Show I - - t r s i U Dl NT Bszi STUDENT LIFE LI i- - tu Scribbler Calls fur Contributions to Quarterly Club Has Peculiar Published Week’y by Students of Utah Agricultural Continued from Page One) efforts of the student body This magazine is the club’s major activity and it defrays all club expenses To belong to this organization requires but one thing: have an article published In “The Scribof The nature ble Quarterly1 articles is a matter of individual choice Poetry fiction essay ' and even drama are welcomed Label your masterpieces “For Scribble” and hand It into the Student Life office as soon as post College fOt’Ntt— A cap Uor use cur head) Beginning and a fountain en have been Printed by the Earl £ England Publiishing Company Logan Utaa turned In at the Registrar's Office Entered as second-clas- s mail matter September 19 190$ at Logan Utah owners may regain possession The tinder the Act of March 3 1S97 Acceptance for mailing at special rate of An item of Interest to new stu- of these articles by indenUfying postage provide! for In Section 1103 Act of Oct o ter 3 1!2L authorized dents is the activities of the peppy them " August tt 191$ club- called Be-nWho are Urey and why? A Joe Cowley pencil has About twelve years ago a crowd been gold eversharp and returned to foujict 'o? Prestthe asked Business snappy Aggies Greaves Manager Cyrus Student Life offee Looser may for permission to organize a obtain same at the office Frank Richards Assistant Manager dent campus pep club The President was not sufficientlv and impressed Reporters Capa Ordered announced that there would be MELVIN JAMES OR PH A SWEETEN RUTH HART The Sophomores have ordered no on club And the pep campus MARY JOHXY CHRISTENSEN MATTESON THEM A JOHNSON green caps for the sible was 'the traditional Club JAMES SCOTT MARJORY WEBB PHYLLIS BALL AN promptly the Be-n- o first t0 wear durJ)? lh Kl LON WALKER AUSTIN E FIFE LAURA NELSON organized - ED JENKER JUNE MONSON PALLAS JOHNSON LAURA BANKHEAD CLARICE WEBB os NIELSON LETT IE 1SRAELSEN JAMES JACOB CLEO BOBBS ALLEN CANNON GLADYS sophomoresfrom ternity on the campus and ron-Ir- at are added to the Volume XXVII Number 3 group Theboysmembers Friday September 28 1928 are active AG MEN’S DANCE only two years after which they Under the direction of the U become alumni “An Honest Man The club sponsors one party A C Ag Club an Ag Men’s dance is not a thing of the past among college students will be given next Thursday night every year the historic- “Be-NHONESTY would have us believe that the institutions of creep Other activities are pep Oct 4 In the Women’s Gymnashigher learning are made up of students whose motto is “The ralles Intermission stunts at ath ium All students who are- regisLord helps those who who help themselves and who make this t£ys ““olict as ushers atUftudent tered in any branch of the School of Agriculture are given special maxim a reality by helping themselves to everything within Body games or meets concession Invitation to attend A venders field police and genera) ed their scope has been planned Ag program aides to Athletic and Student Body Men! Come and bring your Lady! Utah Agricultural College students are fast proving the in- officers o Club In 1926 the local accuracy of s'ich an assumption The most striking illustration was admitted to the national pep Sunday School Will Contiune of this took form in the Registrar's office not long ago A young fraternity Knights Sunday Discussions of Current Since that time they have been Problems toe JU A C People in t —jtvm pwjseniwl jtiurap snm-o- f raaoajuat ervn'Ttfore' active tmar formerlyr 30 1928 ' ReSunday 'September local of his registration fee which called for twenty dollars change The acting president of the In Different-RegionBackgrounds ligious Pressed for time the cashier handed him a fifty in lieu of a chapter is Carl Sheffield of America” Presbyterian Church 10:00 a m R M twenty doHhr'bill'The recipleuT accepted the'bill but after Rutledge leader he returned the it over that dollars excess What the Barber Supply (Vs Salesmen Say — ' WE CATER TO STUDENTS Eat Drink and be Merry — Opposite Post Office MONSEN MEAT! —MARKET— A Delicious Food I’hone 409 31 o South Main Street — Logan Students Aggie For the Best of i j —Candy is- a delicious form of energizing food — Eat a few bites every day for enjoyment — for energy and to relieve fatigue - thirty thirty dollar test A person whose integrity can survive the may be branded “an honest man” Shaw Writes To America I ! i of the most lucid discussions of the fundamental ONE of capitalism and socialism it to be found in the last classic work of George Bernard Shaw one of the British Empire’s greatest contribution to modern letters With his proclivity for satire he has titled the book “The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Socialism