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Show Piute County News, Junction, t'tah .ummr immmmmmrm m ScKooIs Pushing Music to Fore America Destined to Lead World, Says Frederick , Neil Innes. That the public school band movement is bringing America to the fore In the music world, is the belief of Frederick Neil Innes, director of the Conn National School of Music, Chicago, and internationally known band leader. America is destined to lead the world in music, says Innes. It does cot yet rack with Germany, France, Hungary, Italy or England, but we are climbing. Tully eighty per cent of the high schools have some musical organization, an orchestra or a band, or both Music in the nublic schools THIS age tried Camels and placed them Crsti And it was no half-way Frederick Neil Innes, Director, verdict. Never in the history of smoking was a cigarette given a leadership like Camel has today. Camels first To find why Camels arc the favorite, just try them. You will find the perfect fragrance and taste cf choice j tobaccos, rarely blended. You will experience a mc!!ov mildness that gives endless cigarette enjoymer.t! r or the choice c "ll:yc a : Conn National School of Music. the mode..,, ace Camdr iH Vt- - will give America this coveted musical si.ureinacy. Mr. Innes further believes that the time is near at hand when even the smallest community will have its band. He thinks that when this condition is brought about that it will be due largely to tlio incentive given musical training by the public schools of the nation. The modern scliooi is as proud when a musical championship i3 won by their band or orchestra as it is when their football heavies go down the field to glory in every game they play, he says. The band or orchestra is vastly the vocal class, says Innes, becMue the boy in the adolescent stage simply will not sing. He may be compelled to go through the motions, but he will-no- t actually sing. He refuses for the simple reason that he has no voice to sing with. Give such n lad a trombone or a or any other instrument of the band and his musical progress will astound even himself. co-n- et, frxZi Y " N,rgY - r;T - 3- 7 j if This Town of 20 Has izzznzszzzzzsmi A n 44-Pie- Band ce town with a band has been discovered by the Conn Center at Elkhart, Ind. Forest Grove, Mich., Is the town, The entire population of 20 Is housed in five dwellings. Small boys throw stones from one end of the town to the other. Two stores serve the needs of the community. Yet Forest Grove's JLu-si- 0) 1927, R. J. DvnnlI, Company, Vucaon-SaleM- . X 4 Toh, N. V, X Relief Work in Wake cf Earthquake A Thir.:O of Beauty At Americas Orphan City in Armenia Joy Forever Is a This is the time ot year to (lx up your winter clothes. We do cleaning, pressing, altering and dying. Guaranteed tirst class Work only, c band numbers 41 pieces. Tbs hamlet lacked paved streets and papulation. I. was not even mentioned on the maps, yet the musical was there. Several of the urge townsmen knew something Of music, as did several of the boys on the surrounding farms. There were lots of others raring to blow a horn. A meeting was arranged, attended by a 100 per cent representation of the town and by farm boys within a radius of many miles. The band came Into being overnight. Rehearsals are faithfully attended. Band night gees the one street lined with parked automobiles, and Forest Grc-.c- , once a jest, has become thr envy of the surrounding Secial attention to mail orders, Reasonable prices, Ideal Gleaners & Tailors, Richfield Housewives Big Buyers of Musical Instruments Utah, Near East Relief Orphans Repairing Damaged Streets American Ambulance Bringing In Casualties. Armenian earthquake has had been reduced to nine thousand waste the most novel city The disaster, however, now threatens the jvorld Cable dispatches to throw a large number more on tht to the Near East Relief indicate that hands cf the organization. its orphanage centers of the organizaRelief officials on the field have es tion In Leninakan, formerly Alexan-dropo- l, ti mated Utat a million dollars will be have been seriously damaged required n provide adequate reliel by the disastrous earthquake that In the earthquake zone and to furnish cost 500 lives and made S0.000 home- sufficient funds to repair the orphaD less in the mountain country city and maintain it until Jqne. The orphan city was established by Peopla in the United States are the Near East Relief shortly after urged by the Near East Relief, 151 the armistice, being housed In bar- Fifth avenue, New York City, to ok racks that once be'ongei to the Im-- serve International Golden Rule Sunntal Arrr.v o' the Russian Czars At day. for the benefit of the earthquake i 0"c 'in- - a.f j e' str, cared victims and ti aid in the continuation r ' i r ; e ,1. i !.. : u efforts of work in the earthquake zone and i h 'd in up to the time In Greece, Fjvia, Pai"Stii.e, Turkey, t! t o' i. the tu.iber and Persia for another year. THE On The Market Everbearing Strawberrie plants-ol- d plants lc each. Young plants 3c each. See P. M. Rick at Junction, Utah. M.-c- . tnra.tusawmnjiir. mo.'. i2r.rs:- - i yr tx. ! if- - -- jt , jc This Is one cf the beauty spots of the Sesqui-Centeunia- International l Exposition Id Philadelphia. The exposition celebrates the 150tb anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of independenc- - The view shows the tovt r o. one of the main exhibit buildings rearing its head up from among i. gorgeous landscape which ar:s3 bi.iit -- r v. the i ,"t strio-.re-uh.'-- h use exhibits from fortv-thre- e ur io. t thr wc id. The Exposition eoi'nu- 3 until December L b'e 1 s Elkhart, Ind. Sixty per cent of musical instruments said to women are purchased by housewives, it is revealed in a survey made by the Conn Music Center here. The survey was made through music instrument dealers in twenty cities, and covered 320 actual transactions. One out of every ten Instruments sold were purchased by women, and their preferences for Instruments was very much along the lines favored by the men, according to the survey. Of the total number of transactions, fifty, two ijer cent involved the purchase of a saxophone, sixteen per pent that of e trumpet, and nine per cent that of a trombone. That youth will be served, especially In music, was well illustrated in the ages of the purchasers. Fully thirty-fou- r per cent of those purchasing Instruments were under twenty-on- e years of age, while nineteen per cent wete between the ages of twenty-onand twenty-five- , and twenty-onper cent between th ages of twenty-fivand thirty. Only twenty-siper cent of all transactions Involved persons gf thirty years and ovc e e e x |