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Show TITE WEEKLY from the place of enlistment to the training f&mp. Men wishing to enlist should apply to the nearest f the above named listing officers for application blanks, will be furnished by the government Ip IBrchly Scflex CO LEX. KAYSVULE. UTAH BOUNTIFUL NiM mite aorth f BK Ukl City, ty la rmntene Iowa. Urft Dari aooatyi Sm waterworks alaetn iant Hffata and pomr. telophoaa. Sarrouadod by rick tearkat SOHom and fruit land, two olactrie railroad, wttk low taro, tw tranaooatlaaatai railroad, brick yard, tw banka, yood buaiaom hoo, commercial dub, yradod mad bik school, aa ui akte-walk- a. The Flag in God's House. knW Frances Pace is visiting with her brother in Bingham. . A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ulyses Parkins recently. Born to Mr And Mrs. John Hill on Tuesday, June 26th, a girl. r r. rbtuiM4 THE INLAND PRINTING CO. Pack of Dr. Fred J. spent Monday visiting relatives. W, P. Eppmai, Editor C. A. Eppcraan. m Entorod imthu Editor Mrs. Hannah Garrett is just recovering from a severe case of small pox. matter February It, 111, at Karavllla. Utah, u inter ih act ot March - i. aacond-cl- ai 1179. - nd - Lila Moss The Misses Neal in1 Park City last fswdays week. - Advartlslng ratoa oo application. spent- - a- tlil por year wkon paid in a4 Subacrlption aoco l por yaar, on ovordoo aubacnp tiona or whoa not paid la Mraneo. (lit - Harry Hatch is spending a week or friends in Pocatello, two visiting Idaho. TELEPHONE Offlte, No. It W. P. Epporasa, No. 71 C. A. Epporoon, No. tw FORESTRY Salt Lake City . Mr. a CLingren, the florist, has just relumed from a two weeks' vacation in California. REGIMENT IN THE MAKING Elizabeth Ingles left Saturday to The plan of organizing the Forestry listRegiment provides for twenty-si- x ing officers throughout the United States whose duties will be to receive applications from those desiring to serve. The following are the listing officers for this district: L. F. Kneip, District Forester, Ogden, Utah; Forest Superivsors G. B. Mains, Emmett, Idaho; E. Grand jean, Boise, Idaho; C. B. Morse, St. Anthony, Idaho; C. D. Simpson, Montpelier, Idaho; W. M. Anderson, Vernal, Utah; C. B. Arent-soSalt Lake City, Utah, and J. W. Humphrey, Fanguitch, Utah. The regiment will be made up of picked woodsmen. Service in it will give such men a chance to take part in the war for which their lives and training have peculiarly fitted them. For the logging crews skilled axmen, sawyers, tie makers, skidders, teamsters and blacksmiths are wanted. Millwrights, sawyers and engineers are needed to man portable sawmills which will form part of the equipment. Helpers are required for the various activities connected with woods operations and the maintenance of large camps. Recruits must be between the ages of 18 and 40 years and must be citizens of the United States or have declared their intention to become such. They will be subject to the same physical examination as that required Enlistment . for other military service. will be for the period of the war. ' The regiment will be composed of six companies of 164 men each, aside from battalion and regimental staffs, drivers and commissioned officers. It will be recruited at once and sent overseas as soon as organized, trained and equipped. While designed to serve primarily aa a mobile logging and milling crew, the regiment will be organized on military lines and its members will be uniformed and armed like other units in the United States Army. The first duty of its officers and men will be to learn military discipline and teamwork through spend a few weeks with relatives In Fillmore, Utah. , n, The Nations Needs First Mr. Claud Jacobson and Lenord Day joined the National Guard in Salt Lake City Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Illustration shows a military officer hurrying to the telephone for import- ant military business and a civilian cheerfully according him the right of way. This typifies the attitude of the nation and it also typifies the attitude of the Bell System. The nation is at war and it is necessary that private interests shall be subordinated to the Government's need for telephone service. ' was Bell When war was declared, the whole immediately placed at the System disposal of the Government A re- Even the Churches Display turned to their home inEldredge Newcastle the National Colors. Above la last week after spending a week here. Shown the Flag in the Nave of the Church of the Heavenly Buelah Ashby returned home from the hospital in Salt Lake City Monday Rest, at New Yorlv. after being operated on for first' fug over school appendi-ti- s. " ; During these weeks of military preparedness the Government has had the serv- '' ice of the most comprehensive and efficient telephone system