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A to save' for this purpose you will l5e',able.Qto2- f2Qgob'tciinjtltat prjiceless gi t which is the desire,?f':e of all ambitious boysuandgifls. -, . -u . f, ' 2 ' ,Al small deposit 'macleeregulorly-V in ougrf ffSdvirigs De ptlrtmeizt, thivthiejnterest that we ' ad ,-A' will soon amount to.: cz t ceonsid erqbl e sumt I - L' 7Qql.Resources ouer 3l?0i0U0,f000.b0 -' Q' ' s--.1 ii f, .op 5 MERRILL l TRUST COMPANY - ' BELFAsr QQBUCKSEOQTIQipExTER.4fJoNEsPoR11h1a E ' A 'MAQHIAS Q 'QIJDTQWN ,oRoNo. ' x l - V LAQTIIHANGOR, MAINE' on4+ngooo4uuwow+o4+o6+MnwaeMx0www-:-ew4-weMe-+gnMe-e-z--in:-:..g..'EI if f ' ' ' f e . yi-1 f.-T'--, - -, 9' ,, T ' 7.0 -I1 .-..'..'..-..'..'. .'..'..'..'..'..'. .'..'..'..'..'..'. -'..'..'..'..'..'. .'..'..'..'..s.-. .'..'..3..g..'..'. .g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g. .g..g..g..g..'..'. .'..'..'..'. .'..'..g..'..-..'. .g..g..'..'..g..g. 000000000.0000000000000000000000 0. . 000.00000 0.0 00 0:0 ' 05 0 0 ISI ISI 0:0 0:0 .g. 4. 0, 03. ffl 3: 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 00 00 E. .f. 4. .3- 0 0 ISI :ff .:. .g. 0.0 A 0:0 .g. .g. .:. .g. 0:0 0:0 3: 3: .f. , D .20 .g. .g. ff: :ff 0:0 ' 0:0 0.0 0:0 0:0 0:0 .g. 3 15: 0:0 ' :SI 00 .f.' , .f. 0:0 0 0:0 4. .g. Q. 01. 0 0 325 vit egg 525 00 0,0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0,0 0:0 0:0 00 00 .f. .ir u'0 0, 0:0 0:0 0 0 Z5 B 't' GOOD If 33 CCQUSC I S gg , . 0:1 0:0 ffl ISI :Sz :it 0:0 , 0:0 : 0'0 :gi Q. 0:0 0:0 4' egg' 'Y ' 00 ff: .5 0:0 - 0:0 ' - ' S 0:0 0.0 0:0 0:0 0.0 0.0 .5 01. 0 gg BAKED BY gg 0 ' 0:0 0:0 0:0 0.0 0:0 rs: 44 v 'Y :gr 0:0 ' 0:0 0:0 V - 0'0 0:0 0:0 0.0 0:0 0 0 31 ffl ' zi: 25. Bangor Brewer Eastport .f. .g .g. 05 0:0 0 00 030 0:0 0 ISI 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:0 uh H M m O W b 0 w m Z' '! ! '. 'Z' 0 -5 0:0 0:0 0'0 0 0 0 0:0 0:0 0:0 'e 0:0 223 '0' 0:0 'I' 0? 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 .,a 0:0 'I' 0? 0 0 030 0.0 oza 0? 0 0:0 0.0 9 Q :go 0,0 .g. 'I' 'J' E '0' 0? I 0:0 so 'I' ':0I : : I I' 'I' ZMZNZ' '51 :iz 2: 'I' :Sz v 5 :iz 22: 0'0 -. 3 HA Good Plane to Ea! 32 40 Eg . . . Ig: 0:0 0:0 Dear Friends oi' B. H. S.- :Eg A 0:0 J We thank you for your patronage during Q N the school year. We hope to see you during the 2 summer. The management assures you of the Y - best service that can be afforded anywhere. 3 . ! I ' E Our food is of the best quality, and as to the' E perfection of the cooking and serving, every- E N one knows it is the best. E . We hope you enjoyed HJill'sU letters and E S we promise you that more will follow next Q E term. E Sincerely, E 2 JONASON'S. E fi I I Main Street, Bangor E 00 Ein! 0 '-if E -if 'I' 0:0 0:0 0:0 90 050 Z 0'0 '0 0:0 4 X 3. 0.0 30 5 an 0 0 0:0 I it 'Z' 0:0 5 X 'Z' 2 lee hr '0Brw:1r Vol. XXXVIII Number 7 Published lllonthly by the Students of Bangor High School Subscription 31.00 Yearly Single Copies 50 Cents Address all business communications to THE ORACLE BANGOR HIGH SCHOOL BANGOR, MAINE The Oracle is approved by the Bangor Chamber of Comm erce as an advertising medium linlered as Second Class Matter, June 14, 1914, at the Post Oliice at Bangor, Maine, under the Act of March, 1 vii- The Editors reserve the right to change or reject any article submitted for publication. inns, 1930 Grahuatiun umher NSYQ? 3634333333 The Qbranle Baath, 192960 Zvi:- EDITOR-IN-CHIEF M. Chandler Redman, '30 LITERARY Ruth J. Blanning, '30 BOYS' ATHLETICS Harry Boyd, '30 STUDENT ACTIVITIES Natalie A. Anderson, '30 Irving L. Grodinsky, '30 PERSONALS Raymond F. Prince, '30 ALUMNI Allana Landers, '30 BUSINESS MANAGER Gridley W. Tarbell, '30 A-34? ASSISTANT EDITOR 879 Howard L. Kominsky, '31 GIRLS' ATHLETICS Evelyn C. Welch, '30 Henry P. Gulnac, '30 EXCHANGES Lydia Jones, '30 ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER Leonard U. Ford, Jr., '31 'NOTE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENT The Oracle Board of '30, upon passing over the management of the school paper to the Class of '31, wish our followers all the possible success in the world. The Oracle Board of '30 wish to thank the following people for the help which they have given in supporting the huge undertaking of publishing a school paper: Mr. Charles E. Taylor. Miss Edith M. Knight, and the Commercial Department. The J ordan-Frost Printing Company. The Pioneer Engraving Company. The Photographers who cooperated with us in supplying the pictures. The Advertisers to whom the prosperity of the Oracle is due. And the Faculty Censor. HENRY P. GULNAC RUTH J. BLANNING President Vice-President Q9ffiner5 lass uf 1930 1 MILDRED M. HANEY BERNARD STRIAR SCCYGUIIY Treasurer .,., WERE IG X hh! Fern E. Allen Here is one of the most prominent mom- bers of our class in Athletics, social events and other school activities. Girls' Athletic Honor Council, Class Base- ball, C25, Class Basketball, C25, School Hockey, C25, Festival Chorus, C25, Girls' Glee Club, C25, Latin Club, C35, Tribune, Praetor, Expression, C15, Debating Club, Interclass team, C15, French Play, La Duchesse Couturiere, Junior Exhibition, Speaker, National Honor Society, Dra- matic Club, Playgoers, The Youngest. Isadore Alpert Izzy With his wit, good humor and ability Izzy has certainly made a sur-cess of his school career. R. O. T. C., C25, Debating Club, C15, Daniel Webster Club, C15, Treasurer, National Honor Society. Natalie Arline Anderson Nat Natalie, so trim and neat., Is surely clever on her feet. Snapdragons, C15, Latin Club, C35, Tri- bune, Dramatic Club, The Maker of Dreams, The Youngest, Combined De- bating Society, C25, Girls Debating Society, C15 Secretary, Bates League, Maine League, Bowdoin League, Oracle Board, CLocals Editor5, Expression, C15, junior Exhibition, National Honor Society, junior Chorus, Interclass Debate. Thelma T. Anthony Shrimp Dark brown hair with cheeks of red, A lot of mischief in one small heml, Her friends are many, her swains no less, She is a general favorite at B. H. S. Dramatic Club, Glee Club, C35, Festival Chorus. Edgar AuCoin Da Ed' Here's to Da-Da who likes his fun, He makes whoopee from eight, till one. Band, C45, Orchestra, C45, Junior Orches- tra, C25, R. O. T. C., C35, Junior Exhibition, Dramatic Club, Aunt Mathilda, C15, Boys Glee Club, C15, Debating Club. Mildred Ayer Millie A little bit bashful A little bit. shy, But shorthand doesn't bother her, Do you all know why? Dramatic Club, Junior Exhibition Chorus. l dge Edward Baker Ed A friend to all! Frances E. Baldwin Fran We have one Brewer citizen among us, and that's Fran, She is one of the best- 'liked girls in school. Although she may look sober and demure at. a distance, ber many friends can assure you that she is charming. Festival Chorus, C155 Junior Chorus. Helen B. Banks Dark eyed, vivacious is Helen our pal, And a better friend or a better gal, ls hard to find in li. H. S, Because of ber true friendliness. Dramatic Club, C15, Glee Club, C253 Fes- tival Chorus, C353 National Honor So- ciety, Member of Traffic Squad, Junior Ex- hibition Chorus. Edythe Helen Barker Eddie Edythe certainly is a lovely girl And a. perfect pearl. She knows how to have a good time And get her lessons, too. Dramatic Club, C155 junior Chorus, C153 Festival Chorus, C15. Merrill Barnes Mase Quiet. but self confident. One need never to worry about this fine chap. junior Chorus. Waldo C. Barrett Everybody has a lot of respect. for this marksman. Rifle Club, C255 Rifle Team, C253 R. O. T. C., C35, First Lieutenant. Helen Marie Barstow Helen is a clever girl, and good natured too, and a wlnsome mlss and a friend true blue. Basketball, C155 Expression, C155 Junior Exhibition Chorus, Dramatic Club, C153 Festival Chorus, C155 French Night. Dorothy Elizabeth Bartlett Dot, Dotie Persistent, she is sure to make her way. Snapdragons, C153 Library Club, C15, Festival Chorus, C15. Mildred Bean Mickey Out for a good time right, from the start 'l'hat.'s a motto from the depth of her heart. Glee Club, C25, Orchestra, C45, junior Chorus, CI5, Festival Chorus, C15. Maxine Bicknell Max Mack Bicky Bieky is tall, Bic-ky is gay, liieky wins all in a charming way. When the next Who's NVlu: of thc good and the fair ls off the press, lXIaek's name will he there. Traffic Squad, CI5. Murray Blakney, Jr. Bill Bugs A l in studies, but full of fuu A pal and friend to everyone, As fine a fellow as e'er youill meet, And Murray Blakney's sure a treat. Festival Chorus, Football, C15. Ruth J. Blanning She's widely trusted, admired, desired, A girl hofh happy, kind and refined, ln studies and activities far in the lead She wins her way by her ohliging deeds Class Vice-President, C15, Class Secretary, C25, Oracle Board, C15, Literary Editor, Dramatic Club, President, C15, Property Manager, Playgoers , French Night CLa Duchesse Couturiere5, Latin Club, C35, Quaestor, CI5, Debating Society, C25. Presi- dent, C15, Vice-President, C15, Girls' Debat- ing Society, C15, Snapdragons, C15, Junior Ring Committee, Banner Committee, jun- ior Chorus, Bowdoin League, C15, Bates League, C25, Semi-Finals, C25, Interclass Debates, C25, Bowdoin Cup, C15, junior Ex- hibition, CSemi-semi Finals5, Class Ode, Class History. Laurence Blethen Quiet and studious is this blond Who of the girls is very fond. lie likes dramatic-s so they say, And at a piano, hear ye! hear yel Festival Chorus, C35, Boys' 1927f28 Glee Club, Dramatic Club, Junior Chorus, Boy's Double Quartette, junior Exhibition, Semi- Semi Finals, French Night. Donald Bowden 'llhere's a spot, in our hearts for Don l'he boy with a hundred smiles And we hope he'll never forget. us 'l'hough distauee leugtheiis to miles. r Harry C. Boyd A fine fellow! Oracle Board, Boys' Athletics, C15. Dena Brill This girl is very studious, But full ot' laughter too, Vfe wish her luek and happiness W That surely are her due. Eugene E. Brown Gene He's good at his studies, At speaking he's better, And on the sax or piano- Boy! open the window. National Honor Society, Junior Exhibi- tion, CHonorable Mention5, Band, C353 Latin Club, C15, Aedileg Part in French Night, Al- ternate Lyford Speaking Contestg Class His- toryg The Youngest. Priscilla F. Brown Pat'v Full of fun and full of pep, Is she nice? Well, you bet! The busiest girl in Bangor High Pat's broken hearts reach to the sky. Junior Exhibition, Medal Winnerg Ath- letic Council 'Minstrelsg Glee Club, C355 Cantata, Three Springs, Festival Chorus C259 Latin Club, C25, Tribune, Interscholas- tic Prize Speaking Contest-2nd Prizeg Dra- Ralph E. Burleigh matic Club, C15, The Youngest. John E. Buckley Buck Johnnie A thoroughly fine chap. Track, C45. I Not exactly noisy, but knows how to make just enough noise to show that he's around. Lillian A. Byer Here's to our Lil Sweet, pretty, and gay. This tall girl will Be a success some day. Snapdragons, C155 County Typewriting Contest, C25g Festival Chorus, C15. Charlotte Rose Cahners Have you seen that green roadster around lately? Well that was Charlotte driving. On the Q. T., we've all tried to get a ride, Cwith varying degrees of success.5 Expression, C153 Debating Club, C155 Latin Club, C35g Consul, C353 Dramatic Club, C155 Play Goers g Oracle Board, National Honor Society, French Night:- La Lettre Chargee. Charles Cassily Charlie Charlie is leaving B. H. S. but his memory will remain, for we hate to lose such a good fellow. We wish you luck, Charlie, in your future undertakings Boy's Glee Club and Festival Chorus, C15, Track, C15. Hugh Campbell A student of large size and very good tem- perament. We wonder if he'll be on All- American football teams years hence. I Football 3 Ca tam, C15 Junior Exhibi . C 5' P ' s - tion, qseirli-seiiii Finals55 Junior Exhibition, Track, C25. A N Clifford Clark Nifty lilveryhorly likes this fellow, he's a great help when one forgets his loeker key. I Debating Club, C2Dg Festival Chorus, C3D, Junior Chorus, CID, Glee Club, C2Dg Track, Elgg Football, CID, Annual Singing Contest, 1 . Emerson M. Clendenning ' Tim This small la.d has been with us for four years, yet most of us have heard him sav hardly one word. Bon voyage, Emerson Junior Chorus. Dexter J. Clough, 2nd. Rather ehuhby and red on top, llut for nothing will Deeker stop. He digs right in--the harder, the better For at lessons-he's a go-getter. Debating Club, CID, Rifle Club, C2Dg R. O. T. C., C3D, CCaptainD. Ruth L. Cole jerry llappy and eheery all the while Owning a smile that goes many a mile 'l'owarrls making others sunny too Where'er you meet her she's Uhmlllng Thru. Dramatic Club, junior Chorus. Carolyn A. Collins Caddie To know her is to love her A friend both good and true, With a eharming smile and a kindly thought 'l'hat's Caddy-f through and through. Snapdragons, CID, Dramatic Club, CID. Edward H. Conley A quiet Commereial student who detests Shorthand. Wt-'ve all seen him down to the Bijou giving out programs. Albert Conners Squeek With a blare of hugles and hursting of shells The great ranks open amid hearty yellsg Loud applause rings through the air, Ah, have a look-Squeak Connors is there. Rifle Club, C2D, Team, CID, Band, CID, R. O. T. C. C3D, Captain, CID, Track, CID, Manager. w Gladys Cookson llere's rv. girl that sure ean work And at a task she does not shirk Ho here's to you as years pass hy, Somehow you'll win without a try. james Cox Corrie jim A friend to all, that's he. .lim will he one of the country's greatest pole vaulters, wait and see. Track, C3J. Frances I. Crane Frank Frances is an athlete, For B. H. S. she'd fight. And Frances is the best of fun Morning, noon and night. Girls' Athletic Honor Council, C4J, Treas- urer, Clbg School Hockey, CID, Manager, Cljg School Basketball, CZD, Captain, C159 Base- ball, C255 Class Hockey, C333 Class Basket- ball, C23g National Honor Society, Class Prophet, General. Y you. Estelle K. Crawford Stellie Quiet as a mouse, which has quite a lot of advantages, Estelle will leave B. H. S. this year to overcome life's obstacles. Festival Chorus, Cljg Junior Exhibition Chorus. Norris W. Crosby The boy whose face aside you see Goes by the name of Norris Crosby. He goes out for track and studies too We'll miss ou a lot, Norris, good luck to Track, CZDQ Winter Sports Team, Cl930D, Junior Exhibition, Semi-semi finals, lst. Sergeant, Festival Chorus, Member Picked Platoon, C115 Picked Squad, Clj. Donna Croxford A girl like this is very rare, Because she never bobbed her hair, But we all know so very well. That. long hair becomes her swell. French Night. Michael Crowley The Frank Merriwell of B. H. S. Mike is one of the most popular boys in the school, and he deserves this popularity. Good luck, Mike, but you need to grow a little taller! .Football, Clj. Ivel Cutter Ivel has one of the best collections of A's of anyone in B. H. S. This fact ought to carry her far in life. Betty Day Betty hasn't been with us long, but she knoweth there'th a lot of t'Bleth-en going to thith high thchoolf' Hazel M. Dorr She's been with us through our four years, She's shared our triumphs, joys and fears. She's always lent a helping hand To all the members of our clan. Junior Chorus. David Dorsky Blondy Dave is rather a quiet boy, and it is this good quality besides a great many others that will make him successful in whatever he will do. Festival Chorus. Lester Doughty Jake llere's a boy wl1o's quiet and tall, A boy who's known and liked by all. R. o. T. c., qzp, Track, 429. Katherine Driscoll A girl whose true value and worth rceives a high rating in the judgement of :ill her acquaintances. Ruth Drummond ' 'Rufus Always smiling, always sweet Making friends with all she meets. lf you're looking 'round for fun- Stop right here-the fun's begun. Snapdragonsg Debating Club, C359 Dra- matic Clubg Glee Club, C455 Junior Exhibi- tion Chorusg Festival Chorus, C339 French Nighty National Honor Societyg Daniel Webster Club. John Dunning Jack A good fellow to know if one wantsa good friend. Eugene Duran Eugene has been one of our standbys. The Band couldn't get along without him. May success be yours in whatever you do, Eugene. Band, CSD. Maud Dyer Quiet and shy, We wonder why, A Commercial student Of Bangor High, Richard O. Ebbeson Dick Here we see the pieture of a cartoonist. Ilis drawings show real talent. Just take a squint at one some day if you want a good laugh. Lawson C. Evans Red Some there are who think he's slow No doubt that some are right But- the greatest- men on earth they say Were made famous overnight. Band, C253 Junior Exhibition Chorus. Dorothy Farnum Dot Dot, likes her school work She does it very well. We know she likes some other folks But she will never tell. Robert F. Feehan Bob A quiet chap, well-liked by all, one who knows what he is doing. Glee Club, C153 Festival Chorus, C15. Oscar Fellows Oscar is a band boy, He pah-pahs on the bass. And when it comes to indoor sports He rates the highest place. Band, C35, Librariang Orchestra, C153 Base- ball, C25, CManager53 Dramatic Club3 Play Goers and The Maker of Dreams , Assist- ant Business Manager, C153 Latin Club, C153 Debating Club, C453 Ride Club, C153 French Night, Festival Chorus, C153 Boys Glee Club, C1 . Harold Field Heff Heli is always on the job, he's never caught napping. junior Exhibition Chorus, C153 Festival Chorus, C253 Glee Club, C15. John W. Finn A soldier boy wl1o'll rise to fame, He's alive, alert, and very game. Officer's Club, C253 Rifle Club, C25. Wilfred Finnegan Woody Woody doesn't know how to worry Furthermore don't. tell him. Just now he's wondering whether or Not there is a. Santa Claus CD01-s he look it.'