Central High School - Chieftain Yearbook (Muskogee, OK)
- Class of 1919
Page 1 of 144
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 144 of the 1919 volume:
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1 --im. HHHHHHIIHWHIHIIIIIIIIIIIUHIIIIHIWWWHHxNWNHNNNHlllHHllI!!II!llHWHWNUllll lisa Eihria V nm If A M he if Q ulcalflcnu..WflRw,MwE mmm f ' X vi '-Y' K 5 . MATER A ALM OUR hr Svrnui CAnmm1 iiiliiinnb 1 H 1 H BEING THE YEAR BOOK OF CENTRAL I-HGH SCHOOL NIUSKOGEE. OKLAHOMA 'Y 575 'v 'GSW' H3 Wflhfsge mu Q., -1. 'Wi W '?'9 x u'l'l'l'l Q! 3?- , Q. .LL MJ vvvvvvvvv Lf' M 6, Z ky ' ff wh ff, fl j 'I fl' ' E , 'J ff I E ! Q . JC sci? QA ilu an Pffnrt tn pnrirag ihv iIl'l1iPlll.'l1Il'1lfH nf QTPIITITII I-ligh in the pant numt glurinua grarg amh rxzhrzumring in inatil, bg zz prwvniaiinn nf zz rrrurh urnrr hvfurr rquullrh, at grratrr Inur fm' tip' mhnnl mhirh mr hnnnr, this hunk in prrmwlirh QL ETTA H. DeLAY Behiraiinn Zin apprniutinn uf hm' thnughtful guihanre, hm' ahh, tutrlagv, zmh hm' gunh frivnhnlgip, the Sfvninr Gllaua nf 1515 hvhiratw ihin nulunw nf Ghz Smut tn illlinu iitta EH. Erlang an ai tnkrn nf im lnue :mil rvnpvil -w FAGE fi! THE SCOUT C.H.S. I ,HWHWWWWWHWNHWNWWWNWHMHHWMWHWMWIIHHHHHVHWWWWWWWHMHIIXJMNNNWWWWWHWWNHMIMWWNUW'HW!VHNNM1N!NHWHNHMHHW WW HHHWH HIIIHWWWPIIHWWHIINHIIIIHIENHWHiI?HMIW BOARD OF ED UI T ATION IGDWIN S. AIONROIG Roy F. HANNUM Supm'i1 zf1'm Zr'1'1f of Cify Sfflmols Ijfijjfiljfll of Cmzfml Il'igl1,S0hnul President of the Board of Ia'c!uc'czi iow ... .. ,,............A . .. F RANK LEE Vfigg Prggfident ,M-,,----,,,,V,, , A,,,,7,w,YV,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,....,. I JR. WI. K. THOMPSON Members of the Board .,....., ...... F 1' W' SMARTT Rox' M. FINK Clgfk ,,.,q., V ,, , ,,,,,,,,,,,, . , F RED V. NIADDIN w ' WBS. -4 1 , 'x 1. AGE 8 TIJIE SCOUT C.H.S. llHWIHIHHWIlIHIHEIIIIIHHHIHHHIIIIIHHWHMH1 1 1WHNWWMWWWWWWWWNNMNMNMNNWHH1WMWWWHVIIIiH1l!Hhl1HiHIIVIINHWHWNNWWWWMHHHHIIIHHMIHIKIIIIHNIIWII wluimwmmm mlm HWWMHNWHUWHIHHIIHHNHHH M W 4 H I!! FA CULTY ROY F. HANNIJM, A. B., Principal Senior High School BAKER, SUSIE K., A. B., English BARTON, STELLA LEE, A. B., History BERKEMA, I. J., A. B., A. M., Head of English Dept. BIANCHI, J. B., Spanish BILES, MRS. W. B., Manager Cafeteria BROWN, FIDATHA, A. B., French BUCHANAN, PEARL, Public Speaking SBUTCHER, R. E., A. B., Principal Junior High School BUTTS, MRS. R. B., A. B. English CALDWELL, RUTH, Domestic Science and Art OALLAHAN, STELLA, A. B., Librarian CREW, BIARIE, A. B., History, Civics DE LAY, IDORA, A. B., Latin DE LAY, ETTA, A. B., Mathematics FAUIIIKNER, HARRY, Military Train- ing and Physical Culture LNRAZIER, CORA, A. B., Latin JFRAZIER, IPLURA, A. B., English GIBSON, THERESSA, A. B., History HOLMES, MOSSIE, Art HOWELL, VICJIIETF, Commercial fStenog.j HUEE, BESSIE, A. B. English JETT, ALICE, A. B., B. O., English JONES, H. S., Ph. B., Normal Train- ing LITTLE, ETIJZABETH, A. B., Home Economics LIILNE, JULIA, Physical Culture LLURLIN, LIAREE, Music LIURPHY, VV. J., M athematics, Science BICCAIVIINTACK, EMMETT, VVood Turn- ing and Bench W'orh NEEE, L. B., A. B., Mathematics PAUL, C. E., Industrial, Head of Man-ual Training Department. .llAYXE, EDI1'tI, B. S., Home Eco- nomics PEAK, GRACE, A. B., A. M., Science PRAGER, C. H., M. Acc'ts, Commer- cial REED, TJINA X.,B. A.,M. A.,History R,EIFF, C. K., A. M., Head of Com- mercial Department ROGERS, BKIRS. C. D., B. of Ped., Ed- ucation, Commercial SHARP, NOLA JEAN, Art SMITH, INA FJLIZABETH, A. B., English STARR, LIINNIE E., Supervisor of Music. STEXVART, ANNE A., B. S. Education STODDARD, HORTENSE, A. B. English STROUD, AILEEN, Physical Culture SULLIVAN, J. E., A.B., Mathematics TIIORNE, ANNA LIAE, Commercial fTypeicritingj TURNER, IONA, Supervision of Pen- manship XLANCE, CORA, History and Civics VANCE, GLADYS, Music VVHITE, MARY LOUISE, A. B., Latin VVILLIAIVIS, Cr. C., B. S. in C. E., B. S., Science WINDERS, J. C., Science XVINDERS, MRS. J. C., Mathematics XNYINKLER, EMILY, A. B., B. S., Education WSS PAGE 10 THE SCOUT C.H.S. V HilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNllllllllll1llllri'WNW'W1W'llHillNllilllilllllllllllllfllllllilllll' vl''1wlllmWllH!li!i'lHil ' wllllllllllwlll1llWl1ll1lllHHllll1WllWi'lwlw11liHI1wI1lll1llllIH5lH!W1llIllllH1lNNNNlNNNNlllllHlll11!'Ull'HliillIflllU'lHllllIIlv!H!iHl'l IREVELIN VVIMEH, Class Pfwwiflrlnf l1l'CILI.E STHUBLE, SPf'I'Pffll'y Cnllwyv Pl'f?Z?ClI'ClfllI'.Ij Forum '17, '18, '19, Dramatic Club '19g Secre- tary '19g President Glee Club '17, '18, '19: Business Manager '18g Class Play '18, 193 Vice President Junior Classg Scout Staff '18g Cap- tain Cadct Corps '19, Make up your mind what you want, and then go after it, and keep after it, until you get it. THEODORE ICELLER, View P1'fz.9ide4'zft College P1'epal'af0ry Forum '18, '19g Science Club '18, '19: Triangu- lar Debate '18, '19: Cadet Corps '19: Secretary Junior Class, Boys' Glee Club '19: Operetta '19. A man, he seems, of cheerful yesterday and confident tomorrow. II'i'1'.fjllIUI' Entered as sophomore from Pryor, Okla.g Class Play '18, '19: Girls' Glee Club '19g Dramatic Club '19, Scout 'Monthly Staff '19: Scout An- nual Staff '19g Sponsor Company B, Cadet Corps. For information on coiffeur, apply to me. CHAPMAN HUNT, Trnasuemf' College Preparazfory Entered as junior from Wagoner, Okla.g Com- mercial Club '18, '19g Science Club '19: Cadet Corps '19, Cadet Basket Ball. What I most need is somebody to make me do what I can. l, C.H.S. THE SCOUT PAGE 11 1 5IHHIIllllIIHHIH'4lHWWWWWWWWWUHWWHNHHlHHH'HlIl'IIilllllllllllllllWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWW3IHillWHHHWVHIIIHHHIIIIIIHHWWHWWWVHWIfNNNNNNH1NINH111NN1NNNNNNNNNNNNIINNNNNNNiNNNWNHIIN1iN1NiNWWNWWWWNNNNNNNN1NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNIINNNINNNNNNNNIVIJIVI1NHINMIZMWI 1 JOE M. BAILEY-AIr1rif'ul1fu1'11l 43' VVILLARD BEl,L-Cnllvlqre PH'- Demosthentic '16, '17: Dramatic Club '19, Class Play '18, Scout Annual Staff '19, Science Club '15, '18, '19: Cadet Corps '19, Anybody that would do that would push little chickens in the creek. 427 parafnry Entered as Junior from Council Hill, Okla. Being always fm the job heats carrying fl rabbit's foot for luck. CLIFTON BARITKJNW-II l'f'g1llfII' Junior Play '18, Commercial Club '18, '19: Operetta '19: Glee Club '19, He speaks slowly, but 'to the point. 44' CLARENCE BOXX'ER-COIZQQC 45' CHRISTINE BliADl,EY- Preparatory CTOHHl1f'l'f'lfll Entered as sophomore from Broken Arrow, 0kla.: Basket Ball '16, '17, '18, '19, Base Ball '17, '18, '19: Foot Ball '18,: All State left half back '1Sg Captain Basket Ball Team '18, '19: Cadet Corps '19, Whenever excells in what we prize, appears a hero in our eyes. Commercial Club '17, '18, '19, Assistant Editor Commercial Review '19g Public Stenographer '19, Girls' Glee Club '18, '19g Operetta '19: Class Play '19. A maiden never bold of spirit. I V 1 PACE I2 THE SCOUT C.H.S 1lII1w.I1w1111111l1l1111111ll11l11111I11111111111111111111111111111i11111i11U1111111111I1wE11'IHH11H!I1!'T:l'11H HlM111H11111w11111iHIliililNN1NN1HN1wNNHillNNN1N1.Ni1NN11NNNNN11,NNNNNNNNHNN1NHNNNNNNi1'H'11HW1N1NNNNNNNNNNNN11IN1NNNNiwNI1flWillV!NN1N11IlHlr'lMi'V1,!1Hlul1Ci 117 143 CARMEL BRINKLEY-II I'f'4ljZtICH' 13' Entered as senior from Lehigh, 0kla.g Y. W. C A '19 l bother not, why bother me ? 121 RUTH BROWN-College Pre- pm'at01'y Delphic '18, '19g President '18: Gunaikes '16, '17, 'l8: Treasurer '17: Vice President 'l8: Entre Nous '18: Orchestra '16, '17, 18: Scout Staff '16g Scout Board of Control '19: Class Plhxy '18g French Club '19g Rousseau '16, '17: Treasurer '16g Senate '16: Sponsor Cadet Corps '19g Chairman Play Committee '18g Chairman Pin Committee 'l9. All things combined, makes life sublime, and thls you'll see, by my pedigree. IXJNIA BROCK-Commcrcial Commercial Club '16, '17, '18. Silence is more eloquent than words. H,u'm1E I4iLIZA'l3lCTI'I BRX'AXTH- 45' AiARIE PDULLARIJ-00110106 Pre- Irregular Commercial Club '17, '18, '19g Y. W. C. A. '18 '19g Y. W. C. A. Reporter '19: Operetta '19: Business Manager Girls' Glee Club '19g Girls' Glee Club '19. She had all that was necessary in the type- writim.-: class patience. paraftory Entered as Junior from Dennison, Texas: Y. W. C. A. '19: Gunaikes '19: Gym Exhibition '18, Your ways are enticing: and your expressions are true, Now what sweeter things could be said of you? C.H.S. TIIE SCO U'l' PAGE 13 illliliiWiiiYiiHiiiiiiWUHIIHXIIHiiiiiiiUHiIHUllillliliHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH1iiHiiiiiiIWWWi1iii11WIHWiliiHIiiWiIUiiHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiWiHIHllllIIiiIlliMIi'544NNHHIZIIIIWMiiN'WNxiii1NNH1NNNW11NNNNiNNNNNNNNNNWNNHNNN1NNNNillNNVIHliNNiiilliiiiiikiiiiiiillii'ilwiiiihblzlu ill 44? Nl.-SRY L1m.ux C,xMPm:1,r,- 43' lim' ANNA Cuinmxnsgf'ollwqw Collrfyv l'1'e2pa1'al'ory Mandolin Club '18. Oh, how she did play on her piano. 12? l'rf'parafory Senate '17, Folk Lore '16, Gunaikes '16, '17, '18 '19, Chairman of Program Committee '171 President '18, Chairman Social Committee .lun- ior Class '18, Class Play '18, '19, Interschol- astic Meet '17, '18, First Place Voice '181 Dramatic Club '19, Y. W. C. A. '19, Operetta '19. Just, a bit old fashioned like the days of long.: ago. ' Lo UISA IIARRIET CAswE1.r.- CONf'.Ijl3 Prepa1'czfm'y Gunaikes '17, '18, '19, Girls' Glee Club '16, '17, '18, '19, Class Play '18, Operetta, '17, '18, '19, Y. W. L. A. '18. An investment i interest. ALBERTA Pl. CUNKLIN-Cullriryrf Prvparaffwy Rousseau '18, '19, Girl S-couts '17, '18, '19, 0I'CheSf-l'8 '17, '13, '19: Librarian '19, Class Play '18, Y. W. C. A. '17, '18, Girls' Gym Ex- hibition '17, '18, Free to overflowing' of mirth and gaietyf' n fun paid her the highest UECHLIA CONNVAY-Z1 ww Ef'fllZ!JllZiCS Triangular Debate '18, Delphic '17, '18, '19, Folk Lore '15, '16, Rousseau '16, Basket Ball '16, Secretary of Delphic '18, Sous Artistes '18, Class Play '19. 'Twould be at miracle if she cogld not talk. ' i l f 1 PAENEIL 1.4 THE S COUT C.1I. S 'llH'1'l1lH llm3'41N' 5' ' 1 1' ' N3'HI l 3'N'HW11Vl i' 1' 1'UQ'11WI2Iwl'3HlWi'lW'1'iI'::iIH:N!HW11'N?- HVH WV: ,, mW, 1 41iH'W5 'H:Ii'i'W !Hwl W 41' Xfl+1l.MA COURTNEY-II'I'r fj'lllllI' 43' AIAYBELLE E1.1zA1515'ru Cmzws- Entered as senior from Lehigh, 0kla., Com- Normal 1vl'CL?i'7Zi7l.U W mania' Club '191 Y' W- C' A' ,19' Entered as a sophomore from Shawnee, Okla.: 145 Class Play '18, Y. W. C. A. '19, 'Thtop now,' which means, 'continue ' C25 Some day I shall dress. T111-31.MA Cowolam'-Coemwnzcircial Public Speaking Club '16, Y. W. C. A. '16, '17, Treasurer '16, '17, Sous Artistes '18, Com- mercial Club '16, '17, '18, '19, Secretary-Treas- urer '19, Dramatic Club '18, '19, Secretary- Treasurer '19, Class Play '18, '19, Scout Monthly Staff '19, Chairman Social Commit- originate a popular lead in tee '19. 'Booster Billie Bclicves' that if the world treats her as square as C. H. S. has, she'll be happy. Y N r C1lARI,Es Bwrm Csoss, Jin- C'oll1'gr4 P1'epa'l afo1'f1,1 Scout Monthly Staff '19, Cadet Corps '19, For- um '17, '18, '19, Science Club '18, '19, Dra- matic Club '19, A great man is always willing to be little. 4-rl Jmwm. FJDITH DoUG1a zcm'x'-- College Pl'0pmuXo1'y Girls' Glee Club '17, '18, '19, Folk Lore '15, '16, Secretary-Treasurer '16, Gunaikes '17, '18, OD- eretta '18, '19, Scout Annual Staff '19, Sponsor Cadet Corps '19, French Club '18. Judy loves '004Resist that! Oh, Genevieve, Sweet Genevieve--our SOD!-Y' '1' 4 x f,..H.h. 'I ll E SCO U'l' PAGE15 lllllllllllHllSHUQWSMHWWWN H1HHl'!1MHi'1i', wWI,11WW1W,111W'lN1'Nliill1 HWHIMMU' ' dl!lll1'u,' .' 1 1 HEWWHM , HHWWMM 1HWI3!iWl!l,l 1' W V M1wWWwWWWWWWWU1?!Wl'wlllH!HllWlllzw l U' GENl+:v1Eva llovcsmss-C'nllfjrff' Preparatory Entre Nous '18, '19, Vice President '19, Gun- aikes '17, '18, Girl Scout '17, Girls' Glee Club '18, '19: Operetta '18, '19, Glee Club Concert '18, '19, Sponsor Cadet Corps '19, Y. W. C. A. '18, '19: President '19, Cabinet '19, 43' Al1lSPlR'1'A N. l4llJM0NDSON-- Collvyrf lJl'f'1JClI'flf0l'lIj Entered as senior from Henryetta, Okla., Y. W. C. A. '19. To hustle while you wait is indeed the best of bait for great accomplishment. P ALLAN Coarulmrl' l+lNGL1s11- 45' IXIAURINIQ l4lvrcm,Y-Ilmarv bird. 42' CECELIA IJURSCHEHI,-Nfn'n1 ul Tfllllllllfl Gunaikes '16, '17, '18, '19, President '19, Senate '16, Thaliian '16, Dramatic Club '17, '18, '19, President '18, Vice President '19, Delphic '19, Vice President '19, Y. W. C. A. '17, '18, Class Play '18, '19, Senior Play Committee '19, Sponsor Cadet Corps 'l9. Curls and smiles, the way to win, That's the way to get after him. 4 College Prwpurczfory Commercial Club '17, '18, '19, Demosthenic '18- Cadet Corps 'l9. n Perbaps the germ of great achievement slum- bers lr! YOUY heart, because you are contented. E00mnni1'.v There is an infinite distance between the dreamers and the doors. PAGE16 THE SCOUT C.H.S ,HWIHMWHIIIHllllllllllrlilllllllHlllIIIl1IHHHllllIIIINHIIIIIIllllllllllllllvllllllllMNxN1NuNNNN4NlllillllNNNNHllllllllllllllllNEHWHHwlllw KHYlWllllUNHHllillilllulH'NNHNxNl W'Hl!MMl'Wli'l ll 'WNWHHNWNM' Mw'll4lHl'lW HW WH! WMWHNHIN U w H w . ..i.-'M ml w w My 1 A, 415 Joux limaF11m-Collfgqw Pnl- 435 BiARY BHULAI1 llAxNA11- parafory C'o11mze'r'f'ifzl Science Club '18, '19g Cadet Corps '17, '18, '19, Little, hut- Oh! my! Commercial Club '17, '18, '19: Board of Di- rectors '18: Scout Stenographer '19: Public Stcnnyzrapher '19g Managing Editor Commer- cial Rcview '19: Y. W. C. A. '19. Eil'iciency equals useful work divided by total work. 42' BIARY GRl'BB-AvlJI'lII!Il Trailzing History Club 'l6: Knitting Club '17, '18, Rous- seau '18, '19: Y. W. C. A. 'l9: Girls' Gym Exhibition '19. Sweet simplicity is her yruidinyr star. 445 XVILLIAM BIACE EIARRISON TR.- 457 T , . . AM ms EDXVIN 1dAS'I'XIN'- Collrqqe Preparatory, Tech- nical and E4'ZvUl7ZPf'l'liZ-lj Forum '18, '19: Boys' Glee Club '19g Operetta '19: Class Play '18, Science Club '18, '19g Vice President '19: Cadet Corps '18, '19g Track Meet '19g Senior Business Manager Annual '19. A good old boy and just the right kind for an all-around friend. College Prcparafory He can who thinks he can. '1 Cf.H.S. TI-IE SCOUT PAGE 17 ZI1!lll1lVlll1llllNNHH!11W111111111111HHHM11111i11iiW11WW111'111111HHWHHNMHUW1W111H'Vll'VH!1111w111111111111,1W,I1111NNNNNHN1NNNNNNNNNN1NNNNNNNNHHNNNNNHHHNWNNNNiNuNNNNNNNNNNNNHHHNNNW13H1N3HIiNill'llilllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIWHNHMHNNIHHHMWH U7 l'll'lLEN ilAli'l'lCli llrwsgllmnw EC!HIUHltl'H 131 li11.l,1,x lime Hlexnmx-Ilmrzff Ifmlzfnzzics Two thousand pounds of pep and rzwin' tu go. Y' W' C' A' '192 Sponsor Cadet Corps ,19' 12' tlA'l'lll'llilNl'Z Vollfyfw Gunaikes '18, '19, '19. l'crsuniIication of joy. lhxox llnwis- Pl't'jJIll'flf12l'.Il Y. W. C. A. '18, 'l9: Cabinet All who name thee, praise thee. 4' IRINIA lMI,IzA1sE'1'u HINIXSY Co nz nz Mriczl History Club 'l6: Commercial Club '18, '19: Public Stenographer '19. I was born with my brilliant mind, that's how I happened to have it. 1 Y 15' LNUN b. HIRSLI-flIllII fjf' Pra- parafory Sous Artistes '18: Triangular Debate '19g Sci- ence Club '17, '18, '19, Class Play '18: Military Training '17, '18, '19: Cadet Corps 'l9: Chief- tain Stalf '16. What a spendthrift he is of his tongue. .PAGE 18 THE SCOUT C.H.S NIWWWWWWHWWMIHWHWWHHWiiWHIIHIIlllllllliillilllllWWWWWNW1wNI1I'llllllil'4lIHIllilllIll'!3'WWHIVIIIIIIIIHHWMHWIWNWUWWNNHNNHNi1NNHNxiNVNIKIHIIMMMWMEHN1NNHMlUHlinHHNlVHVlH'Vl!IUixNiiWlNNHNWWMWNNNHIKIIIIIIIUMMMIHNHMMMH 417 RAYMOND LEE HOLCOMB- Y I Collage Prepcm a,tm'y Cadet Corps 'l9g Forum '19: French Club '19: Operetta '19. Skinny--Been here four years-'who'd a thunk it Y 427 B 43fL11.L1AN lXlA1l1E I'lOXVES-AfY0I'H'Hll I 'ra in my Entered as a senior from Valley Center, Kan- sas: Glee Club '18, '19, Y. W. C. A. '18, 'l9: Operetta '19. Little we know what she thinks or dreams. EULAH IGLIZABETH HOSMER- C0 'IH TIT G I CiCLl C0 MVS 8 Operetta '17, '18, '19g Glee Club '16, '17, '18, '19, Commercial Club '16, '17, '18, '19, A man's a man for a' that. 447 DORIS O. JAY-Irregular Commercial Club '18, '19, Gaiety tempered by reverief' 45' CLARA JENNINGS-C077H7'L8l'C'lCll Commercial Club '16, '18, '19, Y. W. C. A. '16, '17 A good cook and well pleased with the results 5 N4 -1 I,.H.h. THE SCOUT 'PAGE '19 'IWW' U' HHHWWWWWWWW1WWHiH'Wi:!3!HU'W ' ' 1 'N W 'U ' V! Ww1W N ' 'W' ' HWWWWWWWWWWWWwWWWWW1WWwWWWWW1I,I'WNNuNiNNNNNWMWWWWHMW '1 WW!! HM-1MWHWHHMUHHH!l51'UH 'H' '1WW!'HH W 41' l'r:,xm. .lm:l41fXn1'nu1l Tflllllllljl Y. W. C. A. '19. 1 can't deciflvg l am always on the fence. i2'1Xli'1'llL'R 'l0llN 1mrr1fm'y Boys' Glee Club '18 Commercial Club '18. W lllsxm' J. lxxox-fC'nl1fQf,1f' l'rf'-- purufury Forum '19: Cadet Corps '19, He truchrcwl along: unknowim: what ho sought and whistlf.-rl as he went for want of thought' f'ollc'.r1rf Pw- '19: Dperetta '18, '19: More commonly known as 'I'inky'. 44' IDUKUTHY DUNCAN lAlVINGSTUN --f,'0Nl'.IjI' PI'l'j1flI'flfflI'tll Y. W. C. A. '17, '18, '19: Cabinet '1S: Vice President '19: Entre Nous '18, '19g Secretary 'l9g-Associate Editor Scout Monthly '19: Senior Editor Scout Annual '19g Sponsor Cadet Corps 'l9: Gunaikes '18. Sufficient proof that beauty and brains can be combined. 457 l4h.1.EN ClicwEr.1.-.Collffgfc Pm?- lNlI'lll'0I'fIj Y. W. C. A. '16, '19g French Club '19: Sous Artistcs 'l8. Rules worry her but little. PAGE20 THE SCOUT C.H.S fll3lllllllllHlHllllllllHllllHlllllllUlllllllllIlIlllllllllHlllllllllllHlllHlllHlIlllllIllHIllllHllllllllHHIIIHHIli1l'1lllll1ll1lIlHHlillllIllllllillIlllHilllII!IliH!fli!411NlIliIlililIIllIHll!UIlIIIl'llilIIIIllWNINHlllllllll11NNNNllUHNNH4114NNNEHIIIMIIIIIIIIHIHII4 II fl? ZCS Y. W. C. A. '19. Still water runs deep. 4231 A P LIATTIE IJYNE-11017716 Emmom- W HRLRN VIIILEINIA hlAXVVlfll.l1- CjU7IH1ICI ClIlZ Commercial Club '18, '19, Y. W. C. A. '17, I studied and got ready, and at last my time did come. JEOT A. ILIZABETH MALO N Re - Cn 111 nz ercfial Commercial Club '18, '19g Y. W. C. A. '18, Public Stenographer '19. A rare type of girl in C. H. S.-a blonde. 445 PAULINE MERK-College PVC- 457 CARRIE ELIZABETII LIERRIMAN- paratory , II'l'P.U7,LZClI' Y. W. C. A. 'l9: French Club '19. I do my duty and do it well, and when it's possible, I excel. Rousseau '18, '19g Y. W. C. A. '18, '19g Girl Scout '18, '19g Basket Ball '17, '18. She knows her ability best of all, in a well matched game of basket ball. ' s C. H. S. TH 111 S C 0 U 'I' PAGE 21 .Iillllllllllll1lllllllllllli.,llH1Wllil' lilSlI131l1lll1l'llllillllllll1l11li1llNll!HH!1l'WlHMlllll w' 1lllllllll'llWl1HlWllM3lllll:1HU! '1 l1l1HlHHl ' 1' l1lll'!ll . N'il'1lII'1lwlllllllllllwwlNlIlllllllllllmmlllllh1llN..1iNNNlilill:!l!lHl!HElZ lllH in ORLANDO H. lllER'l'Z-Zlldlllllfll 43' GmHAI.n NlONAGllAN-CUHlHIff3I'- Tl'GlIIflI'lj vial Glee Club '19. Science Club '17g Scout Staff '17, '18g Commer- cial Club '16, '17, '18. Successfully keeps out of the limelight but He may seem lxashful, but he aint. hasn't yet been mistaken for :L freshic. 