Show FRIDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 8 1929 THE OGDEN STANDARD EXAMINER -- puromise you shall hear a great deal from us Wednesday we held our meeting with President- Edith Konold presiding5 r We discussed costumes and say— just wait until you see them Don't 'be ‘bashful step up and pat our new membersright on the back They are: Myrtle Herbert Myrtice Evans Marjorie Lindquist Ruth Jenson Elma Reynolds Lorna Evans Rae Hadley Burnadett Wedell and Althea Bell These girls are to be initiated Friday at oui? president’s home Girls! Beware! ' All we have to say is— we are looking forward to some more gay parties —Lois Robinson Reporter nANDY VOLUME This week Miss Hubbard’s English Classes are learning how to use the “Readers’ Guide to Periodical literature” They go to the library in groups of from five to six and get drill and instruction in the use of this important ref erence tool The Reader's Guide" is an index - nelson tiiora Editor Pro-Te- rn ASSEMBLY An assembly was! held this afternoon at 2 p m We had as speaker for this assembly sent by the American Legion Judge Howell who I gave a very Interesting talk The sponsors were in uniform for the first time They! made a very pleas ing appearance ' FOOTBALL i Let me remind you once again students to go out to that game It is going to be a fight to the finish We have a good team and we want to get out there and support them Remember the game is at 2 :30 p m with Weber County High school Xt Is being sponsored! by the American Legion We want to make this' the biggest and best game of the season and if we ali get behind and push our teamj slonjz we will win of all the articles written in the most important magazines It is published monthly In the front of every copy of the “Reader's Guide” is a list of the magazines which are indexed Item list varies from time to time as new magazines come into existence and other mazagines die OUt V Ur The arrangement of the Reader’s Guide is alphabetical just as a dictionary erne can find material tn three ways: (1) by subject (2) by author 3 f by title If you want to find a poem and do not know the author look up under the word “poems” ‘ j1 j CHEAP RADIOS ' Many firms advertise radios at most inviting prices Just as one gets keyed up ready to buy he notices in fine print below the cost price “without tubes” If this be good advertising why do not automobile firms advertise low prices on automobiles and then in fine print “without engines” or clothiers suits say $8 “without pants” or school ed for the appearance of Ogden’s wonderful R o T C unit and band in Armistice day parade Ogden people never tire of witnessing the fine appearance of these young men and yearly grow more appreINTEREST IN MUSIC ciative of their great contribution Ogden High school students are to public events and ceremonies J manifesting greater interest in music than ever! before 'This conies The following appointments' are probably from 1 the fact that finer hereby announced in the reserve ofmusic v is being offered right now ficers training corps' Ogden Senior than ' ever before When have we High school effective October 31: ever had such? an orchestra as that Company A—To be first sergeant which entertained the parents Wed- James Riley" To be sergeants Grey nesday evening? Answer— Never! Reynolds William DeHart Gilbert Tolhurst Charles Morby! Doyle Hales and Lester Douglas To be A NEW BASSO ' At Wednesday’s assembly teachers corporals Carl Grace Roney Inama and students were surprised and de- Fred Morris Harold Bell Boyd Carl Schoonmaker and Ray lighted by the vocal performance of Budge i a new high school ringer a Junior Orton student Frank ‘ Graested" Frank Company B—To be first sergeant has a wonderful voice and spendid Jack Hilton To be sergeants Rowcontrol Over it We begin to fore- land Corry Eldon Lowham Billy taste the aesthetic pleasures that Williams Preston MulcahyH Edwin await us in the annual school opera Miller Francis Sangberg and Dee Bramwell To be corporals Jack