.5 Football, C253 Track, C253 Baseball, C153 Band, C453 R. 0. T. C., C253 Class Prophet, Classical. Albert J. Goodin Al At, gridiron's and diamond's call Al was there, first of all. Football, C214 Basketball, C21, Captain, C11g Baseball, Cl1g R. O. T. C., C21. M. Mary Goodspeed ln action she follows her last name Her Speed is Good and always the same, In friendships too she keeps the Speed Her lessons too are Good indeed. Glee Club, C413 Orchestra, C413 Festival Chorus, C313 Junior Exhibition CSemi-semi Finals.1 Marion Hilda Gordon Jerrie Jerrie sure knows her statistics, we got them full force at a Dramatic Club meeting. Dramatic Club C119 Glee Club, C11, CMat- tanawcook Academy1g German Club, CI1, CPortland High School1. Doris Goss Dot A very nice young lady who comes from Orrington, we're all glad you came to B. H. S., Dot. Dorothy E. Grant Pat A high-rater in the Girl Scouts, who also isn't at loss in the school-room. Dramatic Club, CI1. Rhona Gray Runty A young violinist, who is a ready mixer, won't have much trouble getting along in hte. Orchestra, C41. Irving L. Grodinsky ' Izzie If you've read Issie's publicity notes on the Band, you know he'll make a good press agent. Oracle Board, Music, C113 Orchestra, C41g Band, C215 Debating Club, C213 Baseball, C21g Dramatic Club, Aunt Mathilda, C11g Junior Exhibition, Semi-Semi Finals, Boys ' Glee Club C21g National Oratorical Contest. Edward I. Gross Isie Ed has been one bright boy, To the senior class he has been a joy, With his wit and his humor he's sure to succeed And some fine day be a great man indeed. Boys' Debating Clubg Freshman Club, Latin Club, Semi-Finals Junior Exhibition, Base- ball squad CI1. Joseph J. Gruber Joe He is a earefree, likeable lad, Always eheerful, never sad. To every student these four years through He has proved a friend, tried and true. National Honor Society. Henry P. Gulnac Moose We expect big things from our Class Presi- dent who has won his way into the hearts of all. Henry is one of the most popular boys in school, as he stars in all athletics and in other school events. President of Senior Class, Football, CZJQ Basketball, GJ, Track, Captain, C3Qg R. O. T. C., Major, GD, Officer's Club, C235 Ora- cle Board, Military, Harvard Book Prizeg junior Exhibition, Semi-finals, National Honor Society, Parting Address. Lorenzo Hackett Larry A quiet ehap who is an old stand-hy at first base. Baseball, fljg R. O. T. C., fCaptainJg Jun- ior Chorus. Annette M. Haley Blitzen our Annette, leading eoquette, plays and sings things. Charming and sweet is Bangor High Sc-hool's She dances, aetsg she Along with many other Girls Glee Club, fly, Dramatic Club, Fes- tival Chorus, 123. Helen G. Haley lf you want to know how a report. ear.l looks with all Ns, ask Helen, she knows. Debating Club, 121, Dramatic Club, Duchesse Couturiere g Latin Club, uLa- 435: Mildred M. Haney Junior Exhibition Chorusg National Honor Society, Expression, IU, Daniel Webster Club, CU, lnterclass Debating Team, fly. Mary Here is the former viee-president and pres- ent secretary of our class. She is small hut, brilliant. Mildred stars in all athletics. Class Officer: Vice President, QZJ, Sec- retary, C115 Girls Athletic Honor Council, Secretary, fly, National Honor Society, Dramatic Club, Playgoers , Glee Club, CU, Festival Chorus, C155 Junior Exhibi- tion CSemi-Iinalsjg Snap-dragons, fljg Class Basketball, C353 Class Hockey, 125, Class Baseball, C253 School Basketball, fly, Mana- ger, School Hockey, CU, Junior Chorus, French Night, Marseillaise , Junior Ring Committee, Banner Committee. Harper A retiring girl, who is well liked by all, is the lass you'll find when you ask to know Mary Harper. Festival, CU. Helen M. Harvey A star in the Commercial world is Helen. Dramatic Club. Waldon H. Hastings No, his medal essay wasn't written in Latin, as you might suppose, but he could have written a Latin one i he had tried! Football, 1153 Dramatic Clubg Orchestra, 125g Rifle Club, R. 0. T. C. 1Picked Squadjg Latin Clubg Graduation Essay, Medal Win- ner. Esther Hathorne Hessie Here's to the popular Drug Store c-lerk, whose good nature and Sweet disposition are well known to all who are luvky enough to be her friends. Expression, Freshman Glee Club. Thalma Hawes Timmie A real friend and true, tha.t's Thalma. She has a ready smile for everybody and a sunny disposition that can hardly be equalled hy any one of us. Is it any wonder that everybody likes Thalma? Freshman Debating, 1115 Junior Exhibi- tion, 1Semi-semi Finalsjg Dramatic Club. Lillian Mary Haycock Lillums Lil Ki 16 A dramatist Lillums wants to be you ought to hear her A Real Ghost. Dramatic Club, 1ljg Festival, 119. Lewis Hazelton The best dancer in the school, nuff sed. Wilfred Hessert Bud Bud is a versatile chap who will get on well in the newspaper game. Band, 1333 Orchestra, 1335 Debating Club, 12Jg Football, 1113 Junior Exhibition, 1Semi- iinalslg Glee Clubg Latin Clubg Ride Clubg Festival Chorus, 125. Donald Edgar Hillman Don Another of the women-haters. Festival Chorus, 1355 Glee Club, Singing Contest-Quartet and Duet Prizes, Dra- matic Club. Clyde Hodgdon Well liked by all. A boy of whom we ev peat great things. Go to it, Clyde! Junior Exhibition Chorus. Marion E. Hughes ' She's not very tall and not ve? fat, But a charming girl for all of t at, Loyal to her friends, we think her a peach And wish her success, her goal to reach, French Play, La Duchesse Couturiere. V. Pearl Hutchings Teddie Demure and guiet is our Pearl We cannot lin a better girl, In hockey games she guards the goals So never a ball gets by the poles. Hockey, f2J, Class Basketball, 131. Raymond L. Jenkins ' 'jenks This boy is going to beafuture states- man. Wait and see. Festival Chorus, CID, Junior Chorus CID. Kenneth E. Jones Ken Ken is one of Bangor's crack shots and also one of its best scholars. In him we see a future big business man. Junior Exhibition CSemi-iinalsj, Rifle Team, 121. Lydia Jones Lyd There can be only one Lydia Jones. She takes life as it comes and has a smile for every- body. She has had a famous career in the athletic and social life of our school. Girls' Athletic Honor Council, 125, Class Baseball, CZJ, Class Hockey, 121, Class Bas- ketball, 113, School Hockey, fly, School Basketball, CU, Snapdragons, Oracle Board, Exchanges, French Play, La Duchesse Couturieref' Ruth Jones Jonesie Here's to our Ruth With eyes of blue, We know she'll be successful, Our Ruth true blue. Junior Exhibition Chorus, Shorthand Con- test, National Honor Society. Cornelius Kelleher Neal Neal is so quiet you'd never know he was here, but he is, with a punch, too! Vaughan Kelley Kel A very likeable chap we all find Kel. Baseball, 113. Mildred H. Kennedy Ken lien's cheery smile and winning ways will he missed lmy everyone in B. H. S. next year. joseph A. LaFlamme Joe join 't.loe is a real good sport, and a good schol- ar. lt' you think he isnlt a good French stud- ent, ask Madame. Junior Chorus, tljg Festival Chorus, tlj. Carlton Larrabee Kike A good square friend to all is 'lliikef' Allana Elizabeth Landers Al tlnc of the liest girls in our class is Allana. She is quite an automobile driver too. Most any day you can see her Ford rambling along. Besides being Alumni editor of the Oracle, she is one of these girls who always take everything for l'granted. Dramatic Club, tljg Snapdragons, tljg Junior Exhibition Chorus, Oracle Board. Phyllis W. Libby Phish Phil We all say, Phil, that you are very charm- ing and naive. Debating Society, tl J. Arline Leach Arline is a whiz at shorthand and type- writing and she's always glad to help ns slower ones out.. Typewriting Contest 1155 National Honor Society. Rose Lavoott We all know the saying, Good things come in small packages. Nut Sed. Snapdragons, Member of National Hon- or Society. Emily Lyon Em Fmily is an all-round athlete. As the old saying goes Birds of a feather flock together, so do athletes flock together. 'l'hey're all right, we mean foot-hall players, aren't they, Em? Girls' Athletic Honor Council, C255 School Basketball, tlbg Class Basketball, 127, Cap- taing junior Chorus. Nathalie MacLeod Nat Nothing t.o say but, just look below. Girl's Athletic Honor Council, C255 School Hockey, C255 Class Hockey, C255 School Bas- ketball, C155 Class Basketball, C155 Base- ball5 National Honor Society5 Girls' Glee Club, C355 Festival Chorus, C255 Dramatic Club, C155 Latin Club, C355 junior Exhibition CSemi-semi-Finals5. Dorothy M. Maddocks Dot Her feet hardly touch the floor when she sits down, but she never has a long face so that squares the accounts. Glee Club, C155 Junior Chorus, C155 Fes- tival Chorus, C15. Mariom Marsh Marion always has such a jolly smile that we r'an't help forgetting the worries of thc 4 ay. Helyn McGrath Red Helen, youlre our little red head, Full of pep and never dead. You always know something new What would li. H. S. be without you? Junior Exhibition, CSemi-semi Finals55 Latin Club, C355 Dramatic Club, The Play- goers 5 French play, La Duchesse Cou- turiere. Fleetwood K. McKean Dick Mac Here is the budding poet of our class. This Scotchman is a big military man and above all a French shark. What more need be said? Rifle Team, Captain, C155 Track, C255 R. O. T. C., C25, Captaing Winter Sports, C155 Officers' Club, Vice-president. George McKenney Mic Attention! Eyes right. Who do we see but that soldierly young man, George. His success in military affairs is most. pronounced. Footballg Rifle Club, C155 Picked Squadg R. O. T. C.-Lieutenant-Colonel. Mildred McKinnon A smiling lass who is very willing to lend a helping hand. Dramatic Club, C155 Girls' Basketball, C155 Girls' Hockey, C255 junior Exhibition Chorus. Hilda M. McLeod Everyone agrees that Hildafs a peach and one of the best sports in B. H. S. You can always depend on her for a smile. Glee Club, C355 Festival Chorus, C455 Jun- ior Exhibition Chorus5 Senior Orchestra, CI5. Genevieve Mead Bobby Another lass who is always willing to do the right thing at the right time. Junior Exhibition Chorus, Class Basket- ball, C23g Class Hockey, C235 School Hockey Squad, C333 School Basketball Squad, C23. Austin W. Miller Une of our evermost rominent shieks Yes, he's one of that kind of freaks ln Chemistr he a.lwa. s oes bi - Y YL E f- B They say he could make a date out of a fig. Rifle Club, C333 Rifle Team, C235 cer's Club, C233 Band, C13. Lawrence Miller Larry Casey Here's a boy that has made countless friends while in High School. His brains, personality, and good looks will carry him far in future life. Good luck, Larry! Semi-semi Finals. Woodrow Miller Willie Willie is his name Success alone is his aim We know he'lI find li. in any lme So here's to you, Bill, you re sure to Debating Club, C13. Elizabeth C. Mongovan Lib Clever, attractive, popular and sweet A clearer girl you'd never meet A would he sewer and a French Offi- Bill' shine shark, too. 1 1, the class is proud of you. Edward A. Morgan Ed He is the leader of our band, A real musician when he takes the standg He has led our band through thick and t ing A fame like Sousa he'll surely win! Band, C43 Student Leader, Orchestra, C433 Track, C43g Football, C235 Winter Sports, C13g Officers' Club, C335 Rifle Club, C333 R. O. T. C. C335 Second Lt. Marian Mooers Marion is quiet Cexcept. in Chemistry3 and studious. Good success to you, Marion. Freshman Glee Club, Festival Chorusg Dramatic Club. Jeanne Momeault A whiz in French, we wonder why. French Night, La Lettre Chargeeg Or- chestra, C13. Harold L. Morris Captain The famous B. H. S. Band couldn't- get along without Harold. His good humor and keen wit. are going to get him a lot of suc- cess in the future. Debating, C23g Band, C235 Orchestra, C43. Frank H. Morse Morsie Blond hair, gray eyes, five feet two, He's never grouchy, has always a smile, He's a great sport and a pal worth while. Band, C33. Agnes F. Mullaney Ag This sweet demure little miss Is certainly hard to surpass Always smiling and full of bliss There's no one better in her class. james Mullen Jim ' 'jimmy Here's luck to you, Cap'n. We expect to see you a big army man some day. President of Class, C133 Oracle Board, C133 Football, CAssistant Manager3 C235 Ride Team, C235 Rifle Club, C23, CSecretary3g R. O.'I'. C., C33g Officer's Club, C23, CCap- tain3g The Youngest. Alice E. Munce Al Alice can speak, dance and act, A popular girl, Ca well-known fant,3 In all sehool-doings she takes a part. A much loved friend in all our hearts, A jolly good sport in work or play, A true-blue friend in every way. Junior Exhibition, Honorable Mention, Glee Club, C133 Debating Club, C133 Cheer Leader, C13g Festival Chorus, C133 Dramatic Club, Playgoers, Cl3g National Honorary Society, The Youngest. Miriam Myrick Babe Tho the way be hard and rocky, Miriam will get to her objective. Ernest Nason Nason Nason is clever Good natured too Kind of shy But a friend that's true. junior Exhibition Chorus. Avis L. Nickerson Little Avis Nickerson! Thoughts of her come to us by loads. Sort them out and we'll have the traits of a lovely girl. Class Basketball, C133 Class Hockey, Cl3g Dramatic Club, Festival Chorus. Helen Novak Skeesix .lust say French to Helen and you're her friend for life. Baseball, C233 