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Show VOLUME XV kwsmlij;. layton for Sunday Program School Conference vtjville Sunday Schools Nos. 1 and 2, BURNING OF CORN BF.1V, Farmers lell Commission Be Neecssan If Hich Freight Continue. 2f. RiysvDle Sunday, August T Dl. J o Will Aug. 1 ers are attempting to nuniu the hug10:30 A. M. est com crop m the y t,f Ult, Regular opening exercises of state, with no prospera market ht-- r, f - end Minnesota Sunday school. femur- - tt Five-minu- te taysville school No. 2. Presentation of general stake T)d ward Sunday school authorities. Vocal solo, Howard Larkins. 19. Remarks, Loyalty and Respect fc Sunday School Workers, George C. 8. Insign. ' Singing. Benediction. 2 P. M. 11. 12. te layton. Sold .Into I 3. Story, "Joseph L. B. class of Coles. f gyp t, 4. Model lesson, Transfigura-n- , school No. 2. WesHCaysville Comet solo, Waynard Bennett . !5. Story of Almas conversation, Test Kaysville school No. 2. f 7. Baptism by immersion, Mae filter, Kaysville school. 8. Manner of translating Book of lormon, ni.vr.her of Theological de- Emma Thomassen. I 9. Mission of Parents class, Geo. Bibble, stake board member. 1 10. Remarks, Thomas E. Williams, partment, t kAopric. 11 Singing. 12. Benediction. BASEBALL RESULTS All of the games that were to have en played off last Saturday were istponed on account of rain until fednesday. Farmington was defeated by Layton Layton by a score of 12 to 2, the me being called in the Sixth inning account of darkness. I Kaysville defeated Syracuse, 18 to on the Kaysville grounds, and Centerville was to j4veBountiful played yesterday but for some i known reason the game was d post-an- is to be played at Centerville. they stand:'-- ' - this after-x- n - . How i W. ysville tyton ...s ratiful J atfuse 3 2 ' o 'Wrville 2 o rmington Q I After the Bountiful-Centervil- le further changed. f there is a tie at the end of the les next it will be played off. ,f a tbree-gam- series will be e ar-5?- ed between the winners of the and. second half of the series. f ogust 20 will see the last games Le . except the tie off to determine f -- final winners. fas Games scheduled follows: Syracuse vs. Bountiful at mgton vs. Centerville and Layton vs. i,U L 0Wn i at Farm-!r- n I, borne team. . II Hy & P Gordon Contracting oteHeS e, , KARNIVAL. A BIG SUCCESS The carnival given by the Civic Center club of girls Tuesday and Wednescomday nights was pronounced a Lake plete success. Music from Salt was on hand and was much appreci- me it f fvery thing In n cnf to bottom prices, nVCT Wtre cheaPr than UCty Furniture great deal of attention, noteworthy among which was the fortune tellers the booth, the Green Forest Inn, cream ice the and fish pond booth booth. i i than tho, two other state m th lll.OIl o! tin , ,im llgll' You can plow, disk, harrow, harvest, thresh, bale hay, grind feed, fill the silo, saw wood, pump water, pull stumps, do road work or any other power job around the farm quicker, easier and at less cost toyouwith the Fordson Tractor. Twenty-fou- r hours each day, every working day in the year it will give maximum service. Light but powerful it gets from job to job quickly. Easy to operate and control efficient, economical and above all DEPENDABLE. frame of mind Get in the power-farmin- g us or a card for now. Call, phone drop in facts. See the Fordson practical operation. Layton Auto Co. Authorized Ford Dealer Layton, Utah 'Hu following uccmini of the Marion B Fletchei m froni the Monmouth (III.) Atlas, o! Monday Marion B. August Ulctchti was h brother of Mrs G D. R at ledge of Kaysville amt known to many residents of vvh thi city, when he had visited with hi sister Mr. Rutledge vvu nt the funeral serpieem vice. ) Kilitm Ref b x i fonc Uii'ti-ij iigiuniluiri- nl of 1 ta!i moilition ol l(i..i pih iviit it i' the ten ye.ii noimal Oklahoma .nut Niblaka are the only two state hovving better pi ospeet than Joe Utah, while Idaho, to thej north, l high among the leadem an av erage'of HU li a the romliluioj Si ci a! thousand people gathered of its staples. lit this city nod nt Ellison cemetery These figure, compiled vvith 'be jyetetdav afternoon to pay then last greatest care bv tiamiii obiiver. respect to Sgl. Marion B. Fletcher show some veiy lompelling u as-whose funeial was held from tho First why the harvest time thi year i. go I'reshy tot tan church at 2 o'clock Suning to mean the end of the hardday afternoon Impressive military going for rarmers and a'! o(h, ami Masonic services wete conducted