OCR Text |
Show l' THE JORDAN • -·-- SCtfOOLS LI!:A.U Salt Lake t;ity, Utah c. , ~-pt . lo, ., ..;., ··" .ur-. Jeuen Utah SuipelriQitendeJJt' Ne&llea tot sent.! yQQ the weithat your sc:Uo1s have br~ougbfliaijrnal honors to, our State National a.alth 'l'ow·· na.menf,jjr'J a whica they copJpeted with all the other States in t.he captured more uational .tiiQUlnta, in provortion to her BChool than any other state. 1 pve ..t the news to the Salt IAWe paper~, directly I received word, bat feel JOur own local papers should chronicle the glad event. Pleue extencl the congratulations of the Utah Mlie Health Association to the te. .ars and pupils oi the Willllinl achool,.W express our hopes that they will not relax their efforts in performing tleir health "chores," which will mean 80 much to them in _ , . _ life 4 · Very macerely J • H. W~llis Extntive Secretary Utah P\itUe Health Association • • were going t A RADIC 1:. CHANGI!: IN BBOADCAS'l'ING PROGRAMS ---~ ·-· Broadcasting has grown with such rapidity that atudi9 and program managers have not given attention to many points which, in the near future, will be outstanding features of broadcasting programs. K-F-R-G, Hollywood, California, one af ~he la~est 600-watt Weste~n Eleetric stat1o~s to g~ on . the au·, has created an mnovat10n, u~asmuch .as Mr. M. Turner, the Direc~or, (mternat1onally known as the mventor af the o~iginal nili:r?phon~ and all wave r~o set, bearmg h1s name), after making a close c~nyass of more than ten thousand 7ad1o ow11ers, has reached t~e conclus10n that the owners of radio sets should be allow~d to se.leet the type of program that they w1sh to hear, the same. as they ~el· ect the ty.pe of enter~mment wnen they .pay for theatre ~1ckets. ~1s has re.sulted m . well-~ ~o stats tak~ng ch~rge of defm1te, fiXed hours dunng wh1ch seleeted programs, Tanging from vaudeville to c~ical lJUSic, will be put on the .... -· • It has been found th~t many parties are arranged, dependmg upon these fixed programs for the entertainm?..nt. K: llr. Lorus Baud has opened studios Sandy, 64th Seuth State Street East Vine Sleet Murray, Tele"!'HE WAY OUT" !JIIIiOI14~, Midvale 268-W for the teach-"The Hellenic News of Salt Lake of voice in addition to piano. states that Greece has never attem,pFriday, September 25th the Par- ted to side track or ask for cancelaad Teachers will enjoy a get- latiou of her de.bt to the United social. Watermelons will States. Greece is one of a few nations served and a &'OOd program will that believes in business methods. given. The slogan of the asaociatron "A government bond issue would year will be "Better acholarahip be the most sensible and most equi'thlrolltJ:h better atteD.daDce." table solution of the European debt • • • to us. Surely the people of the var»very Friday a ape'lling co1lteat ious nations llhat owe us money have held among the grades lof the enough confidence in the stability of ,aclllCXJ•L The winDer receives an Amer- their t.ountries to subscribe for bonds, flag and a pieture. The winner aad American investors would eagerly the second week ol the contest take large blocks of sueh bonds which the 8th Grade, under the direetion were baeked by the foreign governH. W. Jorgensen. menta. Such procedure would immed- JOURNAL the Iris to see Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" September 27, 28, 29, 30 iately place those nations on the credit list and bUBinesa would begin to boom because of the liquidation of their debts. Any ._. country which is bacltward in mamng negotiations for the settlement of its debts cann<l't be placed in the ~le da~s and no one wants to do busmess With them. "Europe has Uved in the hopes that an angel would appear that would pay off her iDdebtedness, but they surely must know that it would bt:: folly to rob Peter to pay Paul. The payment of debts puts money into circulation, and not only are ~he people benefited dit-ectly concerned in the financial deal, but all the people reap a benefit because of the good will and new business established. "European states do not want to pay us and our sta.tesmen appear timid about asking for the just rights of their constituents. We talk about our great financial business men, but so far the late war bas failed to produce any outstanding financiers. Mem· bers of commissions stand around tables and discuss