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Show Vv' ;,!lr ta rI'1 ',1 f 1 j , t Successor To The Progress VOL. V. A JUNCTION. PIUTE COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY, Vacation That Is Not Stay A Vacation The Utah Farm Girls Told 19,-33- popu-lateo- ht rTEsjSir,S5r?rfr7SJ of that' even in these five y t days Presicalled vacation hut that' the dent sat and thought much vof jiie problems of the day. The time does., not include of course; the hurried trip that the President and Mrs. Coolidge made to his. fa-- ; . Yrien-tion- ed thers home in Vermont when Colo- -' riel. Coolidge wrs operated upon. When .the' President first arrived at White Court there' were burner-ou- s invitations fronr society people asking , that he attend this or that function. It is needless to say. that these'invitations were declined. The Preskk nt had no time to fritter at away;' There were too many' qups-tions'th- the ages of 'fifLeen and twenty-fou- r years; A big factor 'in' explaining the popularity of marriage in thd country over . that in cities is the relatively better economic posilijn cf the farmer, according to Mr, Ewing. No matter how poor, the farm family is almost al ways assured of food and shelter, and there is never the fear of loosing one s job. Too, there is a between the greater farmer and his wife than exists in the cities The idle wonan is almost unknown here, for the . wife helps with the chickens the cows and the hogs while her husband is out in the fields. And so while the city .man may be financially unable to marry, for the farmer it is practically an : 'r - had to be decided, and in ' addition to that, Mrypoofidge is of the opinion that the President of economic necessity. the United States should devote hisi sunset fl&mes across the western rim wS&ii hues that baffle all the art of man; ne firsta silhouettes and slimj Stand guard above the valleys that tKej crow, with one lasting, lingering caw,1 trees in unison sway restlessly, ff n twilight seems to grow A sense Of loss that holds one breathlessly. v,The SSyESIThe 1 . The people of the country as a whole,-- will applaude the frank comH. B. Hughes ment of at the Williamstown conference, when he declared that for his part, he was a little bit tired of hearing European authorities, visitors in this country, comment adversely and critically on American activities. Not so very long ago. President Coo- -, lidge felt obliged to utter weil meri- ted rebukes to the American resi- -; dents abroad who took upoq them- . TV southeastern Ohio, county, shortly after 5 oclock on the morn-tn- g Noble in J " . ,No 4. ; - - New Hopes For Silver ocals , . I , i en- BILL BOOSTER SAYS Belter Times Coming Quite a number of Junction people visited .the Sevier County Fair Thursday, L. C. Peterson and family. P, M. Rick and famiiy. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Barlow.; Mrs. Helen Allen, and Misses DeLqne Rrck and Clara Morrill, Mrs. Rick sajT3 the display in all departments was extrA fine. There is no better barometer of business conditions than earnings of railroads. Gross earnings indicate volume of freight movement and travel. Net income shows degree of prosperity of railroads themselves, it is highly important that the carriers be prosperous in order to attract new money to create new fa'' ' cilities for moving increased traffic Judge N. J. Bates and Attorney which results from increasing popuv Parley Magleby were In town this lations. of session a morning holding shrt Court. Judge Bates went on toPan-guitc- h Miss Witchen, the Federal Nurse where he will hold another for this district appeared before the session s Board with a request that a special Nurse be appointed for Piute County ? Miss Alta Anderson teturned from The matter will be taken up with Cannonville last Tuesday where she Dr. Beatty, who will meet, with the s and Commissioners here In the near fuspent, a few days friends.' 1 ture. ' ; Evry penny advance m the price per ounce for,, silver means greater profits for hundreds of mining properties in the western states. The white metal is now selling at around ' seventy cents an ounce. ' , Ore bodies which could not be profitably .mined with silver, selling . at lower figures can now be Worked and this means prosperity for many states. There are few mines that do not produce silver us a byproduct. Mining is a bread and butter inselves responsibilities of attempting dustry, and its .prosperity is tp a to apologize for Americas attitude great extent, influences the financ'on the matter of war debts to the ial statutes of Our Countiy.' '' officials of the cotnlry in which they were resident. The Presidents reour European buke, happily,, resulted in these im-- r. has also now advised .i r- rmature; and unofficial spokesmen visitors.. that they might be engaged The family of. John I. Norton has The County Commissioners held seeing the' error of their ways , and in a better business than visiting Admiral America for the purpose of" criticiz- their regular meeting Thursday. moved back from Tanguitch for the appolog'zing: promptly. " T . Hughes, in a blunt sailor fashion. ing our internal and foreign policies. Routine, business was taken care of. winter, Rear-Admir- al -- s AVWE'tosam w,fcjrr me XROuaie wvm SOME 0US1UESSMEU IS 'THAT TUEH WAVE A WlSWBOWS h IUSYEAO OP A fcAOOOUE 1 i NCX) GOT TO STEP CSK AUO WOSTVE IP MOUV1AWT THE OOUARS 'TDRDICWOVR. DOUY MEAU VUAM, AWO . MANGJU I i jt - with-'reiative- . Ji Junction k. . ( of Septembei 3. Tossed like a toy baloon by the terrific wind the airships structure The go about the evening work v-- i proved to frail and the name of Upon the farm, their routine as of old, Shenandoah took its place on the minor detail overlook, or shirk, roll of giant aircraft that have met No voiced complaint to listening ear e'er told; disaster. Her fate recalls other similar tragedies in which American ambition first surveyed , They plod the paths airmen have lost their