the mtermountaiii section. at the ihunh am! at the cemetery. Thi winter wheat, yield in Utah I ho i emu m of Sgl. Fletcher, which estimated at twenty-thre- e huhek to at rived in tliis city Friday night, were ,thv acre, as compared with nineteen taken to the armory Saturday afterand three-tentbushels a year ago, noon nt 2 oclock and n guard was and the condition of spring wheat is posted ovei them coot inuously from a ninety-three- , while the that lioui until 2 oclock yesterday aveiage hy been but eighty-eigh- afternoon Hundreds of people viewed The condition of potatoes on the remains of Sgt. Fletcher during showed a point fall from the July the time it lay in state at the armory., r average, being eighty-eighE. service men from all parts of tho as compared with eighty-ninAlfgathered ut the armory becountry alfa shows a better condition I and :3ft o'clock and marched tween r than the average, being ninety-- in a body to the First Presbyterian six instead of eighty-six- . church. As the caisson, carrying the Beet Condition Improved. casket, stopped in front of the church, In Idaho the winter wheut yield is the detachment of men s set at twenty-fou- r and stood at a rigid attention until the s bushels per acre, or of a casket had entered the church. Tho bushel less than 1920, but the spring then followred and took wheat condition is ninety, as com- seats in the church wWh had been in 1920. Idaho reserved for them. pared with eighty-fiv- e Neurly one hunpotatoes are shown at ninety-thredred men in uniform were while their average has been in the line of march. eighty-nine- . .Sugar beets in Idaho Members of the local Mason lodge sho.w a condition five points better had gathered at the church prpvioua than the average, or, ninety- - to the hour of the serviced, and Btoml six, while in Utah this years esti with heads uncovered as the remains mate of sugar beet condition is ninety- - 0f their departed brother were taken five, as compared with the average of jnto the church, t ol j I - , ni j vi , t Sue f'T acfoMluig to thi etinaO 1, made puldn rucda li Ii.trict mains tbe misfortune, to fell a RwTthi KUUh Power & Light power transmission - ! KySVille &b0ut The tree ated. A orning. tw ; f the lines and the Special features were given during ut Power until after the intermissions of the dance. The iWv- - n 106 afternoon. Fortunate-- ; green forest idea of Robin Hood was ro oe was hurt. carried put in the decorations. Doris Thornley was chosen queen of The Purchase 4 heavy 40- - the carnival Wednesday evening. and interesting. 1 18X0 v was election mattress spirited fotton not But it can Miss Jenkins received second place. ioce. Lv-- i 111 The booths were cleverly arranged we Pleased to inf0na our friends and and prettily decorated and attracted a L 113(1 uo k1"' rot uin It ckti.r Short-,- ci op V f otal KAYSVILLE , Ilah bounteou se(oi,! Ii.trict hill said, had effected savings amounting to five cents a bushel in handling grain through cooperative elevators and market systems, but freight rate increases, had more than wiped it out. Corn costing 55 cents a bushel to produce onTT 1914 production cost basis, sells today for 46 cents in Omaha, tho farmer getting about 33 cents after handling and transportation charges are paid, he said. It does not matter whether the fanner sells in the next town, the next county, or at distant market, he pays the freight bill just the same, the price he gets being always the market price Remains of laid to Rest esterday Afternoon in Fllison Ometery er i Hurt! rps I ' Dm net Kaysville. at s wiH close the regular less the freight charges, the witness Kames of the season. Be said. j and boost to the skies for a i Syracuse; S. KfMirl Shows I'ondilion ol vrt - Farmers in twelve States, Mr. . Impressive Services for Sgl, Fletcher IIMiFM rirtnighoui Slate Railroads, by maintaining The official count wilt be m.wh li high freight rate., ui!! l.M. misinner Monday, at which tinw t i.t ,.,v W1on the eoal which the fat met eandidat e fur directors will be known. would use if they could .. their mm, A. t he matter now stands, tin pioposition to organize as well as that on the un.old gram, the Davi bounty Irrigation I )wt ru t k now T. E. Cashman, a Minnesota just as if faimm, it never had been started. The 'Keilcx understands there told the committee. Lower freight is talk t making another attempt dong somewhat differrates on grain and hay, he said, m reent lines but the result of the of Monday should ply to question- - by member. of