Show - -- Qp n( mi mp SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER U btHti habit ebanetar 18 1934 WASATCH KINDERGARTEN MAKESJELLY JT Kindergarten children at the Wasatch school aren’t content with merely hearing how things are done they want to get right inp and do those tilings themselves When their teacher Miss Una Smurthwaite talked about making jelly they were all eager to set to work Some brought apples or sugar othei brought knnes pans a clean white sack through which to strain the jelly towels and eveiy thing else that was necessary Then they set to work The result was some splendid apple jelly and some fine apple butter made from the pulp and peelings Then there was a jiarty with jelly served on graham crackers and milk for refreshments But tlieie was still some jelly so a committee of the little folks visited the city superintendents office and treated Superintendent L John Nutall Jr and Mrs A Maud Spioat primary sujiervisor to jelly and apple butter The woikeis shown in the photograph to right (back row) Eddie Siegel Marjorie v Zane Miller Peter Prout Mary Leenette Moran Geraldine Ossman in front) Bonnie Blankenship Some Schools Seem to Shine With Workers An analysis ol our paper week by week shows that some ol the schools especially in Salt Lake City just bristle with enthusiastic workers while others don’t seem to have so many Of course contributors work from their homes but the glory they wr i diec tea oh their schools This fact is easily accounted for When children see the name of a classmate constantly appearing in The Tribune Junior they think they’d like to have the same distinction so they set to work and win it Thus in one school even in one class we may find a number of our best contestants It happens this year that Roosevelt junior high school and the Emerson school are leading the city Katherine Jane Stumm of course is secretary of the student body at Roosevelt She is a well known and popular gul and has pnany enthusiastic fans ahiong our readers Keith Edgar Montague who took our readers by storm with his drawings last winter Is also at Roosevelt as are Betty West and Blair Fowler two fine young artists who have contributed from time to time to this section Bob Connely Tribune scfiool editor at Roosevelt is known to our older readers as he used to contribute ralher often His other journalistic work keeps him busy now There are others at this schoor who send us splendid work from time to time and place the school at the top of our roll Emerson school from which interestingly enough Keith Montague and Betty West went to Roosevelt is just alive with eager contributors First of couise is Ruth Eloise West who has sent in moie work than all her schoolmates combined Then there are Wanda West and Beverly West Barbara Martin Sue Snedaker Elizabeth Jewel Edwards Betty Jane Cooper and others Stewart school Is forging ahead with Emily Neff Beth McArthur and Kathryn Wright leading And right at the time this is being written some Liberty school children start a little journalism club of their own with the purpose of writing for The Tribune Junior Ten little girU led by Patsy Broyles associate editor at Liberty are going to see (Continued oa Past five are-Le- Bu-b- Donald Kleinsnuth TKtV ' — w tCIV 1-- ” YY C 1 i IlOUgnt - Manv people do not like their names Personally I am not fond of my own name Joan but the best thing I can do for that I think is to remember worse names than mine and be thankful I haven’t got them People who have these “woive names” need not mind because this is meiely a matter of personal opinion and they can in turn think of names they would consider worse to have It I weie able to change my name I would choose Marjorie Anne Peggy I know a girf named Marjorie who detests her name Barbara or Shuley Anne Phillips is a friend of mine who does not like her name We tiaded names one day and plenty of odd things happened J 11 tell you about it some time I have an Aunt Barbara and a Cousin Shuley and an Aunt Janet and Cousin Peggy— all four names I adore’ When I was little I used to tell mother that when I became of age I would She asked me what I would change it to and I had a hard change my name time deciding whether it would be Darlene Patricia Diana Bonnie or Bethm which were my favorites at that time I didn’t reach anv definite conclusion and whenever mother wanted me to stop talking about it all she had to do was to ask' me this question This silenced me as I could never answer it I suppose the reason we like some names is because we know some person or have read of some character that we admire who has that name Well then Be such a lovely peison that the cure for a name you do not like is simple Then it won’t matter much whether jou everyone will love your name But try pot to be discontented with your name personally like it or not Your patents wanted to call you what they did and probably spent many anxious hours choosing it And at that it is probably as good a name as you ’ could choose for yourself JOAN CAMERON 11 Salt Lake THE KNOWLEDGE TEST Who wrote 1 2 J ‘For each age is a dream that Is dying Or one that is coming to bnlh’? ‘Tufles light as air’? ‘But where life is more tunble than death it is then the luest aliur ' to dare to live’ 1 4 ‘‘How sweetly sounds the voice of a good woman’ It is so seldom heard that when it speaks It lavishes all senses ? 5 ‘The world loves a spice of wickedness’? Do you know t Haw many red stupes has the flag of United Slates 7 Near what village is Sing Sing prison’ 8 What is the doctune of adventism? 9 What two motions has the moon? 10 When the water of the sea reaches its lowest level what is It known as’ 11 In Norse mythology what Asgaid’ 12 What food is colcannon? 1 What is another word lor "finical" 14 What is another word for hard coal 15 Of what does the science of pediatrics treat? s 1 “i Selfishness Can Make Others Dislike Child Every Friday night during jhe summer months Tommy met his father at the tram sighting him with his sharp eyes and running eagerly beside his - stop nd rather car until It com appeared on the platform And then before father had a chance to put his fi5ot on the ground Tommy began to recite In rapid excited sentences the ‘I alstory of his weeks activities most caught a chipmunk father — one of the rabbits is dead — Tiger can stand on his hind legs— I can swim to the raft — almost ” Father listened to Tommy with an Indulgent smile Mother thought it was cunning of Tommy when father told her so anxious to tell futher everything right away before anyone else had a chance But finally when autumn wras coming on it occurred to her to ask her husband whether Tommy ever asked him what he had been doing during "Of course not” he anthe week swered ‘ My doings woulc hardly Tommy at his age a bit too young to be keen on business ” Mother had to admit that that was true But she wondered if Tommy was too young to be Interested in business warn t he quite old enough to be She interested Interest in father? in Others Too thought1 too of certain egotistical tiaits in ceitain contemporaries of heis which mad I them very difficult to get along with and caused them to be not at alt Were these sama generally liked tiaits exhibited fust when the-- a offensive adults-weiabout Tommy j age’’ She thought too of Tommy treating other boys the way he heated filher talking hard of what inter-este- d him but not inquiring as to tha other fellow his health and his hobbies And she felt that the olher boys wouldn t like it very much that they wouldn't like Tommv Come to think of it Tommy ha I been playing alone a lot this summer To be sure the little boy next dooc had come over occasionally to loo-at the rabbit but preferably 15 seemed when Tommy was not about It seemed possible even probable! that the little neighbor (Continued m Fata five) ? watru:i |