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Show Thursday, November 22, 1923. THE WEBER HERALD PAGE THREE PULLS YOU THRU ANY MUD-HOLE Without the need of Chains SEIBERLING ALL-TREADS Cost No More Than Ordinary Tires and Built for Just Our Kind of Winter Roads T SUPPLY CO, 183-24th St. Phone 922 A NEW WATCH FOR GIRL OR BOY COSTS LESS THAN A SUIT OR CLOAK Let us show you. From $15.00 UP "Get to School on time" J. S. LEWIS & CO. Jewelers-Opticians XMAS CARDS Now is the time to make your selection. You'll be suprised how-cheap they can be had and a small deposit will hold them for you until needed. We can truly say to have the largest assortment of high grade cards to select from. Dee Printing Company Berthana Bldg. on 24th. Street aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimij A Complete Line of Up E E to Date Drapery and E Curtain Material E 1 OGDEN FURNITURE & CARPET CO. -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiinir USE Nyal race CREAM Ensign Drug Co. Ogden, Utah Biascopes 6 Power only $5.00 306 Twenty-' xj fifth Street C. E. Armstrong & Co. SECURITY STATE BANK SAVINGS COMMERCIAL Ogden a? Hudson Ave. Tlf n li 24thStrwt Ulall Shine 10c Shine Your Shoes right at The Famous Shoe Shine Parlor 410 Twenty-fifth Street All Division Eleven The 1923 all division high school eleven has been named. Malcolm Watson former coach at Weber and an able football official made the selection. "Male" officiated in practically every game in the division and has studied the work of the various players in every contest. He gives Box Elder five men on the squad. Ogden secures four and Bear River and Davis one place apiece. The grid material for the coming years in the Purple lair will come from among the teams of this division. Many of the present stars are expected to be in the Weber machine next year. All-Division Football Eleven Player. Position. School. Clark R. E Ogden Hi. T. Hunsaker..R. T...Box Elder Jensen R. G...Box Elder J. Oviatt... Center.. ..Davis Hi. Bishop L. G. Bear River Gentsch L. T. .Ogden Hi. Reeder L. E. ..Box Elder Holton (C)....Q. B..Box Elder Peterson...L. H. B. .Ogden Hi. Call R. H. B Box Elder Kennedy F. B. ...Ogden Hi. Honorable mention: Davis High Page, Blood, Robins. Box Elder Mann, Welling. Bear River Harris, Giles. Ogden High Ririe, Parker. GOVERNOR EXPLAINS NEED OF OBEDIENCE TO LAWS (Continued from Page 1) laws are taught in all our churches where we receive those great words of Paul, 'The wages of sin is death.' Every person who breaks a divine law pays the penalty. "Human laws have come to us through an orderly process in history. They have come through years of toil, sorrow and tribulation and not one of them should be treated with contempt. "Man progresses in law just as he progresses in science and art. There is a vast difference between the laws of today and the laws of a few centuries ago. As we progress we are forming higher and better laws. "In America we have a peculiar law, a written constitution. There was a time in American history, after the war for independence, when we had a system of government in which those in authority had power to declare everything and do nothing. Our fathers saw the approaching anarchy and assembled together the greatest men of the nation and after two years of toil they completed the greatest constitution that has ever been drafted in the world's history. FEW CHANGES MADE "Since the constitution was adopted only nineteen a-mendments have been made, ten of these were adopted within a few months after its adoption. During the last 134 years over 2,000 amendments have been proposed but only nine have been accepted. "In 1909 there was an agitation among the people, the discussion being based on the fact that some thought the constitution was too hide bound, that it was too hard to change. Since then there have been four amendments; the Income Tax Law, the law for the direct election of the United States Senators, the Prohibition Act, and Woman's Suffrage. The people of the United States would not be willing to retract on any of these amendments.. "The question of law enforcement is the greatest problem facing the American people today. Some people seem to think that only the governmental officials need to obey the law. Whose law is it? Whose government is it? It is yours. It belongs to you, Mr. Average Citizen, and it is up to you to see that it is properly enforced. Everv citizen should feel it his duty to uphold the law in all its phases. "People seem willing to report the breaking of most laws, such