| Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY MORNING C Dcnool JMews and Views Students Hear Indian Chief and Wife Lecture V i OCTOBER 4 1033 IT r France Slater Editor BRYANT junior high school —The invigorating autumn weather eems to encourage outdoor activity Of all the fall sports football soccer and tennis are favorites among Several football Bryant j students teams have been organized two of which have been scheduled to play the Fort Douglas boys in the near future Mr M'&rwin Jonas will explain the fine points of the' game so that it will be played correctly Bryant students enjoyed having Chief and Mrs Eagle Wing in an interesting program Chief Eagle Wing is an Indian noble and a member of the Klamath tribe of California He was educated at the Sharman university for Indians He and his wife have made an intensive study of Indian ceremonies customs and art Indian articles were shown and explained and legends and dances of the various tribes were given Officers for the mathematics club were chosen for each period They are Mary Lou Muir Bob Bagley Virtue Swenson Connie Ashton Edith Stevens Arthur Eickers Doris Hansen Lewis Ellsworth Irene Harold Spencer and Helen HartwelL The mathematics students have planned a novel entertainment to be given next week Each pupil will represent an angle of some sort and will invite another angle to the “Banquet of the Angles' Row-botha- a tour of France with two boys Andre and Julian Volden French places of interest will be studied on this imaginary journey Colorful Flower Show if Draws Attendance of 800 Annie Neff Editor BANDY JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL —A colorful flower show was held In the Sandy junior high school audi torium Friday September 22 Mrs H Jacobsen Mrs A M Peterson Mrs L Boulter and Mrs Earl Chris-tensen all of Sandy together with the sixth grade nature class sponsored the show One hundred and fifty-on- e adults and 647- students at1 tended The judges based their decisions on the following: Length of stems evenness of blooms and size of flowers Professional growers were banned Jrom the contest There were 121 entries 25 of those who entered were students First prizes were awarded to 88 entries 51 received second places and 41 third prizes The Sandy junior high agriculture division also exhibited many farm products Sugar beets tomatoes water melons com and carrots of giant size were displayed by the junior farmers In one corner of the auditorium was placed by the boys a very interesting collection of injurious weeds Mrs E S Soffe of Soffe's Gardens had a display which was entered as It proved to be an inprofessional spirational attraction to the amateur growers This flower show is held annually in the school and is one of the events looked forward to by the community Orchestra Director Forms Bugle Corps Shirley Newman Editor Roy Cole Associate Editor LOWELL SCHOOLr-M- rs Ardelle Dickard our orchestra director has begun to organize a bugle corps which is for the purpose of instructing the boys or girls who are interested in this kind of activity So far 20 boys have enrolled and Robert Thomas the leader is prepared to direct them during the coming school year Lynn Thompson of the second grade reports The second grade children pf the Lowell school are making a grocery store We have made shelves and painted them and now the children are bringing empty cans and bottles to fill the shelves When this is finished we 10 make Lowell school especially in the sixth play as well as the boys for with every spare minute used for practice they are steadily nearing their goal Every recess the children flock to their baseball diamonds like birds and many boys and girls are fast becoming exceptionally fine players Tribune School Editors Elect Officers to Direct Year’s Work Traffi p Congestion At School Discussed Room 3 children have had fun acting oyt the stoFy of the gingerbread man After hearing the story several times we chose a number of children who can speak and act well torepret sent the characters in the story We hope topractice our play well enough to invite some other room to visit us when we finally present it The children are very grateful to Bobby Wicks for his present of seven goldfish which are finding their new home a pleasant place in which to be Helengene Holding Editor Cleo Keene Associate Editor LAFAYETTE S C H O O L-- Last Thursday our principal Miss Olive Ferris called the sixth and seventh grades into the auditorium We had a business meeting and are going to elect a president and a secretary to take charge