Hockey, C233 Track Let- ter, Basketball, C133 Latin Club, C33, Or- chestra, C33, French Night Speaker. Helen M. Orbeton Helen needs no introduction for she's al- ways ready with at helping hand. B. H. S. is going to miss her next year. Glee Club, Class Basketball, C135 Class Hockey, C135 Junior Chorus, Festival Chorus. Richard S. Palmer Dick Richard is one of our star musicians and he certainly plays a mean clarinet. We wish you the greatest success in the future, Dick. Band, C33, Orchestra, C33, Festival Chorus, C23g Junior Chorus, C135 Glee Club, C13. Mildred Paul Millie Billie Mildred is a. very studious girl and ii' she keeps up the good work, there is no doubt of her success at Maine. o Dramatic Club, C13g Basketball, Cl3. Geraldine C. Peavey G erry As a. writer she'll excel As a talker she is swell ln other things she's a belle But nothing had could we tell. Junior Exhibition, CSemi-semi Finals3g Festival Chorus. james Pendleton Jim A well-liked chap, a friend to all. junior Exhibition CSemi-semi finals3, Junior Chorus. Madalynne A. Peters Pete Pete is one who shines in popularity and talent, especially on the gym floor. Class Basketball, C33, Captain, C13g Class Hockey, C33, Class Baseball, C233 School Basketball, Track, Glee Club, C133 Festival Chorus, C13. Charles Pooler Charlie What would we do without. him to hrighten up our class? Baseball C23. Raymond Prince Although he's quiet., conservative lad, He's not too good, yet. not. too bad. Prince describes him well, l'll say. Success awaits him some line day. Latin Club, Band, C455 National Honor Society, Dramatic Club, The Maker of Dreams. M. Chandler Redman Mac Mose llere's the boy who edits this sheet, Look him over he sure is neat. Someday, according to the signs, Hc'll be editing the New York Times. Freshman Boys' Debating Club, Senior Debating Club, C355 Latin Club, C35, Aedile, CI5, Consul, CI5, Rifle Club, C15, Junior Ex- hibition Finals, Dramatic Club, Treasurer, Playgoers, Senior Play, The Young- est, Band, C155 French Night, La Lettre Chargee, Oracle Board, Editor-in-chief, National Honor Society. Elliot A. Reid Ellie Elliott plays a snappy game ln basketball it ls always the same, Team work a specialty, playing is line One game he saved, we'll bet a dime. Basketball, C25, Class Treasurer, C15, Dramatic Club, Vice president, Business Manager, Mid-year plays, Senior Play, De- bating Club, C35, Bowdoin Cup Winners, C25, Lyford Speaking Contest, Solo and Duet Medals, Festival Chorus, Orchestra, C45, National Honor Society, Double Quartet. Catherine Reilly Cony Catherine is a good sport, fun loving and a friend to all. She has a most pleasing voice over the radio. And is also partial to thc name of Bill, Glee Club, C455 Dramatic Club, Cl5, Fes- tival Chorus, C45, junior Chorus, Style Show, Cheer Leader, C1929405. Richard Rice Dick Rather quiet., but one of the leaders of our Senior Class in athletics as well as in his stud- IPS. Band, C35, Baseball, C25, Football, C155 National Honor Society. Edythe Rice She's tall, hut. that's not all, She's sweet., charming, and hard to beat, We call lter a friend and to the end . VS'c'll love Edythe Rice, this girl so nice. Herbert A. Richardson A military man who'll take his company over the top in overcoming hl'e's obstacles. Track, C35, R. O. T. C., C45, Captain. John Rimbach A stubborn, plugging make-up like John's will carry anyone to success. Ada Rogers Peggy Sunny and smiling Neat. and trim By her merry twinkle She is sure to win. Dramatic Club, C155 junior Exhibition Chorusg National Honor Societyg Lunch room, C455 Festival Chorus, C155 Home Economic Style Show and Exhibition. Louis L. Rolnick Lonky A friend to whoever needs one. Boys' Glee Club5 Festival Chorusg Junior Chorus. Dorothy E. Romero Dot Dot is one of the best students in the class. Her brilliancy and grasp of all subjects have kept. her name on the honor roll for four years. She always has a smile for everybody and is a good friend to all of us. Do you wonder that we all like her? Snapdragons5 Latin Club, C35, Tribuneg French Play, La Duchesse Couturieref' National Honor Society. john Ross Johnnie Everybody has liked Johnnie who has known him. More should get to know him. Football, C15. E. Frank Rowe ' 'Pat Eathel Rowe with laughing eyes, Makes us think he's awfully wise. We feel, no doubt, l'16,S full of fun, Know too, his life work has begun. Mildred Russell Mildred always keeps in step With all the athletes full of pep, ln hockey she plays a mighty fine game In basketball too, it sure is the same. the same. Girls Athletic Honor Council, C455 Snap- dragons, C155 School Hockey5 School Basket- ball. Nathaniel Sawyer Nat Another one of the boys' who have helped put the Band on the map. Thanks a lot, Nat, may the best of luck be yours. Band, C455 Orchestra, C455 junior Chorusg Festival Chorus, C255 Glee Club, C155 Rifle Club, C35. Eleanor Ruth Scanlon Ellie Ready for work or ready for play Sometimes studious and sometimes gay, True to her friends and lessons alike, We think that Eleanor is just all right. junior Chorusg Latin Club, C255 French Night, La Marseillaise. Benjamin Shapero Ben We all like Bennie and his Ford, Like his Lizzie he's slow but sure. G mod boys like him, are like Model T Fords, They are getting fewer and fewer. Debating Club, C lj, junior Exhibition, CSemi-semi Finalsl. George W. Shean jake .lake came to B. H. S. to make a. name for himself and he has accomplished that very objective. He is a marvel on the basketball court, on the gridiron, and on the dance floor. Football, CZJ, Basketball, 425, Glee Club, CZJ, Festival Chorus, CIJ. Frank Smart One chap in High School that everybody likes is Frank Smart. VVe all wish that more of the boys' were like him, don't we, girls? Wendall Smart Sum Jimmy Smarty is a popular student. He can most always he found in his Essex. It is a well-known fact that he possesses a Hart- ley laugh. Oracle Board, CU, Football, CID, Basket- leallb llzlinagerg Officers' Club, CSJ, Rifle u , 1 . Frank Smith ' 'Smithy A very quiet youth is Frank, A help to all indeed, No matter what he undertakes He'll be sure to succeed. Junior Exhibition Chorus. Richmond Smith ' 'Smitty One of our quiet but best. liked fellows in the school, thatfs Richmond. Football, CZJ, Rifle Club, CID, Picked Squad, Clj. Isabelle Spencer Bell A denture lass who wouldn't intentionally pass up a good time. Junior Exhibition Chorus. Fred N. Sprague Freddie is a good scout., afellow you are proud to know. Everyone likes Freddie. Agatha Stanhope Peggy Agatha is one of the best ball-room danc- ers in school. She's very popular among her classmates and itfs rumored that she's not a man-hater either. French Night, La Duchesse Couturiere. Abraham Stem Abe Abe is our oratorl Speaking, Although he doesn't care what about, ls his drawing card, W'e expect Abe To he a great lawyer in the future. Junior Exhibition, Medal Winner, Maine Interscholastic Speaking Contest, Second place, Lyford Speaking Contest, tied for Sec- ond place, Dramatic Club, Playgoers, C15, French Club, La Lettre Chargee, C15, De- bating Club, C45, Latin Club, C15, Inter- class Debate, C25. Samuel Stem Sam Salesman Sam says: My highest ambition Is to be a man of great recognition, Success in business will be my aim And so be honored by my great fame. Junior Exhibition, CSemi-semi Fina1s5. G-race A. Stevens Peanut I believe that if Grace ever went in for aviation, all she'd fiv would be planes manu- factured by Curtis Company. Latin Club, National Honor Society, junior Exhibition, CSemi-semi Finals5, French Play, La Duchesse Couturiere, junior Exhibition Chorus. Miriam Arline Stevenson Stevie Stevie is an athlete, a fact we cannot doubt ln hockey she's a player we could not do without ln basllfletball and baseball she makes quite a it And when she's gone we'll miss her and not a little bit. School Hockey C25, Class Basketball, C45, Baseball, Dramatic Club, C15, Girls Glee Club, C15. Abraham Striar Abie One of the best fellows B. H. S. has ever had. His brains, personality, and general efiieiency will put him way up with the lead- ers in the years to eome. Good luck, Abe. Debating Club, C15. Bemard Striar ' Bemie Bernie went out for football this year for exercise and became a star quarter- back. His speed is confined to football and track, otherwise his motto is: Take it slow and easy. Football, C25, Track, C35, Basketball, C15, lst Lieutenant, CR. O. T. C., C25, Debating, C15, CTreasurer5, Treasurer of Senior Class, Officers' Club, C15. Vincent A. Talbot Binnie Une of our musical heroes. What would B. H. S. have done without him for the past four years? Football, C25, Orchestra, C35. G-ridley Tarbell llere's a hoy who deserves our praise When at 393 State street. he goes into a daze. lle's an Oraele man and a future has he, W1-'re 1-het-ring for you Grid, your sueeess we Fall 390. Track, Band, C453 Officers Club: R. O. T. C., 135, Regimental-Adjutant, Oracle Board, Business Manager, Orchestrag Dramatic Club, The Maker of Dreams. Velma C. Tate Kitten A lovely girl. who is so popular that she reeeives callers right. in Chemistry Class. Festival Chorus, QD, Junior Chorus, Clbg Glee Club, QZJ. John Thompkins Jack .lark is light-, quiet and small, lle's a good follow and t.hat's not all Ile likes his fun hut had rather work Ile's the lmy that will never shirk. Herbert Thornton Husky A lad who has made his way into the hearts of all who know him. Louise Tremble Always jolly not a pout ln ranks she's in the lead A splendid girl in sehool or out To say more there is no need. Penobscot County Typewriting Contest, CZJQ Maine State Typewriting Contest, C215 National Honor Society. Elva M. Tumer Honey Hlva is the kind of girl everyone likes, good in all her studies, full of fun and always ready for a good time. She will eertainly he missed hy her li. ll. S. friends. Dramatic Club, CID. Margaretta Warren ' 'Maggie ' 'Peg l'eg's at her hest whenlshe has a pen in hand. . May she always enjoy life as much as we enjoy reading her stories. Oracle Board, Acting Literary Editor. Nlkman J. Walsh 'llhis quiet hoy is very popular. ls he A I P always quietl lerhaps not. Evelyn C. Welch llere is one of our most successful girl athletes. As president of the Girls, Athletic llonor Council, she has had much to do with the success of athletics in this school. Girls' Athletic Honor Council, C455 Presi- dent, C15, Third Honorsg School Hockey, C25, Captain, C155 School Basketball C255 Baseball, C255 Class Hockey, C155 Class Bas- ketball, C255 Track, C155 Latin Club, C255 Dramatic Club, Playgoers5 Junior Ex- hibitiong French Play, La Duchesse Cou- turiere5 Oracle Board, Girls' Athletic Editorg Senior Play, The Youngest. Wilmar White Wilmar is a girl we know you'll like to meet She's a sport that can't be beat, A friend through thick and thin, And we know some day she'll win. Snapdragons, C15. Evelyn Whitman A lovely girl, with that. linger-longer look. Dramatic Club C155 Snapdragons, C155 Junior Exhibition Chorus. Emily L. Wiley For miles around There can scarcely be found A girl like Emily Wiley She's full of life You just bet. she's nice, And we hate to see her go. Elizabeth C. Williams Betty Who knows Betty? Everybody! Who likes Betty? Everybodyl Who wishes her luck? Everybody! Nuf Sed. Dramatic Club, Junior Exhibition, CSemi- semi iinals55 Junior Exhibition Chorus: Lunch Room, C455 French Night: Festival Chorus, C155 Home Economics Style Show and Exhibition. John W. Wilshire Shankster What will your school pals do without you? We dread to think of the effect your absence will have upon the 1930 lassies. Glee Clubg Football, C155 Junior Exhibi- tion Chorus. Herbert A. Wiswell Herb llere's one boy wc're proud to say, Who can tell a pine tree a mile away C Fun he likes and study too, Good luck, llerb ue're cheering for you. Emma C. Witham M Emma certainly is a. lovely girl And perfect pearl. She knows how to have a good time, And get her lessons, too. Lunch Room, C155 Festival Chorus, C15. AUTUCIQADHS XQ wx X X X 2, fff 'Nr ' X4 y ML. 0 R., Kg, x 'x.,'x tx' ',,,,f.f4-Qf' ',:Q.,.txitj-L -mix 1,7 uf A wg '- L- XX , ' f N N if s . , J Q , , N, t o era or , X ,-ga-,K I. 9.- 1 1,4 sie:- a. g--'13, 5 'nf' at -kf',',, Lx' ,QJJ 1, 1.3, A gfv-J 4 ' if 1 YS -Lf! vc 'pf it ' say ll 'J-- A ' Q V XL its-jw'! v l , ',-3 Xxfffh f ,Q N 5 V. J , -L l nsfxr, 54 - v . .t t -s ' t t f-X-X of if , lfffff 'W The wise prove, and the foolish confess, by their conduct that a life of employment is the only life worth leading. -Paley SIC TRANSIT GLORIA MUNDI! IC all know of tho glory which tho Band brought homo with it upon its roturn from tho rocont triumph at Pawtuckot, Hhodo lsland. Tho trophy won for good. tho now modals tho boys got, tho wondorful banquot which tho city gavo tho boys, tho vory fact that tho city sont tho boys, all callod for a largo oxponso of monoy, timo, and onorgy. Tho storios which tho boys havo told of tho wondorful timos had in Pawtucket, Provi- donoo, and Boston and of tho ups and downs of tho trip on tho boat havo croatod in many of tho lowor classmon a dosiro to got into tho Hand. All thoso doods aro sung aloud. Accompanying tho band woro two mon, both of whom actod as guido, philosophor, and friond to tho Hand, holping Mr. Robinson in ovory way possiblo and sooing that tho boys woro troatod proporly and given what oppor- tunitios for ploasuro affordod during tho four days of tho trip. Ono of thoso mon was tho Hon. Bonjamin W. Blanchard. Tho othor was Major O. M. Baldingor. Tho first showod himsolf to bo of firm mottlo whon ho undortook tho task of raising onough monoy to sond tho boys to tho contost. 