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Show • J THE JORDAN o·tJftN AL ~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~~9 ~e~:~~~! ~e~!r~rtg~:t:~:~: lel~~~ Leak 8. They were also awarded a West Jordan Star Scout badge. Scoutmaster Virgil Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hogan, Mr. and Goates of West Jordan and Joseph Mrs. George Henderson spent Holt of South Jordan were the main afternoon in Salt Lake. speakers. Charles Cockayne is on the sick went to the Pantages and list this week. spring3 after which they reNora Bateman is spending the sumand attended the dance at mer in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Page and children of Riverton were guests of John Yates has been suffering with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. poisoning in his hand the last Bateman Sunday. weeks. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Asay of MidGordon Drake is very dll at his vale visJ.ted Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. !IVIJuc, with leakage of the heart and Adams several days last week. complications. Mrs. Arthur Dimo'nd and children and Mrs. Stewart .Sexton of of Magna spent Sunday visiting her Colo., Nick Migos of Park mother, Mrs. Emily Wardle. , Mr. and Mrs. Pete Cusis, Mr. Mrs. L. L. Baker and children Gene Mrs. Pete Bakulas, Mr. and Mrs. and Evaughn of Springville is visitPappas and Bertha Hendrickson ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank ~rrned a party and went to Liberty Spratling. Mrs. Baker was formerly Friday to see the prince and Miss Grace Spratling. ~ItCel!S of Sweden. Miss Gel€tta Egbert of Salt Lake Mrs. Gus Pappas entertained at spent Sunday visiting her brother IIIUier Sunday in honor of Mr. and Henry Egbert who has been ill fo;. Stewart Sexton of Salida, Colo. several weeks. ~v<>r" were laid for ten guests. T•he many friends of Austin But-Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Williams and terworth are pleased to see he is able Anna, Max, Ruby and Dale to be in his store again after his here Sunday. serious illness a few weeks ago. Earl Egbert and 'I.!helma Henderson 1 Vila Jensen arrived home last week attencied a party at Union Tuesday 1 from the L. D. S. hospital where she at the home Lorane Barrett underwent an operation for appendiin honor of Harold Payne who citis. leaving for Minnesota soon. Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Newell and chilMr. and Mrs. Wm. Charles Blight dren visited with relatives at the L. Bennion are receiving congratula- D. S. hospital Sunday after which on the birth of a son. Mrs. they motored to Fort Douglas and .,.. 1, ... was formerly Miss Emma Car- attended the band concert. a member of our ward a few Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Silcox and ago. family spent Tuesday afternoon and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baird and chi!- evening at Liberty park. Wanda, Verda, Frank and Bon-j Theron Webber and Walter ShepGean, Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Bate-! ard are spending the summer at and son, Gerald, Myrtle Cundick Park City where t~ey have employ--Elmer Palmer were dinner guests ment. the home of Mrs. Lydia Bateman Randell Walker is spending the summer at Soldier Summit. Alfred Furse has bought a house Grace Malmstrom entertained the Bingham and is m·oving it down following girls at a slumber party his lot on Bingham highway where Tuesday night: Edna Malmstrom, expects to have a home completed Ora Finlayson and Gweneth Silcox. the near future. Swimming and refreshments were enMilton Lancaster, A. J. Sabey, 1 joyed. Bateman and Lynn Hart arGrace Lancaster spent last week in home after a most interesting Salt Lake guest of Miss Florence through Yellowstone park. Gosling. I The regular dance Friday night The fatllers and sons outing will a huge success, the same or- be at Lambs canyon Friday, Saturtb ....tr·a will furnish the music Fri- day and Sunday. night, July 16. Everybody come. Miss Bemice Ba~eman joined a A large number from the ward at- party of the Gleaner and Beehivr 1en1ied the dance at South Jordan Fri- girls of Sandy Third ward and is night to see the last of the series spending the week at Brighton. prize fox trots which was won by Hyrum Walker of Soldier Summit Freeman and Vera Saunders of spent Sunday with his family. llu:rray. Mrs. Ina Johnson of Salt Lake was Wl!dn.es<lay