OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO TIIE WEEKLY REFLEX Senile KJoiIuccgb GDI! TTqtx t: ner of NWU of .Section 25, Township 2 North, Range 1 VV SLM; N 89 50 West 45.76 rods; North 63 30 West 3.20 rods; North 85 50 West 4.60 rods; North 40 3(7 West 8 rods; South 89 50 East 32.20 rods; North IS rods; S outh 86 40 East 3370 rods; South 19 50 East 32.50 rods; North 1.20 rods; South 19 50 West 11.50 rods; East 1.20 rods; South 19 50 West 4 rods to beginning con- LIST OF AUDITORS DEEDS ISSUED January 10, 1940 ADAMS, DELBERT IL Beg 2346,6 feet West of Southeast corner of Sec4 North, tion 20, Tp SLM; Range 1 West, North 330 fret; East 66 feet; South 330 feet; West 66 feet to beginning containing 0.50 acres ADAMS, DELBERT IL Beginning 2 chains East from Southwest corner of SEtt of Section 20, town- ahip 4 North, - Range I - 7.50 taining 5.10 Beg 20.2 chains South from Northeast corner of Lot 2, Block K, Bountiful Tlat NMC, Townsitej'South 9.6 chains West 10 chains; North 9.6 chains; East 10 chains to beginning containing 9.28 acres .. DAVIS COUNTY DAIRY BeASSOCIATION ginning 403 feet North of Southeast corner of Lot 3, Block 19, Plat NMC. Section 25, Township 2 North, Range 1 West, SLM; North .150 feet; South 57 51 West 129.85 feet; Southwest 160 feet; East 110 teet to beginning rontaining 0.30 acre 28.45 GEORGE, JAMES B. Beginning 15.036 chains West of .the Southeast corner of SEU of Section 1 - 18, Block 11, NMC rut. Bountiful Townsite; North .26 chains; West 2.1S6 chains; South 7.96 chains; East 2.186 chains; North 7.70 chains to beginning contiining 1.74 acres GREEN, ESTHER A. Beg 4.50 chains North from Southeast corner of Block 6, Elat E, Kaysville 1.50 North Townsite; 29 chains; South 70 West 4 chains: South 95 feet; North 70- 39 East 3.75 chains to beginning , containing 0.57 acres GREEN, ESTHER A. Beginning 5307 feet North from Southwest corner of Section 36, Township 4 North, Range 1 West, SLM; North 70 39 East 734.4 feet; North 33 30 West 66 feet; South 70 49 West 10.49 chains; South 1.50 chains to beginning containing 176 acre IIARROD, HARRIET M. Beg 175 chains North from Southeast corner of - 12.86 2t . KELLY, ELLA BRAIN Lot 29, Block 1, Tlat A, Val Verds, containing' 1.00 acre LAYTON, BESSIE HAD-LOC- K Beg 20 chain.. East from North fest corner Section 29, Township 4 North, Range 1 West. SLM; South 18.84 chains; Northwest 3.88 chains; North 15.66 chains; East 2.231 chains to beginning, 3.83 acres containing and - rods South and 38.41 rods West from center of Sev-ti1, Township 1 North, Range 1 West, SLM; West 155 feet; North. 50 feef; East 155 feet; South 50 feet to beginning containing 0.02 acres NOBLE, WALLACE Beg -e- hetnr-East 278 43.84 SE34 of 23, Township 2 North, Range 1 West, SLM; East 20.77 chains; S 3.83 chains; West 21.62 chains; North 3.86 chains to beginning containing 8.11 acres MOSS, HENRY Beginning 53.60 rods West and North 19 50 East 5.60 rods from Southeast, cor- - 0 40 Fast 3.69 I f North 50, 0 East .50 Northwesterly 15.053 chains; South 49 45 West .50 chains to bechains; ginning acres - 0.75 containing - - 1 well-dress- BLUE JA 1 J 1.52 SIMrSON, JOHN J. Beg 8.49 chains North 5.77 chains East from Southwest corner of NE4 of ' Section 27, Township 4 North, Range 1 West, SLM; North 21 20 West 3.18 chains; South 50 03 East 7.02 chains; North 74 40 West 4.53 chains to beginning containing 0.54 acres. Also beginning 8.56 chains North from SW corner of NE!4; 72 North East 2.85 15 South 85 chains; East .88 chains; South 68 10 East 2.36 chains; North 21 20 West 4.06 chains; South 69 27 West 7.30 chains; South 35 05 East 1.98 chains; East 0.06 chains: North 72 30 East 1.35 chains to beginning containing 1.70 acres. Total 274 acres butchers nest next to actors, carpenters, acrobats, divers ployment problem. 