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Show AT KAYSVILLE ELEMENTARY Published by THE INLAND PRINTING COMPANY ATI OH At KajsTUU, D.7T ' In County Continues Up ; V ,. The labofmarket in Davis counfirm through October ty remainedlimited a growing season despite N I tomato procesthe short cut that rea to report sing run, according leased by the Utah state employ. Locally Owned and ment service. PHONE 50I The report stated that in canning deand allied industry employment Open zt creased substantially; however, and poultry processing which On Highway 91, One and nJ. Miles North of are not in full swing absorbed A tomato processors. the of many majority of the female tomato workers who were housewives FRIDAY AND StTURp. G Hen have retired from the labor force, officers who attended the Kayaville meeting last Thursday were (left to right) build J g Gibbs G. NOVEMBER lo AND ,Jl Smith, said. Mrs. the report Hampton, achool principal; Mrs. George Lowe, hospitality chairman; semihistorian, and Howard " skilled Mrs. room for Kendall demand Ence, mother; The Mr. PnneH)'it' firet vice prMident, program chairman; STAGE COACH land Bone, skilled male workers stiU exceeds mother; Mrs. George Heywood, president; Mrs. Ray Harold Mrs. With Perkins, Mrs. Forrest Hansen, program; Mrs. Grant Cullimore, secretary treasurer; demand, with day. to day shortages John chairman, membership to Wayne Bloxham, Sam Mrs. Heed males continuing Mrs. unskilled Gunnell, of magazine chairman; ' noted. was Mrs. Charles Dredge, safety chairman, and Mrs. Harry Duckworth, publicity chairman. it develop, Plus The area continued to enjoy an TRAIL OF THE P-Tration to total labor unemployment in A Folka News About by James Oliver Curwood force below 3 per cent PhysicaUy and qualified skilled, unskilled male workers continued Correspondent to be referred immediately upon SUNDAY AND MONDAY Phone: 78 f registering with employment offiMrs. Kathryn Jennings NOVEMBER 12 ND ij cers. Forty workers were cleared Stock (Jarxh Union recruitmail rftigeles to Ogden through Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Hess, Mrs. OF THE RAM n ment during the period, for airKathryn Hogan and Mr. Karl . . met Field. Hill starring Kaysville elementary craft repair work at attended the funeral services Mixed trends featured trading in Susan Peters, Alexander Kwn. of Mr. Joseph Seal, HU yeas of age the livestock market here this last Thursday evening, marking , Peggy Ann Gardner at Collinston last week. Interment week. Cattle prices worked to American Education Week, NovemThe meeting was comber was in the Farmington cero&tery. higher levels as receipts dropped and a The American Legion Auxiliary off, but at the same time hog prices prised of business, sessions school the CLOSED by presenter program on house in court met the Thursday declined under the pressure of a children. TUESDAY. WEDNESDY tvn evening for the regular meeting. new break at midwestem markets. THURSDAY An Indian dramatization by the The North Farmington Relief so- Sheep and lambs sold firm with students of Mrs. Mabel third grade bazaar annual the have will small. Merchant" Your Mileage ciety supplies very Gleason and Mrs. Margaret Jost on Friday and Saturday, November wholesale dressed meat trade was The fourth and Specialized Lubrication the presented, in the church hall, accord- has also been a little uneven. Re10 and FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Washing, Polishing and Miss Zena of Williams Florence Mrs. to pupils Hess, presi- tailers in- grade ing moderate a NOVEMBER 17 AND 18 Tire Repairing the settling of Kaysville. dent. Dinner will be served each crease inreported beef demand at current depicted Lee Tires A modern version of Kaysville was evening. Daytn andTubes "HER HUSBANDS AFFAIRS levels and there was a good trade and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Williams on some pork cuts. A few items given by Mrs. Josts fourth grade. starring National and Trojan in continued to move slow, but most attended a floral convention Displayed were two murals made Franchot Tone, Lucille BaB Batteries Great Falls, Montana, last week. foolers are going over well cleaned by Miss Williams class, one depictThermoid Brake Service plus ing the Indians before the pioneers Mrs. Wilma Miller entertained up. came to Kaysville, and the other Expert Tire Recapping one day last week for her five sis Cattle supplies on the opening BLACK EAGLE ters and mother. Guests were Mrs. day were very light and prices showing Kaysville shortly after the Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mrs. settled. had Josts Week Mrs. Arthur the Goodrich. in starring Josephine Every Day noved forward on active buying. fiioneers showed a clay model Preston Foster Taylor, Mrs. Lefty Cole, Mrs. Bar- Numbers showed some gain later THOMAS HOWARD bara Zabrinsky, all of Provo, and so that the weeks run was fully of modern Kaysville. NOTICE As part of the business session Mrs.' Frank Taylor, of Canada. Mrs. Operator . of five for to days offerings equal Above schedule will hold if wrath Utah Taylor spent several days as house the previous week, All steers, year- G. Henry Rampton, school princiKaysville, permissible pal, discussed the two school gueftt. lings and heifers are 25 to 50 cents on 7. voted November Mrs. Aleen Jones, Mrs. Leone higher with medium grades A overflowing Miller, Mrs. Mary Myers, Mrs. nsost. Cows are 50 cents or more a gay reminder of was with books, and Mrs. Warnock Laurita Mary higher and there was a similar Book week, November Griffith attended a luncheon given on