42' N1f:l.1,IE lgliYAX Bl1l1ISl'RN- COHIIIll'l'CiCIL Y. W. C. A. '19g Commercial Club '16, '17, '18, '19. BL-hold! A light in our midst l W ALMA FR114:1JN1CHswN NIORGANA- mm SVLA ll'AuNER NIUKINXEY- Collfqqff Prwpuruz'ory CYUNI'-iff' P1'f'pfu'f1fcn'y Entered from North Division High School, Chi- Y. W. C. A. '18, '19: Class Pllay '18: Rousseau '15 cago. . Girls, take my advice. Who says 'tis folly to be wise? N . PAGE 22 'PHE SCOUT C.H.S WWWWWWWWWWWWHWWWWWHHHHHIWHNWWHWWWVIWWWIHMIWWHWT11: W'W W ' W WWWWHWW 'WWWWW:'J', H1WW1w1W1WwWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'IlW1 u WMWWW' ,,,, 1AUW,HWWM'HW!WWWNWM!WWuV WW'WWWWwlW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWW 'WWWWWWW''WWWWWWWVHWWWWW' W WW W , 1. , 1 mn... ,: nw 41' JOHN XVILLI.-UNI NEYVLON- 43' ANNA BELLE PERKINS- Collcge Prf?paratm'y Il'l'I'.ljH1CLI' Entered as a senior from Weleetka, 0kla.: Y. W. C. A. '19. Glee Club '19g Dramatic Club '19: Commercial Club 119: Forum ,19: Cadet Corps 119: Class gfier wayT':41rEcz1lm, and Simple and neat: Play Science ,19. 19 5 1,001 lll Pl 0Sh0ll5'2'lll1l Vl'ly bvvleet. Behold in mo! the soul of wit. 42' CECIL OGDEN-Normal 11l'CLf'WIi'IfZ.fj Girls' Gym Exhibition '16, '17, '18, 'l9: Basket Ball '18, '199 Captain '18, '19: Girl Scout '18, '19: Patrol Leader '18, '19: Y. W. C. A.'17, '18g Rousseau '16, '18, '19g Vice President '19. None but the out-door life for mine. W ANNIE RACITEL PIT'l'M'AN- 455 DoRo'1'11x' CIIORTENSE PITCH-- Collrfge P1'epamfm'y Home 1DYf'0'iZ0l7lfC'S Delphic '18, '19: Girls' Gym Exhibition '16, '17g Entered as a Junior from St. Joseph, Mo. Class Play 19' She demanded .more of herself than any one A really able woman usually unclerrates her- 0159 demanded 1 her' self. 1 4 ' ' J' S. THE SCOUT 1 PAGE 23 li 'll ll lllllllllllllllllll if''NilllllllllllllllilWWlllli'!lll3wlWll'll'E' lffllflflt' 'ifllfil',,l'lllLlfllluli1hllllhlhNillllllllHlllllllU1NilllNNNN1UYl,lll31illllilllli3HNN1lllll1liNMillliillizllliiliNi11l.IlElULili!!iNNHWUhlllHNllNl1NNlUl1laliwlllllillllwilm 1 41' BIILDRED Bmmzmomz RANDl1E- Hom 12 Econmnirs Rousseau '17, '18, '19g President of Girls' Glec Club '19, Operetta '19: Commercial '18, '19: Girl Scout Circus '18, Girl Scouts '17, '18, '19, Always ready forjfun and mischief. 12a Tra'inlin.q 433 Zomlx Co1znELLl Rmzns-N0rn1al 7 Y J raining Y. W. C. A. '19, Speak up, girl and express yourself. Jnssm lllomus REECE-A'fJl'lilClZ Entered as a Senior from Braggs, 0kla.g Y. W. C. A. '19, Girls' Glee Club '19, Knowledge comes so cas I l'k . , sy- 1 e something which requires effort. 44'THE1'.1v1A Rosumzouczir- 45' Amsmrr J. RUSSAK-College Irrvyular Course Y, W. C. A. '19, She proves that all good things do not come in small packages. Preparatory Military Training '17, '18g Cadet Corps '19, Science Club '17, 'l8: Glee Club '18, '19' Or- chestra 18, '19, Band '17, '18, '19: Heed of Band '18, '19, Demosthenic '17, Operetta '18, '19, His good 'understanding' carried him through on R 147 PAGE 24 ' ' HHWHllllllllllllWlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll HHHI Hlllllllllllll , Y 1H1'l SCOUT C.H.b , I if 1 l , E 1'l'fI41i!'HiwlwIH111HillllllwlIlllllIllllllM1'H!!HHlllllllllllfilifflliiIEVWIVTHllll1lINNl1NNNNiN1NllllMi,EH511'J'HHNN1ll1lllllllll1llNllNNlllllllNll1lllNMHNWHIIHHHNNNNHNI 1' UTH JOSEPHINE SCOTT- 43' C0 Folklore '16, '17, History Club '16, Gunaikes '18, '19, Chairman Program Committee '18, Vice President '19, Class Play '19, BEN SLAIGI1T-I7'7 6lQ'Ifl'ZCVl N093 P iZ9aVCWl0 'y Football '15, '16, '17, '18, Captain '18, Track '15, '16, '18, '19, Yell Leader '19, Major Cadet Corps '19, Glee Club '18, '19, Operetta '18, '19. A source of peculiar information not to be learned elsewhere. Her grandmother was a southern belle, We know it, for it's what she doth tell. W CECIL SHADLEY-Normal Traizoziwg Entered as a Junior from Morris, 0kla., Y. W. C. A. '19, Lots of big people come from little places. THELMA LOUISE STETLER- 457 AGNEs ALVERA SWANSON- 110 me EC7ll7'ZIJ'7lI ins Normal Tminifny Sous Artistes '18, Entered as a Sophomore from Wagoner, Olds., Gunaikes '18, '19, Secretary '19, Class Play She was a mighty little woman. '13, yn W. C. A' 119. 'l'oo m uch good can not be said of her. l 1 ill 443 v I f. H. S. 'PHE S C U U 'l' l'AG'l-125 1llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllHllllllllllllllllllllllllll1lIw1lllllllUwwNrw1N l'1lHN1x','NNNlll1lw1iliNNNNNNNNHNNNN'xl:11NHNN'ilWWNNNNNNNN1NNNNlluWllHWl1H!SM1'fHMM YH. 111WlllllWWlllllwlll11WWlwltllwllllllwllllilllli' WW ,viH1:mllHH1x!Mllllilllllllllwl ARGURITE GOULD Swwsox- W A . 1 LLIE MAY TREECE-II'l'f'g'lllGI' College Preparafory Entered as Senior from St. Joseph, Mo.: Tri- angular Debate '19: Delphic 'l9: Y. W. C. A. '19. A soft answer won our hearts. 42? Science Club '17, Sous Artistes '18: Y. W. C. A. '19, Without work, even the most brilliant genius will be of little value. NVILLIAM LAWRENCE 'l7lsD1zr.- College Pr1'parafnrg Forum '16, '17, '18, '19, Class Play '18, '193 Cadet Corps '19, It's the knowimz man who knows enough to know the1'e's a lot he doesn't know. H.AROLD GARNETT TRENT- 45' Irregular Entered as Junior from Oklahoma City, 0kla.: Forum '18, '19: Glee Club '19, Science Club '19, Operetta '19. A jewel without a setting. l4lLlZABETH GRA1' WVAGNER- College Preparcllorg Delphic '18, '19: Editor 'ISQ President '19: Entre Nous '18, '19: President '19: Y. W. C. A. '16, Girls Gym Exhibition 'l6: Girl Scout '18, Triangular Debate '18, 'l9: President Debate League '18, '19, Scout Annual Staff '19, A master of words-true to her sex. PAGE 26 THE soo UT C.H.S. l llllllllllllllllllHlllllllllvll!5'Hllll illllllIllllllllllmllwlllllllllwlllllllllllxlllllllllllllllllillllllxllWlll!llllllllllllllllMllllIllllllfilllllllwllll llulllllwllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulwllwwllllllllllllllllllllllllxlllllIlllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllrl ,f- ul BERTHA WAIIDON-lb70I 7l?dl 139 HEmf:N SANFORD XVELTON- 1'7'CL'i11fl'I'Lg Co na 7lMCI'Ci6ll Y. W. C. A. '18, '19, Orchestra '18, '19. Glee Club '16, '17, '18, '19, Operetta '17, '18. '13, Commercial Cllub '17, '18, '19, Dramatic - '. ,-, . - - ' . Cub '17, '18, '19, Class Play '18, '19, Public If I do its all iight, if I don t, I don t caxe. Stenogmphers, Business Manager ,uk Scout Staff '19, Commercial Review staff '19. Music hath its charms---so has typewritingf' 42' FRANCIS AIARIAN IVARRRN- College Prc1pa1'aiory Y. W. C. A. '17, '18, '19, Glee Club '17, '18, '19' Operetta '18, '19, Girl Scouts '17, '18, Girls' Gym Exhibition '16, Class Play '19. I am little, I'm petite, Tell me, don't you think I'm sweet? 44? Lois B. XVILEY-ZVOI 77I'Cll TI'CL'l7Zf- 459 DONALD WIIJIIBAN Ks-College ing Preparatofry ,. -, Etaf we k,Okl., s', glee Cfub ,19' Operetta 19' Girls Gym Exhl Folrsi.: '19I,o'l'5ram:tilcnCllub '19Ez Fgsr lviiiiiilte 'tum 16' 17- Speaker, Triangular Debate '19, H100'W l?lI'l'D3-1' Value all the time-U A boy that works and never shirks. 1 ' 4 ff.ll.b. 'l'l1l'l SCUUT PAGE 27' Gil iiiiibll 1 HUiW iHIi'wi'iiiH wh 'H1It1HmWWHH1Hi'W 1UW'HN'NNwii'MN'HMM1H1! Nw , x ,: 'N' 1 w 'N , . 11iW ii'iiH'l iM W1:ii NWHH Wi i fl' .I14:wm,1, XVINIFOIill-frvilufffjl' 43' B1-zuxicm lvoons-Normal Prr'p11l'afo1'y Training Et'd'S' fo MAli,0kl.:C0m- v ,, 4, mririifii 'Ei-lbmiiiii :fix Piesiilqerit Frerzich Club !v1'f1HJH9ll5b 17, 1?2,I?PlPh1C 19: Y- W- C- A vw. 19: Girls Gym Exhibition '18. Hi-1' cheeks were pink, hm' lips were rc-41, I have spring' fc-vm' all the year l'llllllli.H H1-1' :lrt was pn-x'I'c-1-t -frr 'nuul' said. 12' JXNNA Lim lvlsnml-Nnrlnnl 171111111171 Glee Club '16, '17, '18, 'l9: Secretary-Treasurer 'l9g Mandolin Club '17: Operetta '17, '18, '19, Class Play 'Hg Girls' Glee Club Concert '18, 19. My name is my passport. Why chamzu it 7 44' iliII,DRElJ 'FIHALMA VVHHALEY- 45' RUTH S1v1I'rH-Cnllfge PH'- CYUNIQIII' I'rrfpr1r11lfn'y Orchestra '16, '17, '18, 'l9: Gunaikes '17, '18 '19 Class Play '18: Scout Stall' '17: Y. W. C. A '16, '17: Dramatic Cliub '19. Ri-al genius .is one-tenth ability and nine- tvnths bluff. pa mio ry Dramatic Club '18, '19, Cornelia '18, Operetta 'l9g Glee Club '18, '19, Delphic 'l9: Entre Nous '19g Y. W. C. A. '17, '18, '19, Rousseau '17, Secretary '18: La Causire '19, Scout Stan' '17. l-'ly little troubles on your dark wings, You apnezn' greater than the 'feel' of y0m' stinks. y w 1 IAGL 28 THE SCO UT C.H.S .IIHHIHlW1iilYWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWi'W1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWwWWWWWWWWWWWW1UW1NWW1WWWWlW'WlWWWWHH11WIWwWWWWWYiWWWW1'IiwWWWWWWWWIHWW1WW1wWWWWWW,WWWWWW1NNNNWNINNNNNNNNNNNNHlfllilifem,NxHHHMwM1!EIlE'!I11H1NNNiNHNNMuNRHNNNNNNWNNNiNNNxNNNNNNNlNNNNNNIINNNINNHNMNINHNHHWHIZINHLIIHM NIALCOLM Fl. ROSSER, JR.- SAM BURNELL-Irregular Ir'Y1.UuZa'r Entered as Junior from Streator, Ill.: Football Forum '16, '17: Assistant Manager Athletic GiQe zilbliiilfcijBeilsttgsflglg5 Track 'ls' 19: Association '17: Manager Baseball Team '17' ' P ' Class Play 'l7p International Society Debate '16 4-Please go -way and let me Sleepy I have the courage of my convictions. r-- , Y Y Y x K. Lffri A if L Q21 ,A ww? PAGE 30 THE SCOUT HW1WWWWWWHHNWNHWNI!'SEMWW1WMWWNWxiNWINMWWENNW',l HNHHM1,H .V V 51.'NH!WWWHMiT''WWNWHNWWNUWWUI!WUM1M!WlMMw-1,1'UN3vW1WI!l5,Ui'lUNM'NWwHWWmwMW'WWHHH1WEEWlW1'UW?lfW'R pm CECIL HUNT, l'rr'sidf2fnf I4lmzABET1 r PA1,MoU1z , Swqrretczry-Treats Josavu T11oMvsuN, Vice I'rczsiclc1zt JUNIOR CLASS 1 A I ' PAGES2 F1-IE SCOUT C.I-I S IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIlIIIIIIllIIlllIll'iIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZWWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlillIIlIIIIIIIIIIII'IlihlliIlillI5llIIIIIIIIMI!IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I' JUNIOR ROLL FLURA IIIRAZIER, Sponsor MARION ALLEN CHARLES ANDERSON MARJORIE ASHBY CTTO ASHWORTH KATIE MAE ASKEW PAUL AVERY RONALD BARTON CHARLOTTE BEARD MARION BILLINGSLEY SYBIL BINGHAM EDWINA BLACKWELL CARL BLOOM ARLINE BOLT GERTRUDE BONNELL ANNIE RUTH BCWLIN WALTER BRANDENBERGER BERNARD BREEDING CARRIE BREWER ERLINE BUNTIN ALICE BROCKENBOROUGH IMOGENE BUTLER WILLIAM BUTCHER CORINNE CHESTNUTT JOE CHILDERS ARTHUR COCHRAN LILLIAN COE BENNETT COHENOUR ELIZABETH COOK LILLIE MAY COOK CARTLEY COUCH MAURICE CLOUD SHIRLEY CRESSLER GLADYS CROW HAL CROUCH GLENN DAVIS JUANITA DAVIS LE ROY DECK MARTHA DODSON PAULINE DONNELL LUCILLE DOWNIE LA DANTA DRAKE NELL EAGER FOREST EDWARDS DONALD EMMERT ROLAND ERDWURM LEO ERHARD RUBY ESTES ROBERT FAHNESTOCK HELEN FARMER ROBERT FLAHERTY RAYMOND FREDERICK LORA MAE FRYER ANNA FURRY ELEANUR GIBSON PHILIP GREEN GUY GRIFFIN HELEN GRIFFIN LORNA HAMMOND ESTELLE HARRIS NEVA HARRISON JAMES HAYES MILDRED HEAP RUTH HEINS LOUISE HELD KARL HERBER LUTIE MAE HOFFMAN LEAH HOLCOMB WALTER HOOKER HARVEY HOOPER WALTER HUMPHREY CECIL HUNT GUILFORD JACOBS BEULAH JACKSON JOE JACKSON MARY JAMISON CARRIE JENNINGS WALTER JENNINGS BEATRICE JOBE VIRGIL JOBE KATHERINE JOHNSON GILES JONES GRETCHEN JONES DUANE KARGES LOUISE KEATON VIRGINIA KINNARD CLARA KITCHEL ELMER KITCHEL BERTHA KLU-TTS KATHERINE KNOX MARIE LAMB MILO LAMPHERE ROBERT LAMPHERE HAZEL LANNER LAWRENCE LOFTIS BESSIE LYON HALZEL LOONEY RICKARD MAIR MARY MALONE MARTHEL MAYES MARY MEREDITH BEULAH MERK PHABRICE MONTGOMERY ELTON MONTGOMERY GEORGE MORRIS SAM HAYS MORTON ATHA MURRAY JEANETTE McFADDEN MARY McCLARAN HUGH McCLURE HAZEL NALLEY LOLITA PACE ELIZABETH PALMOUR ADELE PEMBERTON LOUISE PERRET JUANITA PETERS HALE PHARES RUBY POTTS HAROLD POUNDS HOLLIS PRICE GLADYS PUGH LUTHER REID KATHLEEN ROONEY HELEN RYDER VERA SELF SARA SHEPHARD LORENA SICKLES GLENN SILER MARTHA SILVERTHORNE RUTH SINKES CLARENCE SMITH THELMA SMITH RUTH SMITH CEATTA SNYDER PHELMA SNYDER LLWYD SNYDER KARL STANER THEODORE STURR KATHERINE STERLING ALBERT ST. CLAIR CLARIS STROUD GILLA STROUD .IOSEPH THOMPSON GRANVILLE TIERNEY CLEO TRANTHAM SARAH TYLER CYRUS WAGNER OWEN WARNER JOHN WILCOTT RACHEL WILEY BLANCHE WILLIAMS EVERETT WOODS HARLEY GOODMAN GEORGE SEIBOLD DOROTHY DISNEY MAURICE DICKENS NIURIEL WILLIAMS ig' YZ Xiu QED' AS 11 Wm NNN X ff S fi X! X I if ,'mf'YiX .5 XNW SOPHOMORE CLASS. , '. O 4,ll1L. QA QW r-FL NJ . ,Q y' Mm I .XXL 1 I , Ixlff f1,fHff QA Ming L'-A41 fl. uw X 0 A L 1 pl' AVI! Vqyl Q .Y-x N 4 lhwq, AM is QQ g W Sv PA lu. It .-Sm 0 N A , ff I ' 'k' v ' Y i 'gi-! OOL. IV, JUNIOR HIGH SCH OUP GR 15 ,gif e 1? Q , - as- mm ,V f ,jf M. . .f , mm-f. . - :xxiiviifi k 1 MQF? A OC L. CH S HIGH NISR JU ill, GROUP OOL. SCH , JUNIOR HIGH II UP GRO any -if GROUP 1, JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL. PAGE 40 THE SCOUT C. H. S. ,lllllllllllllVllllllI!Hllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllillillllllllll l I lllllllllllllwlfhlalllVHllillllllliill11llllllllllllll1lNlllllllfullliillllilllllllllllllllllllllliiillllllllll llllllll Hlllllll HHH!! Illllllll1w1lwwlllllllHlllIl11llll11llllllililI,illllllll'M THE MIKADO HE Mikado was presented by the Senior Boys' and Girls' Glee Clubs at the Hinton Theatre April 29, under the direction of Miss Minnie E. Starr. T ll 111 CAST THE MIKADO OF JAPAN ....,..,.,..YY,,..,,..,,.,,,......,,.,,,.,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,r,r .,...........,..... T om Stern NANKI-POO fhis son, disguised as a Wandering minstrelj .,,7,r... ,.,,.,.. H arry A. Faulkner KO-KO fLord High Executioner of Titipuj ,,,,.,,.,,,,.,,,,,, ,,,,.,..,,,i, ,........,,., B a rtley Couch POOH BAH fLord High Everything Elsej .,..,,,...,,, ....,., .......... T h eodore Keller PISH TUSH QA Noble Lordj .......,i,..i............... ,..............,. B en Slaight NEE-BAN QA Noblej i.,....,.....................,,............,,.. .,...... Robert Fahnestock YUM YUM Mildred Wing PITTI-SING Three Sisters, Wards of Ko-Ko .,......... ,.,.... M ildred Randle PEEP-BO Carrie Brewer KATISHA 1An elderly lady in love with Nanki-Pooh ,.i.....,...,.,.,i...,.,,,., Genevieve Douglass OHURUS 011' SCHOOL GIRLS-IIIRLS, GLEID CLUB BRYANT WILEY BILLINGSLEY MCFADDEN CLARK LYON CASWELL WARREN SVVANSON CULP WILEY SMITH MURLIN PETERS REECE DRAKE INGRAM COE CHILDERS WILLIAMS DONNELL BLACKWELL NALLEY BONNELL SINKS MALONE BRADLEY MONTGOMERY HOWES HOSMER WISDOM DOUGHERTY Ciioiws ow Noismis AND G UARDS-Bow, Gunn Orme MORRIS JOHN TRENT BLOOM BARRON JENNINGS WALSH HOLCOMB HARRISON ERDWURM CARROL EDWARDS POUND MERTZ NEWLON BURNELL TOIVILIN LEIBERT SLAIGHT MONTGOMERY GRANGER SNYDER CHILDERS HALL PARKER TRANTHAM Xl x ' PIII ' 9 'Q 1'nl .Wg fer' -5 1 :elf Q5 E - , id' flflv 0 If A309 ' - 9.0 W A6 I 6 my -YW i 0? AME f A QI + .. 1 -4 4'1- Q Q-egpi u, MQSQK M mv-XX Zh.. WNNA, wg A gf 'WN' W ' ' ze Q 4 7- 5 if WA 3 S - A BANN YEAR. 4...iJ PAGE 42 , THE SCOUT C.H.S HWWWWWWHHWWHWMWWHWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW1NWWWWWWNWWNNNNNN1NNNHNWIWWNWJWHNNNNNNINWMHWNWMHNHH,11, HIMWWWNWW:MHMNWNHHNWMWWNI 11.,iiHHHMI.lIIUJHMNHI'W1W1WWWW1WW1WWWWNNNNiNNNHWHHHNH2iWHHNHl'IIHHWhf1H THE ROUSSEAU CLUB. THE GIRL SCOUTS. C. H. S. . THE SCOUT PAGE 43 II'T'IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHE 111, IIms'11'I'II1CI II'l'III1'xI'I'IIlI'I'I I IIIVI k' I' 'I Z ' VE H!IH!IIZ'1i1l!I!',3',' IIIII'IIuI!H'1I!I'I'1 11:I3'II I ' I I I II 'I' 'I VXI' I R 'T'' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIQQIII' Nz! 1 Y w 71 ' 1 QEBTIQAL HIfxH. Y- W. fj. A. , , 1 Miss CUBA I4 RAZIICR, Sponsor THE CABINET. EDWINA BLACKWELLH . ,,,,,,,.A.. President MAYDEE BRYANT ...,,,, ., ,,,..., .. ..,,,,...,,,,, Reportcl' DOROTHY LIVINGSTON ., Vice President CATHERINE HAYES. ,Social Service Committee BESS STEVENS ,,,,, ,, ,,...., , , ,,,,,,, Secretary GENEVIEVE DOUGLASS .Ch'rman Program Com. SARA SHEPARD ,, , , ,,,, 'I'1'1:asur01' RUTH SMITH . Chairman Social Committee M IQMBERS. MARION ALLEN DOROTHY DISNEY ELLEN LOVELL THELMA ROSEUROUGII KATIE MAE ASKEW GENEVIEVE DOUGLAS MATTIE LYNN GRACE ROUSEK CHRISTINE AYER ALBERTA EDMONDSON BEULAH MERK IIELEN RYDER MISS BARTON KATHERINE FAST NELLIE MILBOURN LOIS REED LOIS BEUTELSPACHER MILDREIJ FORD LEOTA IVIALONE HENRIETTA ROBINSON SYBIL HINGHAM MISS CORA FRAZIER PAULINE MERK LULU SNYDER EDWINA BLACKWELL MARY GRUBB SULA MCKINNEY VERA SELF ELIZABETH BOYD CATHERINE HAYES BERNICE IVIcKEE THELMA 'SMITH EVELYN BRECHEISEN LEAH HOLCOMBE MISS IVIURLIN I'HELMA SNYDER CARRIE BREWER MISS BESSIE HUFF CARRIE MERRIMAN CHARLOTTE SMITH CARMEL BRINKLEY LUTIE MAE HOFFMAN .IUANITA MILLER BESS STEVENS ALICE BROKENBROUGH NEVA HARRISON NORMA MCMILLAN CEATTA SNYDER MARIE BULLARD IRMA HINES GOLDA MERRRIMAN RUTH SMITH ERLINE BUNTIN MARY HANNAH HAZEL NALLEY MARY SYLVESTER BERNIECE BRUNSON LOUISE HELD HORTENSE 0'CONNOR MARY SHARUM MAYDEE BRYANT BESSIE HARRISON CECIL OGDEN NADINE SPEARMAN MRS, BUTZ FLORENCE HANNAH MARIAN PACK OLIVE SEXTON MRS. CALLAHAN FRANCIS HACKBRESCH LENA PRIDEMORE VERONICA SCHNIEDER MISS RUTH CALDWELL RUTH INGRAM WINNIFRED PULLIAM AGNES SWANSON LOU ANNA CHILDERS DOROTHY .IENKINS ANNA BELLE PERKINS ALLIE TREECE MILDRED COFFEEN RUTH JOLLY RACHAEL PITTMAN SARAH TYLER ALBERTA CONKLIN CLARA KITCHELL LOUISE PERRETT ELIAZBETH THOMPSON HAZEL CORY MARIE LAMB RUBY POTTS MARG'T VON UNWORTH MAYBELLE CREWS LOLA LANNING CATHERINE KARNEY BERNICE WOODS VIVIAN CROUCH MISS LITTLE CARRIE ROGERS MARGARET WHITE MISS DORA DE LAY DOROTHY LIVINGSTON ZORIA REED BERTHA WALDON MISS ETTA DE LAY GERALDINE LOGAN JESSIE REECE FRANCIS WARREN LILLIAN DICKSON ANNIE LEE LONG KATHLEEN ROONEY MURIEL WILLIAMS LA VINA WYSONG rf, L. 11 rw' 1 1 PAK-In 44 I HL SCOUT fl. H. S Mill!!l1 ll'I:lx,i,l I!ll,I : ll 'l i ' I Ii l 'l' 'I 'l'lIii,l 1Il 1 ' 1' I ' V' 1 .lulll l',:',.!,llllllllI1Ml 'THE BOY S ' FOR I l M Ov if 1 mms R,x1,l'11 ldnmzlav, flflflfflllllll AIACE llARmsox, ,S'wrn'!r1ry-T1'r'r1S. M nm mans FRANK LANE GLENN SILER JOE BAILEY KARL STANER LLVVYD SNYDER JOSEPH THOMPSON GARNE'l l' 'IXRENT DONALD WILBANKS RALPH BARNEY CHARLES CROSS HAL CROUCH MACE HARRISON CECIL HUNT THEODORE KELLER HENRY KNOX TREVELIN WIMER JOHN NEWLON HONARARY: FREEMAN BURFORD . ELLIS GARRETT HAROLD FISHER WILLIAM TISDEL HE Forum Debating Society has completed its tenth successful year of debate work. The Forum was organized ten years ago at the same time that other of the boys' literary clubs began their existences. Though there are none of these other clubs in the school now, and have not been since the Demosthenic was dissolved last year, the Forum still works on with ever increased vigor and enthusiasm. During the past year, practically all the speakers that represented the school in public speaking work were members of the Forum. The Boys' Triangle Debate teams, by far the most widely known debate leaguers, drew its members excepting two, from the Forum Debating Society. Likewise with the Four Minute speakers for the Liberty Loans and many other speakers that were sent out as representatives of the school. The Forumites believe that the secret of the success of the club has been that it has always laid early plans for the work of the ensuing year. Bent on making next year even better than this, they are starting the machinery of reorganization to running. G. H. S. IilIllllllllllilllilllll1'lllwllilllllllllllllllllll ll H ll lll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Hlll llllllllll Y m w 1.1 w Y ,1 , llllll',lllllmlllllllllllll llllllllllllllll lllllll,lwllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllmlll. THE JUNIOR FORUDI OER1CER.s FLOYD GARRETT ...,.,,,,,...,,..,...,.,.. ..., .,,,,.,,,,.......,,.. C h airman JOHN JAMESON ........, ...........,.. V ice Chairman ROSCOE CATE .,,,.,... ,,...... S ecretary-Treasurer JOHN FLOYD .....,,A...,....................Y,,,,,..,,A......... Sergeant-at-Arms Miss PEARL ISVCHANAN, Sponsor At l'IX'l'l AIEMBERS L llVATsON GREY DIATHAN GIBSON JOHN JAMESON .lOsEPH K ENNEDY JOHN l1EEKLEY GUY LOVE ll0XVARD iiOSENDOR E VVESLEY S1MMs TJELIX TODIJ CLINTON TOWD NENVMAN TVILl.Is HO BERT A N DERSON VICTOR lXNDER.SON ,BYRNE :BOXVMAN JEROME ISROVVN l'iiIfFl'S BVMGARNER RoscOE GATE CECIL CLEM CLARK Cl.IN'1'ON XVAIHFEIT DIDLs DONALD DREW JOHN FLOYD FLOYD GAliRl+l'l l' IIONORARY M ICM RERs TIIEOIJORIC TVRNER YICRDALE lqENNEDY DEEA'1'Es llELD IN THE JUN1OR IPORITDL DURING THE SCHOOL XYEAR RESOLVED RESOLVED , That all captured German ships should be sunk. RESOLV ED, RESOLVED, Military RESOLVED, world. 