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Show • THE JORDAN JOURNAL A ~:=.~============================~==~l&noohPmrung America Destined to Le11d Little Messengers of Love Are Gladly Receiv~d World, Says Frederick by Everybody. Neil Innes. 0. That the public school band movement Is bringing America to the fore In the music world, is the belief of Frederick Nell 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 not yet rank with Germany, Franee, Hungary, Italy or England, but we are climbing. Fully eighty per cent of the high schools have some mt.skul organization, an orchestra or a band, 'Or both. Musle in the public · schools I N C. STOR E S Midvale, Utah. Doing a Good Job Has Mutual Benefits Success eomes from doing a good job. We are all judged more accumtely by ov d'*is than by our promi.ses. We do not like to make promises for sometimes it aevelops tilat it is impossible to fulfill them. We prefer that you judge this Store, our service and the goods you buy here ancl the 'values you get, by what you actually der.ive f:r:-om each visit to us. That is the test by which you can decide whether we are doing a good job-whether we deserve your continued patronage. As we the border which separates the new from the old year, it might be a fair to of ourselyes: "Are we buying our personal and household needs the most in wear and service for eaeh dollar expended?" and selective power is we fee~ confident, doing a good This Cou1pany'a·· ~ for you-as • • fhe Best That.Money Can Buy! . Fre'derlck Nell Innes, Director, Conn National School of Music. Our Winter Coats "'ill give America tllls coveted musical supremacy." Mr. Innes further believes that the time is near at hand when even the smallest community will have its band. He thinks that when thi!l condition is brought ahout that it will be due largely to the Incentive given musical training by the public schools of the nation. ''The modern schooi is as proud when a musical championship is won by their band or orchestra as It is when their football heavies go down the Held to glory in every game they play,'~ he sazs. "The ban(] or orchestra Is vastly superior to the vocal class," says Innes, "because the boy in the adoleseent stage simply wiU r.ot sing. He may be compelled to go through the motions. but he will not actually lllng. He ~;e fuses for the simple reason that hE' has no voice to sing with. Give such a lad a trombone or a cornet, or any other Instrument of the band and his musical progress wlll astound even lllmself." 14.75 and $19.75 I Your money will absolutely go' farthest here in these striking Winter Coats at our stunning low prices I 0 This is ·the time to choose your new Coat I YQU will receive almost a full season • of wear this y~ar--a.od then be all out&t'WCI laext 'Fall. This Town of 20 Has 44-Piece Band ValUCMWhicb Shine Out! ) Sjylea~ Radiate! ! I . ..t.":·· ;·~~· . .;· -~· ·Fur .trimmings; neat~ dur~ble li~.. ings; bOlivia and suede ·fabrics---)~ the attributes of intrinsica11;· good Coats! You make no mistake when J'OU buy .herel I F WHAT value tu anyone Ia a name on a poatal card? Thla card craze at Christmas does lit tle more than till our waste baskets. There Is seldom a greeting saved to 1•efer to utter a day or so. This Is my iir!lt cardless Chrlstmo.s. It I can send no more than a card to my friends 1 ~hall send nothing,'' Laura Lee de dared during an afternoon's ahoppin~ trip with her U"elghbor, Mrs. Rand. c.-llw...-.olchildrcawhewantedhunt'"The Cllrd muy ro Into the wast~ s- called ... the'- -.led Lda'a " nasket but the kindly thoughts that s- - llw far tropia. - ,_, lhe Azanll th~ car1 conveys to the one who re· AD E.npe. ud Aaa. ud Africa t.e.d. eelves It and the joy of the sender of F• .U had tuaed-in aad - aeaia1 lhe waalthe curd could not he contained In the "1" . - .