in the world. J. J. Bergen arrived here from the East recently to join her husband who Is working at the Golden Rule Mrs. Honor Is Claimed for Colraln, Mass Whsre National Banner Was Raised In May, 1812. Mr. Fred and Wright Feamley Today the United States flag flies over millions of schoolhouses, in every motored to Tremonton Sunday and city, town and hamlet, throughout the spent the day with their sister, Mrs. United States, Porto Rico, Hawaii and Charles T. Johnson. ' the Philippines. On every day of patrl otic observance exercises are held atN A daughter was bom to Mr. and which the flag is saluted and the pupil Mrs. Glen Eldredge of Newcastle, standing give a military salute and in Friday, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. chorus slowly and distinctly repeat : Clarence Eldredge.. I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the repubtlc for which it stands, one Lyle Grant of this place and Lee nation. Indivisible, with liberty and fiebeker of Brigham City Were marJustice for aU." ried last Thursday. They will make The distinction v of antedating all home in Brigham City. other schoolhouses In raising the flag their a little log schoolhouse on belongs-tA daughter was bom to Mr. And Catamount hill, Colraln, Mass., in May, Sirs. Edwin Williams of Goodwin, 1812. The second war with Great Brihome of Mrs. tain was threatening at that time, and Idaho, Thursday, at the and Mrs. Williams Mr. parents, the people of the community raised the Thomas Sessions. flag in an outburst of patriotism and loyalty to the United . States governWhile Dr. S JS.. Burnham was atment The man who felled the tree to make the flagpole auii three members tending a dental meeting in Salt of the committee In charge of the Lake one evening last week some one "hoisting of the flag were a short time stole his automobile. He found it two days later near Provo. later marching away to the war. After careful investigation of the Funeral services over the remains claim of this school being the first to Mrs. Jesse Tuttle were held in the of was raise the Stars and Stripes, there set up, In May, 1003, ou the place where First ward tabernacle Sunday. Mrs. the old log schoolhouse had stood, Tuttle died Thursday of heart failure neat stone tablet od which was carved : and leaves three small children. war, the demands of the Government upon our service will oontinue to increase, and must always be met An extraordinary increase in telephone traffic, due to the unprecedented commercial and industrial activity incident to the war, must be adequately provided for. v 1 -- We ask you to cooperate in this patriotic service, and to bear cheerfully any unavoidable inconvenience or delay in your telephone service. m . rk s on-forei- n, : ( 1 t FOR Utah Farmington Phone 1W X- - X X- - X- - X- - ' Dentist - . - V - Thursdays Only NOTICES I I. V. WILSON t t t 'i 1 I i x :! t t 1 t x X X :S X 'x In order to make our .passenger service more efficient, the management of the Salt Lake & Ogden Railway Company wishes to announce that effective Wednesday, June 27th, 1917, train No. 36, leaving Ogden at 11:30 P. M., will discontinue stopping at the following stations: Orchard, Ellison, Kings, Rosedale, Chase, Thomas, Bums, Parkin and Cleverly. Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult Couaty Clefk nr the Signers for Further Re-spect- ive SAIT LAKE & OGDEN RY. CO. 1 SALE OF REAL ESTATE gale, real property situated in Kays-vill- e City, Davis County, Utah, described as Lot 4, Block 32, Plat A,r Kaysville Townsite Survey, with the buildings thereon containing in all 76100 acres, on or after the 9th day of July, 1917; and also two shares of capital stock in the Kaysville Irrigation Company; and written bids will be received at my residence at Layton, Davis County, Utah. Terms of sale, cash. Dated June 21, 191T. CARL LEVI MARSTON, Administrator with Will Annexed. T. McClure Peters, Attorney for Administrator, Kaysville,- Utah- .Date of first publication, June 21st. .Date of last publication, July 5th. Binders and Headers Standards of the World Since Harvesting Machinery Was Invented - , NOTICE TO CREDITORS Place Your Order With Us for Estate of William Blood, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Kays- ville City, Davis County, Utah, on or before the 26th day-o- f Apfil, A. D. 1918. i ; . HENRY HOOPER BLOOD,. Executor of Estate of WillianrBlood, - - BINDING TWNE NOW aiid Assure Yourself of a Supply for Harvest deceased. Date first publication, June 21, 1917. Date last publication, July 12, 1917. - - X - .needhsms,,ALotheEtimesrm.