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Show TIIE WEEKLY EEFLEX, EATSYILLK. UTAI1 will go forward on the 29th. He bad the best chest expansion recorded, 0 0 that of 7 inches-- - Another odd feature our country Wt Mo&ut honor 0 about the young recruit is that he can 0 with too deep ft reverence; aim a rifle for shooting with either we cannot lore her with a 00 too pure end fervent affection 0 and with either can write hand, eye, 0 serve her with cannot we is as agile with one foot as with the 0 energy of purpose or n faith-feli0 is Odd from steedfnat other. Young of seel too Ileybum, It i sweet and glorious to die 0 0 for one's country, Hones. end erdent. Grimke. Idaho, and it is believed that he po0 name has ses ses the shortest that yet been placed on the recruiting books It Is related that a private In the here, according to Sergeant F. R. SHIP OF- - STATE army of the Potomac was sentenced Busch. SAIL ON, to be shot for o Sail on, O ship of state; sleeping at hli Ball on. O Union, strong and greet post of duty. In THE WEEKLY REFLEX Humanity, with ell IU feere. . some way word of future yeere. Prints the news of Davis County. Its With ell Its hopee of on the approaching subscription list contains the names of Is hanging breathless thy fete. execution came to Ball on, nor far to brest the see. the attention oft Davis County's best citizens. Our hearts, our hopes, ere ell with the! President Lincoln, Our heart, our hope, our prayer, our and after writing tears, out a reprieve he Our faith triumphant oer our fears, 11 with thee, ere ell with the. Ar called bis car. Pi & Sljr Drrkhj Srflrx Not Afraid to Die u ne -- ft p. - rabiuh4 ir THE INLAND PRINTING CO. W. P, Epperson, Editor C. JL EpHrwn, AsnncUto Editor Enured m 1911, March at i, cond-- cl Keyeviile, 1879. matter February 16, Huh, under the net of z AdvirtUina rates on application. Subscription HAS per year when paid fn advance I 81.60 per year on overdue eubeertp-tiun- e or when not paid In advance. TELErnONES Office, N. 10 W. P. Eppenen, No. TO C, A. Eppenen, No. 4w i II who loathe war, and will do every thio in hi power to vert it, but who will, in the !et extremity, eneouater it peril, from love of eountry end of home who i willink to acrifioo himtelf, end nU that 1 deer to him in life, to g of hie promote the fellowmen, wiU ever receive worthy home. Abbott, ft well-bein- Pi Pi' THIS MOTHER GAVE HER ALL . out to see that the reprieve did not fall to reach Paul Jones the poer condemned soldier. It was a Of aS human things nothing Is broiling hot day and the ride to camp' more honorable or more exwas a long one of ten miles, bnt the cellent than to deserve well of Lincoln was bent on savones country. Cicero. foring the poor soldier and he went ward. Perhaps the president later forgot the Incident amid weightier cares IBstory pages do not relate any more of state, but not so the soldier. When heroic or thrilling story than that of Vermodt the Third charged upon the the triumph won rifle pits before Yorktowu the followagainst great odds ing year the enemy poured a volley by Capt. Paul upon them. The first man to fall was Jones, In whose William Scott of Company K, with six e Ins, although bullets through hla body. Ills comnot an American rades caught him as be fell and as but a Scotchman, blood ebbed away, be raised bly life there flowed blood to heaven amid the din of battle, the staunch and true cries of the dying and the .shouts of to the American the enemy, a prayer for the president, cause of liberty. end as he died he remarked to his comWhile off the rades that Lincoln bad showed be was coast of Scotland no coward and was not afraid to die. the with nar-1 At the burial later the chaplain Bichard rated the circumstances to the boys who stood about with uncovered ' and the Alliance and the Pallas he heads. lie had prayed for the presi- was swooped down upon by the fiotll dent and paid him a most fervld and la tfhder Captain Pearson which was ! Jones glowing tribute with his dying breath, convoying a merchant fleet I ' a prepared to meet the enemy as best One country, one constitution, one he could. The British guns had long destiny, J range and Paul Jones determined to I fight Close. He brought his ships up AMOS ODD ENLISTS IN MARINES to the enemy until the muzzles of his came contact with the enemy guns ip Amos Odd, well known in Kaysville, e of rhen m08 8Ueld who has been employed in Ileybum, . .. , , , , the history of ,I . from .ereo listed in the U. S. Marine Corps last to ten In the watlmilng Paul Jones' evening. Friday. Amos is the son of Mr. and position was desperate In the extreme. Mrs. Charles Odd of Kaysville and is Ills ship .was so shattered that only well known here, 'Ilia father, Charles' three guns remained effective, and he Odd has been in the employ of thethen assailed the enemy with hand ' ' Oregon Short Line for more than rena?ea which falling into the soon on set her At Serapls .fire. thirty tyeartf. length her magazine blew up killing The Salt Lake Telegram has the all near It. Pearson commanded his following