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Show THURSDAY, JULY THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVILLE, UTAH PAGE 2 Jeanette Platt was uT' and. the activities lasted until late to Miss club Wedne&dat,, her bridge sports, in the evening. Games, 1. . Dinner was ,erJ the were ning July luncheon and program, features .of the day. The following patriotic program was given: Stars Spangled Banner, congregation; invocation, Bishop Hatch; selection, girls chorus, America For Me; salute " to the flag, Boy Scoots; address, Wiiford Wood, of Independence Significance Day"; selection, Salter orchestra, Royal Palm; selection, girls chorus, Grand J)ld Flag, and a FiUhM br THE INLAND PRINTING COMPANY Entered as second-clas- - matter February 15, 1911, at Kaysvllle, Utah, s 'under the the Act of March 8, 1879. Advertising .Rates on Application. Subscription $2.00 a year in advance. TELEPHONES ' C. A. Epperson, No. 124 Preston M. Budge, No. 151 : C. V. K. Saxton, No. 70 Office No. 10 ; 7:30, and the evening bridge. Those present wer., Rodney StringhamMiss Mann, Mrs. Gilbert Huffman, u Christie Eldredge, Mrs, Wilh llepworth, Miss Marjorie and Ireta Argyle. George G. Smith, of LoMb a guest at the Walter Grant ho last week. . Mr. and Mrs. Lenard announce the birth of a dauehS? born Monday, June 29. Mr. and Mrs. David Holbrook ai family Spent the week-en- d at lake. Mrs. Marie Price was a , her sister, Mrs. Philander gunt Ht,i last week end. Mrs. Clarence Roberts and tui ily lire guests of Mr. and Mr, J? vocal solo, Doris Eakle, God Gave Me America. service was held g A for Elder Andrew Gwinn Sunday evening at the South Bountiful church. The following program was presented: cornet solo, Irvin Moss; reading, Mary.Tovey; talk, Wiiford Wood; vocal solo, Isaac Atkinson, and remarks, Andrew ClarencsJYinegar at Wendell, Gwinn. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Telford and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jackson spent July 4 and 5 at Granddaddy lakes. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Roberts are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Roberts. Mrs. Clarence Stewart is improving and expects to return ta her home in Kaysville next week. She has been ill for four months, and has. spent most of that time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Argyle, Sr. Mr. and - Mrs. James Arbuckle ami Mr. and Mrs. Emer Arbuckle and families formed a swimming party at Becks July 4. Hal Eldredge returned Tuesday from Butte, Montana, where he has -been the guest of his brother, Eluotii.tr wh.t iareu bert Eldredge. can be packed la i Best Mrs. Zippora Nelson and son; as you hear the voice word Richard, spent th past week at one of Mrs. you love. And long Bingham with Mr. and frank Buck. distance costs so llttls now. For example, station to its home-comin- 1 Enforce Water Dairymens Regulations The new schedule for watering of lawns and flowers in Kaysville goes into effect Friday, July 10. Each home owner will be allotted a two-hoperiod three times a week ample if the water is used right. Lawn grass roots ' only penetrate into the ground a few inches, and a soaking which penetrates more than this distance is a waste; flowers and shrubs will thrive with only one good soaking a week. situation is serious this year. The streams and springs have fallen rapidly during the past ten days, and no one can forecast how small the supply will be. There will be ample water, however, if all citixens will cooperate. No water should be wasted, and absolutely nothing butfflowers, shrubs and lawns should be irrigated. Last year during the shortage of water caused by the floods in Webbs canyon, the people in the upper part of town were out of water for a number of days. There was no excuse for this. Water was being stolen deliberately to water lawns and gardens, while neighbors did not have water to drink. Members of the city council and Marshal Frank Williams should enforce this law, and law - abiding citixens should help them. A person who steals water from his neighbor deserves no consideration. ur The-wat- er League Cooperative association, a pioneer in the far eastenTfield. All activities of the association, according to F.f II. Sexauer, its president, center on . the one idea of equitable returns to its members, and assured and protected markets. As a result, the volume of milk sold and handled by the association during 1930 in spite of depression and decreased consumption was well in excess of the previous year. The associations membership Increased by several thousand, bringing the total to nearly 60,000. At the end of ten years of operation the association has 239 plants, handling a vast volume of dairy products. The dairy industry, Mr. Sexauer said, must look forward to lower prices for its products for several years in the future. To meet this producing economy and cooperation between three groups the cooperative, the independent dairymen and the distributor. They must work together, unselfishly, for the benefit of the industry as a whole if success is to be achieved. The banker, the minister, the teacher, the merchant everyone with an interest in American prosperity must be affected, for good or ill, by conditions within the dairy industry, What one cooperative has done and is doing, other cooperatives in other localities can do.. Only through cooperation can a stable market and a fair price be assured. The Dairymen's League, and similar enterprises, have pointed the way that leads toward sound 6000 ten the last years During banks have closed their doors with agricultural development. losses of nearly $2,000,000,000 to 7,000,000 depositors. In 1930 alone 1326 financial institutions went Bank and Bankers under. This