and Capitalism” The preface directs the book to the attention of intelligent American women and in his inimitable sjyle Shaw1 expresses the hope that occasionally an American husband might be drawn into a discussion with this wife mother sister or friend and in this manner he hopes to reach even the American male With his tongue in his cheek Shaw suggests that it would be an impropriety to suppose that any American man didn’t know all about these two gseat economic systems The work itself is profound and scholarly and written in the brilliant Shaw style so that it is just as interesting as narrative tales Anyone man or woman who wants to know anything or rather more about the proposals of two groups of mankind as to what should I? done with the wealth of the earth should read this new book According to the author he ha3 spent the last six years in writing and collecting the material Those against the volume as they must perforce meet new fied sculs who don’t want any change in the prevailing order are ideas cogently expressed ed About Ethics - freshman’ IMPRESSIONS are ethics? How many students have had the WHERE ofyour standing at the end of a long cafeteria line up to see a group of classmates come wending their way into the front end of the line? j Everyone who takes his lunch down stairs has in all probability had that experience! Quite frequently Student Life has observed jfgcuRjr ipqmbers standing patiently Uine along with' albng'strti-cifvstndeno- s whfefy'fUddefily up trip- ped some fair coed casually 'oozingdnto the btjeiuJ ahead of them: This editorial is not written especially for the benefit of those who are ethical enough to wait their turn Certainly they are not seriously injured by the inconsideration shown them The principal of thoughtfulness for others is being neglected by a cer- ain-few Surely they fail to realize that they are automatically classifying themseWsi 'amori! the (habitually inconsiderate College should serve as a schooling in ethics as well as in scholarship If the shoe fits put it on Wait your turn Kids Play fS there any reason why a necktie should be taboo on those days which precede an athletic event ? Last year the pass-wor- d on to a game was “jerk that practically every day prior necktie” It became almost traditional upon entering the main building to either be compelled to “jerk the tie” or be subject to severe treatment by some of the more robust enthusiasts If the exponents of the practice feel that the necktie conflicts with the spirit of a rousing Aggie rally let us leave them behind However it is generally understood that the pf£?tice originat- ed among a certain few who took delight at the humiliation of "‘those who offered resistance to the idea The practice is losing its charm It is becoming commonplace The writer has faint recollections of like indulgences being relished in High School but it surely is an innovation m college activity Let s grow up and discard the habit as a silly and absurd one can equal the eyes He hears all sees all and then wonders what it i is all about- - I have for the space ( of two weeks been delving into the mysteries which the College presents to a puzzled freshman I have observed from the first a ‘spirit of general democracy friendliness and cooptra tion among students which is rather in th conspicuously lacking high school that I came fronr Apparently snobbishness has no place among the “Tggies” Strange things greet the eye at every turn A multitude of so called phrases “collegiate” combine seemingly to worry my ears and fill my mind with puzzlement Registration day was an ordeal a nightmare endless hours did I fill long questjopaires Looks actions antecedents ancestors tastes Ideal past history went down Li black and white time after time I came to school that memorable Saturday morning with the hop that at last I was to be educated Eight hours later I left the balls of the institution discouraged downhearted and wondering If I had been to college or to a “Teapot Dome” investigation At last! A girl who does not roll her stockings! I had thought such creatures were long extinct which is another proof of a freshNothing satis-warn- ‘ By Edgar A Who elves bis best to every task Guest Success is doing something well It’s winning faith and trust Despite what theorists may tell It’s doing what you must It's giving all the best of you To every task you have to do Success Is not the gift of luck When rightly understood It’s keeping on with grit and pluck To make your service good It's keepng honest when you meet An easy chance to play the cheat “He alone pellation Is worthy of the ap- of greatness who either they may be done but those only are great things which tend to render life- more happy which Increase the Innocent enjoyments or and comforts of existence which pave the way to a state of