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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH r BOUNTIFUL milvs north S!t 1 1 fi ri C City, Nitif p u6urLan an4. rvsNfence town, w vJ ; has nKfwori, m Davie county city turbt and power, telephonrn, ettric cement itilr4lk. Surrun Je4 by mh two & maWel jrarilcne And biuh, two & electric railroads with low 3 transeonUneuuri roalroada brack yard, f howwn, business bat onJ 2 5 Uo k, good mercval club, graded and kutfh arboo a 2 wni churv her. A Rood place in which .vT H "'L fiit J r v i to V Dodge automobile. .''v ' r-- - ' - -- V,A k A t .." - winter. Finish the Year With Pride or Shame? j from relatives here. I I I J Stamps? The state must answer this question within a few days. Let Y OUR answer to it come TODAY, How will YOU finish the year with Pride or with Shame? Have you bought your share of W. S. S? The deadline is December 31. You have but a short time to make good. Keep your W. S. S. is for your pledge and then buy more. It . hanor and 1 , HCp suffering Mr. and Mrs. Ofm Tolman and small Idaho, are visiting j child of Blackfoot, SHAME that, after performing all the other duties with honor, w&havef alien short-i- n the -last failed to buy our share of War Savings KEEP W.SS. , at a hospital in Alice Putnam is Salt Lake City, typhoid. PRIDE that in furnishing volunteers, answering the draft, contributing to war funds, buying Liberty bonds and taking our quota of IKS. 5. we have an absolutely clear record, or FOR THE . . - Lieut. E. W. Crocker and Radio Men of the 145th Artillery (First Utah) Catching Messages From the Front OF UTAH PLEDGES No--3 s HOME TO THE BOYS Tip' French soldiers b.n can which th nt (.jh-im- Ibe I The Seasons Greetings and Our Best Wishes to Our Friends and Customers . Fii.'lKU flglm-go Imh F.hi.hi) Hut our bo) a !ute th Oinao them and bvino '1 lie) lahiixt tome home on fnrio kaja h, ai d ittoniili o tr) and a .Mr. 'and Mrs. Stanley Poole are re juicing over the arrival of a son, born to them Friday. 4 For the New Year we ainrto keep Quality up, Prices down and thereby merit your continued patronage true In regard to the con vales vtt homes. .Here all reersion to hospital life Is avoided. Rooks, games, music, social eventngv and home-hk- e lp them sumnitHhiij.. buslne.. of war tt throw oft until the) are really able to recover. a motherThe housekeeper la who ly woman, usually Amvthun, ltniks after the comfort of her t barge and helps them to pack up all liuugl-uartroubles In the old kit ha The American Red Cross now has six of these homes lu ojieratlou. . r Saturday Specials will be a feature Dont 1 the-grl- j Vv r take home to them, 1 his. Is particularly t .Ralph Holbrook and family of Syracuse came here last week to spend the How Will Utah r. $ Briggs, who is working-ahome for the holidays. is Magna, Wtv , - Jt-ss-q ' I frw, t 3 . live, lrrt Ernest Wood has purchased a nea i , RED CROSS TAKES . miss them!. m 1)- Co. Stewart-Burto- n y ( I GENERAL MERCHANDISE KAYSVILLE. UTAH 1 AMERICAN GIRLS BRING CHEER TO WOUNDED. Major Charles R. Mabey, who has just returned fom Ft. Sill, Oklahoma , but I My woitn J burta Uke li was taken sick with the influents on dont Intend to pass up this chance to talk to an American girt. Monday, This sept Intent, voiced by an Ameri- Word has just been received that can soldier, reflected the fefftHg of Rodney Pack, who was in the avia many of l.te wounded comrades when tion corps in France, had arrived saf- they arrived In Paris after the recent drive north of Verety in New York. dun, according to reiorts Just received Miss Annie Fackrell, the nurse, re-- I by the American Red Cross from work-et- s in Paris. These reports, testifying turned , home from Pleasant Grove wonderful cheerfulness of the Vo the Thursday, where she has been attend wounded men, say that many of them ing "flu patients. .'..refused to continue their Journey to r, ' " received! the hospital' until they had a chance Dr. E. W. Smedley haa just lhe Alnerkau women in chat word from Kentucky that his son, canteens. Israel, is suffering from influenta This is his second attack. Experimental Rod Croat Dairy, d Bert, son of Hilton Springstead of The American Red Cross has an exiwrlmental dairy at one of this place, is at the Ft, Douglas, hospital, suffering from appendicitis. He the base hospitals In Frimct1. The French government has leaned 1,000 has just returned from France. expectrows for this purpose and Otto Fackrell, who for. some time ed enough milk will be pnluwl to has been at a base hospital in London, iupply some 20,000 Injured lighter dalarmy doctors agree thaft fresh England,' suffering from a wound in ly. For vital In the speedy convalesla milk the leg is reported on his way home. cence of the wounded men. William Gerisch and family Yave moved to Burley, Idaho. They have