Arrangements have been complet Moore Taylor Wines Howard “geometries 50c— without problems” We are sure that such a scheme would Improve sales— especially in such articles as the last mentioned people Greenwell Clarence Clark Charles Peterson Anson McKinnon Thatcher and Harvey Higgs George Company C— To be first sergeant Ernest Sthnlei To be sergeants Ellis Stoker Max Clark j Albert Adams Frank Todd Porter Anderson and Louis Perry To be corporals John Hopkins Robert Prout Robert Kimball David Morrell Lee Shiff-l- et Thomas Condie Gordon Price Carl Cas person Jack West and Frank Miller ? f "T H CUNNINGHAM I ’Lieutenant Colonel If S A- - Re-tir- er - ! ? -- - P i r M Si and IT PEACE AID PLEDGED BY CAMP FIRE GIRLS NoV 8—i(AP)— Sup- NEW-YOR- K port for President Hoover in his efforts “to secure for the peoples of the earth a lasting and honorable peace” was pledged by j the executive committee of the Campfire Girls of the United1 States A telegram was' ’ sent the chief executive 5 today i killed the mother of five fatherless children'':' Seventeen Are Accused of Firing Shot Which Killed v Mother - GASTONIA N CL Nov 8— (UP) —Presentation of state evidence came to a temporary end today in the special Inquiry into the fatal shooting of Mrs Ella May Wiggins in a textili strike disorder here two months ago Defense alibis now will ' be presented Thus far the picture drawn from more than a score of witnesses by Solicitor John O Carpenter accused 16 men generally and one man particularly—Horace Wheeler a mill worker— of firlriv the shotLoray that - FAME HALL Ashton Harris Because he wants to know if whs travel In spools J - Members i of a grand Jury j which previously heard the case and failed to indict nine men! held to it were called to court yesterday in an effort of Charlie Shope state witness to identify one as a member jof the mob accused jof the ::- :! ' crime v Shope had : testified before the grand Jury and remarked later that he believed he had seen its for-m- an Howard Paysour in th mob Paysour and R RAutman another member of the grand jury were summoned by the state but: Shope was unable to make positive ideni tification ' anti-commun- ist 1 I i SfAY ' DRIVE CAR ALBANY N Y Nov (AP) — Governor Rocseveltl is now: authorized to drive a car Laving passed a test with one equipped with hand- brakes Infantile paralysis prevents using foot pedals I 8-- ' iff i ' f j or pools f Perry Ward— Because she put It over on us and found the good look- tog blopde senior plenty attractive Dave Lowham— Because he ' has only one sponsoC and four girls after him r Because li® has that sort Of “hair you ove to touch" appeal Florence Gay— Because she thinks A1 is “it" Because she’s never stopped at the gate upon arriving rhome at night (P S— They have " no - in k y gate!) LUNCHEON IS SERVED Wednesday at' noon the student of Misa Keener's first period English class had a luncheon The obof this noon-da- y meal was to 'ject teach students to it converse intelligently with pnS Another Each group of four discussed the Items of some magazine Tin charge was Garnett Bradshaw chairman Irene Gilmore and Mae Trousdale The luncheon was a great success Great - interest was stimulated among the students More lunch eons will be enjoyed in the future not only by the first period class ’ but by other classes also We hope others will benefit by our experiment it i r- -f amefe Bradshaw - V Y — aL' '4 I - The-committ- i ‘it 5'' r ifJAWit 1 j ' K T'jvrjc?vvfc 1 porter Winifred Laurie Nelda oeasions Marion Allison Billie Lucille Shaw Madeline Malan Wheeler Fthal Thomas Valerie Bradshaw Wanda Weeble Julia Cain Donna Malan and Naomi HalL !j Now for our initiation! The poor pledges! Phi Lambda has a reputation of always doing everything up in fine style and! this initiation 1? going to be the best of the year We’ll tell you more when it’s over Phillis Fredrickson AMIGOS vw ! ?5Vcsr ' I i - Hdi y ' Jgii POT LAMBDA TAU 'Here we are Phi Lambda’s’ complete membership: Lucille Van Dyke president Florence