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Show 0 CLAD WEVc. UMLKED AROUND ?UttPK!NV!llt- -I KTOJ You'd like te 11-- 1 The town 'LAO j . 6 clock on Ike church RUNNitV mnE I eACKWASDS-COS- H! ten Don't pelieue It All Depends on the Point of View Wr Vppr Iroq know Mr ire uRb rtt -- CMTTSET depot rr'VVMALS aivi Mrs frli FeatSerhca,i sue $iO)f,r,q Depot Note! Mrs FvMkeihccvcl ft 3 rTTie i?f TTri'Lin 0 tSe country Fkmpkipvt!!? tO HOTEL hu.Kvx' 7 OiiC noted men Oi'ii . both pYssrvl on pnui ! km (He k- -r her rfaC a- - Vu Of cOU- - TmEK are OOHE TonCD AfVXiT T C TOUJN That AK0 Atl RIGHT - FOK invOs.U7I tm.nkT.cT a darn ha-- E rirf: little bfKrTK-- i t V m&Si (Ms, cfrWl xK I XX-- ON. 0 .an D. Harris returned Monday night n of Mr. and Mrs. onn iil.Mid, from Safi Francisco, California, to Htbir C. Blood, arrived home this LAYTON which place he recently journeyed in wek from the ventral s'. lie mission, idt f frliW fNltU. Locstad in th toma-u- r milk, cl charge of a carload of tine beef steers. where he had spent two vcar. Miss Tnk in th production WA Ha th factory Susie Wood, duughUr of Mrs. James nnnry. jjj, Layton Suit tuaptVi Mrs. Golden Adams and infant i on th and ernmry nulla, rallcr (. Wood, who hud spent twenty-onStata road. Good opportuniti returned last from months doing daughter Sunday (aert work in the aeroan for for thoa Mektn .ubuAan an extended trip to where she northwestern states mission, arrived chickn fruit crowing, truck gardening, lmaa of On tbn visited with her parents. The child home Ming and dairying. Short yesterday. tb Bainborgdr Elactric. Oregon was born in Lehi on January 2. Haa alactric G. A R. Un and Mrs. L. S. Hey wood entertained the lights tod wiUrworu. We have been informed that Editor May iluh at her home yesterday afterW. II. L. Baker, formerly of the North noon. Eight guests were presedt. Mrs. Mary Ellen Roberts is reportDavis News has left Layton and has ed quite ill. Hog cholera is again liecoming pretaken upt residence in Denver, Colovalent and seems to be spreading. Morris Scoffield was a Salt Lake rado. Hr. Moss of Bountiful is busily envisitor Saturday., gaged in vaccinating the hpgs to preMr. Llyndahl of the Morrison-Mer-riAbout 150 remain & company at Layton returned vent the disease. George F. Ellis visited with friends be in Layton and to vaccinated the first of the week from the St. in Salt Lake City last week end. v icinity. Marks hospital where he was operated One of the young children of Mr. upon for appendicitis. Of all the smiles that have ever and Mrs. Charles Draper is reported been seen in this fair town, none have Miss Vera Layton ind Miss May me there ever been like the smile worn ill with pneumonia. ' ' Layton will be guests at the Friar Aiy our good friend Yird Wallace Stephens of Denver, Colo- ball at the Hotel Utah tomorrow night Cook. The occasion for his smile is rado, has been visiting the past ten m Salt Lake City. This organization the arrival of a fine son horn at the days here with relativeii and friends. is made up of th missionaries' of the Dee hospital in Ogden last Sunday. L. D. S. church. Both Mrs. Cook and child are well. In Miss Ruth Harris and Miss Frances in meantime Vird walks on air and the week the visited during Layton Charles Nalder returned yesterday is busy handing out cigars and candy. Salt Lake City with Mrs. D. B. Harris. to Winnemucca, Nevada, after a ten The North Davis farmers are plannBruce Philips was a visitor in Lay-to- days trip to his home town. While last week after a prolonged stay here he attended the funeral of his ing a huge Farmers and Housekeepers to be held in in Portland, Oregon, where he has brother Leland, who died recently in convention and ronnd-uand next Tuesday, made his home. Monday Syracuse Preston, Idaho. Three sessions will be January James Nalder returned from the A twelve inch drain is now being held daily at 10 a. m , 2 p. m. and 7:30 Dee hospital in Ogden last evening put in accross the state highway from p. in. A number of excellent speakers after being operated upon for an Adams & Sons store which connects have been secured for this occasion of the back. with the Kays creek ditch. This will and a grand time is in store for all Born last Saturday, a fine daughter serve to drain the waste water from who attend. There will he free lunch to Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Houghton. Mrs. the east side of Main street. This is and plenty of amusement for old and Every farmer and every Houghton was formerly Miss Mary in line with other important improve- young. is cordially invited to at- town. noted housekeeper about ments Abrams of Kaysville. recently 1 t iu! t ,is will a-- , ihnr families and Th.iiu.is Vu.lii will he the bigg t a'T.ur fuiia fiji'iid- - Ih-of IN kind ever held ill this soition i T the a now-a-da- n p 29-3- ab-se- ss Bavis County-- Davis County, Utah, is practically the celebrated Salt Lake valley, famed the world over for its wonderful fruits. It is a, rare blending of scenic beauty and social advantages. Davis County forms an ideal community, one of those rare settlements has been for which the real home-seekadwonderful searching for years. The rich vantages offered by this marvelously valley have drawn into its confines a remarkably high type, of American citizenship. er Davis is primarily a fruit and agricl-turdistrict, apples, peaches, pears, straw- berries and cherries being produced in