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Show WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1922. THE WEBER HERALD WEBER HERALD I'lihlinlwl tvrry other V-liitluy during 1 1 1 school i-ur by the tinient..s tit the WVlx-r .Normiil College. Orrirtftl paper or the U'eher Xormnl AMflresw nil efiiiimtinleaMniLH to Metier IItiiIiI, uii' ', I Kill. 'i n': i i in it ill i: i,i sr i i' l,f;nll .1. I ' I irlfi I i: :it; f . . K '1 ; I u r -1 1 1 - C il i r' f Alice Tippet A hhociji I .j Kdlh.r-ln-i 'hlef Alton Kichii i-Im New Ivlllnr Josephine KIh-.-h As.soeKU e News l-Mllor 'irant i.utmiii Sports Kdiior K.i v Keinill,. As.ioe:ul Si.oil.i Ivlllor Sun Klnttiett I-Viiturt; iv.ltot' I '.ill 1 i It:' 1 1 Assuei.Me l-'f.il ur': t'Mltur HodyH llrnwn .... I'ixuh.i nKr Kilifor .lOHepIl .lejipSOM . . ', ( si nes.s Mtinaip r I M w renee Itnrnett. A HH I Mt II 11 1 IlllsitieSS M;innK,'' 'I'lniliuiM .Sin II ll . . ( 'i i-i'll i:i I inn M.-ihiimT uiiriiK tkiis Marion Tuyloc lll;i'ls (lii-'ii, J. on .l.-iin MeKiiy, Ullliy llio IfieLI, Iloniln Hidrti roil, Kul In-line I'isher anil ijloru.-i Mnrlensen. THAT GYM. Kvpr Hincti VWher lias jwn estab li.'.hi il tin: meat disire anil aim of lh mliool ha.s been h have uyiuniiHluni. I':in:h year Ihi; ulndents hav looked forward to being In a prym the following year. The prospects now arc brighter lliaii ever before and n dream mil only of the. students bin of ninny citizens of OKdim may ut last bo realized. The energy expended by Hie board llie faculty membcra, 1 ho Interest taken by I ho citizen of Ogden, anil I he hard work of I ho sludent.H arc three pood reasons why flic work to bo accomplished will nol fail. The alumni association, under I he direction of Pro-lessor Aaron Tracy, is taking an active Interest In the HChool (bat has never been shown before. This was proved in Ibo aluinnl meeting found-era" day when over four thousand dollars was raised. The business men have voiced the opinion that they are willing to give more money to Ogden's most needed building If necessary. All that is needed to have the gym completed by next, fall is last fall's quota from the wards. Many wards have already gone over the top and, through members of the alumni association, interest is being created that soon will result in the same accomplishment throughout. This does not mean that we students can sit back and watch (be work go on without any more effort on our part. The Interest now created must be kept alive until the building Is completed. This responbility lies upon us. It Is probable that through lack of active interests on our part the gym will not bu built this year and future students and citizens of Ogden will go on dreaming for a gymnasium as others have boen doing in the past. For tho love of our children and grandchildren let's not let the opportunity pass. 'DRAMA. Mrs. McKey wishes to announce to the students of Weber that there will bo no other play this year. Because of the financial affairs of the people, she thinks It unwise to press them again for support. We appreciate the work that Mrs. McKey has done for us and we hope that she will give us more of her splendid productions next year. oo LITERARY TKKWAX. The day broke just as the throe before it had done quiet, but so cold that even the heaviest furred tenants of the mountains would not even come out of their warm lairs, though they hud not eaten for three days and nights. If they had have come out there would have been nothing for them to eat because rabbits, deer and even the partridges? were buried deep in the protecting drifts. Ravines were Tilled as if nature had salved up the deep cuts in the mountain's face and intended them to be smooth once inure us they were millions of yeais a,so. A short while after noon a low moaning breeze began to blow, swaying the few scattered evergreens and cedars, causing them to quake and snap as if their very trunks would break with the brittleness of their ?vo7.k :i condition. The wind increased some btit the cracking was less. The old monarchs acted as if they had, seen nature play the same trick be-1 fore, or as if they sensed the warmin coming just after the wind. They seemed even jolly as they tossed their ranches and shook off the glittering j snow ttiat nau oeen ci:ngmg to tneir branches for a week or more. The wind quieted down and it did not seem to be the same old wind that had come a few hours before, a crouehinc: thing tingling with cold that wished to flatten every object in i's path. Now it was a balmy, lulling wind that seemed to warm the very 1. arts of the great rugged, wind-twisted pines, that an hour before h id been frozen solid. The trees were not the only life to be effected by such a change. For all life would soon be awakening and 'here would be many stomachs, both great and small, to be filled, all requiring more because of the long forced fasting. It was true that many would never be filled as it would re-i;uire some of them to fill the others. A family of coyotes had spent the cold period in their lair that had been the birthplace of the three pups. I'nacr ordinary conditions t lvv would Inve left home in thi sum mer. but be-rause they were born two months after their natural season they were forced to stay with !hf:r parents. Tlvnr1 appetites increased with the hours un-1 !fll the whol family went out reluctantly in nc;trrh uf food. It v. -a a a blank world not a trail , to be s'!n nor a :pnt in the air. Everything Heerrif'd tn five the t-rUng of at ;.irvii t ion. Thf two old oiif-H were in th lead. I Mnifi'hriK of th; nir and Know to, r-.i d any nK-HMine thai w;is in tho air or , r;t j ii the '' n t o f a rah bit r pa rt- HdKft that Mhuiild b: hidden under the j fih'iit whu. For a long time their hunt. w;ih f ruitb-sj. At la.-it th'-y vtwrti , n-wri r-b-d hy s- L-nting a r.ibbit. th;-1 ; had burrowed und-'i" th now iK-ar a I Urt? t rtif, v, hosj ba rk had furnished j food for it rlirnuKh the bitrr mid 1 davH. II- hud not faired so badly as i oi h'-rn. It was but. a minute's time for t tie hungry coyote to dig 1 ho 'r.ibblL out. lie was large and faf j MKht pounds of juicy frt-nh nn-ul. Hut tin- eoyote.s suddenly realized that they would have to fight if they wn- to U'ep I h f prey w hen they caught hight of a lynx approaching unknowingly at some distance. Sue waH yet three hundred yardn away and had not a-n or acented them. HowfVT, they wre right in her path a ml nhe run Id not nilns them. The coyote con Id have cy rrid their kill away In xafrly but the ld'-a never once occurred to them. If it hud thy would never l:nvo had heeded it neeRtise, they were fvt agaliiMt one; find, too, il in not the way of (ha wild to give ground over a frfsh kill. Tho lynx rnme on. The coyotes had not touched their warm kill, Inning been so completely wrapped up in her approach. The h xir on their necks a nd whoulflers was a bristling rrest. Tho lynx ho tin ted th'dr preaence before she K w them and without fur ther investigation turned to the right a nd wo ii hi ha ve gone over a ledge rather thufi meet them. For she wjh after food a a well as they and a 1-t hough her appetite would have tempted her to fight any lone coyote, let a lone one of his big brothers, the wolves. Five were too many. Besides, they were eat ere of carrion which rendered their flesh very strong and bitter. In another minute she would have been over the ledge and gone. A breeze parted the fur on her cheek. She stoppod and sn If fed I he air. It was the scent of the freshly killed rabbit I he breeo carried to her that made the whole difference. She was very hungry and the rabbits only lived to supply Hie. lynx with their sweet flesh. Hho had again started up the trail, not sniffing for traces now. Boldness was shown in every step she made. The rabbit was her's; that was t-o be understood and she challenged the world to object if it dared. The coyotes had not moved stone images, unless for the crest of hair becoming a little higher and Hps being drawn a little further off the flashing whfte teeth which sparkled with froth. She was but ten yards distant now. She stopped and surveyed the coyotes questionlngly. They did not move or make a sound. A great red tongue came out of tho mouth of the lynx and followed its old course around her upper lip to gather in the dripping saliva, and went back wtth a distinct smack. She advanced a few yards. The coyotes held, their ground. She was Irritated. Why did not the coyotes run away? She was not afraid. Oh, not that; but then she did not want to fight. It was the rabbit she wanted; that was all. But, as things looked, fight she must. Not close enough to spring, but now she was preparing for it. Her eyes became gleaming slits in the fur of her face. Her lips curved back from those great' knife-like canines that even seemed huge in the afternoon sunlight. She