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Show . t 0 ; W , AOS ' THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE UTAII at at fartlW Hm Un 'About Gentle Art of Fishinjf - ' flU h Iwmt IIJ ,ek IuMm. iw. lutow KWukOwn. tntt w4 (iUif tlM ( SmI Um M wrtfc Aabrlas. Oa K. G. W. D. FIREPLACE DREAMS pital last Monday. Mrs. Sherman LAyton, who has been seriously ill for the past two weeks, is now very much improved. Mr. and Mrs. John Sheldon and family have gone to Fresno, California, where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Higgs an- the arrival of a daughter at their home on January 2. Mr. and Mrs. George Staynor announce the arrival of a daughter at their home last Thursday. Mrs. Stay-nwas formerly Miss Aleap Allen. Mr. and- Mrs. Reed Duncan announce the arrival of a son at the Dee .hospital last Thursday. Mrs. Duncan .was formerly Miss Alice Whitesides. Mr. and Mrs.. John Hill and 'Mrs. .James Hill have gone to California or - via auto,wherethe some time. ywUL.iiaitfor Katrina Kallas, daughter of Mr. and James Kallas, who has been in .a Salt Lake hospital for the past six weeks, is now somewhat improved. The Layton ward M lien defeated the West Point team in a basketball game in Layton last Tuesday evening by a score of 22 to 9. The Layton boys displayed very good team work .and were always in the lead. Annie Brown has been granted a sixty-da- y leave of absence from the bank and has accepted a position as committee clerk in the state legislature during the session of that body. Miss Isabelle Parker is taking Miss Brown's place in the bank. Mrs. The Blue Fire F&lries hrul the Bed Flame Fairies arrived for the ball In the fireplace. The blue and red colors tn the fire soon seemed to be, dancing and playing and frolickiug' together. Then came the Yellow Fire Fairies and the Green Fire Fairies, and some queer ones dressed In black. They were the Witches. They wore the black costumes to make them look more interesting and mysterious. After the dancing was over the Witches alwajs told the Fire Fairies the most beautiful stories of everything that had happened In the fireplace for yeare and years and yeark. They alwhys told them of the games the sparks had played, how they loved to tease the grownups by Jumping out on the rug In front of the fire. They told thenr of the castles that had been made in the fireplace and of all the Fire Kings and Queens who had lived In them. But when they tell them about the sparks you will see that the sparks still jump out and land on the rug for they want to show that her stories are8tijLveryt very true. Later on, though, they will become sleepy so that they will go to sleep right in the fireplace. So you can watch the dancing that bo often takes place In the fireplace. You can see the beautiful coptumes of the Fire Fairies, and you can see FARMINGTON Mat of Dtdi ooonty, city at iwc lowered Somi, MomiUla water, rice trie Ugfcta. ttlcpSon kooriy carrice ea Bambcnrcr Electric to Belt Lake City aad Ofdca, O. B. L. aad D. A K. 0. Wcctcra Railroad . fine ckarry orchards. berrioo aad other frtrita, tables, ate. Homo at the Miller Floral company, State Experiment Fans aad Oontr Tha Dancing That So Often Takes Place Locoes, the Prettiest Spot is Utah. Mrs. '.Clarence Eldredge visited friends in Farmington last Tuesday. Draper laying mash, all poultry dairy ration delivered. Call B. adv. 0. Brough, Kaysville 180-enwill club Lions The Farmington tertain at a party in the Farmington opera house this (Thursday) evening. Dr. and Mrs. R. C. Robinson entertained at a coasting party last Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ruel Steed entertained at a bridge party at their home last Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brimley entertained at a bridge party at their feed, home last evening. . Mr. and Mrs. Glen Miller announce the arrival of a sob at a Salt Lake hospital last Saturday. Both mother and son doing well. