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Show t item ! Kaysville wants a Bamberger depot VOLUME XIV X X X X X X x I are here FARMINGTON . County Mat of rich and fertile Iavu county. Home of the Miller Floral company. whoee tTeenboueea are the largret between the Miuouri river and the Pacific coast. Location of the famous Hu waterworks and Lajroon resort. electric lights. A fine place for "tt ed sub-nrb- an t f Gana-d- of a no; u.tn ental home States La o Hrigham at ht r par- - Sarah Hess of I I.fton. Idaho, spent a few days durir g the week at. the heme of Mayoraim Mt- tH.J Mr and Mrs Oiiaff lari of Oguen weie Sunday guests of Mrs. J. H. Rob Miss Eva Joy Nielsen visited friends inson and daughter. Alta Robinson. - j Mrs. Carlyle Chaffin of Idaho Kalis, Miss Nellie Clark is spending the Idaho, m Farm-- , pent last weck-em- i summer in Salt Lake City. of Mrs. C. R. Chaffn.. ington, guest Mrs. Howard Chaffer last! Mrs. Genet a Paxtor at.d daughter week-en- d in Salt Lake usitmg her' of Salt Lake spent the week m Farm- mother. Mr. with C and Mi ington Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Rol ii. son t St Mrs. Henry Soule Anthony. home ir, Logan during Idaho, is turned tot few weeks m a spendirg the week. Mrs Farmington, guest of her Ixircnzo Walker. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Crosby and family visited frmed in American Joseph S. Clark is Uain g down the Fork Sunday. upper stoiy of hi- - boned home and bungalow of Miss Beatrice Brown, spent last will make a the house. week end ,ih Farmington with Miss Modena Chaffin. Wilder T. Hatch and his Thora and Delilah Hatch. of Reck Edward Chaffin and family of Idaho are here, the guests tf the Springs Falls are, here for a few days visit Sessions family. with -- i re-the- ir M-t- I irfr H ag' n ik ? f .! g- wrf, y H V K'A 4 relatives. G. Miss Marion Hess - around on crutch- - Mary Taylor of Salt Lake es as a result of alighting on some spent the week in Farmington, guest rocks when a load of hay on which he of Miss Mariette Taylor. was riding tipped oter. ' . A Commissioner D. F. Smith and W. , v' Iv , Mrs. Nellie E. Taylor, who lately re' ft- , Jn Thayne left Saturday for Denver turned from New York, spent Tueson Farm Bureau work. S J day and Wednesday evening isitmg J it Miss Alta Robinson returned Tues- relatives in Farmington. f X M from a ten with visit Miss day days Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wood of FieldL Lucille James at Murray. fi ifli i m ing are here for a few days. Their Mr. and Mrs. Niels Nielsen of Ogden old son has been operated on at visited Farmington Wednesday, guests the L. D. S. hospital for adenoids and H Scores of Vtuh soldiers, woundf.l of Mr. and Mrs. S. Nielsen. tonsil trouble. or ill, ling in the gre.it Army j '; & tv Jin 1 A v 'V i J; 1 J ar of States, and in the cases of wounded, they call on (be mn in the wards, carry ing cheer, homo papers that are avidly seized, ii.d llowors or fruit. Ml the hospital activity for the i The Farmington descendants of the of Ogden spent a fetv days during the week in ancient Puritans of North America are much shocked at the hankering of Farmington visiting her parents. their Kaysville friends for Sabbath Mrs. G. R. Chaffin entertained in day ball games. honor of the Seloun club Friday afterThe roof of the Heber Sessions noon of last week. The house was in decorated red roses. Luncheon was bungalow is practically completed and served to fifteen. the three other new residences in course of construction are rapidly nearing completion. MICKIE SAYS A number of our young people attended the wild west show in Salt Lake last Saturday evening, and on missing ARC SMt-Lin X.OVS o JOfcXNOWW , the last train, had to stay in the city THCO.ft ARE SNU-LN until Sunday morning. ADS , JJ PUENTV O snm-cee There are Hyrum Welling, treasurer of Davis IN P SUBSCRIPTIONS is no longer on the unmarried county, s Then are He list. and Miss Esther Joy Spencer tNHtCH NEVER OOCOWtt OfP of Salt Lake were married in the Salt Lake temple yesterday. There was no official announcement that the treasurer was to enter the state of matrimony, but notwithstanding that, his friends wish the happy couple a long and pleasant married life. A. Boeslund f ES J ES D ShM-t.E- The largest affair of the week was the supper party given by the Farmington choir at Lagoon Monday evening. Covers were laid for eighty-fivThe centerpieces were bouquets of red roses and a rose was the favor at each place. Toasts were given by Mr. Garf and Mr. Brimley. Leonard Brim-le- y and Berdet Brimley favored the company with a cornet duet, after which the compafiy spent the evening e. in dancing. W Want a Dpt STOLEN Ford automobile, license No. 25574. Taken from Ogden theatre Monday night. Notify G. A. Stevenp son,. Layton. Phone 27-1- 3. Adv.