was creeping closer now only five yards distant. Five feet more and she could have made the spring. She stopped again. This time the froth dropped neglected in sparkling drops to tho snow. She snarled. It was as a last warning or chance offered to the defenders of their kill. She was answered only by deep snarls that came from the leader of the family. His mate at his side only bared her fangs the .more. The lynx was again coming on slowly now but with deadly precision. The she pup, standing between her two brothers, could stand the strain no longer so she whluned and stepped back. This demonstration of cowardice seemed to encourage the lynx and she rushed in. The old he. a wiser fighter than his agile but unskilled mate,side-stepped; and so It was his mate that met the on-rushing lynx. . The weight of the mother coyote's body stopped the fiery demon long enough to allow the father time to secure a near fafal hold on the lynx's short, sinewy neck. Hungered and weakened, he could not force his fangs through the thick hair immediately. But all the time they were sinking. If he could hang on to that snarl ing. spitting mass of fangs and claws fangs that easily broke the neck of a. toe and claws that were sharp and powerful enough to rip the very vitals clear from the ribs of a coyote, he could bring it to extinction. Luck was good to the coyotes for awhile, for each of the two male pups were hanging doggedly to a hind foot of the lynx. She could not reach the certain death that was hanging at her neck. Ten seconds of life was all that was left for her. Even if she succeeded in getting one of her hind paws free she could only hope for vengeance for with the strength of her foot would only add the force needed to tear her jugular vein open and her life would flow through that tenr very quickly. That is just what she did. With a lunge that was quicken ed with the strength of a last stand for life she succeeded in sending the one pup flying against the tree that had protected the rabbit, the cause of this bloody battle. The pup fell limply to the ground, the blow ha d stunned him. In a flash the free foot was doubled under the soft, unprotected stomach of the old he and with the straightening of that foot the long sharp claws ripped the vita is clean, from his backbone. But at the same time the lynx had torn her own jugular. Before her strength failed her she turned on her only active enemy left and with one closing of her powerful jaws his neck was broken as easily as his mother's had been. He had not even time to loosen his hold on the lynx's foot. She turned to the other near the tree and. sensing that he was not dead, as he appeared to be. went to him and sank her teeth deep in the soft underside of his neck. Never loosening "that hold she sank to her side dyins from loss of blood. In her last convulsions she tried to close those mighty jaws more closelv. There was but one left of the number that had visked the fatal spot that day. she tried To crawl further under the large rock where she had hidden during the battle. CZiy fe-t from the Moo -J y arena, now that all was still once more. Wat she a coward or did she realize how fruitless any effort of hr's would have been? She lay very qu!et and it was not lilt the next day dawned that she came out. She went to her mot her hut thnre was no response when she licked her face with a warpi tongue. After that nhe sniffed them ail. even the lynx, though b.he growled and bar- ed her teeth as she did so. ' She was- very hungry und now she ' thought of the rabbit. It lay undr ; a heavy hind foot of the lynx and I while she tugged to draw it but she J growled at the lynx. When she li d ! succeeded and had dragged the ra b- bit away she begun tearing the irov,-) en flesh. She would have gladly j shared it with the other coyotes if they had been alive but -she knew luuv v uuiu ue er niuvt; u&iiin. ntiv aUo knew that the lynx would never move again but even then she faced her all the time and sometimes she growled her resentment. That night she was no longer hungry' for nhe had eaten the whole of the huge rabbit during the day. The nighf seemed so full of fears and gruesome, shadows frightened her so much that she wished to lea e it behind. Site slunk away for a quarter of a mile from the scene of the batt le; then, as if it held her no longer, aha bolted and ran. On, on through the nignt she went with no particular place