7 1918-1919 VVERE: That the State of Oklahoma should adopt the free text book system. That Central High School should adopt the student self government plan. That the United States should adopt the Swiss system of compulsory Training. That the League of Nations would be detrimental to the welfare of the RESOLVED, That the Government should continue to control and operate the railroads. RESOLVED, That the President's term of oflice should be six years and that he should be ineligible to succeed himself. RESOLVED, That the United States should adopt an equal suffrage plan. RESOLVED, That the daylight saving plan would be beneficial. Besides holding these debates the Junior Forum has, during the year Composed and adopted a constitutiong Initiated new members, and Challenged the Junior High History Club to a debate. 'AGE 46 'l,'Il E SCOUT C. H S V 'UM'1'H1 N W 1, MM ' 1 ' RIJMV V. 1' VwH,1WUW:wVME!!! 1Ul ' 'Vw 1NH:'W'I 'WUH'WiU','ilH w HEEWWH 'Hi' IM ,,,.1 IWIWIHHEQHUNW' 1 1 'Nw I THE BOYS' GrLEE CLUB Firsi Twnor G. C. WILLIAMS CLIFTON BARRON GEORGE MORRIS GARNETT TRENT Sf? C 0 11 rl 1 'ff no r MACE HARRISON WALTER JENNINGS JOHN NEWLON HAROLD POUND ALBERT RUSSAK COURTNEY TOMLIN RALPH WALSH Firszf Hass CARL BLOOM BERNARD BREEDING ROLAND ERDVVURM ROBERT FAHNESTOCK ARTHUR JOHN THEODORE KELLER GABE PARKER, JR. LAWRENCE WANASEK TREVELIN WIMER RAYMOND HOLCOMB LLVVYD SNYDER Secnml B ass HARRY FAULKNER SAM BURNELL BARTLEY COUCH ORLANDO MERTZ BEN SLAIGHT LAWRENCE WANASEK ....,...,,..,,.. Y,,,,,..,,....,,,,..,..... P resxdent TREVELIN WIMER ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,........,,,.....,...... Sec1'etav'y-Treasurer Iloxoffmm' M EINIBERS IN FACUUUY G. C. WILLIAMS HARRY A. FAULKNER C. H. S. THE SCOUT PAGE 47 'WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWVWW'WWWWWWWWWWWWW'WWWWWWW WW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWll WI'l-W''WWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWli'WWWWWW'W1' W WWWWWWWw ' WWWW' V W W W WWWWWWW1WWWWWWWWWWWW,IllW'WWWIWlWWWWWWWMWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWW JUNIOR BOYS' filLEE CLUB T THE beginning of the school year, only a few old members were still in the club and at mid-year they were eligible and were taken into Senior High Glee Club. At that time new members from the 7th and Sth grades were taken into the Junior Club. The boys have worked hard this year and presented several of their pieces at the Girls' Cantata. 0 if rioizns MAURICE HARRISON i......................,.. . ....... President JOSEPH KENNEDY ,,,,,,. ii..i,.. S ecretary-Treasurer RACHEL WASSON i...... ................ A ccompanyist GLADYS VANCE i.,,..,, .,........... D irector Mmviisnns Romain ANIJFIRSIJN VVEsr,Ey Siiviivis ' llLDlIAlVl 'Bisnor XYICTOR ANDE1isoN Joslzrii Kmxxianx' IIENRY COFFEEN CARVEL IIAHAFFEX' BIAVRICE Hixiznisox FLOYD CARTER HAROTiD LooNEy lx'lARS-TON lllEL'l'ON RALPH llAVIS STEVEN PoR'rER -loim JAMESON K nxxnru lV1i,1i1NsoN PAGE 48 THE SCOUT C. II. S. 'IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH1llllll'ill!1'1lllllllllllllllllilllllillllllllllulll,Illlll1ililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIHlllllIlIllllIIHIHlllllllll1VUl'!lll'55ll'llilllllllHill4NillIllll1lllllllllllll11l1Illllllllllllllzlllllllullllllll'llllllllluIl,,,lill THE GPIRLS, f?LEE CLUB 1 IEEICEIIS MILDRED RANDLE ............,,....,, ,...w., ,,,....,.......,,,..,.. P I 'esident ANNA WISDOM ......,,,A ,,,A,. S ecretary-Treasurer MAYDEE BRYANT ......,7,,....,..,......,...,........,..,, Business Manager Lucille Struble, Anna Wisdom, Pauline Donnell, Pin Committee SOIfRANos Amos CARRIE BREWER GENEVIEVE DOUGLASS LUCILE CULP JEWVEL DOUGHERTY LILLIAN COE LILLIAN HOWES LOUISA CASWELL BEULAH HOSMER LOU ANNA CHILDERS MARY MALONE MARION BILLINGSLEY LOIs WILEY CHRISTINE BRADLEY RACHEL WILEY IIAULINE DONNELL FRANCES WARREN LA DANTA DRAKE ANNA WISDOM HAZEL NALLEY RUTH SINKS MILDRED RANDLI-3 CERTRUDE BONNELL RUTH INGRAM MILDRED CLARKE MAYDEE BRYANT RUTH SMITH LUCILLE STRUBLE MARGUERITE SWANSON NADINE MURLIN PAULINE MONTGOMERY BESSIE LYONS EDWINA BLACKWELL ALMEDA BELL JES-SIE REESE JU ANITA PETERS HE Girls' Glee Club, which was organized in 1915, has always been an important factor in Central High. Under' the skillful direction of Miss Starr the Club has completed a Very successful year. The third Annual Concert was given, in which the cantata, Tennyson's Lady of Shalott and a study, The Angel's Serenade, were rendered beautifully. The girls took part with the boys in the Third Annual Operetta, HThe Mikado. lf. II. S1:'Ql,l'lf l'Al'iI'iwflQ c v v - 1 f 1 - - 1 JI, NIOR frIKLS' ferLI'lE f LUB C.-XLLIE WELDONH, , .,,,,,..,,,,,,, ,,..A, P resident THELMA MINTERH ,,,,,,,,, ,..,, S ecretary-'l'reasuI'er MISS GLADYS VANCE ,,,,. ......Y,,,,,,,,...... D irector ELIZABETH EWING ,,,,,,, ...... I .ibrarian NlEMI:ERs MARY I'A'I'TERsON I,OIs MAHAIfIfEY OUIIIA MARTIN .IOsEI'HINI-1 NEWIROLII HELEN HAYWARII IfRIEDA GREEN LILLIAN GARDNER LUCILIIE HIIIIIIARD 'FHELMA GILCHRIST IIAZEL LOONEY LORRAINE STIIIIIIELIPIELD CATHERINE WELTON RACHEL WASSON 'I'REssII-1 HAGGARD NAIOMI MINNIS ELLA THRASHER LAURA DUIIOIS WAHILLAU LA IIAY CARROII PUGII l I.O BETESS MARGUERITE MAYS LOUISE DAVIDSON IIEULAH I IsHER BEUTIAH SMITH VERA SMITH GLENDOLA STANDORF VIRGINIA THROCKMORTON EMMA IPEAN ANTHIS LOUISE ROSSER LOIs IIEUTELSPAOHER MARRY ANNA MOORE MARGARET TACKETI' HE Club has gotten in much good practicing this year and has worked especially hard on the Cantata, 'tSpring Rapture, which was given May 15th. All during the year the club has admitted new members, as many of the old members now will be eligible to the Senior High Glee Club next year. L l , I PAGE 50 THE SCOUT C. II. S. wuwu rrrwr m'm 'v 'l'll 'l I ' ' 1 1' ' ' ' ' iq., ,. ,i,-,,1 THE Sf'IENIf'E flLIlB ITF H. S. MR. NYILi.I.xMs, Sjzoizsol' O If l l'CFlliS PHILIP GREEN ,,,....,,,,,,,,...,,,,.,,,.,..,,,,.. ,........,....,,.,.... P resident ALBERT ST. CLAIR ..,,,,,, Y,,.,...,,,,,.. V ice President GUILFORD JACOBS, ,,,, Secretary-Treasurer DONALD EMMERT ,,,,AA,,., A,,........,,7.,,,,, ..,,. ,... S e r geant-at-Arms hi'l'lMBliltS LEON HIRSH MACE HARRISON THEODORE KELLER JOE BAILEY MR. WILLIAMS CHARLES CROSS MR. MURPHY ALBERT RUSSAK LEROY HOLMES FRED PERKINS JOHN PIKE J. G. HUNT MISS PEAK WALTER HUMPHREY OREN SMITH RUSSEL HADLEY ROBERT INGRAM HE Science Club was organized in 1917, with six members, Rayburn Fernside, Theodore' Keller, Mace Harrison, G. C. Williams, Joe Bailey and Kennth Reid. The object of the club is to study physical and chemical Science and to keep in- formed with the progress of the scientific world. The club has lived up to its purpose, though it has been hampered many times during the year by the irregularity of school. The programs have been exceedingly interesting and instructive. Many times during the school year the club has visited the different plants and factories of Muskogee. By the interesting and instructive programs rendered, the club has each year grown larger and larger. Boys who enter Central High School in the future will do well to join the Science Club. I . ll. S. THE S1'UlI'l' PAUIC Sl QIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' II blllllll 'I Il' ll' ll l l ll lklvlll' 'Ill ll' 'Ill I I I I' ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I I , ' ' i 'I l 'lIll FR ICNK 'lol fllyl IB I lr'l4'1I'lf1I:S GFlR'l'RlIlll'I IIUNNICLL, ,,,,, ,,,. , ,, I'1'QSIlll'Ilt JUANITA I'E'l'lCRS ,, ,, ,,Vice l'I'eSidcI1t PIIIIIIP FOSTER., , ,,,SecrotaI'y GUY GRIFFIN, ,. ,.,, ,Tl'62lSUl'01' MISS E. BROWN ,,,,, , ,,,,,,,I. ,,,. . ,,,,,.,,,. ,,,,,,.. , ,,...,, , , SDUIISOI' NIIIAIIIIQIIS Ifon SIQUINII SI-1AIIcS'I'IcII, lfllil cHIcIS'I'INI-1 AYICRS IcU'I'II I:RowN wII,I.IAIvI lilI'I'1'HICH GIN:Ic'I'RIInIH: IsoNNI:I,I. ANNI: cnoom SIIJNI'1YIJIl'liSUN I.oUISI-1 IJAVIIJSUN I-:I,IxAIzI:'I'II IQWING MIIIIJREIJ Ivoun I4A'I'I-II-:nINI-1 IfAs'I' I'HII,II' If'OS'l'HIt IIIQIIEN GIzIIfIfIN GUY GIcIIfIfIN 1,oIzNA HAMIwIoNn GIIAIJYS I-IIcNSI.IH:r I4A'I'IIr:IcINI-3 .IoIINSoN oI,GA KING I,oIIISIc IcIcA'I'oN IIAZEII I.0ONl'IY ICIIIIEN I.ovIf:I,I, IIIIII:RIf:I,I,S IvIII.I-:S I'AlIl.lNE MICRK IIAI:IcIII1'I I' I'00I,I'I INIAISICII I-ARKS .IIIANI'I'A I'I-:TIQIIS GA'I'IIIaRINIf: STIH:IcI.ING IcU'rII SMI'I'II IVIAICY SIIARUM IQUIIY SIIARUM LUIIA SNYIIIIJR I'HAIcI,o'r'I'I: SMI'I'II CALVIN S'I'oU'I'z In-:lII.AII .IAc'IiSoN IIIAIQY EVANS IRENIG 'I'IIoIcNI5 SARAH 'I'YI,oIe IcAI,I'II WALSH noRo'I'IIY JENKINS 9 A CAUSERIE was organized last fall under the direction of MiSS Edatha Brown. M French IllStl'LlCL0l'. Louise Keaton WaS the club'S firSt president, Jewell Winiford the vice president, Philip Foster, Secretary and Sidney Dickson, treasurer. The purpose of the club, aS the name Signifies, was for the purpose of convcrSation in French. Only those taking: advanced French were eligible to membership. A Short program has been given each meeting, and during the year the club has read two b0okS, Mernani, by Victor llugo and Chanticleer by Rostand. There have been two Strictly Social meet- ings and a hay ride. Les RomaneSqueS, a Short play, was given in French. 5 L PAGE 52 THE SCO UT H ,MWNH1'iN3?WW HU'HNINI'IW U V U'i'3IW l! i,1',,HI.1 'V N , l1'1N'wN N II C' M , 1 1'W ' 1' ' W ' 3 w MN w V HIGH SCHOOL LIRCHESTRA 1 Miss STARR, fNl'1'f'f0I' O1+'lf1CERs JUANITA PETERS ,,,., ..,.,.,.....,..,,,,, .....,,.......,..,, P 1 'esident HALE PHARES .Vice President LADANTA DRAKE ,,,,, . .,..,.V. . ,,,HSec1'eta1'y-T1'easu1'eI' ALBERTA CONKLIN ......,,, YAY..,,,,,.,,...... L ibrarian FIRST VIOLINS JUANITA PETERS LORNA HAMMOND LADANTA DRAKE MILDRED WRIGLEY RACHEL WASSON BERNICE BRONSON LOUIS SILVERTHORNE CASS NEWBOLD COLEMAN JACKSON GRANVILLE TIERNEY MEMBERS SECOND VIOLINS ALBERTA CONKLIN GLEN DAVIS JOE ERWIN MILBURN SCREECHFIELD NATALIE FARMER ANNIE CROOM HAROLD LOONEY MILDRED CARTER BERTHA WALDON JOSEPHINE NEWBOLD CELLO FLUTE DRUMS BASS GEORGE MARSHALL HALE PHARES LAUREL CHILDERS CLEO TRANFHAM FIRST CORNETS SECOND CORNETS ALBERT RUSSAK RALPH DAVIS HENRY ERWIN GERTRUDE CALVIN PIANO MARTHA SILVERTHORNE fx 11. s. 'rum s g'0Ir'1' Inuslc 53 ENTHIC NUIIS Nllss HI VV Axxlr Miss I'1'I I',X ITIQIAAY, S,lfIll.N'flI'.S' f,I4'I Il'ICliS l'ILIZABI'J'l'1I XY,-XliNIQ11,,, , , , ,P1-egiqlq-nt Gl1INEVH'1VI'l DOUGLASS , , ,,,,,, Vive Presiclc-nt DOROTHY LIVINGSTON, ,,,, ,Sec1'uLz1ry MfXR'1'Hl+II. MAYICS , ,, , ,,,,, Treasurer Xl ml mms EI,lZAlCl'Z'l'H wAf:NIf1l': ICIJWINA l4l.Ac'Kw'14:l,l, MAIHAN lilfllili lsl.AN1'H1f3 WIl.l,lAMs m-:LI-:N 1f.x1cM1-:Ie WINIIVREIJ WINTON MARY 1VlEREI7I'l'II LURA IVIAIC 1fRY1cn lr0Ic0'1'1lY l,lvlNGS'1'0N SYIRII, CALLAIIAN MAR'l'111':1. MAY!-is LAURA Illinois GPINIQVIEVI-I IDOUGLASS Lois RICICD IQUTII SMVV11 MAIUORIE ASHIKY r:1iR'l'lcUlJ15 BONNICLI, KA'l'llERlNl'I KNOX 3 NTRE Nous is one of the most prominent clubs in C. H. S. During: the past year, in spite oi' many intewuptions, the vlub has succeeded in maintzxiuiug' its usual stundarcl of high svhoIzu'ship. For the past yn-zu' the club made 21 complete study of Les Misvz'z1lmIes. PAGE 54 THE SCOUT C. II. S. 1llllllllllllllllllllllillllltill1lHli,lilll1lllll1l1ll,,.z.'llK11.l1wllEll1ll'i,11.1.'11'.ll1w. ll'l'i.'1Ll.llllllllllllxullllH1llli.1illi..,llllllllllll1llllllllllllllllHi1llliillllml'lllllllllllll!lll!illllMllallllll1Ml1lllllllilllllllllliiliilll iilll1l.llli3ll,l ,hllllv THE UPUN A IKES Miss Nmfif, Spmzxfor 1 Div ifrcms CECELIA DURSCHERL ,,YA...,....,,..,A, Y.,,,, , Y..,President RUTH SCOTT ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A..,,,. ,.,,,,. V ice President AGNES SWANSON .....,,,,,,..... .,V.,,,,,,.A S ecretary MARGARET ANDERSON ..,..,,. ,.A, ,Y,Y,.........V..,,,,,,.,..., T 1 'easurer CATHERINE HAYES ,,,,,,,..... Chairman of Program Committee N ElN'TBl'lRS LEAH HOLCOMB LOU ANNA CHILDERS JUANl'l'A PETERS LORENA SICKLES SYBIL CALLAHAN LOLITA PACE DORIS BROWN MARIE BULLARD MILDRED WRIGLEY ROMONA PFENDER HE Gunaikes Club is an organization of congenial girls, who meet fortnightly to study the lives and achievements of famous women. They have received much benefit from the meetings, and are always ready to help in all movements for the betterment of Central High. U. H. S. 'l'lIl'l SVUITT PAGE 3 gi I I I , 'I I I' I I 'I'I I'IIII'IwwI:I'I IIIIw:II,I'I I ',III:I'IIII x I IJICLPHIC' DEBATING S0i'IlC'I'Y ilI l'll'I11lir4 ELIZABETH WAGNER ,,,,,,..,,. ,,.., , ,, ,,,. ,, ,,., President CECELIA DURSCHERL, ,, , ,,,,,.,, Vice President EDWINA BLACKWELL ,,,,,,. , ,,,,,,,,,,, Secretary-Treasurer Nl IAM Isicns RUTH IIROWN RACIIIQJ, PI'I l'MAN DORIS BROWN RUTH SMITH I,OI,I'I'A PACI-1 RU'I'1I INGRAM GI+1RTRUIiE IIONNELI, MARY JAMISON DOROTHY DISNEY MARY sYI.vEs'I'IsR MARGIll'lRl'I'E SWANSON MURII-JI, WILLIAMS CI-1c'IH:I,IA CONWAY LORA MAE FRYER VIRGINIA IQINNARD SARA SHEPARIJ ELPHIC is the first Girls' Debating organization in C. H. S. As soon as the 4 Annnal Girls' Triangular Debate was instituted as one of the school's recognized activities, the necessity was realized for some girls' organization, which would furnish preliminary training' in debate work. To meet this need, all girls interested in debate and argumentation were enrolled in 1917 into two societies, of which the Delphic was the final product. This year, although the Delphic has only reached its second birth- day, it is the recognized leader of all literary activities in which the girls of C. H. S. take part. The Delphic is represented in the departments of school life by seven of the eight Triangular debaters, the leading ladies of both the class plays, the presidents of the three other leading girls' clubs, several members of the Scout and Annual Staif, and the Secretary of the Board of Control, officers of the Junior and Senior classes, in fact, every activity in C. H. S. in which girls are allowed to take part. The saying goes, The Forum controls the school, and the Delphic controls the Forum. PAGE 56 THE SCOUT F H Q illllllllllllllillllllllllillllllHl!IIIIl1I1lllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllHHHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllll l THE COIVIIVIERCIAL CLUB OFFICERS CEATTA SNYDER ,.........4Y.......,.......... ............V.. P resident MARY HANNAH ..,......... ,,,,.,,.,..,,,.. V ice President THELMA COWDERYj ,A.,, ..,,.,,, S ecretary-Treasurer BMA THELMA COWDERY HUBERT HAUSER GLEN SILER R11 or l5IRECTORS WILLIAM WARD HELEN GRIFFIN GUY GRIFFIN This year the Alumni members of last year formed a club of their own called the Alumni Association. The honorary members of last year and a few outsiders, consisting of the business men of the city, acted as teachers this year in the newly organized class in Business Lectures. v K1 fi. H. S. llllllllllll' l ll'lllllwl!ll'l:li'l'll l l l V 1 1 THE SCOU1' PAUL 57 ' 'llllllllllwlllllllll ix .l ' ' lll l ll1' 3 . ll 'll ll'3!l'?lllUlll 'w ' lllllllu'llll'llll'llwl'll'lillllllllilllllllllllllHill WINNERS-FOURTH ANNUAL CONTEST. As in former years the Club publish- ed the 'tCommercial Review, kept the French orphan, operated the Employ- ment bureau, gave a demonstration at the State Fair which won the blue rib- bon for the department, and held the regular contests, results of which are given below: Typewriting Sweepstakes. Thelma Cowdery, winner three day Sweepstakes Typewriting contest, set- ting a new record at 60.3 Words net, 10 words deducted for each error. Leota Malone, second, Helen Welton, third. Bookkeeping. Helen Griffin, first, Helen Hayword, second, Irma Bickett and Sarah Hew- itt tied for third. Mr. Bender, Assis- tant Cashier, First National Bank, acted as judge. Quick Figuring. Grace Hargrove, first, Raymond Burchfield, second, Sarah Hewitt, third. Standardized tests in addition, sub- traction, multiplication and division, including decimals and fractions, were used. Business English. Rachel Pittman, first, Mary Malone, second, Helen Griiiin, third. Noyes and Trabue standard tests were used. Stenographic Efficiency. Mary Hannah, first, Christine Brad- ley, second, Thelma Cowdery, third. Decision based on shorthand speed, accuracy and speed of transcription, reliability, English, and sense of fin- ished product. Spelling. Marguerite Vise, first, Mattie Floyd, second, Mary Hannah, third. Jones and Church standard lists used in pre- liminary contests, Kim,ball's business speller used in final. Marguerite Vise spelled correctly nineteen words after all competitorsuhad been eliminated. U. II. S. THE SCOUT PAGE 59 'WWI' Nw IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I1WIHIIIi1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINNI1INNIINNNNIIINNINNNIIINIIIINNW'NWWN11 3WN' I UWHHHWMI 'HW' IIIIIWHWHMWWMHH M 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIMWMWMMHMVIM il.I.1Nu :I11HHMH1wN :EH JUNIOR HIGII HISTORY CLUB VURA XIANCIC, Spmzsfn' 1 M1 l ll'l'1RS MILDRED CLARK ,,,., ,,.. ,,,, , , ,.,,,, ,,,, ,,.,,,.. P I ' esident LAURA DU BOIS ,,,,,., ,,Y,,,,, ,,,,, V i ce President RUTH GILLILAND ,,.A.. ..,,,,, S ecI'eta1'y-TI'eaSuI'er GARNETT CLARK ,,PI'ogI'am SecI'etzu'y ERMA REID ,,,,, , ,, , , ,, ,,,,,,, ,,,,, I Editor N E M REITS GARNI-1'l I' CLARK SYHIL BINGHAM .JEWEL BRYANT ETHE1. CROSS RUTH GILLILAND LOIS BEU'l'I'II.SPACHER LAURA DU BOIS DOROTHY STI-:ARNS MILDRED CLARK HAZEL LOONI-:Y OZELLE MERITT ERMA REID DOROTHY WITHRON ALMA MARLIN ANTOINETTE I-'LAMM ALEXA GRAIN ALENE WAY WAUI-IILLA LA HAY ELIZABETH LESSLEY PAIILINE KEEL VIVIAN ROGERS HELEN HINES IRENE .IANSEN ETHEL DAWES JOSEPHINE NEWBOLD MONA SISNEY EDWINA SWEAT IDETA BOHANAN LARON DAVIS NELDA DUNN ELSIE CRAWFORD 'VHELMA WHITE INA GARRET .IANE SEIIIOLD ELIZABETH .IONES LOIS FRANKLIN LULU SNYDER MARY THOMPSON MARGARET HOFFMAN ELIZABETH ROBINSON MARGARET TACKETT BESSIE MQCOLLUM MARGARET VVHITE MARGARET ADAIR MARY SHARP I1 ,, gx Q y ,r CENTRAL HIGH'S CADETS ff. H. S. TIIE SCOUT PAGE 61 '1IIIIIIIIWIIIIII ' 'IIIIIIIIIWII'IIQIIIIIIIIW' ' III1WWHHHIIIIIIIIIWIIIIW1 VW 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIUII' ' IIIIIIINIIIIMMINWIIII I'HIII!II! II' TIIIIWIIIIIIIIIRIIIIIII' II II- I II'IIIIHmIIIIiIiIwIII' IIIIIIIIWI CADET BAND IST LIEUT. ALBERT RUSSACK- 4Cm'net IST SGT. COLEMAN JACKSONfDrum-IVlajm' SGT. LAUREL CHILDERS -Drums SGT. HALE PHARES--Flute SGT. OWEN WARNER fAIto CORPORAL HENRY ERWIN- Cornet CORPORAL WALTER JENNINGS-Bzxritonc CORPORAL RALPH DAVIS-fCornet CORPORAL PAUL AVERY----Bass PVT. ALBERT BONNELH Cornet PVT. FELIX TODD-Clarinet PVT. MAURICE HARPER f-Cornet PVT. MARSTON MELTON-fTrnmbunc PVT. JOE ERWINfBarit0ne PVT. EUGENE PERKINS-Cm-net THE CADET CORPS CA1fTA1NAAR'1' u UR FI.EAK CAPTAI N-CORTRIGIIT E NGLISH BAT. SGT. BIVAJ. GrI:AXx'11.1.r: TIERNEY COMPANY A CAPTAIN-JOHN CARROL IST. LIEUT.