afternoon, July 7th, the the guest of Mrs. Arthur Richardson klflloV~rin~ friends surprised Miss Alice Sunday and Monday. The Primary,boys ball team played at the home of her parents, Mr. Mrs. D. M. Todd on Bingham with the Sandy boys Monday afterlrlll!'hV~rav Effie Furse, Florence noon. Score 6 to 11 in Sandy's favor. Mr. and Mrs. George Goodridge Au•uu. Margaret Squires, Louise WebMr. and Mrs. Milton Goodridge, Mr. Butterworth and Burton and Mrs. Austin Peterson joined a The aftemoon was spent in party of friends and spent Sunday at games and refreshments were Saratoga. Miss Ida and Gerald Seegmiller of Mrs. William Stevenson and daugh spent the week end as guests ter Milla May of Los Angeles is visitMr. and Mrs. J. T. Adams. ing her br~>ther, Frank Cooper. A number from West Jordan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Woolf and att.emled the Boy Scout court of hon- Erma Woolf of Murray visited at the held at South Jordan Sunday home of Mr. and Mrs. John Yates The boys from West Jordan Wednesday evening. Don't forget to read the big announcement for the twenty fourth celebration at West Jordan in this issue. Doctor of The funeral of Margaret, the daughter of Mr. and Mr$. Milon Tilberry was held at South Jordan, July 9. Margaret lost her life while in Over bathing at her home in Idaho, July 4. The ten nay old daughter of Mr. Comer Meat & Grocery and Mrs. Rupert Silcox died with Office Hours: pneumonia Sunday July 5 at Magna. Work on the new home of Austin 10 to 2 Butterworth on Red Wood road is 6:30 to 7:30 rapidly progressing and will be an ornament to that part of the ward. MIDVALE, UTAH A large crowd from the ward atANTED TO RENT-2 or 3 fum- tended the old folks outing at Salt iahed rooms. Notify Joumal and air Wednesday, July 14. Roy Thorp, 11 year old son of Ed tenant will be no-tified. tf Thorp of Salt Lake who has been visiting his aunt,. Mrs. W .W. Malstrom had the misfortune to be thrown off a horse Tuesday afternoon and is suffering with a very house, bad fracture of the bone between the 1t elbow and shoulder of his right arm, SALE-Return ticket to Los besides the fracture his elbow was Angeles, g()()d until July 9th. Will pulled out of place. He is resting as aell for $8.50, worth $25. Call well as can be expected at the present Neils Lind, phone Mid 136-W. 1t writing. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Finlayson and family of Salt Lake visited his par~E:NTS WANTED IN MIDVALE ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Finlayson TERRITORY. 'Sworn proof of $75 per w~k, $1.50 •an hour for .spare Sunday. time. Introducing Finest Guaranteed Hosiery. 120 styles and colo.rs. Low prices. Auto furni·~ No capitaJ. or experience neces~ry. Time is the most valuable of all HOSIERY 00., Dept M-88 h~man possessions. lt outranks love, Greenfield, Ohio. for love is not permanent. It abides after friends are gone and wealth has vanished. Time is priceless because it is changeless. Of all other things one must say: This, too shall pass away. Time is the only ' thing that never ceases to be. The most precious thing in life is the 24 hours whit:h are allotted to mankind each day. Time is the changeless possession. And the more time one has the wealthier one is. And in this, youth is the wealthiest of all. Time is the equal possession of I I I I I GEORGE A. COLE CHIROPRACTIC THE DAILY MIRACLE Packed in Ice Delivered Daily Sandy and Midvale Fairdale Farms EARL TOONE· Cottowood, U tab. Tel. Douglas 91-J-4 LOOK! • GOOD ONLY AT HUB THEATRE CHILDREN UNDER TWELVE This Coupon Good For 5c Cut it out, take it with a nickel and you will be admitted to any show at the Hub Theater. SOC JETY The Jordan Journal Issued Every Thursday by The Jordan Publishin~ Company, Inc. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Richard, the small son of Mr. and One year ........... -.... -..........-..--...