OCR Text |
Show J I I VOLUME XIV kaysville KAYSVILLE, LAYTON AND FARMINGTON. WILL HAVE CIVIC CENTER AND PLAYGROUNDS The energetic committees of the association and the of Kaysville have Commercial club made a splendid start in establishing For a dvk center and playgrounds. this purpose they have been granted school grounds, the use of the public H. which under the direction of Supt. in ordeer by C Burton will be put fine of the grove trees the trimming school gradjust south of the walks building, and it making and graveling ing gathfor community place a delightful and old. erings for young the University of of Griffith Prof. Utah will meet with the committees next Monday at 5:30 p. m. and definite includworking plans will be adopted class a first for ing arrangements the playgrounds. supervisor for Both committees, assisted by many who have volpublic spirited citizens and mateams unteered their serivecs, on the assemble grounds terials will next week and do the necessary cleaning, trimming and beautifying. Everyand thereby body is invited to join in of what get a practical understanding will be This the movement means. the first step in community organization and demonstrate in a smallway Parents-Tesche- rs -- Parents-Teache- rs Bon-nemo- rt, y- Crushed Under Locomotive as He Attempts to Get Aboard. Alfred Duke Scof field, 16, a motor-ma- n at the Utah Steel corporations plant at Midvale, was instantly killed Monday night when he slipped and fell beneath a motor train in attempt to 11 I I S K 1, 0 V - wm -- "v , kV? iV' if fit- : , - JT-- rl Totals LAYTON G. Stone ss J. Van cf. A. Gunn, lb. A. Jensen If. J. Kellerrf. fiehin in t he miM of ltr in the production of imlk, toinn-no- UI.N m oi I w I'd I am FKir tu ,1 i.nc 6, ha llie n.it i!iai head .id Siei.t-- , The pioitey if obtained m a- - Assuci tins tutu i i ,1 ,1 i i tin-su- t J 4, avion -- mi-jun- tt Lucius Laudie has been ill, but :s now able to be about. Totals Royal Owen ha. accepted a position as salesman witfr the Farmers Union. 2 Mrs. Ellen Sandall is suffering from a tick bite and has been ordered to her bed by the attending physician. Summary Errors, G. Adams 1, G. The Layton Auto company reports Stone H. Stone 2, Keller 1, Watkins H. Two Stone a base Garrett hits: 1; 1, big business in Fordson tractors, G. Stone several Double A. to 1, Green; plays having been sold during the M. Adams to G. Adams, S. Adams to past week. G. Adams; Stolen bases A. Gunn, SimThe ball game between Layton and mons. Hits off Wiliams 5, off Morgan will be, railed at 2. Bases on balls Williams 4, off Mor- Honeyville Saturday the 4:30. date to Layton team has Up gan 1. Struck out by Williams 9, by won every game played. Morgan 9. Hit by pitcher, Mann, II. utes. Attendance good. Umpire, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Birkin are in Time of game 1 hour, 45.min-man- . attendance at the annual convention Left on bases Layton 11, Brig- of the State Pharmaceutical asot ia ham City 8. tion in Salt Lake City this week. Tol-Ston- e. bn Mrs. M. H. Eliinon, who hu seriously ill for several weeks ia re- ported a IltU. better at this time. She has been able to ait up about half an hour each day for the past week. erecting a modem bungalow about a mile and a half north-eaof town. The bouse is of red brick and presents a very handsome appearance! --Beray-Rosmaitls st and Henry Morgan the Layton American wilpTepresent state convention the at Legion post which will be held in Ogden Monday and Tuesday of next week. Layton post is out after the prize for membership and stands a fine chance of winning. The post Las enrolled every man in the jurisdiction, except one and he is now absent from the district. members. The post has fifty-tw- o Dr. Whitlock , MEN WANTED AT ONCE Carpenters, plumbers, steam lathers, plasterers, fitters and other union wage scale and Jiours under American Plan Contractors. Address: F. J. Bossner, Associated Industries, 2t. ThejOriginal Advertiser Just look, at that roorter, re mer ked the duck. Since he began crcwir.g hes had- - his statue placed Shur-O- n on top of the barn. s I n two-wheel- , J Rtt' s- -- that-thatyartlc- ular 5 j.-at- . s . -- i , I nt i ! e - 1 ing-t- fr to lift a bigger lad and carry him. You little whistle. Why that ia the identical lift that you saw a fireman use in carrying a smoke victim from a burning house. And then you rack your brain for something you once read. What was it? Oh, yes. Th motto of every one of these 490,000 Boy Scouts is Be prepared. A fine motto you tell yourself; and then doubts arouse and you ask yourself how it works out. After all these are onV boys. Be Irepared! Yes, but so you begin to search for cases that can illustrate to you in just what manner these Boy Scouts qualify and you find them? There is the ease, for instance, ef First Class Scout P.4! ip P, Tawcette, of 1348 Madis(n" Memphis, Term.,- - a sixteen year old boy. On the" morning