as those of murdering, stealing, etc, but they fail to report those people who are breaking another law, the eighteenth amendment."Let me say that the eight eenth amendment is here to stay. I have heard it said that the people do not want pro hibition. No government of ficer has the right to make that statement when the people of this nation have ac cepted it. The people have written it in the constitution of this land and there is only one way to change it and that is by the ballot box. Those who do otherwise are enemies of this country. "Again, some say that the law is ill advised and hasty. After it had been debated for a century and written in state charters before it was made a federal law, would you call an act ill-advised? Hasty? The people of the republic have spoken, and they mean what they say. "In a convention of governors held recently nineteen out of twenty-five who spoke declared themselves in favor of a strict enforcement of the prohibition amendment. "No one should have license to do as he pleases, his desires and privileges should be carried out under the orderly process of law. So long-as one is with his fellows he must give up some of his desires for the common good. "I have heard it said that the prohibition law is unen-forcable. There are laws a-gainst robbing and murdering. These are broken but yet they remain laws. The 18th amendment can be enforced, and will be enforced." He closed his address with an appeal to the people to rigidly uphold and sustain the constitution of the land. Thomas E. McKay, who presided as chairman, thanked Governor Mabey for his splendid address and also thanked the business men of the city for being present. Members of the Ladies' Glee Club of the school entertained with two numbers. Miss Mary Fisher rendered a violin solo entitled the "Spanish Serenade" by Kreis-ler.A piano solo by E. F. Oborne was one of the other musical numbers. Invocation was offered by President Thomas L. Allen of the Summit Stake. As a concluding feature the audience sang "America." IN TUNE WITH THE GOVERNOR People talk of liberty as if it meant the liberty to do just what a man likes. I call that man free who fears doing wrong, but fears nothing else. I call that man free who has learned the most blessed of all truths that liberty consists in obedience to the power and will, and to the law that his higher soul reverences and approves. He is not free because he does what he likes; but he is free because he does what he ought, and there is no protest in his soul against the doing. Frederick William Robertson THE ELECTRIC WOMAN If she talks too long Interrupter If her way of thinking is not yours Converter If she is willing to come half way Meter If she wants to go farther Conductor If she wants to go still farther Dispatcher If she wants to be an angel.... Trans former If she is sulky and will not speak :.. Exciter If she gets too excited Controller If she proves your fears are wrong Compensator If she goes up m the air Condenser If she wants chocolates Feeder If she sings false Tuner If she is in the country Telegrapher If she is a poor cook Discharger If she eats too much Reducer If she is wrong Rectifier If she is cold to you Heater If she gossips too much Regulator If she fumes up and sputters.. Insulator If she becomes upset Reverse!" Ruth, "Football certainly is a dangerous sport, isn't it?" Junius, l es, 1 had a shoulder nearly broken last week because the person next to me at the game slapped me on the back so much. Clarence . Barker, "I wisli to advertise for a wife through your want ad columns. .a a Man. l es sir. under what classification: Business Chances, Pet Stock or House hold Fixtures?" Musical Notes MUSICAL NOTES Seven programs were given in various wards by the music department. Those who assisted in the rendition of the programs were Professor Oborne, Mary Fisher, Francis Bingham, James Lindsay, Edna Keating, Pauline Waterfall, Lillian Eastman, and Araminta West. These people visited the Huntsville, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 11th wards. Sterling Wheelwright rendered selections at the Congregational Church. Fourteen members of the Ladies Glee Club appeared at the 13th Ward. The bishops who have reported on these programs are all highly delighted with the numbers and have expressed their desire to have the music students come a-gain.There are sixty-two wards around and about Ogden that will receive programs this coming year from the Weber College Musical Department. Most of these wards will desire more than one