| Show Wt ftnt make our bablta and then they mak ua Bow and aett iwa habtti habit ow roap character SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 13 1935 Schools Find Many Ways to Use Our Paper RADIO DRAMA GROUP SCORES Schools everywhere in the state are finding many ways in which The Tribune Junior can beusdd to help boys and girls learn inore easily rapidly and happily Ever smceritrihauguratlon seven years ago the little section has been accepted as fine reading matter and has been anlntegralpart of every school library In many libraries has b'een given little section our — an honored place a little table of its own where boys and girls who have done the required work lessons for the day may sit and read just for the fun of it or may look up items of helpv in their class work Several schools have reported that they keep bound files of The Tribune Junior Each week as our readers and contributors know is devoted to some special subject —the subject of greatest importance for the week following the issue By looking at last year's Tribune Juniors then the teachers and pupils can get desired information at an earlier date 'To illustrate our Halloween issue will be out in two weeks from today Many schools however are already working on Halloween material so they consult last year’s papers to find out games construc-- tion work etc suitable for this ’ day Our contributors can help popularize our little paper if they are alert If your school hasn’t' yet started to save The Tribune Juniors why not suggest to your librarian that you will be glad to assist in collecting and binding the papers this winter? Each Monday morning take your copy to school (or if you are saving them for yourself find some generous neighbor who isn’t and get him to donate his copy to the school) Make a binder of heavy cardboard and keep' the issues in this in order You will find that you will be providing one of the most interesting reading projects for your school As a help in the language work The Tribune Junior is invaluable as it offers the only chance for most boys and girls to get their best work published and presented to an audience of hundreds bf thousands weekly The teachers who are taking advantage of this opportunity report always that interest in fine written work increases by leaps and bounds when the best material is --sent "in' for publication If your English teacher hasn’t started this yet show her this litr to “put your tle story and school on the map” by Sending the best contributions each week to us for publication ask-he- Our Radio club’s dramatic presentations get better and better and the recent production “A Narrow Escape” has been hailed by many fans as the “best yet” This little playlet based on the principles of our Knighthood of Youth club was prepared and directed by Mrs C W Grover (Arval Grover’s mother) In it the children represented little kittens and a big rat The group that presented the play had never appeared together before none had ever had professional instruction in dramatics yet each one put over a finished performance that did credit to tl)e direction and proved the unquestioned talent of the actors The little group is shown above They are left to right: Dan Harvey Mr Rat Betty Mae Dykes Fluffy Keith Karen Tommy Bobby Brewster Papa Cat in front Nadine Brewster Mamma Cat Selma Harvey dancer The Knowledge Test Who wrote: “Stormed at with shot and shell Boldly they rode and well”? 2 man ijout of th$ reach of fortune”? 3 “Sweet vale of Avoca how calm could I rest In thy bosom of shade with the friends I love best”? 4 “Still-tmy brother turns with ceaseless pain And drags at bach remove a lengthening chain”? Fill each blank: 5 Crescendo in musid means (Copyright 1935 King Features Syndicate Inc) 1 “A-wi- se Lets Revive Our Interest In Sun Dials The vanishing sundial is daily becoming more rare in our period That horologue of the early ages man’s most primitive clock is Its business usef says passing Nature Magazine has served its day perhaps It has been displaced by a more elaborate invention which ticks off time after sunset But artistically we might plead that this silent friend be given a permanent place about the American home — a sanctuary Many are aware that the origin of the sundial is credited to the shepherds of old who conceived it wvhile --sitting patiently watching the shadows They then fashioned it from a staff and stones and later ornamented it (Continued on Put Thfet) |