lives, those When little cliildren romped beside the door; which befell the ZR-- 2 and the Roma Alone, they face the twilight, bent and grayed, the most notable. Their plans fulfilled and asking nothing more. being The ZR-- 2 buckled and exploded over Hull, England, on August 25, 1921, causing the death of 62 of the But oh! there is a heartache in the scene, 66 men aboard, 17 of whom were The empty house where youthful voices were, Americans, the nucleus of the crew The verdant acres where the grain is green sent to bring the airship to the Uniwhile winds stir of stalwart ted States for the American Navy. sons, night Speak On February 25, 1925, tne Roma, the of The memory a grave upon hill; The whispering of the evening is a prayer, sST bought in Italy for the United States Army, went out of control over the There is a tensity of silence; still Army bose at Hampton Roads, Va., struck electrtc wires which broke, the' resulting sparks setting fire to , L , jjfrJfrUusaqajjg; in the distant citys, rush and roarr - ,f 46 men Id the crevfc, v ' 'durjtT.fhe taught by its tides and tangled, in its net, "It is estimated that not less than Are those who played beside that farmhouse door. 20,1)00 lives o? kifmen iiave beenlost " And oh, the tragedy when they forget! Including war deaths, since the first . ' airplain fatality on September 17, V CcffrltKl by Dodd, kftod fit Co, bit . 1908, when Lieutenant Thomas E. of United the States Army Selfridge w)s killed and OrvilleWright, the,'..-pilot- , was severely injured-,-- -Piute Scliocls To Open ,So!emn official investigations foU j low each disaster, but , appearantly is ever done to prevent their little September 2 1st. recurrence. Coming almost simultaneously with the loss of the' Navy At a School Board session held Tue. airplane NP-- 9 No. 1 and crew of five . A party in honor of Hyrum Morril', a delegation of patron$ from Circle-- in an attempt flight from San Franhis wife and son, of Hints, and Mrs. ville and Kingston presented a re- cisco to Hawaii, the loss of the Sudweeks, of Idaho, was htldin the quest that the optning of schools Sherandoah is very depressing to church Monday evening. Mr. Morrill of Piute Co. be postponed one week those responsible for the efficiency and Mrs. Sudweeks are brother ar.d as the gathering of the crons would of our air services, us well as to the sister of John and Charles Morrill of make it impossible for many of the taxpayer who pays the bill. this place. They weie formerly resi- students to start befere the 21st. If ono is clever at dodging dents of J unction but have been away An order was made setting Sept. 21 as the date on which the schools of he will not have to meet them. for many years. will this open. County old fashioned How Do A time in serving che people rather' About the only time a woman of some; than being the center-piec- e dosent get the last word is when social gathering. . god she is talking to another woman. You Do The Presidents vacation may party was thoroughly all be best described by one word.-worpresent. joyed by No Apology Heeded Again the highest modern engin eering skill has been set at' naught by the elements, resulting in the loss of the great dirigible airship Slien- andoah and the lives of 14 or more officers and nitn. 1 his proud craft, 680 feet long, the pride of the American Navy, broke in pieces and fell to earth while trying to weather a storm over i -- " Airship Shenandoah Collapses Sears-Ropuc- 4. NO. 37. Home To Wed The Utah countiy girl has a betSwampscott, Mass. Sept. 11, 1925. ter opportunity for marriage at (N. P. S.) The vacation of President Cooli home than she' would in the city. of marriage statistics dge has not been a vacation at all. Comparison It was merely a transference of his for city and country districts in the k duties frow Washington to Swamp- state by P. V. Ewing of the Agricultural Foundation, scott, Massachusetts. Here is a real reveals whereas the number of that story of how Calvin Coolidge spent in Utah cities is obout women the time when he was away from the single 77 per cent of the number of its nations capital. It is more than doubtful that Mr. single men, out in the rural sections there are almost two single men to Coolidge would have visited any other place than the humble home every single woman. An examination of census figures of his father in the Vermont hills 8 had it not been for the fact that it by Mr. Ewing, showed there are single women fifteen years of was absolutely necessary that certain and age up in the cities of the state, repairs be made to the White House. It certainly was in need of repaiis, and 25,016 males. In the rural places, and it should further be repaired, or places of 2,500 population and for the historic home of our Presi- under, however, there are 15.789 15 years of age and dent is not in what the average single women to 28,278 single men. householder would call perfect con- over The figures also show that rural dition. folks have a greater tendency to During the time that Calvin Coothan have city folks. VVheie-a- s lidge has been away from Washing- marry 61.7 percent of the rural inhabiton he had just exact y five days of real vacation: three of these he spent tants of the state are married, in in Plymouth Ver- the cities only 60.25 per cent are at his birth-plac- e found so. This is in accord with conmont. it is true that he was there ten States for six days, but during that time ditions throughout the Uni which shows that while 61.8 percent he had a conference with Secretary of the rural population is wedded, Mellon and Senator Smoot of the n Debt Funding Commission, and also the percentage for the urban is only 58-- percent. The larreceived other gove nment officials of married persons whose business was ccst pressing. gest percentage The other forty-eighours were inbolh the urban and rural sections Used in visiting historic points in is.betweeu the.age period of 35 to i SEPT. 11,1923. . f f , : . V t i i |