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Show THE TIMES-NEW- NEPHI, UTAH S. W INFfflcMATMN ON c . i 3 Ml fit ' DEBATE IS RECEIVED ii ' 6 i I ycors of service W. w I i kv. I urr vis or Home Decorating the Co. Has It or Does It D.-T.-- ts Continued Satisfaction with Iouj fuel cost through long S If It Pertains to Home Furnishing The following letter was received by Miss Langiois, from Herbert B. Maw, relative to debating. The try-oufor the N .H. S. Debating team will be held In the near future. Those desiring to enter the tryouts should be getting, their material ready: Miss Geneva Langiois, Nephi High School, Nephi, Utah Dear jMadam: In view of the fact that a sufficient number of states in the Union to defeat the child labor amendment have refused to ratify it, it seems advisable at this time to change the wording of our prosposit-io- n The committee In for debate. charge has agreed upon the following wording subject, of course, to the approval of the various coaches of the ! "3 I ( R. WHEN YOUR NEIGHBORS CALL ARE YOU PROUD OF YOUR WALLS m state: "Resolved, that the proposed Twen tieth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States as passd by Congress in June 1924 should be ratified." A printed booklet containing all of the rules for the high school debates is being prepared. In order, however, that you might have a general idea as to what to work for I am sending the following informat- CHOOSE FROM ion: There shall be two debators on each team. 2. Each school will enter a negative and an affirmative team. 3. The main speeches are to be twelve minutes long and rebuttal Each speeches, five minues long. debator to give a main and a rebuttal speech. 4. The speeches must be the work of the student and not the coaches and should not be written out and memorized. 5. Any bona fide student of the high school under twentyone years o' age, who is carrying and passing In at least three units of work may compete. 6. The speeches are to be judged on both argument and delivery. More detailed Information will be sent out in the circular referred to. If you have not sent your five dollar fee will you please do so at once so that we can handle you when we make up our schedule. Yours very truly, MPERJ J D OUR LARGE STOCK 1. Now and Twenty Years from Now! Duplex Draft any range does satisfactory work when it is new and its joints are tight. But if you expect long years of satisfaction, it's the range constructed with permanent tightness you want. Thousands of MONARCH Ranges built twenty years ago are still in service as satisfactory as economical of fuel as when, they were first sold. For MONARCH Ranges are made of unbreakable Malleable Iron and heavy steel plates riveted securely together. A range built this way needs no tove putty to make it tight. And such joints stay tight through many years of hard service. A LMOST ONE PRICE TO EVERYBODY Dixon - Taylor hus a patented Cofuel to burn pies Draft which enables evenly in both ends of the firebox. to be no unburnod cohI Iavi-thrown away with the ashes. Gives of the top unlfuira heat to all parts and oven. Tho MOVAI5CI! No Stove Blacking The MTItCO Top has a beautiful color and tines not neeil stove The only top of its kind blacking. la use on any range. blue-Ma- life in a MONARCH Range la further insured by its VITEIFUSED Rust Resisting Flue Linings. Eiperi-nc- e has shown that this is the only effective ruat protection which is il for rse under the citreme variniion of temperature that exist in the Hues of a i'unt,e. I,on.T prn-tic- THE LOWEST PRICE - HERBERT Russell Co. :- -: Nephi High School News The :- -: (From The N. H. S. Clarion) and histories, and your fifty blood But you hatreds and rivaltrles. won't be long like that, brothers for these are the fires of God you've come to these are the fires of God. A fig for your fueda and vendettas! Germans and Frenchmen, Irishmen and Englishmen, Jews and Russians into the crucible with you all! God CAST FOR "THE MELTING POT" I .' ft " 1 1 V Is making the American." "Yes Jew immigrant! But a Jew who knows that your Pilgrim Fathers came straight out of his Old Testiment, and that our Jew Immigrants are a greater factor in the glory of this great commonwealth than some of you sons of the soil. who are It is you, undoing the work of Washington and Lincoln, vulgarizing your high heritage, and turning the last and noblest hope of humanity Into a caricature." The task of putting this play over seemed very difficult at first. Is Is Front row Lois L,unt, Florence Chase, Miss Langiois. Clela Bailey, of a type that professionals usually Blanche Burton, Wayne Sidwell. Second Row Loyle Adams, Bent Bryan, play, but Miss Langiois is very pleased with the work of the cast and LaMont Sowby, and Byron Taylor. she feels sure it will be a success. more vital that America shouliT"pre- - Clela Bailey, as Vera Rivendal Is very BE And serve that spirit of William Tell. MELTING POT TO good and so Is Rent Bryan In the there is assuredly none which ba3 part of David Quizano; Bryan Tayvaluable elements to contri- lor could not be beaten In the part PRESENTED 27 more bute to the ethnic and psychical Blanche of Herr Pappelmeister. of the people tomorrow. That