to go only to get away from the dangers the hills held for her. She kept a steady swinging gait that left a dozen miles of her trail hehind as each hour past. If the old Wan-sook, a Shoshone Indian trapper, had seen her he would have called her Teewan, meaning "the lone coyote." Tecwan was young and could not keep up that speed as long as she might had she been older. By dawn she was forced to stop and rest. She killed a rabbit that was caught in one of Wansook's bear traps, ate this and rested through the day. When the moon rose above the hills that evening, Teewan ran on again. "Say, Dad, I'm going to get that old chicken thief If it takes a year. Two more of my best hens are missing this morning and I can see the fresh tracks of that old three-legged coyote and her two pups out in the mutl where we irrigated yesterday." It was George IlRrper who spoke. At the time he did not believe that he would ever be able to carry out his threat. "Well, son," the old man mused half to himself, "I've seen this country so full of coyotes that it wasn't uncommon to see as many as twenty of them together in broad daylight. That was before any families had moved into these parts, but the thing about It that seems strange to me is that .1 haven't seen nor heard of a coyote within ten miles of here for eight years, and here cornea a she coyote and settles in this country, where she couldn't get more than a mile and a half from a house. It's true that It Is deserted enough over on Salt creek; but coyotes as a rule would rather be farther from us humans than that. It doesn't puzzle me half as much that she mated with Burt's sheep dog as It has that she stays so close around us humans." Mr. Harper would have sauntered off to the house and thought no more about the matter, but his boy would not let him until they had planned some way to get rid of the thief, that was nightly taking toll from one or another of the farmers in the neighborhood. As a rule about every third night she would visit the Harper hen yards to eat a meal of the choice pure bred hens that were there. "Well, son, if you- are really going after big game I guess I'll have to help you a little; but really I kind of like that coyote for her oddness. I couldn't kill her myself, but some one is going to get her before long1. If you do it means the bounty from the county and the $5.00 reward that the neighbors have offered for her. You say she was here last night and she makes her rounds about 'every third night about every third morning for it is always just before dawn that a coyote usually hunts. Then she will come up the north fence because the beets have grown too lar?e to make the field an easy course for her. It is too far around on the road. I think you had better wait ior her out there in the corner of the fence. Now, don't shoot or even move till you have a sure shot and remember if you miss you will not be the first to fail to get a coyote, for they are clever brute3." "I may fail but I hope I don't for I have a personal grudge against her for taking my blue ribbon rooster, the one that won at the county chicken show." It was quite evident that George had none of the tender feeling for the wild things that his father had. Two hundred miles south of that bloody battle that had ended so fatally, Teewan had found a place far from the mountains, that was inhabited by no animals larger than the rabbits and they were here in abundance It was an ideal place for coyotes to live excepting for the nearness of civ ilization, which lined the barren waste caused by the salty creek that wound through the center. The ground rose a mile or so back from the creek, but this land was very fertile where the farmers raised large crops of beets. On the east of this barren strip there was another raise not so prominent The land was not so fertile, but It made very good hay fields and meadows upon which there were as many homes. The land in the center was so full of alkali that salt grass, a few-kinds of salt weeds and grease wood were all that could grow there. Here and there were sage-covered knolls. It was one of these knolls upon which Teewan chose to make her home. It was on the east side of the creek about a quarter of a mile from its salt grass-covered banks, the tiny spring in the summer flooded a small area with its fresh clear water, forming a very beautiful meadow before its waters ran into the salty creek. The