of the meetings We will have three business meetings a month and each room will present one program In our meeting Thursday we discussed the traffic congestion in front of the school We decided that each pupil would go home directly after school so as not to block the traffic Room 2 of the second grade has made a moving picture The screen Is a wooden box which they will Paint They have pasted the pictures on a roll of paper that they pull through a slit in the box The children of room 7 are happy over 'the lovely work books that Miss A Maud Sproat the primary super visor has sent them There are many cute pictures in It that the boys and girls will color The fourth and fifth grades have been studying the Indians They have made blankets Indian designs and have brought many Indian Traffic Police Give Auditorium Program William Tnddenham Editor Virginia Ray Associate Editor LONGFELLOW S C H O O L-- The bugle corps of the Longfellow school is now organized with Bud Spencer as captain The members of the corps ar Jjeoald Burton BOb Storm Frank Hurlbut Clarence Spencer Bob Grimmer Nick Groesbeck Avard Booth Benny Winn Jim Swinyard Bob Hot fenbeck Rolin Hanson Clifford Curtis Richard Reynolds and Roy l°” — Salt-Lak- South Junior TO PRESS AND MEbJD AND CLEAN OUR -- COSTUMES- - WISH t COULD' JUST RUN AWA- Y- Pupils Take Imaginative Trip to Chicago Fair BurdeH Johnson Editor Thornton Cobb Aoooclato Editor FREMONT SCHOOL— We are glad to be back to school and shall try to make this year our very best Last week the third grade children e took a trip to the Century of Progress exposition at Chicago We played that we rode on the famous Amos and Andy sky line From here we saw many bright colored buildings giant trains and many other interesting things We enjoyed our play trip very much First grade news: We have two reporters in our room Their names are Dorothy McLaughlin and Mitsue IwasakL Bobby Rosette came to visit Us yesterday He was in our class last year-H- is little sister came with him We were glad to see them Bobby read with us His little sister played in the play house We hope they will come again We elected Second grade news June Samuels and Rejina Vitlri for our newspaper reporters The second grade children brought some autumn leaves to school They were very beautiful Charles Sherman brought a funny caterpillar to school It had a red belt It had long horns too We hops it will make a cocoon for us to look at make-believ- EAMIIYMEETSET etch-meeting meeting a song contest will be held with each school offering a Tribune editors’ song Prizes will be awarded both to the school and to the author of the winning song Members of the David Osborn family who are “Interested In L D S temple and research work will meet Friday at 8 p m at the home of L Jane Thomson 340 Coatsville avenue Bv Ripley mi' President - WHY RUN AWAY? GEE- SERVE CHITZLER ACT NOT TFd OLD RIGHT-OU- R WOULDN’T EE WORTH A DIME TO HIM IF tT WASN’T FOR Mi i HE’S GOT OUR NAMES ON A ' ? 'Jr " "to m work! work! work! MINUTE THAT I’M NOT AT TH’ THEATRE SING1N’ MY HEAD OFF I’VE GOT of the traffic 'police announced the" rules to be observed for safety “Bob Storm demonstrated the different bugle calls and instructed us in the meaning of calls and in ourpart in the flag raising ceremony The boys and girls enjoyed the program very much-a- nd promised to obey the Longfellow safety first rules BELIEVE IT OR NOT High Girl Chosen for LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE EVERY Kenneth Morgensen contributes: The junior traffic police gave a program in the auditorium on September 29 Avard Booth took charge of the program and gave an excellent talk on citizenship Ralph Griffith sergeant 4-- LafaySe bugle corps will start Tn4?hP''r" enriedine Cortria— contributes- her ffie share: Our third grade has begun tolwUl be study geography This is the first year New officers of Tribune School Editors' as- - I Newton vice president Elizabeth Snow we have had this subject We are studypresi sociation: Left to right Edith Kienitzr secre dent Dean Harmon pianist e The election was valley Our ing about the teacher told us that long before any held Tuesday afternoon tary Bernice Gant song leader Marianne people lived here the whole valley was This was under water completely school in the city and 400 room recalled Lake Bonneville JrVe have porters one from each classroom in learned that there are still water marks each school These young journalon the mountains surrounding the valists supply the items of school life ley which make up the School News and Kenneth