program, so this means that the department will have to prepare a-bout 300 programs throughout the school year. The orchestra which is increasing in numbers as well as improving in the quality of music played, will assist in these programs. Sunday the Men's Glee Club assisted in rendering the program at Lynne Ward. They made their initial appearance in Devotio nal yesterday. THE VERDICT He sat pondering, his head bowed in his hands. For him, life held only sixty minutes more of happiness. In these last few minutes his many negligences passed in a panorama before him, as the criminal's numerous offenses haunt him in his last few moments. His conscience, that ever present reminder, asked him questions, which made him squirm. "Where were you, such and such a night when you should have been ." to all of which, he could only dumbly reply that he did not know. He had thought life sweet thus far, but now, now this over shadowing catastrophe would obliterate any chances of his enjoying it. He had long contemplated the possibility of extracting himself from the impossible situation into which circumstances had forced him. He sia'hed, a powerful sigh it was, akin to that of a furnace, then he picked up a book which laid beside him. He tried to interest himself in its pages, but it was of no use. It was too late, nothing could now save him. Gloom pervaded the whole assembly. He looked around, only to see other suffering mortals in a similar plight. He was naturally nervous, and by his sense of impend- insr disaster, he had worked himself into a high state of uneasiness. A chair rattled at the table near him. He started then turned his wea ry eyes back. To hope that an earthquake would come a- long and destroy him would be too pleasant a thought to dwell upon. Finally when he thought he could stand the monotony no longer a bright idea entered his mind. If only he could pretend to be ill parhaps just perhaps he would be able to get out of the gruelling contest that was before him. The sixty seconds finally expired, second by second, and at last came a reprieve from this immeasurable wait. The loud ring of a bell caused everyone to rush for the door, and dash madly dowu the hall. THE SUSPENSE GROWS. THE PLOT THICKENS!'!!!!! After the next hour had e-lapsed, he was a total wreck, and a mere shadow of his former self. He felt that to die would be pleasant, but to survive would be agony in every sense. The next few days seemed months. He walked the halls, weary eyed and downcast. Finally the day of reckoning was at hand. Who was this poor slave?????? Was he a prisoner doomed to death? No! He was only a student who, after taking a final examination, was waiting the verdict his mark. Monsignor Cushnahan Addresses Students Monsignor Cushnahan was a visitor at Weber Tuesday and addressed the students in devotional. The subject of his discourse was "Patriotism"He said, "There is an old saying 'A house divided a-gainst itself cannot stand.' "We cannot be loyal and patriotic Americans and not be loyal to our community. We cannot be loyal to the nation and be false to the state. "The love of country and love of God are very closely related. We cannot have one without the other. "This government is God given. This country has been established by divine right and God expects and demands obedience to its constitution."By upholding that government and respecting its authority we respect God. "Should we not above all nations be imbued with the highest spirit of patriotism and love of country. "It is not a matter of selection or a matter of choice but a conscientious duty to be good citizens. You should be patriotic and conscientious citizens of this America. "There are patriots in peace just as great and to be revered and respected just as much as the patriots of war. There are patriots in verse and patriots in song. There are patriots on the battle fields and on the high seas. But no other patriot is greater or sacrifices more than the dear old Mother. "Mothers are the greatest patriots in the world. They have given the boys and girls to build up this great nation. Your Mothers are now working hard to make patriotic citizens of you. You should always respect and honor them." He then closed his address with an appeal to the students to be loyal and patriotic Americans. WITH THE COLLEGES The death of Dr. Martin Perry Henderson, Dean of the college of arts and science at the Brigham Young University is indeed a great loss to many, especially those with whom he has associated. He was a personal friend and instructor