OCR Text |
Show ifiurvei Why r Should 'Attend our UTAHS FARM AND ORCHARD PRODUCTS TO BE IN STRIKING DISPLAY AT BIG FAIR High School. One of the out-st- a niip essay received in the I'lUlE COLiNlYs jNEVVS contest on Why I Should j Attend Our School wiitlen ly High i ' v L'.vl! ! ! : "Siv'V.'r I I TJ?7Wr - Ipsonof Juncticn. lie clier Best essay was wriUeniy Clela Luke of Kingston and will at I" hr 'n our next issue, Should the boys and girls of our county attend our high school or should we look for something bigger and better? I wonder wl.o sh u Id EMa , 0 at let d ii if the boys and grills of this county should not? Why should gooff to some oht-e- r county when we have a school of i nr own? Oh! I say we should push for OUE school and make it a s.v.ool to be proud to belong to. It jn.ay not, be as far up in the world s many, others tpe, Lut it has at i ast made a shoeing or itself and is growing very rapidly. When we t'linkofthe schools that are so much better we must stop and consider things, Our school has not .hatjthe many years for development tha,t. ftp njar.y others have had. .Lets cje.veljipjk If vye do not I World's Premier Scenic Ii.euiptn I ' ,$ifddclnly Prf : ditces a'.Keiv, l)e- trlvpmeritoj the tcy- rGre.a(;sL . riornic Interest to ', ' l)c: ; Unlire .lion, , t i. , By JUV&OjM C. WELLI'JE.R HE GrandJCanyon of the Colo-- ' ratio River,' widely regarded as the 'Worlds most lmosilnfe htnkl' wonder, has suddenly taken on a new and startling ' ' ' ' i IntprqeL' A few1 yeari1' ngd; whbn' It'wals' as Inaccessible as the North Pole, John 'Wedlo'y PowplP won Thine 'by'"mak1tlg t the first trip through lL" A little later another1 advdhturer conceived opening rliii down to a trail from the rlvef, a mllo below. It seemed r grotesque; but the impossible' was and Its accomplishment rhas made the canyon's innrirmost won-- ' totfr-Mst(ers accessible td thousands of each year. They coittb ffom all i quarters of the world every season In t'grestef numbers to traverse the Is i Bright 'Angel Trail. That trail And t truly a monument to the daring lie worked Jdeyotlod of Its' bulldeh yeara, almdtt without help tat It for-te- T ' .or flnanclal'"tabklnk.' ft bpe' period spending "althoct hhlf A yoai1 aloffe'tn (he vast gdrge'.?'' But't today Ralph Cameron, builder- of the Bright Angel t Trail, occupying a 'seat in' the tJnltdd 'States Senate 'voted ' to1 him by the "people of ArlioJa; has 'his' reward. i ,, 1 ' ' ' ! greatest. Artificial j j But the ponqiijpst pf the canyon had hardly been realized when tho engineers discovered a hew use for' It. At iBoulder Canyon, Arizona, the greatest tdam In the world. a third of a' mllo high, should imfuml a hike' which, spreading over A great area in Arizona land Utah; would t0, next to' Lake Michigan, tho largest fresh water body ' fntlr'ely within the United State). waHarnessed to mighty turbines,-thter, falling hundreds 'of feet, would iproduce a power greater than Niagara, 'and Irrigate an area several times that lof the Nile Basin, which served for 'uncounted centuries os granary of tho ' .ancient world. " The ' Boulder 'Canyon dam 'has not yet been built, but. the people of the Southwest arc as confidCnt or its ''as' that the Colorado Its giant continue tp flow- between . ' '' swalls. Now .comes a- new chapter In tho ( romance of the Colorado The Intrepid wildcatters" of the oil Industry, scouting for aew Bources of petrtv 'leum, have brought In an oil well rlght Jn the- canyon! Drilling from a narrow shelf at the' gorges bottom, they have overcome unbelievable obstacles. Perpendicular walls of rock grimly construction of road or trail to transport machinery add" supplied. FrOra the river a succession of rock walls rlse In gargantuan 'terrace to a " height Of 3.000 feet. ' n - tor-bad- e ' ,, ,Thq. ( Desert Great--America- Ttje llttlp Mojmon towfloMoah, ts the neareighteen miles est supply bitso; But Moab 'Is 'not a railroad town; a drive of ftmy'mlles'ls to reach the Denver & Rio Grande t allrbad.- Salt take City is 250- milesi aw'ay, to the'notthweat.s ;; Standing at' the foot of the derrick which marks the site'of the"new oil well.' ones back is fairly Against ah BOO foot cliff, which Is rtfafGhed by another Immediately across "the river. d - - Looking up; one imagines that' if he ' of" these Walls he could climb g would" be outside. :' this, he finds' him sell on' a "plateau dr ter race,1' with another ctfff a' little To climb this. In turn, would only bring him face tor face 'With still had another fcliff.' and so on (Kl-hmounted-ful3.000 feet from, ttre'rl vet r Not only musr this sucPesiton'1 of cliffs be mounted; bur ro traverse' the rock' terraces,- gashed and torn, is'oniy less difficult. And flnally. th ascent to the ' outer rim accomplished-- . one tonfronts a wasre Of ridged, seamed and boulder strewn desert. ehdless save--fodistant mountain peaks. ' s Manifestly. (be oil' "wildcatters', n,'v not make roads.1 so t they ' built But.