bulls. Calves gained $1 by the Lehi Beverage company in while feeders ended firm. Salt Lake City on Monday, for the Most of the medium to near good Ladies Auxiliary of the Utah Grosteers and yearlings here sold from cers. $28 to $20.50 with the top resting Dr. and Mrs. J. O. King of Salt at $30. Medium grades of grass-er- s Lake City were guests of the Robwent at $20 to $27.50 with ert Griffiths on Sunday. plainer grades down to $25. A few Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hinman were eifers sold at $20 while the bulk r hosts to Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Poul-to- figured from $25.50 to $28. ComWotson-Tcmn- er A stake fireside for Explorers Sr., Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Poulton, mon kinds sold at $24. and MIA Maids of Davis stake will Features Jr., and daughter, Candace; Mr. Good beef cows sold from $23 to be held Sunday, November 12 at and Mrs. J. E. Hill and Rocky Snow Griffou and Society Brand $24 with medium kinds at $20.50 to of Salt Lake City On Sunday. Suita. A few good dairy cows sold at 8:45 p.m. in the Farmington ward $22. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Ellis and Wilson Bros. Furnishings. and a little above. chapel. the latter price Nunn-Bus- h daughter of Centerville were Sun- Canners and cutters sold from Shoes. Pictures of Europe and missionday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Owen $17.50 to $20. Top grades of bulls Stetson Hats. Ellis. Interwoven Sox. travels will be shown and deDr. and Mrs. H. S. Jenson spent went at $27.50 and vealers brought ary to scribed by Flint Dickson. There last week in Chicago where the up $34. Wotson-Tcmn- er ' The Store With the Good and choice feeder calves will be other special features and doctor attended a medical convenCLOTHING CO. sold at $33 while yearlings went refreshments will be served. ' tion. Friendly. Doorsg) 379 24th St. 2331-3- 9 Miss Pauline Morgan has taken up to $30. Medium to good replaceis The event Washington Bhd. under the superthe position in the Davis county ment cattle bulked from $20 to vision of Lucile B. Sheffield and .Ogden Ogden bank vacated by Mrs. Ernestine W. $28.50 with feeding cows going at Dale L. Barton. $21 and down. Held. Hog prices are down 50 to .75 Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Harker have sold their home on State street and cents for the week. Good and are moving to Salt Lake City. An choice 100 to 250 lb. weights closed Ogden couple have purchased the at $21.50 to $22 with a few at a top of $22.25. Kinds weighing 200 duplex home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Colemere of to 200 lb. sold from $10.50 to $20.50. Sows bulked from $17.50, to $18.50. Kaysville spent Sunday with Mr. Lambs are ending steady on and Mrs. Arthur Thurston and Mr. small supplies. A few lots of good Ray Steed. Mr. Lawrence Miller has accept- wooled spring lambs sold at $28 ed the position of clerk in the with a few feeders at $25. Old ewes sold from $11 to $14. Farmington post office. Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Wilcox and Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Udy of Salt Lake City were Sunday guests of KAYSVILLE Mrs. Ethel Udy. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Oviatt of Los Mr. and Mrs. Marion Thompin Lorelatives Angeles are visiting relatives and son visited friends here. gan, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. WalMiss Judy Swaner, daughter of ter D. Thomas, of Kansas City, Mo., Mr. and Mrs. Dean Swaner, cele- formerly of Kaysville, are visiting brated her twelfth birthday on No- at the home of their son and daughter-inMr. .and Mrs. Howard vember (i. She was surprised by -law, fourteen of her girl friends at a I). Thomas this week. party after school. Mrs. Mabel Rose entertained the JUST PHONE 10 Neighborhood club at her home on Monday evening. yea DEVOE number to call Miss Judy Lundburg, of North Thats Farmington, celebrated her 10th tones birthday on Saturday afternoon. fora The fourth grade girls' helped her celebrate with a party at her home. Reflex-Journ- al Mrs, William Mills spent Saturday at the home of her son,I Mr. and Mrs. Keith Mills. Co,1or ... magic key that.uoJodcs a whole new world of hf riAmuu; t.,. 2 matter February 15, 1911, at Kaysville, Utah, under the Act of March' 8, 1879. National Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service Entered as Worker Demand A-- T. pEONIS. , E" r: P-- second-clas- s 222 N. Michigan Are., Chicago, I1L Subscription: $2.50 Per Year, Payable in Advance. In Combination With the Journal $3.00 Per Year. su-g- ar P.-T.- pre-scho- ol Lloyd E. Anderson, Editor and Manager Richard 0. Anderson, News Editor J. V. Woolsey, Display Adv. Mgr., 179-Ernest It. Little, Classified Adv. Mgr. Office Phone 10 R BE AMERICAN BUY AMERICAN People are growing more concerned over what to do with their savings. It is one reason for the rapid building of homes and for the iiftreasing interest of individuals in acquiring shares of stock in operating companies providing necessary products and services to the nation. Only a limited number of personsrTaff'dWtra 'business alone but countless millions, through stock ownership, can acquire part ownership in any number of companies or corporations. If the same caution is used in buying a share of stock as is used in buying a town lot or farm, the savings of a purchaser are equally secure. The average stockholder in many of our business corporations today owns no more than forty or fifty shares of stock. It is registered in the books of the company