of Pres. Aaron W. Tracy. Pres. Tracy can testify to his sincerity and patience as a teacher and to his abiding faith in God. The Nebraska University at Lincoln challenged the U. A. C. rifle team for a match. The challenge was accepted and the U. A. C. team will be selected soon. The match will be a telegraphic shoot. Regular U. S. Army officers will certify the scores at both institutions. The U. A. C. has been invited to join the Royal Society of London, England, a society for the encouragement of the arts, manufactures and commerce of that city. This society was founded in 1754. It has greatly aided in the promulgation of a knowledge of the appliances of science and art to the use of mankind. It has also assisted technical and commercial education. Miss Virginia Budd president of the Womens League of the University of Utah represented the Western States at the Convention of Associated Women Students of the Eastern section, which was held at Oberlin, Ohio, Novemeber 21, 1923. The purpose of this organization is to get greater participation of women in all activities. The Freshmen and Sophomores of the University were busy last week having their photos taken for the Utonia. That's a good idea, let's get busy and have ours ready when the first call comes. Cora Mortensen a former Weber student who was popular in Dramatics while here is rehearsing a part in the University Play. Mrs. Halverson: "Oh Alton, who taught you to swear like that?" Plumber: "Taught ME! Why it's me that teaches other guys." SCHEDULE FOR WINTER QUARTER ARRANGED (Continued from Page 1) DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCE The department of History and Social Science offers the following subjects: A. History 5, The Period of National Expansion, Civil War and Reconstrution. B. History 2, The Reformation, Colonial Expansion, French Revolution, etc. C. Economics 1, Elementary (College). D. Economics 2, An advance course in Economics. This class recites at "6:30 P. M. and is made up largely of business and professional men and women. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Principles of Education. This course is g"iven principally for Normal students. It meets the state requirements for first or second class certificates.Other subjects to be taught are Curriculum and Public school music. DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL SCIENCE Chemistry: This course includes the study of ionization, chemical equilibrium, the periodic law and several of thenon-metallic elements. Nine hours a week including six hours laborato ry. Prerequisite, physics or hig'h school chemistry.Geology: Continuation of physical geology studied in first quarter. In this course considerable attention will be given to laboratory work. The laboratory is well provided with rocks, minerals, maps, literature, etc. Students who have never had a course in Geology can join the class. Physics: Study of the laws of motion, heat, sound, etc. Three hours per week will be devoted to class recitation and four hours to laboratory work. The lecture room and laboratory have been greatly increased this 3'ear by the purchase of new equipment. Students who have had a two year course in High School Mathematics can register for this course. DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGES In the Winter Quarter, all the Modern Language courses will continue. All students who have two units of High School French or German are eligible for French V or German V. These courses will consist of composition, conversation, review of grammar and reading.The beginning courses of, French II and German II are open to any students who have at any time studied either of these languages and who wish to review part work or to continue work not satisfactorily completed. Prospective Missionaries are strongly advised to make use of the opportunity to study a language, as the Weber College is drawn upon extensively to furnish missionaries to foreign lands. ANCIENT LANGUAGES Elementary Latin will be taught during the Winter quarter if enough students enroll. This course will take up constructions, declensions, conjugations, and grammar, so that the students will get the basis for further Latin reading. During the winter quarter a course in Home Engineering will be offered by the department of home economics. This course will be concerned with every phase of home life. It takes up the study of systematic housekeeping, from the view of economy in time and energy, maintaining health and promoting happiness in the home. It further includes