Cave vice president Lucille Hales secretary and treasurer Phyllis Frederic kson 1- ''' x ‘III ?4 ’ J ztit I — X ' ' ' : — r V I::! : V’V Ml t ij j MUNDO Stand aside folks here somes ADM full of pep andMun with which to start this year We may be a little late but we Sour Stomach Is Danger Signal at breath on a cold BLOT7 yoursee how the vapor Nature Warns When poison Gas T Begins to Sapi Your Strength ' !i -- ijjj 1 ma a Sour Taste Sour Risings Heartburn Belching Bad Breath Pains in the Pit of the j Stomach— are Na- VV--4 5? ture’s way of telling you! that something Is wrong with your most important organ thje stomach These symptortis generally mean Hyper-Acidi- ty the forerunner of more serious ills such as stomach Ulcers and other frequently fatal L v conditions disorders these instantly! Get 4 Stop Take a ieaspoonful in a little water after meals You will be amazed' at the quick relief you get You can feel working - In 10 ” minutes time or pss- r is a new scientific compound Its special ingredients go directly to the sojurce of stomach troubles The corrective action is mild and soothing— a pig advance over the Violent harmful effects of soda or potassiuin BifRex is sold under a satisfaction or Imoney back chramm -- Johnson guarantee byDrugs and all good druggists settles The same thing happens 7Vfi 4i in your car ' gasoline i’fft ! 'J won't stay mixed with air when tl hits the cold manifold- “Dry” Shell 400 overcomes this—it stays vaporized & v k r 4 m No m - I! I “wet?- - j j n f ' ex Bi-R- ( I ’ ex ’ Bi-R- ex ' j I : : down attery - i W PI - 4- tins witn fv ? - 4 ' v-- - ’ V - V1- V n ’ ' T have been taking Lydia E Finkham'a Vegetable Compound to build me up and for the Change of Life and I can’t get along without in I lpst about twenjy pounds and I felt weak and rundown I find It rives V V J me strengthJ ndj quiqts my nerves 1 have two daughters land 1 gave it to diem when they came into womanhood and was greatly pleased at the results I will an wer any letter asking for informl ion”—Mrs L E x- v : J 4 f iMornings are getting colder—motors are harder to start But you have a wonderful chance to test your gasoline YouVe been told how Shell 400 the “dry” 'gas keeps out of the crankcase It does but it’s hard to prove it to your neighbor who uses a“wet”’ gas You only see it when yc u drain your oil’ j Yet when cold weather comes and “wet” gas— even winter quality of “wet” gas— floods the carburetor sputters only half- heartedly and refuses to vaporize you can change to Shell 400 the “dry” gas and see the difference at once A whirl of the starter It doesn't take many cold CC mornings' to' flood your boil with condensed wc£' gasoline that runs down the cylinder walls Here is an example — oil half gasoline in less than flee hundred ’miles of run-- rung! ’ on half choke and you’re away— Just like summer You waste no gasoline you protect your oil from the dripping “wet” particles that would run down the cylinder walls you save gasoliner-mil- es i !' of it with “dry” gas Refined by scientific methods to that exact point where! “diy” I- - vaporization is possible Shell 400 bums completely for maxi-‘ : mum' power Don’t be misled by “winter gasolines” —you want neither winter nor) summer quality of “wet’j gasoline Buy SHellj400 at convenient yellow and red pumps— and save yourself a lot of winter starting problems ‘ j ' j - SheU JOO the “dry”' gasfyou can often run a T7t£& full thousand miles and have less than 10 gaso- line f in your oil — not enough to variously dam age it j T STARTING Op Hanson Waterloo Iqmxl And about o3: There's an foil now that forms no hard flinty carbon If you would prevent the endless troubles caused by carbon" and “add thousands of miles tothelife of your car ” insist on SHELL MOTOR OIL whenever you buy I You can teR Shell 400 in the starting Pud your choke out only half wayI Push it back in 'a few seconds after ihe'moler starts Shed 400 requires less choke than gasoline bvi can stand more without causing oil ' thinning j ' J |