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Robinson will entertain the Utopia club members and their partners at a party at their home next Saturday eve ding. Mrs. Myrtle Criddle entertained the Farmington Business and Professional Womens club at her home last the Fireplace. In them blaze and flame while the queer sounds seem to grow fewer. Then you can see them eating their banquet you can tell bow the Fairy Fire Cooks bring In their little flaming dishes, and you can Just Imagine how. they are all enjoying the goodies. Then you will notice how the flames begin to die down and only a few little flashes of light and fire are seen from time to time. Thoae flashes and flames are some of the Fire Fairies who are atlll wide awake enough to ask the Wltchea quest Iona The Wltchea tell fireplace bedtime tales, and soon the Fairies go sound, sound asleep. They love to be put to sleep by the Fire Wltchea The flames die down entirely and only a little smoldering goef on In the fireplace. Then the Witches say They too will go to bed. But the ashes will be left the nice warm ashes they are tbs pleasant dreams that are left behind for the Fire Fairlea And now the ball was over tn the fireplace, the stories had been told the fire had gone out good-nigh- t. , Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wooley and children of Riverside are visiting at some ashes could be seen, but the home of Mrs. L. Rogers for a few In Only 6ne corner a few red coals had ap. . days. peared. Mrs. Clara Rose has gone to PhilDo you know what they were? adelphia, where she will visit with her They were the King and Queen of and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. the Fireplace and they came to see LaMar Bennett, for a period of about that their people were all fast asleep. two months. , Then they went to sleep, but first County Agents DeLore ' Nichols and Miss Elna Miller have gone to Logan, they whispered a thank you to the where they are attending the county Witches 'tor the marvelous bedtime stories they always told. agents onvention. And If you had been In front of this Mrs. Golden J. Barton and children left yesterday for Oakland, California, particular fire where there had been where she eras called on account of the so much going on, you would have serious condition of her brother, Wilheard a faint, crackling noise,' and son. Perkins, who eras injured in a you would then have known that all railroad accident.. had gone to sleep In their warm ashes The Farmington M Men lost a close of pleasant dreams. son-in-la- w basketball game to the Bountiful d ward men in Farmington last Tuesday evening. The final score was Sec-en- 16 to 17. LOCATED GERMAN GUNS .DURING WORLD CONFLICT An electric thermometer which registered the temperature of puffs of air occasioned by artillery fire enabled rh British army to locate and quickly oestroy German artillery positions oaring the world war, reports the Pennsylvania Public Service Informa- won committee. .This was disclosed at the opening ot the annual convention in Glasgow, Scotland, of the British association lor the advancement of science. Coincidentally, it was revealed that the 9enc student, at the time a whose inventive evolved e novel instrument wasgenius W. L. Bragg, of Sir William the association.1 Bragg, president ,, Tisstions of the guns whistling XfOogh the vents of a hut occupied "I the officer, who had been investi-h- c possibilities of electrical measurements, led to the creation of electric thermometer. This gave artillery experts a. basic figure Pon which they could calculate the sct whereabouts of the enemy guns. suh-uter- 'V ' PUZZLES Who can stop a train with one hand? The engine driver. ELECTRIC THERMOMETER - t 1 t J - By RING LARON ER BONNER nil. Draper laying mash, , all poultry Call B. feed, dairy ration delivered. adv. 0. Brough, Kaysville 180-Mrs. L. E. Ellison has been ill for the past 'week, but at this writing is omewhat Improved. Clarence Forbes underwent an op oration for appendicitis in the Dee hos- nounce le r Um Dell Adams left last Monday for 'hi sheep herds near Wendover. l i 4. LAYTON tar y Why Is a tidy house like the letter "O"? Because they are both In order. Who Is the most popular fellow at a Halloween party? Peter Pumpkin. What tree la half musical Instrument and half a ray of light? Horn- beam. ToAhe Editor: The uuderslgned wrote such a masterful article, ou Instructions in regards to Usiiiug a yr. ago that 1 have been ast to write another one and try to make It somewhere near twice as. good. 1 witch could change herself into something to eat, what would It be? A sandwich. 