the study of family income and its proper divisions. This course is open to any college girls regardless of whether or not they have previously had a course in home economics. A high brow is one who has been educated beyond his intelligence. Educational Week at Weber The American Education Week is now being observed at Weber College. Three interesting programs have already been given. The following men are the speakers: President Guy C. Wilson, of the L. D. S. College, Salt Lake City. Monsignor Cushnahan, President W. W. Henderson, of the B. Y. College of Logan. Superintendent Karl Hopkins, of the City Schools. President Geo. Thomas, of the University of Utah. The programs as outlined are as follows: AMERICAN CONSTITUTION DAY Monday, Nov. 19th. Life, liberty, and justice; how the constitution guarantees these. Revolutionists and radicals a menace to these guarantees. Security and opportunity.Slogans: "Ballots not bullets." "Visit the schools today."1. Solo The Flag Without A Stain Eva Porter. 2. Address President Guy C. Wilson. 3. Community Song" "Star Spangled Banner." PATRIOTISM DAY Tuesday, Nov. 20th. The flag the emblem of the nation. Help the immigrants and aliens to become Americans. Take an active interest in Governmental affairs. Musical influences upon a nation. Slogans: "Visit the Schools today." "America First." 1. Community Song "Utah We Love Thee." Monsignor Cushnahan. 2. Address 3. Community Song "America." SCHOOL AND TEACHER DAY Wednesday Nov. 21st. The necessity of schools. The teacher as a nation builder. The school influence on the coming generation. The school needs in the community. The school as a productive institution. Slogans: "Visit the schools today." "Better trained and better paid teachers." 1. Violin Trio A Lullaby. Kathryn Cannon, Josephine Manzel, Clyde Randall. 2. Address President W. W. Henderson. 3. Solo "The Little Red School House." Kieth Corry. ILLITERACY DAY Thursday Nov. 22nd. Illiteracy a menace to our nation. An American's duty toward the uneducated. Let every citizen teach one illiterate. No immigration until illiteracy among native and foreign is removed. Slogans: "No illiteracy by 1927 it can be done." "Visit the schools today." 1. Contralto Solo Violet Banford. 2. Address. Superintendent Karl Hopkins COMMUNITY DAY Friday Nov. 23rd. Equality of opportunity in education for every American boy and girl. The rural schools, city schools, and colleges. A public library for every community. Children today citizens tomorrow. Slogans: "An equal chance for all children." "A square deal for the country boy and girl." 1. Orchestra Selection. War March of Priests. By Mendelson College Orchestra 2. Address. President Geo. Thomas. Taking him at his word. Pete was telling Lottie a-bout the members of the football team. "Now there's Ilalliday," he said, "in a few weeks he will be our best man." "Oh Pete," said Lottie, this is so sudden." Ruth I). "Oli Monk, did you hear my powder puff?" Monk. "No, but I felt your lipstick." There were many students who questioned the sterling quality of the punch on the night of the Freshman party. Miss Noble, so we hear, had charge of this. We all know that Mi.--s Noble is much a-bove suspicion, but since the next in authority happens to be Ted Woods, all we can say is "We'll speak to the manager about it." Starting Saturday For One Week I Jackie Coogan In "Long Live The King" By Mary Roberts Rinehart Jackie's Latest and Best Picture. See It! Ogden Theatre I ASK FOR MILKY WAY Bar Shupe-Williams Candy Co Makers of Preferred Chocolates Jl 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ( Williams Music Company 2215 Washington Avenue E Ogden, Utah Phone 503 E 1 EVERYTHING IN E MUSIC AND MUSICAL MERCHANDISE BANNER RECORDS 55c I ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1F JIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILj I IF IT IS ELECTRICAL E Buy it at The Lighthouse 1 2452 Washington Ave. E E Telephone 581 E E C. G. Eklund : G. E. Wilson E nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir Boston Shoe Shop Fine Shoe Repairing 2352 Washington Ave. .Artistic floral (To, 2411 Hudson Ave. Ogden, Utah EVERYTHING IS FIRST CLASS At the Wistaria SWEET SIXTEEN CHOCOLATES The Cullcy Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS JOHN CULLEY, Ph. G. Manager Everything- in the Drug Line 2479 Washington Ave. Ogden LiiiiimiiimiiiiimmMiiiiiiiiiiiimiii'- i Kerns 1 1 1 1 1 i i 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! I J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ASK FOR |