyed progressive and flinch until a late hour. Prizes were won by Mrs. C .V. K. Saxton, F. B. Muir, A. M. Barnes and Mis. V. IV Epperson. Among the guests present were Mr. and Mrs. John W. Thornley, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Epperson, Mr. and Mrs. II. IL Blood. Dr. and Mrs. G. D. Rutledge, Mr. and Mrs. Nick Bonnemort. Mr. and Mrs. B. George L?athatn, Mr. and Mrs. J. Z. A. Mrs. Tanner, Cooley, Dr. and Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Muir, Mr. and Mrs. C. V. K. Saxton, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Epperson. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Barnes, Mrs. Nathan Reeves and Frank Reeves. n ufwn it o iddress was optimistic as to the J Labe vas opene the that time the tore of farming and farm bureaus. was built during and operated Union Pacific controlled L E. Smith, ... county seed committee . ic. Central aci Ea, reported on the good results of J of better 1 wing seed, and urged continua-William Francis Hooker, author an in fen ef the seed work, tells He reported xhe Prairie Schooner, success of the onion pool as organ- article entitled Hanging Recreant by his committee and the county Officials in the Old American , -- Bay View Club I I I well-govern- I Mr, and Mrs. Charles Ovid received ed mg v vn-Iso- v lb-id- es sis-ui- 't e Drama of a Bashful Boy Thi boy is a coward the boldest hmg he ever did was sing out loud in church. He loves the girl, and his lival is a bully who makes the boy's life One night he and the bully ai e calling on the girl. The vi-- it is interrupt! d by the hhoritT i bunging word that one of the village lieopois has been shot by a tramp, a rough customer with whom the hoy has already had an encounter. Every man is sworn in as deputy. The boy gets lost from the posse and the daik night is full of things that frighten him. In terror he run home and hides. His old grandmother ells him a wondeiful story of how bis grandfather had been a coward, but, with a magic talisman in his he had redeemed himself and covered himself with glory in the Civil war. Grandma gives the boy the chrm and he goes out, captures the. tramp in a series of incidents both thrilling and funny, and fights the bully to a knockout. Grandma then tells him her story was a Fib the charm is her umbrella handle.' All He he needed was it has he by really yinning proves the girl without the chfffui. This will be the picture at the Kaysville opera house Friday and Saturday evenings, January 5 and 6. single-hande- d Mr, and Mrs. Herbert L. Gleason are rejoicing over the arrival of a fine 8 'A pound boy, born on New Year's day. The baby vies with his father as a cornet player in the latest report. 1 THE UNIVERSAL CAR ; I TOURING CAR New Price ; ' wtjo . J Ha Gratifyinr " & Ped ec nt George E. Holt said -? abnormal conditions S'?" Prevailed, ' j work that K.";Kto, -- I. ex-- 1 which the work contained in the ad-J- Thayne, county agent United States department of vUr?He arranged for cmm unity during the for selection of coromu-Grafter which a county pro-Tear were r m . r -- J j. zkie s in res a4 a $L A L Ilfi car. cation in the observation aae ideas on selecting fJr priseB to - k, to he hil ject meeting wayarranged commencing Saturday, January 6, At tm the morning. 11 oclock in meeting the county Fogramofwork selected. The for another yeaFwill be will atte local bureau presidents this meeting. A u. F' Harvesting of the crop - $22,-UUO.O- . " , x - - Reserve District shut-dow- . - d Indebtedness Red need in Twelfth Farmers of the was practically completed November, permitting a estimate of the results of the years operations in agriculture, The acreage planted to crops in 1922 was slightly smaller than in the previous year and on the whole yields were below those of 1921. But the crops-wer- e raised with a minimum of outlay for labor and materials, and tbs prices of farm products, with the exception of potatoes, rice, apples, raisins and hops are now uniformly above those of a yenr ago, so that in many parts of the district the margin of return to the farmer has increased during the past year. Banka in the country districts, instead of expanding- their borrowings from the Federal Reserve bank throughout the harvesting and marketing period, have been steadily reducing them from a total of $31,000,000 on August 2 to $18,000,000 on December B, a do-- e reuse of 17 per cent. Commercial loans of reporting member banks in the primipaUdties of thejdistrict, on