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Show I , , . , cx cvksrv V Sabscribs for TheReflex ? ,1 i JlgtU $ ? ! f Subscribe for The Reflex REACHES EVERY NOOK AND CORNER OF DAVIS COUNTY VOLUME XII KAYSVILLE, TROOPS READY FOR DISPATCH TO FRONT PORT, June' 27. The FERNCH A here! Pershing boys are came within the them of Thousands out of the mishours twenty-fou- r last infested a sea the' tiness of for them terrors no held sea that a on scratch transport; not a torpedo and not a single man lost. Spick weather-browne- d fa.ces, span, with one every fight, sparkling their eyes -ta man, hey of them gVe to the the gangways down tramped strains of the Stars and Stripes into cheers. a pandemonium of unending In camp, are already Tonight they The front. the camp to itching to get is in It here. charge is not far from who of General William L. Sibert, Perthe of troops. came in command Paris tofrom over is coming shing morrow to greet them. As these thousands of American off jthe translighting lads poured ports, scores of German prisoners stood on the pier. Teeth set, they looked half sideways at these strap Those who watched ping newcomers. discern a grudgcould these prisoners looks. their in ing admiration How Expedition Secretly Set Sail sea drizzle In the cold before-daw- n The transports they sailed away. bearing one section of Pershings force of American soldiers silently slipped from their docks and disappeared sea- - U-bo- at jinch ward. ly- - . At the mouth of the channel the great fleet of battleships and destroyers waited in the darkness to convoy them safely on their way toward France, Aboard, crammed in every corner, hamunder hatches, in dose-hun- g the were soldiers, mocks above decks comprising many regiments. Reports some titan furnac?7 Then she became an indistinct mass in the shadows of the stream. Propeller threshed with rhythmic joy aslhe.fi eet plowed into the-t;- en sea to face the peril of the The foremost of the fleet, forgetful of her stealth, suddenly raised her voice in a great hoarse, throaty noise. As the sonorous blast died away the ships were lost to view'. The, sound LAYTON AND FARMINGTON, UTAH, THURSDAY, JUNE 28. 1917 Old Glory Has Waved Over Us For One Hundred And Forty Years. It Is The Sentiment Uniting Us As A Nation That MaHes It More To Us Than A Beautiful Piece of Cloth. It Meansi Liberty And Union, Now And Forever, One And Inseparable." reached back to the forsaken piers, Where a vasUarmy 'of ste eJores and commissary troops were seeking tht nearest comers and were soon in deep sleep after a thirty-hou- r fatigue of th L-Secib uas-drivin- -l- final preparation. officers, bedraggled and with toil, staggered into sweating automobiles and were whirled waiting away. It was in the first days of June that troop trains began to discharge at this port great swarms of men in khaki. Who they were ,or where they were bound none was permitted to learn. Tents . sprang up over night and small camps spread into great tent cities. Less fortunate regiments spent more than a week in cars in Drowsy Troops Cheer When Order Comes The men were still on field ration, for little cooking could be done aboard train. Relief came from the Red Cross, which sent refreshment parties. Finally to each cars occupants would come the word for which all waited, an event generally welcomed by a cheer Which Could be heard for miles. The order to move generally came at night on less than twenty minutes notice. Men were hustled aboard the cars, the roll called, the doors sealed, there was the Bump of the engine and the slow roll of the wheels, a short run and the doors were opened for the men to file down the length of the dock and aboard ship. As the troops found themselves quartered aboard ship their spirits rose perceptibly. The course of setting up exercises was begun immediately to take the kinks outof Main street, and a Mrs. Mc- DAMS COUNTY SHERIFF CAPTURES GREEK MURDERER Carthy escaped with' slight bruises. The victims were extricated from Wednesday morning, about 5 oclock, the wreckage by the occupants"' of an Sheriff Charles Nalder of Davis automobile ahead, driven by S. Segil, ctunt arrested Peter Terloupis, the and hurried back to Salt I.ake. alleged murderer of Bruce Dempsey in Salt LafceCityTastTuesday night. the boy was left in the care of a phy- and turned the prisoner over to the sician at the L,. D. S.. hospital. Both Salt Lake officers. The arrest was were reported to be resting' easily last made on the farm of Bishop Davis E. night. Layton where the accused had fled to uho who have a nor- the u. join, tomobile, was at a loss to account for tion of the Layton farm 'leased fo the accident. He said he was not go- beet raising. At the time of his arfest the Greek ing faster than fifteen miles an hour when he rounded the curve. The top was armed with a murderous looking of the automobile was completely knife and was in a vicious mood. After the murder of Dempsey Terloupis smashed, 11. und S, Segil are the proprietors made good his escape and remained of Segils Specialty