| OCR Text |
Show kaysulle. lavton YOU' AM) faruincioa, itaii. yihksoay', jlse u. NUMBER 2ft 125 mharing NATHAN ONJTAIIAIR CALLEDBY DEATH Writes Well Known Kaysville Man Succumbs After -- Gftom Chicago Telling of His Impressions in the Big Town. - Illness of Few Weeks; Impressive Funeral. Th funeral of Nathan Reeves, who died at hi home in this city Saturday, June ft, at 12 ID a m. was held lr the Ka xvitle talemacle Monday, -- it Ok th had otherwise Minnehaha, 01 June Mr back over the valley and the home of our friends, in-fLUmx amid the green trees, we Ut that we were leaving home, geoo wt mere purring along the eB ad rush-fceWeb- pleted there will be another fine lessors drive open to the people of n, ru and Weber counties. From the metropolis of southwest-tr- a Ev-nsto- ' little side Wyoming, we took trip to get a good view of the Bear nver valky, but notwithstanding this loss of time, we reached Rock Springs esrty in the evening. Soon after leaving Evanston we passed through Bndger, the home of the famous sesat, saw his monument, and .ruins d his old fort or trading post. . It is a pleasant summer road that leads through Wyoming. Most of the the road is on the top of the world where the Rocky mountains aught to be. It is a land of magnifl-len- t distance, hay, cattle, sheep and eL All the towns look, prosperous and there is considerable fresh paint m the houses. Most of the towns shoe the prosperity that oil brings and at several points there are large supplies of well drilling equipment. As wt rolled along we met many touri-- Another ton, nj sts going time will be nobody everybody going a visiting, Seems to me that soos come when there will where'. at home only to find The night nobody at home. of the third day found us western Nebraska, . still in the short grass country, where land is plentiful and the grass so short that every town has its own golf onret nd if the regular course crowded another may be laid wt in a few hours. But soon we came the country where they say the Thu com grows." Guess it does, even corly to see much of farms were all wen fenced and of the land is under cultivation, f Itra houses are mostly painted nl the barns red. Central eastern Nebraska is a land of k'5 barns, which look as 7 had grown there just as wpples grow on trees. They told crop conditions were not the best yw bet the fields did not look so nd green as those of Davis be-om- es it r,;7 'Sri rm?nt Nebraska, w switched mai" highway which leads to northwest corner of Wer of ballots for Bryan, and Chamberlain all hpT?ple re fn w Berk-Johnst- on me tim- JLr - Sio city Poking place and Newspaper Union boys the 23 &trnch nff.Ci'T p1" ' Ain't from' a 0re our niTal l damage was not ve were fortunate so concerned. .We yathfr uabout skTtdcf three jumps ymg now storm and .g Utm n the Missouri val- Bn.ri ers" had released ccXon AfteriP rmf r?r" llsrs. with days friend vjy bet sptmyITi da 2 r4 the wtfT en h J r ?, ,in City,' we dUnr ct the home of Mr. Ingles, mother of w found them lo- - niTIes, . er SiOT Wple pnng farming Ulk of dTacrrthey im tt. It t f con i w rM backbone of this ra Cmj commonwealth. I th are great mystery re they going to do Kh tonuiisj count mg dranced here I1. f" the thrtra-i!- 7? f the great have been trav- Iowa and Wool Market Takes Los Angeles Still on Steadier Tone for Magna Team Very Much Alive: Swan Wins Game BINGHAM CANYON, June 10.- -A home run over the left field fence by Mack Swan with two men on bases in the ninth inning, with two men out, gave Magna a 7 to 4 victory over the Utah Copper ball team here Tuesday afternoon in a postponed game of the Copper league. Notwithstanding the persistent fcrs flees ? farms are good and the nd prorperoua. Pwnta srlro'J'ta? hn tUt low eans much ,rt farmer VrTl-1- ' Faroes it he strong, makes and kr ru- - that Los Angeles is experiencing great slump, building operations mor Business in the woo! market is look- Ing up, according to advices received from Boston Tuesday by F. R. shall, secretary of the National Wool-- ) growers association. Mr. Marshall has received the following telegram from Boston regarding the wool situation: "Boston wool market prices firmer today than at any time this year, There is a vty optimistic tone, due to activity of mill buyers. Market-reporMar-(publ- ic continue active in that boom city, The following figures are furnished by the Twelfth District Regional bank, and show that the City of the An-gels" is nutting up about one third of all the buildings now being erected in the twelfth district. Gosh, but it are to the effect that a Urge would be great to be "dead" like Los Angeles, It is interesting to scan the volume of business is being booked. building figures as given for the Prices are on basia of $1 .25 to $1.30 for fine wools, such as Ohio Delaines, twelfth district cities: scoured basis. Others are: Territory fine staple, $1.25 to $1.30; Texas, $1.25 to $1.30; territory $1.10 to $1.15; territory three-eight- h to $1; territory blood, 65 cents to 30 cents; quarter-blooterritory fine and medium clothing, $1.15 to $1.20." 