Stump writes: Miss Norene Views column a feature of the daily Romney our teacher is teaching us a Tribune dance which is called the “Kinder The meeting Tuesday marked the Polka ” She told us that “Kinder' Tribune school editors starting the means' children and "Polka” means year’s work with enthusiasm Tues- beginning of the seventh year of this dance It certainly is fun to learn the day afternoon elected officers Those feature The Salt Lake Tribune was elected were' Elizabeth Snow South one of the first papers m the counsteps that are in this dance us: Our fourth Betty Elcock sends junior high school president Mari- try to Inaugurate a school column anne Newton South junior vice pres-- ' conducted by the children although grade class pupils are pressing flowers and mounting them Some pupils have ident Edith Kienitz Jordan high such columns are now seen in many their flowers which already brought secretary -Bernice r- Grant Sandy ju- of the large newspapers both east include pansies petunias zinnias marinior song- leade- Dean Harmon and west The Tribune school editors meet Grant pianist golds roses and sunflowers When we The Tribune School Editors’ asso- on the first Tuesday of each month study trees we will press leaves just as we do flowers ciation is 'composed of eighty edi- A program furnished by selected tors and associate editors two from schools talks on journalism and disRuth Hunter contributes: Baseball has become a very popular sport at the each elementary and junior high cussions of their problems feature change37 week The exhibit I liked very much consisted of four chipmunks They acted as if they were acrobats and did many tricks Them pen was made of two boxes one big and one little The?e were arranged hke their Own little homes with lawns shnibs and plants well placed inside the pen The chipmunks were very happy DANIEL MQNSON ‘iff 4? : - xWhyNot? T CONTRACT-BU- T A IT’S A PHONEY I WOULDN'T CONTRACT- BE DOIN’ WRONG- - AND THE CONTRACT WOULDN'T HELP CC MUCH tF HE COULDN’T FIND ME- - V7ATTEIS RAIN FALLING ON THE NORTH SIDE DRAINS RAIN FALLING ON THE 50UTH -- Gordner INTO SIDE DRAINS AND RAIN THE GULF u ST LAWRENCE GULF OF MEXICO INTO THE FALLING of S' HillPa ON THE EAST SIDE FLOWS INTO CHESAPEAKE Mi NATURES STEIN - A HUGE AUG GREW ON A WINNIE WINKLE THE BREADWINNER I'M GOING TO THE COUNT COURTHOUSE AND SEE YOUR POLITICAL FRIEND MR WILLIAM M'NEAFSEY MYSELF AND BELIEVE ME 1 LLTELL HIM A THING T OR Owned by No Show Today and we'll HONORABLE WELLV'CANfr DEFEAT THE MC william HERE ’mm show him LADIES ye'll '’HAVE TO MOVE ON Baldwin Meyer4aleP( MEEDHAW J C W BEER TREE CHEWED — 50 of Forest Grove Oregon STICKS OF GUM ANO PLAYED A TRUMPET SOLO AT X the same Time Vv' STACK of NAILS THE - of Weatherford Texas' FW GREGEORY CUT HIS INITIALS ON A TERRAPIN in 1907 AND 25 YRS LATER IJ0UN0 (T AGAIN 170 MILES the ground of an oil lease IN CEMENT Okfefr — — OAf Picked off AWAY — EXPLANATION OP TESTEKDAT'S CABTOON tlon and harlns boasted of his own prow--ely In this respect he screed A Hamas lea Pall—Herr Reinaeh e petty to make food hit boait A cake of lee official In the finance department of the weighing about 10 kllot (31 pounds) was Vienna siastatrature (city hall) on a cerent for which Herr Reinaeh proceeded to tain ''blue” Monday mornlnt found hie belanee on hie brow for about an hour While ertnclni ereat disoffice eupertor sufferlns from a headache until It melted comfort durlns the rruelllna teit the end awathed In Ice bendaiei Htvlns be- Human Ice Pall did not aeem to have littled the quantity of lee In the applied- been ireatly hermed by it BRINGING UP FATHER GASOLINE ALLEY Campaigning GO (Reg O S Pat Office) By Preelena Wheat— The Alaska wheat sold tor It per bead consisted of multiple heads and they were purchased In South Caro linn In 1110 by wheatsroweri who thought that the multiple beads would insure s bleb The authority for this statement Is yield the department of agriculture In Washington Tomorrow— “Pinanetel Suicide George McManus ANSWER THE DOOR VtXJ KNOW IT’S THE DOCTOR TO SEE Me “ I'LL LOSE MY TEMPER IN A MINUTE THE GUMPS IRTVWORK- The Snake in the Grass - whenTcbaftv towns sno zanocc BLOOD- HEARD THE HOUND BAYMsKt OMH1S TRAIL H& KNEW HE WAS DOOMED UNLESS HE COULD r6T DOO-OFF Hi Te hrVricked THS POOR OLD ‘ FISHERMAN INTO SHOES-TH- e KINDLY OLD FEU-O- W GUIDES ZANDER TOTHS SWAMP DEAF TO THE VICIOUS oncoming- - DOCrS— 10 AUSIN- fcSCKPfc IJ bW ZMUa decbit he has made Through his ue and VICTIM TO AN UNJUST Fate- - how lck can this fiends amaund LUCK HOLD UP 'ANOTHER INNOCENT MAN ? - 4 r |