Show SALT LAKE CITY UTAH Alumni Issue Postponed to Later Sunday Our big alumni issue of The Tribune Junior announced for today has been postponed) to March22 in order to give some of our distant alumni time to write and to send their photography But it is worth waiting for with its wealth of interesting and Inspiring material Preparation of this issue Is proving a most fascinating task Splendid response has been had from former contributors and- from current workers who have Interviewed former writers and who have sent in many tifnely news items about those who started the little Tribune Ju-non its very interesting and successful career Many of our present contributors have friends sisters or brothers uncles or aunts who contributed to our little paper 7 or 6 or 5 years ago Many have been reading The Tribune Junior since they first could read anything The names of the first ambitious boys and girls are as beacon lights to these aspiring youngsters of today showing them the way through the shoals of discouragement and failure to the harbor of success So wait and watch for this big or - SUNDAY MORNING MARCH 8 1936 Second grade children of the Garfield school with Miss Virginia Weiler as teacher are hard at work on a most beautiful and useful bit of service They are making a lovely coverlet curtains and pillows for the nurse’s room at the school These articles made of monks’ cloth in a soft grayish tan are trimmed with pretty flowers which the "Children have woven of scraps ®f wool- - - The gay flowers make a bright border around coverlet and curains and invite ill children to get well and go outdoors to play agaim vln fact the furnishings are so cheerful that it is difficult to imagine anyone’s staying sick long when they are used Our photographer caught a group of the children at work — and they The love to work on their coverlet grasping every opportunity to do so children shown are left to right Melvin Stoof Calvin Riggs Barbara Taylor Colleen Hinckley Gail Shea BIG DAYS IN MARCH -- Some very important historical events have taken place in the month of March March 1—The first American bank was chartered— 1780 March 3— Florida becomes a state— 1845 March 4—U S constitution 1s first used— 1789 March 4r— Vermont is made a state— 1791 March 7— Providence R I is founded— 1738 March 7— The telephone is pat- ented— 1876 March 7— Amundsen discovers the south pole— 1912 March 8—Stamp act bypassed alumni issue out March 22 and see what our former workers are doing today and what thejr think of The Tribune Junior from their vantage points of high school and college March 8— Battle of the Monitor and the Merrimac — 1862 March 11 —Congress decides to have a navy— 1794 March 12— Grant appointed commander in chief— 1864 March 12 — First U S postoffice is established— 1789 March 13 — The use of standard time is begun— 1884 March 15 —Maine is admitted to the Union — 1820 March 16— West Point founded— 1802 March 23— P atrlckHenry speaks “Liberty or Death” — 1775 March 27— Florida discovered March 30— First congress under new constitution meets— 1789 So history moved sharply forward in March! - SHIRLEY ANNE SYRETT Cedar City Utah Read About Famous Men March-Bor- n This week I’m going to write a little about the important people whose birthdays coma in the second week of March First comes Oliver Wendell Holmes He was bom March 8 1841 at Boston Mass He served in the civil war He became a professor of law at Harvard law school in 1882 and was appointed justice of the supreme court of the United States in 1902 Dudley Buck was born March 10 1839 He was a great American organist and composer He was born at Hartford Conn He composed much organ church piano music and songs He composed “Cantata” “The Golden Legend” Which won a $10000 prize offered by the Cincinnati music festival of 1880 Thomas Marshall was born on March 14 1854 in North Manchester He was elected vice president of the United States in 1912 and 1916 and served during President Wilson’s terms in office He was a lawyer also KNIGHT CONSTANT RUTH ELOISE WEST Age 11 Salt Lake City |