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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE, UTAH ollir ISrdily Srflrx By OSCAR S. STRAUS, Pnbliaticd br THE INLAND PRINTING CO P Eppwwif Kditor C. A. Eppron, Aimlil Editor Subscription $1.50 per year in Advance -- ratao aa application. AdrortUIng TELEPHONES W. P. Epparooa. No. T9 C. A. Bpporaon, No. 91-Offtoo, No. II E FARMINGTON County tool of rich and fertila Darla aaunty. Homo of tho Millar Floral eom. pony, whoao froonhouooo art tho larpoot botwoon tho Miaoouri riror and tho Pacific ooaat. Lora lion of tho famoat Laeoon raaort. Haa waterworks and n alar trio liyhta. A fin plaeo for ratidonea. tab-urba- spent the James. week-en- d Kays-vill- Vorl e with Louise Miss Sarah Smith of Provo is visiting with her sister, Mrs. Grant dark. Mrs. L. B. Farr of Ogden was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A, Miller, part of last week. T Banker I am not a Zionist, but I am in hearty syrnfath with Z'onisins idaiitic enterprise. NVverliirle- - I ,: com inml that the number of .Tews win. .viil emigrai1 to Palestine from, let us, say, Gref. Jin; u:i or ti. United States is infinitesimal. Jews in Britain and Atneriea have h'etjH pr porou and patriotic citizen and in nura'rou tei prominent figures m the life of tho-- e eo'iiries. .Vi! lions of them, though JewishJjy ind irv. no native-bor- n I citizens and feel ives, as they ar entitled to do. Britons or r the case tnay lie. 1 think events of the past four yean amply demon st rated that their claims in this respect are justified. The Jevu'h v.r record in the United State, I am proud to say, was a spLmdiJ one. 1 aa sure it. was equally creditable in Great Britain. . Jews are domiciled in large mimlxrs in the two great 1 In speaking countries and become integral parts of them lwenuse of tV. opjKirti'iiities for spiritual freedom which they have so long oJTered. 'Win should Jews desert such an environment? 1 cannot comeive any circumstances under which considerable nutnlx'rs of Jews will ever leave British or American shores. f am told that frequently suggest that7 with the of lishment a special Jewish state, Jewish citizens of other countries uiigh; some day find themselves political outre its and he told to go Lack ti your own country. Nonsense! Stull and nonsense! To suggest such a tiling is to crec-ridiculous bogey. To curry out siuh a suggestion would be to-- .;t h,ul the wheels of liberty which the war we have fought and won have w full-fledg- anti-Zionis- Miss Norma Underwood of Nw f-- mutter Mratry 15 Knbcnd u tetond-cla- a 1911. at Kartvillv, Utah, under the art of March I, 1879. Tinr Few Jews Will EmiqrcTe to Inline From America and Circa! britain th Amt-HuM- ed i, ts e.-t- al far ahead. so in New Palestines foundation. We believe in its legiti confident that sooner or later its mission will be aceom plished namely, to afford a comfortable, happy, prosperous nation. home for the oppressed Jews of nil lands. It is because Briti-- h am AmericanJews arenotoppresed Jew that they will not go to Palestim We rejoice maoy. We are We Gave You the Diadem of American Citizenship and Then Left You Miss Dean Chaffin is spending her vacation at Brighton with her cousin, Miss Aigie Barlow of Bountiful. ) Miss Venita Palmer returned Sunday from Lost Creek, where she had spent two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Burnham. By U. S. JUDGE CHARLES F. AMIDON. Noidj DAota Premier Lloyd George vs. With a Forecast of the Future - By J. L. OARVIN, Editor London Observer The rhiof significance of the prime ministers declaration in the commons h that it mark him out a not only the nation loader of now aues of peace and progress after Armageddon hut probably the world's imdot a. well. Wo must remember what an incomparable advantage Brit- i , i., conditions give In the long run to any man who achieves fer-onsupremacy, 1 z 't'1 J'fi ft or AY H - on h ire reap'd tn; bp president of the' United States 1r f i ' r, i v iTrTTTF" Fr ei n If 'prTtmer. Lieut CTeorge in alt Iikelihmd itt not only play tho same part a- - lie docs now hut will lx1 more and more ot Ins time. . If the league of nations j. to bo a living and working reality, if the , a arid is to lx saved from war before the lapse of another decade, Lloyd i GVitge. m our view, will have to do r.mrc than anv other statesman to , develop the league and to avert nuaunty m democratic affairs. j a anything in the futuruean be that if North-- ; It is ahnit as icrt-id die continues the ioniroery on personal line study controversy would me m the end of NorllnfilTe as a proprietor of syndicated newspapers. lxir.Iatnm vvouh tv introduced and carried put Dm; an end to multiple proprietorship of the opinion-makin- g powers of the press. '' al i l'lyer' orOgden.. Lorenzo A. Christensen and Marie Swartz of Provo. Edward II. Clive and Irene M. of Salt Lake City. Des-pa- in , Ft NOTICE TO PEA AND . 