Burton the part of Frau portrays in the crucible of love, or even Quirano to perfection as does Wayne the most violent antith-ese- a Sidwell In the part of Mendel The Melting Pot by Israel Zang-wllof the past may be fused Into which was clioen as the school True to nobility are Lois Lunt a unity is a truth of both and LaMont Sowby In the roles of higher Feb. play, will be presented Friday, ethics and observation, and It was Baron and aBroness Rivendal. Flor 27lh, In the high school auditorium. in order to present histories enmities ence Chase as Kathleen O'Rielly Is The piay takes up the emiuigrant at their extremes that the persecuted very funny and Loyle Adams as prbleni, a subject in which we are Jew of Russia and the persecuting Quincy Davenport Jr., Is good Indeed. all vitally interested at the present Russian race have been takn for The action of the crucible time. The story was written In the SPORT TIT-BIT- S hope that Americans will appreciate is not exclusively physical a considthe safety and freedom In which eration particularly important as reOur own center is winning renown they live and that they will help gards the Jew. The Jew may be Americanized and the American Juda As we opened Wednesday's "Deseret others to gain that freedom. The play centers around David Ised without any Ramie Interaction News," to the sports page what Quixuno, a young Russian Jew, who America exhibiting the normal fus- should confront us but a picture of after being the only one left of his ing process magnified many thousand Glen! And here is what it said under massacre, diameters and diversified beyond all th picture. family after a terrible camo to America. The story tells of historic experience, and fed not by "One of the foremost basket ball his love for a beautiful girl of the succsslve waves of Immigration but players of the state In the sehoolastlc of simultaneous circle Is Glen Worthlngtnn, center of Russian nobility and his wonderful by a American Symphony which ho wrote hordes Is, in Bacon's phrases an the fast Nephl High School team, Instance" of a universal phe- runners tip for the lead In the Nebo inspired by his love for America. It Is seen from the official table of nomenon America Is the "Melting Division. The Ranger tipoff man Is second best scorer In the league de Immigration that the Russian Jew Tot." The following expressions of Dav- spite the fact that he has played In Ik only one and not even the largest of the fifty elements that, to the id's sentiment! will help to give the only three games, as against five for tune of nearly a million and a half a render an Idea of tha Intense fooling his mates. In three appearances ycar, are being fused In the greatest he has for America. Worthlngton has scored 3 8 points. In "America Is Cod's Crucible, the five games Paul Grace, Nephl Captain "Melting l'ot" the world has ever known; but If ho has been selected great Melting rot where all the rac- nnd forward, has collected a total of as the typlcnl Immigrant It Is be- es of Europe are melting and 50 points. cause ho alone of all thn fifty mlng! Here you stand, good folk, Worthlngton nd hi fast nhootlng There Is none, think I when I see them at Kills colleague will doubtless appear in hfig no homeland. therefore, more In need of a land of Island, here you stand In your fifty (he st.tte association tournament In liberty, none to whose future It is groups, with your fifty languages March." freak-fashionabl- e, JEB. m l. Qulx-sn- hodge-podg- e .. o. team Journeyed to Payson Friday February 13th to meet Coach Olson's aggregation from that city. The floor was very slick, which was a disadvantage to both teams. Due to Paul Grace scoring nine field goals when Payson played at Nephi Coach Olson took his regular center Simmons (who is a very good defense man) from his position at center and placed him left guard in order to stop Pokie our scoring forward and he succeeded but Paul found he was trapped by Simmons and Livingston in any close range shots so conestrated to passing to Worthlngton, Adams, and Starr, who were able to connect with baskets. Glen played the roll as heavy scorer. He shot twelve field goals and two foul pitches, scoring twenty six points out of the 34 made by his team. He ha3 run his total way high and is leading the rest of the centers by a, large margin of 64 points to 48 points that is gained by Amloft, Provo's center, altho Glen has played In only 4 games while his rival has ' played In 5. Loyle Adams played forward and he played a very good game connecting with one field goal and helping Glen get his twelve by passing the ball to him. Starr and Bailey finished the first five and played a very good defense. Bailey got one foul pitch while Starr came dashing Into the offense to get 2 field goals and a foul pitch. In the fourth quarter Coach Durham substituted a full five men. Ostler for Grace; Cowan for Adams; Neldon Worthlngton for his big brother Glen; Beck for Stair and Sidwell for Bailey and gave bis regulars a rest. Brown of Sprlngville referee, and Barnett of Provo, umpire. The lineup and summary: Livingston If Gardner c Hiatt rg Simmons Ig Mendenhall rf Dixon If Me Beth c McDowell rg Belts lg 4 17 Totals FG Nephl Grace