abundance and to a degree of perfection unequalled elsewhere. All the grains and grasses produce in great abundance and all the vegetables of the temperate zone excell in quality and quantity of yield. Potatoes of excellent quality form no in al , A Few N. considerable item, large quantities of which are shipped annually. Situated at the base of the Wasatch mountains and bounded on the west by the Great Salt Lake, killing frosts in Davis County are nearly unknown. An abundance of water for irrigation, fed from the snow fields of the mountains, make it independent of fickle old Juniper Pluvius. Soil and air drainage are almost ideal. In Davis County there are some 30,000 acres of land, good land, awaiting clearing or draining to become at once highly productive and capable of the most intensive farming. The cost of clearing will vary according to density of the growth of brush and drainage on local conditions. Electricity for lights and manufacturing purposes is furnished and distributed by the Utah Power & Light Company and is available in all parts of the county. Facts About Davis County ' a lu hiS'futuio home. M H of Miss Agnes Swan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Swan of this city, Eurmingtnn. and E. M. Bagley of Salt loike City, Nellie Mortensnn of Burley, will he married at the home of the Idaho, is spending a few weeks at bride's parents on Monday, February the home of Mrs. Clara Sanders. 3 at 2.00 o'clock p. ni. They will 1 homas Abbott and 'William V. for an extendod tour of the depart Haight, Indian War veterans, are cirprincipal cities and points of interculating a petition, asking the legis- est on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. lature to pass the Indian War vete-lapension bill. Dr Tanner seems to think that the U smallpox situation is under control now. Meetings were held Sunday and Salt Iaike (Tty Through the aid school stalled nfter a weeks vacaof extensive laboratory apparatus the tion students of the Dniveisity of Utah Bishop J. II. Robinson returned are enabled to learn modern lanTui sduy evening from a throe days by the most recent und guages business trip to St. Anthony, Idaho. methods, according to Professor He says there is first class sleighing L, Barker, head of the departJames in all that part of Idaho. ment of modern languages at the A letter has been received from 191 i. j n of U. News just Elder Harold Robinson, who is on a to Auckland, New Zealand. He says that melons and fruits of all kinds and an abundance of flowers aie in evidence in that country. Almost every citizen of Farming-tois signing the petition asking the legislature to kill the race track gambling bill which Representative M.ihey has introduced into he legislature. races are a source of considerable revenue to our people and they very naturally are in favor of letting the sporting people have their fling. Farmington is lively during the races and there is never, a vacant house or room in the city. mis-io- n n Modern Punishment Far From Corrective uYnl university. The labointory is fitted up with dictaphone and a tube listening system to assist phonetics and dictation. Native teachers dictate lessons upon dictaphone records. Students dictate two or more lessons a week. These are corrected by the native teachers who give recommendations as to imA great provement of pronunciation. ileal of vvoik is done through this system of oi nl dictation, grunimnr and composition win k. It has been found thnt this new system is far in ad- vance of tdie classroom method i formerly used. Extensive woik in dictation and phonetics study is carried on for ad vanced pupils. Many delicate instiu luiyton. ments are in the laboratory for the at The I'oinsctta club entertained of sound vibrations and the recording in honor the residence of E. I. Ellison of tongue, lips, mouth and who on a leaves position of Evan Ellison, on mission to California February 2h jaws. The evening was spent in cards, music Professor Ilaiker has recently reand a general good time. turned from Philadelphia, where he gnve two pajiers before the Modern Centerville. language Association of America. At the request of the government he n Frank Barber, manager of the Nurseries of Washington coun- is writing a book, Pronunciation of which is to be ty, has been visiting relatives and old the Foreign Born, friends in Centerville during the past used in the governments Americanization work. week. The laboratory is perhaps the most Virginia Tingey, the little daughter of Wesley Tingey, one of our mis- extensive of its kind in the whole sionaries in Australia, has been seri- country, said Professor Barker. It exously ill with pneumonia, as has the has been highly commended by little son f Walter Duncan. perts v. ho have visited the university. lion. N. T. Porter and wife celebrated their silver wedding anniversary Saturday. About 100 guests were present. The guests were Mr. and Mrg. James A. Eldredge, Dr. and Mrs. Middleton and Mr. PorOn Saturday February 3 at 10 a. m. ter, one of the Mexican refugees. Miss Skidmore from the extension service will be at Farmington to give Kaysville. Misses Stella and Millie Criddle and the spring millinery course to local Miss Myrtle Burton left Monday for project leaders. Each community is urged to sent delegates. a visit to Logan. both capital punishment and putting away in stone and steel cells at hard hut unproductive labor as punishment, will