Shop and The hidden in Salt Lake for twenty-fou- r Mode on East Broadway. hours, and had he remained there X would have probably not been arOLD FOLKS OF SALT LAKE AND rested, as he successfully evaded both DAVIS COUNTIES AT LAGOON the police and sheriffs men all that The old folks of Salt 1 jke and Davis time. Concerning the murder and his counties are being entertained at La- escape a Salt Lake morning paper of goon today by the people of Davis Tuesday has to say: Eluding the combined efforts of county. Over 1200 old folks that is to say, police officers and deputy sheriffs to men and women over 70 years of age, capture him, Pete Turloupis, 31 years were seated at the dinner table in the of age, a Greek section hand of the .agoon bowery at noon today and Oregon Short Line, alleged slayer of Bruce Dempsey, was there were several overflow tablea out side the bowery. The menu was such still at large at a late hour this morn180-Nor- -- -- the railroad yards. i NUMBER 50 JFieFlag Bp FRANKLIN K. LANE Secretary of the Interior g 164-year-o- E i v r r I ld -- NE, morning, as I passed into the land office, the Flag dropped me a most cordial salutation, and from its rippling folds I heard it say: Good morning, Mr. Flag Maker. I beg your pardon. Old Glory," I said. You are mistaken. I am not the President of the United States, nor the Vice President, not a member of Congress, nor a general in the army. I am only a government clerk." Well, you helped to clear that patent for the hopeful inventor In New York, or pushed the opening of that new ditoh in Colorado, or . made that mine in Illinois more safe, or brought relief to the old soldier in Wyoming. No matter whichever one of these beneficent individuals you may happen to be I give you greeting Mr. Flag Maker. as only Dvis county could provide, with chicken and ending starting with strawberries, cake and Ice cream, The ladies of Davis county, as sisted by an efficient committee of men prepared and Berved the dinner which was thoroughly enjoyed by all . the old folks. ' is There an extensive program being rendered for the edification of the old folks. It ia a day of pioneer reminiscences and renewal of old acquaintance. At the morning meeting t was found that 0 pioneers of 1847 were present, five of whom reside in Davis county and all members of one j . ing. . o clock Sheriff John S. Corless his deputies out of bed and formed a posse, which started in automobiles for an unknown destination. The entire city detective force also worked on the case all night Tom Cestudas, 31 year a of age, also a Greek and a friend of the fugitive, was arrested by Chief of Detectives Joseph C. Sharj) and Detective Herbert Leichter in an Oregon Short Line bunkhouse at midnight and is being held in the city jail as a witness. Turloupis, the officer said, was living in the same bunkhouse up till yesterday afternoon, when he suddenly dis-- f At 2 called Yesterday the Congress spoke the word which will open the door of Alaska, but a mother in Michigan worked from sunrise until far from came every show that the units into the night to give her boy an. education. She, too, is making the Flag. Yesterday we made a new law to prevent financial panics; quarter of the United States. All are r in Ohio taught his first letters to yesterday, no doubt, a sunburned, seasoned regulars, picked will a who write a will cheer to millions of our race. that boy song give men not a single rookie in the ranks We are all making the Flag." r appeared, Centerville family. and a majority of them veterans of But, I said, impatiently, these people were only working." Young Dempsey, who was a Davis The man from oldest Mexican campaigns. Men clung to present Then came a great shout about the Flag county is Horace Drake, of Center- brother of Jack Dempsey, the heavyrails and rigging like swarms of Let me tell you who I am. weight pugilist, died at St Mark's hoskhaki-cla- d ville, aged 91 years. flies; sailors and marines the mens joints. The work that we do is the making of the real Flag. The oldest woman present is Mrs. pital yesterday morning at 8 oclock took the gangways on the urgent busi- Sea Swept fur Possible Mines I am not the Flag, not at alL 1 am but its shadow. Rebecca' Porter, of Centerville, aged from the effects of a deep stab wound -- While the ships lay at the dock the ness of casting off. T am whatever you make me, nothing more. in the abdomen, said by his friends 87 years. sides of the vessels swarmed with I am your belief in yourself, your dream of what a people Field Guns Put in the Holds The oldest man present from North to have been inflicted with a stiletto may become. painters and mechanics, while night Davis stake is said to be Edward Tree, by a Greek answering the descripI live a changing life, a life of moods and passions, of heart Field guns lay in the hold, aero anf day the quartermasters army of tion of Turloupis in a scrap at Secand tired breaks muscles. of Syracuse, aged 85 years. planes were packed on upper decks, stevedores slung aboard the ship the ond