'l'hrough his oooporation anothor concort was givon which addod somowhat to tho fruit of Mayor Blanchard's stronuous offort in raising tho roquirod sum. At this opportunity tho mombors of tho Band wish to thank ovoryono in tho city who donatod so liborally towards, or offorod tho moans by which to raiso, this sum. Nach mom- bor of tho Band fools that tho city has shown tho highost amount of intorost in this undor- taking as woll as in tho Portland trip which tho boys tako oach fall. Tho Ornrlo boliovos that ovory citizon of Bangor fools that tho boys, wholly through tho modium of Mr. Robinson, havo satisfactorily paid for tho oifort, tiino, and monoy oxpondod to sond thom. Major Baldingor was spoodily approoiatod as soon as tho Band startod on tho boat. Ho gavo tho boys holpful instruction in rogard to conduct on tho boat and ashoro. On Satur- day it was vory warm during tho contost and tho Major gavo us pormission to broak ranks and sit in tho shado whilo ho carriod wator from ono man to tho noxt. Many of tho othor bands standing at attontion undor tho hot sun wondorod who tho good Samaritan of tho mili- THE ORACLE 33 tary band might be. When registering at the homes in Pawtucket Saturday night and again at the Statler Sunday noon, it was the Major who directed us to our rooms? and got us out of them Monday morning. But while being busy, one can be sure the Major enjoyed himself immensely. Cf Mr. Alton L. Robinson, no praise too great can be sounded. He has devoted time and energy as leader of the Band to develop an excellent organization and he certainly has succeeded. But his duties run beyond the field of music. Anyone to appreciate him should attempt to escort a group of sixty-odd boys for four days on steamboat, train, taxi, and hotel. A difficult task, nobly performed. Again we thank you, Mr. Robinson. ON OUR WAY speaker in Assembly a short time ago said, What we are to bc, we are now becom- ing. That statement was repeated several times and impressed upon our minds. What we are to be, we are now becoming. We seniors are finishing one of the stages of our development into citizens of the country. Many will not go on to college or normal schools for various reasons. Those of us will learn from the school of Experience much that is to influence our careers as a voting citizen of this country. High school has laid the foundations of the course we shall take in the school of hard knocks. What we have been in High School, we shall be in the school of Experience. And we who are to enter this school must not believe that there is no hope for our future success. Many a successful business man has had no more public schooling than that afforded by the high school, but on his own he has gone after that which he could not obtain in high school. Edison is an ex- ample. Removed from school because he was apparently not as intelligent as his fellow pup- ils, he constructed a laboratory in a car of a train on which he was combination newsboy, porter, and conductor. What is he now? Probably the greatest scientist of all time. Certain businesses indeed have special train- ing schools, a graduate of which is assured a lifetime job in a strong, established firm. But whether of the school of experience or of the training school, what we are to be, we are now becoming. A great part of us are going to schools of higher learning, prep schools, finishing schools, colleges, universities, institutes of technology, or seminaries. We are not to have the wide- reaching, practical education of Experience, but we shall specialize along certain technical lines, believing that in these days of wide- spread unemployment, the specialist will be several places ahead of the untrained mind when looking for work. One of the chemistry teachers of the high school has given much to his pupils beyond the scope of chemistry. He has instilled in our minds that the student who goes after knowl- edge beyond the material in the text book will have more to show for his effort when gradua- ted. We who are going to college should obtain a benefit which will put us to great advantage over those of us who are less fortunate and must begin work in a few days, work which we shall probably bear as long as we are able to uphold the burden. But whether we have the advantages of college or not, we must. realize that, what we are to be, we are now becom- ing. 34 THE ORACLE 0:0-in 1110: 1011 iuioicviexicrieniuievicrinbianisniuniauicviapioioioie 3 U Q Q ! Q . 5 g lass cane U ! II Ruth J. Blanning II l I . H We all must sail the stormy seas of llf9Q Like ships, our lives must wend their rock- hound way Uoncluded are the days of fun and strife, The call of reck'ning fate we must obey. F S II Q Our sheltered, carefree youth is almost o'er. ll The anchor lifts. The sail of life begins. The prow is turned t'ward unknown, pathless shores The ports of fame and wealth are ours to win. III Our ships must all traverse unfathomed seas. H Our knowledge is the power that wafts the sails. E Not all may cross this stern, harsh life with easeg H But dauntless, ceaseless effort never fails. IV i And then our ships their destined ports will gain, The sails from endless travels will descend. H Our passing years in happy peace shall reign, i Power from knowledge shall attain this end. Ozhic:iiuicnicniaricsioiuioicliniuaioiui vianioicpiupiurisvioioioioievic D D E ll: -6' E f 539 , 15: zffrflg T 5-.yy M sv 'QL tx 2141! ka x .4 yS' ,Z N ' f XXX- 1:97 Z- 4-'K 6 .-. lilwf ll. ,!.. A, f BLA fl siX.vi1-M-fgf. 1' f ff -- Sl-.iff sf s ' '-Xssz-:ffl 5- T he modesty of certain ambitious persons consists in becoming great without making too much noise. -Voltaire Men and Women Builders Third Honor Essay Ada Rogers HAT is boys' and girls' 4 H-clubwork? VVhen was it organized? These are two questions I asked myself many times before I became a member of a 4 H-club. lcifvhgl I am safe in saying that thirty years ago the expression 4 H-clubwork was nearly unheard of. In the last part of the 19th century, nature study was introduced into the schoolsg so, in my opinion, agriculture and home economics began then as a part of the school pro- grams. The Middle West of the United States did not delay to introduce the work of agricul- ture into its schools. I find that real 4 II-clubwork began sometime between 1902 and 1904. A story taken from a boy's records was published by a teacher in Ohio relating the experi- ences that A. B. Graham of that state had in 1902 when he raised sweet corn, made a report of it, and exhibited his produce. A leaflet published by C. H. Benson in Iowa states that in 1904 every school had a club, demonstrations, exhibits, contests, labels, etc. very nearly as have our present day clubs. These people were the first to use the three-leaf clover labels, the original of our four-leaf emblem of today. In the South, 4 H-clubwork started from an utterly different reason. I do not think that the government fully appreciates the great war that club members have waged against the boll weevil. In 1909 several states throughout the South started clubs in which the boys and girls raised cotton and fought the mischievous weevil that was causing thousands of dollars worth of damage. These young people won prizes not only of money but of short visits to Washington, D. C. In my estimation, John D. Rockefeller has been one of our dearest friends in clubwork. In 1910, girls became very much interested in work connected with the 4 H-clubs in order to increase the family income. This work could not be carried on without money. In South Carolina and Virginia, a way was found to get this needed treasure. A club-leader asked the government for financial help and, too good to be true, Rockefeller made a large donation to the General liducational Board to promote education. This money was used for clubwork throughout the country. Ulubwork was progressing at this time, but I believe that the 4 H-clubwork which the boys and girls tincluding mel do today really was established by Congress in 1914 by the Smith-Lever Act. Cflontinued on page 671 36 THE ORACLE What is Ambition? Third Honor Essay 1 V HAT is it that leads men on, makes empires, ruins vast countries, and, in a way, Edward Gross determines life? It is that little germ Ambition, sown in the minds of all, which fini grows, thrives and flourishes until it is quite mature. Sometimes one may lose it, but it is always there-to be aroused by some stimulant. The child realizes his ambition through daydreams, but the man, in reality. When one says Country first, he means am- bition for his country. In the days of yore, a child who daydreamed was called a lazy boy or girl, but more times than one the child turned out to be a genius. When a child daydreams, he pictures what he would like to have or be in his mind's eye, soon he wants this picture for reality, and then it is his ambition. When he becomes of age, he determines to have it, and there we have will power, directly leading from ambition. Daydreams are not merely soap bubbles in which to stick a pin and they burst to be gone forever-they are but parts of ambition molding into a purpose. Ambition is like choler which is a humor that maketh man active, earnest, full of alacrity, and stirring, if it be not stopped: but if it be stopped, and cannot have its way, it becometh a dust thot and fieryj and thereby malign and venomous. You know and I know that seventy per cent of the boys and girls of high school age have no more ambition than to drive a truck or work behind a counter in some local store. That is not ambition, it is merely getting by. When one does this, he is not fulfilling his duty in the eyes of his Maker. If ambition is not encouraged, the world will not progress, but rather retrogress. Thoughtful literature should be given to the student for him to absorb and to mold his character upon. But one should not go too far with ambition, for, as Longfellow once expressed it, Most people would succeed in small things if they were not troubled with great ambitions. For an example of ambition applied wrongly, we have only to look toward Germany. In that case Germany showed her greed for more power and lands, but there always is an end to this type of will power. Ambition applied for the good may be seen in Madame Curie's discovery of radium, in Fdison's discoveries and inventions, and in many other benefits for the world. - Today's average American will call a person mercenary if he desires to live better than the great middle class, but it is not so. To do good for the World, one must have power within himself 3 and the easiest way for this kindly power is money, sometimes called the means to an end. To secure this power, one must have that will power to push, push ahead in the right way. Honest pushing ahead is formed on one's character, and character is a part of ambition. A man's character can be blackened because of his unscrupulous ambition, though at heart he may be an honest citizen. This can work both ways, for if a man has a strong character, his ambition in life will be constructed on the same lines. That is why more care should be taken in giving a child the right ideals to uphold. Everywhere we hear about environment and its work. If a man fails in his project, we hear a lot about wrong environmentg if he attains a prominent position, we hear He's a hard worker. In a way there is a great deal of truth in both, but association has just as much power on the criminal as it does on the man of position. Environment can easily swing one's ambition from generosity to avarice. fContinued on page 885 Second Honor Essay OSCAR FELLOWS Second Honor Essay NATHALIE MacLEOD Qrahuatiun Svpeakers QEIH55 of 1930 Parting Address HENRY P. GULNAC Class History RUTH J. BLANNING Class History EUGENE E. BROWN 38 THE ORACLE A Bit of Nature Fourth Honor Essay Margaretta Warren I sat, on an old stone wall, near the shore of a lake, one morning in late spring, watching 91, 'S l the world come to life. The trees were pushing out their green leaves to make hiding places for tiny homes, the homes of birds. And, as I sat there, I suddenly heard a familiar but harsh and loud twitter from the tall maple above me, and down shot a bird, like a blue flash, into the water. In a few moments he appeared again with a squirming pickerel in his long beak. The first kingfisher, I thought with a thrill. How nice it was to see him again! I re- mained Very still and watched as the bird flew to a dead limb and devoured the fish. Then my attention was drawn from this little scene, as I heard a charming and musical o-ka- lee of the red-winged blackbird. Field glasses were brought into use and I soon found the pretty fellow and his sparrow-like mate in some young willow bushes. As if he were showing off, the male raised both wings, showing the red on his shoulders, and looked down at his loving mate. Then, just to tease him, Mrs. Blackbird darted away, but was closely followed by Mr. Blackbird. The air seemed full of song. The bushes around me stirred with life. Three yellow Warb- lers, like golden sunbeams, flitted into view within arm's reach. They were unafraid and hopped around from branch to branch, from twig to twig, happily chirping and searching for bugs and worms. One of the yellow things hopped onto a branch just beside my head, and I feared for a time that he was going to peck at my eyes, he looked so curiously and intently at me. I was un- able to hold a stony expression longer, under so intent a gaze, and smiled. Away jumped my yel- low friend, followed by his companions, but they did not go far away, as I heard their gay chirp- ing from time to time. A song sparrow started to sing, from the top of a bush nearby, and soon I could hear the charming song from different places around the shore. Were you ever awakened by this brown bird's song in the morning, and then wonder how such a plain bird could have so sweet a song? It is beautiful! God was kind to his children on earth when He gave them the song birds. In contrast with the song sparrow with his beautiful song is the rose-breasted grosbeak. This bird is not as well known as the little sparrow, but he is handsome. His head and back are black, the rump is white, the tail is black with a few white markings, but the upper part of the breast is a very brilliant rose, the rest is dull white. The female looks like a big sparrow. These birds have a whistling song which they utter at intervals, and also a deep toned chirp that always re- minds me of a wagon wheel that has never been greased and makes nerve Wracking squeaks. As I was thinking of this rose-breasted fellow I was surprised to see one, on the wing, not far away, across a cove where a brook enters the lake. I breathed a delighted, Oh, and raised the field glasses to watch him, after he alighted in a tree with a number of others of his kind. I watched them for awhile then decided to go home by a way through the woods. The wood- sy air was fragrant with the smell of violets, delicate dark blue ones with long stems. Then, a lit- tle farther along, I found some rich yellow ones with black markings and a fringe of yellow in the very center. A marshy place lay in my path. It was thickly carpeted with moss and gold threads, a tiny delicate flower that grows up about two inches from the ground with a cup shaped white blossom with yellow center. These little flowers get their name from their roots which are bright yellow. C Continued on page 875 -Q. ,... . Graduation Essay Graduation Essay WALDUN H- HASTINGS CHARLOTTE R. CAHNERS illilehal winners lass of 1930 u-lil junior Exhibition junior Exhibition PRISCILLA F. BROWN ABRAHAM STERN 40 THE ORACLE The Constitutional Convention Fourth Honor Essay V 1 , the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish jus- Irving Grodinsky tice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general ci-5:-5 welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty, to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America. One hundred forty-three years ago, these words were written in our famous Independence Hall at Philadelphia by fifty-ive of the most brilliant men in the country. Never, in any history of the world, was there gathered together such an intelligent group of men with such an excellent understanding of the situation. Little did they realize that the Constitution then agreed upon was destined to become the leading factor in the future development of the greatest country on earth. The Constitution of the United States is the foundation which America has been built around! As the English Premier, Mr. Gladstone, once said, The Constitution is the most won- derful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man. How did this all happen? Who were the great men that wrote this masterpiece? Why was it necessary to call the convention? What was really accomplished there?