••• - COalina-" Cick- '1xinaiaa ..... largest basket In the world. There F• It- who ue eaaer. and -ty to .,. are some thing-s that we may not May .,_a,ly - ~1he,..ty- ...,_ 'sera p,' nor cun we afford to east some things out of our lives. If my dlsf:..J bop D "'f~ ~b.uten away. •tgreeuble and harmful manners and Diawded. my'.Je;ah. witll the daya that - . . habits could be thrown Into a scrap W'dl- ~\ ~ ~w lodla or .. " heap as easily as a card may be cast But ,... -~lie ji~ ol ....driwa juo there, It the worthy, · lovely Impulses Aa I peckcb. ud hwnecly .,_ of the sender could be filed away In my bruin-box for reference whenever ~~ .''11'-N.....,~ !l previous desire to be kind and nn· ~_, (II®~ ;;elfish Is forgotten und the u~rly, selftsb . cp " part of myself begins to assert Its ownership, I would be 1h1d,'' Mrs. Rand !lnswered kindly. FOR RENT-Two rooms, suitable fot Two days before Christmas Edith office11 Over C'.-orner Meat 4 Groltand hurried across the street to the cery. Lee home on an errand. 'l'he mall man had just left the door as Laura Lee FIVE ROOM House on Main Street met Etlith with a handful of lett&rl' In Midvale, for rent. inquire at and c.trds. the Midvale aate Bank. "Please walt uiltll I look over JUNIORS PLAN REVENGE this curd from Jane, the dear. Shthasn 't written me f()r ages. Let me The Midvale Juniors 'basketi>all '!ee who this one Is from. Why from Lena ln Cuba! And one from Jack Ia team are planning for revenge. '!'hey Cnnada, and dear old pal Ethel In play the Midvale M Men· 2nd team Mexico. When have lever heard from and they also will play the Metbodist Cora Haines? I had lost her where- chut1ch ~m to even the score and abouts. Lena Is teaching In a mission not fol'getting the West Jordan Farm school. Cousin Jack Is In the gov- ers who have a hoodoo over the Juernment's employ and as busy as a niors, the basketball has a squad of bumble bee. We used to get our "trig" l5 men which will be cut down to ten together in college. He would help me in the next game. while I wrote his English outllne11. The Juniors opponents will receive Dear Ethel says st.e has established a a surprise. The Juniors have been school for girls. And here Is dear Mur· practicing for the Salt Lake Rover's garet Lane with her third baby. She i .game to be played at Salt Lake Po· ls writing this card while watching the 1lice Gym~ .. The Juniors Qfficers were enterbaby who Is 111. To think they found time to write to me. 0, Edith, never 1 tained at Salt Lake Tuesday evenhave I realized before how huppy u 'ing, :where they were the guests of name on a card could make one feel.l the Kinema theatre ana enjoyed Red What if no one ?ver thought to write . Grange in "One Minute To Play." me? What a dtscovery to find thut 1 Juniors will hold a meeting Saturour thoughts, our love may be so big I day evening at 6:30 every Junior is while sending a card, for no package · asked to be there. See that you are. is large enough anyway to hold genu· Meeting will be ·at Joe Qotter·s 1 lne good wlll and love. The joy these h messages have brought me could never ome. be tllruwn Into a waste basket. Please forgive my words the other afternoon. GOITRE REDUCED FIVE INCHES Can you hurry to town with me to buy And Health IJllproved for Spokan ~ Lady all the car<ls they have? It wlll take a great numl:!er to distribute son1e of )Ira. Bertha Landberg, E. 2607 7t: the good will and love that Is buhbllng Ave.. Spokane, Wash., says "Since over In my heart. It Is true this joy, using Sorbol-Quadruple, a colorless peace nnd love that Christmas meanl!l liniment a short time my Goitre i:s -the things the Babe In the M11nger goone. My evesight is good. I sle6iJ brought--can never be cast IDto a nigo~ts. and feel like I <lid before. waste basl>et. Will tell or write by full experience.' (@, 19%1, Western Newapaper Uolon.) Wn.e Sorbo! Oompany, Mecha.niscburg, Ohio. Sold at all drug stores. Loc»lly at Midvale Drug Co. On Chriatmaa Day w- M *'" 1(}'7' And Make Sure of Quality Here Not Ollly in the low prioea. ~t in i'he remark ably good qualities of ·the IRterfals aftd pilOQJIJ• Mrs. David A. Shields is to her )led again and she is sufTerin.ar with her ·heart and Mr. and Mrs. Bart Hovx~rot\ children of Salt Lake anJ Mr. Mrs. Laurence