South and Third West streets some automobiles and motor trucks formed munitions and materials of war that time after pildnight yesterday. Demp- EFFORT CONTINUED TO RAISE another item. were a part of the expedition. Sometimes I am strong with pride, when men do an honest work, was taken to the emergency hosDAVIS COUNTY BATTERY sey No warning signs betrayed the de.Outside the harbor naval vessels of fitting the rails together truly. where it was at first believed ho pital, watchThe effort to enlist a battery of arSometimes I droop, and then purpose has gone from me and then parture of the fleet to sinister every description were sweeping the would recover. When he began to sink dutch-man coward. I the ers. Ghostly tugs are flying cynically play waters for possible mines and buildtillery from Davis county will be re- he was removed to St Marks hospital, and am full of Sometimes that ego that blasts I loud, garish newed according to letters from the cutters . loaded with spectral ing a cordon against submarine atwhere Drs. W. S. Keyting and S. D. judgment office of Adjutant General Williams, guards appeared from nowhese and tack. , A careful watch was set have-th-e be and to on all am that to But hinr.Th stiletto Calonga operated hope you courage alwiysl MajorBrigham H. Roberta will had cut asinexplicably vanished. Red flare for suspicious vessels and several for. the try abdomen to the through Rpeak at Layton .in support of the lights made the waters about the schooners were stopped and searched. 1 am song and fear, struggle and panic, an ennobling hope. backbone. proposition Sunday afternoon- or piers a charmed circle in which magi- - The sailing of the fleet was accomI am the days work of the weakest man and the largest dream With the meager description furand Major Young of Salt Lake cal craft were seen for but a passing plished without an inkling of thd acevening of the most daring. nished them by Dempseys companCity, ami Hon. C, R. Mabey, will speak moment. Searchlights flickered, haw- tual event reaching the residents of I am the Constitution and the courts, statutes and statute makers, detectives ions, yesterday scoured at the Mutual meeting at Kaysville soldier and dreadnaught, drayman and street sweep, cook, counselor sers splashed, and the ships, one after the city in which it occurred until - ' Greektown for the alleged slayer, and cleric. and Sunday evening. the other, were gone. the transports had actually departed. am the battle of yesterday and the mistake of tomorrow. I It is reported that Davis county will step by step their investigation led Even then those who missed the ships "" them to the Short line bunkhouse. Strains oft Song Across Water.. the mystery of the men who do without knowing why. am be honored with a battery organiza at the rocks on the following mornI am the dutch of an idea and the reasoned purpose of resolution. One by one they fell in line while lion if she enlists CO or more men. If When they entered the bunkhouse late did not know when the fleet left ing terexcited circled about like tugs the battery is raised Hon. C. R. Mabey last night they were informed that waters. these Turloupis had fled during the afterriers. But a single lonely green lamp will captain the battery. noon. I am no more hn what you believe me to be, and I sin all that on the masthead of each ship betrayed be. can believe LICENSES ! MARRIAGE . you her- - presence; Turloupis has been working interUJNERAL OF BISHOP BEASLEY war paint more. make what I me, am nothing you for three years as a section Theodore 22 Zearyos June blended hnll with river and night sky. The funeral services over the re- mittently as a bright dream of color, a symbol of before 1 eyes your swing hand for the Lake Salt of Short Line. He Here a signal light flashed intermit- Teresa Crist City. mains of Bishop Robert Ileber Beas- is well knownOregon yourself, a pictured suggestion of that big thing which makes this In Greek communities. June 23 Joseph L. James and Vionation. My stars and my stripes are your dreams and your labors. tently then a snatch of subdued song ley, bishop of Sunset ward, were held He is 31 was heard across the summer waters let V. Carpenter of Ogden. .years of age, measures five They are bright with cheer, brilliant with courage, firm with faith from the Clearfield meeting house yes so for out are of them made the have hearts, you because your seven or eight inches, and and feet you of T. Ogden Doxey "from a crowded deck, a plaintive fareJune 25 Alma afternoon.' and it is well that you glory in the making." the of makers terday Flag, between 165 and 170 pounds. weighs and Jane E. Bodily of Fairview, well to the homeland. The meeting house was crowded to He has a Idaho. heavy crop of sandy, bushy Start Blade Without Fuss capacity andnany were unable to hair and is smooth shaven. The last transport her name careJune 26 J. C. Watkins and Edna Shortly enter the building. The speakers were before leaving the bunkhouse he was fully painted out and Tier elines care- P. Marshall of Salt Lake