-24-2- Hospit..ls of New York recoil e thiir first special welcotm and their first hint of home from letters and calls from volunteer women workers at the Utah desk in the Hall of States in that city. "U bile other states are usimr large appropriations, such as Kansass A Prmary bazaar and entertainment will be held in the Kaysville opera house Wednesday, July 2, under the auspices of the Kaysville 'PrimaryjLssodationfor' thebenefit of" a" Primary' Piano fund. The following program will be given at 2 p.m.: Preliminary music lone Phillips. Prayer Allen Blood. Summertime. Song Piano solo Thelma Nance. Dance Sleeping Beauty. Song Sweet Bells of Peace. Recitation Mirra Jacobs. Violin solo Alice Thomley. Lesson Wilford Woodruff, Reva Sheffield. Smile. Song Piano duet Lucille Blamires and Nelda Lindsay. Dance Norwegian Mountain March. Song The Laddies Who Fought and Won, Seymour Butron. . . . .. - Dance -- Eovenacka. Story John Butron. ' Duet Allen and Hazel Blood. Song lifes Mirror. - Closing prayer Madge Peak. The following booths will be open: Ice cream, cakes, vegetables, candy, dolls, sewing, pop corn. A program will also be given in the evening at 8:30. r r for angt tin- - hav iiii-ii- t i MADE btc. perfected h.i it, .iyli'ii jqua which iipoii.-- lor Mine Layton On Wcdtit m1.iv July Liui, and will iun-- 1 u a.1 fm (hue dij-- . be uf -- ttt IS LlkeLS-Let l i 1 IV- - n H i s vcicly rnnke up fur sei Mims ti That is to say, should three be three numbers of the family may be admitted on a tukt at the same time, 4th of July Celebration. The 4th of July i elehrution will be a feature of the last day of the session and the 4th of July program will in1 free to all the people. The program will begin at 10:30 a. m. in the Chautauqua tent, program of which will be found in the advertisement on page 4 of this issue of The Reflex. The bishoprics of the Layton wards have this celebration in charge and W Waal a Dapat they cordially invite all the people to FINED FOR USING WATER OUT join in the lelebration of the natal day OF HOURS of the republic. Returned soldiers are On Monday the waterusers from cordially invited to be present i.mous at ites centers at the Hall of k'uus, which the War Camp Community Hoi vice has established at 17 Wt-- t Twintv-flft- h 1 35.0(10 and Massachusettss 150,000, street, cloae to the Victory Arch. Here Huddles' meet, in welcoming their homecoming sons, 1tah is ripiesented by Mis. K. .it the war's end, and home folks Dewey Rich.wds, formerly of Salt welcome the boys back from the Lake City, and such helpers as she trinchis and the deep blue seas. Home of the men need even more has been able to gather. Without the aid of any money from the state prartM-a- f aid; some are 'blue; some ne d a job back home; some want to they are endeavoring to do as other' well, for Utah's soldier lads as irace lost families. To all of these the Uth women give help. Some-- : tales do for their boys. The clerical work of sending lethim they take a blue lad to ters to the men In the hospitals here dinner and to the theatre. Borne-limIs large and calls for heavy expense. they find the lost loved ones. Such letters, sent out under a plan For those who need Jobs the War devised by The War Camp CommunCamp Community Service maintains ity Service, are, as a rule, the first at the Hall of States a nation-wid- e the Kaysville water system were worda from home folks to reach the employment bureau. Its manager, William Injured boys a f t e rth e y a rrive O n tlie lrv W. D. Fisher, canvasses upstate-Ne- warned by Watermaster York and other states, for positransports. The women Invite those conform must that to the Haight they f lads who can to. visit then) at the tions for men. sprinkling schedule adopted by the Kaysville City council, namely: All that portion of Kaysville east of Main street, 7:00 to 7:30 a. m.; all. that portion of Kaysville west of Main street, 7:00 to 7:30 p. m. Since that time several people have used the water through their water hose outside ..of the time prescribed and have been assessed a fine of 35.00. Watermaster Haight proposes to follow up the order of the city council night and day until waterusers realize that the order must be obeyed. THE UNIVERSAL CAR - Tbe order means just what it says and if water is used through a hose to wash an automobile or wash off a walk it must be done within the preIt used to be, a JACK OF ALL TRADES scribed time. ' The long and short of the