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Show m SWwMn gltflcx BY W. P. EPPERSON & SON KAYSVILLE UTAH Entered as second-clasnatter, Feb' ruary 15, 1911, at Kayivllle, Utah under the act of March S, 1879. s Advertising Rate on application. Subscription $1.25 per year when paid in advance. $1.50 per yepr n OTerdue subscriptLons oj- - .when aot paid in advance. Office Phone, No. 10. Residence Phone, No. 34. Statement of the ownership anti management of -- The YVekly Reflex, published weekly at Kaysville, Utah, required by the Act of August 24, 1012. Editor, W,' P. Epperson, Kays; ville, Utah Business 'ManagerrC A. Epperson Publishers,- - YV. P. Epperson & Son, Kaysville. Names om per cent ofihestockof ,Tlu 'Reflex " Publishing company f II. 11 Blood, II. J. Sheffield, John , 0. M. Barnes, Hubert C. Burton, John It. Oailey, all of Kaysville; Vernon Felt, Salt Lake City and Martain Kessler,- deceased. Signed W. P. EPPERSON, Editor. -- Subscribed and sworn to before mo this 30th day of June, 1913. J. R. GAILEY, Notary Public - o - Many machines traversing this speed that they throw uoliars aorta oi dirt, irom, its surlaee every trip.. 1 he ton ns in Davis coulity are ail small tmt their peo pie are entitled to protection irom the speed tieuds and they would be a poor lot Indeed if they luudd no effort to insist that people treat them with consideration, especially when using the roads that they hav e paid lor. We farmers expect to comply with the laws of the cities when we go there or pay for the "fun, and .we iire usually good loosers to the extent .of .keeping our mouths shut when we get away. If the motorists must speed through llaviscountyTIet" them buy a right of way and fence it, provide it with overhead or under crossings and then no one .will care if they run their heads off. But untiL they Jo this they must show some consideration to the laws of the land. .. The Keflex is glad to note that all the towns of l).iis county are a unit in- this matter and the iasiom rsmust fall eqoHty-eom- m in line and enforce the county ordinance' or state law, or the jecple will not be able to repair the roads as fast as they are de stroyed by those who get stung. r You Want TO SEE THIS This is the sale for which the ladles of Ogdea have been waiting. We are offering the greatest bargains ever presented In this city. The tables and counters are heaped with seasonable merchandise, all new and clean from the looms of the big factories: We have.prepared for this sale because we realize" that it is time for the "prudent" buyer" to supply for summer, and this is surely the opportune time. Beautiful foreign and domestic wash goods, . linens and hundreds of varieties of Domestic goods, in fact one of the greatest assortments ever" brought to 0gden." All seasonable goods We offer an enormous stock of the very latest foreign and domestic goods at prices that will arouse the liveliest interest. Everything that Fashion approves will-bfound in this sale, in unlimited quantities and assortments, at greatly reduced prices. - - Why a Fish Law? About the . most foolish law ever heard of is flic so called game law of Utah as it relates to fish, partieulary trout. The law protects the fish in the streams and lakes of the state from dym e niters, seiners and druggers at of the all times and from anglers until Fourth of July address delivered the season opens, but there is no at Layton by Henry II. Blood, prevision to keep the fish from bishop of Kaysville ward. We entering the irrigation ditches hope that this oration will be and perishing on the parched read, and reread, by every, per- lands of the state. son who receives a copy of this Thousands of trout from one " and to three inches in length are deour paper, "regret that '. - circulation is not state and nation stroyed daily .by being left high wide. In this oration is found and dry on the irripited lands of tha first and last word that Davis county, and the same is An Original Story by T. McCLURE PETERS. makes for the highest citizen- true we presume in all ot the (Continued from last week) ship. In' this oration we find counties of the state where trout the cornerstone of ideal citizen- streams are tapped for irrigation ship and if the American people water. We know of no other ' nd Enoch went off to the wars,1 tire heart broken from his encontinue to build on this found- mountain state that does not re or in that general direction,, for treaties and pleadings that she rather suspect that he had not wruld leave her room and come ation this nation will never per- quire . screening the- - heads ditches and it seems most quite finished his farewells, and down stairs and be her old self ish. So long as a country paper can publish articles of such in- remarkable that then is no such that was the last his friends or again.. After months his harsh enemies in the vallov ever heard spirit was completely