Work for the Refugeoa. sold their home here to Fred Darnville At Italy, there I a little here moved who Lake of Salt City, shoe factory, which la furnishing work . for the refugee families who are uuder Monday. v the protection of the American Red A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dross. It la but a little factory, but It Peter Strong recently, at the home of Is providing work, which meant salMrs. Strongs parents, Mr. and .Mrs. aries, food and clothing for more than evWilliam Hill. Mr, and Mrs, Strong two down families from Spreriatio month, ery are residents of Rupert, Idaho. Franco-Amerlca- n Men of the IFMh artillery (First Utah) playing games during the recreation juried. It liven them up. 1 mlc bum has some i. The fighting la over, hut it Isnt paid for yet. estab-llshr- , Still to nwet. Rtampa. colossal hill War Saving He need every dollar you , canjmt Into lt-- ls i The 8 months old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Zan Telford died Thursday of illpneumonia, after but two days Sunness. Funeral services were held day at the Bountiful cemetery. Le Grande Winegar, son of H. D. formWinegar of Salt Lake City, but. erly of this place, 5ied Saturday. !r. Winegar was severely burned last week while working at the smelter in Bingham. Charles Harrison, Sr., was run into a Salt ay an automobile driven by .was returning Lake man, Friday as he home from Salt Lake City in his wagon. Mr. Harrison has not regained consciousness and is suffering from a fracture of the skull. . Half a Century Ago s. Haifa of the consuming centers, thousand with millions of people, are one to two k producmiles away from the principal settled. ing sections, which are sparsely of The American meat packing industry the best way to today is the development of perform a national service. deThe function of providing meat had to men who first graspvelop accordingly. Those created ed the elements of the changing problem the best facilities to meet itlarge packing at strategic points, plants and branch houses car refrigerating equipment (including cars), outlets routes, trained organization, profitable which became the natfor former waste the vast flow of ural, inevitable channels for meat across the country, this If there were a better way to perform and necessary service, - American Ingenuity discovered it, and others enterprise would have would now be using it. earned During 1918, Swift & Company has of kss a profit on meats (and meat emnl a than 2K cents per dollar of salestoo " effect on prices. profit to have any appreciable Now loss Jenkins, Ernest Putnam, ,fred C liley, S. Brow-- and Edward n YANK, TWICE , INJURED, DIES OVERSEAS CENTERVILLE William It was the martyr President sound the term McKinley who made President McKinley money famous. believer la banks. He frequently a great their money. advised bis friends to bank cure for vorry. A bank account Is a Are you If a bank depositor? start aa jou are aot, . account with CARNES BANKING CO. ' ' UT. KAYSVILLE, C-j- ;:r Ultras d -- fc&t 05 George Howland Croft, 23 years old, eon ef the late W. II. Croft of Centerof ville, died November 21 as a result was He 21. October wounds received wounded in August, but was slightly able to return to the front. Croft left for Camp Lewis, Washand was ington, September 19, 1917, Greene, a ter transferred to Camp He was eent overseas last May with the machine gun company of the N-- by-produc- ts) infantry Surviving hm are two brothers and two sisters, W. P. Croft and J. II. Croft of Heybnrn, Idaho, and Mrs. Ella C. Evans and IDs. Dora C. Smith of Centerville. Fifty-nint- h n BOOTLEG SUSPECT CAUGHT Found with two bullet wounds in his body, which he is believed to have received' during" apistof Tattle w iK , hours before, Dan j a posse forty-tw- o arrest- Kirby, bootlegger suspect, was ed Sunday at the Plaza hotel, Sat Lake, on suspl'iu of being the man who shot and seriously injured Deputy Sheriff W. A. Tomas f Davis county. two-thir- ds live-stoc- The following Bountiful boys have various just returned home from the which at they were, training camps stationed: John Sessions, Ben Platt, Ray Hatch, Thatcher Willey, Major Charles R. Mabey, Jesse Goodfellow, McKinley and Sound Money Ao, every community could dressed be supplied to some extent with locally meat, drawing on live stock raised nearby. Funeral Services over th& remains f Mias Bessie Harris, who was run down by an automobile in alt Lake held last City on Peace day, were Bountiful cemetery. Wednesday at the Miss Harris leaves her parents and several brothers and sisters to moun her loss. i Ctnfurtf d.-ru- f rtill-r- re t y nv mil? I lab (FirM k- Swift & Company; U. S. A. H Mijlitl M -j h vbrti timl.-- iim bill n'bt now Tin- iuniiU. Tb ridOiMt.iK! War Saving ,ui.tT) 5uy r i- i -r n ii.it if ibi I b invt. bvy 3 t k |