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Show paci: nuuii Tilt SUN O V A r A T E . thumdav, .nq,,, V T A PRICE, to churth end state the former bisutss biixTr'" by the schools nearest the UeraUon of Y farfur the Cum lag college, and the latter by thobe .Car iu edU thet away. The curriculum was see- - I.' " and Greek for u Offered tuslliPS, Utm tdiian; TOLD BY WRITERS la (ulijulu Hull I 1th IL k Wrrk b'T' and cultural "disciplinary" their r,),,,!y Cm Lib-f Tk ra fjum tlm file of Tli Siiiij Fo'.ks la Suiinjtid la have uhser vain Jal uctk, tli Uric The clientele studied the subvalue. old ft Cbnstma of November 30, 1917). volumes. a of a bat dance la j.ew iue- fry lompilrd of using them a OF LOCAL SCHOOLS jects with the idealikes ilcxk lr meld hall, Ltmg rushed la toir'l lei- ItrW, that U ogtat.luhlig Ifl their and dislikes personal tools; Mohrland, Black Hiaut!iiun T) buiLl.ng it ixiy by a bum!- firUl, for benefit of pat were discarded. Ir a few of the and Carbon' firat train of cool over red arul twenty feel of runeret and too wiatong la u ihrm. of schools the three ft's" and English fidi'iwing I the initial portion Tli following book we it chuen: the Utah railway and the Son J'r.iio, ,trel eumtrur were taught, but this was the excepeducation. chool rt Aa Tle Earth Turns," G lady a Haaty an art.cle on high route la due la reach Salt IVe City! rather than the rule. The tion with the University of VJ4'' a sene which will be pub- of came from first the all .Institutions for if afternoon on the bliaiiows goe nock," Saturday tTakrn frum ihe file of The New Carroll; bel common most T1 the ,isht-sources, various The new Salt Lake route will handle Advocate of November 29 1917) WUla CaDtri; W lit an Tlu Dreamt," paieq m the Pacific CW ing colonial land grants, private sub- tournament all of the Utah taailwayi train be- iMargoiet Ayer La r net; Disraeli,1 iponsorsh'p of the on NovemU.r and donations, bequests association: scriptions, Teachers' tween lYovo and Salt Lake. wiUi lUJ Dr. C. T. Grandmother Mauruu; 11 ha purthaw-tuition fees, taxation, and incomes The question all team, b Uit (Amlre own engine and train hand. o the. Handled MV from public utilities of one kind or "Resolved: That the NatiunaM V A w,.,. iLrown Evolution br,k Cultural Our forty-foaaved Utah radway Gro,f P'tal. He Harriet Connor Brown; Story of The another. The spirit of the school was Relations Board should be w l'Uenc ,nd present American high ichool. miles of travel and tram wo,k. Son of severe; classes were held ed to enforce arbi'TioT ha school, extremely haa made purchase fir equipment I'liiluauphy," Will Durraiit; ith its junior high from six 'til eleven in the morning dustrial Uncalled exrln.ent and will entirely irm.M the build-- ! disputes." ;,UeRreatet We find. and we-- e again continued from one About two hundred curve in state Ing to meet hi need. A staff of nurs jof Wisdom," T. F. Lawrence; Strang- - m ftll ,rfUCilUun;,l history The afternoon. the in "For-I- n oclock four rioxlt-'til Lewi er to are be rro-;than such Brwn; Fiction," complex given highway jm vastly RfV. Rue To c wl M Wt,on a minister, w as an j emplu) Speak Archer Butler Jlulbert. tion as Is afforded by danger ig- - mnds tion. that much which is old persists teacher, usually Rev. The William A. Ruel severe all disciplinarian. not Is xceedingly new; that to much along-idboard I Ian of wer made the woik and the by nals, posts placing plaved a prominent of the Notre Dame de LourdeVi list each week a nuinler of books leforms have arisen because of any his inpedagogue signs to begin next week. An uuto- and was a highly here, will preach the affairs civic role American The animal ba.'aar of the Dur factor. mobile tire manufacturing firm is! that might pro v interesting to local' otw special not tlie result JIis salary, be- - solemn pontifical mass individual. or IL1 respected wholly Aid society of the Methodist c Lurch education u then brated at 10 00 a. m. t, r.atj,.rs other of enthe vide supplying the signs gratis, that professions nor the Fremh Enlightenment, will be held Iknefiber 8 A large Think'.," f the t ' Tndmtriaf Revofutmr'. At llimo eTert himself tohe limit. His! 11, r?. set 'n Celery Day in Utah has Membership Grows MeadUy leine Salt Uke City, it tot sale; abo a..n.e be desired. to one was Wu w flow were for Monday. Dncmler 3. Thousands ing position of multitude of mulcts Memlwrship in the 11 ue a nounced here this week. or took its with r;" confluence New place. of packages of Utah relery will be eighty their England lefoie on continue men Home made earuly. aprons and 'the American . perhaps, the hundred cities never had. at any one shipped all over