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Show ·day, Feliruary 22, 1929 -------·- The Midvale Journal -----.. ___., ALE JOURNAL SMELTER QUINT DEFEATS JORDAN Weekly (Friday) Published by the J'ordan Publishing Company, Inc. ~- _ _ _ ____,__ ..... _........__... ~-·- .. ··-·-A- ·- - ......_ -·R- 4#--- •••- • - , 0• ·~ ••·---· ·--·-·--'• Monday and Tuesday, February 25th and 26· _ ...... SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24th, 1929 Tei"IDII of Subscription COACH HOWARD MEN SURPRISE BY OVERCOMING JORDAN SQUAD li:Dtered u second class matter at )be poetoffice at Midvale City, Utah, 1IIUier act ot March 3, 1879. In a hotly contested battle, the lfodern Job Printing Department Alurray hoopsters do~ed Jordan 30All prices based on the 22 Friday, February 15th, at the maintained. Murray Gym. This was the second ~ Printing Price List. time this Sll,ason that Jordan has fallAdvertising Rates en before the Murray attack, and as Dl8play, per column inch ........ $0.35 game Jordan was forcReaders, per line ........................ $0.10 a result of the ed into a tie for third place in the AU buaineas correspondence should be league standing. addreaaed to The Midvale Journal, Both teams exhibited tight defenses JOdvale, Uta.IL at the beginning of the game, and Phone Mid. 178 nearly four minutes of the time had 1fl N. Kain St. passed before a score was made. This Fdday. February 22nd, 1929 goal was soon followed by others and the first period ended 7-5 for Murray. LE'rS HAVE BASEBALL! ry"tO DROP Copper League Baseball A scoring rally by Murray in the and allow Midvale to withdraw second period put them far in the from participation in this fast lead, but three successive long shots baaeball aggregation after the excel- , by Densley, Jordan guard, helped to leut start made, would be nothing close the gap and give Jordan a 16-15 lead at the half. llltort of criminal. The Smelterites, slowly but surely, Reeidents of the intermountain terahead in the second half as the drew territory, who have never visited in llldvale, have a good impression of fighting progressed, but tired. Jordap. tbe ~ gained through reading a- team missed its chances to score rlpeatedly. A desperate rally nearly bout our baseball activities. Thouaands of dollars worth of pub- gave Jordan a tie in the latter part of several Murray baskets Jiclty accrues through the newspapers the game, but coming at this time ended the Beetduring th.e season and we are menchances. digger occasionally in the prominent W Woods, Murray center, was the aport sections of the Eastern publicahigh point man of the game with timul. poUlts. Densley, of Jordan, thirteen Ball players have sigqified a willsecond with eight points. ;:;'1111!Delil8 to come to Midvale and help was Summary of the game: put a winning team in the field. JORDAN :mighty per cent of the residents of G. T. F. P. tile city are behind Copper League Brady, f ....... ....................... 2 4 2 6 Bueball. The twenty per cent who Butter:fl.eld, f ........................ 1 0 0 2 do DOt believe it will bene:fl.t the city Tucker, c ............................ 0 2 0 0 an eotlUed to their opinion, but we ILn convmced that they are wrong. Larson, g ·······-··················· 0 2 1 1 Densley, g ............................ 4 0 0 8 It must be a personal matter. They Kimball, f .......................... 1 1 0 2 Aennot truthfully maintain that it is Bateman, c .... ....... .... ......... 1 4 1 3 detdmental to the progress and welMatthews, c ........................ 0 0 0 0 fare of the city. Smith, c f ............................ 0 . 0 0 0 All that is needed now is leadership. Totals ·······················-····· 9 13 4 22 Will someone please come forward MURRAY aDd assist in organizing a ball cllib G. T. F. P. for 1929. And C. K. Thompson, Asst. Peters, f ............................ 2 0 0 4 Supt. at the U. S. Smelter will give f ·······-················· 2 5 2 6 some pointed pointers and might even Kastelllc, Woods, c ............................ 6 3 1 13 give valuable assistance if he can be Perry, g ................................ 0 1 1 1 convinced that we mean business. Simper, g ............................ 0 1 0 0 However, the time is short. SomeMeyers, f ···············-······-··· 2 3 2 6 t.hiDB must be done NOW! Totals ···············-··········· 12 13 6 30 Pv Tear (in advance) ···-······· $1.00 .1 D. C. JJCNSEN GOES EAST N VIEW of the fact Utah schools are second low in the Educational list of the Union, it is indeed fit· tmg that our school superintendents ahou1d go East to the National Educational Asaociation meeting. D. C. Jensen left this week for the aty of Cleveland, Ohio, to attend the &IIDual meeting of the National AssoUon for the Promotion of Education ""*M*g the schools of the land. Our SUperintendent has been attegdfng these conventions at the ex- I ., CHINATOWN Cll Rl/E Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 27th and 28th NO SCHOOL FRIDAY For the last time this year the students of the Jordan district will enjoy a holiday. Washington's birthday is the o&casion, and will be celebrated tomorrow. pense of the taxpayers for several years and it is hoped that Jordan district will soon begin to climb the ladder of achievements in school progress and thereby get value received for the money expended in these costly annual pilgrimages. Utah Telephone Users Place Daily Average of 4911 Long Distance Calls in 1928 Telephone "Traveling" Increases Daily Olle of the most. Important factors that made possible the recent reductions in Long Distance rates, effective February 1, was the increased use of the service from day to day. In 1923, for example, an average of 3430 long distance calls were placed each day from various parts of the atate. In 1928 the dally average In Utah was 4911. In 1923 an average of 24,590 calls to distant points originated each day in the entire Mountain States territory. In 1928 the number had increased to 31,819. It, undor the latest schedule of rate reductions, the use ot Lone Distance continues to Increase, it not only tells a fiol't of the telephone's increasing value in your business and tocial life, bu.t unmistakably indicates. a growing UtN.. . • • • • .. A STATEMENT OF POLICY ~ "'Today, practically any one anywhere can talk by telepboae with any one else, anywhere in the country. Moreover, any oae in the United States can now converse by telephone with any one in Great Britain, Canada, Cuba and the prin· dpal ciUea or lle:dco." From Gil Gdd,ss by Walter 8. Gifford, President, Ammc. Tdelllo~~e tm4 TdegroiiJ CtH111fM1· "Siflu llli.r address, dtliwred by Mr. Gilford owr tJ ytar ago, eelclltolle sennce 1uu betJJ mended to hlltltJ• oddititnwl eot~~~lriu •I Ewofle.'' F. B. Reid, President, TIN Moatom States Teklltotte aNd Telegrolll Co. ---® --Your Telephone Connects With 21.000.000 Others SHOW STARTS at 6:00P.M. SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS ....·- f. ' ... - ft) SHOW STABTB . at 7:00P.M. W~K |