and isriegal evidence of the shares he owns. His number of shares determines the extent of his interest ifthe company in the profits it may earn and the risks it assuntes. Stockholders have the right to elect the men who direct their companys policy the same as they have a right to vote and elect the men who run their government. The directors of a company must report to the stockholders on the companys operations. The hundreds of companies whose securities are listed and sold on the New York Stock Exchange are required by law and by rules of the Exchange to make available information which is essential to a clear understanding of a companys financial condition. It is good American practice to own homes, insurance policies, savings accounts, automobiles and stocks in the companies which serve this nation. Whether you own one share or a thousand, you own an interest in a business which is a living part of your country. ' music-chairma- Kaysville Group Held Meeting Nov. 2 FARMINGTON SITUATION semi-skill- l.v ed Hin-ma- P-T- A 1. Conoco Service 1 1 horn-of-plent- ad-tan- ce 12-1- 8. . Fireside Slated By Davis Stake Group v n, ... FREEDbM MUST BE EARNED We all cherish our rights and they must be protected, said Representative James C. Davis of Georgia recently. We all treasure our freedom and it must be vigilantly guarded. But these rights will not survive, nor will this freedom long continue, unless those who enjoy them daily perform the tasks required for their protection and preservation. They are not They can be kept and rightly beto those who have the courage, the industry, and long only the determination to guard and defend them. This is another way of saying that the man who takes freedom for granted, much as he takes the air he breathes, is ripe for slavery. Few of us would willingly surrender any basic liberty. Yet millions of us, in the hope of personal gain or advantage of some kind, seem eager to give government and those who represent government more and more power, more and more authority over our lives and actions. And each time government is given more power, it must be taken from the people. There is no other place from which it self-perpetuati- can come. That we have witnessed a serious decline in the old American qualities of independence and no man can satisfactorily deny. The tendency to look to the state to protect us from all manner of human misfortunes and exigencies has reached ominous proportions. And if the state is to be our guardian, we are the wards of the state, subject to its whims and dictates. After all, he who pays the piper will also call the tune. Only those who work for and actively defend freedom deserve to have it. self-relian- ce HOW MUCH FOR A JOB? A large power and light utility recently announced that it had invested $125,000 to create each and ever)' job in its f ...is tho key to a more beautiful home not system. It arrived at this figure by diriding tile total cost of the companys plants and properties by the number of operating employes and the average is $125,000. That money came from tens of thousands of stockholders " and bondholders who made the existence of this utility like How little do they see what real- all others possible. The great majority of them are men and is, who frame their hasty judg-mely women of moderate means who put something aside for a that which seems. rainy day. Their capital built the company and created the Southey.upon jobs it prorides. And in return they get a modest profit on sives 223 exciting Interior In four finishes . . f Subscription Home news for just $3.00 a Year nt their investment. This is particularly interesting in the light of the present problems of the utility industry at large. If an influential group in and out of the government has its way, private capital will no longer exist in this great enterprise. Instead of building and operating a company .with the savings of individuals, all of whom make their investments voluntarily, the tax money of all the people will be used. The plants will all jbe socialized. The employes will all work for the government. The huge taxes the industry pays will be gone forever. Local regulation will be dead. And the politicians and professional bureaucrats will be the bosses. AH this is planned in spite of the fact that private enterprise and private savings developed this country, and private employment brought the living standards of the to levels which are undreamed of elsewhere. In a free people economy, free men and women can willingly invest $125,000 to create a job and everybody benefits. In a socialized no one but government can do anything. How mucheconomy, more of the Federal socialization program will the United States . and only ihf beauty Interiors J0 harehfeatures . . . softs dramatically lovely stoves walls bade brightens dull comers. And with DZVOTS LC1ARY OF COLORS you cant go wrong. For hero am 223 tones that am fresh and vibrant, chosen by nationally-famou- s decorators to make yours the kind sf home yowvs always wished for. . - (T A Mft, wUt-K-k fMth w padeRy windirf In Hm m deHi Him. Wanrs wd irik as haawNMIy. CUES sum... ') aft, nl MIRROLAC ok tWsh. $.h hftwj i'People can live nly where there are mines and farms and factories to give them jobs. My industry not only employs lots of men it make; a good many jobs for factory workers, too, by turning out raw material for factories to use." . porcelain liU fw kftdwe nr I soldi wh M a devopake hMh Se oom te we With cook t' nrt dnre hulk. Stand hint end hnrdt w,iM . : oft j G IT. TERMS fi 0 ( . S' f V SEMbCLOSS DEVOE VELOUR 1 |