the country. ok Even now. fortunately V1 trend am tilmr lo class as opposed to the massfancy Work and fmxl will Uo b on have not been completely timr more than thirty Latin-Grastreams of the committee swallowed ilU;naidi. chairman tide mi,r schools; therefore only one third ed only boys; the classical -it m the deadening up That game duiks may conti ibute ; kU'e of Inal wotk anaJ inaita in were neither filling nor apiX? uniformity. We often full to ac of tlie cities was exposed to schools. o, ,0 u,- The whole institution was umw? R. H. ukm, Siddoway, ply. cd an im- scbool began to wane and die. lean, tjon game commissioner, has perfected ar- - the good roads and good weather and January I. 1938, an accomplishment portant part in forming the svstem of The The economic, social. and squabbles the Revolu- political rangements whereby they may le,are rapidly bringing in the product which will practically parallel the education in America. Among them.jlon, r and Indian war. the changes of the century from uAnktl prencb The Spanish beginnings in ecnomic forces, the venturing into! 1890 paved the wav fur unorJ0 placed in cold storage for .use after of the basin and the Kingdom of goal which had been reached at the 'Were: . . A al ,ltfu ri season, cry. Monday evening there were 31, when the ojx-rand. the life on thCcnted progress in education; same time In the 1937 campaign. TJY.rniir..rnia the I1'0 wcod? for ,rom !ed up at the Brice Commission com- ducks closes. created both the opportunity 'aton More than eighty members have ,T,?' n t,H k frontu'r ,he p,or trado. of these helped need for the development of and countries-- aU now been signed and .ssured promis- nn-phasu- ed TH IiM MliHAK A;0 YICAItN Y M KKS I.IST EDUCATION STORY or rom.Au you mi: b-- d. ,.C j j Hk, reat-cvtlv- e t ' u.. aup-po- wt-li- r ' i U d Year-1927-- 1 ur 19:7. , KT j educa-ty-Nine- ri 2 r," de-le- i e : , I ja.-f- t , la-gio- . u-- oj-. z;, nf"" " lin-o- ,l.K l hc ""and .llfr 2 2 . ef! Kj goal by the first of the year. (the contributions of the Dutch. Swiss. to prevent its existence; it served al (To be continued next week) Swedes. Danes. Norwegians. Scotch. !he C;'rm;?,s; pany three loads of alfalfa seed from tradition ana Emery country; five loads of tPl(d,.mocratlc mowment in Great Bn- We are glad to announce that we have completed onr Spur and flour, three loads of basin honey, the work bt Catholic societies From four to eight loads of Upalco ar d onUm; and the services of Serve You Direct are coming in every day. nnd,OU4 Protestant groups, the Pietists. YOU Mac and Mat ore finding a heavily Moravians, Quakers. Lutherans, and 70 - 72 OCTANE OUR TRY GASOLINE Calvinists. it. for demand increasing The colonists in a large measure A the educational practices transplanted Adn '0f bc mother country to the New IHUiy Ca a &w World and adapted them to their par- OPEN ALL NIGHT (Takdn from the files of The East- ticular needs and points of view; ern Utah Advocate of November 28. still the educational situation in America was. however, greatly 1907). complicated by the fact that the early settlers, although the majority came PHONE CAMPBELL'S TRANSFER STORAGE Telephone communication was last from England, were anything but ho- Sunday evening made with Salt Lake mogeneous from the standpoint of City and the outside world by the traditions, points of view, and aims; completion of the gap from Tucker so there were at least three and Colton by the Rocky Mountain MOVING 'PACKING .'SHIPPING groups the New England, the ' Bell with company with the lines of the Middle, and the Southern-e-ach Eastern Utah company at Castle rather distinct traditions and atti tudes toward educaion Gate. rpifE, Al. CAKUCN AVE- UTAH The New England colonies repre sented by far the most favorable conEmery county had its first snow ditions for education. The newcomstorm of the season Sunday when ers were for the most Dart Puritans about an inch fell. adherents to the Calvinistic wing of Protestantism, with common tradioutlook upon life. Ground has been broken for the tions and a common a highly educated people, were These foundation of the Methodist church keenly conscious of the need of secin Price. ondary and higher education for the training of leaders for church and Lowenstein Mercantile Company state, and strongly apprehensive lest will give away a handsome doll this learning be buried in the graves of year at Christmas time as they did the fathers. Accordingly New England proved to be the cradle of the last year. American public school system; here and secondary education, There are at this time some twenty elementary at first left to the home and to volfive new houses, mostly