-Let us turn back a little and look through those precious pages of History. The very same day that the Declaration of Independence was signed, a committee was formed to propose some form of government by which to uphold that famous document. In thc meantime the Continental Congress was yet holding out in existence. What could be done? How would it be possible to devise a plan of government that would satisfy all the people, the thirteen colonies, unite them into one union, insure the individual his freedom, about to be won in the War, and at the same time construct a different form of government other than a monarchy? Finally, after a year had passed, the com- mittee reported the papers known as the Articles of Confederation. John Dickinson is said to have been the author, but these failed to unite the struggling states. Why? Because the fed- eral government did not have any direct power on the individual, it could not collect taxes from them nor could it regulate their trade! What good would a government be without the people's money behind it? All the power still remained in the hands of each separate state, while the Con- gress, consisting then of only one house, was dependent on the states. Many saw the numerous defects of this form of government, but none dared to start some- thing different. Democracy, the united rule of the people, was yet in its infancy. At that time there were still some people who believed in the Divine Right of Kings. Some went as far as to look for some European Prince to come into the new Federation and rule. However, the Arti- cles grew weaker every day until something had to be done. In 1783, federal power was so weak that some soldiers drove Congress out of Philadelphia because they had not received any pay. Then, three years later, there was so much trouble about interstate commerce that a meeting was called, resulting in the famous Annapolis Convention. This was for the sole purpose of consider- ing the trade relations of the different states, but ended with the calling of the big convention to be held in Philadelphia the following year. Alexander Hamilton and James Madison were the outstanding men present. The affair proved to be a success as twelve of the thirteen states were present at the Constitu- tional Convention. Sixty-five men of the best ability were invited, but only fifty-five of them ac- cepted the invitation. The purpose of this convention was only to amend the Articles of Con- federation. But what could they do with a machine that was totally wrecked in every way? It was indeed an impossible task to patch it up. Nevertheless, the brains of America assembled, each with the idea to help the convention be a success. fCominued on page 831 ORACLE BOARD --'30 Bark row, la-ft to right lrving Grodinsky, Evelyn Welch, Leonard Ford, '31, Harry Boyd, Lydia. Jones llvnrv Gulnaf' Front roxii fflhiynihml Prim-0, Natalie Anderson, Ruth Blanuing, Gridley 'l'a.rbell, M. Chandler Red nmn, Allann. Lmmdors, Charlotte Cahners. Fi EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Howard L. lionxinsky BOYS' ATHLETICS Cto he appointedj N316-.? Grazia iBnarh-19304931 LITERARY Mary Gibbons BUSINESS MANAGER Leonard H. Ford GIRLS' ATHLETICS Louise Rosie MILITARY MUSIC STUDENT ACTIVITIES Norman Caluwrs Frances Hayes Cto be appointed, PERSONALS Betty Russ Arthur Lieberman ALUMNI EXCHANGES Frzmvos Clough Margaret Avery ASSISTANT EDITOR ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER CTo he appointcdb KTO be appointedj JDfEf4DfSw-.a 42 THE ORACLE The History of English Literature up to the Eighteenth Century Fifth Honor Essay Helen Barstow century or more ago it was calculated by the great lifnglish essayist, DeQuincy, that Riggs should a man, in early youth, set out to read the world's books, and read every day the greatest number of pages that his eyes could over run, and should live a hundred years in this exclusive occupation, death would find him still toiling in the first alcoves of the immeas- urable library. This statement might sound a little exaggerated to some, but if one would only look into the beginning of the subject, he would find that the number of books and great works of Literature is beyond all counting. Therefore, I do not have the slightest intention of going into the history of all literature, but only into the English, and not even the whole history of that, but only as far as the eighteenth century. Let us, then, begin with the Early English or Anglo-Saxon Literature. It is commonly said that it begins with the Epic of Beowulf. The material on which it is based, legendary, mythi- cal, and historical, refers to the time of the Danish conquest of the Cimbrian peninsula, in the first part of the sixth century. There is a theory that the epic embodys old Danish and Angle poems, handed down for generations. It was from time to time modified and added to, until after nearly three hundred years, in the eighth century, it attained the form in which we now have it. In the seventh century there was a man, Caedmon, who attempted to diffuse among the people a knowledge of Scripture history by means of Anglo-Saxon verse. In this ambition he wrote Eve and Satan, Angel of Presumptionf' The story of the latter anticipates Milton's Paradise Lost. Judith has also been attributed to Caedmon. In 1823 there was discovered in a monastery at Vercelli, in northern Italy, a manuscript of Anglo-Saxon poetry with the name, Cynewulf, curiously inserted into the closing lines. The same name, thus found, was discovered later in two great poems, The Coming of Christ and The Legend of St. J ulianaf ' In these books were found over a hundred smaller poems and riddles. Alfred the Great, who was known as a fighter, an administrator, a scholar and a good man, did a great deal towards the progress of I.iterature, as well as other branches of study. He did much Writing and translating himself. Under his order the Saxon Chronicle was begun. This is one of the chief authorities for the history of England. It begins with Caesar's invasion and extends to the year 1154. William the Conqueror and his Norman barons banished the Old English or Anglo-Saxon from the court. Richard Cour de Lion and his courtiers talked in the Provencal language. The Chronicles, written by monks, were in Latin, yet there is a remarkable proof of the continued vitality of Native Fnglish in Layamon's Brut This work serves as a landmark to show the close of Early English Literature. The literature of Fngland in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries is chiefiy represented by the Chroniclers who wrote in Latin. They begin with William of Malmsbury. The most remarkable of them was Geofifry of Monmouth. The Arthurian Legend, begun by him, has had a powerful influence on literature in many lands. Wzilter Map enlarged the story and added the Quest of the Holy Grail. The other famous cycles of romance, Cffontinued on Page 81 Q guolll M01 H uaqu ng UILU Riu! qeuxw 'uosmyl 1.xaqoH 'vm 'L 'C 'E A - E' -1 A - 9: Y 1 'I 'u.xxo.1g1 pmjpof muxox 's.1.z1a1M.JN 1.mq0H U lpmlllag qciafauf 'ml,i12AL 'l 1 gal No.1 301:51 0 umlux !1q3g1 H 'xaximg 'JN 'ailmxmeg leuu 'sxpg 024 'HIYIO ONLLVSIEICI QSLOH NVWHSHHH 44 THE ORACLE What Roentgen has done for Mankind by his Discovery of the X-Ray Fifth Honor Essay-I Dexter Clough HERE are probably few people who know who it was that discovered the X-ray. This man was Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen, a German physicist, who was born in 'Yr-e1 Lennep, Prussia, March 27, 1845. At Zurich in 1869 he received his Ph. D. and in 1885 he became professor of physics and director of the physical laboratory at Wurz- burg. H It was in a room of the Institute of Physics at Wurzburg, where he made the discovery of the X-ray in the spring of 1895. He was experimenting with an energized vacuum tube similar to those with which experiments had been made by Faraday, Plucker, Gassiot, Geis- sler, Hittdorf, Varley, Crookes and Leonard. Each of these men had made notable experi- ments and discoveries about these energized vacuum tubes, but it remained for Roentgen to explain the phenomena produced by them. On this day, while he was experimenting, he was called from the room. He set the tube, which was still glowing, on a book under which was a photographic plate holder. In the book wasalarge iron key used asabookmark. Later, when he had used the photographic plate in that holder and had developed it, he found the shadow of the key in the picture. His discovery of the X-ray was not an accident, but this accident of the shadow of the key in the picture gave him further data which directed his thoughts in the right channel to the discovery of the X-ray. He repeated the experiment that he had done at first by chance, and again found on the developed plate the shadow of the key. This led him to think that an invisible light had produced the shadow. To verify this thought he started an experiment. He incased the vacuum tube in an en- velope of a light-proof material, so that no light visible to human eyes could be seen com- ing from the bulb. When this apparatus wasset up in a dark room, a handful of platinobar- ium cyanide, which in the daylight looks like ordinary salt, became fluorescent. This proved that rays invisible to human eyes and able to penetrate opaque substances had pierced the light-proof envelope and made the salts glow. To these rays he gave the name X-rays. Experimenting further, he made a photograph showing shadows of the bones in his hand by placing his hand over a covered photographic plate and energizing the tube above it. Edison was one of those who saw the significance of this experiment and invented a hood and screen which enabled doctors to see the shadows of living human anatomy when placed between this and the energized vacuum tube. With apparatus similar to this, Dr. Williams of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, was the first person to see the inside of a living man. The bones made dark shadows on the fluoroscope-the instrument used for viewing the shadows produced by a solid, which more or less absorbs the X-rays according to its density. The organs produce lighter shadows than the bones, while the flesh is hardly visible. It was the important significance of these experiments that brought about the science called Roentgenology. This is the science which treats of X-ray therapy. It has devel- oped from year to year, so that now much in the study and practice of medicine depends upon it, and it has and continues to be an infinite credit to mankind. Before the discovery of the X-ray, the examining of human anatomy had to be done after death except in rare cases, where an ex- Cflontinued on Page 75D 'fl 532'-gg 1-1-123 'T 5 mfbi ,.1'r'3:-T3-. 1-51 6 H. . Q ma?-:UD ,CLQQJE M . 25510 no Nmwc goo? H1333 mga: Qmfirn S303 fi-'pea 5:1655 E'a1f:Q11. c-ff.-,IO nw-,ol -1013... NE-15 0' 31' sw ffvw an-1 EW' 3 , 'U-'LL O71-if :Om ' .4 and 2,-vis ':'9,':P7 E43 -5 mp EF 'E'v11Q?l. S'Q,5g.E 2635? , ., . QWFA FD 5' Crib 1 :Q '5lP'w EQLUB '11 Zig' QDCYQI-A I Fin 2 H QFD ,figs iz'-3 S:-Q49 Wgdfla- P 542. -'-3':U5ll1 fatiF w :iE3,'b on-In vfgf EI . rum' TJ- 997 5' mi' 9 35 3 5' o F 46 T H E O R A C L E The Eighteenth Amendment Fifth Honor Essay-II Eugene Brown 2 ,, by the ton came with the Pilgrims hogsheads of wine with the Qavallers Drink Lia debauched the forest Indian, very nearly destroyed the Church in various colonies, and obstructed the administration of justice throughout the length of the Atlantic Coast. The railroads and vast industrial establishments were not the first to. realize the serious economic effects of alcohol consumptiong long before, the colonial assemblies had enacted laws to prevent servants from loitering, drinking, or idling around public inns. The Vir- ginia Colonial Assembly in 1629 passed a law that ministers shall not give themselves to ex- cess drinking. Doctor Benjamin Rush, who is considered the father of the anti--alcohol movement in America, published a pamphlet, which pointed out the evils of ardent spirits upon the human body and mind. Then, in 1850, the Neal Dow prohibition measure was lost in the legislature of Maine by a tie vote. At last it was manifest that alcohol was an evil and on January 16, 1920, every saloon in the United States was legally abolished and the manufacture, importation, and sale of in- toxicating liquors for beverage purposes were prohibited. This was the result of a battle waged for over two centuries. What is the result of this battle? What has prohibition accomplished? It has removed organized and legalized temptation from the pathway of the young, the weak, the habit- bound. The familiar saloon door is not swinging inward to engulf our men, nor outward pouring forth a stream of drunkenness and misery into American home life, and this is a new day. Prohibition has let out of temptation and delivered from evil those who wanted to be. Millions of excessive drinkers have stopped. Their names are not in the newspapers, they are making no sensation, but they are living at home, paying their bills, and in many in- stances their old debts. Instead of prohibition being a failure, as those whom it has restricted would have us believe, it has been, in spite of handicaps, the greatest moral triumph that our generation has ever seen. It saved America from what came as a crash upon every other country, and that financial advantage ought to be remembered to the credit of the Eighteenth Amendment. Candy shops, retail dry goods establishments, millinery shops, and restaurants scrup- ulously avoided the vicinity of saloons. Now that saloons have been driven out, owners of property, suitable for the sale of such goods, have been surprised and delighted to find that merchants have seized upon the opportunity to occupy the choice corner locations and con- venient premises where drink was formerly sold. What is the effect on American prosperity? The most important consequence of prohibi- tion has not been its favorable effect upon the crime situation. A study of the crime statis- tics undoubtedly vindicates prohibition, but its work -in general has been much more con- structive. It has brought to the front the average man 5 has built him a home such as he never saw in his dreams before 1920, has put a modest ear at his door and built thousands upon thousands of miles of boulevard to open his way to the fields and flowers, has taken his wife from the wash-tub and allowed her to rejoice in a washing machine, a vacuum cleaner, and a hundred small conveniences which a few short years ago were the marks of moderate wealth. fCominued on page 771 RINK followed the flags of half a score of nations from the old world to the new. Beer s , . . . . . . , . . TQ -tr' , T , i g .. , . f5V4 4 . ' , . . . A 71 ZHQ? 68:11 Ezra! ,.,:L.,:- O'1O 'l gosgo VT n fs U Z' fa-sys: ,,... ,-. 'wsiw :1 goggggf Euirsvm mmap -1' Q 1'-1 92359 '1'j lD5f'D 9955 5102 . Dggm .QQUP1 ru ' 'U Piilgzf, :liwzlz fav? 5-'I . '::.:.' Q':g.L - EFPfe ,O no 5215 wzwv g- 69. mfg' .ANZQ U-'Ion ggi? Hmmm Sw-WE' 1,2 45 -fd'-2:-11 ZW? ...:z. 114 9992. 3, all -39521 'D'-710:1- 325' :. , ,-ww 5422.5- FP Er?-T22 -12.1325 msg: g-:'Fcz.w ...wal UQQ514 UE.:-1 PN.-B lb Bfglm :SMD gmt!! .f-'en Us fa 33: D:-' 'Z rn iff: :TE- will .. 43 fb E. UU rs O nr' '1 c T: F -s fo A O C1 UQ :- Y 7 CD :x :1 FJ ,-. :' il fx C 5' o ir: 3 5' o 5 sw 71 FU co rn Q- Z o 1 5 an :S O no :: :: 'D -1 'n 'JU sw 4 3 c :1 Q- 'C Tl. :: fl O P-Z :- fb o Q. o 1 FD .1- Q. w B rl: 'U fb 17 UU N I zz :n 1 9- 02.-oz. 