the indicate that another attempt to oig.mie a district will not commission, would increase th udurn-omeet with favor. traffic, not only m those commodities, but the increase would be reflect ed in the added purchase. oy fanner i vmiia uf.lkbuatf.s Cli'tci Ba'I. Wendell Nance, I.eland of machinery, household good, lumbei The family ot llyrum Maylin vnter-- J Mav nio Maylin, Rolan Harm1. and other necessities. tainvil Tueila evening at Lagoon in at'; loiiici Ball The remaindei of Precedence Right Claimed. boner ot' tlu l birthday thi iV'i.iug v,t spent in social chat E. II. Cunningham, secretary of the of then was and th i, mmis amusements the result father Dinner American Farm Bureau Federation of served at 7.3n p. m tn the following: afford At a late hour the guests Iowa, and a practical farmer, aid that Tlu- guo.t of honor ami his wife, Mr. they while the railroad. probably were suf- and Mrs. llyrum Maylin; Mr. and Mrs. ening fering as the result of the piesent re- John Swift. Mr. ami Mrs. Calvin Wood-ai- and vvihing to meet on many more of Salt, Lake City, Mr. Ezra sin h oil ,i urn. adjustment, he believed the situation as regards a basic industry like agri- Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Jatpes Ball, Mr. culture should be given precedence in and Mrs. Thomas Anderson of SyraGl.l WIN AT OPKU'A HOlSL consideration over the carriers, which cuse, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maylin, lleai Hilbert W Gleason at the he described as a commercial indus- Mrs. Nellie Nance, Misses Martha Stewart and Ester Parker of Welli-vill- Kaysville opera house next Tuesday try. Clara Maylin. Ada Maylin, evening August 23. He will tell you Dr. E. C. Mourse of the Iowa State Thurza Barnes, Maggie Ball, Norma something new nliout Yellowstone and Agricultural college was put on the stand by the grain men to establish Ball, May Ball, Melva Maylin, Helen Zion national parks. Mr. Gleason i quite well known in that costs of producing, transporting Woodard and Thelma Nance, Messrs. Ka Alex and Woodard and marketing grain were more than Johnson, Wayne ysville and vicinity, having lectured the prices received by the farmer. All Wendell Woodard of Salt Lake City, here on previous occasions witnesses agreed that the market price of grain included transportation costs and that the price paid the farmer was in every case the market price less the cost of handling and freight. Commissioner Lewis asked whether a reduction offeight rates would not have a tendency to increase shipments to points of consumption, thereby increasing competition and. reducing prices. He was told that this probably would be true in the case of hay, but that the reduction in price would not equal the increase in the amount paid the farmer as a result of the reduced rates. Decreased rates on grain, the witness said, would not reduce the market price of grain. ' J. H. Mercer, secretary of the Kansas Livestock association, testified of economic conditions in Kansas,' which, in general, he said, were depressed. Affects All Sales. Freight rates on a carload of corn from a Nebraska farm to Omaha, payable in 1914 by the sale of 118 bushels, now costs the market price of 392 bushels, J. W. ShorthBl, president of the Farmers National Grain Dealers association, told the commission. . lday the above percentages Ln owners of land with whuh it was proposed to. ,u with additional irrigation water knocked out the i'.po,tion at the polls Monday.. The proposition for the dMrict went down for the count L ;i majority of about tour t i t n t. I nofficial returns were as t til low ( Regular opening exercises un-- i of bishopric. direction ,, tr I 2. InterFirst talk, mediate department, Its Aims, Vera Five-minu- I evemy-ecom- 1. IKOMIM'D Ml HI MPFK atoHii-mall- talk, The Primary McClatchie. Maud Apartment, 6. Model lesson, Primary depart lent, - West Kaysville school. Inez Barnes in charge. 7. Duet, Webster sisters, West I 5. 1 Irrigation District Project Defeated Its ingito burn their com tin. Srxaphone solo, Lei and 4 NUMBER 41 1921 ,m jit.pa, I , 2. kindergarten department, a mm Marie Layton. Stake worker, of buying coal, fatm.i t".ia Aims. told the interstate curium m- commi 3. Class demonstration, KinderNo. 