-JOE BAILEY A ZZND. LIEU'1'.fMILO LAMPHERE ZND. LIEUT.-CLARENCE SMITH IST. SGT. HUGH MQCLURE SGT. JOE JACKSON SGT. ROBT. LAMPHERE CORP. SHIRLEY CRESSELER CORP. MACKLIN EICHOLTZ CORP. RICHARD MAIR CORP. HARVEY RUSH CORP. DOUGLAS SMITH PVT. MERLIN ADRIAN PVT. HERBERT COOPER PVT. VERDALE KENNEDY PVT. BENNIE ASKEW PVT. JOHN DAVIS PVT. ORLANDO MERTZ PVT. EARL ANTHIS PVT. WARD DABNEY PVT. THOMAS REED PVT. ROBT. ANDERSON PVT. MARION EWING PVT. JACK RING PVT. VICTOR ANDERSON PVT. RODNEY HAYDEN PVT. THEO STARR PVT. ED. BATTLES PVT. LE ROY HOLMES PVT. AMIC SPONSLER PVT. FRANK BIGGS PVT. ROBT. INGRAM PVT. PARKER WARD PVT. JACK BALDWIN PVT. OTIS KELLY PVT. FRED WOODS PVT. BAKER BONNELL PVT. JEROME KEOPKE PVT. DELOS WILLIAMS PVT. NEWMAN WILLIS PVT. ARTHUR NASH PAGE 62 THE SCOUT C. H. S. IlllVIIIIIIIll!lIlllIllIIllIIlllllHWUI!lllIIIVIIIIIIIIIIIIIllillllllllllllllllllllVlHIlliII'Il1lllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNllNHlNlllNllHllllllllllHllllllHllllllliHlllllllllllllllHililllllli1illNlllillliIHllllllIlilIil'VUIHllHlllHllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllw' COMPANY B CAPTAINSCALVIN STOUTZ ' IST. LIEUT.-THEO KELLER 2ND. LIEUT.wGEORGE SEIBOLD 2ND. LIEUT.-MACE HARRISON IST. SGT. GABE PARKER SGT. DONALD EMMERT SGT. GILFORD JACOBS SGT. OVVEN SMITH CORP. FLETCHER BAKER CORP. GEORGE DEWAL CORP. JOHN PINK CORP. ELMER KITCHELL CORP. CARVEL MAHAFFEY PVT. ROBT. BRAZZELL PVT. MORRIS KIRSCHNER PVT. GLENN SIMMONS PVT. HENRY COFFEEN PVT. EDWIN LEIBERT PVT. THEO SINQUEFIELD PVT. CHARLES CROSS PVT. DWIGHT LEMMING PVT. AUBREY SWANSON PVT. GEORGE ELLIS PVT. JACK MANN PVT. THEO TURNER PVT. JOHN FIKE PVT. CASS NEWBOLD PVT. JOE WILIFORD PVT. RAYMOND FREDERICK PVT. WILL PHILIPS PVT. DONALD WISDOM PVT. MERYL HARRIS PVT. JAMES RAFTER PVT. HARVEY CHASE PVT. MORRIS HARRISON PVT. EDVVIN ROBINSON PVT. WILLIS HASSIT PVT. CLARE RUSHMORE PVT. HAROLD HAYWARD PVT. CARL SCHROLDER PVT. VVALTER HUMPHREY PVT. EUGENE SEVIER PVT. DWAIN KARGES PVT. TED SEIBOLD H. S. V. U. S. 9' IGH School Volunteers of the United States is a national organization of boys in 'h schools and other institutions, aiming to promote better citizenship by a uniform national plan of specific training, competitions, games and in other ways. The military and educational leaders of the country are being called upon to devise 11 definite program for providing every American boy, and for that matter, every American girl, with the elementary military knowledge, the strength of physique, the qualities of mind and conceptions of national loyalty, which will make them-in the new sense which our part in the War has given to the world-good American citizens, as ready for the service of humanity as they are for that of their country. It is to this end that the Muskogee Battalion of the H. S. V. U. S. has labored so diligently and faithfully for the past school year. On August 1, 1918, a cadet-leaders' camp was organized, in whic habout fifty of the high school boys enthusiastically entered, so that by the 9th of September, we had a well-trained staff of leaders ready to handle the Work of organizing the raw material. Two days after the opening of school we had recruited a full battalion, and on the next day began work on the school of a soldier. The next few months were unusually successful ones for the Cadet Corps. With regular routine of drill came some very interesting ceremonies, such as guard duty at the fair grounds, supplying the armies for the great war spectacle during the Fair, and passing in review for visiting army men. But chief of all ceremonies, and one for which the cadet corps is justly proud, was the escorting of Mrs. Josephus Daniels, wife of the Secretary of the Navy, to the Hinton Theatre, where she gave a very in- teresting talk, and later back to the hotel. But, with the signing of the armistice, came a re-organization of work and equip- ment. Today we may find some two hundred boys diligently executing the various drills, games and problems, that will so materially make of them what the world, with its new aspect of its citizenship, so desires. In communication from National Headquarters the first of May, the Muskogee Battalion of High School Cadets was assigned to the 31st Regiment of the Southwest Division, and our band was designated Regimental Band for this organization. L l vvf , 1 101 'N I 'X ,fgwxzv 19 sw N431 010 51 74 qt, 5 X QWWWIMW y L'QL Bm . .. an' . P an IZ Wfsf fzj flpigx ,xii uw' f J'f x If I . 3 . 1?Q gww rf 1 I ' S Q .N ' 4 , 1- Sift- QQ X N ' ' '1 pc Yiwu, 'fy' f 'Q 3' - - A ',' . K 1 'Q ' ,U A 5 AQ f,,, 2 A f f g 23 . X .ff f AQ ' A zfff1f Was ,v , 'V Qld f H4 f '!1-:Zan X' U ' if A ,fl - V nl, 'zip' --. 0 'l A A ' , aff 65 6 'M -.S , X X V 'I , ' f f i 4 ,qi FRN ffl. mg X gil, 1 , . .,, 3, ' A - ,f A ffl , X ,f 'wx.515,fg,.l ' ' ' A .:'.-'A+ Ra Q-X , f f , f , .A 4: 3 x -M VL, 1 X i: l X , ,X ,I l ' . X -' f 7' Y il? 'X 7 1 f M J, X K ff I1 nj ' . x ,,c. L, .. 7,19 If -jf? , 1 5 Q , .Q-1 Q1 - i ' I , A f'JfW Z' ::h Ii '4 ' , - 1 '- 1 f g l-.T 1' f-ff'f' g , 4' ?i:: K ,1i?' l?1'1i. :- V A---- rg? x - 5 L N-22:4 Q 6' f, 3 'df -ii 2-we gem v-1.2 sl RAGE 64 THE SCOUT IIMSN. WW'l 'if lll Will'llllllll1'il l'l1l'll' l l ll l 1lll'''ll l1 w,lIlll,',1Ill ' ,Il lullill1w , ' 1 llllll ll lll 'l Nl llwllllllfilllll ll WH ' Al4'I lRNlA'l'l VE TEAM. NEGATI VE TEA M. THE CHAMPION IJEBATEHS HE Annual Boys' Triangular Debate was held April 15, between Muskogee, Tulsa and Oklahoma City. The question for debate Was: Resolved, That the United States Government Should Continue to Control and Operate the Railroads. The affirmative side of the question debating Oklahoma City here was upheld by Luther Reid, Hal Crouch and Ralph Barney. In Tulsa, Central High for the negative was represented by Donald Wilbanks, Leon Hirsh and Theodore Keller. Both decisions were in favor of the Muskogee teams. Here the score was 3 to 0, and in Tulsa 2 to 1. Honors like these are what make the record of C. H. S., and it is to the efticient coaching and geunine interest in debating that make such victories possible. C. H. S. THE SCOUT PAGE '1iiiwiiiyiiuwiwilil 11'1 1 1 '1 1 ' 1 l l llllllll l l'1'IlllWWllllllllllllllllllllUi1Y1WW'WWl'l'lI11ll1l11lli1illiN1NimMlulw,llmiwi ill l ll llllllll ll lllllllllllllllllllllilillil 1.1f Ili?-llhililmllHlrlfliilill THE Al l IRMATIVE TEAM. THE NISGATIVE TEAM. THE CHADIPION f ill? L D EBATER S N the night of the 25th of April the Annual Grils' Triangular Debate was held with Oklahoma City and Tulsa. The question to be debated was, A'Resolved, That All Immigration Should be Prohibited for Fifteen Years as a Post War Measure. The affirmative team, composed of Dorothy Disney, Lolita Pace and Marguerite Swanson, met the Tulsa negative team here. The negative, composed of Edwina Blackwell, Gertrude Bonnell and Elizabeth Wagner, met the Oklahoma City affirmative team at Oklahoma City. Both decisions were a glorious victory for Central High-at home our girls Won 3 to 0 and in Oklahoma City 2 to 1. The success of the teams this year was due to the splendid coaching and spirit of cooperation. Central High has a record in debating which shows the high standard of C. H. S. studentS. PAGE 66 THE SCOUT C. H. S. llHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIHlllill1HHllilllUlllllll1Illllllllll1'llllllllll11lllllllNllllllllllllHillllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlll1lllllillillllllllllllllllll1l1l1l1lll'l1llllll'llllllllllllllll1lllllNll1llllllllllllll1i1xllllllllxlllllxlll1lillwlllllWllflllllllllllilllll THE SCOUT BEAUTY CONTEST HE Scout Beauty Contest was a great success, not only in the high school, but it excited great interest throughout the city. The Exchange Department shows that the beauty contest idea has been adopted by many schools in all sections of the country. The prettiest girls were tirst selected. They were: Dorothy Livingston, Anna Furry, Cecelia Durscherl, Pauline Donnell, Lillia Lee Hendrix, Martha Silverthorne, Lillian Coe, Louise Keaton, Muriel Williams, and Annie Ruth Bowlin. From these the three most beautiful were chosen by vote of the student body. The result gave Lillian Coe first honor, with Dorothy Livingston and Martha Silverthorne running second and third. , The winner received a leather bound copy of the Annual, a five dollar cash prize and ten Broadway theatre tickets, which enabled her to give a box party for the other nine C. H. S. beauties. The beauty contest is the first of its kind ever held in this high school, and its out- come is another proof of C. H. S. pep and good taste. .Z BALL SQUAD. FOOT 1918 HE T C. H. S. THE SCOUT PAGE 69 li1'1lilllllllllllllllll1llllllMll.1HHllillfllli.lllllll1illillllllllllllllllll,lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllIilllllllhlwlllHllfllillH1V11ElllNN,llllHill1l11'li'I2'lhilll3llllllililllllllllllllllillll!lHillllllllllilillllllHlllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllul J CHAMPIONS OF EASTERN OKLAHOMA BASKET BALL HIS Basket Ball season has been a very successful one for the wearers of the Green and White. Although at the first of the season they had no coach, our men were victorious with a few exceptions. Later in the season Coach Faulkner took the players in charge, and the C. H. S. defenders, backed by such a competent coach, won the championship of the Eastern part of the state. Our seven first string men were: Captain Bower, Barton, Gilliam., Hooker, Tomlin, Deck and Burnell. The substi- tutes were: Smith, Seibold, Bell, Fahnestock and Wagner. The Eastern State Basket Ball Tournament was held in Muskogee High's gym, March 7 and 8. Friday morning the game between Tulsa and Coalgate was forfeited by Coalgate, she failing to appear on the scene of action. Sapulpa forfeited to Muskogee on Friday afteroon on account of her failure to appear. Okmulgee, after a tight game, defeated Ramona 40-32, thus eliminating Ramona from the tournament. Jenks and Checotah fought a close game Friday night, resulting in Jenks carrying home the bacon by a score of 43-27. The defeat put Checotah out of the contest. With her usual ability Muskogee defeated Miami Saturday morning by a score of 27-19. Miami was out of the race, and Jenks was put in the same boat with her Saturday afternoon by a score of 42-30 by Muskogee. Tulsa completely defeated Okmulgee 72--29 the afternoon of the same day, thus deciding the championship game to be played be- tween Tulsa and Muskogee that night. The house was packed for the final game and much to the delight of the C. H. S. rooters, Tulsa, after a hard fight, was defeated by a score of 32-29. Thus Muskogee won the Eastern State Championship, and all honor is due the boys who won the shield. ' The State Basket Ball Tournament was held at Edmond March 14 and 15. All 'teams in this district having forfeited to Muskogee, she entered with the championship teams from the seven other districts. Muskogee lost her first game to Anadarko 32-30, but as Anadarko won the tournament the Muskogee basket ball team has the distinction of having lost to the champions of Oklahoma alone by a margin of only two points. , , 1 1 'vyy N 4 PAML '70 THR SCOLI ff. H. S. IlllllllllllHllllH1lll'IlllIlll1Illlllll1lllllllHll'll,,, l, ,ii , ,l ,,1, lt, l,llllll.,llllll,,lil ,ilillllllllllllllifl I2 . illlll1lliilll1llllIilll1illliilillllllllllllllllllllillll ll. il lui .Milli i liililiil www, llllllll.i,lllllll.1i1KiililllllIllllll11lHLI1lllllilillrllllllilllll THE CHAMPIONS Ol OKLAHOMA BASEBALL HE baseball season for C. H. S. has been very successful. The team won every game played, and in the base ball tournament at Norman easily carried off the state championship. The base ball shield will rest in C. H. S.'s trophy case another year. The team has had line coaching under Mr. Faulkner and together with his able direction and the fine playing of the boys, it has been a very successful year. The line-up is as follows: Veale, third base, Bower, second base, Barton, short stop, Deck fCaptainJ pitcher and left fielder, Cloud, catcher, Gilliam, first base, Hardin, center fielder, Ringsdorf, right fielder, Tomlin, pitcher, Hooker, fielder. FOOTBALL The football season last fall was shortened by the flu epidemic. The team was composed of experienced players and did well for Central High. Slaight CCaptainJ, Woods, Barton, Burnell, Bower, Deck, C01-mack, Montgomery, Walsh, Henderson, Gilliam Wanasek. The subs were Smith, Tomlin, McLaurine, Edwards and Granger. Our team played fine football throughout the season and Coach Rickard was a great success. TRACK HERE was a good turn-out for track this year, for the boys were very desirous of making the team. Almost all of the old men were gone. Knowing this many boys thought that they might take the places of the men who had left school. They toiled every evening for several weeks and when Coach Faulkner was ready to go to the meet at Norman, he chose Burnell QCD, Slaiht, Smith, Hirsh and Harrison to rep- resent the Green and White. But success did not attend their efforts. Their best en- deavors proved futile in every event. X 4! l 1 f if AA U V.l V U LK i nf' BoPuBLrcAg,4 l N5.xxXXX W-5.3 V 4 THE A NNU A L STA FI' THE SCOUT STAFI F, M ,, 1 PAGE '74 THE SCOUT C. H. S. Il1lllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllHlIlllIIIHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlIllllllIlllllIllllllllHlllllINllIllllllIlIlllIIIIIHIRHl11ll1llll1liilliifillnllllNIHNNINI,Nlllhilllili11lHlNlNllHHlllllllllilIlllNiNNNNNxNxllllllllllHwWNNllNliUIhl!lHIlIIIIll1lllllllxlllIlI1ill!Il'iHl!,?i HAL L. CROUCH, Editor Scout Monthly LLWYD C. SNYDER, Bus. Mgr. Scout THE SCOUT STAFF HAL CROUCH ,,,,... ..,.. , ,,,,,,,,,,..,,,.,,......,,,,,. , . ,,..........,...,,,.....,,,,,......,,,, ,,, ,, ,, ,,Edito1--in-Chief DOROTHY LIVINGSTON ,..,,,,,,,..,,..,,,,, ....,,...., ,,,,,,,,,.....,..., ,...,,,,,,,,..,,,,, , ,....., , , , Associate Editor RUTH SMITH, ......,,,,.,..... . DOROTHY DISNEY. ,... . LUCILE STRUBLE ...,..,... ELIZABETH PALMOUR, ,,,,, , CHARLES CROSS ,,.,..,,,,,,,,,,,, SARA SHEPARDW, ERLINE BUNTIN, ,, . CONTRIBUTING EDITORS. CONTRIBUTING REPORTERS. LUTHER REID ..,.... .,,,,, ,,,..,.,..........Y,...,.....,,,,...... ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,....,, , , . THELMA COVVDERY ,...,.,, FRANK LANE ,,.,.....,.,,,,,,., JOHN LEEKLEY ,,.,.., THELMA MINTER. ,... , LLWYD C. SNYDER ,,,, CARL HERBER ,,..., , , . GLENN SILER ...,. ,, GUY GRIFFIN. .... HELEN WELTON ....,,, CLARA JENNINGS .... .,,, MARY HANNAH .....,,,,, I. J. BERKEMA ,,,,,,, MANAGEMENT. Literary Editor Assistant Literary Editor ,, ,,,.,,...Local Editor , ,,,. Calendar Editor ,,Athletic Editor ., ,, ,..,..Art Editor . ,, ,Exchange Editor ,.,,,,,,,,,Milita1'y ,, ,Feature ,,,,...,.,Senio1' High ....,,,,,,Junior High , Junior High ....,,..,..Business Assistant Business ......,,Assistant Business Assistant Business Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter Manager Manager Manager Manager ,, Stenographers .,......Faculty Adviser Monthly was Q mg f ' ' if Q1 Ahnvrtxmn QW SEQ gy ri AN D in Q 45 Q ilhzatturrn QW Q5 L5Qi5ZQ2 3 262 g5Q Q,f 52735 mm QQQKSZSQQZZQESENQQQ I I N I WN MVIIH U'-.N!.'l:1HHl'IKIIMEHIIiiIIIIII1I1IIIIIMuHlN1Mnu1H'Z'.l.l.IlMlIEhEl'n.1lu H HHWI HN IHHH 1 1 WWWIIIHEW 31 rc1fza.m'l-bfi -..-- NUSKOGEES EQEATES., Sigma' ++ + +++ , YSERAIDPJATES VACATION AND SUMMER NEEDS CERAHAM-SYKES WERE NEVER BETTER PREPARED TO TAKE CARE OF THE GIRL GRADUATE FOR HER VACATION AND SUM- MER NEEDS THAN THIS SEASON. HERE SHE WILL FIND EVERYTHING SHE MAY DESIRE- OF THE MOST AUTHENTIC STYLES AND AT MODERATE PRICES. ,m1H'WM H I N N I N WNW!! IW E112 Qzcfhzmgn zriinmrl I awk Cmuskugce, 0Bklz11ru1nn , , M ,. , ,. IWIW' ' I .21 'IHWNWWWNHWiMI I I' W 3 Capfmz - 3150, 000. 00 Surplus - 350, 000. 