'afrlo uI.Lv'I sas osIxIiI.I3 or f :Fi'IIjIIII,w l-3RUA.DEAETINE X ' 'MQ 5 uoem' I 'f 0 .ez ACTIVITIES My pen is at the bottom ofa page. -Byron A.DIEU Well, it becomes my sad duty to pull the old Parting Address, usually delivered at Gradua- tion. I'll just say a word or two before you see the last of the Class of '30, Personally I believe we can argue the other classes in B. H. S. into believing that when June twentieth rolls 'round that the Class of '30 will show it isn't so dumb after all and that we have just been waiting for a quiet lull in the conversa- tion to get really started towards achievement. At least our achievements throughout our stay in B. H. S. are worthy of some slight at- tention. During our four years in High School, we have seen the steady increase in the per-- centage of victories in Football, Basketball, Baseball, and Track. And it is in the season of '29-'30 that the climax was reached. Class of '30 was present when the Hearst Trophy matches took place and B. H. S. got a third and a second. And Class of '30 was right on hand when the Band won the New England Championship three times running. And it isn't just in Student Activities that Class of '30 has been on top. Dig out the Honor Rolls beginning with the Fall of '27 and upon in-- speetion, you'll see that Class of '30 has had a higher percentage of members on the Honor Roll than any other class by a large majority. So we feel mighty proud that Class of '30 was given the honor of being able to furnish the charter members of the National Honor So- ciety. Now I guess you'll allow Class of '30 to stand up and accept your applause. GRADUATION EXERCI SES Of course you began at the beginning to read, and so we take it for granted that you all have seen the prize beauties of the Class of '30. Also, scattered around were a few individual portraits, Bernie Striar's and such-like, to fill space. But really a few of them call for ex- planations. First were the class officers, the President, Moose Gulnac, will deliver the Part- ing Address, Ca big husky guy was chosen so no sob scene might be liable to be worked into the Night of Nightsgl the V-P, fDutch for Very Pretty, but in this case meaning Vice-Presi- dentj, Ruth Blanning shall interpret one of the Class Histories with the Class Ode as a theme song, of which she is guiltyg Mildred Haney and Bernie Striar fsame mentioned abovej are Secretary and Treasurer respect- ably, Crespectably because there were neither minutes nor moneys to be watched over, just as Well perhaps for our piece of mindl. Medal Winner Waldon Hastings will deliver his chef- d'oeuvre with Oscar Fellows accompanying as the fortunate boy who obtained Honorable Mention. Miss Charlotte Cahners, being in the same Hx as M. W. Waldon Hastings, must also display her wares and we also take great pleasure in presenting Miss Natalie MacLeod who was a very close second. A couple of last year's medal winners at the Junior Exhibition were interviewed to see if they would allow us to use their pictures again this year. Strange to say neither of them objected, and we take great pleasure in presenting Abe Stern and OEFOZ4 NOSVEIS-CINVH 50 THE ORACLE Pat Brown. And well, I guess that closes the chapter of Class of '30's graduation. Ch, there's a small fellow asking to be given just a line or two, Cpersonally we think he has a line all his own, but here goesl. Gene Brown will recall to our memories the doings of the last two years around the campus and we can well believe that he won't get his cues mixed. CLUB ACTIVITIES On May twenty-Hrst, the Debating Society held its annual banquet at the High School. Every year this club has a ban- Debating quet in order to tell of the Club club's activities during the Banquet year and also to award the letter 'B to those having debated on the varsity and interclass teams and to the officers. After a delightful dinner cooked by Miss Crosby's Home Economics Class, there were speakers among Whom were: Kenneth Kur- son, Mildred Rolnick, Robert Kurson and Nor- man Cahners. Norman, who is president of the debating society was toastmaster and he introduced the speakers with a few remarks about each one. The Club has been very active this year. In the fall, it held a dance in the Assembly Hall, which was very successful. Then, it joined the Bates League. The negative side of the question, which was Resolved: That the Jury system sould be abolished, composed of Natalie Anderson and Kenneth Kurson, won the debate from Lincoln. This was a proud event for Bangor High. So, taking everything into consideration, the Debating Club under Mr. Bryant, has had a very busy and prosperous year. One of the most brilliant of social events of the High School year was the Military Ball, sponsored by the Bangor High Officers' School R. O. T. C. Officersf Club Club, held at City Hall, May Military Ball twenty-ninth. The hall was crowded with high school stud- ents and with parents and friends who wished to see what the R. O. T. C. Unit had accom- plished, and they were well rewarded as the drilling was very fine indeed. The Bangor High Band played a few pieces in its usual captivating manner which was appreciated by everybody. Then followed the drilling and medals were awarded to the picked men and letters were awarded to the Riiie Team. Soon after the sponsors received souvenirs and then came the Grand March led by Lt.-Col. George McKenney and Alexina Michaud. This was indeed very beautiful and both the girls and boys looked very fine indeed. HONOR SOCIETY Not long ago Mr. Taylor presented the thirty members of the National Honor Society with emblems which were admired by the whole school. Each and every member was very much thrilled to be the owner of such a valua- ble ornament. Some had pins while others had the charms which resembles the Phi Beta Kappa key. These charms represent Char- acter, Service, Scholarship, and Leadership, and all thru life these seniors will know that they have been adjudged to possess some of the best qualities in the world. In the near futum the members are to be initiated before the student body, with a ceremony, the first of its kind ever held in Bangor. SENIOR PLAY As in former years the Dramatic Club is preparing for its annual Senior Play. The play, The Youngest, by Philip Barry, is one of great interest and will provide a very good entertainment. It is light comedy and there is not a dull moment from Act I to Act III. The Cast has been well chosen and consists of many well-known school actors and act- resses, many of whom have appeared in pub- lic, many times. The play is under the direc- tion of Mrs. Doris Bridgham, who has trained the nine students carefully and diligently. No one should have missed this gala performance Friday evening, June 6, and it is a sure bet that everyone who didn't, wishes they had gone. Es?-3 ASEE? SSEQCG QQ' 3:- .1371 rc 'f ,qs 132 4 ' 31 QV 51 an Q5 505' 5 EQ E, -?-1 ' g'oEgoE' F'1PfE:nE,' QZf.E,OI o' . cr: Cv,,E' UQ ,-,ma 5 F0515 N. L ....g5,1 719 FN: paw' 92 :EF3? 4m no-.' 'gp :uP1w:E5 pw? 5 v-Q'-1 Q00 -1 72-Www 5251790-V :gw.4g, ': O, ,jfs 45 P4 4 mfg On . -F4 ff ,saga n-7' 9535 5-,.::,D-DC-D 'fb bfisoi' fs F' 5 Ocz.':r'CJ-- 5-352.2 giaggf ghd B., - - QS? E59-F5 to , .A gym, 652' F' 4 OH,.... ,-445'-16.1 r gp :UULWS gfsgvzi' , vs' S wg' woo? r-1' Q..y' 'Emi 'T4' N261 anim? gfi' . ' ' v '-4 rn 593 5 U-I' .I ,.. Q av P 09, . H111 3 sr 31 9 52 THE ORACLE THE CA ST Charlotte Winslow ........... Alice E. Munce Oliver Winslow ............... James Mullen Mark Winslow ............ Eugene E. Brown Martha Winslow C MuiT j ...................Natal1eA.Anderson Richard Winslow CThe Youngest? Chandler Redman Allan Martin .................. Elliott Reid Augusta Winslow Martin. . . Evelyn C. Welch Nancy Blake ............. Priscilla F. Brown Katie ........ .....,.......... P 'ern Allen MUSIC BAND Three cheers for the B. H. S. Band, cham- pions of all New England for the third succes- sive year! We can keep the big trophy for good! The Band certainly has turned out to be a wonder organization! Again we cheer, this time for the king of all conductors. Mr. Alton L. Robinson, none other than our be- loved leader who has worked magic with the boys. And lastly we will cheer for those who gave so willingly to the great and expensive cause-the long Pawtucket trip 3 also to the Mayor, the School-board, and Principal Tay- lor, through whose untiring efforts, the Band was sent to the thrilling contest. And it sure was a contest from the start to the finish. There were forty-six bands and orchestras there, comprising over 2,500 musicians' After the contest in the morning, the B. H. S. Band led a 25 mile parade around the city. When Bangor had returned to the Park, there were still some bands just leaving. From Pawtucket to Boston, at the Statler, then on the boat at six, Monday evening, the boys finally made their way home. Many weird stories have been told by the boys of their journey around Boston during those two short CPD days. Be- lieve them or not! However, after all had been seasick, Con the last night of the trip,D they arrived amidst a downpour of rain, and yet everyone in Bangor was there at the wharf to welcome them. Just as the Band got off the boat the sun shone up as if to show his appre- ciation, and he did stay out just long enough to get our parade out of the way! As for the contest itself, the Egmont Over- ture, which was the Class A required number, met with great approval by all, as the inter- pretation of the piece was slightly different than that of the others. The Slavonic Rhap- sody created a hit! No other band selected that number. CWe don't blame themj. Many congratulations were given Mr. Robinson not only at home, but at Pawtucket for his great work in building up the Band. Maine was well represented at the contest. Their division led all the other states. I repeat it, sir-to the Class of 1930, and to all readers of the Oracle- let us not forget the B. H. S. Bands of '28-'29 and '30. Special credit will now be given to Charles Jacques, ineligible as a post-grad to compete in any contest this year, but yet willing to come to every band rehearsal helping to build a crippled bass section into veterans. Charley knows his bass. LAUGH AND BE HAPPY CReminiscences of the N. E. Contest Tripj CPlease ask these items to your friendj 1. World's greatest radio receiving set .......................askHessert 2. Who invented the Goose-step? .....................askE.Aucoin 3. How to play cadenzas ..... ask P. Sawyer 4. Why am I so quiet? ...... ask Mongovan 5. Where I learned to play golf . . . ................. ask Levenseller 6. Sitting on a soap box at South Station .......................askPalmer 7. Put a nickel in it .......... ask Finnigan 8. How to play the Stein Song askMorgan 9. How to cut-in at a dance ......... ask Nat Bring that boy in my room. . .ask Brown 10. 11. Not so fast ............... ask L. Ford 12. Can I go too? .............. ask A. Miller 13. What is a Freshman? ...... ask A. Ford 14. Why I was born a shiek ..... ask A. Kern 'ssog agleqmx '11axpeH mneq 's.10uuoD .inuex '1a.i'eqLL 1am3.1f:Iy 'ummng .ia.1pny 'supfuaf amonfl-M01 1s.1H 'iiuoq qlaqezqg 'qiinolo .lounam 'bugq3poH peed 'uoq auglepelg 'u.1:AIHn5 muiaql-4.xxo.x puuoag 1 HCC ITN -.,, if 'I Oc si 'Tig '1 B7-v DO Sz. URN QD' OT' 55: fm m 1 25 U' NU Bo 3 54- Di: Sa' 'AFD Vie Fc G QF 3-o :JN ,E 45' gm FY oi FB ,P F-1 NE E-fl :B FD H'-3 :Sig EE' E55 Q, fbv ... 1 vi CJ 'D N P 094'HI1'IO EIEYI9 4S'IHI9 NVIAIHSEIHI 54 THE ORACLE 15. Let the other fellow carry the music Fellows 16. Was I seasick? ............ ask Betterly 17. Watching the clouds roll by. . .ask Curtis Why I am a woman-hater . ask Joe Mullen 18. 19. I just love Boston taxis. . .ask H. Morris 20. How to get somewhere on a subway .......................askStetson 21. Among my souvenirs .... ask G. Carlisle 22. 23. Around the corner ........ ask T. Smith 24. Why did the band win? .... ask G. Tarbell 25. Egg on Toast! .............. ask Evans Why am I last? ........... ask R. Prince ORCHESTRA A new chapter has been written in the line of music by the B. H. S. Orchestra. It is Champion of the State of Maine. Much credit is due Mr. Sprague for his fine work in conducting the Orchestra to its present rating. If the Orchestra keeps up at the rate it is now going-they too will go to N. E. contests in the future. Three cheers for our Orchestra. We will all hear them at their best when they play for the Graduation. GLEE CLUBS The Girls' Glee Club gave a fine demonstra- tion at the Maine State Music Concert on May tenth. It was a grand success. Mrs.,Dean was greatly praised for the fine work that she has done with her Glee Club. MILITARY The local regiment, under the tutelage of Major Baldinger and Sergeant Clarke, has just completed a very successful year. The Federal inspection took place at Broad- way Park, Thursday, May twenty-second, and was a credit to the school. The local unit was officially inspected by Colonel P. P. Bishop, C. A. C., U. S. Army, Officer in Charge, First Corps Area and Captain James C. Crockett, Infantry, U. S. Army, Headquarters First Corps Area, Boston, Massachusetts. Later that same day the inter-company and inter- platoon drill was held and Company F under Cadet Captain McKean won the company competition while the first platoon of Company C under Cadet First Lieut. Johnson was ad- judged best drilled platoon. The preliminary eliminations for the picked man drill also were held and fifteen men were selected by the judges to compete at the City Hall the night of the Military Ball. The official report on the inspection of the unit has not yet been received but it is believed that it will be unusually fav- orable. The Military Ball was held Thursday, May twenty-ninth at the City Hall. This affair was well planned and well executed through- out, as the Officers Club, who sponsored the dance, spared no pains to make it the most successful school event of the year. Among the many highlights of the evening was the short but delightful concert of Bangor High's New England Champion Band. They played remarkably well and it is very evident that they are an exceptional musical organization. The picked squad drill was held and the squad from Company C was adjudged the winner. The picked man drill took a lot more time than was expected as it was very difficult to elimi- nate anyoneg they were all so evenly matched. Finally Edgar AuCoin, who is also drum-major of the Band was adjudged first, with Second Lieutenant Flynn, second, and Thomas Reed, third. Then the Rifle Team was awarded letters for the excellent showing they have made this year. The Grand March was by far the most- colorful event of the evening with all the sponsors in their evening gowns and the officers in dress uniform. The dance itself was very successful and all those who attended were loud in their praise of the affairg all those present enjoying them- selves to the utmost. Financially, and it is a fact that the financial success is almost as im- portant as the social success, the dance more than fulfilled expectations. The Memorial Day Parade was a fitting finish to the work of the regiment for the year CContinued on Page 735 f1 1'4 322' A . E251 -15--1 C'-13 sc: 112i 1 :I+ . t O Q rw :E-1 nyc' 45a ?::' Z, fb ' IJ' x- FU ' Ov yo.-. 455 3073 :az- .-We FFTQ 3:25 ar A SW f5:1. f 'l. V- 4 P-il -,- 1 -...gf Swfvz, :Ea gr! ..