negotiations and after six years of parleying they a1·e just where they started. What bus· iness could exist or progress under a similar comlition '! "It just shows that politics is a business f:ailure regardless of how and where transacted." PLAYTIME AT 'GRANITE SCHOOL P. M. Mie}celsen, Teacher Elvira Larsen Age 12. Granite School 7th Grade An interesting feature of our school is our reereation or play period in which we all adjourn to the play· ground and enjoy ourselves by playing games for ten minutes. We leave our school room at 9:60, hurry to the playground and rush back at ten o'clock. Nathaniel Crane Herriman School A. J. Reese, Teacher 7th Grade Mr. M&TVin Freeman left for Idaho last Thursday to spend the winter. •• WINTER WHEArl' o ·uT LOOK GOOD FOR YEAR 1926 Murdered Man Fo1Dld in Burning Car WANT ADS I FOR RENT-6 room modern house on Main Street. Inquire Booth Mere. Co., Midvale. Replumbed and remodeled throughout. Winter wheat production in the 1 United States next year will be con- · siderably in excess of probably domesFIRE INSURANCE-Don't Delay. tic requirements if reported intentions See H. C. Aylett, 320 N. Main. Tel. of farmers to increa><e acreage some 4,000,000 acres above last year are Midvale 36. tf carried out and average yields are secured, the Department of Agriculture FOR SALE-4 room modern house. 172 First Avenue -16-2M points out in its wheat outlook report released today. MOVING--Express, Hauling of all This situation, the department says, kinds. Call Sam, Murray 140-J tlO would place winter wheat on a world market basis. The fact that our marFOR SALE-Tomatoes. 50 cents per ket is now on approximately domestic bushel. Burton M. Oliver, Union, basis is considered largely to have Utah. 8-20-4t brought the present favorable market position of wheat producer'CLYDE L. RADDON The winter wHeat area sown this Teacher of the Violin. For particufall will be in the neighborhood of lars, phone, Midvale 86-J3 -8-27-4t 46,400,000 acres, if farmers carry out MIDVALE HOTEL and Apartmem.ts. the intended increase of 9.7 per cent. Rooms $10.00 monthly and up. Allowing for average abandonment Clean and good service. the area to be harvested next summer would · be about 40,424,000 acres LORUS HAND-Teacher of voice and comnared w1'th 32 813,000 acres harpiano. Studios at: Sandy, Murray .. • vested this year. and 64th South. Call, Midvale-Should the vield be the same as 263-W t-10-9 this year, 12.7 ·bushels per acre, the lowest since 1904, the crops would Milton Klein, mllkman, discovered this burning sedan tn front of 838 East EGGS FOR SALE-Kennedy's Poulreach 613,000,000 or 23 per cent more Eighty-first street, -New York. He turned In an alarm and ftremen responding try yard. 39-4th Avenue wheat than was harvested this year. found a charred bodJ In the car, later ldentlfted u that of Horrls G1'088man, a A crop of 686,000,000 bushels or abou t gang member. He had been shot ftve times and his banlll were tied The car FOR RENT-Furnished or unfurnished apartments. $10.00 up. Wasatch 40 per cent more than this year would bad then been soaked w\tb gasoline and aet on ftre. 6067-W or Midvale 12. be produced should the yield per acre costs an amount approx~mta~ting 1 ¥.! A TRIP WORTH WHILE equal the a~rage of the past ten per cent of our income. This compar- Gladys Crosgrove years, which was 14.6 bushels. Sandy, Utah Age 13. a a The spring wheat crop has aver- ative cost is the mure significant Sandy School aged 263,000,000 bushe1s in the past when we consider that we have in 8th Grade Miss Winn, Teacher II • Combined The Sandy Faculty spent the week! Treatment,both five years, which added to 686,000,- 'our grade and secondary schools alone 126 ti.mes as many American youth end at Brighton. On Saturday they !local and lntemal, and hu been IUCC• 000 bushels of winter wheat would 1 hike<! as to there the three are lakes, inmates Mary, of our Manha p<,Jal fulln inthe treltment of Catarrh for over make a total of 839,000,000 bushels. stitutions. and Katherine. Sunday it rained but I forty yean. Sold by all druuflta. This W'ould produce an exportab~ There is reason to feel flhat when they enjoyed themselves very much.j P. 1• CHENEY 6i. CO., Toledo, Ohio surplus of from 160,000,000 to 240,· 000,000 bushels in the face of an up- thU; conflict clears the vision of the The faculty returnd