of November 11, 1918, fire broke out near his home, and he hurried to the scene. Ay he stood in the crowd an agitated man cried out and demanded to know if there was a Boy Scout present. hikthe dust? This joyously through Im a Scout, said Philip. The Boy: I shall be glad when I am ing stuff is only a playing Indian My little boy is asleep upstairs, sort of gamer isnt it? old enough to do as I please. You have a dread of being caught the man cried; wont you go in and The Man: And about that time you snooping especially by hoys. So you get him? T1 go and get married, so it wont do watch from a distance. You hear the Anon. much good after all. Scouts in the van yell and Pee them (Continued on Page 4) - guarahleedat Ogdrti, Utah. gray-giee- l- n -l pHlgll Is to lie used lie pleltlet On. but the object Is nunc si out Wel uilly to encoul nge the G y Scout, la-stc- r A HI, HO is or by Hey u.ittts of tlu 1 B1.I1MI1I tl uf Ma I I ate Metnbrrship week la mg the teith ..l.invel siu y ef I hi feuiitl lie e! hi Bey Si outs of America. , d itirirfr'itit'Cr'tttt'trir'if'irtr'fr'k'trCt'irb'erir'irtrtt McIntosh p. Layton Auto Co. - M 0 I (I K well, liy secuiiug Associate ship ol those who appreciate the value ol the orgaoi.ut mil an soiuring the remwal of those Asseii ite Memberships who joined last year. nv man or woman may become an associate member by applying to any of the following membeis of the Kuy- BOOK I OK 1920 Till. K die committee; lybei Bowman, Harry L. Strong, Will Fox : ,, ,n a: uk. i iu i la i.i li I'll .v horn I. Hl .11' ley, Vernon Strong; and paying l auoii of from $1. to $5 for Associate . (uige..; ui i uiii.iiii , iiu pi enb and paying $b. to $2h for Membership u un l.liialiR .ml lo.ci, j if,, perMembership and J2o. and li Contributing i itl puiiliMie.l oy haps, iiu liesi uni ot the up pot year for Sustaining Member the st, nit ni bony in the ship. mslitui on . The Boy Scouts w'ish to acknowledge The lint.k is printed on heavy India the courtesy and kindness of the editor tint paper uni the jioitiait? aie on t opper. I lie pages are bor- of The Refley in publishing this notice dered with anaiti in. borucr m a deii-ta- and the following short story sent out tint. The dedieatioii by Buy Scout headquarters. VERNON L. STRONG. is the farewell artuie hy Principal heu.l of the commercial department of Scoutmaster. the school. A fealuie ol the cot. tents By M illinm Heyliger - the farewell urtic.d t y rmcijial Dud along the valley highway Leo J. Iun, tor fuuruen ytais head a timl of dust such as could only arise a of the school. Mr. Mini icsignei to from the tread of many feet,, broken column of khahaf lucky, go jy accejit the oliice of Stale Supennteriti-eii- t ki figures, each with a haversack of Iublic Instruction. snapped to his hack. The afternoon The staff, those members of the sunlight shows the glow of health on student body who produced the book merry faces and the light of anticipn-t.oin eager eyes. Slowly, in the rear, are Marian Jacobs, editor; Sargent lumbers cart a trek a bt reaper, assistant editoi ; Muuriee cait they call it drawn by eight hoys. Barnes, business manager; Delbert Originally canvas has come over the Stni t?r, assistant busmes-- , manager; top, hut the cunvua has come loose. You see cooking and kettles, and Dorothy Ilenegar, artist; Harvey a flag, and tents.pots, And then you This is Friday, June 4, the B'lndcy, assistant artist; Clay Adam.--Mxth ; em or of Boy Scout Week. This Glen Robinson, day junior reporter; rt porter; Francis Janlne, s iphomnru is the day on which, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the Lakes to the n porter; Malcom Layton, freshman Gulf, 'every member of the Boy Scouts n iiorter; George Barker, athletic re of America is expected to take an overporter. Each and every department of night hike. There are 396,008 of them, school work and activities has been and it dawns, upon you that at this identical hour they are kicking up dust covered and the articles are ot on ten thousand roads and trails val literary excellence. From a liter-in- g leys and hills, mountains and deserts. ary standpoint it is an excellent piece The figures are a bit staggering. There is one man with these boys. 0f work, fully as good as the besj. He dressed as they are, and he in vho.1 th. walkis where tvfr Produced by ny he can keep a sharp eye on the party. They haul the trek The merhanieal excellence of the cart across a loose bridge spanning and pres. win k on the a stream you hear the thump, thump book has brought forth much praise of the boards as they are jarred by the wheels. from those who delight in examining The voice of the man reaches you. high class printing. - The book is from Somehow it carries a note of vitality All right,, Eagles. 