dwellings, untary endeavor, soon became comunder construction in the vicinity of pulsory through state action in Massachusetts as early as 1647. Helper and the town proper. In the Middle colonies conditions A magnificent school house is now were not as favorable for education; schools there became primarily a in the course of construction at matter of parochial and private confield. cern. In the South conditions were even Mai tin Millariche and George less favorable for learning; the preShaeffer are erecting a building r- valence of the plantation system placthe north end of the main street at ed severe limitations upon commun WHISKEY Spring Glen, to engage in the saloon ity life. The motive for elementary education was relatively weak, since business there. most of the settlers were adherents to English pretestantism. The need for secondary and higher education for the training of leaders was gen erally reeogmed, but it was felt that this should be provided through private and voluntary endeavor rather than through state action. New EnglandThe forward-lookin- g ers established, on April 23, 1635, the first American secondary school the !, THAT Thanksgiving Day V-ir- CON-TINU- E Send it to the Laundry We Pickup and Deliver 218 j PRICE STEAM LAUNDRY j I PRICE MOYEVAN ed 309 STRAIGHT Phone for a FREE Test, Find out if your home is safely lighted! Half-Pric- e, Electricity Is The fCt pil! U ETl Boston This colonial school had a Latin-Gramm- School. F reading makes your eyes ache, don't blame it on the book. Simply telephone and ask for a free Sight Meter survey of your lighting. Poor light is one of the commonest causes of eyestrain and its attendant evils yet thousands of homes are not properly lighted for easy, comfortable seeing. That's why we maintain this popto help you get the ular service g best possible light from the electricity you buy. Phone for your free survey. Let our trained lighting advisor hold a Sight Meter under your reading lamps . . . and see for yourself how they measure up. Every customer is entitled to this free service, so don't wait sight-savin- Biggest Bargain In The Home PHONE YOUR DEALEn OH UTAH POWER & LIGHT EO. i ?ire y iys Ac a I fcv ber drive br l sad 7 fi ciki Tbo'j P Bern Dnf J. Earri I W Pears ad? Sd no about tt v the at eessfi band thus It! of arck Ser I( BOURBOI! p: sault den. live' me that Sevc Peru ar dual aim preparation for college and preparation for public service in Qar Spri Fi TO WATER USERS The State of Utah, Office of State Engineer, Salt Lake City. Notice is hereby given that Jean Ardohain, Price, Utah, has made application in accordance with the Laws of Utah to change the point of diversion of 2.5 sec. ft. of water from Gordon creek in Carbon county, Utah. Said water, heretofore, was to have been diverted from April 1 to June 15, inclusive of each year by virtue of Application No. 11146, from each or either of two points described as follows: (1) W 1690 ft. and N 1144 ft. from the Sty cor. Sec. 10, T 14 S, R 9 E, SLB&M; (2) N 53 deg. 02 min., E 630 ft. from said Sty cor. Sec. 10. The water was to have been used to irrigate 200 acres of land embraced in parts of NVVty, NtyNEty, SWtyNEty, Sec. 13 and SEtyNEty Sec. 14, T 14 S, R 9 E, SLB&M. It is now proposed to divert 2 sec. ft. of said water at a point N 1140 ft, and W 1935 ft. from said Sty cor. Sec. 10, and .5 sec. ft. at a point N 53 deg. 02 min., E 625 ft. from said Sty cor. Sec. 10. The water will be used from April 1 to June 15, inclusive of each year to irrigate 134.5 acres of land located within the legal subdivisions hereinbefore described. This Application is designated in the office of the State Engineer as NOTICE i& er"" to. -t warn T5TT THAN EVER! Recent reductions in the domestic lighting rate, plus Extra Electricity at makes more light available at lower cost than ever before. is i col-jon- ial AND THEN LET THE ENJOYMENT OF THE HOUSEHOLD BY GATHERING THE LINEN AND v Si Good Deal For Your Dollar ' i M bf OTTOS TRACKSIDE STATION c well-defin- LIGHT IS CHEAPER It ied FROM TANK CAR TO Thirtir f EC ur i PHONE Kli res ANNOUNCEMENT vari-flo- FEAST V:: w sion Roll B.L ton to i trail tura tot C Tice stat in bett OpfK thro D froi diffi or Pa T 0rt to$ No. title All protests resisting the grafting of said Application, with reasons therefor, made in affidavit form, must be filed with T. H. Humphreys, State Engineer, Capitol Building, Salt Lake City, with one extra copy and $1.00 filing fee within 30 days after the date of last publication. T Ami fina that dl r corn tor T. H. HUMPHERYS, State Engineer. Date of first pub., October 23, 1937 Date of last pub., November 25, 1937 CODES: QUART 06PIHT 97 or Vis deb- |