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Show SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 18, 1933. Eight Clubs Will Seek Gonfalon In Northern Division Hopkins Tells of Plans For Basketball Play of High Schools Teams of the Ogden and Cache divisions of the Utah State High School Athletic association will adopt a new basketball policy dur¬ing tlie 1934 campaign, W. Karl Hopkins, regional representative, an¬nounces. Scholastic teams of the two divisions will play ten games under the new arrangement, instead of six as has been the custom in the Ogden, Weber, Box Elder and Bear River will play two contests with each other and in addition! they will meet North and South-Cache, Logan and Preston in single games. The winner and runnerup in the combined divisiqii will be eligible for competition in the state finals at Salt Lake late in March, Mr. Hopkins states. The third place team will meet tht Rich division winner in a playj oft for a post in the state series. Competition in the combined cir¬cuit will open January 5. Schedules, are now in the making and will be announced shortly. Coaches of the teams of the two "divisions attended the meeting at Brigham City Friday following the grid clash between Box Elder and The* new method of determining the champion and runner-up in the northern part of the state met with the unanimous approval of the coaches. "We are looking forward to a fine season," said Mr. Hopkins today. "Competition, under the new plan, I will be keener than ever before." MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20, 1933. Ogden Gridders Will Be Dined Wednesday THE Ogden High school foot¬ball team, one of the best machines to represent the Tiger lair in a decade, will be dined at Dick's cafe Wednesday evening. The annual dinner party is scheduled for seven o'clock sharp. Members of the squad and a number of invited guests will be in attendance. Supt. W. Karl Hopkins of the Ogden city schools will be one of the speakers. Coach Ernie Simkin and Coach Dick Kapple will respond with short addresses. TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 21, 1933 Ogden High, About To Start Its New Season, Summons Candidates Opportunity Offered To Those Clever On Hoop Court OGDEN HIGH SCHOOL NOTES Mary Paquette, Editor Jack Bennett, Associate Editor As the football season is over, all minds are turned to the future basket makers. So how about talk¬ing business, you basket makers? Hear Ye! Hea: Ye! Foulers of foulers, send your fowls ! to market and do something your roosters can crow about. And to a senior, come on out and guard that guard position. You measly juniors that are looking for-ward to a forward position. Come on out; maybe the great and hon¬orable seniors might let you look at it. You tall skyscrapers, why don't you center your ambition on being the center of the team and the center of praise. According to Coach Cap — all (and do they stay capped) he will start basketball work this week. The only thing wrong with the coach is that he teaches geometry and, he might show the juniors how to get squared up with the seniors. As the saying goes: "Oysters makes the pearls, basketball makes heroes, hotness makes diamonds but the girls make the nuts." So for heck sajkes, you coeds, please re¬member that the squirrels are still putting in their winter supply. So please encourage your hero to come on out for basketball. P. ep W. ithout J. uniors. P. ep W. ith a J. unior. Pleasure With—the Juniors. —J. W. P. PRACTICAL HABIT One of the most beneficial and practical habits to form for any vocation is being taught in sewing. That is recording every cent which we spend in our personal account books. How surprisingly do our ex-penditures total at the end of each month! Money used for food, cloth-- ing, pleasure, and miscellaneous isN jotted down, in order that we shall1, know how much we spend, and, this realization will teach us to be more thrifty. The purpose of sewing is not only to develop technique in making clothing apparel and household ar-ticles, %ut to develop efficiency, or¬derliness, and thrift in home-mak¬ing as well. To keep our account books for a school year will fix the habit of recording our expenditures permanently in our daily lives; and, this trait will serve us well in the efficiency of homemaking inasmuch as it will generate thriftiness. Of course, this characteristic will be of great use in other professions such as business, science, teaching, music, dramatics, and other lines of work besides homemaki-ng. Thus, sewing would be worth the time of every girl on account of this part alone, since keeping a personal ac¬count book is so practical and adap¬table — Emily Merrill. HONESTY Young boys and girls, life is be¬fore you. Two voices are calling you — one coming out from the swamps of selfishness and force, where success means death, and the other from the hilltops of justice and progress, where even failure brings glory. Two lights are seen in your horizon — one the fast fad¬ing marsh light of power, and the other the slowly rising sun of hu¬man brotherhood. Two ways lie Tor you — one leading to an lower plain, where are heard : ies of despair and the curse-; poor, where manhood shrivels, and possession rots down the pos¬sessor and the other leading to the highlands of morning, where are heard the glad shouts of humanity, and where honest effort is rewarded with immortality. Now students of the Ogden High school, if you are responsible for any of the missing articles from school, you may consider this well worth while, make yourself an hon¬est person and then you may be sure that there is one person lower than you in the world. L. M. J. KICK OUT OF PLAY Dear Nose-All: In our assembly Friday, I got a great kick out of the little dra¬matic play, but here is one thing that is bothering me. Tell me, how can one peel a grape, and what is left of it when it is finally peeled? Your name suggests to me that you should know. — A—Peeler. Dear A—Peeler: I hate to admit it, but I must! I am afraid you will have to write directly to Mae West to find the answer to your question. Thus far— I haven't tried to peel any grapes. I am very sorry to say taht I couldn't help you. Come up and see me sometime again. Nose-All. THIS AND THAT While A. G. was shoving, pushing and elbowing through the halls, I wonder if you noticed those green ties with a large question mark. Wonder what they mean? I guess it is their way of putting the ques-tion, "To be or not to be." Also have yon noticed the string of girls with blushing faces looking at the strong "he-man" that is standing by their side. The girls' faces have an expression on them as if to say, "Oh, Say! But he is grand." Wonder why Toots W. is always looking at locker No. 4444. "It could¬n't be R. L. V. C. could it, Toots?" Who is that little girl flitting around always kissing other girls on each side of their cheek? I say to her, "Give us boys a thrill, Winnifred." As one of the many I surely like Emily's smile. It seems to say to us all, "Come hither, come hither." I wish she would save it all for me. Well, all that is left to say is, "Keep your bid clean" or "I'll be seein' you." — Burp II . SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 19, 1933. Maurice Kennedy Sparkles In Salt Lake Grid Matinee Tigers Display Ability; Richards Counts Lone West Touchdown SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 18.— (AP)—The Ogden High school Tigers, one of the outstanding scholastic football teams in the state, passed its way to a 31 to 7 victory over West High's Panthers, city champions, hers today. The Tigers, held scoreless in the first period, tallied a brace of touch¬downs in the second period, Kennedy, fullback, scoring both, one on a reverse line buck and the second on a long pass from Green- well, halfback. Rowse, quarterback, scored the third touchdown in the third period when he received a long pass from Greenwell, and Kennedy tallied his third touchdown just before the period closed when he sprinted around his left end for 15 yards. Richards, reserve Panther quarter¬back, scored West's lone touchdown in the final period when he rushed the line for five yards. Ogden. tallied its fifth touchdown with less than two minutes to play when Wayment, j reserve back, plunged through the line. Ogden scored only one point after touchdown, out of five attempts. The lineup: Ogden West Kinard (c) le Thomas Herskovitz It Graham Decorso lg Campbell Higgins c Ashton Call rg Savage Randall rt Krashotitz Cole re Caputo Rowse qb (c) Fairfax Woodland lh Wetzell Greenwell rh Shaw Kennedy fb Ketchum Score by quarters: Ogden 0 13 12 6—31 West 0 0 0 7—7 Scoring: Ogden touchdowns, Ken¬nedy 3, Rowse 1, Wayment 1. Point after touchdown, Greenwell (place- kick) West touchdown, Richards 1. Point after touchdown, Wexell (end run). |