Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE JUNIOR SUNDAY MORNING Page Fire NOVEMBER 18 1934 Great Rulers Of All Lands Interest Us Brave Girl Saves Life Sister Of i 7 Ruling abdut the same time Elizabeth did Mary Queen of Scots Is another that could hardly be left out of our study Mary was born in 1542 and though she was a true loyal friend she was a deadly dangerous enemy She became queen when her father died a few days after she was born When she was older she was married to the eldest son of the king of France and thus became queen of both France and Scotland but be- cause of a plot against England she was ordered by Queen Elizabeth to be beheaded The next three to be mentioned all have the word "Great” after their names They are Peter the Great Frederick the Great and Catherine the Great Peter was a rough uncouth brutal man and the people of Russia never really loved him but he did all he could within his power to make the Russian kingdom a strong one Frederick was king of Pnissia He hated to spend money and he and his court were both shabby He abolished torture and allowed free- dom of the press and religion He loved to fight and was one of the greatest soldiers that ever lived Catherine was married at the age of 16 and her husband was a demented weakling She ruled for 34 years however and made Russia a clean pleasant land Marie Antoinette is said to have one most of the been extravagant women to ever live Her mother was Maria Theresa empress of Austria and married her daughter to Louis XVI who was a weakling The French people hated her and she was beheaded during the French revolution After the downfall of the royal family m France came Napoleon — Napoleon the peasant the insignificant soldier who rose to be emperor of France He duplicated Hannibal’s feat of crossing the Alps and crushed Italy and Austria and conquered Egypt But he was exiled to a desert island later in his life and saw his brilliant career crumble to dust at his feet Last but hardly least among the great kinjs and queens eomes Queen Victoria of England She ascended the throne when she was 17 and ruled for 64 years Truly was Victoria the mother and grandmother of kings and queens Her nine children married all the leading powers of Europe and when she died she had 37 She was marliving grandchildren ried to Albert of and when she died in 1901 she was mourned more perhaps than any other English ruler Saxe-Cobur- g Today of course we still have our kings and queens but the glory that is theirs is not half as great as those V nna - jv TU - Tt nutau v wuyt ant atUMIMU royal family was wiped out m the World war France Spain and Germany are republics but the British and Italian Swedish and Norwegian kings still carry on living up to the tradition of ruling wearing the crown and living and dying for their kingdom - KNIGHT CRUSADER BETTY LU CARWILE 15 Salt Lake age-ol- d City BUZZINT ’ROUND s What shall we do?” sighed Madge giving her bxiks a shoe to keep them from falling Madge’s twin Midge who had listened to her sister’s grumbling now burst out "I know! let’s go gathering black walnuts There are a lot of trees down by the brook that are just loaded!” "That is an Idea!” exclaimed Madge grabbing her twin and beginning to in”s5-len- — run They reached home deposited their books and told their mother where they were going They soon reached the trees and set to work filling their J 6acks All of a sudden Midge cried ’ "Watch out Madge1’’ But it was too late A rattler that had been coiled in the leaves had struck at Madge and though Midge had seen it her cry had not come m time to warn her sister The snake glided away In the grass "Don’t lose your head Madge” said Midge She stripped her sister’s stocking down and sucked as much ponon as she could from the wound in her leg Then she took off her coal and wrapped it around the leg "Lie quietly here” she said TU be right back with help ” She dashed away It was only a little while before she was back with the doctor and her father “You saved her life” said the doctor to Midge as he set to work ESQUIRE VIRGINIA LINDQUIST 12 Ogden 1 ' Some Schools Seem to Shine With Workers ' 9 (Continued from Page One) what they "can do to redound to the honor of their school This group meets at the homes of members and writes and draws They promise some keen competition to the rest of the workers It must add a lot of fun to school work to know that what you learn about writing and spelling or what you study in nature and art can bo turned to good account in tins way It is to be hoped that more boys and girls sensing the good time this means will join the ranks and give' the leading schools some competition i PERHAPS When we were going out to i me n vj i aim tain uu vur car boiled going over La Fever ridge My little brother Leon said “I know why they call it La Fever ridge It is because the car gets a fever going over it” Emma Jane Sehoenfeld Age 9 Johnson WITH BUZZ Selfishness Can Make Others Dislike Child — I (Continued from Page One) mBre'friteresetd than in Tommy 2 3 ici” Will Be Unpopular 4 5 6 t 7 Mother asked Tommy about the little boy next door and what he did and what he liked7 But Tommy didn’t know He had neer his contemporaries 8 inquired Mothers guess had been right Tommy had already begun treating as he did liis fa- ther assuming that all the interest would be wiliinglv gnen himself and his affairs and they didn’t like it It s so easy to indulge in little ways ways which though apparently harmless at tlie time encourage traits not inducive to popularity later on Remember if you aie thoughtless or selfish with your parents you will be so with others who are not so ready to excuse your shoitcomings AT GRANNIE S I like to go to grannie’s house To eat the things she makes I like her nice big cookies And her many nicer cakes I like to have some dinner When I may hungrj grow I'm glad I don’t have to wait To eat the things vou know LOIS ELAINE CHRISTENSEN Age It Sait Lake City v n I m Arthur O’Shaughness j ” Shakespeare "Othello " Thomas Browne "Religio Are the Music Makeis in Tommy’s rabbit I ANSWERS TO TODAY'S TEST “We Med- Massinger ’’The Old Law" Longfellow "Hvperion ” Seven red and six white Ossining N Y ’ That the second coming of Christ is at hand Revolution around the eerth and revolution around the sun 9 10 11 Ebbtide ( The home of the gods An Irish dish of potatoes and cabbage 13 Fastidious 12 14 15 Anthracite The hygiene childien and diseases of LITTLE BOY BLl T iHIft - horn TRIija E Klow obiiy Waken the Juniors this sunny morn Here they come trooping with paper and pen They can write articles can! like nobdy GEORGEVA GILES Salt Lake City As charity covers a multitude of sins before God so does politeness before man —Greville By Arval Grover |