- way-of-the - 4 X 1 X X- - X- - X- - ssssssa ZSSSSESSSS5SSZ2ES5ZSS Estate of Ellen Marston, deceased. The undersigned will sell at private to-w- it: . SALE Three rooms of almost new furniture, very reasonable. - - X The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. The First United States FUs relied over a public school was 1812. from a lor floated In ' schoolhouaeMay, which stood on this John Bumingham Jr. of this place and Rhoda Clark of Farmington were married yesterday in the Salt Lake place. Less than a month after the flag on temple. A reception was given et the Fort Sumter had been fired upon a flag bride's home iq Farmington the oame for members of the family. The grades, qualifications and pay was raised over the Fifth street gram- evening Mass school at New Bedford, May of enlisted men will be in accordance mar 11, 1S6L This was eight months after IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE with the customary army scale. The the dedication of the school SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT, building. base pay for privates while in training One of the earliest Instances known IN AND FOR DAVIS COUNTY, in the United States will be $30 per of a flag being raised over a school STATE OF UTAH. month and $36 per month while on building or grounds was over WashEvona Investment Company ( corforeign service. The pay for non- ington school, Chicago, three days commissioned officers ranges from after Fort Sumter had been fired upon. poration), Plaintiff, vs. Albert Mor- er month while in the The principal. Benjamin F. Cutter, tensen, Grace B. Mortensen, Emmett, $36to $5I-pUnited .JStates and from $43.20 to bought the bunting and four of his F. Annis,- - Nora Annis, Jennie V. An- teachers made the flug. One of these $61.20 while on foreign sendee. Men women was a native of Maine, one nis. Sand Ridge Land Company (a with special qualifications, such as from Massachusetts, another was born corporation), Davis and Weber Canal saddler s, wagoners,- - blacksmiths - and In New-Yo- state, and the fourth, Extension Company (a corporation), cooks will receive from $36 to $38 Mrs. Callsta Robinson-Joneof Ver- Rio Grande Lumber Company (a corwhile in the United States and from mont, was afterward a past national poration), O. A. Parmley, and Utah ser$43.20 to $45.60 while president of the Womans Belief corps. Association of Credit Men (a corporvice. Pay will begin at the date of ation), Defendants. Sheriff's Sale. To be sold at sheriffs sale on the enlistment and traveling expenses Read The Reflex want ads. 21st day of July, 1917, at 12 oclock noon, at the north front door of the Davis county court house, in Farming-toDavis county, Utah, the following t described iproperty, situated in Davis x county, Utah, iA part of the northwest quarter of Section Twenty-fiv- e (25), in Township ! iFive (5) North, Range Two (2) West, Salt Lake Meridian, U. S. Survey:' Beginning at a point 28 rods south from the northwest comer of said Section 25, and running thencW south 45.40 x rods, thence east 24 rods to the west x " " " line of the right of way of the Salt x x Lake and Ogden Railway Company, thence south 43.35 rods, thence east Changes his visiting days to 93 13 rods, thence south 43 rods, thence east 42 23 rods more or less to the southeast comer of said quarter section, thence north 160 rods, thence west H 23 rods, thence south 28 rods, During the Summer. Months thence west 27 13 rods, thence south 14 rods, thence west 12 rods to the of the right of west To those in 5 S. L. line & O. RyrCo, thence nOrth along call Ogden 2870, reverse phone', call, and he will arrange said line-1rods, thence west 24 rods time to see them at their convenience either at Kays-vil- le to the place of beginning. Reserving therefrom the right of or in Ogden. wav of the S.L AO. Ry. Co. and the x right of way of the Davis and Weber x Counties Canal Co. Ogden Office, 418 First National Bank Bldg. Dated at Farmington, Davis county, this 2Sth day of June, 1917. Utah, 24th and Washington Avenue CHARLES E. NALDER, Sheriff of Davis County, Utah. First publication, June 28, 1917. Last publication, July 19, 1917. , ' As our military strength grows, and we become larger participants in the great store. NOTICE Dr. Marsteller ; NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the matter of the estates of E. James King and Amelia King, deceased. . , Creditors "will present claims with vouchers "to the undersigned at the residence of Joseph Edward King in Layton, Davis county, Utah, or at the office of W. E Reeder, Jr, David Ecdes building, in Ogden, Weber county, Utah, on or before the 1st da; of August, A. D. 1917. ELIJAH A. LARKIN Administrator W. IL Reeder, Jr, David Ecdes building, Ogden, Utah. Attorney for Administrator. Date of first publication. May 31, 1917 Date of last publication, June 23, 1917 - - - - ' , We, Carry a Compkte - FOR McCORMICX" MOWERS AND BINDERS and Supply Repairs for Phone line of REPAIRS AH International Harvester Machinery aroer & 52-K- 2 LAYTON, UTAH |