future bliss more permanent: and ' more pure” - — Retail CALL AT THE ' and ears of a frosh mans near Sad to sayi since I joined the force eft the nrnnbfr things' ha ve- - jfame&'me inexpressibly The latest addition to my collection of pains Is the "girl simple-mindedne- -- Royai Bakery Try Our Coffee and Rolls North Main 118 I ed ANONYMOUS Logan REPAIRED P Smith & Sons Printers— Engravers Uet us Design and Print Your Dance and Menu Programs SHOES -- FEDERAL AVENUE LOGAN UTAH the same as New STl'DENTTS— Yoa will always get good service at — PALACE- - BARBER SHOP BEAUTY AND PARLOR J ' P Nielsen Prop 7 Main Street - 4t 4 36 West Center Street Two Doors West oMhe Lyric -- FURNISHED A PA RTM ENT " VALLEY FLORAL COMPANY on-- FLOWERS j College Hill AtL 645 North 8th East Eyes Tested Glasses Fitted Lenses Duplicated Consult us for your Jewelry and Optical Needs ' Sheaffer Fountain Pens andTencils ' Utah Loggn i 53 East 1st Noi-t- Street CACHE for light house keeping Wendelboe Jewelry and Optical Company TROTMAN C ' 1 31 FOR Men Who Know What’s What in 4 OCCASIONS v FEDERAL AVENUE rilOXE 7X1 Correct Dress For ' FALL There is 'long wear left In many 1m old shoe ss who winked dropped me an inviting smile and then climbed Into another fellows car while on the street I stood pie-eyIf there's anything that can tame a frolicsome freshie It isj a trip to Mrs Bell's English class She has a way of saying ’verb”! “substantive” “direct object” etcj that chills the marrow in my bones Perhaps with the next nine months she may succeed in teaching me something about English but by that time I shall In all probability ben a mental moral and physical wreck Those ladies in the book store give me a rather homesick feeling especially the little blonde with the pretty face and wistful eyes- - But then she doesn't even know I exist so why worry J j SERVICE' QUALITY AND Next Sunday L D S Institute Collegiate Sunday School “Evo-- 1 lution Religion and the Bible”1 Fifth Ward Amusement Hall Corner 5th East and 5th North 10:30 m W W Henderson director College students invited Suits Shoes Hats Caps Neckwear Shirts Sport Togs Hose Etc AUU llERE FOR YOUR INSPECTION y- - Have Your SUPER-wearin- oak g leather soles live cushion rubber heels rapid and efficient workmanship guaranteed satisfaction MAIN at them you would not believe that your old pair of shoes could be restored to usefulness and long wear and made to look tike new Leave them with us and see what we: can do with them at Very little cost We can more than cut your shoe bill in half if you w ill send your worn shoes to us to be repaired We do good work To look j GOODYEAR SHOE ffendencs 115 NORTH THATCHER’S ' Old Shoes Renovated Shoes Repaired! REPAIRING LOGAN "‘'5 - DonT Guess— See For Yourself SAVE MONEY 77 North Main CO $t '“Get The Habit" iy Four Great Air Lines Select I' (Next to Royal Shoe Shine Parlor) John Carver Speaks To Chapel Students (Continued from Page One) the value of getting a purpose early in life and ad- hering to that purpose His ad dress commanded the attention of j the congregation He spoke- of David of old who said “One thing do I desire- and that shall I seek after” and pointed to David as one who attained his success by having a fixed purpose in life “The world will make room for a people who have a purpose dream desire or am incentive” said Mr Carver “A persona ad- vancement is guaged"entirely by his purpose and one will never go higher than his goal in lifes" He further stated that “the big advantage of cQllege life Is that it helps to form and fU and mold the purpose in a person It helps make the life dream which will determine the ultimate position In He spoke on We Bluebird - KL’CCESS CANDY COMPANY pay-mea- hav-thoug- ht night WFJENSEN Wholesale— BREAD Inter-Collegia- - — Keep Candy handy PIES ROLLS AND CAKES Be-N- ‘ THE DAIRY LUNCH Better- - Meat for Less Money nt - Fiiie Food— Delicious Coffee — — Pleasant Surroundings : - the-windo- "There are no better equipped Barber and Beauty Pallors in tiie West for Service and Sanitation than the — MODERN BARBER AND BEAUTY PARLORS 13 West Center — Logan N HOWARD JESSOP - 4 : ’ For Your Lunch —Phone 711 ’ for their fleets of mail and passenger planes The Vico used in the planes of these ’ 4 Airlines is the :same in qual-'it- y as the Vico you buy for your car at all Blue Light Service Stations t - Success is In the will to ba On friendly terms with men “The ladder of life Is full of life” It's in little things they'll see When next you meet again-Fo- r splinters but they always pric As a closing number Miss so long the hardest when you're sliding nothing ever Rogers rendered a piano solo Or works such havoc as a wrong down" William L Brownell Hark! Hark! the Lark by Lizt Lu-de- en f QWL BILLIARD HALL SOFT DRINKS— 38 West Center Logan BLUE LIGHT GAS & OIL Co Logan— Utah t |