creek never froze in winter time which made it necessary for Teewan to detour a little to the south of the line between her knoll and the water in order to cross on a pole that had served as a foot bridge for a trapper years back, which served Teewan very well. One clear night shortly after Teewan had taken the sage knoll for her new home she was crossing the bridge when in the starlight, for there was no moon, she saw a large mallard duck coming slowly up the bank. It did not fly away as those Teewan had seen at other times. It had not seen Teewan so by instinct the coyote went to the bank near which the duck was approaching and lay in the grass near the edge of the water to wait. It was half an hour before the d u-k came within reach of her. 1 . ! ' It seemed very st ra ng'1 t n;.t i:ie d Lick did not note her presence, bu: ! ducks depend upon the ense of sigh: I und hearing more than upon the senc , of smell. S It came up unwarned of the dun-1 gor, for i lie keenest eye could no! j have seen Teewan hidden in the tall suit grass. She made never a sound I until she shot out her long nose and snatched in the ur.garded duck. Teewan had found a new source of food in this haven of her's. It was rather a contented feeling that she had after eating the sweet flesh of the duck. She was out at the spring to drink after her meal, when she heard the crying of the baby at the Burt home. The sound became clearer in the still night, evon across the miles distance that separated it from the tense lit-ener. When the crying stopped Te-wan whint'd a lonesome whine for the cries of the baby had awakened strong emotion in her. It was mating season and she was alone. The cries seenued to draw her nearer, but when she reached the fence that marked the eastern end of Mr. Burt's field she dared not come any closer, but lay there for hours sniffing the air, trying to fanthom the many strange scents that came from the yards of the farmhouses and barns. The scene that was making her grieve and feel so unsettled was that of the dng that sometimes marked as if to tell his master that all was well. It was a week before she dared come very close to the yards and soon after that she had lured the dog away. They were mates. It was not the first time that a dog had mated with a coyote. He did not stay with her always as he should, for nearly every day. he spent a good deal of the time at the home of his master. Mr. Burt knew that if he beat the dog for staying away as he did he would drive him away forever. In the spring when the frost had all gone from the ground, and the days were getting warmer. Three little baby pupa came to "live in a hole on the sage brush knoll. Now the Burts missed their dog more than ever, as he was kept away on his family duties, supplying his mate with rabbits and ducks now and then. Teewan had taught him how to catch them. Things went well for a month. Soon the little pups would be able to come out of the barrow and begin their training in the habits of coyote, life. Mr. Burt -caught his dog that day as he wa3 making his usual visit to the lair and locked him up. He was going to send him next morning with the sheep to their summer range, forty miles to the west of the farm. The dog was watched very close in the day, so he could not turn back, and at night he was locked in the camp. It was not until a week after reaching the range that the dog had a chance for liberty and when it came he took it. The door of the cabin had not been fastened and as it swung open in the wind, he bolted forth into the night and was gone. The rabbits were no longer left at the opening of the burrow since the dogs had been taken away. Teewan had to do her own hunting while her mate was captive. She was successful enough for a few days and would have continued to be so, but while giving chase to a rabbit that led her past a thick high post that had been sot near the Salt creek many years ago for some unknown purpose, she sprang a rabbit trap on her front foot. When the trap chain that was fastened to the post about a foot above the ground became tight she was flung on her back. The trap had been set there early in the winter and had been forgotten. The weather had washed away every trace of human scent, and there had been nothing to warn Teewan of its presence. She was on her feet in an Instant, snapping at the trap that had seized her foot. She had quickly come to the end of the