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Show PAGE TWO WEBER HERALD v S Hats and Caps NORMAN SIMS 384 TWENTY-FIFTH STREET B. F. THOMAS JOHN M.THOMAS B. F. Thomas & Son PRINTERS 2476 Washington Avenue Telephone 147-J J. S. Lewis Company Jewelers CLASS PINS CLASS RINGS Continuous Business Since 1849 Eimssgim' Drag O Ogden, Utah NYAL FACE CREAM NYAL TALCUMS 335 24ch St. Phone 623 Appearance is an Asset NATIONAL BARBER SHOP Under Utah National Bank Hair Cut 3 5c Children 25c Shave 25c Time For New Tires Hood Tires-Ajax Tires-Goodyear Tires See us before you Buy Curb Service Gas and Oil Free Air and Water Viaduct Auto Supply Company Phone 922 183 Twenty-fourth Street W. H. SHORT. Mgr. R.USSEL-J AMES CO. Props. The Wistaria Confectionery 473 Washington Avenue CROWN PAINLESS DENTISTS 2468 WASHINGTON AVE. Between 24th and 25th (East Side of Street) WEBER HERALD Published every other Thursday during the school year by the Students of the Weber Normal College Official Paper of the Weber Normal College Address all communications to Weber Herald, Ogden, Utah WRITTEN BY ENGLISH E, SECTION 1 AURELIA BENNION Advisor EDITORIAL STAFF Milo H. Lowder Managing Editor Florence Browning Society Ira Beckman Sports Junius Tribe Cartoons Marjorie Bush Class Reports Wayne Grow Humor BUSINESS STAFF JOSEPH JEPPSON Advertising Manager REPORTERS Edna Stallings Grace Hull Almeda Newman Ellen Grieve -Verlie Hunsaker Vinal Barlow Laurence Jenkins Josephine Anderson The- CfpcKEfy Peopl&J tutorials OUR DEVOTIONAL EXERCISES The students of Weber are fortunate in having a short period known as Devotional Exercises. We all enjoy this period possibly more than any other, because we hear excellent programs, speaking and debating contests, and talks from some of the great educators and men of the state and nation. Although the order during devotional has been greatly improved, it should become better and every Weber student should help support a move for this purpose. We have students in our school who are talented in many arts and have exceptional ability. If a committee could be appointed to arrange for one or two numbers to be rendered every day, it would be interesting and would not only restore order in devotional, but would give those taking part an opportunity to advance along the line of work that they are pursuing. M. H. L. THE BUDGET SYSTEM In connection with other improvements at Weber a budget system has been adopted: The purpose of this system is to distribute properly the funds, that each activity may receive financial support sufficient for its success. According to this plan, a certain amount of money will be set aside for the publication of the school paper, certain amount set aside to buy awards tor the honor students who work so hard for the success of the school. And so on with every activity. In this way, each will be financed according to its needs. This will be a benefit to the school as a whole because one activity will not be using the money that rightly belongs to another one. In other words we will not have to "rob Peter to pay Paul." M. H. L. SPRING IS HERE Spring insists that she must come forth. She cannot wait much longer. Already she has begun to stir and has sent advance agents as a feeler to determine an opptrune time for making her coup d' e' tat. Impatient tho she is she well knows that there is a season for everything and that an unwise move might spoil all. Imagine Spring trying to take possession at a brilliant New Year's Ball or a Valentine festivity! She would be the object of scorn and her reception would be cold indeed. She would be frozen out of all the gay circles by frigid glances half hidden in furs and overcoats- King Winter must rule yet a little season until the hearty support he has enjoyed has waned. Then in a moment of unwariness Spring will escape from her constraint and take possession. Then because we have tired of the old regime and its entertainments we will accept the new. We already begin to long for it and every day is strengthening that desire until it becomes a. craving that cannot be suppressed. Spring is not unmindful. She knows the change of feeling and is about to- loose her restless forces. The dormant period of inactivity is about to give way to the new, vigorous days of hope, enthusiasm and ardour. Pent up energy will be released and everything will begin to freshen and grow. The inanimate seeds of life will awake and heeding the call of nature will bring forth each after its kind. Every blade of grass and every insect will accept the call iui its own God-given way. and, "Whether we look or whether we listen, We hear life murmur or see it glisten; And every clod feels a stir of might, An instinct within it that reaches and towers, And groping blindly above it for light, Climb to a soul in grasses and flowers." But the message of Spring is also for us. We can't ignore it if we would. It stirs sleeping hopes and aspirations. It creates enthusiasm; arouses emotions. But those hopes, emotions, and aspirations are determined by ourselves. The thoughts we think are the seeds sown and determine the objects of our aspirations and hopes. We are all "groping blindly above us for light," and as we grow our actions will be determined by the seeds of thought. Significant it is that the emotions and aspirations are stirred to activity from without, but the control and direction of that activity is left to the individual. Each chooses for himself the seeds he sows and the harvest he reaps. G. O. Li. A WORD OF APPRE CIATION The road which leads to the success of a school play winds through many fields and over much ground. A group of students might present a beautiful play in a most commendable manner and still that offering might not triumph. For real success there must be co-operation throughout the school. Very sincerely do I wish to thank our president, our factulty, our students, for their efficient and loyal s,upport. The members of the cast worked untiringly and the plaudits which have come their way justly have they earned, and Weber may well be proud of them, for through them has been revealed Weber ideals. But there are many others who have reaped no special reward yet whose efforts were essential to the functioning of the play. Our president who by his support gave us greater courage, we wish to thank. The members of the faculty and the students who promoted, advertized, built scenery, who handled and sold tickets, excused students, made speeches, in a word, who stood behind us, we thank. The parents who bore with the absence from home of their children and who procured their costumes I remember gratefully. One cannot measure service by its tangable evidence. However small your offering may have seemed, it helped to swell the splendid aggregate which made possible the success of our play. Kindly accept our thanks. Blanche Kendall McKey. We have bought the negatives of all pictures taken at the Christy Studio, and can make more pictures, for exchange with classmates, at contract prices. WALTER A. HOENES, Prop. 2457 Washington Ave. Bob's Corner 14th & Jefferson Where they all go for their Candy, Bars, Cold Soda and Sandwitches From $7.50 to $12.50 a Pai Clark's 2E2S VJ I IIITj ldjo Washington ve. EVENTUALLY Paine & Hurst FOR GOOD THINGS TO WEAR "Where the Women Trade" WHY NOT NOW? jf trst jSattonal 33anli Ogden Savings Bank OGDEN, UTAH Capital and Surplus $650,000. Members of Federal Reserve Bank. Safety Deposit Boxes for rent. 4 interest paid on savings deposits. The KIMONO HOUSE Chinaware, Kimonos, Ladies Blouses, Skills, Silk Shirts and Novellies VARIETY OF BASKETS AND TOYS See us for best prices and qualities KIMONO HOUSE 301-502 24th St. The Hudson Noodle Parlor 2437 Hudson Ave. Phone 94 1 w |