City. bish-priClinton the of Burnett Joseph dressed in a khaki shirt, corduroy June 26 Okeath E. Adams of Lay-to- n STATE ROAD AUTO ACCIDENTS with four passengers,' two men and fully disguised, by false riggings James G. Wood, William trousers and Bishop a round white hat, but he and Hattie H. Watt of Tremonton. joined the procession. For a moment two women, all of Ogden, attempted H. Blood of Kaysville, Bishop Heber The past few days have added sevbe a blue serge suit with may her outlines were clear against the wearing June 26 Hoyt Shields of Tooele 1 to ford the canal, but as the water at Blood of Malad, Idaho; Bishop to accidents Lake on cuffs less the o Salt or more coat and trousers. Nelson exciting eral and Virginia pall of light and smoke that hung that point is about four feet deep the Todne of Morgan, Amos Cook of smash-up- s on was the son of Young of list Dempsey above the .piers as over the mouth of City. the already long . engine went dead and the partyfound Bountiful, David Stoker, and President -a lyrum Dempsey,workingman liv- itself stranded in the water Henry IL . Blood of North Davis stake. the State road in Davis county. 156 at West Seventh Sooth street. ng On Sunday an auto running fifteen up to their 'hecks. Theentire "party The invocation was asked by Duncan Ie was born in Lake. Salt without injury. Time about Stewart and the benediction was promiles an hour, according to the testi escaped The Salt Lakecounty officers re1 :30 a. m.; machine carried under the nounced by Patriarch John R. Barnes. turned to that city yesterday morning mony of the driver, turned over twice bridge; party mixed as to matrimony, The music was by the ward choir. where while turning the corner at the Farm- it is said. they lodged the prisoner in the There was also a duet by Mr. and was badly machine The hotel. county jaiL The new of the arrest ington Many cut tires, reported cut by beer Mrs. Joseph P. Payne. The Interment soon mashed up and the occupants more or bottles scattered spread over the city and there along the road by was in Kaysville cemetery. was considerable less injured. talk of lynching. An joy parties. Next Sunday is ex The .deceased was highly respected a morning or Monday afternoon Sunday night paper added to the excitepected to add materially to the list by people in all the walks of life both concrete on the wrecked That was ment car by printing a story calling atbig A Fqrd Car is a necessity. of accidents of the season. in and out fhe church. He waa born Of south Kaysville. tention the first to the lynching talk and as a on grade in Kaysville ward 51 years ago pn the is the reason so many of your y mob several hundred strong a The occupants made their result OCCUPANT INJURED WHEN MA Beesley farm just above the cemetery them. are in front of the Salt Lake buying without publicity. neighbors where his remains, were interred. He gathered CHINE TURNS TURTLE mornor Wednesday Federal Tuesday night building at an early hour last leaves - a wife and Jen children to two An automobile' excursion party ' of for the purpose of taking the night ing a big Studebaker. occupied by mourn his loss. on turtle turned women two and men prisoner from the jail and hanging him Salt Lakers, with Lagoon as the obto a lamp post. Through the comthe concrete just north of Layton. All when LOOK OUT FOR YOUR CQW jective, terminated in disaster bined efforts of the police, the sheriffs the occupants were badly cut up and UP . the the machine turned turtle in rounding ;,During.the pastjfexir.,d:li, several office snA patched personal appeal from the AUTO CO, of a sharp curve on the road in Farm- cews have been impounaed,tbey hav- father 'of themurdered party which' had a generous supply hoy, and the GARAGE booze, but the identity of the party ington at 2:30 oclock Sunday after- ing been found on the streets of the lack of a leader, the mob was disremains unknown with the exception noon, pinning beneath it its five oc- city after night or without a caretaker persed. In the meantime the alleged Phone S3 of one of the men who is said to reside cupants, two of whom were painfully during the day. murderer was taken to the penitenD. B. Phillips is now acting as injured. Mrs. A. Segil, . 168 North in Eingham. tiary for safe keeping. One of the most interesting acci- Main street, suffered a broken rib ant special police end seems to be getting PEA CANNING SEASON OPENS dents, if it may be called an accident, fractured wrist. Adrian Segil, 5 years busy. Notice was given in The Reroad of the his her had where cows flex on found that streets the The Kaysyille Canning corporation age, the right grandson, point happened at counties hand Weber crushed. the II. of the and father without or caretakers Davis made its initial run on peas today at Segil, during day crosses the sister-in-lamachine Mrs. a in S. his Here the would he time Clintonboy; CflTnl near Segil, night impounded. its Syracuse plant. as-tual- ly V 1 school-teache- o i I I t . -- - fog-tint- 9 ed 1 r i -- c, - icy-co- ld m get-awa- . t w. . - C |