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Show 250,000 HOLD JOBS IN UTAH 24,000 of 127,000 Males Engaged in Farming Report Shows i '- WASHINGTON, Feb. SO. A statement state-ment has been Isaut I the department de-partment of commerce thraugh the bureau of census, presenting the results re-sults of a further analysis of the occupation oc-cupation statistics for Fiuh. The total to-tal population of Utah In LM0 was J4I.J9t; and Included K'7.417 males and m.7M females 10 yean of age I and over, who are reported as working work-ing for salaries, wages or profit-- Of the males gainfully occupied. 24,244, or 10 per cent, wore farmers i in -hiding stock raisers. gardeners. I i florists, fruitgrowers and nursery-mrn) nursery-mrn) and 1G.77E or 13.2 per cent. ; were farm laborers (either including ' stock herders, drovers and feeders i The number ( farmers i presents an increase of 24.1 per cent as against 16.&41 In 1910. and the farm labor-I labor-I ers show an Increase of 6.4 per cent as .compared with 75 In lslO The I number of females gainfully occupied I included 679 farmers, ns against 514 I in 1910. and 11 farm laborers, as i comptired with 166 In 19 10. The- remaining occupational classes for each ol which at least z.soo pec- I sons of both sexes were reported in 192f. stated In the order eif their numerical nu-merical importance, are as follow: Salesmen : i -J wemien, 3S8G males j and 2059 females; retail dealers, 4423 'males and 221 females; schobj teach-' teach-' ers, 1042 males and 2894 females; servants and waiters, 1403 males and Jljii females; clerks, except in stores, 2953 males and 865 f males; coal mine operatives, 37 25 males and sis females; carpenters. 2519 males and one female; general laborers, labor-el's labor-el's entployeel on buildings and laborers labor-ers for whom the line of work was not Specified, 3260 males and 40 f. -male.j, hnok K t p r-, lashb-rs inil ac-countanta, ac-countanta, 1935 mules and 1119 females; fe-males; gold and silver nunc operatives. opera-tives. J920 males and one female; li-borers li-borers on steum railroads, J4S0 males and 48 females. The numbers engaged in certain iniporlaii' pi u'.essions vv : as follows: fol-lows: Lawyers, Judges and Justices, 626 men and one woman; physicians anel surgeons, 481 men and 22 women; wo-men; clergymen, 205 men and two women; trained nurses, 12 men and 544 women Pronounced Increases for females are shown for the following occupational occupa-tional classes: Stenographers and typewriters, from 1059 in 1910 to J1S3 in 1'l'0, saleswomen, from 93,1 to 2059; school teac'iers. front 2050 to 2894; bookkeepers, cashiers and accountants, from 5 SI to 1119. Tho most marked decrease in any Important Import-ant occupational class for women appears ap-pears for dr ' nakcrs and seamstresses, seam-stresses, not inc., ding those employed employ-ed in factories, whose numbers de-creased de-creased from 1587 in 1910 to 759 in 1920. |