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Show Some Items Of Interest If there's a Red Cross on your paper your subscription subscrip-tion is past due. Remember! The following is from our good friend and Neighbor, Hon. Geo. A. Christensen, a State Senator and a Stake President one of the best meD we know of. We treasure this tribute and shall keep it to the end of our days. S L. City, Aug. 1, 194 1 Progressive Opinion, Dear Mr. and Mrs. Lund I saw the md cross on my papertoday and am glad you reminded me that my subscr-ption subscr-ption is past due. I am anxious anx-ious that the paper be con tinunlly delivered to my desk I read every issue and have clipped more choice bits of sound and practical philoso phy from Progressive Opinion Opin-ion than from any other pap er or magazine. If it is necessary to i'oub!e the price of subscription please bill me. In the meantime mean-time I enclose my1 check gladly. Success and thanks to you both. Respectfully, Geo. A. Christensen Neighbor Wm Halladay of R 241 East 6th So., praised the article on Banking in the last issue. Mr. Halladay is an economist. ec-onomist. You can learn a lot from him about saving money on rent and living. He has ex pensesdown to a fine basis and in some ways he is as rich as Croesus, T. J. Rosser of 358 No. 3d W., was caught in the act of rolling a cart wheel up the stairway, and it sure found its place. Neighbor Rjssiter is sav ing his copies of the paper and when he gets time he will do some clipping and make a book. He is an applicant for a state job aud we most heartily recommend him in every way. Neighbor Geo. C Christensen Christen-sen has graduated from the columns of this paper into the Forums of the dailies. His moth er met, with an accident and is confined to the hospital. At their outing last week the Utah County Old Age Pension Association was organized with C. V. Hansen temporary chairman. chair-man. Thy had a fine outing. True Tales of Sage Brush Democracy j One fine October morning when one of the earl cam. I paigns was hot and furious in a town where nearly all were Democrats and to whom the . new politics was like religion, i a good brother came rushing j to th : bish pi who was chair-on. chair-on. n of the party. "Say bishop," bish-op," he said, "my neighbor, John Jones is apostatizing." How's that?" said the bishop, j " v ell, he says he'd gonna vote j the Republican ticket. I alius s i peclcci him of horse stealing j but. I didn't think he was that b.d.' ''Yep," said the bishop, "I know its bad but remember i here's no religion in politics oidy an high churchmen put it in. I'll just ask John Henry if its the Lord's wiil that some of us should go over to the Re- publicans and make the party look sort o respectful like " |