broken and spiration and pure diction, the a aw in Utah. wisdom for their existance .canGeorge Cross, superintendent of him. Perhaps he died a heroe's three or four times' a day he of Ath, foremost .n some hopeless, valid climb the stairs to plead -the not be questioned. Read it can Kaysville (Wry informs roiklcss colIn', Tin children Reflex charge that saved a bat fot her forgivenness, the tears that fully, and warm with pride that tie or a ltfreat. Per- streaming down his poor old face, covered of bucket a over lected half baby you are an American citizen. tr.out from his meadow one ' day haps he found some dark-eyepromising anything, even, the un week wliiB the irrigation mountain lass in the South-- , who speakable Enoch, if he were to. he tst Bountiful Falla in Line. water xvuts on and ether citizens charmed him into deserting from found, if she would, but give Ijiin A Salt Lake motorist, who (.11 of finding the f.Ylr while ir- tie army and taking up eiil life one word one caress; but Mary came to grief for refusing to rigating it eir ga demwdh her. I do not know. Enoch would stand unmoved looking out heed, the warning of a Bountiful w.u equally capable of either. At of her little windovxthd pay no are sacks that it is'jaid gumy policeman, while speeding his :illed with fish by turning the any rate lie passed out of this attention to his pitiful appeals. machine through that place re water from the irrigation ditches story" Nearly twpyears passed with-out his to her veut Weber in va. lev change and then, one day promise oettly, gives spleen Morgan wNowMary kept was such in officers Samsons law of the and method and. came literally against that the tluybrbught her v.Qrd that her ounty old over for it father was dying broken- that in and s in of the otrer parts auger, general parpowered Kaysville pursued h. some her all and prayed that slie. arted in the weeks, TribuneQf Sunday. state, ticular, feelings, jot w and The article is written in a most would t to him and receive come' hcn'ii he' is indeed length" It sought silly to plant trout Lis with her vein words soft lie in and and boasts our mountain streams and then blhs'sing and g ve him one forgivedisrespectful vvtrd of forgiveness before , he that although, the little spill. ruu them out on the land to per- ness, it was too late cost him ten dollars he had a ish. Every man must procure a Perhapvif he had made these die d ; but Mary, her head averted chance to give full utterance to fishing license to fish in the advances at first when Mary was pud no attention to these touchliis thoughts and then complains stream's whore no effort Js made all tears and yearnings and ing appeals; nor when lie - that he wasr treated with Ion rl I n ess, "si tel ingl it"h a ve melted : dr ad vvthiTd'sTi'e at f end' tKF rf undis- to protect tfuT fisTfrom VxtcSum-atiois Wire bi t asv.be sat alone in her little ci il services. Not until his body by - the .wholesale. respect. It probable that this e individual should have been part- screens st but little money and roonywiti never a hook to read had been laid in the lonely little ed from another ten dollar bilk a iinall' portion of the money am! no jSe to talk to save the cemetery on the hill, did she leave In the article, the writer paid for licenses would pay a old colored servant who brought lior room.1 Samson had "left charges that Kaysville is en- game warden to look, after them h r her meals, Marys passion everything that lie possessed to ha dened - into one. unrelenting his . relentless daughter and now deavoring to discourage the auto- ud keep them dean mobile line through this county, Appeal the game law as applied choker of suEen indignation she causal 'the hotel to he closed which is in no manner true. to fish or protect the fish. against her father. When, at the and dwelt in those empty . end of that time, he would come alone except for the old Several individuals have been arto WHAT THEY SHOULD DO. her with gentle words,- - she nt gro maid. rested for speeding through Kays iu silence. There and thus she iiill lives We find a suggest he little edi- w mid -- turn Per-bac- k ville, and it is probable" that many more will share the same torial expression, as follows, in If he tried to caress her 'she and since the day on which Enoch would calmly - and disdainfully left, no one of her feirovv towns fate, but no one has been arrest- the Portland Oregonian: ed when driving less than twenty from .her nun has seen save -- the The output of Portland cement muove .liis lmud miles an hour. T! e ordinance in this country between Ls70 aird shudders. Now' the least terrible ol 1 colored servant or her calls for a lesser speed but the was 82,tXX barrels. In 1912 part of all this to 8 am son, was Only once has she gone never a U to i s t s i ui v e i n eve ry instance It was 80,DOO,(X0 barrels. was thaf"there from sign out tbrdikmaY old