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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 51

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
51
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE JUNIOR SUNDAY MORNING OCTOBER 22 1933 FageSertn Travel to Land Where Fair Saguenay Flows Knarf Meets-Brook Singer In This Story' tWhat Is the song of the broo' find it In any boo' No one can bring it to you No one tan sing it to you You must gp to the brook all alone And sit on a mosacovered stone And before yon have sat very longT Why then! you will hear the Those who fallowed my advice to visit the beautiful Saguenay river country have not been disappointed Letters are coming in telling me that nowhere in the world have the writ era found more beauty more serenity or more novelty The Saguenay trip finds its culminating thrill as the ship passes the famous gateformed by Cape Eternity and CapeTrinity each great rock rising 1800 feet clear and 'straight from the river to the' sky towering above the lesser giant rocks that for sixty miles stand like sentinels along each aide of the river Roadside Shrines On Cgpe Trinity is a statue that tells better than any book or picture the story of the people beyond those giant rocks It is a atafue of the Virgin a beautiful lone figure that stands on a great ledge near the summit of the lofty rock Its beauty heightened by the grandeur and majesty of the river it stands as though Imparting a blessing at sea and those dwelling in the Jovejy little villages Inland This impressive statue tells with silent eloquence the story of people who still live in the atmosphere of a world created by their ancestors Who came to Canada from France during the seventeenth century and dared and suffered much for their land and for their faith -Page Marjorie Wales who is doing such a lot of fine drawing recently has been awarded first place this week for her clever sketch "A Raid On the Girl Scout Camp" We are proud of work and expect to see more of It as the weeks pass Walter roman won second place song -Shadow Saying you look through that crack in the the? crawfish said to Knarf see what makes the brook eing" Knarf had already seen-what made the brook gurgle and what made it murmur Naturally he was curious to see what made it sing So he looked through the crack in the wall of the little cave under the waters of the brook Knaff mind being under water He was only a shadow not a real boy Instead of getting-drowned (or even wet) he simply turned Into a water which Is what happens to your own shadow if you happen to look into a brook or a well or pond or even a ram puddle The Singers This In VhatKnarf saw He saw a school of little silver fish and another school of dark fish bigger than the first and a flock of snails snails go in flocks?" Knark asked the crawfish) and a group of very young tadpoles with long tails and a group of older tadpoles with short tails and hind legs (for these tadpoles Were almost frogs you see) and a group of fierce-lookmg water beetles and some wriggling worms and a whole crowd of water insects and mayflies and dragon-flies and mosquitoes (all of whom live under water before they grow wings and fly) and last of all a huge green frog V'Jf'W yuMiwsmpia 1 The Free Was the Leader I This New Book About Indians Will Please All Kodak Tells Story About These Scouts right girls we shall begin our scout meeting said Mrs Jensen who was in charge of the Girl Scouts are going up In the canyon over Saturday and Sunday There was a lot of whispering and murmuring until Billie Jeanne Fern andKatherine yelled for Mrs will meet you girls at my house Be sure to wear your slacks or said Mrs Jensen On Saturday morning 15 girls were on the doorstep of Mrs Jensen's house big truck was at the curb The girls all got in off now! off cried the girls At last they came to a good sized cabin we said Mrs Jensen After they had unpacked their clothes Billie Jeanne Fern and Katherine took a walk brought my said Billie Jean take a picture of that squirrel eating thbse said Fern went the camera' you take one then Kather-' said Billie Jeanne i Fern took a snap-shot of a' peaver gnawing down a tree and Katherine -took picture of a rock that looked like the statue of man-Afler they had used up all theix-fllms they went back to camjl Saturday and Sunday passed and then the girls went home On the way rMrs Jensen asked the girls what part of the trip they liked best Each one told something BlUe Jeanne Fern and Katherine told about the camera Mrs Jensen and the girls thought that was best of all PAGE BARBARA CROOK Age 10 Salt Lake City Utah AUTUMN Autumn is bre I'm aa glad as can be For it means a good time For you and for me Autumn ia here all glad you know For it meant the near That have some real snow Autumn is here We all go to school Each one of us trying To keep every rule Autumrt is here all shout And cheer for the Autumn Which gladdens each dav EMMA JULIA JENKINS Salt Lake City Utah Women acrobats and ballet dancers who began training early in life ael- -dom haye children when they marry When small boyj and girls come to The Knighthood of Youth office to read