9 - . Piscatorial artiste. Lots of people still call me Isaac Newton on accL of the mastery 1 have got over the piscatorial profession. Well to make a short story atlll shorter, the latest fish that can be caught In medium water, that Is, half way between salt and fresh and vice verse, Is the geffel. The nlmrod must first lay on their back and read an Along about five evening paper. oclock you bait your hook and cast It off the side of the boat or hammock or bicycle or whutever you waa In to start with. The bait must be sage dressing out of a turkey. It will' im prove matters a good deal If the fish ermun keeps reading the comic pictures of the paper and laughing aloud as that makes the geffel think he is not In earnest. Sometimes it is necessary to have two evening papers as the geffel dont always agree on which Is tho funniest pictures. The first time Commodore Gallagher of the Knickerbocker Yacht club fished for geffel, he had no less than three comic supplements and had to read one and a y before he even got a nibble. By that time both he and the geffel was laugh Ing their heads off. That put them both on easy sL Another fish that has recently been discovered in all kinds of waters and some klnda of milk is the prone. The word prone means laying down face forwards on your stomach and that Is where this scion of the finley tribe got its name on acet of It always ly Ing down face forwards ou Its stoin ach. In order to catch them you have got to first wake them up aud turn them over and ask them why they was laying on theli stomach. It may of been from cramps or something, but as soon as you find out then yon know bow to Osh lor them. If It was cramps you give 4hem some kind of Indigestion tablets which 1 won't mention no narnen on accL of free advertising. but If that U what It was, they will get very grateful and turn over on their aide and then Is the time to grab them.-- ' A prone laying on their aide Is sa helpless ss one of Tunney's sparring partners. In this connection It might be of Interest to tell other Isaac Nlmrods about my first experience In prone 1 had been out In s queel fishery. boat on Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, for three years, every day, trying to get a prone. They wouldn't even look at me. One day however, one of them got In terrible shape and began to cry In misery and 1 called down to tha bottom of the lake what Is tbs .matter. The prone rolled over and made the remark that It felt kind o out of things ss parties bad been going on at the different mansions and cottages around the. lake and It had not been Lfi vlted to one. Well, I says, you and 1 are In the same boat No, says the prone, we aint but we will be, With that, be Jumped up aud got In my boat That la one way of catching a prone. Another kind of. flab that everybody Is ravenous to grab one of tbem down our way la the month fish. This If four times ss long as the weak flab and it takes four, times as long to catch them but when you catcb tbem you dont half to worry for another month. They are caught rlth a page out of a calender, Uke for Inst. If you are fishing In September, you bait your hook with the October page of the calendar and they will grab It, think ing they are going ahead somewherea. A year from now I will give you anwhat I call the plsca-other lesson-i- n 'torlal art. r Why are bad friends like the loose pages of a book? Because they are always falling out What country ought to become rich? Ireland, because Its capital Is always ' (Doubling). ( - When Is a chair badly treated? When you hare Jt caned because It cannot bear you. r .'Xy-v- A N v . -- ,u v.vA - -- - Dublin. all over the country at tie -- If a n, cant once hut they ay that from now on is the beet time to fish In either fresh or suit wuter or both at the same time on ucct. of beiug the open season for the new kinds of fish which hue been discovered sluco the last fishing urtlcle 1 wrote. In the old days before these things happened, why If u person lived on a fresh wuter pond or rivulet, why all they had to do was to