loss is appalling. Some of the banks closed because of speculative tendencies; some closed because bank officials were not true to their trust; others closed because of the general depression, particularly in .agricultural sections which have been hit hard during the last few years. Here in Davis county we have never bad a bank failure. The officials of our banks know their business and they are . true to their trust Agriculture here has felt the depression, but our banka are still solvent stronger even than they were a few years ago. It is worth- - h great deal to this county to have banks and bankers of this kind doing business here. A Warning For some time past Chicago has stood before the public as unable to pay many of its current bills, due to lack of tax funds. .Jhe mayor has stated that he does not know how the city will find its way out of its difficulties. Without going into the reasons for Chicagos financial troubles, the situation is an object lesson for other municipalities. It proves that too much spending can embarrass an individual, a city, county, state or nation. Chicago has the power of taxation to eventually pull itself out of the hole but even the power to tax can be carried to a point where the people refuse to pay. The disproportionate increase in taxation throughout the nation compared to growth population and wealth, is a warning to ease up on raids on the public treasury. Oiling Dirt Roads Beneficial According to the bureau of public roads, the experienceof the Missouri state highway department in the treatment of earth, roads with oil since 1928 should be of value to other states and communities interested in low cost improvement of secondary or feeder roads to main highways. The experiments reveaLthat the character of oil used must vary with local conditions. Soils which are naturally firm and dry, such as g clay, require only water-proofin- ews Comment Gold and silver medals were recently awarded to parents of large ve . Hal Odell left recently for the Fackrell, of Woods X,Mrs. WilHawaiian Islands, where he will liam Eldredge, of Salt Lake, and Mrs. G. R. Eldredge, of Bountiful. spend a month. Mrs. Miss Laura Astel, who is . em- Refreshments were served. was in assisted serving Eldredge. ployed in the recorder's office at the U, of U. is spending her vaca- by her granddaughters, Effie, Jennie, and Betty. tion at Brighton. Mrs. James Rich entertained her Mrs. Clarence Eldredge enterimand the . depression needed tained Tuesday evening at a de- bridge club at the home of her provements in the home, and a de- lightful musical. John Parrish mother, Mrs. Brigham Holbrook, cent wage to pay for them. Luncheon was gave a very splendid concert to the last Thursday. Those served to seven club members and lovers gathered. music Buttons, glaxed paper, adhesive present were Mr. and Mrs. Fred one guest. Miss Hilda Steinbleck. South Bountiful celebrated the tape, combs and artificial ivory are Rich, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walton, manufactured from the casein in Mr. and Mrs. Hyrum Parrish, of Fourth of July in a pleasing manmilkin the east. Centerville, Mr. and Mrs. James ner. The singers of the ward serA. Eldredge, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. enaded the town at an early hour, There were 416 divorces in Reno last month, and of this number more than, 100 were remarried immediately. Trading wives has at last been legalised. Fifteen years ago there were a few electric refrigerators in operation, and these were in the homes of the rich. Today there arg 3,000,000 in operation and factories are working overtime to supply the demand. This illustrates the only cure for unemployment i tion day rates 60c Bath AlcohoL...37e, 3 for $1 50c Milk of Magnesia ..39c 75c Silk Sanitary Aprons 33c 25c Long Tube Dr. West Tooth ...29c Paste, 2 for. $1.00 Bathing Caps ...79c from Kaysville, Utah Eureka 80c Oalle Kaysvillea Drug Store It J rick ........ ...... ...45c to: Helper $1.05 Srwhe u alM mIm era lama Expect from your druggist as muc) as you do from your doctor. Saturday and Sunday Colville Sweet Cream Ice Cream . 50c Bulk, quart ..... . hr 'XstCeMLatf Distance 'NwbarrtefM?' TELEPHONE-ill THE SMOOTHNESS OF AN EIGHT THE ECONOMY OF A FOUR as ( . one-thi- rd same-gentle- has-alway- ANNOUNCES SfMCDUTH men FLOATING P O WE R s Ajfbert B. Fall is reported to be Mrs. Robert Hatch and Mrs. well enough to go to Jail and serve Lenard will entertain the Winegar a years sentence. It is to be hoped K. K. K. club at the Skatter Karo" that the report is true justice dub - in - Farmington Friday, July should not be allowed to interfere 10. when a man is not feeling well, Mrs. Edward Jensen, who had especially when the theft runs into her tonsils removed Friday, is doreaL money. Of course, if he had ing very well. stolen something because he was Grandma Ballard is visiting in hungry, that would have been dif- Trinadad, Colorado. ferent. Mrs. James H. Howard returned Tuesday from a month spent in Herr Max Schmeling sailed for Seattle with her Mrs. his home in Germany last Tuesday Leo Scott, who was daughter, Miss formerly with over $100,000 of American Lavaun Howard. Mrs. Scott acmoney in his pocket. How about companied her mother home. some reparations on this fight? Mr. and Mrs. Lee and family are this week at Brighton. , spending Jack Dempsey had to dig down Mrs. Ralph McFarland, of Los in his pocket and make up the loss Angeles, has been guest of of the prise fight he promoted at Mrs. Robert Hatch the for the past Reno on the' Fourth of July. Re- week.