8. Go the limit in talking isolationism. The young Minnesotan was strongly advised to take bis cue from the moderate Glenn- - Frank program committee report He was warned to avoid any Old Guard strictures and to tread lightly on agriculture and relieL On these he was counseled to follow the Glenn Frank strategy of a AAA endorsement, with administration of unemployment relief by the states instead of the left-hand- ed WPA. The Jobless problem, Stassen was told, should be tied up with the $45,000,000,000 national debt and failure to balance the budget by pointing out that although the Democrats had spent billions, the country still was faced with unemployment of eight to ten million persona. On the war issue, Stassen was urged to stress two points: (1) that a Democratic regime got the U. S. Into the first World war; (2) that while this administration professes devotion to the principles of neutrality, its conduct is characterize by a strong undercurrent of Jingo- ar and singers. , , But who are these butchers and street cleaners? Do they exist? Yes, there really are birds which are aptly called by these names. , , 0vT As Illustrations of this the G. O. P. leaders cited the warlike pro-all- y remarks of James Cromwell, U. S. minister to Canada, and the sensational statement of Rear Admiral Joseph K. Taussig that war with Japan is inevitable. Stassen was told to picture the G. O. P. as the great peace party of the country, pledged to oppose any step that might lead to Involvement in a foreign conflict , , ' king of mimics. He not only imitates the voice of other songsters but improves upon the sound which he imitates. Charlie McCarthy of Birdland. The scarlet tanager and the wood thrush' are both ventriloquists for they can throw their voices. I discovered this trick once when a. sleepy-lookin- g little owl in a mulberry tree apparently r, GROSBEAK greeted me with a sharp Then there snug warm nest. In digging out was a flash of scarlet in a tree these retreats, the woodpeckers nearby and I found that a saucy go in horizontally to the center tanager had ued the owl as his and then turn downward in an en- Charlie McCarthy. The blue jay has a cruder larged tunnel until the finished nest is the shape of a long, deep sense of humor and uses his powpear. The sawdust which falls er of mimicking to frighten small while the drilling is going' on birds by imitating the scream of makes a soft lining for the nest. the hawk. This is in keeping with his role as the The Missus Dissents. The woodpecker is a meticulous bad boy of birdland, a rogue and worker. It selects the site of its a bully who steals from other home with care. If the first at- nests and picks on smaller tempt at excavation proves un- birds. Not all bird musicians choose satisfactory the bird abandons a vocal career. The downy it and tries again. I watched a prefers instrumental muhammerwoodpecker the drummer boy, the sic; Hea ing away one day at the dry limb Gene of the bird world. Krupa of an apple tree. His mate, who was perched on a limb nearby, For a drum he may use the stub surveyed the work of her bril- - of a dry limb about the size of ones wrist. The ideal drum has an outer shell that is hard and resonant with a heart decayed and gone. The clumsy crow turns buffoon to entertain his fellow birds. He tumbles, hops, skips and turns somersaults as skillfully as any circus clown. g Champion. The belted kingfisher chooses water instead of land to exercise his athletic skilL He lives along ponds, lakes, rivers and small creeks for he depends entirely upon fish for food. He hovers over the water until he spies flash, of, - ,rv The northern shrike and the loggerhead shrike are called butcher birds because they impale their prey on thorns and barbed wire fences or hang them away in the cleft of a tree limb to be eaten later. The northern shrike looks like a masked bandit as it swoops down upon its victims, for it has a strip of black feathers extending from the eyes to the back of the head like a black mask. It flies low over .the ground spotting its victims grasshoppers, beetles, mice, snakes or even small birds. Then it turns, climbs upward before it hurtles down to the ground again in one last cruel pounce. You may be sure that little Jenny Wryn