he one with the rack and the tnimhscievv, the burning at th stake, the duikmg stool, the stocks, the casting into dungeons of the insane. A few hundred jours ago nations made the punishment fit the crime. If a man stole, his ears were cut off. If he bore false witness, his tongue was cut out. If he didnt pay his debts he was put into jail until be did, the idea being not to allow him to earn money to pay but to make him disgorge hT& hidden wealth or mulct hfa , friends. We smile pityingly at the misguided ignorance of those old days. We are very wise and modem. AH we do is hang women, or electrocute men, or put them behind Iron bars for various periods of time, only to turn tfiem loose again, worse men than when they went in. This is an age of making useful the by product. That which, was thrown away is now valuable. The sawdust no longer rots by the mill; It is used as fuel or to make chemicals. Nothing is lost of a slaughtered pig but his squeal. Some day society will come to recognize that any man convicted of a crime cun be made from a social liability into an nsset; thnt what society needs is not punishment of the criminal, hut making him over; what the world needs is not to thrown away its sawdust men, but to use them. We are on the way. Modern penology frowns uptm the treadmill and the idle prisoner. Some day it will laugh at the idea of iron bars unaccompanied by medical treatment, education, a making over, that the human unfit for society be madfit, not destroyed or put in the prison scrap heap. Speed the day! , Ilur-rica- Millinery Expert to out-of-to- Re At Farmington estern and Bamberger SULLIVAN ELECTRIC SUPPLY acres. . Rainfall, 18 inches, mostly seasonable. Best culinary water in the world all cities and towns have modern water works, supplied from canyon streams And springs. road bisecting county. Principal streets of cities paved, concrete Electric lights and telephone systems cover entire county. . , Transportation Rail, and truck service on highways. Excellent grade schools, modem high schools, public libraries, churches and women s clubs. Manufacturing Plants: Five fruit and vegetable canneries, sugar factory, flour mills, ice plant. Seed nursery and one of the largest floral concerns west of the Mississippi. Retail stores compare favorably with those of much larger cities. Ample banking facilities. Dairying and poultry raising. garages. . Lagoon resort "Prettiest spot m Utah. Municipal play ground at Kaysville. Up-to-da- G , An English woman was hung for one of the vice presidents of the Nil inunhr The inevitable aftermath Is tioiuil Crtiineis1 association, will leave the woildwule protest against the Tuesday with the Utah delegation to brut. ilit v of the execution, and roneyral att ml the meeting of the national as- - of itforts to abolish capital punish- soci.it ion in Louisville, Ky. The party mint. will have a sjH'cial coach from Salt The protests are a healthy sign. laruisvtlle. to the time will surely conio when For (Tty The following items were taken from the Keflex dated January 30, Rio Grande Is crossed by the Oregon Short Line, Denver Electric Railroads. Population of Davis County, 12,000. Acres under cultivation, 41,000. Tillable but uncultivated, 30, 00Q. Planted to apples, peaches, pears, strawberries, cherries, apricots and other fruits, 3,0w TS to make John Baines, pi I'tiill Canneis lat ton From the Reflex of Ten Years. Ago ry la-h- i ll uii has uiuhis, liaih'v, hi ih. i, whole the e mis-iona- leal i'ets ,,nt. . dBV D. A. SULLIVAN Wiring, Fixtures, Lamps, Appliances Ranges, Washing' Machines General Repair Work Layton, Utah Phone 2 Dont Overdo It While costs in the building indus25 per cent below the 1920 peak prices, they are again advancing. Prices for material are nearly 70 try are today about per tent greater than in 1914, having moved up 20 per cent since the first or 1922. Wages are 93 per cent over the rate, acording to the Department of luibor, and yet there is a shortage Of building mechanics. Organized labor has held a monoply over the building industry. With this monoply has come a great many abuses all tending. ti increase the number of men employed on various jobs, to curtail their output, to reduce the supply of labor and to prevent the use of labor saving devices. How long electricians, carpenters, plumbers, plasterers, lathers, paper hangers, roofers and masons will be able to maintain a wage scale averaging around fl per hour and on top of this curtail production at every possible point, is a question. It is making it harder and harder for the average man to own a home. 1914 Probate and Guardianship Notices 28-J- Consult County Clerk or respective signers for further information. te Additional Information Gladly Furnished by ! J Commercial Club KaysvilleKAYSYI UTAH LI E-- , (T) Extra! Extra! Extra! J . A fresh supply of box candles, just arrived, on sale today. And try one of thoe new bars. Walsh News Company, Inc. B AM BERGER. DEPOT-JOHW. WALSIi; KAYSVILLE, UTAH Pres. and Gen. Mgr. CT)notice to creditors .'"Estate of Esther Emily Bosworth, DvCeJsed. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the of fine of hi attorney, T. McClure Utah, on Peter, at Kaysville City, the 2?th day of March, A. or I) 1D23 BRIGHAM BOSWORTH. of Lather Admini.-tra'to- r of the Emily' Bosworth, Deceased. Date of first publication, Jan. 25, 192J. Date of lat publication, rcb. 2- -. I. j. E.-ta- te vr j |