--... -.... -..... $1.50 Mrs. D. C. Smith, had the misfortune Telephone Midvale 178 to fall from the roof of a garage building Saturday and fracture the bones of his right fore arm. Entered at the postoffice at Midvale One of the most interesting social City, Utah, as second-class matter. events of the summer was the party SUPRRINTE!IIDENT'S REPORT given by Miss Lucile Woodhead at For Year 1925-.1926. her home on Locust street. ' The walks and lawn at the rear of the (Continued from Last Week.) house were bright with lights covered with vari-colored shades and affordThe following reports by supervised an excellent place to dance. The ors will speak for themselves: Charles Hood orchestra was in atJORDAN SHOOL DISTRIGr tendance. Pulnch was served. Twenty DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC couples enjoyed the affair. Out of Supervisor's report 1925-1926. town guests numbered twenty four. So far as music is concerned the Monday evening Mrs. Jos. W. Nib- school year recently completed in ley entertained in compliment to her the Jordan district was the most sucsister, Mrs. W. B. Jones of Hiawatha cessful profitable and generally satwho is visiting here. The guests is faet~ry of any one of the five numbered sixteen. Games were played years of experiense as supervisor in the prizes going to Mrs. Jessie Hum- the district. phries, Miss Honore Stagg and Mrs. At the beginning of the year every A. L. Anderson. element necessary for excellent work Mrs. W .W. O'Brien has returned was present. There was complete harfrom a visit to the coast. mony among all concerned, including Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Quick and superintendent, supervisor, princichildren returned last week from a pals, teachers and the children themvacation trip to Nampa, Idaho. selves; there was enthusiasm everyMr. and Mrs. Clyde Webster and where, and a willingness to receive children of Charleston are visiting at and act on suggesions and to keep the Lindsay home. Friday of last the work up to the standards on the week Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay and theh- part of the teachers, and a splendid spirit of cooperative helpfulness on guests spent the day at Saratoga. the part of both principals and teachMr. and Mrs. A. H. Powell who ers. This condition continued genwer e returning to ti1elr home in Loerally through the year and the re--gan after attending the convention of agricultural engineers held at Lake sults were as set forth above. Definite information obtained Tahoe, Calif., paid a short visit at the home of Mrs. Powell's sister, Mrs. through questionaires and careful observation on the part of the superFred Hyke. Miss Nine Sumbot who is in train-. visor show the followiJ,g: In practically every grade (the exing at the St. Mark's hospital spent ceptions were due to conditions that her vacation with her parents, Mr. always prevail and were permitted and Mrs. L. A •. Sumbot. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Rasmussen are with the full knowledge and consent rece1vmg congratulations on the of the supervisor) the nine months work was completed. In every inbirth of a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Hendrickson or stance the outlines submitted by the Draper were guests Sunday of Mrs. H. E. Phelps. Mr. and Mrs. Erick A. Olsen expect to leave soon for a month's visit with relatives in St. Paul, Minn., and in North Dakota. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Beerhaus of Los Angeles, Cal., are visiting relatives here and in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Beerhaus made the trip by auto. and will tour Zions National park en route as they return. Mrs. Beerhaus was formerly Miss Hazel Malstrom. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cozzens are rejoicing over the arrival of a son. Mr. and Mrs. R .R. Gilbert left early in the week for a trip to the northwest. Members of the past grand club of the Rebecca lodge surprise.! Mrs. Walter Hastings Thursday afternoon at her home on East Center street. Games and refreshments were enjoyed. Mrs. Joyce Clark is spending her vacation on the Strawberry. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Sullivan entertained a number of out of town C> friends Saturday evening of last week. THERE CAN'T BE SO MUCH Miss Lorna Evans of Ogden is the AMONG ORGANIZED guest of her cousin, Miss Virginia UNREST WORKERS. SO MANY OF THE:\1 Brown. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Smith of ARE RESTING. Seattle, Wash., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Smith's parents, Mr. RADIO FANS and Mrs. L. McNamara. In addition to the Smiths, the McNamara's are Don't throw away your worn out or e'ntertaining Mrs. McNamara's si2ter, weak Radio Tubes. Mrs. Conrad Maag of Provo. · Keep your tubes like new by letting us restore them to usefulness by rekind. .Without time nothing is pos- juvenating them every thirty days. sible. With it, all things are. Rich One weak tube in your set will keep man, poor man, beggar man and the entire set of tubes from functionthief, all are equally blessed by the ing properly. daily miracle. We are now rejuvenating tubes at a Said Emerson: "Give me health and very low price. a day and I will make the pomp of One trial will convince you of our emperors ridiculous." Said Franklin: superior work. "If thou wouldst lay hold on life, save time, for time is the stuff that life is made of." Arnold Bennett, in his brochure "How to Live on 24 Hours Per Day,'; says: "You wake up in the morning and your purse is magically filled with 24 hours of the manufactured 24 E. Center St ....... Phone: Mid. 272 Midvale, Utah tissue of the universe of your life. Waste your infinitely precious commodity as much as you will and the supply will never be withheld from you. You cannot draw on the future. It is impossible to get into debt. You can only waste the passing moment." What a singularly inept race we ar~ ~o h3;ve invented the phrase, "k1llmg time!" After all, that is the real race suicide problem in a nut-shell. .....~ , :.rw. FULLER PEP c @J 0 & E Electric Service SAVEwitn SAFETY ~OifOUi- ,.g22 , DRUGSTORE POPULAR EXCURSION JULY 24 Salt Lake City and Return $0.25 Ogden and Return $1.00 Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad Tickets on sale .July 24 only; good to return leaving Salt Lake City or Ogden not later than July 26. Two full days in Salt Lake City or Ogden. Good in coaches only ----------·1 Here's a Good Tooth Paste Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste Price 39c Latge Tube Lt Removes the FilmIt ontains No GritIt Corrects Acid Mouth Prevents Tooth Decay Its Daily Use Prevents Pyorrhea Midvale Drug Co. Midvale Utah Silk Dresses 9.9 .95 I Meet Me at Booth's I _: ~.: :· . .' .. . . . ~~.. = .· .. • SIZES 16 to 48 . .,• ~ . ' These Beautiful Sheer SHIMMESING SILK DRESSESCan Only Be Duplicated at BOOTHSCOME EARLY-While Your Size and Selection Is Here BOOTH'S. _ Midvale's Big Dept. Store Shock Absorbers To The Limited Pocketbook supervisor (following the progressive ~uage, geo~raphy, history and spell- J (3) Personal and socii,ll efficiency. system outlines as a rule) have been mg the pup!ls .o~ the primary grades I (4) Character building. carefully followed. In the primary have mor~ efficiently master~d the I We are looking forward to the grades the number of monotones at wor~ outlmed and are therefore well coming year with determination to the close of the year was less than e~Ulpped to enter the grade to which accomplish still more, to make 1926four per cent of the total en,rolled in t ey have . been promoted. i 1927 our banner year. those grades ;in the grammar grades We re~hze. that the comer stone ' FREDA JENSEN. less than one per cent of the total of education IS the individuality of (To Be Continued ) were monotones (this does not in- t~e child that the fundamental prin. clude one school in which some ex- c1ple of education is that children are Jas. W. Stephenson, manager of perimental work dealing with the ~ifferent in .their abilities; in every the Midvale branch Morrison--Merboys' changing voice was carried on.) lme of work. With this knowledge rill Lumber Co., ha~ been confined to 4 Seventy five per cent of all classes we have aimed to adapt the work a~ in the district appeared in programs much as possible to meet the individ- his home on account of a slight attack on tonsilitis. for the entertainment of the public, ual needs of the children. some of them appearing from five to Throughout the year our fundMr. Rasmussc'Il, tailor, informs us ten times. In addition seventy five amental objectives have been: ( ) 1 that he has some 1·eal bargains in per cent of the schools gave operetHealth, the formation of proper made to measure suits and can save tas, every one of distinct value and highly creditable. A junior high health habits. (2) Mastery of the you from $6 to $26 on a suit. Better chorus composed of one hundred fundamentals a ·; a ba ~ : .