does NOT sing, O, ma-m11.93 its the butcher boy for for all of the small birds me, WILCOX, REUBEN B. are filled with fear and run for Beginning 'Southwest cor- -' cover when they hear the heavy ncr of Section 29, Townrapid flapping of the shrike ship 3 North, Range 1 wings. It is a curious fact that 80 East, SLM; East -during the mating season the 4 chains; North. chains: shrike is a very sweet singer, West 80 chains; South 4 seemingly trying to whitewash chains to beginning con- durthe crueler side of its nature 32 acrea 3.42 taining ' of the wooing. ing period WILCOX, REUBEN B. And the street cleaner? Why, Beginning 4 chains North hea the noisy urchin of the bird Sec . of Southwest cor of family who chatters and quarrels 29, Township 3 North, en your roof every day the EngRange 1 East, SLM; East 80 chains; lish North 275 sparrow. Hes a bold, selfish fellow with uncouth manners for chains; West 80 chains; South 275 chains to behe will crowd uninvited into a robina or bluebirds ginning containing acres 2.78 nest and drive away the real owner. Hell take possession of the WILCOX, REUBEN ... house you built for Sir ChristoET AL Beginning 9.50 chains North from Southpher and Mistress Jenny Wren west comer of Section 29, but in return hell do one good 3 deed, at least. English sparrows Township North, Range 1 East, SLM; are city scavengers and theyll do East 80 a thorough Job of street cleaning chains; North 20.50 chains; West 40 chains; South. in front of your house or in an 10 chains: West 40 chains; alley nearby. South 10.50 chains to be-Baltimore Orioler'the'TYea ver." ginmngetmtairrfarrc4.Xr The weaver? That the Baltiacres 11.17 more oriole, a weaver by trade. MEADOWLARK WRIGHT, MYRTLE W. Madame Oriole is a skillful arti675 - chains Beginning san.- She fashions a warp of spouse with a critiNorth from Southeast cal she darted near eye. Suddenly corner of Section strings fastened firmly around with a loud 29, char-r-whining forked of the a branches tree. Township 3 North, Range a for few and seconds the air was 1 East, SLM; West 80 filled with their He cries. angry chains: North 273 chains; evidently had the better of the Is i y East 80 chains; South argument for she flicked away 275 chains to beginning Kv V- ) - NORWAY TROUBLES. Most spectacular British naval victory since ttie Graf Spee was the sinking of seven German destroyers in the northern Norwegian port of Narvik. What most people do not know, however. Is that despite that victory, the town - of Narvik remained in German hands. What happened was that the Nazis were able to remove several three-inc- h h and guns from their destroyers, beached in shallow water, and placed them in the Narvik x&m&i ROSE-BREASTE- a, D . chip-chur- chip-chur- r. fortress. These have been able to hold off British troop transports. Meanwhile the railroad to Sweden has been kept open, and the Swedes have been sending in food labeled Medical Supplies. AH of this illustrates the odds against which the British are operating in Norway. In the first place, the fiords are narrow, easy for the Germans to defend, and difficult for large vessels to maneuver. Second, tanks and artillery are even harder to land than troops, so the British have no tanks to oppose the heavily armored forces of the Germans. Some of these difficulties partially are being overcome. But for a time, British general staff officers were so concerned over the problem of landing troops in Norway and doing battle on a large scale, that mey argued vigorously against red-shoulde- wood-"peck- er a Norwegian expedition. It was only the of table-poundi- Winston Churchill, High-Divin- containing 22.00 acres WOOD-,- ZIN- A- EXTORTER Beginning 1S27.8 feet South and 3900.3 feet AVest of North corner of Section 6, Township 1 North, Range 1 East in SLM7 East 446 7.10 withher finsTeneath the surface, then TAUSSIG OMITTED ONE plunges after his prey with the accuracy of the butcher bird. It is one of the fundamental instincts, mother love, which makes the bob white turn actress. If an intruder comes too close to her . feet; Northeast 318 feet; West 495 feet; South 4S East 314.6 feet to be- 57.81 ginning acres B.1 3.23 containing. ' 7.48 WILLIAM Beginning Northeast cor- - WRIGHT, -t- 1.01 Range A 1 East. SLM; South 1Z60 chains; West 20 chains; L ..North --.1 5 chains - Wrst r "D OWN Y WOO D ECKE R Northwest .chains; 3.05 chains; East 11.18 chains; North 9.45 chains; East 20 chains to begin- .IQ-fc- ning acres 104.45 containing 1 r; jerrtf."Section 6" 'Township 2 North, " ? 