00 11IwI,11IIIIII1IwEHMHHMHHHHWN NWIMN, ,SHUI II'I1I.,E1IIIIIIIHMM1HIiiHHI1UxM: I 11' MN C NMIIIHW i IIIHIIHHHIHHIIHIHIHII llll HIIIUHH llllll HI l I IHH!IIHIIIIIIIII1IIINIIIIIIIIillllllIIINIIHIHIIHHIHIINIIIIIIIIHHH!IIUKIIIIIHHIUWIHIIHH NN WH IUWYWWH NWWHWIHWIIIII. IWNWHWIIIIIIIII Lx PAGE 76 Advertise made thi book poss bl C th m your p t IZ ' ' V V 'lllllll' llw lllwllilllllllllllllll' illiIlllllllll'l1'IllllllllllllllIllNill'lMl!llllllu1l'Z:Rl' V Vwillllm ,illllllwilllllwlllil 1 'll1ll l1' V' ' W 'llll'llllllllllWi1:i1lR 1, A I B Kelly - Springfield Tires Know No Equals. t th ' lves in Material, Workman h p d st Is the Cheapest. Motor Tire SL Supply Company Opposite Severs Hotel Best wishes in M2155 nf 1919 9 O 9 ky. Qvilzrs upplg Ql,111IIPZI1Ig l l Mlg PAGE '78 THE SCOUT C. H. S. IlllllllllllllllllllillllVIIIHlHllIHllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIFIIIIIIIIHIIVHIHllllllllllllHlllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllPIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllll CLASS PROPHECY By William Tisdel. FTER the theatre party, we Ca few elderly personagesj were gathered around a table in the Princess. The few were Henry Knox, Mrs. Genevieve Knox-Burnell, Katherine Hays, Cortright English and Joe Bailey. As soon as our order was given, the Honorable Henry J. bellowed out, What the thunder's become of C. D. and Treve? Joe Bailey: The last time I heard of 'em they left the stage, took the kids and beat it for the seashore. Catherine Hays: Speaking of Treve reminds me of the Senior play. What ever be- came of Cecelia Conway? Mrs. Knox-Burnell: 'fShe has an income of four letters a day, and is continually raving about some Jim person, and has ever so many beaus in uniform. Joe Bailey: She didn't have as good luck as Elizabeth Wagner-we ought to be proud that we graduated in the same class with the first woman president of the United States. Remember the campaign and the stump speeches 'n'everything! Miss Hays: And to think that Ellen Lovell was named Secretary of Education- WONDERFUL! Wm. Tisdel: Speaking of successes reminds me I read of another classmate who has just made a big reputation in journalistic work out in California. You all remember her, Alberta Edmondson? She is now Editor-in-Chief of the most progressive maga- zine in the United States. V H. J. Knox: I s'pose that's said for the benefit of my rejected scenarios. Tisdell: Not at all-we cannot joke about your work, since your latest romance has proven so successful. Mrs. Knox-Burnell: By the way, I had a letter from Dorothy Livingston last week, which said she had been chosen to fill the place in president of some International VVoman's Society. She always could manage people. Joe Bailey: So could you-you managed two, so far- Tisdel: You haven't got a thing on Jewel Dougherty-last I heard she had turned down a dozen for some Thompson boy-Fred, I think his name was-now a Major General. ' i '91 Miss Hays: Major General? And to think-Hubert Hauser, who would have graduated in our class is now holding the exalted position of janitor in the First National Bank of Taft. English: 'AWhat became of Thelma Cowdery'? Knox: Haven't you heard? After she finished the University of Arkansas, she went to Harvard, made leading lady in a play there, and graduated with honors. Catherine Hays: You know her brother married Lucille Struble, and they are now society dictators in New York City. Mrs. Knox-Burnell: Do any of you know how Maybelle Crews is getting along? Catherine Hays: Yes, Maybelle is teaching in Tulsa. A. C. English: And how about Rachel Pittman ? Joe Bailey: She has become one of the leading business women of the East. She ' CContinued on page eighty.J ,M E- J Q'WiiHiiiiiiiiiliWWHiiiI'lllliiHH'?7i'lillIWiiH''XiHiHHHNWNNN'NNNNNNNNN'NHHNWWIIHHWW IWiWiiHWHWNHWHHHWVWIW!HiHiIiHHHWNHiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNNNNHWiiHNUKHPIIViVNIiNi1ii1iiiiiiiiiViiiiiiiiiYiYYEI'i11lVillHI!IlIIf:U'I'lllIHHiiliigi Make Your Summer Vacation Profitable i Phiroll in 'Frm Klolnncx C'fm1Mi:1u'IAi. CoI,LEGE at once. i Gregg Shorthand g Rowe Bookkeeping NVQ! teach Typewritiiig' by rythni drills-that is, by music-and have two pianos for this purpose. Also, we instruct the students of 2 our Stenographie dopa1'1n1ent in the use of the Dictaphone. e li In additioii to our rorfiilar Hookkee ning and Accounting' course f . Q 11 7 we instruct the stufh-iits of this departniont in the use of the 5 5 Burrouffhs Adding' and liistinv' Machine the Bl1I'I'Ouf 11S Ledger is P s 5 7 33 in 1 1 Posting Machine and the Blll'l'0llg'i1S Calculator. L iWe olTc-1' an expert C0ll11Ji0Il10iQI' Course. E Q QXZKAVI11' Qnffzffmffnvhfcgngye E UN CORPORATEDD 2 Olrlalmma's Jim-I fl0lllj2lf'ff'lLIj Ifquippefl Business College 2 R. S. BLAUNT, Mgr. Telephone 35 IEiiiiiiiiiii i,i'iiiii'iWihii1! 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiwiihiiiiiiilllvi,ihiwiliiNi11iiNill'iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiilVW' lvl J WhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNWN' i NVH5' WHiiiiiiiiiiiiWWiiiWHiiiiiiiiiiihilliilig -'Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronage. PAGE T9 L+ , PAGE SO THE SCOUT C. H. S. llllllllllllHHIHHHllHHlllllllll1llHlllHillHlllI'lIllllllllllllllliwllIllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllHlllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllNlllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllHillllllllllllllHlIll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIH!!llllllllllllllllllllllil CLASS PROPHECY. fContinued from page seventy-eight.J is known, too, as America's occasional poet. You know she wrote the class poem in 19193, Mrs. Knox-Burnell: Got a letter from Mildred Wrigley. She says she will spend the summer in Maine after a long concert tour. She is America's most famous violinist hy now. Tisdel: 'tAnd Helen Welton is now playing the pipe organ in the First Presby- terian Church in Chicago. She always could play. And Theodore Keller, you know, has just finished the tunnel under the English Channel. He and Mace Harrison are to-- gether on the deal. Mrs. Knox-Burnell: t'Some one told me that Lou Anna Childers was making a big success as a singer in the Metropolitan Opera. ' Catherine Hays: Yes, she is prima donna in all productions now. Joe Bailey: f'You heard about Bennie Slaight! Got his arm broken playing in the Yale-Harvard football game. He has played four years straight now-made the team the Hrst year. Does anybody know what became of Albert Russak? Tisdell: 'tYes, he is now director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Some job. IIe and Garnet Trent were in my Physics class. Trent runs a saloon in Chicago. English: Yes, and Leon Hirsh is running a Bolsheviki newspaper in Russia. Catherine Hays, Have you heard about Mildred Randle? She organized a road show with John Newlon, and the pair are GOING SOME. Make a hit wherever they go. Tisdel: She used to go with Lillia Hendrix. Where is she? Mr. Knox: She's Mrs. Bower now: they have a nice cottage down at Palm Beach. Mrs. Knox-Burnell: Did Charlie Cross graduate in our Class? You know he's president of Yale now. He was in the Forum. Joe Bailey: Say English, how did those Wall Street flyers comeout? English: Well, I boosted the stock in mountain canaries and cleaned up a cool million. Nothing unusualf' Tisdell: t'Speaking of things unusual. Did you know that Marie Bullard is now court reporter for the League of Nations ? Catherine Hays: I was out in San Francisco last summer and decided toltake a few dancing lessons-and whom do you suppose was the teacher? Frances Warren! Henry Knox Qscratching his headbz Good Gosh-well, we've located most of the class of '19. Catherine Hayes: l've kept a list of the seniors of '19 and all those not mentioned this evening were in a mob scene when I starred in 4The Chamber Maid's Revenge'- William Fox production. Of the ones in the sketch it might be said that A. C. English is a captain of finance. Joe Bailey is a scientific farmer in Illinois-specializing in hogs. Mrs. Knnx-Burnell is a grass widow of two experiences, Catherine Hayes owns a large group of confection- ery stores all over the United States. As for me-well, I have nothing to say. fu IWWWWWWWWH1WWW1WWH!WIHWNWW'IIUIIHHWHNWUHNHHNHWIHHMHNNNWINIIHIiNNNNHNNNWNNHIIIIINNNHHIIIHIIIVHMxillNllIHHHH1llHHI W WN N I XXI A DOLLAR KODAK BOOK FREE AT- Uhr Glurin Nnnk -KODAK FINISHING T -The Heath Way ' ' 'MMHWMVYY,IMNMMNNHxWiHWW ii lwNHHwV1 IWH :iU'1WNW1vxv ,J:M,, W. M Jw MMU1' HWWNINHHE M,MH,Mxww11wllw!.K.:mw1.!miHmJ. N 21'MNN'1NWHWHWWWIH- U1MNHHm'W!W1U'1U I IM COHENOUR-RSYGEL C0 S JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS WW 212 West Broadway SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO SCHOOL CHILDREN'S EYES SECURITY STATE BANK WE wANT Youre BUSINESS El El El w,wN1MHNMNH1I!w'Y1 '1uMH'iHwHMiMlxN1 r w1wNIIIIUWMWw?W1l'HNH1 I ' wMU'lmNN I I ' www, It doesn't take a SALESMAN to sell DRAPER 8z MAYNARD CD. 8: MJ BASEBALL and TENNIS GOODS Because no one questions the quality. Warner-.Iones-Webb Hardware Co. Successors to The Merchant Hardware Co. 410 West Broadway Muskogee, Okla. 'Vl'RmW1MI1W1WWWIIW1IEWHIIHIIHHHN WiXv5lHHHiIkHll1RlwVNHWMHWNW W WWWWMWMWWNUWWWNMMWM 11 I 1 MM tu wHHmuunmemiuMm1:wHmuMH111AmMmmumummw: X Advertisers made this book poss bl G' th fm your pat g., PAGE 81 Q WNHWNWHMHMHWHWNMNHWHWHWHI HHHllHHi1WHNM HH HWIWHWFIHWNHWHWVINI I HWHMMWHWNHH lllVHMNINlWHWHWlWHHWnMdHmHWuMll HMM wartzel Furniture '5 . E DISTRIBUTORS Fon 3 DETROIT JEWEL GAS RANGES i DUTCH KITCHENETTE KITCHEN CABINETS - Trade Us Your Old Pieces of Furniture on the N ew Pieces You Wish ' to Buy. We Trade Any Time. R TZ E L ' 312 and 215 West Okmulgee YOUR CREDIT IS HWHH GOOD HHHHHHVHHHHHHHHHHHHHVVJHIHNNJNHMNNHMMNHNNHHMM,NVJHLMNNNMUHHMNMNULJIWMl'MMHHLlHNl'WlVHf lWHHfJ'HHHHHWMHHHHHHMHHVMWU'HllMMHHVTqVHHYUYN,'MNVNHHHHHHHMHHH 1 3 Q95 ' A I .,,, H EAUTY ' I X -HHS? ' fum .ssl masses X ' . 1 :saws .RQWSBHCQGQS , .X s xi . 4. .nl ,Eg . . - , -- qu Txxlxxxxnsa Ladies' and Growing Girls' Oxfords and Pumps in Louis, Cuban, Military and Low Heels, Welts and turns. We have them in Brown, Black and White Kid, also White Canvas Pumps and Oxfords. Nettleton, Dalton and Beacon Shoes for Men in the popular styles. Prices the lowest for quality. A ODEL SHOE STORE 205 WEST OKMULGEE HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHUHUNUVMHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHll VHHUHNHNNNlNNNWMHHUUVHWHMNNNHHHHMMMMHMNHNMNNNVWHHHHHHHHlHNlHHHHHHHHHHHHHHMHNHNHNMMMIHHHHHHHHHHHHHHNH ,,u . 1, r I l I 1 PAGE 82 Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronag if :U NH x lllllll HH H llllllllll lllllllllllll I ll lllllllllllllllllllll H WW HMM l W HH HW l ll l lllllll l l lllll ll l l X Your satisfaction means so much to us that we guarantee it We couldn't if our merchandise were not so dependable .4 We Varsity models Gif is 5 Mew Always lead 1D Style 1 122: Iad - Q-3 .j:,j:15:-. '.-, 5 2: 'Qi Qi-I 9 V. 5' ' fflffz UU know h0W Populaf the tfQQ1iii.f3'22,122,511 2' Qi 'gillfglrfj-12325555.51 ,'-' ,iq . :h u Hart Schaffner 8: Marx Varsity suits always are. ! lA : :lr This season they're more dis- tinctive than ever, as this I 1 illustration shows. You'll like if fi5fiQifE5lifl1Q,l1i:'fA , the new pattern and fabrics and the 1919 refinements in tailoring. They're all-wool-- guaranteed. Waist-seams They're the style hit of the seasons You'll find a great selection here-single and double-breasted models by Hart Schaffner gf, Marx. We'll be glad to show you. Max Davidson The home of Hart Schaffner Sz Marx ,...,,., . ff! r g E .A 5 ' X1 iff E 'ff I 1? A 1 K ' a X lf Q, G ' 1 'lu 1: f. 2 Jg'?.f 5'J'Q-ax 2.555 f W 'lik , an t Lv 4, ,:.1 tg 1:.11 g.Ie.f:-agfgz lutai :.1: f f::i1:z:u5?1::z1w :1:f: 2 :iii 1': :.:f::..,.: 5 :':A:- , Copyright 1919 Hart Schaifner 8: Marx -Manhattan Shirts -Imperial Union-suits -Crofut and Knapp clothes Hats 11xww.maeminw1111.rites111w1Ymx1x11www1111:11xN1I1miwimwwummxu1Nmwmm11111 1:::x wim-.wwwuxumuH mxummummumuwmm mx ummmwwmullimwuxs: ' Mmlil Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your pau nage PAGE 83 5 4, PAGE S4 THE SCOUT C. H. S. IIIHHHHUIIIIHHIllllllllllllllflfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlHHHIHHIVHHlllllrllll lllllllllllllllllllllllHlHlilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllwlllllllllllllllllllllllllllluillrllllllllllllHlllllllllllllHlllllilllllllHlllllllllllllllllill-lllllii LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT .V EAR ye, and go tell the World, that we, the simple seniors, of the conspicuous remainder of the most magnanimous, delectable, logical, sophistical, pretentious, diligent, and unscrupulous class of '19, being in a fallacious and insidious state of mind, and finding with painful excrutiation, that we are forced to abrogate from these dim haunts of Minerva, do, like the children of Israel, depart from our own dear paths of learning to take our place behind the counters of Kresses, Dunlaps, Futtermans, Head's Upstairs Shoe Store, the Misfit Clothing Company, George's Quick Lunch, and at the helm of R. D. Long's green tinted hearses, and We therefore with tearful eyes and joyous hearts do hereby emblazon before the pure harted, innocent and ambitious Juniors, Soph- omores, Freshies this, our first, last and only will and testament, to-wit: Treve Wimer wills his fatherly ways to Joseph Thompson. Ted Keller wills his position as Lord High Everythingelsen to Hal Crouch. Lillia Lee Hendrix bequeaths to Mary Walker all her ardent admirers, except her own dear f'Spike. Clara Jennings and Christine Bradley bequeath their promise of commercial success to Ceatta Snyder. Mildred Wrigley wills her way with the men to Katie Mae Askew. Jewel Dougherty bequeaths the copyright on her favorite phrase, Judy loves 'oo! to Lavina Wysong. To Frank Biggs, Dorothy Pugh leaves her Spanish translations. To Miss Barton, Zoria Reed bequeaths her lisp. Anna Belle Perkins bequeaths her Latin to Ruby Milam. Lois Wiley bequeaths her beautiful blonde hair to Beulah Jackson. To Tom Swanson, Cecil Shadley leaves her powder puff. To Charlotte Beard, Mary Hannah leaves her bashful Y. M. C. A. secretary. To Lola Laning, Alma Morgan leaves her deep mysterious air of success. John Fike leaves his long pants to Oscar Bass. To Annie Croom, Lillian Howes wills her love for the boys. Pearl Jobe leaves her demure disposition with Hazel in the ofiice, to distribute to whomsoever she sees tit. To Clytie Ogden, Carrie Merriman leaves her death-like devotion for Alberta Conklin. Pauline Merk bequeaths her blue sweater and style of hair dressing to her sister Beulah. To Marshall Ringsdorif, Orlando Mertz leaves his strong mental capacity. Alberta Edmondson leaves her A's in every subject to the person worthy of the said grades. Rachel Pittman bequeaths her vamping red hose to Mary Sylvester. Catherine Hays, Frances Warren and Thelma Stetler will all their capacity for having dates every night and then looking as fresh as a daisy next morning to La Danta Drake, Elizabeth Palmour, and Juanita Peters. Gerald Monaghan and Joe Bailey gladly will all of their wild and wicked ways to Harvey Hopper, Paul Avery and Hank Slaight. Marguerite Swanson and Lou Anna Childers leave the Blue Moon speedster to Ruth Ingram and Helen Chaise. Garnet Trents wills all his eloquence of speech to Walter Humphrey. QContinued on page eighty-siX.J X W WWWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWW W W W W W WWW WWWW WW WWWWWWWWWW W WWWWW WW W W WWWWWW W W WWW WW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW W WWWWWWW WWW W W1 WW WWW WWWWWWWWWWIWWIWIHIWIEVWgi W S T O U T Z B R O . FILLING STATIO Q3 lf ,yr Succcssors to Hudson Oil Co. 110 EAST OKMULGEE AVE. USPECIALU STRAIGHT RUN GASOLINE MOBILOILS AND GREASES The Gas with the Pepa and Mileage. Made from Muskogee grade crude. Home industry all through. TELICPHONE 81 These hot summer days when you want a refreshing dish ofthe best Ice Cream made- Try Our Special Brick Ice Cream That our cream has been seruedfor the past three years at the High School Cafeteria is proof of its excellence. The Muskogee Ice Cream Co. WILSON CLOTHING CO. VVILLIAMS, BURCH 85 YANKEE, Props. HFRAT' Suits for the High School Boy at Popular Prices Second and Okmulgee Avenue X 'WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW1l.WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW 'i WW'W WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWI''WW'WWWWWWHWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW W W WWW WWWWWWW WW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWFUIFIIIIIIIIWWIIWWHIWWllllzill PAGE 85 Advertisers made this book possible. Give the y D trona high V lg o PAGE 86 THE SCOUT C. H. S. HHNlllHillHIHlHlHHHlllllllIlVlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIKlllllIlllilllillllll11llllilllllllllllwllllllwllllllllllllllllHlllHllllllllllllH1IllHIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIiI1lIIII!IIIIII1IIlllilllllllllllllllllel11MHillMNHHNHlllllillllllHllIlllllilllillllllllllillllllllllllllllllllli LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. QContinued from page eighty-four.J Jewel Winiford Wills her good looks to Edna Gerber. ' - Anna Wisdom and Velva Courtney leave all personal belongings of any value to Anna Furry. . Edwin Hastain bequeaths his extended knowledge of the raising of-bees and of farming to Robert Fahnestock. - Sam Burnell wills his ways with the ladies and his blonde curly hair to Gabe E. Parker. Sula McKinney and Nellie Milburn bequeath their record of always getting here on time to Lillian Coe who has a record of being late four out of five mornings of each week. Mary Lillian Campbell and Helen Welton bequeath their ability to 'fjazz her up on the music room piano fwithout being caughtj, to Annie Ruth Bowlin. Beulah Hosmer leaves her all Freshman admirers to Gertrude Bonnell. Mildred Randle and Ellen Lovell bequeath their ability to bluif through history six to Leah Holcomb and Sarah Tyler. Cecil Ogden leaves her athletic ability to her little sis. Lucille Struble gladly wills her prize medals in art, to Sara Shepard. Thelma Rosebrough and Alberta Conklin will their majestic stature to Sybil Calla- han and Gladys Pugh. Charlie Cross wills his position as class infant to Roland Erdwurm. Dorothy Livingston, Genevieve Douglass and Louisa Caswell will their extreme compatibility to the rest of their bunch Raymond Holcomb wills his elegant physique to 'tDucky Deck. Leon Hirsh, Clifton Barron, William Tisdel and Cortright English bequeath their brilliant minds to be divided equally among the entire Freshman class. To Franklin Runt Lane, Mace Harrison regretfully wills his dignified carriage and quiet ways. ' Ruth Smith, Ruth Ingram and Cecelia Durscherl will their future success as teachers to Nettie WVestbrook, Lucile Downie and Elizabeth Thompson. Marie Bullard bequeaths her curly hair and brown eyes to Leah Holcomb. Maydee Bryant bequeaths her general knowledge of all mankind to Marie Lamb. To Louis West, Williard Bell wills his 6-feet, 3-inch stature. To Margaret Anderson, Jessie Reece wills her studious qualities. To Helen Griffin, Irma Hinds bequeaths her excellent ability to serve efficiently both Mr. Reiif and Mr. Prager. John Newlon bequeaths to Harold Pound, the right to take care of all the pretty girls in class of '20. Malcolm Rosser wills his exalted views on every topic to Luther James Reid. To Lee Swindler, Ruth Scott modestly bequeaths her protected eulogies of her ancestors. Ben Slaight wills his seven-league boots with which he raced toward graduation to Bernard Breeding. Cecelia Conway bequeaths her place as the breadwinner of C. H. S. to George Seibold. X Albert Russak leaves his awe-inspiring appearance as director of the band to Fred Perkins. K QContinued on page eighty-eight.J I HW! W , HWHWM DEPOSITS GUARANTEED CENTRAL STATE BANK Deposits Mau 12, 1919 JS'I,245,8I8.94 LOUIS RINGOLSKY PHONE 1136 A VOEGELI, Watchmaker L-R Jewelry Store WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY Hapairiing a Specialty 223 WEST BROADWAY E MUSKOGEE, OKLA. Where a Few G0 Where a Few G0 ZOWBDWY ez NEW A N u HEA T THEATRE Where a Few G0 Where a Few G0 ,WllUlM!MHl lllwhlwmwlil ,N Ywlmwl 13 M , 1. , ,. HH ,lWWUwWWH1ilWU'WU'llllhllflillllillllllll Alix Saga: CH' The son and his dad will be better dressed if his suit has Kuppenheimer Label. - KEYSTONE CLOTHIERS ALEX I. MOSES 206 West Broadway ' ' ' V' V 1' V NNW l '4'1w ' V WV w ' lfffllllfilf' Ad -'t - made this I k ll Give them your fmatvonum-, IAGE 8 PAGE 88 THE SCOUT C. H. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllIIllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllilllHHllllllllHilllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIllllllllllllillllilllllllHHHlllllHHlHulllllllllllllllH'IilllHIlIllIrl1lilII LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT'. fContinued from page eighty-six.j Arthur John wills his perpetual optimism and his graceful dancing to Ralph A. Barney. In order to restrain H. S. from annual despondency, Maurine Everly wills her un- challenged vivacity to any member of the Junior class who will uphold her record as a mirth provoker. To Miss Cory and Mr. Hannum, we gladly leave all of our unexcused absenses. Donia Brock and Doris Jay will their undying devotion for each other to Ruth Sinkes and Carrie Brewer. Ruth Brown and Thelma Cowdery will their high positions in the Senior play to Muriel Williams and Phabrice Montgomery. Elizabeth Wagner leaves her ability to state her points clearly to Edwina Black- well. To the janitors we regretfully leave all broken seats in the Auditorium. Mary Grubb and Bernice Woods bequeath all their wild times to Lorena Sickles and Albert St. Clair. Henry Knox bequeaths his imagination and his master hand at writing themes to Hollis Price. To Mrs. Callahan, the Senior Class leaves all that's left of the dear old library. J. C. Hunt bequeaths his many friends in C. H S. to any one who lacks a goodly supply of them. Helen Hayes wills her quiet, demure, old-fashioned ways to Bernice Brunson. Mattie Lyne wills her ability to expostulate for 45 minutes without taking a single breath, to Karl Staner. - Leota Malone bequeaths her Karl to Erline Buntin. Helen Maxwell wills her new ruby ring to Dorothy Disney. Maybelle Crews bequeaths her numerous neck pieces to Marthel Mayes. Donald Wilbanks wills his bashfulnessf 'IJ to Granville Tierney. Bertha Waldon bequeaths her ability to skip without being caught to Maurice Dickens. Clarence Bowers, better known as 'tSpike, bequeaths his talkative ways to Fletcher Gilliam. Carmel Brinkley wills her rosy cheeks to Vivian Crouch. Thelma Cowdery Ruth Brown Helen Welton Henry Knox We, the undersigned, do joyously swear that the above epistle has been unduly looked upon with all due solemnity this 12th day of May, 1919, P. M., and we proudly sign our John Henries to this, a most masterful document. Lovingly yours, Witnesses, to-wit: Dorothy Livingston Ruth Brown Mace Harrison John Fike X llwll1Hlllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllll llwlllhlllllll lllllllilllllllm, i !1O l mwlllllll i1lllll1lllllllllllW lllll! E m w ul 1' NlllllllllllllllllNWWlWl1llllllllwl1lwl11lNlxllllill1llll:Eiillllllllllllllillllllll l JEWELRY SILVERWARE DIAMONDS T. MILIAERL TRAVELING BAGS WARDROBE TRUNKS LUGGAGE l Hull ' l '. Juli' I in 'Will' ll 'l' ll l' If 1 , GOOD CLEANING, DYEING AND REPAIRING Cherokee at Callahan MUSKUGEE, OKLAHOMA Phone 433 AUTO REPAIRS QI If you want real service, we are as Well equipped as any house in the Southwest. We have the best mechanics that can be secured. ff We also have Z1 complete line of Accessories, which gives our customers the advantage of not having to pay for added expense of going out to local accessory houses to secure needed parts. 11 We have Rayfield Carburetors that will burn any gasloine and Vulcan Springs to fit any car. MUSKOGEE GARAGE Advertis made this b k 1 ll l th m your 1 t PAGE 89 Ji V T. H.wK!lWHuiY5HU HVHEBHMWHHNHIIIXWWN ! '2':V1f '1W W W HH, N W H WN N H W HW HM HHHWHN N W Y W WW HWHHH E1 When in Need of- PLUMBING WORK, STEAM OR HOT WATER HEATING ' Remember The O'Connor Company 216 North Main Street Phone 40 WWW W1! i1!U1!lMWihi 'N ' N 1 , ,tm 1' A m ,J ,t w :mm WN WM , , M ,H,HHQHWWHH 'H 'H'WN BROWN'S C. 0. D. GROCI4lIiY AND BIARKET TWO STORE'S 318 West Broadway 404-406-408 West Okmulgee Phones 3450-3451-3452 W W W W W W WN WW W I 1 W Twenty Stores in 0klaho1na's Rich Cotton and Oil Belt DUN LAP BROTHERS The Best of Everything to Eat and WV ear -at the Lowest Prices in the State ,,,,z'.xum1'rf:,m..f1:: N111H1x1um1111x1111x111ww1w11N1NNxxwxxxxwxNN 1ruu.m:m,Mu1: 1 MN 11Y111'11wwN1x11uma.H1mw'uuw11 1 HIM HN ,- PAGE 90 Ad 'tl made this book D bl G th m your 1 t g 55? A540595- THREE STORES Make Our Store Your Store N wi'lV.Hw l' A , V mu 11 'dw ' r W. ,-U 1 Take Advantage of our Easy Payment Plan . . . 1 eewwnneeweeeeeweeeeewe eeee'eeeeewnneeeweeeee1eeee1Neeeew1eeen1wee r 'ereln T ELEPHONE 142 r eeleeeeeweeeeeweeeewweeeew' eweeeeeweeneexeeel u wnnlsn r ww T, 0. Bass Furniture Company T Y. DA HOBO rlHHMNNWWWWWWWWWWY'WWWuWNNIHWHHNWMHHHM WWW''MV'-MHHW W H',,1P!m'IvI' I The Commercial ational Bank Muskogee, Oklahoma as Flin: -I, we EEKQQ JHUHHB aw ww ' , ,,,, 4 f,f,f 4 ? ge, T W W HH FQ ' Eg 9' H Q HIHW EEE X if Hwgui w u H, ,EQ .551 sl T t ma a lm-MWF 9' fQfQ 2 a s,1,fQ,Tg , LM ,f oz 'Q-gf 5 i t-i m fliziif' ' zzz,-41,3-.32- s j-:':1g,g1' H::.h-'- m ri-1-f -0 -f v -.-is-, 'f:aQ 'f-- :Y -T- --T' TLx?5f3fQE? ,fgTi3'TiififizfT -L 'V V Four Per Cent Interest on Time Deposits The Bank For All The People .,I1i3lM,HHM'l'1w'W'1 ll1wWHMNHNu1lNl1 imllhlwl' HMW1.Hll1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWN1NNNNNWWNIHMHWWHIV X,WI1WiWWWWWWUWHMUHRiiuMHN1m,',1Ni1,,N J '31?1HM1W ': ''W1WWWIW1W'1WWW11WWWWWYNWWN1WWWHNl!'!HHHV Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronage. PAGE rf, 5 A+ X IWWWWWW WWWW WWWWW WWW W WWW I W W W W WW W W WWW WW W W ra John Lumbard Tire SL Supply Company WWW WWW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW W 'MWWWWWWWWWWW W WWWWW W WWWW W W WWWWWWW WWWWWW W Good Shoes For Less- FARIQ. 61. P1XX'NE 312 West Broadway WWWWWWW ' W .'.. 'WIWWFWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'WWWWWWWWWWW'VWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'-WWWWWWWWWWWWNWW' i1,'WWW'WW'WWWW'WW ,WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!IWWWWIWWWWWWWlWWWW WW,WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIW 106 West Broadway-Phone 1388. W Stop on your Way to schoolg shop between cars. RED CROSSU Shoes for Women. BLACK CAT', Hose for Everyone. '6EDUCAT0R Shoes for School. DRY GOODS and FURNISHINGS BJWWWWWWWWWWWW'WWEIWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHWWWWWWW W WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWEWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWlWlWWWWWWW!WWWWWWWWWVMEWWIIWWWWWWWWWIWW'wWWWWWWIllWWWWWWWWWWWWWWII WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWW IIIWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWI PAGE 94 Advertis made th b k p bl GQ th m your D t 5, X WWWWIW 'WWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWW WW WWW WWWWW WWWW WW WWW W W WW WW WWW WW W W WWWW W Wx Q ,Q HHfH W M H MHHH W , OUNG Men and Young Women know that a foot Well dressed in a perfect fitting shoe is necessary to tone- up the appearance of any costume. Our Walk-Over Shoes are distinguished for their good Htting Features as Well ' as their style. We've every variation of widths and sizes and our expert shoe service is a guarantee of satisfaction. WWWW IWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WZWW S5.UU TO S 1 5.UU WWWWWWWWWIWWWW' 'W' W WH W WWW 'WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW i i', W1 WW W W W 'W W' WW WWWWWW 'W',' WWW '1 ' W' W iii, -,WWWW1IWWWWWWWW'WWWWWWWW The Shop 2 The Shop 3- WALK-OVER BOOT SHOP 1 Ahead 213-215 WEST BROADWAY Ahead soo1ETY BRAND and LANGHAM-HIGH Clothes for YounoqJMen W ,HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,.,i,iiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiHiiiiii,,iHii,iHr,,iiHiiiiiiiiiHiiiiHiiiiHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, E.-.J NEW PHOENIX CLOTHING COMPANY W WHWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW' W W 3 I' WW WW 'Wi WWWWWWW WW W' WWW W W W WW ' W W' ' WW W W WW ' ' L Ad t made this b k p bl G th y ' p t' g PAGE 9' PAGE 96 THE SCUUT C. II S illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll3lllllllIP11lllllll!llllllllllllllllliwilllllllllllllllll1HillllllllllilIlllllitllllllllllllllllilllllllllllIIllllllNlIIlllIIIIlIIIlIIIVllllV4IllII'llIElllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillilllillllllllllllllllll nillllllllllllllllllllll 1 6 GGREEN STOCKINGSU l N March 28, 1919, the Junior Class presented Green Stockings at the Hinton Theatre, under the-direction of Miss Pearl Buchanan, instructor of Public y Speaking in Central High School. CAST OF CHARACTERS. CELIA FARADAY ,,.,......,,,,,., ...,,,,,,,,,....,,,,,,,...,,,,.....,,,,....... ,, ..Murie1 Williams COLONEL SMITH QWobblesJ, ,,.,,,..,,.,...,,,,,..i..,, ,.,.......r.,.,,,,,,r,., C emu Hunt MRS. CHISHOLM FARADAY QAunt Idaj .....,,,, Phabrice Montgomery WILLIAM FARADAY .....,,,,,,i... ,.......,.,,...,..,..,,,, , . ROBERT TARVER ,,,,,,..... PHYLLIS FARADAY ,,,..... ADMIRAL GRICE ..,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,.,, MRS. ROCHINGHAM 1Mad,f:eJ, ., ,, LADY TRENCHARD fEvelynJ ...,,,,, MARTIN ,,,,, , ...,,,,,,.i..i.,,,.,......,,....... . J NMES RALEIGH ........ HENRY STEELE ...,... Joseph Thompson ,. ,,,.,, Harold Pound .,......,.Juanita Peters ,,......Granville Tierney ,,,.,..Mary D. Meredith .,,,,,..Leah Holcomb ,,,,..i,,,,Car1 Bloom ,.,,...Harvey Hopper ..,,.,Roland Erdwurm xl I I IIIIH-1,VIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1 III I1III'I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I1II1Z1IIII1II IIIIIIIIIIIIITZIIIIIIIIHII IIM1111111lI11,I3l,'1I1I11'I,TIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I'l1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I Im THE GIRL GRADUATE ' VI 11' I ' ' 1 12 MII' ' I' 'Ii' I ,I'I'iIi IIIIIII1III1' 'MI IIIIIIIIIIIIII To or fl'0ll1 tl1cl1igl1 sclmol will 110011 appropriate zippurel and 2ll'CGSSOI'Il'S of dress. 'Tlic girl who Qntrusts her needs to CIIHIUIIIZIS will lizive thu szitisfzlctiml of sell-cti11g fl'O111 IXIllSk0Q'l'U,S l2ll'Q.l'USt and g'1'c-atost stocks, backed up by illl i11toIIig'c11t suwicc QQLQCQHQ L WILL THE SPIRITUAL, MORAL AND PHYSICAL PROGRAM of the YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION l'laVe 8 place in YOUI' College afld worle-a-day WOTIC1? Added floor space, new equipment, High YH Club and a program suited to I'IigI1 Sclwool Boys is the New offering of the local YH, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II lg II IIE Kd t d th b ki bl C th y 1 'L 1, PAGE 97 in iWWZiWWWE!Wl! WWWWW WW W WW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWM W W WWW W WW WWl'lWWW,WWW I 1 1 W WWW W W W W W WWWWWWW WWW W W WW W WW X1 1 Uhr ilinuniain BROADWAY AT POSTOFFICE Agency Martha Washington Candy, and many other leading brands The most complete line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco Prices are right Our Fountain is up-to-date and Service our motto WW W W W W WWWWWWWWWWWWIIIW'C'rw'WWWWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWW'WWWWWWWW1WWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWW WWWWW WWWWWWWWlWWWW frm Sport Svhnp MUSKOGEE'S ONLY SPORT S-HOP WWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWU'WWW!WWl WWWWWWWW1!1Z?1'.l.1RWWWW'WI11 WWWWWW WWW WWW WWWWWW WWWWW WWW W WWWW WWWW WW WW WW W W W WWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWW WWWWWWW WW WWWWWWWW BOYS- Iguritan Glafv THAT'S ALL All Kinds of Automobile Repairing Oxy-Acetylene Welding and Promptly Done Carbon Burning Car Washing Supplies and Accessories Tire Repairing MILLER AUTO REPAIR CO. Tom Spaulding - R. L. Whistler GAIIIXGE GASOLINE FILLING STATION 809-15 W. Broadway Phone 2520 WwWW1WWWWWWwWw:l:z:1w:'WWW'1s1WW'W'I'WWWW1WW1'WWW'W1WWWWWWW1WWWNWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'''1WWWW1WWWWWWW1WWWW1WWWmWW11Wu1:WW1'W:W , MWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWV'WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWQWWWWWWWWW1W1WWWWWWWWWWWWW1MWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWI''WWWEWWW13 WWWWWW5WWQWWWWWWHWWWWIWWWWWWWWIZWWWWWWWWW W PAGE 98 Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronag xlllHHllllllHlHllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIIIIIll'l'lll!lllllHlHillllHllllHllllHlIIIlllillllillllllllllllilllilllIHllllllllHHllllll1l1llllllllllllIHllNll1lllllllllll'Illlll1llilllllillllllilllNHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNllllllillllllllllillllllllllllilllllillllllllllllllllllgl l 1lPretty white dresses for Commencement Week or the materials to make the gowns as you prefer, are here in wide range of choice. All of the accessories you will need for that week of busy affairs are ready for you in the various departments of this store. IlThe young men of the graduating class will find in the Men's and Youths' Department complete outfits of smart garments. ll.We strongly advise a visit to Chandler's for your Commencement outfit or for anything in the way of merchandise the entire family may need. CHANDLERQS l l l l l ll Will llllllllllll l ll Hill .' I ' WH V'llllllHHlli lIlllll!l V'l lHil1wHlllll !Hlli,3l I Hill! I Ill lllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll LOOK A New Cash and Carry Store WE SAVE YOU MONEYU CRESCENT CASH GROCERY 223 North Third Street ll I ll llll ll lllllll V HW l lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l Hlllllllllllllllllllllllll ll lil lllllllllll Will l lllllllllll lllllllllll l ill l ll Hllllllllllllllllllllllll ll lllll l l llllllllll llllllllllllllllllHilllilllllllllllllHHWillllllllllllllllllll The Muskogee National Bank is a good old reliable institution. It has been here many years and is getting better every day. It has deposits of over TWO AND ONE-HALF MILLION DOLLARS and appreciates the splendid encouragement from the people who live in Muskogee. This bank believes in the educational facilities of Muskogee and the enterprising school board and the excellent teachers. If you look at things like we do come in and give us an ac- count and we will be glad to see you : : : : A. C. TRUMBO, PRESIDENT lllllllIHHIHLWHIEHIllIHillllllHllllllllllllllllll!VlP!HllHlllll1llllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllillllIllllwllllillllllllllliiillllillllllllllllllllllllllilNNNNNNNNNNN1lNNNI1HilllllllllllllllllllllllIllI1llllllllllllllllllllfllllililNNNl11NlllllllllllllllH4lllllllllllllllllllllllil Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronage, PAGE 99 PAGE 100 THE SCOUT C. I-I. S. I IIllIllHIllIIIH1IVIHNNHHHINHIHIHIIIIIUH W WWWWHNWWWWNWWWWWWWWNWWNNNNNNKHHHIIKIIINHNWH HIHHII UHMNW WWWHMNHHIII AIIIIIIIIHHHHIIIHHHWWlllrlll!IlH1lHWHHH!WUUNHUIIIIIIIIUNHHHIIIAIHHHHIIIIIIIIIHUII fy A ,ff.,- u ,-., 5 4,5,f.f,:q-kr, .-, ' K K s 5.-1 Q5 K f 1 'W-Q . ' .1 .. 4 U- ll fan: fi . ,, QP'-T ' , ,M ,. ' 5' ,L , J - x Y' 4 f X a 33 5 l 5 X 3. 5 fa-kr! - ' -334' 'gyff v In 6, , '.ff-L vig ' 35+ 5 .V 13,8 L L X Q I 63' hm, , dt ,, - f ' , r Q , W - 3-f, -.1 f A Y, 1 5 ara? 4 A 4 44 ,0, Os ' 'is an aft' :. - Qxyxt , . X im x M Us Q ,ji ' ,4 . ., v, -I ., SS , , 2 ,L,L, f -. Q f - V, eq S 1 .. Eff kk . It A E5 -ws- ,- fa, :fm K Bi IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIVIIIIILIIYIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIl!lIIIIIIIIIIIII!!IIlII III IIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF SHOES FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS WE HAVE SLIPPERS ESPECIALLY FOR GRADUATION CASH SHOE COMPANY 217 West Broadway I I II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII' IIII I'C,IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII I Igiw mw ook Wow FULL LINE OF TEXT BOOKS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES COMMENCEMENT GIFT BOOKS Equity Bldg. Phone 845 Main and Court E Phone 1625 B1euer's Jewelry Store 309 W. Broadway Muskogee, Oklahoma IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1 '! I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II I JWI, HI' IIIlII'I f,'N 'III , ,I I I1 . '1I ',I. YI I 1 ' I,!lI.2.II 1I,,IIIIIIIIII' i LENS GRINDING AND X 2 MANUFACTURING I Ax Q ,E-:jig OPTICIANS yh I I LENS DUPLICATED ow 5-rymf' RKRYP-I-CK 3 Western Optloal Company Phone 239 MAglygftislIIIIIlIIlL2IgIQ!ItL I S IIIIQIII IEIIIIIIIIIIC IIIIIIILEIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIITIIIIYIIIIIIIIIIIIQIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I I II III IIIIIIIIIIIIIQERIQQQIIIYISIQIIIIIIIIIIIQ PAGE 102 THE SCOUT C. H IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIII II I I I IIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIl'IIIIIIIE'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIII'.fIf,:IIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CLASS NINETEEN By Rachel Pittman. 9 SING not of the warriors brave and bold J Who fought in battles far across the seas, Nor sing I aught of woods and flowers and trees, . Nor hunters strong, nor seekers after gold, - But rather, those who with a greater foe I Do daily cope with French and History, With Latin, Physics, Math, and Chemistry, Essays of Emerson, and poetry of Poe. Conquerors they, of all, who yield to none, Heroes ofthe pencil and the pen, Doubtless will be famous men and women When through life's narrow way their course is run, So that from mouth to mouth the word shall pass, They were members of the glorious Nineteen Class. For who, think you, can with our Keller vie, Whose versatility surprised the school? Or who compare with Tisdel, our class fool, Who can a smile evoke from every sigh? g Demosthenes himself could hardly cope With our Miss Wagner in an argument, She leaves all opposition crushed and spent, And sad, without the vestige of a hope. Though our Lou Annafs sweet, melodious voice Doth hold us all in a magic spell, A Sweet Dorothy Livingston, whom we love so well Shall be beloved and remembered long. Yea, at a glance 'tis plainly to be seen, All these are members of our Class Nineteen. LEAN Wy A Q ' v 4 1 N .s' . A , L3 ' ' .v5.4'Q4 . .. N ,Q - ,,..v. .4 fl as ,'f: Q:,.