-tryin- r in the Agriculture apd Horticulture Bolding at the 1925 Uiah State Fair, showing e speeimens of one county e products and paying tribute to the richness of Utahs soil and tfia kill pf ita farmers and orchardista. Displays like this will draw the admiration of a hundred thousand h 48th Utah State Fair, October 2 to 9, at Salt Lake City. Other attractions include an Auto !. now, horse racing, kennel ahciw, radlp broadcasting and a hundred and one amusements with a big freo flreworka peotacl nltfitly, i . repre-tentativ- . This Is Ihe time of year to fix op your winter clothes. , P-- , i ' wotkfiir it. jittend.it,;pn( support U in every way hov caa v pfiiwct it to be anything t f. t (,1 will it think happen,) ferhaRs, that w.hen our, school: baa ihA'I chance ,we thall f(0, .far above the others. VVe ,8haU, do our, at least trying. We have some real boosters Li Piutej ovuity , qnd wq are goipg to try to establisma school that shall make other schools aniamed. One S. (senator' C a if. e r'on r omr A Just Room for UiA Oorrick We do cleaning, pressing, altering end Guaranteed first class Work only. . 'hhfiV akd ffoatod down It was a daring performance- for the BtreatoAw'sts constanilih; Unseen TOckA' and shifting bars add to Ita diffllillLies, and the canyon''S fler Inataht pend'tcUlar wall.1' threaten wreck. But It was d nd. Materials were broughL a derrick reared, machinery that shall rot only be. known by placed,' a cami b lit and dHlllrig Now, wittf tTl flowing from a name, but by the work it will do and depth df 2,075 Ifcy). the' drane Crefek the honors it. shall.receive; and as a well Is Suddenly 'the wondef of the good educational school. whole Interim Jiidtiln country'. Jf we will hut get hack of, and , Ct pifficultles OUR. high schwl we.wi'1 attend Just about a year from the beginPhewell to of drilling (low, not, always have lhe trials to face ning began wlth every ind&tu'loit that wliGn the that we have thus far had. drill goea somewhat deeper Into the Each year since ihe starting of producing flahS It' will be an 'prodbdtK Fofi'the 'presen't, the high school in Piute, co. it, has 'drilling haS bt?fn suSpChdd. waiting arl(anced a, little. .Each year has provtslonr fbr ffi'klng the oil aa'y;"'lt 'Is doubtful If hi dll" the history of the I rouyht somelhmg new and UOO.OOO Wdls that' havd been drilled In facesiintp .the scmol, until,n'w ,,w v . . thla, ibuctrj', largely In reglouk dUU-Pr,iud tom? n,fl cult 5f access, any one his evdr pre-Bekted StiCh a category of obstacles fcs hav, graduated from our high school this Canyon "well In Utah. How the I elate siv.v, they ,nre as bright as oil nrljl be transported to a' reflnery'da a from Moab. Special attention to mail orders, , , ; Its the Ideal Cleaners & Tailors, .Ever. Be$t J A Reasonable prices. ate 2 lo P. Plnn to Ortoliip tie and nee the aeentewt g e nLMEMBKR the be-gn- ih , 1 , : of laveNtocktj Purni nhd Orchard Product Poultry ever itMciubled In (he . 1 , and .free' " V New i thine , t. do, new fnn. ad new hinK to learn! Don't nW Ltah CtaShow! A Bre-VW- t r V . ST1 , Facing Races at l air After the unqualified aueeefle ot the kennel !at year's Fair, it baa been decided tt repeatthia popular2 attAMCtion at the Utah to 9. The show will be State Fair,' Octcbar Kenundir the aaapicee ther Intermouittann nel. Club wMcft neporta .a laryer 'number of entries already than showed at the exhibition last year. The prize canines of this territory will havo their days during the last three day.9 of the v big Fair. A new building will be constructed on the zruunda to house the Kennel Show and a Pet STATE Sheer guess Work, bat a' wky will (if., not brighter,) than students be 'found, for the ingenuity11 And re- w hot have, Rraduatedi ffotn larger sources of the oil ehiluear have school., j ' never failed. If OUR school keepsongrowing Tho bringing Iti" of fhTs well Illustrates' the difficulty of petroleum de- aq it)ia9dpnp weivvil liave a. beautiCbnvIncGd that1 the geovelopment. ful building as,otier9 have. But if logical structure' was " pirtlcklarly (0. attend-schoo- l favorable, the