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Columbia, Boone County, Missouri
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Goodwin's Weekly compliments University of Michigan journalism graduate Miss Amy Armstrong on her Sunset Magazine article about homesteading in southern Utah and her sketch of pioneer Mrs. Emmeline B. Wells in The New West Magazine's May issue.
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Goodwin's Weekly Compliments M. U. Graduate on Magazine Article.
Goodwin's Weekly, a Salt Lake City paper edited by Judge C. C. Goodwin, says of the article contributed to the last number of the Sunset Magazine by Miss Amy Armstrong, a graduate of the School of Journalism: " 'Homesteading Without a Chaperon' is the title of a cleverly written article contributed to the last number of Sunset by Miss Amy Armstrong. It is an interesting story, prettily illustrated, relating the experiences of a woman who has made good on a dry farm in southern Utah. Miss Armstrong is one of the best known women writers in the West, and is a regular contributor to Goodwin's Weekly."
"Shop Talk," a department which appears in each issue of the weekly, is written by Miss Armstrong,
In the May number of The New West Magazine, also published in Salt Lake City, a most appreciative and well written sketch of Mrs. Emmeline B. Wells, one of the foremost women figures in the West, is contributed by Miss Armstrong. The story is called "Aunt Em" and relates in a sympathetic fashion the work accomplished by this pioneer woman who is, as Miss Armstrong says in her closing sentence, "the highest type of efficient progressive womanhood."
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Salt Lake City, Southern Utah
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Goodwin's Weekly praises Miss Amy Armstrong's article 'Homesteading Without a Chaperon' in Sunset Magazine, detailing a woman's success on a dry farm. She writes 'Shop Talk' for the weekly. In The New West Magazine's May issue, her sketch 'Aunt Em' highlights Mrs. Emmeline B. Wells' achievements as a pioneer woman.