1 big when he loses. The weather has been hot since we arrived at 'Sioux City and I would sure like to meet one of our mountain breexes coming down the street and have a drink of Kaysville water, "the best wster on earth," as paterfamilias says. Monday morning I left the Mrs., Billie ana Bettie with father and mother Ingles at Jeffers and took train for Chicago, where I arrived a few hours ago. This burg is sure the cats cuff." Our train was about two hours getting in to the depot after we got to town. I have not gone about much but have been to the Tribune building where I found "Judge Galloway, our erstwhile lino operator. "Judge" is the tame old "two by four" only he has taken on fat and is more dignified, as becomes a "Judge. 1 could but marvel at the magnificent, stupendous Tribune building, and was glad that such a structure should have been erected to house the great printing plant from which the paperI ie issued. It is the finest building have ever seen, the highest, the most conmagnificent. It ia a dream in al stands It atone. steel and crete, near Aha east end of a remarkable river, bridge which spans the Chicago a river whoso mouth has been made its bead, it stands near and dwsrfs the great Wrigley chewing gum building it is imposing, it is remarkable, it is sublime, it ia the triumph of a 'ti great architect and a master builder. As I looked up the glorious facade, edop to the cap atone of the great it heat, the sweltering ifice' up through i- I thought of that line Off the old Tabor "How theatre drop curtain In Denver, to -, the back of man, worka the swiftly earth again," then my mind went back to my mountain rimmed valley home, where the summer breete ia coming coo! from the anew fields of the huls & heights, and I saw those eternal times and snow clad peaks, many fn1!? higher, many timea more than this many times more beautiful of man. t- .Treat architectural triumph The foundation of the great Tribune on piles driven into the i bailing rests mud and fclime of tho lake front and stone t, Chicago river; the foundation of my towers and temples in the Wasatch rest in the bosom of Mother t- -i thereof is Goa 4 Earth, and the architectfind us heaJed c will Another week exif back to the west and borne. I in this great time pect an interesting add to my city and shall endeavor to . c! prir'Urr!T'ErrERsoN--- p. S. We Still have Utah air ia Vour tires. ts half-bloo- d, 35-cen- d, Davis High Man Wins in Chicago Jack Burton has written the name So the athletic sky of the nation. A dispatch from Chicago, where the national scholastic track and field meet was held last week, states that Jack Burton of Kaysville, a this year graduate of DavU high school, romped around the track in two races, ahead of all competitors. Following are the results of the events in which Burton participated: run (second race) Won of Davis high 1 440-yar- d -' FORD BUY A FORD A FORD BUY A FORD BUY A FORD BUY BUY A FORD Bin' A FORD C- I c- - 4- lister ,' electrocuted -- -- during Shriners parade. Irishman, speaking to bystander-"Whare those fellows with the red f caps?" ' Bystander- - "They are Shriners." Rat "What a Shriner!" 7 Bystander "A Shriner is a Mason Pat "What the h 1 they marching for? Dont masons get twelve dollars i rk 1 c f1 -- a $ i Layton Auto Co. a day?" by Burton, Kaysville, Utah; Mendal, Oneida, S. D second; B. Baumann, Harrison Tech Chicago,' third; E Howard, Florence, Kan., fourth; R. Hale, Fort Collins, Colo, fifth. Time, :51.1 run (second race) Won by Burton, Kaysville, Utqh; E. Miller, Loveland, Colo, second; Kiser, We8W)-ya- rd 1 i natchee, Wash, third; G. Ilines, Burlington, la, fourth; M. Kendrick, Mount Clemens, Mich, fifth. Time 1:59.8. Young Barton is the son of Mr. and W Mrs. Charles T, Burton of Kaysville, r a, and waa born in this city. Lait year -- o fi -- k -. I i i to the sterling worth of the deceased , and recounted experiences in school . and church work and In the missionary field. They had known him well under all conditions and circumstance and always found him steadfact and tm to hia faith and hla' fellow men. violin The musical number were aolo by Mias Doris Thomley, a vocal. solo by Howard Larkina and selection by a double quartette. The floral offerings were lavish and evidenced ths high respect in which the deceased was held by his neighbors. Fourteen ladies bore the florgl offering foung church and to the jrrave. Th San--depall bearer were Messrs. Newell Paul Ward tringham, William,. Truman Curtia, Mack Swan, Edward Muir. The closing prayer was W. Barnea, At th cemetery the grave waa dedicated by Bishop Frank Hyde. ra. e , , W HY PARADE? PJace and time Salt Lake YOU WILL HAVE NO REGRETS ' rerning preparedness for war. reads that tho day of the bat-- a tleshipa potency has passed then it r,a(ji ,ttementa from ths navys de- fenders claiming that the burden of war will continue for quite a while to be borne by the ships that ride the waves, aided, to be sure, by the ships that skim the clouds. Every one who la alive to what ia going on today realises that the air plane is making steady anf remarkable progress and knows