to say in regard to Amos' officers who wanted to surrender to board the Richard which was also enlistment: "An odd young man with an odd now ablaze in several places. But name enlisted in the marine corps Jones and his men received them so when Amos Odd took his place among warmly that they retreated. Pearson's crew was killed, his guns unmounted, l;he nation's defenders. Odd applied and his ship on fire and there was nothon an odd day, Friday, the 25th, and ing else to do but surrender. great-hearte- d & JJ H. W. Longfellow. Captain v, riage and started o Touching Incident of Sacrifice on tho Altar of Her Country Need. O One of the touching Incidents of General Lyons' march to Wilson creek was that of a Tennessee mother bring Ing her little boy to the captain's tent and offering him for the service of his country. The boy's father had been killed In battle and the mother and boy were alone In the world. " The bright eyes and alert bearing of the little chap, for be was scarcely thirteen years of age, caught the eye of the captain and he asked what the I can drum, he said boy could do. proudly stretching himself to bis full height And he could as the fifer soon found out as be played The Flowers of Edlnborough," a most difficult piece to follow with the drum. "Madam, Til take the boy," said the captain. The mother kissed her boy and turning to the captain said: "Bring him back, captain," and to the boy she said ss she placed her hand on bis eager little head, "God bless you, my boy. You're all I have left but I give you to my country, and drum right bravely for the boys In blue." During the heavy fatiguing marches from Holla to Springfield it d was amusing to see the fifer wading through the mud with our little drummer hero mounted on bis back. During the fight at 'Wilson creek the cheery fife and brave drum best time for the soldier boys In battle, The fight led down Into a deep ravine and It was not long before our drummer boy was In the midst of the fray. That night the detail on guard duty near the ravine thought he beard faintly the sound of a drum. lie listened In the moonlight and when the relief came be asked permission to In search of the little drummer lad. Sie followed the sound of the- drum and soon found onr hero seated on the ground with bis back against a tree and his faithful drum hanging on a bush.Ue dropped his drum sticks as the guard came up and exclaimed:' "Oh, corporal, I as so glad to see you. Give me a drink," and as he turned to go to get him water, be pleaded : Oh, don't go and leave me. I cant walk," Ills little legs bad been shot off at the knees Looking closer he discovered a deqd soldier lying In the grass, but evidently before, he' died he -- bad put a tourniquet about the stumps of the little legs. The brave lad was carried Into camp and given surgical attention, but the brave little spirit went out Into the brightness and glory of a duty well done and a country served even unto death. Bon-hom- I !' : long-legge- SET LAKE CITY Invites Davis County Farmers to bring their produce to the lOICIM at Auerbach Field, the block north of City and County Building, which opens - SATURDAY, JUNE 2nd at 5:30 A M. Market Days will be Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday until the berry season, when it wiU he open every day. Watch these columns for further advice FREE America, to thee We pledge oar loyalty, Hind, heart and hand; Thy law he wisely made And faithfully obeyed, . Delivery System, Feed Stalls and Thy honor neer betrayed God keep our land! CLUSTER OF PATRIOTIC GEMS . Eloquent Tributes of Daniel Webster to Our'Countrye Needs and Greatness. Water for Horses Space rented for 23c-pe- r day or by the;month Liberty and union, now andforever, one and Inseparable. 7" Let our object" be our- country, 'our whole country, and nothing but our - country. If we are true to our country In our day und generation, and those who come after us shall be true to It also, assuredly we shall elevate her to a pitch of prosperity and happiness, of honor and power never yet reached by any nation beneath the sun. Efery Available Sow Should Be Bred for a Fall Litter Because of the scarcity of meat, the Utah Agriculture College advises ' that every breedable sow be, bred this spring during the months of May and June, in order to bring a fall litter. So important do college experts feel this advice to be, that they urge every farmer to pay particular attention to the following statement issued by the United Staes Deparmen of Agriculure: "It si important that all sows' be used to increase the food supply and no sow should be carried over the summer unbred. Fall litters under common-sens- e management are profitable. The pigs should come in early fall September and October so that they may be weaned and have attained sufficient growth to shift for themselves before cold weather arrives. The earlier the pigs come in the fall the cheaper their growth will be made on available pastures and the stronger they will be to withstand the winter. HOME DECORATION By Le Conte Stewart x The practice of