the jAhliand, have increased with thexacoeieration of Numbers Increase. business and industry during recent Population of the prison during the months. On December 0 commercial period has increased about fit) per loans of sixty-si- x reporting banka tent, according to the warden's re- stood at $700,000,000, 7 per rent above port. Those actually serving time the low point of June 28, 1922. This in the prison on November 30, PJ22, inciea'-of $18,000,000 was accomtotaled 100. This has made It impos- ft smaller increase of by panied nble to maintain the institution in the borrowings of these strictly within the appropriation pro- city banks from the Reserve bank. vided for it, despite the fact that the Investments of the same banks did per capita costs have been reduced. not decline during the period but inThe balance left in other funds, subcreased by 17,000,000. Business, both sidiary to the institution, is more at retail and at wholesale, was note- than sufficient to make up any apparmore active during November, ent deficiency in the general operat- bly 1922, than duting November, 1921. ing expenses, the warden claims. Department store sales increased 14.5 The institutions gratuity fund per cent in value compared with last shows n balance of $41)32.00, of which year, nrul exceeded sales during No a portion will be used prior to the end vetnber of 1920 and 1919. All lineal of the fiscal year and the road fund of wholesale trade reported increases shows a balance of $218.i.25. About in the value of their salej during No$1200 have been spent for improveJ922, compared with Novemvember, ments in the prison yard during the increase was over 10 The 1921, ber, period, this chiefly for a new lighting per cent in nine of the ten reporting system, installation of a clock punch- lines, ami in agricultural implements, ing system for guards, requiring them dry goods, furniture, groceries, hardto report each half hour, and equipware, shoes and stationery it was ment of guards in watch towers with over 15 per cent. Debits to individuadditional firearms. al accounts in the banks of the disA prison uniform him now been trict, omitting figures for San Franadopted, a new cement floor placed cisco, where a decline of 2.9 per cent sysin the kitchen and a finger-prin- t occurred, were 11.6 per cent huger One of the nusl tem established. Business during November, 1921. commendable improvements durian Lulu ien, although greater in numihe period has be n that requiring ber, were smaller in amount of liasuitable examinations for those ap- bilities than in the previous month plying to him for guards positions, or the same month a year ago. Ida- - . write the warden. The prison library bililies of failure during November, has been increased by 200 volumes 1922, were 35.6 per cent less than during the period. during November, 1921. 124 Released. The lumber industry operated at One hundred twenty-fou- r prisoners normal capacity during November. were released from the prison during The autumn market for lumber conthe period, Sentence of hinety were tinued active longer than is customary terminated, two pardoned, twenty-seve- n and mills have announced that the n will be brief. paroled and five escaped. In usual winter addition there were seven escapes Production of the principal metal from the prison road camp and farm. of the district Is growing steadily. There were (Seven escaped prisoners, The improvement in the statistical including those abandoning paroles, position of copper has been noteworreturned to the prison during the thy and on December 18 electrolytic cents per period. There was a daily average of copper was quoted at 14 187 prisoners maintained in the inpound in the New York market, comstitution at a cost of $1.10 per day pared with a price of 13 cents per during the period from December 1, pound one month ago and one year 1921, to November 30. 