2&47 1770 Attention given to fire hazards !L result of Fire Prevention Week, should not be elated throughout the year. One of the prime hazards which contribute to the cause of winter firea is the condition of thc chimney. Through this she weaves plant fibers, horsehair, string and strips of bark to make a nest shaped like a pocket-lik- e bag. Baby orioles are lulled to sleep by each gentle breeze in their hammock in the tree-topOrioles are very fond of bright colors and they, are not always too scrupulous about property rights in their eagerness to gather material for a nest. A neighbor of mine was seated on the porch s. - high-pitch- ed lmos ft Jji golf of thro at By RUTH WYETH SPj PJAVE you ever tried your davenport on the . the room where there was window? You probably fou it did not look well, bec back was Just high enough The ghat bull Tek eld Jblf the draperies an awkward appearance, as shown in the sketch. The lower sketch bow a friend of mine problem. the to to There are no window gfciKsttou A p, WNDOwi irvee yeai VdoP4 A NAMj shdj T 1di-- a 1 CORNICE SO VENETIAN Sunn) DRAPER $ OVER J AT SIDES r a solve those lowered blinds. sncLS pit! V go8 hat xight or football mvenport M FRONT Of A ol to SINGll 1 g cheder WMDOW GIVES lhi San filler tc DRAPERIES AWKWARO UNU Starting C (ocslsted cornice board was about 2 feet longer than the enport ari was fastened top of the frame of the one dow. The Venetian blinds a rods for the draperies were tened inside this. A narrow for plants just the length c box-lik- e 1 Ug bi 1 (pretj fa nua irvtkpment arm Wa I Vti 'd cool 11 (his Ciinit this taks 0$ davenport back wai fastened curely to the window sill Scboo if the Ttgei Sows wi NOTE; Sewing Book No. how to make this cornice k Also how to make curtain draperies for every room it house from childs room to 1 en. All about slip covers. ing tables from boxes, tablet old mirrors. You will be del ed with it Send order to; 1 US pli wu si star, 1 to 1 golfer uafaetbaS D: it each c t Ui vell 1 muscles to elefi bin MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEAK Drawer IS can icy snoot It Ud COD er Be4ferS HI1U Mn U Enclose 10 cents tor Book Na I Name MeesseaMtsMMMM Address 1 eh his t bees yi odi Sato pert' at! to Utitott I nnyys JiabU Here to Aalng Relief to Dm to Staggish Bent' Job UjeetUnkrflJ ,iH S -- w act alita. NA aM it M auU. tkamga, rrfiMklni tarlfaniwl MM tnm ck kMrl.rkw, Uhal Mm tin a wit! amm !! Ilf wrimi sa25bocMNaMf r.k Gracsiit. IiimwA ImR leH Utkt Om V aM refaad SllMil, Man rarchaae t-i-m the bee M m, Feller, Vded. migb HI at 1 pitd banc Lid bright bi 'X Espe mates in the kids 'tout ton Sot,' the That's lair. art. MKtTMthMw. (lk,l " .etaL3c taners of li I an Power la Forgiveness To forgive much makes erful more powerfuL oQedto the Pub-Syr- us. ADVISES YOUNG GIRLS ENTUIKB IVOMAIHIOOI nP w y" '4? . ... LOGGERHEAD SHRIKEnest this clever bird pretends to be lame until she has lured her sympathetic follower far from her young. . . Are birds people? I was never quite convinced until I found a catbirds nest in our orchard one spring. Held fast to the outside wall by interwoven twigs was a scrap of newspaper containing part of a poem. The title of the poem was a mute appeal Dont Kill the Birds! , star' Venetian Blinds Simulate Vine - -- " iMnaa far-reachi- ng led red-hea- I SaUUMtiaa Rear Admiral Joseph K. Taussig's Thaws 1 roeae ftrto remark that war with Japan is inaahaad hare loud a real Lydia R. Ptakhaa'a VwstaN w. evitable wasnt the only bombshell pevad ta Mp thaa (O 'mibaf in his