hotel; any That been given the best of it. The should gladden th heart of the of pctulence or pfssion about nd tjiat was one. night "When -farmer population, so ob- Ihneliot reservationists, for it will Mary now;; but it was all cold fire brok out in the' bra noxious to the writer of the Trib- leave them free to lot .the timber and deliberate. extinguid ed, and then une article, have mortgaged their rot in the forests while we build 'gain and again Imjwmdtl re sue was heavily veiled. homes to build u good road of concrete. secured The- - figures given wilt no 'doubt 4TH OF JULY Ar LAYTON gave battle to the Indians. Af-- a water' and put ppe lines- to gjdden the heart of the Dim-hokilling 'on an tiler paged ter duple - of the sprinkle the road and are paying rcserationists, but for; quite a soldiers-vvernmruders the left a yearly- - tax for its up keep, and different reason than given by in of field. the lie .'Iris ret at itvd comes possession It was own scores of individuals our Portland contemporary. They por. along i thrilling stunt as' much powder of his type who insist in .driving will see iu it an opportunity for as he had ov himwas burnt and there were their cars orct ' the road at a further aggression, and will no self iu the first few of good horsemanship. drubt ask for a withdrawal of all As usual Simmon;innings. speed which has already torn Bark-duand The stunt of Frank Adams rand to pieces, until in most the lands bearing bmestoucj and w it h their vvere wilthere dim Ylorgan in tliis feature was - places it resembles tvyo irrigation of all the gravel" leds-i- n the laterals ready to receive water. country, so --that posterity . may lows. which they used effectively. particularly good. Both vvere as Indian squaws and Itis safe to say that not one njoy what they would be glad The celebration Was brought to dressed i 1 had hbrs. machine hitched to two tent has passe over this to deny .the present generation. a close by the Wild West show foad between Salt Lake City and The Pihehot preservationists are poWfbn lh'!d i'll pullod oil ,.n the ball within the time limit set .'by the never willing to let go anything " rode squaws state law, to say nothing of the which" they have fastened their grcmnl in trout ot the- grand 'the horse and the other rode on town ordinances. 'AY hen a man talons upon, but they are ever stand. A IVn. .Mail coach, driven the boarl. .The chad Indians gives up a. big bunch of money reaching out for frtsh grabs and by Bishop M. F. Adams was at- - j " ore removed from the field for a high powered machine it is additional opportunities to oppress by a band o Indians in battle on this contrivance. nhsttm-tivelconclusive evidence that he in the imblic-an- d , mounted re leathersand . It tends to violate the speed- - laws tard the progress of all this'Wesf on bores back, who t hasod "the from first to last ar.dciebratio the people f whenever he thinks he ca tv-- -- get ern region. .Salt Lake Tribune. coach which vvaCldc lepdedUiy f Lav ton have 'reason to 'he, away with it, and when he fails guard'wBo did liis lest to stand proud of the manner m vvhi.-t he squeals worse than a - sure and when the red they .hand led the thousand" or1 Kaysvillovi.ll celebrate Pioneer off thing, tin horn gambler when day in a manner the sk,ns Were about to capture the more guests which were, in heat at his own game. , coach the soldiers appeared and attendance.' r Th Reflex spaee devotesr-considerab- la to the publication - 7T!?T . tfSarpson and. Haty aOtns d I there. penny here, Our Saxlingj Department is altvayj ready to terOe you. JOHN R. BARNES, President L. S. HILLS, J. R. GAILEY, Cashier. BRUCE MAJOR, Aaat Cashier Vice-Presiden- t, 'Barnes HanKing Co. -- of-th-e Iccount Is of most benefit When misfortune comes. Then it is a prop of mighty' strength, and jou are thankful that foresight prompted a persistent effort to a dollar save a K.AysViLLE, XT.AH CAP1 TAL , $25,000. SURPLUS and. PROFITSt 3 $S0,7S0 rrcfer; JOHN Rv BARNES, L. S. HILLS, PETER BARTON JOHN W. GAILEY WILLIAM BLOOD, JOHN Q. M. BARNES, , HENRY H BLOOD Interest paid on Time Deposits. We always have Money to Loan on Ba&d security. Drafts sold payable in all principal cities of th world. Your business solicited. Interest payable quarterly. Notary Public In -- 8ank. - -- in-th- -- e When you sec a Suit that looks well, wears well and fits well, you know that it is a - -- w-a- s -- n - Suit Crack-a-Jac- k $15 to $30 -- eor-rdo- rs Co. Stewart-Burto- n "General Merchandise her-face- sue-iso- r. bts-shortl- through--Davis-eoHn-ty- v Known Everywhere As The VERY BEST -- f t - -- re-jt'v- st -- Kami B ns The-roa- ll C"::' 1 - - oj 'T,, - Made of Choicest Utah Wheat Milled in the most noodern Mill r-- Packed in the Neatest Manner. , EVERYJEtLER HIS IT -- tai-he- war-painti - -- h tkiL-lndta- s Stock Books, Legal Blanks bc-fttin- v ii Printed at The Rcflox, Kaysvillo |