projectors determined 'to gamble $75,000 on drilling. .Before apd, vqrk. thprevw,ill be no usei for they got olf" they had' spent more thah a have .the, school and buildipg,. twice that. Copies of the 1926 State Fair Premium List have been sent to all banks and County Agricultural agents in the state, where they may be obtained free of charge by anyone interested in entering an exhibit at the big to be held at Salt Lake City, October exposition 2 to 9. With premiums totaling $20,000.00 offered In the livestock division, in addition to beauti ful ribbons, the owners of winning animal Will be handsomely retarded. Cash priiea are also offered in the other department, including poultry, grains, fruita. vegetables, etc. Entries close September 25, with the except tiou of poultry, which closes September 2J. ; Big Feature At ; Utah State Fair Running, Trottirir rnd UTAH 1 1 Dog Show A tf h..N New State Fair Premium List Ready How Radio Works To Be Shbwh at Fair Radio brotdeaatiMT will be one of the intey .esting featurta at the Utah State Fair, October 2 to 9, Radio fM will have a chance to see how their favoritf proyrrama are put on the air," a process (hat is understood by but a L tmall percentage of the east radio audience. The Mountain States Radio Trades aasocia- -. tion will have charge of the exhibition which will be even motet elaborate than last years kit .is said. . v Statel ATTRACTIONS 1 show at fetlll ' ' Utah. Richfield 4. 1 . v j Horse racing Is assured for the 49th annus! Utah jState'FaY, to be held in Salt Lake Ci y, ' f October 2 to 9. In addition to an umsually strong card of for each day of the running races Fair, except Sunday, there will be trotting and pacing events. Some of the fastest hores in the country will display their speed on the half-mil- e track, which has been put in perfect condition. Show. 11 r SALT LAKE CITY L.. - For years wells have been drilling In various parts of the state fully 200 In all at' a cbst of probably $5,000,000, and tti3 caflyoir well Is the first real producCf! It 13 6nly by dint of' such persistence ' Tn cdplhg ; with natural ob'Sthclesand 'fliianclal hazards that the "eburi try's ' supply 6t' oil is maintained.' The ''firat oil ; Vovell ' In Western Pennsylvania became a producer at the de'jfiti of 85 V feet Nowadays wells a Hi lie deep i,-- not Uncom-Ion. and they have gue'down aa far ks n mile and a half. then the bjujldJcgLTs ke?p, on. go-iR- ' g Lt3 keep ,on .pVtt.fv ..undatiofl oy.r The Branch Agricultural College ha a new system of registration-Studentinstituted building, gpon arriving at the College' senio hqv Iaj4. call at theSecretaiys officei and If wectin.nojt enjoy, while attendcard, will to given tiera whicji vy i il ing sehool, the beauties and the identify tjiem; at the Jlookstoi e, whtjiej the fRre. y,ears ijray they th necersary blanks. They bring, lets fydp put things uver, so will tlien fill the cards undei; Ahe cuij-- 1 ' the younger si uden(a in he cpuuty pices of some member f,the fsculty, line up course desired, and upon the can eijjoytJll.um, apd.witly joy arrival ef the instructor in charge will can saj't Ve helped tyuild tljat rsent ,card to the Registrar Fyery. Wel Is a Gamble schop)j., VVe gave ,it, its foundafipn whee thy will pay their fess. A large proportion of jPtJls produce One set of carets which the student and piadq it first known. .Thqn nothlcig whatever ftnd represent total fill3 out wll go to the. teachers and will with loSs ,Aryd It ,,e . , , vk old-time- enrol hitij in the various dqsses. Another set of cards will be njailed directly (toils parents aod include such as the date of registraticn, coprae selected and fees to be paid. Tkjjs new change in registration epmes as a result of .students being (dilatory aboutt registering after patents hae believed them to be fully entered., All parents( sending students to the Branch College and not receiving his registration card pithin' a rerscnable tips should immediately notify the Directoi;, l jnfor-ipatip- n , Ed Morrill - Xken"'ttomht ssnlRthcointry Puestsof the Branch Agricultural tc'd-bo- u They Have a Clear Conception of what they tire trying to accomplish with (heir sons by way of training, so' that every days activity Is used us definite construction, material. ,, Because Th$y Never Try to bluff their bovs-ythe- y know It is useless, fpr as boys, themselves they were tyways shrewd, detectors, of all hypocrisy ancLdespised It. ,, Because. ,They Repognize that even boys have fights which should be respected eypn