sensational speech before the raatlaea, aoJdr, awreee pdk Mieee raapeTwedache. beda" senate naval affairs committee. ambarraMnr Ulntiat apaU da There was another that at the last faaetioaal tnvrntaHtLa. PmiaeaiM", SO yearn. WORTH TRYING! minute be didnt fire. J ZJ in his immeHalfway manuscript, diately following, the paragraph WNIFe-- W warning that the consequences of modern warfare are so In the Care that the overthrow of our form of not fine stabA he and Care, government is not improbable, was ui makes the good horse. this startling statement: Our financial structure, none too kal sound at present on account of the Today U iW Fm-huge public debt,- cannot stand such 71. fktodl many a strain. wuto b aceertfd "? Taussig skipped this hot dig at the New Deal when he read his preb pared paper, but newsmen didnt know It because no copies of the whetMth, speech were distributed. A memDnaal end (TRla. laboratory ber ofthe. committee, wholater hapTbeaa ybriciaa, too. apprvrl N fte to advertiainf yoo read, the pened to glance through the manunn kick to aoly ta iwoaaail ? script, discovered - the interesting Jrtachei a a food diarrtie treats" W omission scratched out in pencil by ", to tha kidney (auction and I the paia and worry it Taussig. Go, WU pnople .b.rovcn-featheraxuff- Indignantly. I cannot vouch for the fact that she had pointed out a flaw in his work, but I do know that an hour d was chiseling later, the away a few inches down the limb. After drilling in for two inches he seemed to change his mind and flew away in the same dims tion his mate had Taken. When I examined the holes, I discovered that the limb was too badly decayed and a chip had come. out, making aEole in the outer walL In the second cavity the workman had again come too near the surface and scarcely more than as protection eatherv No dou the woodpeckers flaming head drooped with shame when his triumphant wife had her chance to chirp I told you sol Hes s Swing Addict. Singing is, of course, the most popular profession among birds. The song sparrow is a swing addict. Their usual song opens with three notes followed by complicated warbling trills but no two song sparrows sing exactly the same song. Mu MMT ng ing to hear a lot of internal political rumbling in Great Britain over this. - r- rrTTsrn mhfi I ' $ who demanded that an army be sent .to Norway immediately, that overruled the British high command. .You are go- x 4.82 start sending miTx ed CO five-inc- ed liant-head- .27.00 ism. ed , -- 1 5.88 ' frpnrNgftIi-eas- t J 1. Make it liberal in tone. 2. Bear down strong on the New Deals ' failure to ' solve the unem- u spring-o-the-ye- .... South corner of Section speech: "spring-o-the-yea- West, SLM : South 40 0 East 15.053 chains; on 1 3.8S" cKaIns er Also chains: North 49 45! East from Northeast corner of SEU of Section 31, Town- ship 4 North,' Range 1 137 HELEN-B- cg sions. The butcher, the baker, the candlestick-make- r of the world of men become the butcher, the weaver, the busy street-cleanin the bird realm. Birdland is a veritable Greenwich Village, for well-behav- ed 4 '4-SLM; North 4 chains; 2,58 Westerly chains; Southeast 1.50 chains; West 564 chains; Southeast 3 chains to beginning LEIFF, 2.03 W containing 0.42. acres ARE birds people? Why IX not? For they work like real people and they fill almost as many profes- sorting scraps. of yarn left over r from a crocheted afghan. Noon cams and she left the yarn in a box while she prepared lunch. When she returned the yarn had disappeared as if by magic. A month later her small son discovered the thief. High in the branches of an elm tree a mother oriole sat proudly on a colorful nest decorated with the stolen yam! The humming bird is an artist as well as a weaver for its nest is a thing of delicacy and beauty. The entire nest Is about the size of ta walnut. It is made of plant down and dried flower petals and t, held together by ailvery spiders "V web covered with bits of moss. This dainty creation resembles AMERICAN CROW a babys silver-line- d thimble. Theres