that it An evitably will play a muph more im po riant part in the next war than it did in the last one. .But we suspect that all those thousands who witnessed (he thrilling spectacle of the com bined Atlantic and Pacific fleets as they entered San Francisco harbor believe that the auperdreadnaugb: will be with us for a few years. Despite the revolutionary changes and modem inventions cavalry ha its place in the world war and mules played an important part In motive power though gas engines and electric motors were highly developed. Poison gaa waves, bomb attacks from the air, guns ind other dread agencies of destruction did not eliminate the man with the rifle and the latter had plenty to do in th struggle. So while the airplane unquestionably will continue to become more and more important to nations that expect to remain free and independent, it will be well, also, for such nations to keep the power in the battleships dry., Anne Sunset. .1 .4 t-- - T.7.Y . BUY A H rgs, th pa-raly- sia some nine months ago while playing on a power line on the Reeves farm. The deceased waa prominent la church work and for many yean wa an officer in the Davia stake Sunday school . He wa a student in the University of Deseret with E. M. White- sides and was at all timea interested in the cause of education. He also took a keen interest In civic affair and served as treasurer of Kajrsyill City and filled other public office. The funeral was under the direction of Bishop Frank Hyde, bishop of Kaysville ward. The oiwning prayer waa made by Elder John V. Galley. The speakers' were Klden ' E M; Whitesides, David 'E. Layton, Jame Griddle and Hyrum Smith of Salt lake City, a missionary companion of the deceased. The speakers testified -- bound west. In these caravans there were all sorts and Conditions of ears, and license pistes from most of the states to the east and south. Indeed it seemed that the world was on wheels and everybody some- at 2 p m. U-e- past the headgates of the canal which were Weber and n,rii of silver which will flood a in tokrg into golden doltransformed he ,00 b sale of the products of the ly, fertile soil The foing up the canyon was good and we were soon in a country new to We found about thirteen miles or less rough road before we more f jcbed the Wyoming line, but this etrttrh is being rapidly put in good eeodition. When this work is com- -- fi. Recvea wav stricken with n Monday, Mav 10, and never since that time was then hopes for hi- - reeosrrv. He wa so badly para-hro- d that he never soke nor was he He steadily grew able to sit up. weaker from day to day and died as above recorded The deeeaMsI was a native of Fngw bom in Preaston, land, having I rbsbin. November 7. 1R5.'. While ia small child be, with hi faber and mother and three sisters, emigrated to Amenta and arrived in Utah in the summer of lSfd, and settled in Kye-- 1 ville, slinr he remained until hi death. Roth parents and. his sister have preceded him to the grave. Irt 1K94 he went to his native land on mission for the rhurvh of the laitter Day Saints, of which he waa a member During his missionary labor in England he met Miss Effie Newman, who liecame his wife, and who Burvivea him. Besides his wife he 1 survived by two sons and two daugh- -' ters, Newman and Frank th aon and Muriel and Bessie the daughter. zTjlted J' REEVi he attended the national meet and failed to win- - This year be was among th high individual point win- j ners. Burton arrived home today. James Chipman Is Run Down by Auto James Chipman, sexton of the Kayw-vil-le cemetery, was run down by art automobile driven by youth named ia in tha said to who reside Sharp, point on thcr Syracuse district, at state road near the old Kaysriikr brick yard aite, last night. Mr, Chipman had just stepped front an automobile when he was knocked down and run over by the machine driven by Sharp. This morning it was thought that. Mr. Chipman had not been seriously injured, although his cuts and bruises are painful. Davis Makes Good , in Parade Showing ' ! North and South Dari stakes made fine showings in the great M. L A. parade in Salt Lake City yesterday. . The south Davis stake marc her were under the direction of Albion In line Moss. There were sixty-fivand bore banner bearing the motto., Youth of Today, Leaders of Tomore row North Davia stake Mutuals, beaded by Stake President Henry II. Blood, had 320 marchers In line, including the big band of Syracuse and Layton. The marchers were led by John Soel-be- rg and wore pompons of blue on their hats. On their banner was inscribed, "Truth Our Guide, Righteousness Our Aim. When one conriders the fact that Elder Brigham IL Roberts, commandy, er of the parade, and Charles IL marshal of the day, are ; Ix.tl son of Davis county, w certainly have reason to be proud of our show- -, ' ing. CARD (XT THANKS W wish toex press our grateful appreciation to all who ssif'ted- us sr..l for their expressions of ym; a'Jr of our darink the Ulness and husband and father. MRS. NATHAN REEVES AND FAMILY. Ma-be- DANCING CLASS Next Friday, June 12, at Civic Center Gym. 11 o'clock. |