-sx.4 'l - ' tv, G- ,X 7 .1 Try' I, .av 4 , , lx WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHlIIIIIIiIW!l1WWWWWWWWWWWWWlWlWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWNWWWWWHWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWli IIIWWIWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWW WWWWWWWWWHWWIWWW WWWH iWWWlWWWl'WWi l:WWWWWW'Wl1lWW' IW WWI! WWWWWN THE WHEAT, OATS AND HAY CROP Promises to be large. H. WALDO Is prepared to handle his share of it. WWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWW WW WWW W WWWWWWW WWWWWWWW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWWW WWWWWWWWW W WWW W ll II WWWW WWWWWWWW W WW W WWWWWWWWWWWWWWW W W WWWWlW WlWWWlW WWWW WW WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWWWWWWW WWI W W WWWWWWWW WWW WWWWWW W GIBSON Sz HULL LAWYERS Suite 1010-13 Barnes Bldg. MUSKOGEE W WWWW WWW WW W W W W W WWWWW, WWWWW: 'WW W WW W Anything in Clothing for Men ...AT.... 1 . . MCCLURE 104 West Broadway Advertisexs made this book possible. Give them YOUT vatronage illWllIlllilIWWWW'nill'l:!n'1lI11lKIlWI1:WW1WW1'1lW!IIWWWWWlWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWlWW1WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHWWllllllllWHIIWWIIIWWWHWWWHWWWWWW WW I Ill WWIWIIWIIlWlliW1HlWWWWlWWWHWWWWlWWWWWWWWWIWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWIWWWHH1WlllIl1WWWHIH ' -- - ' ' X PAGE 103 V r P I i V PAGE 104 THE SCOUT C. H. S. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIHHl11llllllllllllllllllllllllWH!llHI III H11 ll llllllllllllllllilllllIHHIIIIHIIIIHIIHIHlllllllllllllilllllHi!II!lIII!Il!11l1ll'HIlllilllllllllll Hi I Hl Hlllll ll I Il llil VllllllU!H!IllllHHHIlllllllllllllkllllll I l l l 4 Some suggested as a title for this page, Ten Years Ago Today. Others suggested, Future Belles and Beausf' We believe, however, a more fitting title would be, UROGUES' GALLERY. -A-i I?III!!!!!!!!I!!I!III!III!!!I!!!IIIIIII!!Il!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lIIIIIIIIIIIIII!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!l!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!! ! !!!!!!!!!! ! I!!II!I !!!!!!!!! !!!!!! !!!!!!! ! !!! !!!!! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!! 5 I!i!!III!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'Il!'!dl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!'lIIli!?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! EUROPEAN JOE H. NETTLES, Prop. E STEAM HEAT ELECTRIC ELEVATOR i 85 MODERN ROOMS 30 WITH PRIVATE BATH O Telephone in Each Room A S Corner Main and Okmulgee Ave. Muskogee, Okla. ' A. Fabbro Marble and Tile Co. TEN YEARS IN MUSKOGEE ALL OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED Phone 2982 P. O. Box 711 110 North Fourth St. I!!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!I!!I!I!I!III!!!I!!!I!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Il!II!!!IIIII!II!!!!!!!!IIllIII!!!!!!!!!!! I !!! I !I!III!IIIIIl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!III! !! !!!!!!! I I! II III I IIIIIIIIIII I! I! !!!!! Adver ' , mm I 1 !!!!! X! tlse made this book possible. Give them your p t L PAGE 105 ew gif EQ gm if-1 EO gc: EE iw 31 en: P-lt-ll-ll-lb-ll-1 U1rlkC1OlYJP-JKCCOOOQQUXNSOOLQP-1 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23: 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 SENIOR SUPERLATIVES Joe Bailey-The most all-around boy. Willard Bell4The tallest. Ruth Brown-The best speaker. Clarence Bower-The most faithful. Christine Bradley-The quietest. Carmel Brinkley-The most retiring. Donia Brock Doris Jay Maydee Bryant-The chubbiest. Marie Bullard-Curliest hair. Mary Lillian Campbell-Best hearted. Louisa Caswell-The best vamp. Lou Anna Childers-The most talented. Alberta Conklin-The babiest. Cecelia Conway-The most phono- graphic. Velma Courtney-Most unassuming. Mabelle Crews-The fixiest. Thelma Cowdery-The best booster. Charles, Cross-The smallest. Genevieve Douglass-The most all- around girl. Cecelia Durscherl--The grinniest. Alberta Edmondson-The smartest. Cortright English-The fairest. Maurine Everly--The slowest talker. John Fike-The biggest nut. Mary Grubb-Pinkest Complexion. Mary Hannah-The most studious. Mace Harrison-The best collector. Edwin Hastain-The least concerned. Helen Hayes-The most care-free. Catherine Hayes-The most ladylike. Lillia Lee Hendrix-The most beloved. Irma Hinds--The most distant. Leon Hirsh-The biggest argufier. Raymond Holcomb-The skinniest. Beulah Hosmer--The most congenial. Lillian Howes-The best teacher. Clara Jennings-The most American. Arthur J ohn-The pinkest. Pearl Jobe-The least troubled. Henry Knox-The most accommodating Dorothy Livingston-The prettiest. Ellen Lovell-The jolliest. Leota Malone-The most capable. Gerald Monaghan-The most business- like. Helen Maxwell-ReiH's Special. i The chummiest. Pauline Merk-The meekest. Carrie Merriman-The best acrobat. Orlando Mertz-The best carpenter. Nellie Milburn-The most charming. Alma Morgan-The onliest married. Sula McKinney-The loftiest. John Newlon-The most foolish. Cecil Ogden-The best Girl Scout. Anna Bell Perkins-The most reserved. Rachel Pittman-The best Poetess. Dorothy Pugh--The most unknown. Marguerite Swanson-The most con- vincing. Mildred Randle-The best dancer. Jessie Reece-The most unobtrusive. Zoria Reed-The lispiest. Thelma Rosebrough-The most aspir- ing. Albert Russak-The tootingest tooter. Ruth Scott.-The most aristocratic. Cecil Shadley-The cleverest. Ben Slaight-The laziest. Thelma Stetler-The daintiest. Agnes Swanson-The prettiest hair. William Tisdel-The biggest Beau Brummel. Allie Treece-The most domestic. Sam Burnell-The slowest. J. C. Hunt+The most adventurous. Theodore Keller-'tPooh Bahish . Lucille Struble-Most affectionate. Garnett Trent-The most self satisfied. Elizabeth Wagner-The brilliantest. Helen Welton-Most optimistic. Treve Wimer-Most executive. Anna Wisdom-lilost inquisitive. Mildred Wrigley-Best hearted. Don Wilbanks-Most innocent. Frances Warren-Easiest pleased. Bertha YValdon-The most independent. Lois Wiley-The deepest blush. Jewell Winiford-The best artist. Bernice Woods-Most preoccupied. Ruth Smith-The slowest to decide. Malcolm Rosser-The biggest grouch. Jewel Dougherty-The rarest jewel. Mattie Lynn-The calmest. Clifton Barron-The most loyal to the stripes. 51 IWlliIIIIII W W IIWIWWWIWWW WIWIIWII I IIWW IWW I W WWWWW WWWW WWWWWW W I W WWWW WWWWWWW WW WW WWWWWWWW WW WWWWWWWl WWWWWWWWWW WWW WWWWWW W WWWWWWWWWWIWWW gliehmizrl aiming nmpang We bake the kind of bread that makes mother stop baking. DELICIOUS HOT BREAD AND ROLLS 210 West Broadway W W W Photos in this book were made by O 6 Htvrann Qin THE LARGEST IN THE SOUTHWEST BRING YOUR FACE IN hum Filip Making a specialty of High Class Portraiture and finest Commercial Photography combined. Ask about our Special Rates to Students And we also give 20 per cent off on any of our prices to 'returned sol- diers and sailors. Phone 847 Now Or call and see us at our quarters at 41615 West Broadway llvlilllllllmmrwiizn11WI'I:W111I1:lulrllululllmmu1H1I.W111WWWWWWWWWW1HWWHWWWWWIWHUWWW1W1I11WWW1W1WWIWWWWWWIH1WWW1Wim'.IWa:Wax'1U1WWWWW1W1lxillswilxWAWmWmW1WW1WNN111HWHWWWWHH1rmzimimzfllzxtmWmmmnmWWWHWW1W1NWWWWWWWWNWNWWIIWWIWW 1 lx Advertiser made this book possible. Give them your p t PAGE 107 pf , PAGE 108 THE SCOUT C. H. S W IHHHH1HHHIHHHHHHHIIHH111WHIIHIHIHWIHZEHHWNHHHIHHWIHIHHHWHHHTWNHIHHH!!HWHWWHWH!WMWMWWIIIHWNUNWNNNHNMNHNHNNMxMNHN'HIIIIIMHHIIIHHNUNNNNNNMNHw'NNNNHNHHMNMNHHHHNNMiHNHHHH!!MNMWHIIIIHHHWWH W .. N 1 1 - .,.,, .. .... .,,,,,,.V.. w L4 XX iMlNlMwHlNlMlNlHwNlMlMlMlNlMlMlMlMlMlMlH'MlMlMlHiHlHluMlUlm1V il 'I' f'llNlH,,iHiMlHlHlM,Miiw,VlHlHlMlMlMlU,,,'lEHlH nlMmJ,M,L, l1,'JlN 'V V lk1JlNwNlHlU1HlHlNlNiMlMlAlLlN1TlHfUlH1wlHH!Hl Dil YE OLD RELIABLE JEYVELEIQS J. M. MCENTEE 8: SONS, Inc. EXTENSIVE DEALERS IN DIAMONDS We operate a Diamond loan i, department and are enabled thru . . . E X A 1 hods of Diamond banking , . . I. f Om mfft . . . mg our Diamond bargains befoie ,Q to 0581, Clean propositions m , Diamonds at a substantial sav- ing. Allow us the privilege of lay- lwwgff you at your earliest convenience. 4 'WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE Ol WATCHES AND JEWELRY I ESTABLISHED 1905 306 NV. OKMULGEE AVE. Y MASON SL ETTER MUSKOGEE, OKLAHOMA DISTRIBUTORS OF GOOD CIGARS WE HAVE EVERYTHING IN Furnifure .. Rugs .. Draperies Quality an5ACharacfer Wi' , 1 Esc 'Bef lolf-1, 9 runnnvns coumnv U mm. ,lil 4 l lHUHHWHHHHHHHMHHHHHlHHNHHHNMNHUVUUNWHNHUNNVELMHNMJJLM'HM,HHMNUHMANMUNNHHHMHUHHHHNMMHNMNHNMMMHldl K JwMll1 ,HUHUHUNNHNNHHNUHMMHMHNNUWWNHUNNNNNWNNNl 3 Advertis made th b k p bl G th y 1 t PAGE 109 ,EJ PAGE 110 THE SCOUT C. H. S IIIHHWWHillillllllll!lllll!I1lHHH!H!HWHHH!WHHWHHMWIWHHWHHHHHMH!WHWHWHHHHHWHWHHH!HHHHHHWIIIIIIIIHHHNWHNWHHllI!lHWUI!!VIHHIWHHMIHHIIWWMHWHHWIHWNHHWWHHHNMWNMWNHIHIII!Il1U!l!i W in in 1, Lg ,,..,4, , THE STORE THAT MONEY ead's Upstairs Shoe Store IVALK A FLIGHT AND SAVE A SB We carry a complete line of SHOES AND HOSIERY for every mem- ber of the family. Two Entranccs Second Floor Fite-Rowsey Building 1035 No. Secondg 20855 W. Okmulgee J. CIBALDWIN MECHANT TAILOR TO YOUNG MEN Style and Pep you all like at Ready-Made Prices HATS AND HAHERDASHERY KODAKS AND KODAK SUPPLIES Qllark Brng Qlnmpang 204 West Broadway LARGEST STOCK IN MUSKOGEE Amateur Finishing PEABODY ELECTRIC COMPANY GOOD GOODS ELECTRICAL -- FOR -- ZOSB HOME, OFFICE, AUTO, FARM Adyertisers made this book possible. G' th 'm YOUI' PHI PAGE 111 , , 4. Y PAGE 112 THE SCOUT C. H. S. HIQHIIIIIKIHWWHWWWHUWWWW11WW1UlWHH1Wl'IIl1.1HI HMlllliUi1Hl1MlIl,IllnllH!luJH'HMH1WHMiW'H111,HRHWWIKI!WHHSIIIIHHWWH1H1HNHNNHMWHNMHMIIIIIIHIIIHWIHIHHlUNlIl!EW1WNWNIUIILHIIIEIINHIIHHIWHQHNHlIHHlHllllIHHH4I I A-1 ,,4 A .A 'Z' ,NEW WWW1WWWWiWWWWWWWWWW1W11WWWN1WWWWWWNNNNNNNNN1HWWWWWMW! il' 1 i1WWHWWW1WWWWWWHHHWNWHHHWH WW11iWW1WWWWWWWWWW1WWWWiWWWWW1W1WWWW1Wi1iWWWW'1ilHW'WNNiNNiNNINNN1ilH!WHHi'HlHHi'I' I ii iii'!'iHlMW'NH'l VHS' LET V +++ U5 V, , BE YQU3 V JEWELER Youyil find us reliable 1 gg Lgacigg, liberal accommodative 65' ' ' and appreciative JEWELRY oo. 333i nlin 'fq'flIJh'i1'f WM F DUGAN, Instructor Orchestra Furnished For All Occassions Phone 809 308 Metropolitan Bldg , w ' W ' WN' 1 NWNHW ii ,i1W,MM I il 'Y W NliH!NNMiiN 1, WI,41W,WWWWW1WWWWWWWiWW1iW1WWWWWWWWWHW11W1WIN1WNi11NNNN'NINi1NNNNN1WHHMHHMW ilN 1 CIW' PIGGLY WIGGLY ALL OVER THE IVORLD Wait on Yourself and Save Money, Time and Temper 322 Niest Okmulgee mumiil . l A t sets ie this book possible. L1 th t PAGE 115 ...il PAGE 114 THE SCOUT f'. H. S. IiIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIH'IIlI'l!lllli ,ilTE!ilEl,EllU'llll,ll' 'll 'l' 3 'l l!1llllllilli:lll ll' lllllllllllllllllli 1I1lll1'111 lll'3l!'llllw:ll' I' 1'wlll',l1 illwll ll Nl l llilltl'Illllllhlillll,llil'ul1l'Q 6 GMIS S SOMEBODY ELSE The Senior play, Miss Somebody Else, was presented at the Hinton Theatre May 27, under the able direction of Miss Pearl Buchanan. The cast was: CONSTANCE DARCY, the brilliant young daughter of Harvey Darcy, a multi-millionaire mine owner and proprietor of the Dareyville Copper Mills ....,.,Y,,....................,,...........,a,...,,.,.,.,,.,.....,i,...,,...,,,,., Cecelia Durscherl Ann Delavan, a reduced gentlewoman, manager of the Tuxedobrook Club House .,...,.... ....,,..,,,,..,,,............,...,,,...,,,...,,..,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,.,.,..,,,.,,,...,, C ecelia Conway Mildred Delavangeighteen-year-old daughter of An and Jasper Delevan ,,,, Lucille Struble CRUGER BLAINWOOD, Mrs. Blainwood's only son ..,...........,,..,.. f ..,,,,..,,,,.. Trevelin Wimer Mrs. Blainwood, a society leader of Tuxedobrook .,,a..,,,,,,,,,,...,,,, ,.,,,,.,, L ou Anna Childers Fay Blainwood, Mrs. Blainwood's debutante daughtei ',,,, .,,,,,,,,,,.. ,,,,......, F r ancis Vvarren Celeste,'a vivacious French maid in the employ of Constance ,....., ,.,....., R achel Pittman Freda Mason, a typical society girl in appearance ,,,..,i.,.,,,,i.,,,,r... ....,. T helma Cowdery Alice Stanley, a graceful society girl ...,..,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,, ,,.,..........,.. R uth Scott Mrs. Herrick, a beautiful young society matron .,o., ..,...... C atherine Hays Susan Ruggs, Mrs. Delavan's maid-servant ,,,,,.,,, ..,...... H elen Welton Ralph Hastings, a young crook ...,.,....,,,..,,,,..,,,,,, ...,,...,,,., J ohn Newlon John, chauffeur to Constance .....,,,,,..,..i,,,,,,.i,,.,. .,,,,.. T heodore Keller Jasper Delavan, an elderly scientist.. ,,,,,,,,,,a,,,.,,..,.....,, ..., ....,,,,,, ,,,.,..r............. W i l liam Tisdel Sylvester Crane, a diflident chap ,,,a,,,,,,,a,,,,,,....,.a,,.a,....,,..,,,,.,,,,,,,....,,..,,,,,... Raymond Holcomb Bert Shaffer, an enthusiastic member of the younger society set of Tuxedo- Cortright English brook ,,.,..........,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,,,,.,.i,.,,..,.,.,.r,,,,...,i,,,,,,,,,,,i,..,....,..,,,,..,,,,.. ng i..l.l,...,.,,l.,. ..,,,llll,l l ,llll l W, lllllliiiilliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, W W i iliilll H iiii i M N i l iiii H lllllliii iiiii iiiii iiiiiiii i i iiiliiilllii iiilllllilil T 1 T ,WiitCMiH,N,WMM,W,im 2 Robert Bebb Forrest Bebb M. R. Bebb, 'Muskogee 'Garnati rz 'C mpaml 5 Telephone 1754 310 West Broadway all it with lowers IElllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllflllllllll1llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllvlllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllfl' 'illlllllllillllllllllllllllwllllllllllllllllwllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllliiflllllI''ililllllllllllllllllllllllllll gl NiiHWiiHiiiiiiUHKIIIIIIINIIHWHHWiiiiklllllillliiiiiiiWHHiiiiiIMiiiiiiiHiiiiiHWiililililliliiii1HHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMHLIIIEEHIHHiii1iiiiNHIIIIHIIIHHIHNiNIH!HMNUiiNWiiiNHH1iiiiWiiiiNiiiiNilHHNLWNiiiiNHiiHiHHiiiiiHNliHINHHIIIIIHHiiiiiiliiiiiillliiiiiii QU HMiUHiiillliiiiiiiiiUiiHlllliiiiliiilllilliliililIIKIIIHIHHIIIIUHWiiiii1iHIHIkHI!HHiiiWiiiiiiiiNWHilllliiii'il'fl!!ELIIIII!HHWiiiNNNNNWHNNNNNNiiNNWH'HHUNNNHMHIUHIIIIIIIIIIIVHN1lllllillllilllxHIIIHIIHIHUIIIIIIHININillllillllilllllilliHIIIIIIIUIIIHHHQI Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronage. PAGE 115 W --if , 4- .4- PAGE 1 1 60 THE SCOUT C. II. S. ,ll1,Qlllllllllllllllllllillllwllll.llull w111,llllIlllll11w1wwl11llllullmlllllllllld' 3 lmllllllnillwii ll1lwllllllllwllllllluwl, Milli ,,,1w will l':JlIwIH,ni ,,,w illlm,liilll,,l' lltil 1 ' mlm w 'l 'l l l 1 'l'!',3,l ROLAND ERDYVURDI WINCS GFOLD lVIEDA,L Prager's Second Annual EHiciency Contest was held at C. H. S. April 25th. There were three students from Senior High School, six students from Junior High School, and six students from the ward schools. The judges Were: Mr. A. C. Trumbo, president of the Muskogee National Bank, Mr. Winders, Mr. Williams and Mr. Berkema of Central High School. Out of 3600 possible points Roland Erdwurni Won 3200, Pauline Minugh of Longfellow school Won 2592, getting second place, and Raymond Burchfield, a Junior high student Won 2516 points, which gave him third place. Roland Erdwurm did the Curtis Test in addition, which is an eight minute test, within four minutes, with only three errors. Nearly 200 spectators watched fifteen of the fastest rapid calculators in the state. Had we gone to Norman this year We would have brought back the honors in rapid calculation and concentration. .LL - X l lllllll llll l l ll 1 l l ll l l Geo. D. Hope dumber Co. REIECTED TAILOR-MADE SUITS Thrown back from express offices on wholesale tailors, Chicago, on sale at HALF PRICE lno. R. Douglass Misfit Clothing Co. 220 W. Okmulgee Ave. Muskogee, Okla. Build it now and get your Hardware from The Muskogee Hardware Co. 208-10 NORTH MAIN ST. TELEPHONE 1709 Everything in BUILDING HARDWARE, VARNISHES, GLASS, PAINTS, BRUSHES, BUILDING PAPER, TOOLS Largest Stocks-Lowest Prices for Quality and Quantity ' 1511lx111,xHxHlll1iHl11ilM1'illMxM11M1Mxw1imummlmumuziix11x'1M1ll1xMxM1wWlwmuwuum wx: lilllllllllllllli mmul1Hui1.1',' ' mul ' ,ml , , ii :W Al t -rs made this Look possible. Give them your patronage. PAGE 11 l l l l lll If P EIIIWMHHIMNHIHIQ N W WW N W1 WH WWWNWM WWI N WWHHHWWH!MHl1HWHMHMWWMHHW WN W NW WN NH N W HH HH! HWIHIN NHWWN WW M M WMU NWHHH Il VIWWHWHRWH 7 itat atinnal X. 15511113 J Hiuakngrv, Gbklahnma QD Capital, Surplus and Profits - - S 475.00000 Resources -------- 6.000,000.00 -OFFICERS-- H. H. OGDEN, President C. B. LIILLS, Ass'15 Cashier L. W. DUNCAN, Vice Pres. J. WV. HOONMAN, Ass!! Cashier J. P. SOLOMON, Cashier W. E. BENDER, Ass't Cashier BOARD OF' DIRECTORS V. R. OOss T.iT. GADDY . J. F. DARBY J. P. SOLOMON C. F. HUBBARD S. M. RUTHERFORD ROBERT L. OWEN L. W. DUNCAN H. H. OGDEN ALEX SONDHEIMER I-EHHH!1gm!g!gWlYTQN!NMHWWMHWI HNHWHMWN HWWHH ml Nwwu NliiilillllggfliliggniiiAPillWally!NNQQQQNNNQQIMQNNNLQNNNMNHNEH WWWgl-Illlllllilggllimiiziwliiigl L.....L. ,LLL J IHI WILL L. ASKEW CLYDE L. ASKEW S. B. HUDSON 1 HHN!! H EHUNHHHHHHHHHVHHHHHHHHHJIBNNMHMHMNMMMHNHHWHHHHUMMUHNNMN HHUHHMMMM HHMMNNHNNVNLH' VJHHllM 1 +b9?1CKhatf'.9 boxyly' ff? Q , 4' 54 xxlx ji THE SHR PRINTERYI conxrnmn GWALL MUSKCIGEE, UKLA., 71 igh Nrhnnl mark SPECIAL ATTENTON GIVEN TO NEEDS OF GRADUATING CLASSES I SCHOOL PAPERS, ANNUALS, INVITATIONS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, CALLING CARDS, DANCE PROGRAMS, TICKETS, ETC. NNHHHHM lMHMHUHHHHHHNHHNMNNU dNHNHMMMwd llN NNHNNN lHHl ' JHbHJVH3lVl l 'NU l lUHlMMl We are pleased that the 95W allowed on Typography of The Scout this year helped to Win in the contest for State Honors. ' KHHHHHHHHHHHHHNHHHNHNNNMNNHNHHHHHUHHWHMMHHJHNHHHUHHUNHHHHHMNNNUNNNNNMNHMHHHHUHHHHHHHHNNNHNHHUUMWNHdWUMNUMNHHNNNNNHHUHMNHNMHWHLVNHHNUNNHHNUUNNNHHMNNVB? IHNNNNNNNNNHHHHMHHHHMHNHHMNNNNNNNMM HNMMl ll VUIHVT HHHHNMNUNNNNNNMHNHHHHHHHHHMNUHNHUHNl HHlNlHHNNllHUNNHMNMMMHlNNN HHNHHNHHH lHllHlllMHNHMNMHNNlEg 1 J Advertisers made this book possible. Give them your patronage. PAGE 119. ,J.L..lL. I 1 r ? I V f I r w i 7 I ., JLHLYVL PAGE 1, 20 THE SCOUT ,1WWNWWWWWWWWNHHWWWWWWWWH1WWWWWWWWWWWNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNW:MM'IfIHW1M1W .x' W1NWW'W1WYYYUM1YWHU1YUWYYWWYYYWVUWHN'U'NWWNWWHNVW'WWWWNW ' 'IWWI WMM W I .1'1 1 mu, 4 www H N I, . H. WWWWWWWY1WYWWNWWWW1WWWWWWWWWHLJ?1HHiHhiHHH!'IHiIHM cm , ' s 1 s ,, . 3 lv. - 9 1 Q? Q., an A , f ehuw Nasa! 'fllihnt a ' I ' ' ri THE- MELANCHD N110 DA Nc ,Ng- - DAYS HAVE e 4 1- 5: . ,Iv caME Ja k 3 Ifpopuili cn? : X 0 , 5 ,,, , .5 AQ 1919-19 I!l5?Y'..b, ' f . ' ,f . RABLE ' f ou,naYf! if A MFNTIZENT. 5,3 I ' ,V 8lLl.lq Bdqa -rsk 1 Qvfb ,wf -Mwlwwwww gg 93 , AU WP Q5 f iz'af,zN L X , ,Z -X ff Illmq -4 X 'LGKEEK n f N69 4 ' 4 A , ' ' IS Un ' IM ', rms' IW fl ' rl f ' ' ' X KN I W 1 X A A I - ' 4 iff S SWB lu ,R mf P ' 4 XX , 'X' Yg,,,,,, ,-k , UQ! ..,h ,J A- ' 5,4 F Q.Jr x-' OVER THE 'raP Af 'V rlwfi W 'ff 'X' W1'rH ' 'A - 5 1 S C001 SUBJCRITIOIVJ BASEBALL VBAsKE'I'6AL: -ji ,BQ ' pew-ww 5- 19 V75 fvufiiis. , , ,.,,.p,.,Nsw fvisrfrxsk X ' 'Z' E LH FMR llll fl' 'Z , ll W- V - Lfsrvavsr -'fa A 'Q l ,J mf -1 f : f' 'I of 1- H - ' - ' Q WS! ,I .4 352515 as pw , QF ,, :L - iii! hiv fe 'jeaam q :fail - an k DEQ E mgg gg . 