1 sion in its investigation garten department, Kaysville f1(1nl rates on grain ami hay. Kbool. Ben-el is. Th lAa -- gist I 1 Washington, xn Farmington. utah. Thursday. ,u j v j - ! i i h ten-ye- t, 1 ten-yea- t, e. ten-poi- 1 ten-yea- three-tenth- t four-tenth- e, ten-ye- ( -t- en-year ninety-two- . The large auditorium of the Rresby-teria- n Anyone in Utah and Idaho who can church wa filled to its capacity remain a dire pessimist in the fare and the school room was also of this report is just about incurable. filled. Sunday Hundreds of people remained With prosperity in the two states de- on the outside, unable to enter the pendent for the most part upon the church. Nearly every one in tho success of the farmers, and that succhurch had in some .way become access practically assured witl bumper with Kgt. Fletcher during the returns from almost all crops, the fall quainted Hme he had lived in this city and all . of 1921 gives every promise of closing i had guthered to pay their last respect the harassing chapter of the postwar to the memory of the beloved soldier. deflation for a mujor part of the peoThe church quartette, composed of ple of the two states. Mrs. Edith Sykes Walters, Miss Julia Raising bumper crops, of course, JL W, Stewart and Clyde McCracken, does not alone guarantee prosperity. the services by singing. McCoy, opened But it is the first ami most importAbide With Me. The Rev, Taul ant step. There still remain the prob- Arnold Peterson, pastor of the church, lems of realizing on those crops. After then read the Scripture verse in which the disastrous experience of not a few was suid, I have fought a good fight, farmers who last year held their prod- I have finished by course, I have kept ucts for the higher prices which never faith. the Such were the words of came, if is unlikely that such disposithe Apostle, Paul. tion will again be manifest. The quartette rendered another seAnd liquidation of the crops will lection after which Miss Frances Portmean a great deal more than providing er read James Whitcomb Rileys fathe farmers with money. It will mean mous poem, Away. Miss Porter that the banks which have carried the selection in a most impressive gave their clients over the hard places will and there were many a have their loans paid up; that the mariner in the audience. ,eye Major merchants" who have extended credit B. Bereth then read a short history J. will be paid, and that they in turn will of Sgt. Fletchers life and related the settle with the wholesalers and the manner in which he came to his death. jobbers. The address of the afternoon was Nearly every dollar realized from made by John Lugg who wus-t- r very these crops will mean a threefold or close friend of the deceased soldier. fourfold liquidation for farmer, merPerhaps no other man could have made chant, wholesaler and banker. Of as an address for the course, the process is complex, and occasion appropriate as did Mr. Lugg and "his many factors are out of liner but the words brought comfort to the members basic materials of prosperity are in of the family and the close friends of the fields today. Sound thinking, hard Fletcher. His address rang work and the cooperation of all will young and many tears were with, patriotism fashion these materials for the comthose in the audience wiped away by mon good that all may have reason his discourse. for gratitude when the Thanksgiving during Mr. Luggs address' in part was as time marks the harvest's end. . tear-stain- CLAIMS MARRIAGE AT FARMINGTON- WAS ILLEGAL , -L. W. Gaisford has entered suit in the Third district court for annulment of his marriage to Ethel Kearns Gaisford, alleging that the purported marriage was illegal, since he was under 21 years of age when it took place and he did not obtain the consent of his parents. Two weeks after the marriage, Feb. 15 last, be aays that he and the young woman separated and have not lived together since. The ceremony was performed at Farming-to- n. i mm urn f FOR SALE Brick and used lumber. Inquire of Sir. llyrum Stewart. Phonal 4, Farmington. Vl ed follows: It was my duty and my inestimable privilege this hour to discharge two obligations. If I may, I would like to express the appreciation that we civilians of Warren county owe the soldier whose sacred dust is reposing here for a few minutes. I do pot feel that I shall be able to pay that debt, for it is one that never can be paid. The second obligation that rests on me is the redemption of a promise I made to the mother of this soldier some months ago that at such times asthis service might he held I would l peak for her. I am thinking about her this moment as she sits in her western home, her heart and her thoughts hero with this lad who has glorified not only himself, but has (CtufS m fw) re |