chain, but now it kept hanging on the painful foot quite steadily. She lunged back to pull her foot out and suc ceeded In breaking the chain in two, She also broke the post just under the ground where the alkali had rotted it so that a high wind might have done the same thing. With itsever-Increasing velocity it struck Teewan just above her thighs, dislocating her back and paralyzing her hind legs. If she was in a bad way before with a brok en leg in a trap, she was in a most hopeless condition now. She was able to drag herself free from under the heavy post. It was slow, painful work to drap her crippled body over the ground to the sage knoll with her one good leg and some little help from the broken one with the trap always hanging to It. She had spent hours in making a third of the distance and her body was paining her more and more. Then In a fit of rage she chewed her foot off just above the trap as If it was the cause of her lamentable condition. Then, as if freed of a handicap, she continued on and just as the next day was showing signs of coming over the eastern hills she reached the burrow on sage knoll, nearly dead. When her hungry pups came to her she sent them back to the farther end of the den with a most savage growl; nor did she allow them to come near her in the next four days. They were locked in there to starve, for their mother could not again move out and she would not allow them to. It would be only a few days before they would all starve. One of the pups already showed signs of weakening. Early next morning It died. Not long after this Teewan's mate came. He had not stopped the whole night for anything except water. He was mystified not to find any fresh scent of Teewan anywhere about. He thrust his head down into the burrow-to investigate. Teewan made her efforts to fight this unknown foe for she did not recognize her mate. It wras a good thing that she did not, for when she twisted her body to snap at him she put her back in just the right condition and the misplaced ver-tibrae went back in place with a painful snap, so painful that Teewan who had stood everything before without a sound howled pitifully. Her mate was mystified. He caught a rabbit and brought it to the burrow. When his mate did not come out he went back for another, caught it and was bringing it back when he saw Tee- wan out of her lair, eating the rabbit 1 he had left her. He had saved her1 lite, though he did not know it. It ; made him glad to see her out again. It was weeks before Teewan was 1 well and strong and before her one : front leg was able to do the work of two. The two remaining pups had grown quite large. They always fol- lowed her wherever she went. When , her mate could spare the time again! he went back to the ranch to fpend- a day with his master. Again he was locked up. This time he got away. I Two weeks from then Teewan by) chance learned how to sieal the far-' NEW MUSIC CLUB IS ORGANIZED Com 1 nurd from Page One.) cerely hope for the loyal support of the members. The com mi, tee on framing a const! tut ion. under the chairmanship of Edwin Vent, recently reported the results of their labors to the club. The following is the club constitution: COXSTITl'TlOX OK Til K M I'SIC API'KKI'IATIOX (I.IH OF Till-; WKBKIt XOKMAIj colli-:gk. We, the members of the Music Appreciation club of the Weber Normal college, in order to cultivate a deeper appreciation of the art of music in its various forms; to arous a desire for an active participation In presenting better music; to create a refined mUHiral atmosphere at Weber, and give music the same importance as other Weber activities, do ordnfn and establish this Constitution. AKTICIJ-: I. lltitit's of the OrguniAHtioii. Section I. This organization shall work in harmony with the music, faculty to arrange musical programs; and to furthe develop the study of the arc of music. ARTKXK II. Organization. Section I. The officers of the Music Appreciation Club of the Weber Normal College consist of a President, a Vice-President, a Secretary, aSer-geant-At-Arms. a Club Reporter, and and a Program Committee. AKTICLK III, Duties of Officers, Ktc Section I. The President shall have power to appoint a committee of three to arrange a program for the year. He shall preside at all meetings; and shall have power to appoint committees to take care of different situations as the occasions may arise. V ice- PrcsJ d en t. Section 