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Show Page Dat-wyle- r, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. was preUtahs poultry and dairy farm- Fred Datwyler, Logan, her Golden Gleaner pin reers will have an opportunity sented Mrs. Lois Riggs, Gleanto attend the Pacific Dairy cently by of the Layton Stake and Poultry association conven- er supervisor YWMIA. tion right here in their own front Miss Datwyler is a member of yard next week. The convention the Layton Fourth ward. She is a is scheduled at the Hotel Utah in USAC and is teachof Salt Lake City, March 17, IB and graduate the in the Layton elementary 19 and all Utah farm people are ing school. For the past two years, invited and urged to attend. she has lived here. own Utahs CONSERVATION PROGRAM ASKS FARMERS' AID Layton Maid Wins High Award Miss Birdean LAYTON Dairy, Poultry Convention Set In Salt Lake Ezra Taft Benson, secretary of agriculture, will be one of many nationally prominent speakers. The latest developments in both the poultry and dairy industries will be outlined at the convention. Edwin Gossner of Smithfield is president of the Pacific Dairy and Poultry Association this year and will preside at the convention. UPSTAIR- S- Charles P. Rudd of Salt Lake City is general chairman of the event, which is expected to attract dairy and poultrymen from all western states and also from midwest and eastern states. Secretary Benson will make his address at the noon meeting on Saturday, March 19. Cliff D. Carpenter, president of the Institute of American Poultry C. Housh, Industries; Chester president of the National Turkey Federation; Merrill Warnick, president of the American Dairy Association; Russell Fifer, executive secretary of the American Butter Institute, are just a few of the outstanding farm leaders who will speak at the convention. President Gossner says: This is a wonderful opportunity for the farmers of Utah and we hope that a large delegation will turn out for the meetings and take advantage of this chance to get the newest ideas in both the dairy and poultry industries. Its going to be a wonderful convention. A cheerful temper joined with innocence will make beauty attrac- DOWNSTAIR- S- a.m, in the A.S.C. office on Wcet Gentile Street in Layton to pie-vie- w the 1930 program. Suggestions will be invited at that time in an effort to better serve the needs of the conservation Davis County FARMINGTON program in the area. farmers and represnetatives of farm groups are to have a voice in planning the 1930 Agricultural Conservation program, so stated E. Glenn Green, chairman of the StabilizaAgricultural County tion and Conservation committee. All farmers are invited to meet with the representatives of the farm agencies on March 10 at 9:30 j By Harry Marlowe The 91st Utah Legislature acand complished the impossible thereby made history. They managed to do what no legislature since 1931 has been able to do although nearly every session since it. legislators came up 3911 has tried The 193.7 with a reapportionment plan that passed. Naturally, the plan is not all that everyone would have liked to see. No compromise proposal will ever please everyone. But it went quite a long way to taking care of a number of inequities. First, and probably foremost, the plan divides Salt Lake, Weber and Utah Couties into senatorial districts. This means the Senate make up will reflect every passing political change in these counties. Under the plan, Salt Lake will have six senators (losing one) and Weber and Utah will still have two each. ' By setting up the Senate membership at 23, and cutting Salt Lake by one, rural control of the Senate Three counties was realized. got Iron, Washington and Sevier That a senator by themselves. makes up the increase and several of the counties got a realignment. For instance, Wasatch was taken away from a five county district, and goes into a senatorial district with Duchesne. Dagget was added to Uintah County in another change. That leaves Wayne, Garfield, Piute and Kane Counties four of the smallest, lumped into the only district with more than tive, knowledge delightful, and wit three counties. Joseph Addison. In the House, Salt Lake goes up two, Weber and Davis add one each and Sanpete loses one. That makes Speaking of G4 members and takes care of the biggest inequities populous Davis PUBLIC SAFETY County having only one representative and Sanpete with a declining The nations traffic accident tolls population, having two. and in injury, .death, property By 1900, when the census is damage on our highways would be taken, Davis, Salt Lake, Weber cut tremendously if all states followed Californias procedure to and Utah will all go up. And that assure safe visibility at night. is as it should be. The plan, as we The National Street and Traffic said before, is not the best in the Safety Lighting Bureau points out that all California freeways now world. But it does not hurt anyone And have safety lighting as an integral unduly and it is workable. construction of the original part the very fact that it passed makes plans. This is a tremendous forward history. step, Edmond C. Powers, LightWith the lawmakers through, or ing Bureau educational director, nearly so, an overall look shows says. Only a few years ago, it was that the 1935 Legislature did a not uncommon to build a freeway, pretty good job. They held the line expressway, or highway first and pretty well on expenditures. install the lights later. This was extremely costly in They raised as much added reeconomic losses from accidents venue as they could without unduly caused by unsafe visibility and in increasing taxes, even though the the expense of tearing up the paving, running in conduit, setting $44, 000, (WO plus minimum school fund will necessitate a statewide poles, etc. On all new freeways, it is now property tax of no mean proporthe policy in California to illuminate deceleration lanes tgjd ramp tions. What to do about school financoutlets, ramp inlets and acceleration lanes, as well as other points ing remains a problem that will of conflict in interchange reas. have to be faced more and more in Rural traffic accidents now account for 2 Vt times as many deaths an expanding population. But the as urban mishaps and accidents 1935 Legislature faced with a big due to unsafe visibility due to injob and without too many tools adequate lighting are a major facwith which to work as far as tor m this tremendous toll. Engineering safe lighting into financing went, did a workmanlike the original plans for new highjob. ways, .rather than installing the lighting after the highways are built would greatly reduce the accident tolls and save road construction dollars as well. The procedure of designing lighting into original plans seems worthy of serious consideration at the present time in view of the cx-- " tensive highway construction program proposed for the Federal government in addition to those planned by the states.? x ' good-nature- March 12, 1033 JOURNAL T1II3 2 fat VrvA hv rfai ftwnd Your Honor, I dont think youll have to charge the jury much! I A weekly newspaper published In the interests of the residents of Davis County, at Layton, Utah.! matter at Entered as second-clas- s Layton, Utah, under the Act of March 8, 1879. j Published By INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 MEMBER- UTAH STATF WCOATIO NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Natl Advertising Representative Advertising Service 222 No. Michigan Are. j Newspaper Chicago, that lonesome hour, when you long for family, friend In or sweetheart take heartl Theyre just seconds away, 111. Your Bedroom Closef- - Those Spare Things Will Get You Spare Dollars Fast Youve money to spare good n quick by disposing of needless things through Classified ads! Keflex and Leader readers search the For Sale columns every day for items like those youve standing around idle, gathering dust. Get your useless articles together, then, and make ready cash out of em! Its so easy and economical, its a crime NOT to do it! . by "long distance." Lloyd E. Anderson Editor Manager Mary B. Bowring News Editor J. Y. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager For helpful, efficient service . . . PHONE KAYS. 10 ad-writi- ng REFLEX and LEADER for fastest service.,; CALL BY HUMBER! In THE REFLEX and JOURNAL Best Results Obtained From Placing Ads and Want Ads f Subscription: $1.00 Per Year j j Payable in Advance. In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. I In T The JOURNAL d. E It Fast Action . Want Ads Reach Over 6,000 Homes in Davis County For Only . . . 5c j 5 ' |