1 APRICOT GROWERS On Monday, August 4, at 1:00 p. m., John G. M. Barnes will be at the Barnes to pay the Syracuse growers for peas. On Wednesday. August 6, at 1:00 p. m., he will be at the office NOTICE TO WATER USERS of the corporation in Kaysville and State Engineer's Office,. ' pay Kaysville growers for peas. Salt Lake City, Utah, July It, 1919. On Thursday, August 8, at 1 :00 p. m. .that Mary "'"he will be alBarnes and pay Syracuse --Notice, ia hereby iriveu Harvey yfjvaysville, Utah has made growers application In accordance with the reOn Friday, August 8, at 1 :00 p. m., quirements of the Compiled Laws of he will be at the office of the corpora- Utah, 1907, as amended bv the Sestion at Kaysville and pay Kaysville sion Laws of Utah. 1909, 1911, and 1915, to appropriate one'(l) second-foo- r growers for cherries. of water from Little Cannon Creek, in Davis County. Said water will be diverted at a point which lies JOnN R. GAILEY . 1320 ft. east and 1155 ft. south from the northwest . corner of Section . 6, Township 3 North, Range 1 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, and conveyed AVith Barnes Banking Co. by means of a pipe line 5280 ft, and Kaysville, Utah. there used from April 1 to September for-rherrir- s. -- Notary Public g In these days of high priced gasoline, oil and tires, the decided savings effected by the use of The Briscoe should have the attention of the careful motorist. So great has been the recognition of the economical operation of The Briscoe that the de- mand for this car is exceeding the supply. Therefore, get your order in early. W. H. Udy Agent for Davis County 2 Telephone Farmington 50-N- than Dickens did. Thomas Jefferson left a whole library of his writing and he wrote with a primitive pen. So, while the typewriter ts one of the greatest of time savers, while It gives an Inereased product, and a more easily read product, the fact Is that the men of to- day are not doing any more writing than was done when the matter had to be scratched upon a sheet of paper with a stick It Is Up to America to Justify the Experiment of Marriage by Proxy By th MARCHIONESS OF TOWNSEND Ihe announcement that American You received the City and Josephine Kirk of Tooele. James G. Jakeman and Gertrude ers MIGHT HAVE BENEFITED BY TYPEWRITER A contributor to one of the current magazines deplores the fact that Benjamin Franklin had no typewriter. He says, and truthfully, that If the great man . had no( been compelled to use pen and pencil, he'could have accomplished much more than he did a statement that Is so obvious It Is hardly worth quoting. The same thing can be said of all other grpnt men of Washington Hnd Jefferson and all the rest. They accomplished much ; they left a greater volume of writing than men do In the days 'of the typewriter.- - But the fact remains that with a typewriter any man can accomplish' about four times as much as he could accomplish with pep and Ink In the way of recording his ' thoughts, if he sees fit to do so. - But the contributor overlooks one tiling, namely, . that the matter of writing It dowrr Is not all of a thinkers work, observes Columbus Dispatch. If Franklin hnd had a typewriter, he would not have beenhammer-inIt would It all the time. have sided him greatly ; he would have had more time In which to do his thinking; he would not have had to spend so much time over a desk scrawling with a poor pen. But It Is debatable whether he would have actually produced more literature than he did. Charles Dickens wrote all of his novels with a. quill. He could have done the writing In half the time on a typewriter, and the printers would have Raved half their time. But In these days of the typewriter we have no novelists who are turning out good literature any more rapidly 7n sentencing a North Dakota preacher convicted of disloyalty. 1 jour final papers as a citizen in 1898. By the oath which you then tookyou renounced and adjured all allegiance to Germany and to the Emperor of Germany, and swore that you would beur true faith and allegiance to the United States. What did that mean? That you would sel about earnestly growing an American soul and put Miss Elba Robinson met with a painful accident Tuesday afternoon away your German soul. That is what your oath of allegiance meant. when a glass door shut against her Have you done that? I do not flunk you have. You have cherished arm in such a way that a deep gash everything German and stifled everything American. You have preached was cut in the arm. German, prayed German, read German, sung German. Every thought Grover Brown, bookkeeper for the of your mind and every emotion of your heart through all year Murray smelter, ia spending part of has been German. Your body has been in America, but ha9 life your Mis two weeks vacation in Farming-ton- . in Germany. been If you were set down in Prussia today you would be He and Will James caught two in with harmony your environment. lbig strings of fish while on a two There have been a good many Germans before me in the lat month days camping trip in Farmington canyon last week. Mrs, Brown and her They have lived in this country, like yourself, ten, twenty, thirty, forty husband are guests of the Millie Tuck years, and they had to give their evidence through an interpreter. There family. was written all over every one of them, Made in Germany. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Holbrook of I do not blame you and these men alone. I blame my country. We Bountiful, Mr. and Mrs. Heber Sesyou to come; we welcomed you ; we gave you opportunity ; wo "gave sions of Farmington, and Mr. and urged we conferred upon you the diadem of American citizen-hi- p land: Mrs. Hanson and Mr, and Mrs. Joseph you Jlolbrook, Jr., Mr. Ilanson of Syracuse ami then we left you. spent Sunday at Strawberry ford in Weber canyon, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Holbrook, who are tenting for a few days in that pretty Northcliffe, . camping ground, . ns Madge RoberryoT SaTtTiake'Tity7" THINK-I1- U or quill. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Carr of Bountiful and Mrs. Alice Hatch and Mrs. Mamie Jones of Ogden were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Miller last Sunday- .- - MARRIAGE LICENSES Clarence II. Vincent and 'Rebecca E. Albertson of Salt luike City George G. Peters and Nancy B. Nelson of Salt Lake City. Keller C. Robins and Louise Robinson of Salt Lake City. Joseph F. Tracy and Janice Swan of Salt Lake City. William VV. Knaup of St. Louis and Helen G. Erickson of Murray. Andrew Brown of Murray and WORLD'S 40 W DO AWAY WITH IDLE Why a Hobby," or Something te Take It Place, Is Necessary for Women. 1 . There D that everlasting appeal to people to get a hobby. It Is all very well for the writer or speaker to prepare hts hobby aermqpA but, like Portia, it Is easier to tell twenty what Is good to be done than to be one of th twenty to follow their own teachings. A hobby Is a most commendable thing. Rut most hobbies are expensive. The best thing to do Is to plan out a dally routine for yourself where you know every hour where you will be ami what you are going to do. There should he no idle or haphazard hours at all. These are the hours which make you nervous, allow you to think of yourself, and which the preacher oL-h- e hobbles would therefore hnve you fill with your hobby," Vacant, restless hours. If you have no hobby, can be Ailed with reading good hooks, calls on the sick, calls on the places of interest in your city, and with all such thing which cost little or nothing. In this day of great needs, when letter and packages are enjoyed so nundi by the soldiers, there should be no woman who is Idle, who can't And anything to take up her mind and Is so bard pressed that be 'must have a hobby." Exchange. How Some of Our Ancestor Lived. According to James Curie, who has discovered some old caves and houses 1,1 s,'nthmd, life in a flat. Janitor on n strife'. Is bliss "lt, compared to what people Used to pul up win,. He ha found several large cave In Scotland which were used ns lioiives, a .couple - of thousand years-- j two-by-fot- ago, before modern convenience were TilvenTect ln mTher ph Were built underground. Many relics have been left In these dwellings. w hnrKrrmd spindles used by the women, enameled l'ron'hes pins, and colored glass armthey decked them- wives. Women and childrens shoes were also found. Besides these re Rwhold utenlls, wooden dishes and spoons, stone lamp, and platters, and pottery of various kinds. The men have left tools and weapons, plows, Pleks. and rakes, made of deer antlers. wheels of cart, harness mountings, and large decorated swords. Prof. Carle declare that the Romans who - acres of land embraced in the NV SWH of Section 1, HOURS the IM011' tft rnakc Township 34 I" '!'1 'tr ths North, Range 1 West. As much of said water as may be necessary will be used during the entire year for domes- F.. H Mnts D V . lVl. ticpurposei Thii.apphcation.is ignated in the State Engineers Office os No. 7989. Deputy State Livestock Inspector Alt protests against the granting of County Veterinarian said application, statnvg the reasons be made must Rhone 57-therefsjr, by affidavit in duplicate, accompanied with a fee of BOUNTIFUL UTAH S2.5Q, and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after the completion of the publication of this notice. soldiers in France are to be permitted to marry by proxy in states where the law allows such procedure" has created a boom in the American marriage market; and a very good thing, too. I am interested to see the result of marriage by proxy. Curiously enough, Australia would have none of it. In fact, the mere suggestion of such a law was literally howled down ip Australia. Though I object to the proposal on principle it has its good points. Bearing a mans name, for instance, often protects a woman from attentions from other men. Then marriage in these mad days is an anchor which keeps many a weak human bark off the quicksands, and gives a girl a better social standing than a engagement. And marriage by proxy would be a financial benefit in many cases. It long-drawn-- would give a man an opportunity to help financially the woman he loves, orendow her with his worlds goods without Mrs. Grundy turning up her nose. But I think marriage by proxy a dangerous innovation, and not at all Jikely to cure the unrest on the part of separated lovers, nor'will it revive waning affections. Human nature and modern conditions are against it. Both men and women find separation a strain. Faithful in thought, they miss the companionship which is natural. Some day the loneliness becomes unbearable, and theres the rub. However, it is up to America to justify this bold experiment, as shi has justified many another. Sunmmer Shoe Every summer Shoe, Slipper and Oxford on sale at great reductions. This includes shoes for men women and children. We carry nothing over from one; season to the other. Dr. R - . G. r. AIcCO NAGLE, - State Engineer. Date of first publication July 24, 1919. Date of completion of publication August 21, 1919. We Heed Rags Prices Count W-- ! Washington Ave. iu j r ... - Ogden, Utah . |