2. It shall be the duty of the Vice-President to perform all the duties of the President when the President is unable to act. Secretary. Section 3. It shall be the duLy of the Secretary to accurately record the minutes of every meeting of this organization, to call the roll and to receive excuses of absence. Club Reporter. Section 4. It shall be the duty of the Club Reporter to make an accurate report of all proceedings of this organization to the Weber Herald, and to the Ogden Standard-Examiner for publication. Sergeant Aat- Arms. It shall be the dut of theSergeant-at-Arms to collect all fines imposed upon members by the Club, to collect membership fees, and to maintain order. Program Committee. Section 6. It shall be the duty of the Program Committee to arrange all programs working in harmony with the music faculty. ARTICLE IV. Membership. Section I. The charter members of this organization shall be those who attend its first meeting at the commencement of each year. Those who desire to do ao may become members after this first meeting by paying a Club fee of ten cents. Duties or Members. Section 2. It shall be the duties of all members to assist in the furtherance of the ideals for which this body is organized when called upon to do so. Forfeiture of MembersJiip. Section 3. Any member of the Music Appreciation club shall forfeit his membership in the organization: I. By disorderly conduct in the meeting. II. By an unexcused absence from three meetings. III. By failing to appear upon a program after having agreed to do so, without giving notice in due time in order to allow the committee to get someone to take his place. Article V is here omitted. mers' chickens. She was often near the Burt home, waiting for her mate, who never came. Once she went inside the fence and among the buildings as if to find him and carry him off. She passed the hen house. The door was open and, again guided by instinct, she caught an unsuspecting hen. Hens were very good eating and when the Burts noticed their loss they bolted the door, to the hen house. As a matter of course she went to neighboring farms and got her kill. She developed Into a very clever chicken thief. The two pups were always waiting for her outside the fence. They knew that they were soon to have a fine breakfast. But she overstepped her bounds when she took George Harper's favorite prize rooster. About three weeks after the Burts noticed their hens missing. George told of his successful shot and displayed his prize, too. "I couldn't get either of the pups, but I seen them." He ended his story. His father assured him that they would not bother the chickens, for soon they would wander off to seek their fortunes as many a boy has done. REED NELSON. We know that we can suit your taste if it's Candies and such JERRY'S GROCERY 620 Twenty-fourth St. We Actually Enjoy Rebuilding Shoes Boston Shoe Repair That is why people like our work so well. We recommend and apply Neolin Soles and Goodyear Rubber Heels. Washington Market A. M. Miller. Prop. You Know "Where "We Are. Thorie 2S00 The Economy hoe (UPSTAIRS) OVER UTAH KNITTING STORE 2359 WASHINGTON AVENUE ANNOUNCES NEW PRICES. NEW SERVICE We are making a special of Shoes at three prices: $3.85, $4.85n $5.85 Normal College GET YOUR FIRST TWO YEARS AT WEBER Pretty and , W Practical ) Footwear n' LAST & J THOMAS TRAIN YOUR DOLLARS TO HAVE MORE CENTS Ignorant and wasteful dollars will never amount to anything. Send them to school in our bank. We give them a careful financial education and pay you 4 per cent interest while they are learning to become sensible dollars. Today Is a Good Dav to Enroll SECURITY STATE BANK Twenty-fourth Street at Hudson Avenue Ogden, Utah The NEW SPRING WOOLENS are in and ready for your approval LEROY BUCHMILLER TAILORING HABERDASHERY Next Door to Orpheum Theatre TELEPHONE 513 418 TWENTY-FIFTH ST. THE REGAL CLEANERS FRENCH DRY CLEANERS New Up-to-Date Plant Just Installed FREE DELIVERY SERVICE Watson-Tanner Clothing Co. SEE US FIRST! ASK FOR A BOX OF Bebe Daniels Chocolates The Shupe-Williams Candy Co., Ogden, Utah Sold at every reliable drug store. 'HE ! CO Paihe No. No 3 Phonnsraph 7 Phonograph No. 10 Phonograph v.-as $15o.o0, now.. No. 12 Phonograph was ?175.00, now.. Call and har thorn demonstrated. C. E. ARMSTRONG & CO. 306 Twenty-fifth St. Phonographs at 8!g RaduGiion s S29.00 soo.oo 70.0O sso.oo vras ?."in.00. now.. was $1 lo.no' now'' |