1922. ago. The flow of petroleum from the One hundred fifty-siprisoners oil wells of California during Novem-e- r were received at the institution duragain increased in volume faster ing the period. Of this number than "did consumption, which also inwere between the ages of creased, and stored stocks were 2 eighty-fiv- e 20 and SO years; twenty six under 20 184,892 barrel larger at the close of between 30 and 40 the month than at its beginning. Inyears; forty-si- x 40 and 50 dustrial construction between twelve years; during the first 60 years, eleven months of 1922 has been great60 between one and years; and one over CO years of age. Nine er in value and volume than during prisoners at the institution are now the whole year 1921, according to figserving life sentences, and 146 inde- ures assembled for seven large cities difterminate, Natives of thirty-si- x in the district There was a seasonal ferent states and thirteen foreign decline in general building activitiy countries are serving terms W the during November compared with OcUtah prison. Two executions were tober, but present construction procarried out at the prison during 1922, jects exceed those of a year ago both raising the total number of execu- in number and value. Seasonal detions at the Utah prison to twenty creases in employment have been genfive. Telegram. the district, but the eral telegram Tuesday morning the death of their son, Charles Alexander Odd, which Monday-eveiYin u railroad a. ulent at Anchorage, Alaska. He was the oldest son of Charles and Agnes Graham Odd, and was born m Kaysville September 21, LnHT, He resided here until fifteen years ago, when he accepted a position with the government railroad in Alaska. At the tune of the World war he m the Army and was attaihod t t he railroad service in France for two yeais. Shortly after his arrival homo he returned to Alaska and ic enured the railroad wotk with the gov rnment. his parents he is survived by tln following brothers and Mrs. Joseph 11. Maylin, Arthur odd, Amos Odd, Emma Odd, Waller Odd, Yrrn Odd and Lois Odd, all of Kaysville and Newman Odd and Mrs. Jes-Odd of Clearfield. The i cumins will be brought to Kavs.iile, where funeral services and intvtment will take place. end. J Le avocation remunerative to the state and to themselves during me entile 'year, is a paramount to the Stale board oi eorieclion by James Devine, warden ot ihe slate prison, m his biennial report covering the period between November; dc, 1921, and November Jv, 1X2, A copy of the report wua received at Governor Mabey a office yesterday. 1 must refer to this, Said the warden," m writing of the above, as what i contend to be the paramount question of this institution today. 1 view it as ua imperative necessity morally, physically and financially, looking to the general weliare of the inmates, us well as to the economic weliare of the slate. The agitation regarding the removal of this prison to some other locality violets me at this tune from, making- mole specific recommendations along this line. Hut you are already advised that some steps have already been taken to partially mitigate the existing condition. My views lieie expressed, have been presented on several uviasions to fho public, and in the cuily future 1 intend to present a eomrete proposition looking to this m some a J I Employment of all its inmates who are physically and mentally qualified Speakers at Banquet of .Kailway Accident at AnOgden Show Declare chorage Proves Fatal Future Is Bright. ' To Kaysville Boy ill I or g progressive At a meeting of the Davis County Bankers association, held at the tel Utah last night, it was decided to hold a special meeting at the Hotel Utah on Wednesday evening, January 10, at which complaints of isfactory telephone service will be dis- cusse Representatives of t I an(j towns and commercial clubs of J county will be invited to take I in the meeting. It is the custom part I the association to have their meet- of i followed by a dinner where each I ings for his plate. 8 F. O. B. Detroit Where can you find a greater value than . the Ford car at this new low price? We believe, without question, that it is transporthe most economical means of Time-saving tation a person can employ. at a travel absolutely dependable desired. if Terms cost. minimum Layton Auto Co. Authorized Ford Dealer, for Darla County PHONE 100 -- Margaret, the infant daughter of and, Mrs. Edwin Bone, died Tues day morning after a few days illness of pneumonia. Besides her parents slje is survived h two sisters. Fun eral services were held at the home of the babys grandmother, Mrs Annie Bacon, Thursday at 12 o'clock. Interment took place in the Kaysville STr. cemetery. J throughout amount of involuntary unemployment is relatively small Price movements during November were favorable to the majority of producers in this district, advances in the prices of many agricultural products greatly increasing the exchange value of thedistricts crops. The general price level, as shown by the index (Continued on Page 5.1 4 |