Rindolsbach of Jordan were dinner .g uests of Mr. \ad Mr.c~. R. A. Naylor on SunJay of ~ Like a vetau ol w- wbo- old ud dwo=·rir. n- !inally datal lo tfle I1I1Lcokn joy Of lather. mel llllllhos.... BaY.,. thr'llop. "' haw tt. aied lather. who, alduaa • I.JillllllAim lenath. a-.ht llw -ae It aa• -c- quocl" he aaed sbnlly...COIDC Oll.lilten'To llw 111aJ1t111 old m-ae_... luod a1 a~ The lone ,_ -dim W1lh • llidta.a liahl: The oul8de. qudc ln.ty, llcmanlled 111 white. Cick.Oick-lluu-aluna.andthenthewonl'"r. Came thnouch the recei-. rich& out ol the •A& am1111 a1 ...dntaht-amw loetweea - . (The riaaiotol Ioeiia) ...llhe - olthe ..." , _ it ~tapped. it - Sula. and out ol the - By GERTRUDE WALTON • A 20-man town with a 44-plece band has been c!lscovered ·by the Conn Mu sic Center at Elkhart, Ind. Forest Grove, Mich., Is the town. 'fhe entire population of 20 Is housed In five dwellings. Small boys throw stones from cne end of the town to thJ! other. Two stores serve the need!" :Keep a lookout for old Santa of the community. Yet Forest Grove's He's coming soon to ;you. band numbers 44 pieces. He's coming to the little onq The hamlet lacked pave(i streets And to the bl~ folks, too. and population. It was not even mentioned on the maps, yet the "musical DOUGHNUTS urge" was there. Several of the You'll find a good recipe for doughtownsmen knew something of music, as did several of the boys on the sur· nuts in Farmers' Bulletin 1450-F, rounding farms. Tbere were lots of Baking; also one for cookies and others 'raring to blow a horn. A meet- several for cakes. ing 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 overnl,;ht. Rehearsals are ·faithfully attended. "Band night" sees the one street lined with parked automobiles; and .r. Forest Grove, once a jest, has becl!me tlse envy ot the surrounding commu· DESTROYS Dities. FLIT .... U.LMY• Housewives Big Buyers of Musical Instruments Elkhart, Ind.-SI.xty per cent of muelcal Instruments sold to women are Pllrchased by housewives, It Is revealed In a survey made by the Conn Music Center here. The survey was made througb music Instrument deal· ers In twenty cities, and covered 820 actual transactions. One out of every ten Instruments aold were purchased by women, and their preferences for instruments was very much albng the lines favored by the men, according to the survey. Of the total number of transactions, fiftytwo per cent Involved the purchase of a saxophone, sixteen per cent that of a trumpet, and nine per cent that of a trombone. That youth wlll be served, especlalll· In music, was well lllustrated In thf ·ages of the purchasers. Fully thirty four per cent of those purchasing ht· strumenta were under twenty-one :rears of uge, while nineteen per cent were between the ages at t enty-one end twenty-five, and twenty-one per· cent between the ages of twenty-five and thirty. Only twenty-six per cent of all transactions Involved pel'IIOna of th' rty years and over. Flies, Mosquitoes Roaches Bedbugs THE CHIUSTMAS SEAL . (Tune: "Jingle Bells") Each year at Christ.ma.~ Time The GOQd Health Christmas Seal Brings tidings of good cheer And makes its big appeal. It only costs a cent. No one's too poor to buy; So we can :have a splendid sale If we will only try. Chorua CluUstmas Seals, Christmas SeaLs, Buy the ~;tickers bright; . In our war against diesase, Help us win the fieht. Christmas Seals, Christmas Seals. Buy them by the score. Every penny helps a lotDollars help lots more. The symbol of Good Health, Of fresh air night and day. The seals teach ev'ry one, To live the proper way. They help to cure the sick. To keep the well folks well, The good that's done by each small seal We can't beein to tell. ' 2 South Jordan :li;JJJ( Give Something To Wear Now Ia the Time To Buy 4 Christmas Cards Bring Good Cheer I Mmic to Fore A NATION-WIDE INSTITUTION• DEPARTME a ant There is a species of which carries an umbrella of petals or leaves when it rains. Wt!f>.k. Maiva Naylor, daughter of Mr. an4 Mrs. R. A. Naylor is im1Jroving at t.heir home after a two we~ks iHness. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Robe1tson were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. R8bertHOn of Midvale on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Nielson spent Sunday, guests of Mr. and Mr.;;. William Newbold. · Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson were t. e dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alma Wheadon on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wardle were WPek-P-nd visitors of Mr. and Mrs. R. W . Palmer of West Jordan. !Mr. and Mrs. J. Gamble and two s18ter,. from l'ark City spent Sunday aa ~ul'-8t;s of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gamble. Mr. and M11s. Lee Bradford, Mr. and Mrs. Nolan RhieMs of :siagna a.n<i Mr. and Mrs. William Hewlett. were week-enrl Jn)esta of Mr. and MRJ. 01\.vid A. Shields. :.;herman Mabey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Mabey is improving 'lt their home after suffering the past week of bronchitis. Walter A. Mabey \Vill be road su.p'!rvisC'r foo- this ward for the coming t-erm M1·. anr Mrs. Leo D. Palmer pd · ~h'ldren, Reta and Dale ' have been on the sick list .t he p!119t week. Mrs. Hattie Mackay and Charles Todd of Granger were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs, Leo Palmer on Sun•Jay. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Stocking were Wt>'!k-Pnd g-uests of MrR. George Stock ing. Mr. and Mrs. Gust Ca!as of Bingham were also thdt· guests Sunday. ~ Mr and Mrs. Ed !-lun motored to &llt Lake and attended the dance a.t the Rl'uebird Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Naylor and Edna Naylor motored to Mu.gna and were !rll~S of Mr. and Mrs. Jra Rasmus!\en last week. . Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Beckstead visited with Mr. and Mrs. Golden Holt no Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. l~d Beckstead wer guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beckstead, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. :llartin A. Beckstead bad as; .their ~rUests. Mr. and ·Mrs. Samuel Cooper on Sunday. Mra. Jesse N. Beckstead is ill at her home. Her eondition is reported some better. .Mrs: C•. Mabey spent one day last wP.ek visiting her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mabey. Mr. and Mrs. Hardcastle of Sandy were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Shields. Alonzo Oakeson was a week-end guP.st of Mr.s. Emma Sheppick. Mr. and Mrs. George Stuart were Salt Lake visitors Saturday. Clinton Beekstead visited Sunday ev..ning at MQrray. Mr . .~nd Mrs. Elred Wardle spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Wardle. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Beckstead of Riverton and Mrs. Ben Max11eld were week-end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ramuel Beckstead, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beckstead of Riverton buried their infant baby la..~ week. The babe lived only two h<>urs. Howa~:~d Beckstead is a son of Mr. and iMrs. Samuel Beckstead, Sr., of this ward. They were also formerly from this ward. Don't fail to attend the big Christmas Oper~tta to be given by the s("l)ool children Thursday evening, December 23. FOR RENT-Two office rooms, over Corner Meat and Grovery-$10.00 per month. A New. York girl has a dress made of thousands of tiny gold plates put t01gether .by hand. The material is so assembled as to resembel the finest silk. An airdale who travels from door to door in London with a box and sign hung around his neck has collected $,500 for a dispensary for sick animals. FRESH SWEET. ORANGES Fresh Sweet Oranges, $3.00 per box of three !hUIIdred large size. Boxes larger than standard size. Sound fruit and satisfaction guaranteed or money back. We pay express charges. A box of these makes an appreciated Christmas gift. Remit witlh order. ACME ORANGE FARMS, LaGra.nge, Texas 'HICK'S TAIWRING · Suits Made To Order Telephone Midvale 107 All Work Guaranteed We Call for and Defiver 109 Center St., Midvale, Ut. I c. |