'the press of the Inland Printing com- - and good cheer. Wolves the to trek D Book carLLively Wolf pany, the printers of the Patrol. since'its inceeption, and is a credit to The eight Eagles drop the hauling the high class artizans who did the ropes, and stretch their arms, and work. trick give thanks is over. The Wolves, alert, spring, smartly io take their places. The cart CLEARFIELD MAN INJURED and the troop go on again. Somehow, yosrr eyes grow a little thoughtful. Horace W. Clark, a well known resi- Theres k boy or- - two in whom your dent of Clearfield has, his left leg heart is hurried. You pal with them, broken above the ankle Sunday while of course, but you think, just at that that youd give much to win going home from Sunday school. Mr. moment, from them the same brand of eager, Clark and his two children were walkhappy response that this unknown ing along the road sooth of the meet- Scoutmaster has secured. After a while you follow them, woninghouse when they w'ere invited to ride by the driver of a passing auto. dering just what this overnight hike is. Just what is it that 39G.008 Boy Mr. Clark placed one of his children Scouts are doing today ? How do they on the r'unning board of the car and do it? What do they get out of it? took a step backward from the car Of course, you know something about when he was hit by a passing car, the work they did during the war the Lifierty- bonds they sold, the driven by 'his' neighlxir, William A. they distributed, the enlistThurgood. The accident was unavoidi-ab!- e ment posters' they tacked up for the under the circumstances. Mr. army" and navy and" the' marinesf 'tTie Cark is reported doing as well as could war gardens they planted, the help they gave to the Red Cross, the Y. be expected. r M. C. A ..the K. of C... Y. M.' II. A. But what has that got To do with this thing of 490,000 Boy Scouts hiking It Is Ever Thus . Bucar lieei. liu the factory Sugar company, canm", mill, cream! y and concrete lion of the State road, isood opportunities fir those seeking suburban arreege for fruit growing, truck gnrdeiuiiK, chicken raising and dairying Orp the linss of the Bamberger Eertnc, Oregon Short Line and O. 4 R. G Has elee-tn- e lights and waterworks. Write Lae ton Commercial club for uifonatOson. the rolter o o IT Ml ir hxceio Act Quick. M H - II in then Mt mliei 5 9 MOLINE TRACTOR . vYV 2- . If One used i) ,.;.VA fv V set 30 ! A BARGAIN I 0 U O O - Borstead cf Randall rf 1 MX l c. Watkins till i!ie -- mir nostrils i c otior of juingi nt wood smoke, and D;i and beans and coffee Two other lios sitting on tlu- ground, have been screw me together pieces of thin, Now thej jam it into the iron pi pt ground it. fmnt of the tents, and 'someth eg colored flutters up to the :op and snaps arid whips in the !o. e,e mi see it boldly uguinst the sk i he Stars uml Stripes' Your And you see. with a I.V- -. grew misty. welling of the heart, that all work had oppetf and that every hoy has tome stiffly to attention. Bugle notes, And oft! blown, com' to your a lb' ill stub as oil have not known n tuns along jour spine. ou wonder, where these G Hus loii.tiiiu Ho fh outs get the binial ot piinoieun that wrote itself so glori-ouduiing the var? 'ion ta theic, and watih the i mg of the meal and the washing of the disbe-- and the thorough cleaning tin. leaves not a trace of the cookWhv, tlu- kitchen of your own ing home scoured anymore painstakingly than this outdoor spot that hoy have Mclerted as a playground. The sun behind the hills, and the flag ernes down, the bugle playing, and again that old thrill plays over you. In the dusk, a camp fire springs to life. Sheltered ly darkness you go 'I hey are around the fire now, inging. julang, recounting the incidents of the day. The Scoutmaster jieaks they fall into absorbed silence He is telling them the story of Commodore Berrys fight on Lake Erie. ou have heard it before. It is an old talc. But somehow, there beside the camp lire, the Scoutmaster invests it with a grip that has you standing tense, Su.v, breathes one of the Scouts; isnt it fine just to be an American? You find your head unconsciously nodding. The fire dwindles. There are sleepy yawns, and a movement towara the tents. Bresently, out of the darkness ome the soft notes of tapa. And tlu re, under the stars, a camp of American boyhood Bleeps. You can remember back in your own young days, when you would have feared to spend a night in the open. You wonder w hat has become of the boy afraid of the dark. Has he 1st that fear someplace along the trails of Scouting? You go off to your own home, pondering this, resolved to come back before the day has broken so that you can see how this camp bestirs itself in the morning. True to your resolve, you are back while the sky is yet dark. Just as a bugle sent these boys to sleep, now, as the daylight spreads, it arouses them from slumber. Rollicking and merry is the music. It brings them tumbling frm the tents. F!ve minutes of a setting up drill how supple those young bodies are you envy them. Then a mud dash for the lake, and a din shouting