rf Adams If 0 C Bailey rg Starr lg Ostler rf Cowan If Worthlngton Sidwell rg Beck lg Total N. c " ' 15 13 FT FO P 10 4 0 2 0 2 28 2 0 O 10 12 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 S 111 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 34 100 0 0 0 0 Pretty Borders Only One Price to Everybody KM The Lowest Price Dixon - Taylor - Russell Co. THE Provo HOUSE ONE-PRIC- E Springville Payson Nephi 3 33 Abraham Lincoln In the history of all nations God has caused a crisis of some sort oc- casionally, probably to Impress upon them that there was a power greater than any given to man. In all cases has He at the same time raised up a man who was humble enough, honest and great enough to meet that crisis face to face, and fight it, even though he be met by overwhelming odds. think He realized the need to raise up a real leader at that time in our hisory when He allowed one section of our country to separate from the union, causing the great bloody conflict of the Civil War. We all know the man who stepped forth, above his fellow countrymen to meet this serious crisis. It was Abraham Lincoln nicknamed by all that knew and loved him "Honest Abe" because of his great rugged I honesty. As a boy he split logs for a living; and it Is said that no one could split more logs than could he. Then after a day of this strenuous exercise, night would find this sombre young giant before the fireplace pouring over the few presiou3 histories he was then able to get. From these books he was learning more and more to love the great country of which he was a citizen. i ' one big reason why Lincoln became a great leader. No leader can be a learner, or if he does lean, it must be on his own knowledge. Aa said before: Lincoln kept climbing higher and higher until in 1360 h climbed into the presidental chair, just at the beginning: of the Civil War. As a great pilot he guided the trembling feet of the nation; stopping to support her when the thread of the union became too weak to hold, until at last he won. At the end of the great strife he was a happy, melancholy man.- He was happy because the union was saved but grieved because many of - his beloved JUNIOR NEWS Fellow students, do you know that your high school education is Incomplete without your participating in at least one or more activities? We all agree that ntuding is a good thing and will hurt no one, but on the other hand, the best educated man In the world will not advance unless he Is able to mix with people at formal and Informal affairs. Do you realize the great opportunity you have of gaining this priceless refine-me- n right In your own school? The annual Junior Prom is not far off and will be the only affair of Its kind this season. Here you can go while and enjoy a happy evening you unconslously acquire the essentials so necessary for men of affairs. !'. cause of these things, we wish to take advantage of the rare occasion and round out your education to pretention. WATCH FOR THE ItlU PATE country-me- the field of battle. n lay cold on Lincoln was one of the greatest friends the people ever had. It Is said that a prophet Is never appreciated in his own country; neither is at any great leader appreciated, least In his time. Some people were jealous of Lincoln and they said he was dangerous to the country so they had his life taken. We sincerely hope that before the spirit fled, Lincoln was able to look ahead far enough to read the lines of the peom "O Captain! My Captain" publishd a little later and to see tha quarleosme sectional nation of that day as It is now A mighty, union of any of the contented 'states ' all under beautiful stars and stripes. Then Lincoln would know that his g struggles were appreciated and recognized by the mas9 of the Other men with this same chance for advancement, . would most likely decide that the world could expect nothing from them and the world, In turn, would get nothing. Lincoln however wasn't that kind life-lonof a man. Step by step he put himself higher and higher, slowly of American course, because no one could help him. He expected none. This was FG FT FO TP Payson Gourley rf Worthlngton . Polychromes Independent Ceilings B. MAW, N. H. S. B. B. Tiffany Blends Stripes Payson Easily Defeated By Nephi's Fast Team NEPHI PAYSON SPRINGVILLE PROVO Oatmeals In charge of Public Speaking ' THE ONE PRICE HOUSE" Cameo Effects Muraltcnes people. Grant Gardner. Valentine Ball Proves Very Successful One of the best school dances this season was the one glven by the Home Economics club last Friday evening in the High School gymnasium. The girls carried out their decorations, programs and refreshments In a Valentine scheme. The decorations being large and small hearts arranged artistically all over the hall. The programs consisted of a large red heart and the refreshments were punch and heart shaped cookies. The club colors of red and silver predominated In everything. The dance commenced at nine o'clock but due to the basket ball team's playing In Payson It wasn't until after their return that there was a very The town orchestra large crowd. furnished the music and although the club was a little disappointed In the turn out, the dance was a good success. |