Sunday, read:r Constitution's founders will be vin- for school Monday. j Suits Made To Order ward trend in world production. European countries have been grad- dicated-that this will be proved a First class work guaranteed ually expanding wheat acres to the fraternal nation. We have "Agencies CRESCENT PARENTS SUPPORT Ladies Tailoring point that the area in 19 European of hope" that lead us to this conA Specialty THE SCHOOL countries is now 92 per cent of the clusion. They are such institutions as H. F. RASMUSSEN Sandy, Utah e-stimated prewar average. The wheat the social welfare and service o.rgan- .E mily Allgood TAILOR 8th Grade areas in Australia, Argentina and izations; the press and radio; the Crescent School Clothes Cleaned, Pressed H. W. Jorgensen, Teacher Canada have also been increased, so church, the home, and the school. Educators are already at and Repaired the task. September 13, 1926, the Parents and that the wheat acreage in these three j 1 West Center Street countries combined is now about 63 rhey sensed the situation and for Teachers held a meeting in the Cressome time in conference groups the cent School House. They eleeted new Phone Midvale 117-W per cent above the prewar av~rage. subject of character develoJM11ent and officers. Mr. H. Lanocaster was elected Farmers, in planning their plant;dvale, Utah ing, the department says, should con- citizenship training has received tlheir as prisident, H. W. Jorgensen, vicesider Mt only the outlook for total attention. It is a program not of talk president and Mrs. Clara Brown, treawheat crop but also the outlook for but of action. Already many have surer. Executive committee is as folthe eloass of wheat produced. In re- transtlated their thinking into cours- lows: Mrs. Beth Thomas, Mrs. Maud cent years the United States has con· €'S of study for definite instruction. Hanger, Mr. A. C. Morris and W. H. Garner. sumed for feed, seed, and in mill Others are following. Educa·tion is the greatest single foe grindings, approximately 230,000,000 Mr. Lorus Hand has opened studios bushels of soft red winter, 200,000,- of crime, The m!IISs of the vicious desare belnr quickly at Sandy, 64th South State Street tructive and criminal are from Jess and capitaliata. 000 bushels of hard red winter and If you haYe an Innntlon, eend ua a about 60,000,000 bushels of white educated levels. The exceptions are so and East Vine Sreet Murray, Telemodel or sketch• for ae&rCh and report on patentability. wheat, in addition to practically all fow as to be conspicuous. Education phone, Midvale 263-W for the teachOur book on.r.at.eut. and t.rade-mlll'lr:a the hard red spring wheat produced. is the inspiration of reason and rea- ing of voice in addition to piano. The experience of the paSt few years :;on inspires respeet for order. There can be no liberty without TURKISH CHIEF indicates that these quantities of these law. If we are to becomoe more of a classes can be disposed of within the 7th & E. Stt., Wuhlngto1, D. C. FAVORS WOMEN law-abiding nation we will first reUnited States without competition in •atabll•hed In t see. cognize the necessity of having <>ur foreign markets. educational institutions organized as Beautiful Unveiled Faces Appear on tradning camps fC1l' citizenship and Streets; Men Discard Turbans. intelligent as men and must know -~econd, making provisions that our No Liberty \Vithout Law young people come under their in- Constantinople, September 15- AI- tihat there is no good reason why though President Mustaph Kemal has they should cover their faces. How fluence. divorced his wife, the former Latife they m\}St suffer in this heat." On this, the 138th Anniversary of Hanoum, his interests in the modernFrom Ineboli the president returnthe framing and signing of the Conization of Turkish women, which was ~d to Castambol, where he had preonce attributed to the young girl of viously spoken in the same vein. He stitution of tlhe United States, we are GRANITE SCHOOL STUDENT advanced ideas whom he made his was greeted by crowds of women who called on to tak.P. note of the document BODY bride, has not wanted. that gave this nation a new birth and for the first time in their lives applaced in the records tho~ ideals and "Let Turkish women whow their peared in the streets unveiled. All the Age 13. faces to tqa world; Jet them look