an industrious fellow - The - meadowlark thrills you among birds who is an excellent with a clear, sweet r, carpenter. Nature has given the until ha woodpecker family the tools of the notices that he has a human liscarpenters trade. Their strong tener. Then he will impolitely beaks are shaped like chisels so turn his back upon you to hide his they can easily bore into a tree conspicuous yellow breast-- 1 from trunk. Their long cylinder-shape- d your prying eyes. tongues end in a hard tip, grosbeak is barbed on both sides which can theThe Beau Brummell of the songbe pushed out underneath the is the soul of chivbark of trees. - Their legs are birds tobuthishemate for he uses his alry short and stout, their claws strong rich whistling carol to entertain and sharp. Their stiff tail feathher during the nesting season. ers end in sharp spines which can He is an example of what the ne pushed against the bark of young bird is weartrees to hold them upright as for he a handsome sumhas ing they hammer away at the trunk. mer coat of black and rose. In , Equipped with these tools it is winter he favors a duller suit of no trick at all to drill a neat, brown and rose. round hole in a tree and make a Just ak human singers specialize in certain fields of entertainment, such as radio, opera or vaudeville, so do the bird musicians develop their talents along one line. The mocking bird is the red-head- - ' (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) FARRISII, WARREN A. ET AL Beg 4.75 chains West 3.967 chains South n Ranl-..,- STASSEN GETS LIBERAL ADVICE WASHINGTON. Governor Harold Stassen took away with him three pieces of advice from O. O. P. congressional leaders on his keynote rose-breast- ed chains; to beginning con86.27 taining 2.18 acres SILCANNON, EUGENA VER Beg 29.8 chains South from Northeast corner of Lot 2, Block ,K, Tlat NMC, Bountiful Townsite; West 35 feet; Southwest along 5 curve to right 28L2 feet; South 26 47 West 450 feet; West 20 feet; North 9.98 chains; East to beg cont 1.74 3.11 acres . CANNON, EUGENA SIL-VE-R Township By 'ATIIELENE WATSON - chains beginning North 18.81 chains North 89 50 West 3.74 chains South from Southeast corner of NWU; West IS chains; South 773 chains; East 12.50 chains; North 3.84 chains; East .66 links; North .66 links to beginning containing 4.87 acres Total 9.97 acres West,' SLM; North 5 chains; East 2.35 chains: Section 20, ' 11.17 South 5 chains; West 2.35 chains; to beginning. Also beginning Southwest corner sof: SEUi North 5 .chairis East 2 chains; South 5 chains; West 2 . acres. NURSERIES 0-8- 1 to-wi- d'QOGO Are Birds 'People'? All You Have to Do s Watch Them at Work or at Play; Then' You'll Be Convinced Some of Them Are! OF PROPERTY HELD BY.DAVIS COUNTY ON TAX DEEDS The County Commissioners of Davis County .will sell for cash on the 20th day of May, A. D., 1940, at 1 2 oclock noon at the North Front Door of the County Court House in Farming-to- n of Gty, Davis County, Utah, pursuant to Section 80-- 6 the Revised Statutes of Utah, as amended by Special Session, 1 933, Chapter 62, the following described property, assessed to the following names, Thursday, Mat ..KENNEDY MAY. RESIGN- You can write it down as certain that Joseph Patrick Kennedy, one of the most colorful and g envoys ever sent to London, will -- hard-workin- j resign as ambassador to the Court of SL James just as soon as the President will let him. Joe is not in very good health. Is a bit bored with the job, and also he has been a little too frank for the .British. His statements indicating that the empire might be in for a tough time before this war was won. did not sit so well in London. kidoeya arait constintt; "Our tiniot My lery te kealtk. there 'Mold hjh dentynding to why die wkol Whea kidney be, and diorro, boo weald be wore aft Banins, scanty er e tbo Maatiraae wire mi wl"? .faactH. Yn ackcpcnUunt r 7air; A ktndacke, ey idr the eyee ,na as ilete !ut r t ( ait-j- uft a wedicine that hu won cilia thaa aa awaeth'M SP known. A-i- yar wibrl ; ht 1 |