as they go plunging into the cold water.. You can almost see their bodies glow' as they rub themselves dry. Another lineup, a short prayer-h- ow reverently the heads are bent and then the flag goes .up again to stand staunchly against the sky. The ringing of the axes, the odor of cooking, the tang of the wood smoke the day is on. After Breakfast you see things that cause you to pucker your eyes. A group of boys go off on a trot and presently are on the other side of the lake. They have red flags each with a white square. They these, and boys on the near side w?ave back. Why, they are signaling. Two or three more boys, kneeling, are practising with bandages on a willing, prostrate fr-in- The scon Salt Following is the result of the game between Layton and Brigham.la t Sal C. ne i os- - with the winning count kit- 1 LA MON VS. BRIGHAM 3b. smi through. yesterday in an exciting contest There before -- e. H. Stone ..(tliaUl i and Beatrice Scoffield of Kaysville, and a brother, Frank Scoffield, resid ing in Kaysville. Funeral services are being held thi afternoon from the Kaysville taber-noclInterment will take place in the Kaysville cemetery. (Simmons 1 (K0 .667 sun-flash- Lake, Mrs. Darvel Miller and Marion Mann 1 is the pebbly sea nst Kavswle, won the game for beech of a small, you lake. You ,u i N ale. wonder what is the matter with these Instead of hauling off their Kaysville obtained then first run in boys and going overboard they are clothing nnd he the one in pmng inning themselves to definite tasks. applying In and fifth innings. hud. to.nth Axes are ringing lustily soon four or the last half of the fifth, however, the fin of the purty come out of some Midvale boy-- , put over two tallies and timber to the right, currying armfuls of dead fire wood. Other hoys have Ik the score with two more in the routed the equipment out of the trek event h Both teams annexed one run curt, nnd still other hoys are putting o.u h u: the eighth and i ame to bat up tents They arc going up in the there is a tod m the ninth shape of a long i it y nriil tented Another small U group n clouted Si.i on. Wth liiisrnuss, is busily tngage.l preparing the even- out a which sent eli.rn The body was removed to the Goff of 0 f1 ilu Undertaking establishment in Midvale folliwing the accident. Scoffield is survived by a father. Alfred Scoffield of Kaysville; four sisDellaplaain Z3 point. The whole party clusters in a knot. After a moment they leave the road, pass through a fringe of trees 2 and disappear. Somehow, a little shiv.000 er of adventure passes through vour 2 0 ,(H)0 body What have they seen? Wnere You wait a while. inning tally and errors by are they going li netted Midvale one Then you go to the trees and look 3 ooelt .i board it at the companys plant. The lad was switching the motor train which was being operated by L. L. Radden of Sandy. Witnesses sav he slipped as he stepped aboard the locomotive before it could be stopped. Surgeons say death was instantaneous. ters, Mrs. Max NUMBER , Midvale Kaysville The bricklayers are making good progress on Gene Sandalls newr build- which is located immediatey west of the First National Bank building. ' 2: UiNM.V li.Lu LEAGUE Home Town. LAYTON The work of the playgrounds will be carried out upon practical lines and M. Adams besides operating to develop strontr Garrett 3b bodies and healthy minds by intelli- G. Adams lb gent play, will encourage the children S. Adams 21 in the thought that their duties to theiri parents and home are of the first importance. It is not the purpose of those in charge to have the play days interfere with the home duties of the children. But everyone knows that childrenmust have a certain amount of recreation and at the playgrounds this will be carried out under the best influences and as an extension of school work during vacation time. At its last session the city council by unanimous vote, showed ita sentiment for advancement by granting an appropriation of $300 for the movement, upon petition of the civic center and Commercial club committees. It will require about $1000 more to carry the present plans and this amount will be raised in various ways by the committees which are composed of the following members: H. Sheffield, Jr., chairman, Mrs. Nathan Reeves, secretary; J. R. Gailey, treasurer; Mrs. John W. Thomley, Mrs. Z. Henry Jacobs, E. M. Whitesides, R. O. Layton. Commercial Club Mrs. Nick chairman; Mrs. A. G. Frank, Mr. H. J. Sheffield, Miss Mollie Barnes, Thomas E. Williams. These committees are in dead earnest and are entitled to much praise in giving their time and means in establishing our civic center with the worthy object of promoting social od feeling and a spirit of improvement among all of the citizens of Kaysville. ' . i MOTORMAN KILLED UNDER HEAVY TRAIN what can be done by a wholesome munity spirit in improving our Good urday: com- UTAH. THl BSD iit-ratu- re AYt-nue- , r I |