they generally ask for an Indian story It doesn't much matter what happens in the story just so it tells about the Red Man and hia ways To please all these younger readers we have added to our shelves -tha-Wooded Indian atory by Tberese Doming published by Albert Whitman Co Chicago Whitman books are generally colorful and lovely and this volume is no exception All the printing is In a pretty clean blue and all the 40 of them by Edwin are like particularly -clear and bright water colors The story is about two Indian boys Otter and Red Deer who live birch wigwams race birch canoes and live the life that holds so much romance for the little boy of today What the Indian boy wore what he ate what he played and what he did for work'' are all shown As a knowledge of Indian life is essential in today Vschool work the 1 book will be a helpful addition to any child's library Tribune Junior Recipe 'This Is a very good frosting to put on a plain cake It is called Lemon Yellow frosting You will need: Four tablespoons butter teaspoon grated lemon rimf 1 teaspoon frosting twit yellow 1 tablespoons lemon Juice 44 cups sifted Sugar 5 tablespoons water Cream together butter and lemon rind Dissolve the tint in a amall amount of lemon Juice add to the but-ter and blend Add sugar alternately with remaining liquid beating until the frosting is creamy and of the right consistency- to apread Ibis makes enough frosting to cover the top and sides of three nine-inch layers MARION SWERTFAGER Salt Lake Ml A SMART BOY' a very amart Faroes Kenner's his name He put all the boya In The Knighthood to shame For by writing each day After he had begun On July the 14th A medal he won! CLARISSA WILLIAMS Age 13 Murray Calm sultry weather is disliked by herring fishermen as these fish then swim too deep for the nets to catch them Old France TrsnspUted Everywhere in this region there are roadside shrines with people on bent knee before them and opposite Chicoutimi where one takes the train back to Montreal or Quebec there is a giant cross illuminated at night by electricity that ia visible for miles It is well worth while to devote some Umrur visiting the villages and settlements that line the banka of the Saguenay Thus you will be carried back to the days of New France The people seem to have changed not i at all and to have preserved to an amazing degree the habits customs and the speech of seventeenth century France Even If you apeak a faultless modern French you will have difficulty in understanding the speech of the simple folk around you Distinguished French visitors assert that nowhere In France is feet undefiled French spoken as In the Saguenay villages Beantifal Tednsac 1 Two lovely places down the St Lawrence from Montreal and Quebec and the end of the Saguenay Murray Bay and Tadousac -At the latter spot is a de luxe-hotel that although architecturally part of the countryside yet' manages to -seem very re --mote from it so simple is lovely Tad- ousae Its winding streets wander toward the crescent-shaped bay bor-'dered with a beach of white sand and' back of the town are lovely for est of balsam and pine their scent -mingling with the salty tang of the i ae a There are lakes near by full of speckled rainbow trout and a golf course which although only nine holes yields enough thrills and hazards for gven the most ambitious -player TEMPLE MANNING RHYMED FIZZLE My first is in ache and also In pain My in success but never in fame My next is in tooth but never In gum My next is in under and also In sum My next ia in ma and also in mother My next is in nut but never in other Answer Autumn EMMA JULIA JENKINS £alt Lake City All of these creatures were sing except the frog who was the leader The frog sat on a pebble and waved hit foreleg The big fishes had loud deep voices and the little til very fishes had high sweet silVerr voices and the tiny tadpoles sang almost in a whisper and the big tadpoles with the short tails and the hind legs almost croaked and the beetles and the worm had little Squealing voices like hungry pigs As for the insects they made tiny little noises like the tinkling of pins The Secret is all that the singing of the Knarf asked The crawfish said yes 1 thought the singing of the brook eame from the sound of water swirling around rocks and falling over ledges and rushing over pebble and sliding along the grassy banks and splashing into "Oh interrupted the crawfish what everybody thinks but that Hie case at all You can see for yourself Knarf nodded Yes he could see for himself all right but still it seem quite right somehow No one would believe him if he told about what hL had seen and heard So he never told anybody He Just let them or on believing that the brook sang because of the sound of the water that what you be-lieve? (Copyright 1933 Inc) i A LITTLE BINT Surprises always make little chil-drea happy It makes them like you more if you surprise them Give your little brother or sister a surprise In any llttls way and see how glad it makes them end you too EMMA JULIA JENKINS Salt Lake City Utah.

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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004