giving woodwork a natural finish and then several coats of varnish is unfortunate. It produces a cheap, uninteresting color, in itself devoid of character. Another common mistake is to varnish or polish the furniture so brightly that it is seen as a dazzling array of glittering high lights. This is compressing to the eye. A chair or a table should take its place quietly as one of the accessories of the room. In .the selection of wall paper browns, tans, yellows or warm grays answer the purpose. They are better when absolutely plain, that is, with pattern. But if a pattern is used it should not be strong in contrast of color or of dark and light. ' It should be in small, not large, pronounced figures. The pattern ought never to be realistic in treatment. Under this class jare the familiar bunches of grapes, fruit, flowers, leaves, etc. These are not good because they give an appearance of relief to a wall. A wall should appear flat, Flowers and fruits do not ever actually grow over the walls. We should not represent them as doing so. The beauty of a wall is in its simple, plain, flat surface. To preserve, this surface the conventional patterns are bestr In them the lights and darks should be' closely related, so that no strong contrasts are produced. They recognize the wall as a flat conventional back ground which requires "designs in keeping with the wall iCself. A wall should be a back ground for the objects and people In the room. The wall paper which is more interesting than the hostess is question is not as to whether a paper is more or less beautiful, but rather, as to whether, because of its fitness, it becomes a beautiful thing on our no - e. -- one-ten- th " - . . above-entitle- -- KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE CO. walls. The portiers should not be swathed about a pole (a3 if the suffering from tonsilits) thus rendering their moving a matter calling for a stepladder. They should be plain in pattern if the paper is plain figured in case the paper used is figured. In color they may repreat the dominant color of the room. Harmony of color consists in agreement of color. Curtains, also, should suggest the color" of the room' If the room is well lighted they may be of a darker window curtains reaching to the floor; as well buy chairs with their back seven feet high! In pattern, simplicity is advisable. Nothing is gained by forcing the eye to traverse an intricate arrangement of lines and - pole--wer- -- . BREED YOUR SOWS NOW and while matrimony heretofore existing v. carpets is on the floor and plaintiff. or listening tween you waiting for the hostess T. McCLURE PETERS to the conversation, wonders whether Plaintiffs AttonL without he could walk across the floor O. address, Kaysville, Utik P. on every Date first publication, Ma- 3 Th, stepping off the spots, or Date last publication. May" 3j jgj; other spot, etc. A carpet like wall and unobarus-ivpaper, should be quiet Its color should be one general Prebate and. Guardianship Notices of the tone, partaking of the scheme Consult County Clerk or the fi room. reI to rugs. The same applies spective Signers for Further I, formation. member, when a small boy, of making house frequent visits to a neighbors to see a large rug on the parlor floor. IN THE SECOND JUDICIAL DIS. COURT TRICT OF DAVIS This rug was of the "picture variety," STATE OF COUNTY, some UTAH and had for its subject matter lambs gamboling on the grass in W. Danley, Plaintiff spring time, and two little children vs.George A. Harker, Janet Mary bonnets. their in flowers j gathering administratrix Barton, of the The whole thing was so realistically Estate- - of Samuel L. Jones, Jr true to life that I took great delight deceased; aJnet J. Barton, Guardian in laying flat on the floor to study of the Persons and Estates of Prank Lane Jones, Blanche J. Jones, Maurice this picture. What a pity that the Samuel Jones and Ralph Meredith lady who owned the rug did not tack Jones; the Kaysville Irrigation Comit to the wall where it would have pany, a corporation, and John Simbeen much easier for me and others mons, alias John Symons, and Annie E. Simmons and Martha J. Weaver who entered the room to study the special Administrator of the Estate ' of so A more L. Samuel rug eomlortably. Jones, deceased, Defenpicture interesting as this ought to be framed dants. Summons. The State of Utah to the said and hung on the 'wall. It violates be cannot when it to fitness purpose You are hereby summoned to appear seen except at a disadvantage. A within twenty days after the service good rug should appear the same no of this summons upon you, if served matter from what qoint of view it is within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty seenr after service, and defend the In general, the oriental rugs are days above entitled action; and in case of. best. They are flat and conventional your failure so to do, judgment will be and their patterns consist of small, rendered against you according to the of the complaint, which hat closely related spots. They are also demand been filed