Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA)

 - Class of 1917

Page 16 of 670

 

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 16 of 670
Page 16 of 670



Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 15
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Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 17
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Page 16 text:

s sPEc'rA1'oR for safety, he said, as he pulled a little Colt automatic from his hip pocket. David handed the two revolvers back to their owner and asked quietly what the stranger thought of the picture of his wife. She's a pretty nice looking little lady, replied the man, but what do you think of this one? He handed a picture over to David. Q David looked at it and sighed to himself, It's a pity that a good-looking woman like that should be neg- lected by a thief. I wonder if he ever thinks of going back to his home? Then to the red-headed guest across the fire, Why do you roam about so much, when you could go home and live so happily? I am out for meat! You'll know some day that meat is necessary in these wild sections of the coun- try- he broke OE awkwardly, then added, Why not go to bed now? And with that, he picked up the two revolvers and threw them into the tent. Then, standing up, he pulled the Colt from his pocket and threw it in with the others. David, too, threw off his guns and soon both men were fast asleep. Alloy was dreaming how he would wake in the morning and take the outlaw by surprise. The outlaw was dreaming how he would rise at an early hour and take his host by surprise. Thus they slept thru the night-undisturbed by the howling of the wolves and screeching of the Wildcats. ll' Bk lk lk lk bk Ik At the first glow of daylight, David rose quietly and went for his guns. He looked for the Colt first. It was not there! Then for the two big guns. They were not there! He picked up his own weapons and crept slowly over to the blanket of the slumbering man. He reach- ed down quietly and grabbed the blanket-but the man was not there! In his place lay a large piece of bark with a few lines written on it. He stooped in astonishment and read aloud:

Page 15 text:

SPECTATOR . 7 VVell, you see, I have a pretty good life to live: my wife is the finest little woman in the country, and I've a good home to live in with five dandy kiddies running around. I started on a little journey for moose and got caught in the blizzard night before last and lost all my food in a fall. I tried to reach camp, but failed, and this morning I struck your trail. It looked fresh and so I thought maybe I'd reach your camp before night. And here I am. Well, that is good work! It's not every time that hard grit and pull come, out on top. But that little home reminds me-I've a pretty nice little wife and boy and home myself! Alloy pulled a picture from his inside pocket and handed it across the fire. Ever watching him sat the man across the way. He carried two big revolvers-one on each side-and kept a hand close to either of them. Once, as he was looking at the picture which David had given him, he glanced at his host thru the corner of his eye and then whispered to himself, It sure is Red! Look at that beard and hair! That's Red to a T. I'll wait awhile before I put the cuffs on him. That is a peach of a gun you have on the left there. David interrupted the man's thinking and then added, May I see it? The man passed it over reluct- antly, though David was unaware of the hesitancy. He examined the gun closely and discovered the name Red engraved on the handle. Like a flash it occurred to Alloy that the man across the fire was the one he sought. May- be he had trailed this man, who, in turn, had discovered his motive and had come back to turn the trick on him. He would keep a close watch! He laid the gun down and then asked for the other one. The man shot his hand down quickly to his other gun and at the movement, David's hand slipped around his own forty-eight. Both men hesitated and raised their eyes: then David's hand withdrew and the man passed over his other gun. You see, I carry this little one along



Page 17 text:

SPECTATOR 9 Well, old boy, you thought you had me fooled. I wasn't starved last night! I only had a plan to get within reach of you and I took advantage of it. But I'm not a 'nigger'-I couldn't put the chains on you when you played me so straight. Then, when you told me of that boy-and the pretty little wife-well, I just thought of my own little family. Now, take my advice and go straight home to them! I could get the S5000 easily, but as I' said before-I'm no 'niggerf I won't need the money half as much as that wife and boy'lI need you. So-good luck to you! Alec Johns, Sergeant U. S. Border Troops. The Heel of an Achilles Howard Rothstein, '17 The Committee of Inventions, of the United States of America, headed by Tedeson, Fammond, and Hord, slowly left the stately mansion of John Henry Harvey. As two of the latter's footmen assisted the great men into their automobiles, Harvey sat watching them from a window in his spacious study. He was smiling, but it was a smile without humor. Rather, it was contemp- tuous, for the government of a great country was on its knees at his feet. Harvey was an inventor, and in his line, a genius. Although he lived in a neutral country, he was by birth a foreigner, and his native country was at War. His latest invention was a terrible explosive, and his native land had contracted for the output. But his protecting government, which had made him what he Wasp which had given him a field to work ing and which had sup- ported his minor inventions, felt that it had a claim to his latest discovery. It had, therefore, sent its committee of inventors to offer him a fabulous sum for his invention, but he had refused. As he sat there, his thoughts wandered back to his native land and his old mother. He recalled how he and

Suggestions in the Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) collection:

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Johnstown High School - Spectator Yearbook (Johnstown, PA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920


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