bull their hook wl;h spinach uud they were practically sure of drugging lu a nmskle, a pickerel, a perch, a pestlleuce, a sword fish, a awuge, a aerod or a crauie.. But uow days since they have found out ubout the new kinds of fish you huve got to use a whole lot more Judgment That is why 1 have been approached on all aides with a view to learning the new secrets In regurds to how to fish for the new kind of fish. Would like to exclaim at the outset that 1 have long been a student of what 1 sometimes call the fiuley tribe aud am known around home by a nlck-- . fiume 1 nuaglve xnyself, uumslyr the Sr tta lun ayodlexU.w Im.) t Bonnes Is Bonnes , Phil Red Shafer, for sixteen yeare one of the country's best known race drivers and tho holder of many important records, pictured in front of the Administration building of the Iluick Motor Co. at Flint, Mich., with his Silver Anniversary Buick sedan and his Miller Special racer, capable of a speed of 140 miles an hour. Both are valveinhead motors. REPORT to the Bank Commissioner of the State of Utah of the condition of the Clearfield State Bank, located at- - Clearfield,- - in thw eounty of Davis, State of Utah, at the close of business on the Slst day of DeMade cember, 1928. RESOURCES Ixians and Discounts.. 8164,430.00 329.25 Bank House 2,700.00 890.74 Furniture and Fixtures Other Real Estate Owned.. 1,700.00 Due from Other Banks 67,387.88 7. Gold 5 477.50 792.28 Silver 2,819.00 Currency Total Cash on Hand 4,088.78 8241,526.65 LIABILITIES Capital Stock Paid in. ... Surplus Fund Deposits Subject to Chec-k8140,572.49 8 25,000.00 14,000.00 Cashiers Checks 2,400.56 . Total Demand Deposits.. 142,973.05 Time Certificates8 7,900.00 Savings Deposits 61,653.60 Total Time Deposits 59,553.60 Total 8241,520.65 STATE OF UTAH, I County of Davis. Jesse D. Barlow, being first duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is Assistant Cashier of the above named bank; that the above and foregoing report contains a full, true and correct statement of (he condition of the said bank at the close of business on the 31st day of December, u 1928. JESSE D. BARLOW. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th day of January, 1929. JENS K. NELSON, (Seal) Clearfield, Utah, Notary Public. My commission expires 18th day of January, 1930. Correct Attest: WALTER W. STEED, A. Z. Over 82,000,000 was spent in ' the making of Universals of dlarriet Beecher Stowes novel, Uncle Toms Cabin, which is coming to the Kaysville opera house soon. Nineteen months were taken for the actual filming. More than five thousand players appear in the massive production in support of a cast photo-dramatizati- Overdrafts Total Uncle Toms Cabin Coming to the Opera House in Short-Tim- e TANNER. WALTER W. STEED, JR Directors. STATE OF UTAH, Office of Bank Commissioner. L Seth Pixton, Bank Commissions! of tha State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing Is a full, true and correct copy of the statement of the above named company, filed in my office this 15th day of January, 1929. SETH FUTON, Bank Commissioner. all-st- Judge. Whats he running for? asked the judge. Phwats be running for? snapped Norah. Why ter beat the dirty little spalpeen whats running agin him, of W. Galley we were enabled to a print letter from A. R. Spillman, who, at ar side-wheel- er Word's Meaning Enlarged nt g remarked the Irishwoman about to cast her first ballot to the election Items taken from The Reflex of tea yeare ago, dated January 16, 1919: Arthur Barber writes from France and states that he is atlll at the front. Through the courtesy of Mrs. John the time of the writing, waa in Blolflt France. ' He tells of the difference in ' his celebration of Thanksgiving of of magnitude. this year and last. Ha also says that For nearly two years the press has he had six meals a day on tha boat-t- hree down and three up. acclaimed the screening of this picture, and its showing here is the fruiDavis high achool faculty outlined tion of the desires of innumerable mo- -' a health course in order to assist In tion picture enthusiasts. checking the influenza epidemic In tha Harry Pollard, the director of county. Uncle Toma Cabin, fulfilled a lifeA few friends of Mias