with the clerk of said court. more servicible than ordinary rugs. This action is brought by the plaintiff One should have to step carefully against the defendants and each of over a flowered. rug lest he crush the them to quiet title to lands described roses under his foot. One would not in the complaint in this action land for the further purpose of removing s walk over a bed of roses out in the cloud upon the lands so described in flower garden. said complaint. In linoleums for kitchen floors, the Willey & 'Willey, Attorneys for unrelated spots are bad. In tone and Plaintiff, P. 0. address, 707 Walker color linoleum should match the domi- Bank building. Salt Lake City, Utah. nant color of the room. NOTICE TO WATER USERS State Engineers Office, NOTICE TO CREDITORS Salt Lake City; Utah, May 10, 1917. Notice is hereby given that James In the matter of the estates of E. James King and - Amelia Kiug, D. Roberts, whose post office address is Kaysville, Utah, has made appldeceased. Creditors will present claims with ication in accordance with the requirevouchers to the undersigned at the ments of the Complied Laws cf Utah residence of Joseph Edward King in 1907, as amended by the Session Laws Layton, Davis county, Utah, or at the of Utah, 1909, 1911 and 1915, to ap(.1) of jl cubie office of W. H. Reeder, Jr., David propriate Eccles building, in Ogden, Weber foot of water per second from two county, Utah, on .or before theJLst day springs in Davis County, Utah. Fropr the northwest corner of Section30, of August, A. D. 1917. Township 4 north. Range 1 west; Salt ELIJAH A. LARKIN Lake base and1 meridian, the upper ' Administrator issues at a point which bears W. H. Reeder,- Jr., David Eccles spring south 28 degrees 23 minutes west 757 building, Ogden, Utah. . feet, and the lower spring south 48 Attorney for Administrator. 50 minutes west 1036.2 feet Date of first publication, May 31, 1917 degrees The water from the two springs will Date of last publication, June 28, 1917 be commingled at the lower spring, where it wifi be diverted and conveyed . IN THE DISTRICT COURT, SEC- by means of a pipe line for a distance OND JUDICIAL DISTRICT, IN of 5280 feet and there used from May AND FOR THE COUNTY OF 1 tp October 31, inclusive, of each year, ter irrigate about 33 acres of land emDAVIS, STATE OF UTAH. Annie M. Lindsay, Plaintiff, vs, braced in the west half of Section 36, Cherter F. Lindsay, Defendant Township and Range aforesaid. At Summons. much of said water as may be neceThe State of Utah to the defendant ssary will be used during the, entirt Chester Lindsay: ' year for domestic purposes. This You are hereby summoned to ap- application is designated in Hie State Court Engineers office as No. 7097. pear before the within twenty days after the service All protests against the granting of of, this summons upon you, if served said application, stating the reasons within the county in which this action therefor, must be made by affidavit in is brought, otherwise within thirty duplicate accompanied by a fee of days after this service, and defend the $2.50, and filed In this office within above entitled action, and in ease of thirty (30) days after the' completion failure' to do so, judgment will be of the publication of this notice. rendered against you according to the GEORGE F. McGONAGLE, demand of the complaint which has State Engineer. been filed with the clerk of said court. Date of first Publication May 17, 1917 This action is brought to dissolve Date of completion of publication June the marriage contract or bonds of 16, 1917. r to Our ix City x X EARL BENNION, Market Master With a 5 Per Cent Premium Reduction No Extra Premium WiU Be Required from the Insured for-Military or Naval Service in Time 0 f War This policy is issued especially for the benefit of those who have answered and will answer the Call to defend their country. It is just as incumbent for a man to protect and provide for those who are and may become dependent upon him as it is to defend his country. These policies are registered and secured by a pledge of bonds or deeds of trust upon real estate, deposited with the Department of Insurance of the State of Missouri. LESTER E. BYBEE is filled with dust. Where does it sary. Straw mats and rugs make they may be taken out and shaken frequently. If we prefer carpets, however, let Us choose those which are good in design. Large separated spofs of strong color are bad. One enters the house where one of these 1 20-Pa- War Service Policy There is one day in every - week when we celebrate with the broom sweeping day. Everybody clearer out, holding his nose and couehing. The come from? The carpet, of course. Such dirt is never found in the house with hardwoood floors. . It is hardly unhy gennvancl a biding place for disease germs. Hardwood floors need only to be wiped with a. damp cloth, consequently little dusting is neces- -- -- curves. The Floor fir KANSAS CITY, MO. Is Now Issuing a y Life ' -- . District Manager for Davis and Weber Counties riioxra- AT TIIE 33ITS Ite2s 02te WE USE THE BEST PARCHMENT PAPE! |