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Page 28 text:
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foanofAre, . . A' FF1 i ' v L- V - 'U r -- 'v - '-' r ' 1 ado , . I ' 9 I 1 1 E c!'i1f Lf QIYQQ Cf 'UIQ 'ln Q4 417, c-X409 I The Boob Shef Seventeen ..... Doris Porter The Wizard of Oz . lylaurice Glaser Emma Krause Count of Monte Crirto Charles Boylan The Lunatic at Large Billy Rupley Gloriouf Apollo . . John Baxter The Divine Lady. . Nlildred Bosma Green Timber. . . Ottawa's Trees Fanny Herfelf . Frances De Later Old Cnriofity Shop Judson Peckham Vanity Fair , , Virginia Murphy Slay Pilot .... BobH Wood Call of the Wild . . The Lunch Bell Bob, Son ofthe Battle Bob7' Holland Kidnapped .... Ruth Tyson Being a Boy . . . Ed. Frye Man for the Agef . Mr. Ludwick Little Minifter . . Stephen Cooper Sentimental Tommy . . . Orin Cole Iron Woman . . . Grace lVIeyers Keeping Up W'ith Lizzie Stuart Long Amateur Gentleman Billy Anderson The Younger Set . The Freshmen Friendly Road . . Iroquois Drive Covered Wagon Elmer Liskeyls Ford Lady ofthe Decoration Barbara Dewey Wild Animal: I have Known Cordeliers Great Imperfonation Dramatic Club Daddy Long Legf . . Ed. Garner Laughing Mufe . . Betty Billings Melting Pot ..... Ottawa Web.fter'r Unabridged Harry Glass The Mufic Master Donald Renwick Wonderful Worker: All A Students My Lady Caprice . Marion Kimes The Butterfly Man . . Billy Kelly My Lady of Doubt . Ruth Wallace Wild Geeye .... The Seniors Rhoda Fair . Marcella Heintz Friend of Caefar . . Grant Ellis Gentleman of France . Roger Simon Mafter Skylark , . Charles Mulder She Stoopf to Conquer Annette Top A Fair Barbarian . Marion Bullock Certain People of Importance S.T.E.C.,s Son of Hir Father . Walter Cook The Highflyerf . . . Kapi Club The Lion Tamer . . . Mr. Toland The Little French Girl Miss Plumb Heroef of the Wildf . . . Hi-Y
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Page 27 text:
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A - '. 41 ' 1 , ' . 1 . . , f- - 'f:'3f'i' fain! V '3f'4 f TL '5 9'?:L 9- L N f sr if 'Yr f 'lY :fl 1 cf in J Ufaraaarn ,Qlntofn Prize' Winning Efxay in junior High School Lincoln Context A NUMBER of years ago, when a friend of ours was visiting in Edinburgh, Scotland, she saw one day, to her surprise, a statue of Abraham Lincoln in one of the public squares. It was, of course, quite natural that she should wonder how the statue of an American President came to be erected in a foreign city, but upon reading the verse inscribed upon the base of the statue, she came to the realization, for the first time, that Abraham Lincoln belonged not only to America, but to the whole world. There probably will be few, if any, men like Lincoln. He was not born to wealth and rank. He came of humble parentage, and as a lad had many hardships and odds to overcome. Who, of the average boy of today, could and would find time to study and read in the evening, after having performed such a task as rail splitting during the day? Lincoln did not achieve his success in a single bound. It was sheer will and determination which carried him to the presidency. Then too, he was blessed with a generous portion of shrewd wit, which often came to the rescue in many a serious situation. Honesty was another of his virtues, and by that honesty he gained for himself the name of 'cl-Ionest Aben. No man was better fltted to take up the work of the American nation at such a crucial time as the Civil War than Abraham Lincoln. Nothing could swerve him from his purpose to abolish slavery, and no man could have performed his duty to his country more faithfully than he did, even though the members of his own cabinet were against him. The inscription on the base of the Lincoln statue in Scotland read: With malice toward none, with charity to all. His love for both the north and south, his ability to see the right and do the right is the reason that today he is loved and revered not only by America but by the whole world. ..g..l.- el Woodland cParaa'z'.ve Margaret fans Cola, '30 LET me dwell in the midst of a whispering wood, Where the nightingale sings his sweet song, Where trees are all bending their branches to pray, And Howers bloom all the day long. Let me wander alone in a woodland of dreams, Free from all sorrow and pain, Where butterdies e'er will be friend of mine. And death shall neier come again. Let me live, l pray, in a woodland, fair, 'Neath the sunny tinted skiesg Wlhere I alone, from day to day, Can enjoy life's paradise.
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