matter is: was in demand, but conditions have If you use water out of hours Will changed. Haight will get you, and it will be well to see to it that your clock is about j nr-M-- m'-se- d, er es right. This is an AGE OF SPECILIZATION, whether in a Profession, Trade or Business. Primary Bazaar and Entertainment A HAITAI ifU ARRANGEMENTS i h - .. James n LVro .MliER te I one-stor- STATE RO.l CONSTRUCTION The Lynch Construction company will finish pouring concrete on the section of the State Kavsv road through Davis count next week. The section from the end of the old concrete road north of liyton to the Kaysville buck plantvvascprniieted last week. On Monday the contractors commenced pouring concrete at the end section of the and this morning the slab had been completed to a point just east of the home of John W. Galley. The construction compan.v has a grading complete plant of and cement mixing machinery and the work hears the muiks of a high clas-- n h. The big road concrete mixtr is eloi tncally driven, the eurient being taken from the Utah Rower k Light company transmission line alongside of the road. The current is mt in wherever needed by the use of a portable transformer station. From twenty five to thrity men are required to feed aial opeiate the mixer wlinh is equipped with power hoist to the mixer and steel boom from which the con cute is mured. The side forms are fashioned from channel steel and the movable crowning form is of steel. The sand and gravel has been screened to proper size and the mix seems superior to any used on older portions of the load. The slab is reinforced throughout its length with woven steel reinforcing wiie which is again reinforced at regular intervals with steel rods. The slab is eighteen fe t m width and all curves arc elevated in pioportion to their radius. The construction has been held up some two weeks through the lack of sand and gravel, cuused by delays at the gravel pit in Salt Lake City. It not looks as though this section of the road wrill be opened for travel before the first of August. It is reported that the road will be open from Third street (west of the old city hall) to Layton and on north, the morning of the 4th of July. On completion of the Kaysville-Lay-to- n section the equipment will hi moved to Clearfield where the construction company has the contract for concreting the road to the end of the slab at the Davis-Webcounty line. Kaysville-Farmmgto- Farmington Tuesday. Mrs. M ille-Lavto- Mrs. Burnham - Knowlton - arrived home Monday from a Texas training camp. in on a Mrs. Lillie oml Set n-- t City is here for a few ui. residence. X Bamberger depot KAYSVILLE, LAYTON AND FARMINGTON, I TAIL Till' RSIUY. JUNE 2fi. 1910 Mr. and Mrs. Mer x Kaysville wants a W Want a Depot STORES WILL CLOSE SATURDAY AFTERNOONS AT 3 OCLOCK The stores of Kaysville will close at 3:00 on Saturday afternoons and will remain closed until Monday morning. It will be necessary for people to do their Sunday shopping before the hour of closing. The movement is in the interest of baseball and games will be scheduled for Saturday afternoon of each week. 'Die locals will play the Walker Bank team Saturday. W Wol a Dep,t OH! TO BE IN MILWAUKEE; ITS BOTH HOT AND DRY HERE H. C. Burton rounty superintendent of Bchools is in Milwaukee in attendance at the National Educational association convention. Can there be any significance in the association meeting in Milwaukee just previous to the Thirsty First of July? W Wnt a Dnl Send The Reflex to your friends. Adv. The cost is but 31.50 per year. if s Before the Public Utilities .LCommissioiuof .Utah. I$ People are demanding SERVICE to Prompt, Efficient, Courteous VICE. trr- - or supplies we can SERVE yon. The better yon get acquainted with us, the better you will like our policy. That is what our friends tell us, 3 W. P. EPPERSON, et al., If you are in need of Auto Work, Tires vs. Complaintant. BAMBERGER ELECTRIC RAII Case No. 173 ROAD CO., . '64 jC I Defendant. - NOTICE OF HEARING Layton Auto Co. Phone 83 To: W. P. Epperson, for complaintants ; Julian Bamberger, General Manager, B. E. RR. Co., Thomas E. Williams, Clerk Board of Education ; Mayor of Kaysville City. You, and' each of you, are hereby notified that the Public Utilities Commission of Utah has set the above entitled case for hearing before the Commission, on Thursday, the lOth day of July, 1919, at ten oclock A. M., Kaysville, Utah, at which time and place you will be given an oppor- -tunity to be heard. r order of the Commission. . By Dated at Salt Lake . City, Utah, this 20tfc day of June, 1919. T, E. - RANNING, Secretory. R Is g H b If f |