- member the fight at Shelby, MonMr. Clifford 7Argyle left Friday tana, Jack, And make the best of. it. for a two weeksr motor trip through Canada. Three' million British workers are threatened with wage reductions, xo that articles made in England can compete with other markets, It is surprising how. many miHionirescan retire in a. country where wages have to be cut in his-tor- V -- - - -- SLAUGHTERS Gas Oiling :: Greasing Battery Service : General Auto Repairing Plymouth challengea with .... double- drop frame Plymouth challengea with entirely hew styling, with new beauty of line and color Plymouth challenges with full-Safety-Sfebody, with wire wheel eye-compe-Hii To produce in an achievement In motor car design, engineering and pricing so revolutionary that it transcends every previous standard of quality, performance and value in the field of lowest price is to challenge the world. That is precisely what the New ' Plymouth does. Plymouth challenges with one of the 1931 under the Plymouth hood, and many guessed the New Plymouth to be an Eight Plymouth challenges, with Free Wheeling in all forward speeds the . Here is power unsljackkd, yet .power as smooth .as satin, .as soft as velvet Here 2S10 Washington Avenue si el standard, with hydraulic makes It possible to shift from second to high and from high back to second ' at speeds of 35 or 45 miles an hour I Plymouth challenges with 56 brake test horsepower Plymouth challenges with internal hydraulic brakes , wipe out all earlier conceptions of fine motoring field challenges your in the lowest-pric- e tention. See it today. Drive it yourself. L the New Plymouth prove its superiority- - Plymouth challenges with anew, easy - shift transmission which . shock absorbers. 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If conat a mad dog last week with a ditions in France are like they are in the United States, we think they shotgun and the shot ricocheted should have been give the Croix de from the pavement into a crowd of 14 young people and wounded four. Guerre. We do not know which is worse, a dog or an armed men with as leaders can be Gang eliminated mad if you have honest men on the Job little judgment as this policeman and a real purpose, says Attor- showed. j. ney General William DeWitt, the The eight-ds- y heat wave which man behind the federal forces in their recent drive against the big ended July 3, was responsible for gangsters. Mr. DeWitt has dem- the death of 1450 persons, killed off onstrated his belief, but all the livestock by the thousends and gangsters have not disappeared yet caused crop damage of not less by a long ways. Apparently there than $10,000,000. Apparently Old are more gangsters than there are Sol has become disgusted at our at"honest men with a real purpose. tempts at birth control and over production of livestock and crops, Celebration of the nations birth- and is taking a hand in the game. day anniversary July 4 cost the We admit that he does a good job. lives of 175 people. Fireworks were responsible Alfonso still claims that he has for only two deaths this year, the lowest rate not resigned from the Spanish ever recorded. Automobiles were throne, nor has any intention of the cause of about of the doing so, and that he has merely deaths. We rave about firecrack- temporarily suspended his exercise ers and a sane Fourth of July, of sovereign powers. ' Alfonso and then get in an automobile and would certainly be a prince of act like we are insane. salesmen we cant imagine anyone getting rid of him. Dr. Eugene Lyman Fisk, author of How to Live, died last MonThe English house of commons day at the age of 64, while on a was recently thrown into an uproar vacation to Germany. Now we are which ended in a and tumrough wondering if we should take this ble fight hitting, kicking, scratchbook off the shelf or if it is anothand pulling hair. And then er case ofnot practicing .whath ing, these will meet preached. tomorrow and talk of disarmament, brotherly love, and the utter waste France has agreed to the plan of spending money for armies and recently advanced by President navies. It may be time for the lion Hoover for a suspensions! war and the lamb to lie down together debts and reparation payments for if the lion isnt hungry. one year! This is a victory for Hoover, but it is also a victory for France. France WOODS CROSS feared a powerful Germany, and a refusal Correspondent to strike when the enemy is down MRS. FRANK B. MUIR shows real sportsmanship. Telephone: Bountiful 127-- with a relatively light oil. soils, such as sand, need application of heavier oils to bind their particles together. has found that oil , Missouri treatment is especially effective In solving the problem of wash and erosion in roads built of soils. In certain areas, the - highway department was facing the .necessity of purchasing additional rights of way in order to obtain earth for replacement of shoulders removed by erosion. Then oil treatment was tried, and the erosion immediately' stopped--wita consequent reduction in maintenance costs. Furthermore, ordinary - vehicular - traffic .is .beneficial, .to the oil surfaces, through a kneading process. It is recommended, however, that the use of tractors on jrach roads be restricted. Almost any state or county can follow Missouris lead. Oil treat- order to get business. ment makes it possible to give Fifteen people were overcome rural areas adequate, weatherproof roads at the lowest possible and one succumbed to a heart attack when 80.000 people tried to cost. cram themselves into the baseball park at Chicago last Sunday. The Ccr-crat- icn turnout was the biggest in the Value y of the Chicago Cubs. If this val depression" doesnt end soon, big( ' . rxtlves can de for the ger and better baseball parks will ' : l cz: llfiad by tho have to be built. Non-cohesi- THRILLS situation, there must be greater Mountain Road Accsciate Dealers KcyrrdUe, Ifc |