-., of culture. sec him now. twenty five students from the larger schools of the valley, organized to appear before the U. E. A. junior high department, appear-ed on numerous SERVICE WITH occasions during the year in different places in the district, their efforts 'beA SMILE ing praised by competent critics who heard them. In several communitie::; Tlhe usual pleasure ,of cla<:>ses did work that was good and our proiDpt service in deappreciated in caroling at Christmas llivening your orders is time. further enhanced by the In general sense the music instrucsmiLe ro:fl willingnes's to tion work was kept up to a higher please which accomstandard than ever before. Better panies .it. quality of voice was general through- I out the district ,in many instances As a Test, Phone 246 marked improvement over previous years being noticeable. In all schools and by practically all stud~mts the attitude toward the subject was good, 1 so good in fact that no complaint on that score can justly be made. This probably is the greatest achieveR. R. GILBERT E. C. O'BRIEN ment of the year-or years-as af-· ter all, inculcating a love for ~ood music on the part of all concerned is th e primary objective - of the work. Sight reading by all grades, 3rd to BIG TAILOR MADE SUIT SALE 9th inclusive, showed marked imFOR 30 DAYS LATEST STYLES provement; this includes a general knowledge of music theory, in which You can save from $9.00 to $24.00 on suit and a pair of there was the same improvement. extra trousers free. Come in and look them over J. M. BOYDEN. Alteration, Cleaning and Pressing. • REPORT OF PRIMARY WORK Year 1925-1926 More work has been accomplished in the primray grades this year than 64 West Center St. MIDVALE, Utah in any of the four previous years. All Phone Midvale 117-W. concerned, including the superintendent, principals, teachers and chil· dren have given such splendid cooperation in putting over the pro- I _ I I _ G _ Q _ Q _ Q __ (t~-n-Q_I)_Q_I_I_D_rl~.-.a-I-•-D- 3 &11_3_1_11 gram outlnied. I I I Corner Meat & Grocery I As reading is one of the most important subjects taught in the grades and without the mastery of it practically all other work in the first grade is impossible, we have aimed to present the reading work in the first grade in such a way as to secure a foundation upon which to build more advanced work. I feel we accomplished our aiml as- the first grade pupils have, throughout the district, read on the average 20 first grade readers besides the many supplementary' and library books read by individuals outside the recitation periods. We have been supplied with more reading material than we have ever had before and yet we have had to use many second grade readers to meet the demands of the pupils. Our second, third and fourth grades nave also covered more than the reading materials on hand including library and supplementary books and have read many books for the grade above. The educational seatwork supplied this year has been very effective in helping to train the pupils to work independently in following directions and working intelligently at the tasks assigned. As in reading, so in arithmetic, Ian- H. F. RASMUSSEN, Tailor C. C. CRAPO REAL ESTATE BROKER FARMS HOMES LOANS INSURANCE Sandy, Utah Phone Midvale 137-w POULTRY FARM. 16 acres S. West LEAVING TOWN. Seven R. brick, of Sandy. 3 R. house, well and out well located in Midvale at a barbuildings. Only $2500, terms. gain or will trade for home near-· SEE CRAPO. S. L. City. SEE CRAPO. WILL TRADE. 10 Room press brick YES IT'S TRUE. I have 1 acre and near West high school S, L. City. 3 R. brick house, lh mile from Sell cheap or trade for small acreSandy on county highway. Oty age near Midvale or Sandy. water, electric lights, ' shade, orchSEE CRAPO. ard and berries, good out buildings and cbeap as dirt. SEE CRAPO. TRADE FARM FOR HOUSE. New 5 room modern brick and 3% acres NEW AND MODERN, 3 room frame fine land in South Midvale. Sell on 2 screen porches, large bath. Well terms or trade equity fo.r smaller located near car, church and school. home. SEE CRAPO. Bargain at $2000, easy terms. SEE CRAPO. WAKE UP! I am offering the finest 8 acre farm in the county with 6 ANOTHER BARGAIN. 5 R. frame r R. modern brick hf>me right on house, large corner lot trees a)nd State street with twice the water shrubs, Near school ~nd church • right it requires, at a real bargain., Sandy, Utah. Only $1400. Easy All out of debt. Terms or cash. Get terms or will discount for cash. busy. SEE CRAPO. _s_E_•E_c_R_A=P~O-·-------YES and old 4 R cottage and two acres in Sandy for $1200 terms. SEE CRAPO. ' VALUABLE ACREAGE. I have a number of very choice pieces of acreage for fruit, dairy or poultry business. If interested SEE CRAPO • .. |