the male citizens, w'ho, on his former aspirations which have made us great. Merle Miller Granite School 8th Grade world in the face," the president urg- visit, had without exception worn the The Constitution crystallized into basic law a government by the people P. M. Mickleson, Teacher ed in a recent speech at Ineboli, a fez, kalpak or turban, were wearing and established a republic with a The Primary eleetion of the Granite Black sea port, in a district impreg- straw hats. The president waved his guarantee of quality before the law. School students, including 6, 7, and nated with fanaticism and conserva- own panama at the crowda in answer We deem it important, t'herefore, to tism. His audience of 1000, naif of to their hu1T8Jhs. read in its pages not only the privi· 8th ~ades wa.s bel? September 8. whom were women, muffled in the leges but the obligations of citizen- Our fmal election w1ll be held Sep- traditional Moslem veil a 1 ded tember 16, the third Tuesday in Ithusiastically ' pp au en- Th • ship as well. 1ends of Emma Crane met September. In order to relate to you "S · e fr To many thinking people a period ure 1Y our women can be easily at her home last Fr"d · 1 ay an d surpr1swhy. we have our election is becauFe I d d . . has arison that is putting our Con- ln 1 1923 the Granite School students pr~lsu'~ ~ to th~ow as de their heavy er her. Games were played and lunchstitution through a severe test. They made a school constitution. In our vel s, e conbnue<l. "They are as ~n served to thirty guests. contend that hwnan forces are at work undermining American ideals. constitution are school laws and of- 1 They hold before us such "agencies fices and the students are expected of despair" as lawlessness, radical- to live up to the law~o in the constiism, polieital favoritU.m, class hatred, tution. Twice a year we elec .. new illegal trafficing, jury-fixing, loose officers for the oflflices. The offices j application of pardoning power, all of are as follows: Chairman, Secretary, which have become a menace to con- Treasulrere, Sanitary Inspector, Li· l brarian, Assistan Ltibrarian, Social stitutional foundations. We have fallen on days where there Manager, Sheriff, Boy Ball Captain, i is a laxity in respect for law and Girl Ball Captain. order, a defiance of the sanctity of Mrs. Alice Bowen entertained the person and property. Since all forms of human behavior are more or less ladies of the Farm Bureau at her ! contageous it is important that we home Friday afternoon of last week. l oonsider the conditions and bhe re. The time was spent in sewing. Luncheon was served to: Mrs. George medy. In the penal institutions of tire Smith, Mrs. A. H. Dansie, Mrs. 0. United States there are today 200,000 R. Freeman, Mrs. ~ill Swan, Mrs. persons convicted of crime. This does Spencer Miller, Mrs. Walter E. Crane not tell the whole story when we con- Mrs. Nephi Buttterfield, Mrs. J. R. sider those wbo go unpunished o.r un- Freeman, Mrs. Henry Butterfield, deteeted. Recent figures show the Mrs. Joseph H. Crump, Mrs. Sarah ' cost of the crime to be about 81,4 per M. Butterfield and Mrs. Arminta cent of the nation's income, a start- Miller. Everybody Invited ling sum to expend on a destructive force. Unfortunately this does not re- John Bowls .Herriman School present the total outlay. It is but nee- Age 14 8th Grade essary by way of illustration to note A. J. Reese, Teacher the cost of burglary insurance and The friends of Mr. and Mrs. Neilcontrast the rate wibh some other haz- son met at their home Thursday evard as fire. On the other hand, edu- ening and chirivaried them. Games cation, our createat ccmetl'UCIIiive force were played ud luncheon served. • I' Ball'• Cata••h Medlelae PATENTS for your old o:tosWiFT A co. Coffee Pot. Dariq September only we will allow you $1 for your old coffee pot aa part payment on a wonderfully,,finc Electric Percolato r •peciaUy deaianed for every day service in the ho-. ' The rrict il $5.75 but i you turn in your old coffee pot k costa yoa oaly- r---------------------------1111! ,. I 1 Big W.O. W. DANCE at UNION AMUSEMENT HALL MONDAY NIGHT, Sept. 28th Watch for our unparalleled offer for OCTOBER ONLY. A c=~ete laundry equipment for the home that will paJ.; for · many times over in the savings it makes. A Tickets 50c -Ladies Free ---------------~------~ |