by fathers. For Jhfs consideration, the boys are always most grateful. w Because They Realize Fully That No One, no matter how good- - his Intentions, , can so satisfactorily ini(erpret th Fatherhood of God to boys, or ,make plain to them the real message of his E)der Brother, tbft Man of qililee, as a goqd father and so. pet themselve to the task of religious education. ,, Because They Believe That Directed' Fun Is the most effective antidote for evil thoughts and temptations,1 and so help the boys to keep, everlastingly busy and happy at some worth while thing, even participating themselves as time will permit. thr pleasure ye pan, sjt,back w"s''recently estimated that the last twelve and a half years the knowledge .we fiaye gained in $1,200,000,000 was sunk In wells which erC failures.' 'TJdspkk every efTort of Piuty county help pushi Jhg dear old sclfencp, cliglneerlng 'and l'on'g experi- county high school yet. r ence, and notwithstanding the stupenLets matte our county high school dous depths ttoW reached. 25 per cent known above all otheia. And lets of 'wells lust year wbre dry. ' The' lldcatthr ts the Uolumbus trl make our high school .days in Piute oll.: He i3''t6' petroleud. 'to gasoline, to' The fuel skpply of' the country! county, days ,to be remembersd above all others, as our "Joy days. 20.000.!000 automobiles,'' what the gold prospector was to building the empire Of the fat weA." He is essentially a Rambler; good' loser or Cedar City Notes The lure of enormous good win net winnings keeps him tirelessly searchriing, and sometimes he finds his rei. ward. But In the aggregate;, offsetting all winnings against the tdlal coat of Saturday night, Septemberil, the thlseaj; fussing gdinble. It Is 'not Dixie College faculty, will., be the that'all the otl thaVbaS'been ni. Jtea Dads Win r)ECA0SE te x In . By FRANK H. CIIELEY otm o from the tlcRltfrilng cost taflre titan ifs prodUctr3 got' tor tL . " f A Wprid Ip the Big Game (i But their huge gamble is the basis on which' Thii vcliofe industry rests. AJ AretiVS1 'land Kthc Tilt festertiv? trrtpic' JhrtKleSalikfe attract tb'e hardy 'Vilddarter."" To' them 'the world newest and bbdt ih thankpoi't bf land. sA and air. "Thdy help light tts homes' and streets," pro1 vuie sn asttinfshlfig shard ef Its power; HOME,' DAD AND 'THE BOY aqd.d(h9-c- College at the first annual out'Bgof the B. A. faculty at Mr. Mann- s in Toquerville. . The ranch iny mayor xtnd city counsel of Toquerville areplauning, to lceivQ the will join with the Branch Iguestsand ' 'n p.l ' ifndeDijtie College facul- ties m the ey envngs eptertajnnient. luncheou will be ser- campfire ' ' r. ' ved at seven,? clock, ajftep w(i,ichjle Evening. wU be pent jp, game?, and musicaj f nter(.ainmen(,. Mr will supply tbq gjrapes. melons ,ar;dv other fruit, tas w eD.a the picnic grounds. ( '' Jann-ipgs,ran- ch Of , Toquer-- 1 ( K. H, Cfaeley, Denver, Colo.) Vjlle Answers last1 He leaves his wife and several children in that cityi besides brothers ard s'st t scattered throughout ahe, state. Ed Morrill, a former residentof Jun- John,, and Charles' Morrill of our city ction passed away at his home imTo-quervi'- aie half brothers to the deceased and about ten daps ago soon after L.L. Morrill of, Kingston is also a brohis arrival home from Circleville where ther. The News joins the familys he was stricken witn aparalytic srtoke. many friends in offering sympathy and Mr. Morrill had biought a load of the condolence to the bereaved. famous' Dixie Fruit to Circleville and Was siidtllihly s'trick n with a' stroke. Georgs Greenhalgh was brought HTs family was sent tor and after sey-er- home from the sheep herd Tues(lays spent in that city was deter'ill.- - He1 was mined to fake him home as reported hjs cond-- l day seriously ion Defame better. Upon bis arrival quite a lot better as, we go to press. at Toq Iberville he seemed to raly for a Frank .Chalk left sometime last short time and to realize 'where he was but he soon relapsed intn unconscious-- , week for, Monroe: where h will j ness frdm whicl he never herd sheep for the next few ; recovered. Call. le al I months y. dyirg. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert made a business trip to City on Wednesday of t Mr. Beebe intends atter Congrtssionai and Slate C held in that on 1 city Friday of th s week. Mrs. Mae Norton is recoi rapidly from her recent sick She is now able to be up and' the house once more and bos j-- b of housekseping. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NEWS |