Mollie long ambition when he completed the Barnes gathered at her home Monday reduction. Probably no other picture and enjoyed an old fashioned C as had the extensive preparation of evening Those were Mrs. pull. taffy this one, Pollard having spent eleven A. &I. Barnes, Misspresent Edna Rushforth, 1914 in research. It was in that Hazel Bishop, Claire Gleason, FlorJean knew he would aome day di- ence Stanton, Eva Joy Nielson and rect his masterpiece and every waking Artell Linford. hour since then, when he was not enMr. and Mra. William Craig, Mr. gaged upon other pictures, was de- and Mrs. William Craig, Jr., and Mias voted to plans for the making of Edith Gibson, all of Ogden, were the Uncle Tom. guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Barnes Extensive trips by artisans and on Tuesday. craftsmen were made throughout the Dorothy Dalton in The . Kaisers entire South for eight months prior Shadow plays at the opera house to commencement of filming in order January 18. that historical, atmospheric and physMr. and Mra. W, J. Thayne enterical details might be authentic. tained a few friends from Logan Sun-da- y. i Later, the entire company visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Birkln enterthe actual scene of the famous novel, filming sequences in the very sur- tained a few friends at cards at their roundings immortalized by Mrs. home on Monday evening. Dainty reStowe. The' Kate Adams, noted freshments were served late in the was chartered evening. Mississippi Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Adams, accomfor nine weeks, two weeks having been spent by technicians in its metamor- panied by their grandson, Stanford phosis into the La Belle Riviere of Cowley, returned recently from Corthe book. nish, where they have been visiting The most pretentious sets ever with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Cowley, erected were constructed at Universal A recruit wearing sire fourteen City, exact replicas of actual homes in the South being made for the Shel- boot was enlisted in the Irish Free by, St. Clare and Legree plantations State army. One night he was includaa well as tba many .other interesting ed in a rounding-u- p party, and when and unusual settings. the roll was called afterward he waa The poignant love story of Eliza absent. and George permeates the massive production, a beautiful contrast to the epic sweep of the powerful story. The cast is a noted one, headed by WE INVITE such famous artists as Margarita Fischer, Arthur Edmund Carew, George Siegman, Lucien Littlefield, DAVIS COUNTY John Roche, Gertrude Astor, Nelson B. James a and host McDowell, Lowe, DANCERS of others. TO ATTEND TOE Jitney la a term which was at first synonymous with the nickel or piece, but later waa used when speakSermon On the Road to Hell ing of the automobile that carried peoEverybody Welcome Sign in front of a Pennsylvania ple for a nickel tare. church. Ex. Three-Rin- I wanna vote for me cousin Dinny, - Ten Years Ago BERTHANA r . 5 . . OUE REEVE AND HIS ORCHESTRA 12 Musicians 12 course. BILL BOOSTER SAYS: MATTER VACRfi M3U OOlOOtt.MOO CAM 8EE MU WUO COUUO BE DOlWO errrm for twemseues m auo IF THEY'D USE rwe oppofmwmes they wave, IWSTEAD or QUOTUKr COLD FAMILIES Teack Your Boy g to Save Tkis Year! because comdtdoms ars UOFTOTWOR UWUfteTHS ROAD TO SUCCESS RARELY .13 RAVED . It ia the one befit thing you can teach your boy during the new year to save. Saving ia the basis upon which he can atart with assur-anc- e, a career of puccess. The entire facilities of this bank are'yours to use in showing him why it pays to save. Bring him in and talk it over.-- " to enter his mouse dead a by the house carrying Young Nell was about tall when bis neighbor caught sight ' " of him. -do with to are What you going asked the son?" neighbor, mouse, thst t Tm going to take this In to mother and the will give me a dime to take U out," answered the boy. Children's Magazine. v Wednesday and Saturday Astronomy The origin of the term "dog days was derived from arcus, the dog star, which is supposed to shine most brilliantly on the hottest days of the year. Ban Francisco Cell and Post t Regular Dances Every g 'Barnes Banking Co. u r v |