3 1,3 .2 I-I: D 1 ,E I4 W- IL :lo png .nr A, -Q., 5 'f .-' in ', f le Nffnvm sm an H THE 'Hu' 5 A Bonsai!! ' URC E5 Nas va CA nom 'T 5 APPEMA W ,Y wg vwxuf wuof Lmff' 'Q -, HJIVDRS. . A ,N . - W 16 x 2 'Q pENT HEI-F fr-1 ' S TQLZVERNMENT ' 35 Comb 5 A 'X QW POPULAR- Z in 'Wx f , if ., ' 'R xx,-, 'wyf sl MEM ybsif' ia' E ixgnf Qf '. , X' f if .. ' b w WWW I IN MN UMW!!! IH!! I 21 ITH THE PRESENCE OF OTHER ACTIVITIES WHICH WERE OF' EQUAL IMPORTANCE, AND OUR- SELVES ENGAGED IN NECESSARY AD- DITIONAL OCCUPATIONS, IT WOULD SEEM INEVITABLE THAT THIS BOOK SHOULD BE PARTIALLY IMPERFECT. FOR SIX DAYS AND NIGHTS THE BIG PRESSES HAVE SCARCELY STOP- PED A MOMENT, AND EVERY PERSON ON THE STAFF AND IN THE SHOP HAS WORKED UNDER HIGH PRESSURE DUR- ING THAT TIME. IF ANYTHING HAS BEEN OMITTED, WRONGLY COMPILED, OR INCORRECT- LY STATED, IT HAS BEEN VVITHOUT OUR KNOWLEDGE OR INTENTION. -THE EDITORS. I -L -ff- - ---S, I1 Nl I!.,121,HNN HlI?flEH2ll' EIYZYIHHWI1WWWWHIIWWNHIHIJI W1HWWWWWWWHWIIIINHNWWIH 1 H11 hr? nh 'V' V11 H- u N 'HYHHHMIMW1iW l'WWW'NHW'HHH' 'HHH' 'HW' 'WIWUI' ':lf'HWH'llH'1 'WH 4 X Mu IHXWIZIHIIHH'l !1WWWWWillilililllllHKIWWHHH!NUWNHHlI!lHWHWWHNIHWIIIHIHWWNWWWNH Wx' WW HMHWMLIE WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW1W1WWIlf!ZI1EHf5!l!HHWHlHWWWWW1WWWNNNNNNHNNNNNNNNNNNNINNNNNNNNNNNNNWWWNEWWHNWN gg if PRESS OF THE STAR PRINTERY MUSKOGEE Through The Years With Muskogee Central High .fucking Eaokauaacfd ---fmt! 14 .fdlwe f, - ,f -A l W . 7 L- 3: , - -'-7 .QU DDU UU g1:,g1,sg1g.13-f,474 335 g4g2s3'f:g.g:.:34 ll AJC! mmm mmm 5,3:,5ag.gg,fg7f 2:35 EIU DDU L. .JD DDU EDU ' UUE DDU D' In --I I-I -I' -I' L' EQ ggg ggg - ggg gggg E E H '-1-:::.-:1 --.- Mfr, , -:.':3:5,'5g1-,gg ,r--1- - A -E15-Erwin U 1 m mmm r' 15 ggg ggg SEE, SSH? F3125-ifiiffsf. 1 ' JQAEHI nu Ill ggi Ig EEE EEE - EEE' 9295 EI! lll Ill f f'-'Mi c e lllll ll f .- '. BH va' .,L3,-ggi: .'.v g--gg nn '-', n nu ff 4'-T-523 1'-.-a:-::f:1',f:5z1- ll ll :2lll315:1?, ' ll, ':: 5' E31:::ff?3A 1 :F -- , 35 9 ' or 'E H - E2li2f??i2:1523iiif! 'I'i i1-1,2-.:::.H -. - XY L wi ' 5 1908-1919 1966 1 Pioneer Reunion --1 October 28th-29th, 1966 THRCUGI-I THE YEARS WITH CENTRAL HIGH As the years roll swiftly on it seems appropriate to do a little look- ing back. This would appear to be the time and the place. All of us gathered together at this reunion have had a full and varied life. Zestful is the word for it. Our lives have stretched over an exciting era-roughly 70 years- 1896 to 1966. It is with this thought in mind that this little reunion brochure has been prepared. Few of us were born in the Creek Nation of the Indian Country. Most of us emigrated from adjoining states. We came with our par- ents who were seeking to improve their fortune in the new, raw coun- try of the Indians. A I remember quite well when the news spread, fin the little inland town of Stockton, Mo., hidden in the Ozark Hills of Southwestern Missourij tha.t the Nelsons were striking out for the Indian Terri- tory. This was real adventure and I fairly strutted before my stay at home companions. To reach a railroad from Stockton we loaded our few personal be- longings, patchwork quilts and kivers for the beds, such clothing as we possessed and a very few family heirlooms in a covered wagon and rode and walked the twenty odd miles to Eldorado Springs, Mo. At the Springs we boarded the MKT passenger train to ride to Nevada, Mo., and the main line of the MKT, THE Y FL YE R ! Fast Train X ' KAT R -f57fz,i, Y -430: if an T0 THE - NNW' ' mrs I NW' , - ' 15 nd1anT i . aww erntory lx TEX AS, , Mexico and Pacific i H h :HF grfig: Y .Aix of .jg ,,1.' . 9 P403 ff ' :. ,Nj!i 55 ifllii w s 5 JW li V 'Q . ff 1 'iwliz 1 if-f V -a - A NH w 1 O T x M? f,,WW Mlm pu , bb R 5- uiiii wagllel' Bllffet SlCBDBl'S. FTC S Q C. HAILE, Trail: Manager. . ip! fi, fif Iii Q . iw i i' e Katy Chair Cars sr. L0 f The Ka uns, Mo. :Ames sAaKtn, e P s ..g na a Ag.f.f. I ty Railroad and the Last Frontier, V. V. Mastersonj We arrived in Muskogee, Indian Territory, in October, 1906. I was 10 years old. To he certain to catch the afternoon train at the Springs, we had left Stockton at 2 o'clock in the morning and it must have been cold because I had a slightly ufrostbittenv nose when we arrived in Muskogee. Muskogee Indian Territory, in 1906, was a wonderful exciting city. To me, fresh from the Ozark foothills, it was new, huge, and pulsing with life and adventure. At the height of its boom houses were being built everywhere- streets were being laid out, utilities were being installed. We rented a house on East Okmulgee but when we started to move in it was already occupied by a more forceful renter. I think the thing that impressed me most was the mammoth welcome sign, lighted by electric light bulbs that stretched across Broadway just west of the M K Bc T track, also the Patterson Mercantile Em- porium at Main and Broadway, the row of shotgun store front West Broadway on the north side between 2nd and 3 s on rd streets. To set the tempo of our childhood I have selected these ads that appeared in the Century Magazine in the 1890's. Fasten the Buttons on YOUR OWN Shoes so they will STAY. . , 'ft we bn 4 x gullix. gg Wanted in every household: made of steel, nielrel X N plated. Full set, with cutting nippers, mailed upon recdpt of Sr.oo. Ask mr dealer for it. or wnte . Button Fastener Co. New Bl-ltnln, Conn. THERE IS DANGER I B WING OUT A A . The ulfewutarsgrlen haven slmggle extinguisher, Youhu-ndovm the wlckmd out egos e light instantly. These burns! nn large and dnoliilnlsh . I! your dealer does not have CUQDIEIIG li vents to the TIOKNEY 1 GILLETTE MIG. 00. 188 Wabash Ave.. Uhleago, Ill., and moelve one you pu: Be 08 me nfs mu. Agents wanted. IES' WHAUKENPHAST s BOOTS. HAND ' Common sense, .rqf2, easy end perfctjt. Q SEWED 1 , For ine trade-all sizes. Price 85.00 dehv- l ,V WEL-r ' ered to any part of the U. S. or Territories. Q'-Qt E Measure work of'all kinds. N M ., , Send for Circular. . . , ' 49 Leverett St.. BOSTON. MASS. As these cuts show are made to give the necssary fullness to ladies' Skins as and Spring. These Braided Wire Cushions are light and cleanly, and are sure to give the desired hair, wool and other THE NEW BRAIDED WIRE DRESS CUSHIONS f . B6 Centl. Empire H, 25 Canto. Juliet, 25 Cents. Three Bow, 45 Conti. heating and unhalthy substances. The will hold out the heaviest wraps. If you do not find them at stores we will send samples hy mail, post-paid, ou recei t of price. Millyiuus, dressmakas and dwlers, by enclosing their business card, will be sent samples for x5 cents each, with Pricelist of all our goods. Wxsrow Q Wsus Mrc. Co., xxx7 Cherry Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Elastic Braided Win Bust F ' ' ' ' The ladies, four mothersj, were fashion conscious. emu, 5a cents, Bmded Wu-e Hur Rolls fany colory, x5 cents: rent by mail, post-paid. Life in the 1890's and early 1900's was fairly simple. By today's standards we children were all underprivileged and most of our par- ents were poverty stricken. But, God bless them, they didn't know it. In 1890, Muskogee had a population of l,Z00. In 1898, the Curtis Act authorized and made legal, private owner- ship of property by Whites in Muskogee. Up to that date, all white citizens were intruders on Creek Nation land. In 1898, the first school district in the Indian Territory was organ- ized at Muskogee. By this time some of us present had already had the mumps, measles or whooping cough. In September, 1898, the first City governed school opened in a frame building on 2nd Street just South of Okmulgee. There were 250 students enrolled and four teachers taught through the 7th grade. In 1901, 646 students were enrolled and an additional school was opened in another rented building at C and Okmulgee. Discovery of oil south of town and the removal of land restrictions brought on a big boom and in 1904 the population had jumped to 10,000. The school board was forced to take steps to provide adequate city owned school buildings. Four grade schools were authorized and built, and these are the schools that most of us in this teen years reunion attended if they went to grade schools in Muskogee. WASHINGTON SCHOOL IN 1904 Washington School was built in 1904. Its total cost was S42,267. I made my first appearance at Washington as a student in 1906. The universal question on the school ground was, Where you from? This was a natural question because there were few native born stu- dents attending school. The following served as principals, Miss Edna Allen 1904-05, O. H. Baxter 1905-06, john T. Hefley 1906-1908, Charles B. Smith 1908- 23. In 1966 the Central High Graduating Class totaled 521. The follow- ing classes graduated in these years: 1908, 23, 1909, 16, 1910, 22, 1911, 37, 1912, 493 1913, 483 1914, 703 1915, 86, 1916, 80, 1917, 83, 1918, 78, 1919, 91. JEFFERSON SCHOOL IN 1904 Jefferson School was built in 1904 at a cost of .S33,392. To an East- sider, the Western part of the City was an unknown land. It was the home of the affluent. The principals wereg Miss Isadore Andrews 1904-05, D. Frank Redd 1905-07, Charles B. Smith 1907-09, F. M. Kimes 1909-10, John T. Hefley 1910-13 and F. Anderson 1913-18. G A R G ' Kyla? hi! X57 O V E Six-Cylinder Field Now Upen iu Thousands of Buyers in the Great Class Under S1ll0ll.0lJ. With the coming of the Grant Six at 379500, hundreds who have long wanted six-cylinder cars, can and will have them. Price was the one barrier that kept those people from full and complete enjoyment of Sixes. The Grant Six has wiped out that barrierg it broadens the Six field far beyond any previous development in that field. It opens the Way to six-cylin- der ownership for thousands of buyers in the Great Class under 31000.00 At less than the price of many good four-cylinder cars, it offers the unquestioned advantage of the six-cylinder type. It offers even more, because it affords a degree of economy of operation maintenance, hitherto unknown even to the most economical Six, Auto Ad - Scout Annual 1915. FRANKLIN SCHOOL IN 1905 Franklin School was built in 1905 at a cost of .S17,000. My source of early school history, Three Decades in Muskogee City Schoolsn states, as late as 1902 the site of Franklin School on Ninth and Em- poria was a bare hill surrounded on the North and West by a rolling prairie. On the East were a few small houses and in the distance was the small town that was soon to know a boom that was to make Mus- kogee seem like a fairy tale in its marvelous and sudden growth. The principals were, Miss Mary O'Hare 1906-07, Ira L. Cain 1907- 08, Charles B. Smith 1908-09, Ray F. I-Iannum 1909-11, F. Anderson 1911-13, and T. E. Jones 1913-15. The gals were well dressed--Scout Annual 1914. SEQUOYAI-I SCHOOL IN 1906 VVITI-I NEW ADDITION 1922 Sequoyah School was built in 1906 at a cost of .S21,759. The picture of the original school building is not too good because of the new addition. Miss Laura Hardin was principal from 1906 to 1920. She was my favorite teacher and principal. My source says that her pay was at the rate of 510.00 per month per room or 370.00 a month, and that she also was required to teach the 6th grade. f870.00 a monthll l' Q ' f- ' 9 5 9 ' .,.a,z. lquskogee in 1889. Laying the corner stone of the First iNational Bank. IRVING SCHOOL IN 1909 Irving School was built in 1909 at a cost of -S42,413. Prior to its completion in 1909, students in its area attended Martin School Q2 rooms in a 5 room cottage at J and Jeffersonj. There was only 2 teachers. The principals were, 1908-10 flV1artin Schoolj John T. Hefley falso Washingtonl, D. S. Slcogluncl 1910-14, Ray F. Hannum 1914-15. In 1914 the girls dresses for basketball. During these boom years no provision had been made for a high school. From 1905 to 1911 the high school students were moved from building to building in an extremely make shift manner. 1905-07 In the fall of 1905 sixteen young people organized themselves into a freshman class and met in one room of the Jefferson School. By 1906 there were 120 students enrolled and 4 rooms at Jefferson oc- cupied. D. Frank Redd was principal. 1907-08 In 1907, Z00 high school students enrolled and the High School was moved to Franklin School. There were 6 teachers and Ira L. Cain was principal. The first graduating class was held in 1907 and the ex- ercises were held in Convention Hall, one of the old landmarks that has now been torn down. The first football team was organized in 1907. EAT AT THE DENVER CAFE Everything for everybody. Good home cooking. Regular Meals or Short Orders, Meals 25 cents. Scout November 1911 1908-09 s Henry Kendall College was enticed away from Muskogee to become Tulsa University, and the vacant college buildings were offered to the City to house the high school students. But this move was tem- porary because the owners were already busy laying out streets in order to sell City lots. Such education as was secured was between blasting and the shouts of the mule skinners. Besides this, when the wind blew the iron roof flapped. 1909-10 The iron roof must have flapped once too often or the Subdividers of the Kendall Campus forced the ousting of the high school because in 1909 the high school secured new rented quarters at 105 South 3rd in the Bostic and Sayer Building. The rent was S225 per month. School opened in the fall of 1909 with john T. I-'Iefley as principal. Partitions were erected in the building for class rooms but since they did not reach the ceiling there was a- great mixture of History, Latin, Algebra, German and Chemistry all day long. To get to the rear classroom the students had to go through all the classrooms . The Scout was firstypublished in 1909. This old church that stood on the southeast corner of Third and Olcmulgee was used for assemblies. For 520.00 the young man could buy the best suit at lV1cClure's. 4..-...-..-..-..-......-..-..-..-..-..-..-.,.....,......-.,,..,......-..-.,,.-..-...,...,.-...-..-.,-...-.,.l. SUITS for Men and Young Men ...........,,,,....................i.....,...... 315.00 to 320.00 SUMMER SUITS .,.,.,............................ 35.00, 37.50, 310.00, 312.00 and 315.00 UNION SUITS .............................. ........,.................................,...... 5 Oc to 32.00 HATS .................. ...................,.................................... 3 2.00 to 33.50 E. W. MCCLURE .g...... .-.--.-- ...-..-..-..-......--....-..........-... ---.---- .......-...5. fChieftain 19161 1910-1916 -Q xy-4' Muskogee Central High was built in two stages. The South half was built in 1910 at a cost of SZ57,373. City growth was so rapid that it was necessary to enlarge the facility and the North half, at a cost of S380,000 was added in 1912. The Class of 1911, Bert Vogel, President, was the first class to grad- uate from Central High. The first basketball team was organized in 1911. The first Chieftan was published in 1916. Lewis E. Watherwax 1910-15, Ray F. Hannum 1915-19, C. K. Reiff 1919-25, served as principals during the teen yearsn. I think it can be truthfully said that the students that attended High School in Muskogee prior to the building of Central High School were the real pioneers. Consider these facts: 1. The City of Muskogee had no City Government prior to 1899. The white citizens had no legal standing in the Creek Nation. 1 2. In September, 1901, Muskogee voted a bond issue of 5150,000 for waterworks, and 325,000 for sewers. Until these utilities were installed the citizens continued to use wells, cisterns, and pro- fessional water haulers for their water. Outdoor Johns were of prime importance. Gaily decorated Thunder Mugs were offered for sale by the Turner Hardware and Patterson Mercantile Co. This was only 9 years before Central High was built. 3. Up to 1907, when Oklahoma became a state, the Creek Nation collected permit fees from all white Intruders . This was only three years before Central High was built. 4. In 1904, restrictions on sale of land owned by Indians was removed. 5. The first light and power plant was built in 1900. 6. The first natural gas was piped into Muskogee in July, 1906. 7. The first street cars were run in Muskogee in 1905. 8. By 1910, the population was 25,278 fin 1900 Tulsa had a popu- lation of 1,390, in 1910 18,181.1 I enrolled in Central High School in 1912 as an eighth grader. From 1906 to 1912, my education was in various schoo1s-Washing- ton, a country school in Missouri, Sequoyah, and as a Sycamore at Bacone. 1912-16 covered most of the teen years at Central High. Thus by overlapping years I had some kind of contact or knowledge of the graduating class from 1912 through 1919. Today, in October, 1966, Muskogee is a city of 46,000. Like all towns it has its bright new residential districts, a prosperous downtown business section, new shopping centers-and its blighted areas. The Central High graduate that has remained in Muskogee has found it a good place to live. It is my home and I love the old town. It is impossible to mention any name without mentioning many names, The same holds true with incidents and experiences of school life. But we all enjoy playing I remember . It is the hope of the Re- union Committee that this teen years reunion of pioneers will open the gates of memory for all of us. What a host of boys and girls, men and women, and incidents come alive as I have studied the an- cient school history available to me. Hardin Nelson, '16 Northwest Corner 2nd and Okmulgee, 1899 In 1911 a good sound business education paid rich rewards, 550.00 per month pay was common-3100.00 per month was not impossible! YOUNG MEN, YOUNG WOMEN Do you know that the Business world wants YOU? You are living ln a, commercial age, you must have a business education it you want your services to be ln demand. There are hundreds of business men who would employ you now-TODAY if you could do the work that they want done. In the last 30 days we have had a great number of calls for Bookkeepers and Stenographers that we could not fill, salaries rang- ing from 850.00 to 5100.00 per month were offered. It is impossible for us to supply the demand. Address E. H. KUYKENDALL, Supt. Draughon's Practical Business College COR. THIRD 5 OKMUIBEE. MUSKOGEE, OKLA. Scout Ad October 1911 PAINLESS me TIST Set of Teeth Good Teeth 55-00 Preserve Gold Cr0wns Health- 54.00 HEALTH Bridge Work 82.50 IS LIFE. EXAMINATION FREE PAINLESS EXTRACTION, 500. TEETH MADE WITHOUT PLATES DR. G. L. K EBEL, 10955 N. Main St. Across from Kress's. Phone 938. Scout Ad February 1912 K P I u l 5 i P P I r W 5 N: 5 x p 1 I i 5 P I 5
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