- 295 Q12 ,..3.L.A 93531 Wx' E14 :' 1-1 ww, ! 7'- QAC 25 5-2. ...'- R :sfo 1527: P- - Dov . I-4'Tj rl Q - :33 H 1.2 :fa mv: IJ' --1 W sw 'S sr' 1 c if fe 'i -Q -. O 2 N T F. 1 1 5: Q F H V D-1 fi 2: IJ f 1 V .-. 1 .... 11 'D an F P' V P-I P? T' Z v P-Q 'D 'TJ :- fb .. 'D 7 F3 'S' P0 -1 57' 'J T' 094 'HIYIO fSHElOI:I:IO - .4 lil ,L 3 . ATHLETIC . S 1 -:QQ i Sc . ' i l 1 S ji Q K I pl dv wx Deed done is well begun. +Dante BQYQ BANGOR HIGH AND BREWER TRACK MEET Bangor High won the dual meet with Brewer by a large majority of points. This was the first meet between the schools for a number of years and was very satislactory, especially for Bangor. The 100-yard dash was won by lXIorgan, who made thirteen of the total number of points. Second place was captured by Hutch- ins of Brewer and third by Striar. The 220-yard dash was won by Striar, sec- ond place by lXIorgan and third place by Hutch- ins of Brewer. The 440-yard dash was won by Morgan, Ivers of Brewer taking second and Libby tak-- ing third. The half-mile was won by Burr. Second place was taken by Norwood of Brewer and third by Mcliean. The mile was won by Prince of Brewer. Second place was taken by Crosby, Bell tak- ing third place. The relay race was won by Bangor High. Those of the Bangor team were Striar, McKen- ney, Dwinal, and Burr. The Brewer team was composed of lford, Hutchins, VVOod and Syl- vester. The high-jump was tied for first, Hart, a freshman, being the Bangor winner. Bernie Striar took first. place in the broad-jump. Henry Gulnac took first place in the discus throwing. The shot-put was thrown for a first place by .lack Thompson and Donald MeKinno'i took third place. Bangor didn't- score any points in the ham- mer event. Donald lNIcIiinnon threw the javelin for second place. Buckley took first place for the pole-vault- ing and Vox tied for second place. Thus the outcome of the meet, was very successful for Bangor High, the score standing, at the end, 775 to 335, in favor of Bangor High. BANGOR 85 BREWER 7 Bangor played its opening game of baseball of the season with Brewer with an 8 to 7 vie- tiory for Bangor. This was a very good opening game, but as the weather was extremely unseasonable a small crowd was in attendance. Burr pitched well but owing to the wind many balls were missed by the fielders that otherwise would have been easily caught. Perhaps the outstanding men were Burr and Jenkins. Burr struck out thirteen men and made two runs, while Jenkins also made two runs. Hms-wwas A9 'IH 9 'ugals de 91 119qIV U! O aqg ailoag 'ugpoo 'I 'fl 'oeulng A.IuaH 'we CD nv f1 Fw' 1 o 3 :T -+. fv- rv- O 2. UQ 3' T 7 P-Q W 5 IQ re 'I if rn D Q- E- U2 3 93 N 1 -1 no 5 1 fb '11 C-' 3 if O D he 1 na W U7 -1 D7 D- U' C -1 4 094-6Z4 'GVIIOS 'ITVHLEIBISVH 58 THE ORACLE BREWER AB R H 0 A E Goulette, 3b ..,, . 5 0 2 0 2 0 DeLate, lf ..... . 5 0 1 2 0 0 Palmer,lb ...,.. . 4 1 0 ll 0 0 Libby, p. 3b ..... . 5 1 1 2 1 2 Grossman, 3b-c ..,. . 5 0 1 4 1 0 Blackman, cf .... . 5 2 2 0 0 0 Harumn, ss. . . . . 5 0 0 0 2 0 Hall, rf .....1 . 4 0 0 0 0 0 Sparks, c .... . 2 0 0 7 0 2 Tardiff, p. . . . 2 1 0 0 0 0 Gonyer, rf ...,. ..... 2 1 0 0 0 0 BANGOR AB R H 0 A E Hodgden, 3b .... .,.. . . 5 0 1 1 0 1 Hawkes, lf ....., . 5 2 2 1 0 0 Hackett, lb ...., . 5 2 1 8 0 0 Jenkins, c .... . 5 2 2 14 0 0 York, rf ..... . 4 0 1 0 0 1 Ferry, cf .... . 3 0 1 0 0 0 Flagg, cf .... . 1 0 0 0 0 0 Whalen, 2b. . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bradbury, 2b .... . 4 1 0 2 1 0 Leavitt, ss ..,. . . 3 0 0 0 1 0 Grodinsky .... . . 1 0 0 0 0 0 Burr, p ...1,..,,.,.. . , 4 0 1 0 1 1 Score by innings: Bangor .......,...,. ,....,. 0 00140003-8 Brewer ..............,..... 011000050-7 Struck out by Burr 13, Libby 7, Tardiff 3. Home run Libby. Three base hits, Jenkins, Blackman. Two base hits, Hackett, Hawkes, Goulette. Hit by pitch- ers, Libby 1, Tardiff 1. Walked by Libby 2, by Burr 4. Umpire, Earl Heal, Bangor. BANGOR HIGH 173 ORONO 10 This game was rather wild owing to an un- lucky day for both the pitchers who com- menced the game. Vaughn Kelley who pitched the opening inning for Bangor had an off day with five, men getting runs and another being walked. The Orono pitcher didn't have much bet- ter control as fourteen men were walked in the first three innings. At the opening of the second inning, Hawkes took Kelley's place and did some fine pitching, causing sixteen strikeouts. The sensation of this game was the home run hit by Leavitt of Bangor. BANGOR ABRHOAE ..,..4311ll Leavitt, ss ,... Hawkes, rf-p .,.. . . 5 1 1 1 2 0 Rice, lb ..,,.. . . 4 3 2 4 0 0 Jenkins, c .... , , 4 3 2 16 4 0 Whalen, 2b. , . . . 6 2 3 3 0 1 Pooler, 3b .... . . 3 1 0 1 2 2 Harper, cf .... . , 1 2 0 0 0 0 Heyrnan, lf ...., . . 4 0 0 1 0 0 Kelley, p ...., . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Burke, cf .,... . . 2 2 0 0 0 0 Ferry, cf ...,.. ,... 2 0 0 0 0 0 Totals ,..,....,. 37 17 9 27 9 4 ORONO AB R H O A E H. Perkins, cf ..... . . 4 1 2 2 0 1 Fortier, p-2b .... . . 4 2 2 1 1 1 Cota, 2b ..... . . 4 2 0 1 3 0 Hatt, 1b .... . , 5 2 2 5 0 1 Beaulieu, ss. . , . . 3 1 1 1 1 1 K. Baker, rf .,.. , . 3 2 3 1 0 0 Gass, 3b ..... . . 4 0 0 1 0 1 Sullivan, lf. . . . , 3 0 0 1 0 0 Hardy, c ....... . . . 3 0 0 11 2 0 Totals. . . . . 33 10 10 24 7 5 By innings: Bangor .,... .... 3 290000371-17 Orono ..,...... ..,....,... 6 10001200-10 Two base hits, Hawkes, Jenking Beaulieu, Fortier. Three base hits, Fortier, Hatt. Home runs, Leavitt. Bases on balls by Fortier 10, Cota 3, Hawkes 6. Struck out by Hawkes 16, Fortier 5, Cota 6. Hit by pitched ball, by Fortier, Hawkes, by Cota, Pooler. Passed balls, Hardy 4. Umpire, Heal. Time, 2 hrs., 24 min. BANGOR HIGH 75 JOHN BAPST 6 Bangor High defeated John Bapst School for a 7 to 6 victory. This game was witnessed by a large crowd and though rather wild at times was a decided victory for Bangor High. Pete Furrow struck out fifteen of the John Bapst team, including their best hitters, while five of Bangor High's men were struck out by John Bapst. Heyman of Bangor High made a sensational out by barely catching a hit to center field. Furrow is the third man to pitch a good game for Bangor this season. E! 1 'n H 3 5: ED fb -1 5 N -1 C. 71 .Q 2 . N T' L4 N E 'D ,I 'H O C F17 A ? D-4 N D N UQ 'D -1 Y I ui IJ' Q av E 'J E P: 53' 1 C? o o c. Q: Z7 S15 :J 1 .-. 'n Z1 sw :S rs on sw :1 ,uounh.I aauammfl xxasieg plomH 'uospmqopd puelowd 'Seq pleuoq 'xoqlnl 1ua.JugA 31105 pI0JeH4,uo.1 puosag 'a.1gH pmqagg '.ia1.no.rQ lanqsgy 'aeulngj .UUQH 'sa.naH Jauxm Auemloqoelq uqof-Jqflgl 01 Hal 'mu :peg 60 THE ORACLE BANGOR AB R H O A E Heyman, lf .... . , , 4 0 1 1 0 0 Leavitt, ss. . . . . 3 0 1 1 1 0 Hackett,lb .... 4 2 0 8 0 2 Jenkins, e ...., . , . 4 1 1 I4 2 0 Bradbury, 2b ..,. . . . 5 0 2 0 3 1 Hodgdon, 3b .... , . . 2 1 0 1 0 1 Burke, rf ..,... . . . 3 0 0 0 0 0 Ferry, cf .... . . 2 1 1 1 0 1 Furrow, p ..... . . . 4 2 2 1 1 1 Totals .......... 31 7 8 27 7 7 JOHN BAPST AB R H O A. E Connor, cf ..... ,..,.. 3 2 0 0 0 0 McHugb,1b ..,. ... 4 1 0 11 0 0 Korsky, ss ..., . . . 3 27 0 2 1 2 Conway, lf .... . . 5 0 0 3 0 0 Babine, 2b ..... . . . 5 1 1 1 5 0 Tolman,c. .. 3 0 2 5 2 1 Pearson, rf . , . . . . 3 0 0 0 0 1 Doherty, 3b. . . . . . 4 0 0 2 1 0 Flannagan, p . . . . . . 3 0 0 0 5 0 McManus, x. . . . 1 0 0 0 0 0 McDonald, p . . . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals .......... 34 6 30 24 14 4 x-Batted for Flannagan. Bangor .................... 120002200-7 Bapst ...............,..... 202000002-6 Two base hits, Leavitt, Jenkins, Bradbury, Babine. Three base hits, Furrow, Stolen bases, Heyman, Ferry. Bases on balls by Furrow 4, by Flannagan 8, by Mc- Donald 2. Struck out by Furrow 15, by Flannagan 3, by McDonald 2. Sacrifice hits, Furrow, Hodgdon, Korsky. Hit by pitched ball, by Furrow, Connor 2, by Flannagan, Jenkins, Ferry. Umpire, Heal. Time 2 hours, 10 minutes. BANGOR HIGH 53 BAR HARBOR 6 Bangor High lost its first game of the season when it was defeated by Bar Harbor to a 5 to 6 score. This was a good game with fine playing by both teams. Bar Harbor's pitcher was a big factor in the winning of the game as he pitched fourteen strikeouts. However, it was a seesaw affair, Bangor being ahead at times. In thc opening inning Bangor made some fContinued on Page 715 GIRLS On April 17, the Annual Athletic Banquet and Reception was held at the Bangor House. This banquet brought to a close a most suc- cessful Athletic season, sponsored by the Girls' Athletic Honor Councul. Those who attended the banquet were members of the Council, letter or numeral winners from every class. PROGRAM Toastmistress ,....... Nathalie MacLeod, '30 Hockey ....... ...... E velyn Welch, '30 Basketball ..... .... F ranccs Crane, '30 Remarks ..... .... D ean Rachel Conners Remarks .................... Estelle Burrill Review of Events ....... Mildred Haney, '30 AWARDS Interclass Numerals ...,..... Miss Abernetlff Cup Clnterclassl ....... Coach of Champions Basketball Letters ........... Miss Abernethy Rosalie Fellows, Frances Hayes, Rena Allen, had the honor and privilege of being taken into the Girls' Athletic Honor Council. Also sec- ond honors were awarded to Frances Crane, Barbara Stover, Mildred Russell and Mildred Haney, and third honors to Evelyn Welch. One of the interesting features of the ban- quet was the clever 'Review of Events' given by Mildred Haney, '30. , REVIEW OF EVENTS Mildred Haney, '30 The first of October in the year twenty-nine. Coach Abernethy called for her hockey line To begin practice and learn to work So when the games came, We could not shirk. October thirtieth, we played our first game At Broadway Park with the Freshmen from Maine. Though we lost this play we kept working hard So November 7th, we could play our best card. Castine came up in hopes they would see Our team not so fast as it used to beg Thinking us slower than in previous years And the tie in the score dispelled not their fears. CContinued on Page 691 UBJO SSDIIBJJ 'a pax sag H P9-'PIIIYA .Kaus gnofl 'qoqatgx UAIQAH 65 wa 'umolg paqguugm 'pxogpwg palpmg '.xaA015 emqxeg 'a 'fl 2 '5 2 7: 'sauof 12gp.C'I 'uosuqof auqanbonf 'saXuH saaumd 'uo.i'I .ilguxggmox alppglg 9!l9'lWY agfesog 'p09'1o'eK D: ar P oa'I-J,qBg1 01 gal 'mod gong 'GU nv 11.105 LSB M Palm rv 'ua nqmx 'llassng 'slapueg ag Buag 'alquxaxl uapH 091624 'TIONIIOD IIONOH DIJ.EI IH.I.V 1S'I?II9 - . H :S.:..v.mW1Wf-54?12ZW:'lvt.,25s5'v:'i.qg:,gr:q.'cg- ' ' I' ''T-:gaugefrk5:-:5gzgWggQng2g:'g:Qqgyqbisgzgfag: ' - 7 QE-,,sQg44og'UfQ4!4.vp',:J g':Q'q5v,:Yp,QyQ oQL4o.,n'js.' - ' ,z-v'-vztfzaivgma'Ze'4'a:g.2-i:'.:'.-.--'QA'-'M0.1 , ff , :' gm, . MHZE.354Q'gp'95?v'-21QZWQQEQQQ Z'3ln952??' ' - J , . QWWA, . :ys,:.4-agggaa:'.s5g'.2-at-t5wa1p:te.:s f - , 91559 Agar . '-r-'-217311:-,glgnfigs,.s:'P'A'i 5, ,Mfg:.'41g'o'2 3 vm: f xr ww ' , . .g-ffzzgnf-H-gueralv.fb'wif' , Q tgffvf Weak I 5.41. .ztisiggfgfgaigg -,.3:,:- ,XX ,gym i f me ' iii -W 'tm -ab 5 9 ' ' N fi 1 Q N l ' A Y .. t N ' L Q ' r H N4 w 5 . s it s ' 1 , ' XX ' ll' - Xt I I I I ll HI ll I Figitlit imap l!l,l,,,,,f,,i,litu,u,uli!Il,',!li1:uI.m,,,4.t!,ilf.l,1,I,tlII,1,:Nli:li,l:H,ul!',I4,::5,d,,W, . ','l ll,:!,u, Iullllm Q I I 5 H In ,limiIH,,,,,f,i,,I,:.Il,tliHt,smItIt,fillIi,,:l,:,,,,1h!Illvllql f,i,l,,fIis,i,II,,l!,l,Il,i,,,-Il,lull, , . I ,ws c,,, ,Ill lut,l,lItlt,,1,uuill,Hl,HIH,,ul,,I ll, n 'Nil q I,, A Nugnilllt .Ill 4 . 4 annual-aan fits-tial-wi W-num nb Examples hasten deeds to good efects. lf the following issues of Winner, Winn, Maine, are as successful as the first, Winn High will have a magazine to be proud of. Our only suggestion would be an athletic depart- ment and a table of contents-but, stick to it, editors! We next. find The Red and White, a new- sy little paper from Norwich, t'onn. Although we do miss a few jokes and stories, the doings of your many activities are well represented. It is quite evident also that your baseball sea- son has opened with a bang! Let 's keep up the reputation, boys! ln the Red and White, from Sanford, Maine, we find an account of their third an- nual gym exhibition which was as usual a great success. We were also quite interested to learn that Sanford High is adopting caps and gowns for graduation. Un looking through 'tThc Red Lion Hill- top, Red Lion, Perma., we find that the school is to have the use of three new tennis courts. VVe also find that the 'tHiltop has again received first honor rating from the Na- tional Scholastic Press Association.-IIerc's wishing the same good luck on next year's staff! The Stone City Student, Bedford, Indiana. Yours is one of the best bi-wecklys that we receive. We find Scraps f1'om the Classes very interesting while Wise and Otherwise lends tone. Add to Gertie's Gab, its good! K'Stephens Broadcast, ltumford, Maine. Our only suggestion on the Broadcast would be a literary department. We find Questions on Blaine to be original as well as educationalg and4'tWho's Who is not so bad. Again we find in the Jester, lillsworth, Maine, an excellent literary department. Your poems add greatly. Here's hoping that Around the C'lassroom will become a regu- lar feature. VVho said information bureau? That sounds very much like the !'Red and Black, of Read- ing, Penna., which gives in full the many activities of the Senior High: and which also contains an amusing column called HSIllll:f,H besides an exceedingly good literary depart- ment. t l'he Mirror, Patten, Maine, brings us the best headings that we have received yet! Your literary and exchange departments are excellent! lVhy not have a table of contents? Wie find the Spring Issue of the Broctonia, Brockton, Mass., as excellent as ever-good from cover to cover! We especially apreciated The I'oet's t'orner. Your cuts are well done and t'.lest for Fun is enough to make anyone laugh! The least one can say for the HBrown and Gold,', of Haverhill, Blass., is, 'fAnother of their peppy editions! !Ve find The t'hatter- box a spice of the program. Add to it! uafxmg meqaeg I' 'egpjflgpauzas 'sauo PWPIEIY 'p.l05p1eJg SUEJO RJJUHJLI gmdrzgj U if .ilafxg yu ALIJPA QIIWIWX 6'IJ'BIf 'po pueg alle 'SIB kno.: :peg lqiigx 01 1591 aueH paxpmg 's1a1.a,1 ujlxapelg- ulaqy q.moO AQJQBQUHIU .Q -wx 'uu.v1 Aqglujq time LUMN FOX I4 We are to seek wisdom and understanding onLv in the length of days. -Robert Hall John Barry, B, H. S., '28, has been elected editor-in-chief of the Prism and Marjorie Stevens, B. H. S., '28, literary editor. This is the book issued by the Junior class at the University of Maine. Both Mr. Barry and Miss Stevens were members of the Oracle board and Commencement speakers in 1928. Miss Sylvia McLaughlin, one of the honor students of Simmons tlollege, took one of thc leading parts in the annual May Day festivi- ties at the college. Miss lVlcLaughlin has been awarded a scholarship and a trip to Europe for her scholastic ability. Beryl IG. Bryant, '27, now a Junior at the U. of M., has recently been appointed an assist- ant liditor on the Maine Campus, the weekly college paper, having served as a staff reporter for the past year. She is also Secretary for the Maine Outing Ulub, Fo-leader for a large group of girls in M. C. A. Work and chairman of the Personal Committee in the Chi Omega Sorority. She is a member of the University Vhorus. Vlarice Penny, '29, has arrived home from the l'lmerson Orotorical School for the summer vacation. Raymond A. Grant, a member of the junior class in thc school of engineering, at North- eastern University, Boston, and a former B. H. S. graduate was elected chairman of the com- mittee on social activities of the Northeastern Student Union at the annual Division A. meet- ing. Louise M. Knowles, '29, is a student at the Massachusetts General Hospital Train i ng School for Nurses, Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Dunning announce the engagement of their daughter, Alice Myr- tle, to Byron William McPhcters. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lewis announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorothea to Lauris C. Miller. The b1'ide to be is now Sec- retary to the Treasurer at the University of Maine. Miss Doreen l'Ilizabeth Kelley, '18, was united in marriage to Samuel P. VVilson. Allison K. Hill, '26, and John Kazutow, '27, are spending the summer vacation in Bangor, after attending McGill University, Montreal. Christine C. Trenholm, '27, was united in marriage to Charles K. F eeney. Arthur A. Brown, has been chosen as one of the authors of the nine stories, poems and essays which will represent the U. of M. in the intercollegiate contest against the Univer- sity of Vermont and New Hampshire. The works of these five students were selected from a large number of papers submitted. John Barry and .Beryl Bryant, both Bangor High School graduates, were chosen for the Junior Week play entitled Escape, IN MEMORIAM Vaughn P. Mallett, '30 A faithful student, a good friend. Hugh McManus Gilbert Buker, at one time teacher in the Uommercial Department. I A :- B Y: Q sv .-.3-3 159 ?w.'.':I -1 'iq rif... :Magi 2'2 fr: Q - 47' ru si,- V'97f-0 5:- .F3 m'.L KLM' E53 -,. '-0 573110 E357 mag fl' ' f-.Cv 2.35 f 5 S A .... 3 I W E S ,FD 9.5 5 9 -1 2 -I .-- g F1 Q 4 CD Sl an ,4 G D -1 A av 1 5 2: FD 3- 9 A :T Q 5 'U UQ 1+ KD E E, 5 -4 I Q A in 33 S- D' . 2' P 5- S' v 5' '-1 cu La PV T7 ,3- Q ,Q O an F- N '1 I 66 THE ORACLE Qllass will, 1930 We, the Class of 1930, on the verge of committing drastic deeds, are about to be torn away forever from our dear Alma Mater, feel we must dispose of our precious possessions, and in great grief and sorrow, hereby bequeath :- To the Juniors-our exalted posit-ion as Seniors, our stately mien, our dignified bearing, our social prominence, and our dearly beloved Causeries. To the Sophomores-our industriousness, our aptitude for work, and our general good will. To the Freshmen-our sympathy Cwhich is sufficientj. And then- Abe Stern's orations to ...... .... N orman Cahners Ed Gross' bright remarks to ...... ........ A ny Halfwit Pat Brown's excuses to ......... . ..... Frances Reynolds Slippery Reid's beautiful voice to. . . ......... ....... S id Epstein Bernie Striar's experience to. . . ..................... Huc Mclnnis Ed Morgan's cornet solos to . . . .... Joe Mullen and Don MacCready Jake Shean's personality to. . . .................. Henry Flynn Fern Allen's hockey stick to .,.. .... L ouise Rosie Dick Palmer's grand piano to. . . ...,... Abe Kern Nat MacLeod' s Virgil to ......, .... M ary Gibbons Chink Brownls saxophone to .... ..... K enney Kurson Phil Libby's troubles to ........ ....... B etty Russ Dick Ebbeson's drawings to ..... ..... G ene Johnson Austin Miller's medals to ........ ..... B unney Sanders Harold Morris' pompadour to ..... ....... S am Fraser Caddy Collins' telephone calls to .,........ ,..................... D ot Higgins Nathalie Anderson's dancing slippers to ..... .... D ot Friedman and Edythe Graves Charlotte Cahners' pull with the teachers to .... ................... N at Sanders Shank Murray's height to ,.............. ....... A lbert Crowder Chandler Redman's worries to. . . .... Howard Kominsky Grid Tarbell's Carroll to .............. ..., A ny Good Singer Fleetwood McKean's major letters to .... ..... C Iharlie Bradbury Ed Baker's prowess as a reporter to ..., ....... G eorgie Carlisle Ray Prince's grim humor to ........ ........... .... T h ose Who Relish It Signed, HENRY GULNAC, President. RUTH J. BLANNING, Vice-President. THE ORACLE 67 MEN AND WOMEN BUILDERS CC7ontinued from Page 35 J I am not satisfied with the little praise the boys and girls received during the war period. 4 H-clubwork increased a great deal. Club- members helped not only to keep the family in food and take big brothers' or sisters' places, but collected peach pits in the parts of coun- try possible in order to get the carbon to use in the soldiers' gas masks. After the war, the local leaders and agents were reduced. This, in my mind, was only a reaction from the terrible war, for in 1924 clubwork was beginning to be in open bloom. To me clubwork resembles a morning glory quickly opening with the sunrise after being closed for a nights sleep, l have followed the rapid advancement of clubwork, but I have not come to the point of telling exactly what the object of 4 H-club- work is. There are many definitions of club- work, different people having definitions of their own. One person may say that 4 H-clubwork is learning by doing. Some people are able to learn by observation, but others, including me, are able to learn the most easily by doing. My idea of 4 H-clubwork is an organization to teach young people agriculture and thus to help in farm and home improvement. I have found, being familiar with country- life and homes, that one of the greatest needs of rural people today is greater cooperation among themselves. The best and only way that I can foresee to make improvements in farm and home duties and in the building up of rural communities is by the increase of 4 H-clubmembership. . There are many boys and girls in this state, yes, right in my community that are out of school for some reason or other. It may be that the parents want them to work, they may be tired of school, they do not get along well in school, or they may think education doesn't pay. What will the country do with these young people? 4 H-clubwork is the great life saver for most of them. Club-work gets hold of these rural boys and girls and tries to teach, guide, influence, and educate them. It teaches them how to solve home and educational prob- lems, how to work together, how to conduct meetings, lastly it impresses the need of trained hands and minds in order to succeed. There are many different projects for 4 H- clubmembers to do. The projects vary in different climates. I shall not endeavor to name all the projects listed, but just a few that are used extensively in this state and that I have had some experience with. Canning, sewing, room improvements, cooking, and housekeeping are the popular girl projects g while the boys choose pig raising, chick rais- ing, gardening, dairying, etc. Each community has one or two clubs of boys and girls from ten to twenty years old. These clubs range from ten to twenty mem- bers. The sewing club that I belong to in Eddington has fourteen happy, industrious workers. The group was organized at the beginning of the New Year, when each member pledged to do his or her work thoroughly. The boy or girl conducts a piece of work as I have listed above, keeps a record of the results, explains to others by demonstrations, and finally makes a closing report of the years' work. I cannot say that I like to give demonstra- tions, but I do enjoy seeing and hearing them. The 4 H-club boys and girls are demonstra- tors and thus teach better ways for the home, the farm, and the community, they earn mon- ey, do needful and helpful things 5 they meet, play, and cooperate together, they build up their own health. I am not quoting our na- tional pledge, but this translation of it is very suggestive to me. Club members build their health by right living 5 they train their hands to be useful, their heads to think clearly, and their hearts to be kind. From the club pledge our emblem is derived. It is a green four-leaf clover with four H's on it. The H's stand for the parts of the body mentioned in our pledge, which are health, hands, heart, and head. ISS THE ORACLE .:..g..g..'..'. '..'..g..g..g..g..g..g..p.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.-1--peg.. 0.0 Q o , GAS 0' LEEN Compliments of Leen's Super Service o 4.0 ofa o'c -2' Eastern Furniture Co. of o'o . Station .5. HIGH PRESSURE GREASING BANGOR-ROCKLAND MILLER TIRES ' EXIDE BATTERIES HOUDAILLE SHOCK ABSORBERS 2 ATWATER KENT RADIOS 2 S ' Compliments of 0.0 ofa q. 0:0 .24 azz 0:0 0:0 COAL ' Cie Maine Goal 81 Dock, Inc. 515 Eastem Trust Building Telephones: 4573-4574 si' . Graduation Dresses 'Bk' Party and Dance Froeks THE O Camps are being built each year for club members who have worked diligently and are worthy of such consideration. National, state, and community camps are in all parts of the United States. I was one of the one hundred ten boys and girls who represented Maine at Camp Vail in Springfield, Mass., last Septem- ber. I cannot sufficiently thank the State of Maine for the liberal occasion. These camps aim to train, to develop leadership, and to promote comradeship in the boys and girls. Each state has leaders to carry on 4 H- clubwork. Our extension director in Maine, Lester H. Shibles, guides and manages us Well, while our county club-agent, Miss Corrine Merrill, conducts the work the proper way. Theses two leaders have local clubworkers for each individual club organized. A family that I was visiting not long ago knew very little about 4 H-clubwork. One day while I was with them, a rap came at the door. The mother opened it and found her- self being introduced to a county club-agent. Soon the agent had explained the object of her visit. The mother tried to scorn it, but soon found herself becoming wise Calthough she didn't realize it thenj. Mary, come here, called the mother. Yes, Mother dear, you always disturb me when I am asleep, replied Mary sharply. Mary soon knew the reason for all the dis- turbance. After a difiicult task, the club-agent left with Mary signed on the agents' books as a 4 H-clubmember. After this, people found Mary sewing or canning instead of sleeping. The following year her name headed a list of boys and girls who had won prizes on their work, and also a stay at a 4 H-club-camp for a week. In closing, I turn back to say that club- workers are doers and makers. I think that nothing is more fitting for the aim of clubwork than this poem written by Elbert Hubbard: We are all fools until we know That in the common plan Nothing is worth the making If it does not make the man. RACLE 69 Why build the temples glorious If man unbuilded goes? We build the world in vain Unless the builder grows. GIRLS' ATHLETICS CContinued from Page 601 The next week we met the Frosh once again With pep and vim up there at Maine. Altho our girls outplayed the Frosh Fate intervened and a winning team lost. Then once again our friend Castine We met down there, with plenty of steam Down on the sphere, the players did fall, Down rushed the Normal's a.nd thru went the ball Back to center,-all over the field Sanders and Crane their sticks did wield. Along came Seavey, sure of her course, Welch stopped the drive with awful force The Normals ahead, one half all done A roll-in for them and then the fun A hit on the knee, a whack on the shin, An aim at the ball, a thumb, minus skin, Thus they cracked-toes-elbows and all In a valiant attempt for that coveted ball. In vain did Castine fight to beat Score 3 to 1-it was Bangor's treat. Our basketball season -was a better success Though we lost our first game thru nervous- ness, The second we played with our friend Castine But beat them quite badly with pass-work supreme. But alas and alack the following week They beat us down there, their revenge was sweet. Spurred on to win, we went down by the sea To play in Bar Harbor and to gain victory. Our stay at the Y gave us all lots of fun At least when Pete, first shot from the gun, Gave a specialty act in form of a show Displaying pajamas and singing, you know. QC'ontz'nucd on Page 'flj ' 'nzuznzaozoozo ' ozooznzc o:oo:oo:oo:oo:n:e 0:0 ' ORTHEASTER UNIVERSITY ERN UN, 265 ml, ,f w 1 gl - WX fig-f CHU5e 71,11 IQ A ,, ., 3' T .4 'E s 4 Z fl: l, 7 H 0 . o .6 DAY DI VI SI O THE THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING In co-operation with engineering firms, offers five year curriculums leading to the Bachelor of Science degree in the following branches of engineering: Civil Engineering SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Co-operating with business firms, offers five year collegiate courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in the following fields of business: Mechanical Engineering Accounting Electrical Engineering Banking and Finance Chemical Engineering or Industrial Engineering Business Management o o o o.oo.oo.n o o .Q vga 'llie Co-operative Plan of training enables the student to combine theory with practice and makes it possible for hiin to earn his tuition and a part of his other school expenses. ozuzo 020020020 0:4 For catalog or any further information write to: NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY MILTON J. SCHLAGENI-IAUF, Director of Admissions BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 0 THE ORACLE 71 GIRLS' ATHLETICS fContinued from Page 691 Our next game was played with the Institute And Barbara shot baskets while Bangor did root We pulled out ahead and the following week Continued to play with that same winning streak. Brewer came over keyed up for a win But Bangor just trimmed her and sat back to grin. V The next week we went over to Pittsfield to play And Lydia Jones came 'forward' to save the day. Then Bar Harbor came up to be beaten again But next week the tide turned we were beaten by Maine. Our last game of all was another defeat, We went to the College the freshmen to meet. Up there on the fioor we slipped and we fell. Some did the split and some did rebel Pete to her guard yelled loud in despair, Why not 'be mean to me' and st-ay over there? Soon after this game the class teams were up, To join in the light for the coveted cup. The games were exciting and fast to the end, And the winner uncertain while the tourney did wend But the Sophomores pulled out with lots of luck And surely deserve peeks of credit for pluck. Thus all of us learned as for games we have trained That school spirit must be ever and always maintained Its to join in the battle, to push our team thru To wish, to win victory to get trophies, too To stand up and cheer, to yell loud and long To spur the team onward, to burst out in song, To get out and fight and to join in the fray To jump the score upward, to work, work- play, To feel in our blood the call of the game A game to be won, though played square all the same. That's School Spirit! BOYS' ATHLETICS QContinued from Page 603 spectacular plays, making a double play and putting another out on first. An outstanding play was made by Kelley when he caught a fly behind third base and threw the ball to Rice to make a double play. BAR HARBOR ABRHO ' Liscomb, lf ........,,.... 4 0 Smith, c ,..... . . 5 11 Garland, 3b ...., . 3 1 Rolf, p ......... . , 3 0 W. Liscomb, ss ..,. . 2 0 Salisbury, 2b ...,. . . 4 0 McKay, ef ...... . . 3 2 Hodgkins, rf .... . 2 1 Brewer, 1b ...... . 1 12 Hopkins, rf ...,. . . . 1 0 Totals .......... 29 27 BANGOR AB 0 Leavitt, ss. . ..... 3 0 Flagg, p ...... . 1 0 Burr, p ....... . . 3 3 Rice, lb ...... . . 3 8 Jenkins, c .... . 4 9 York, rf ...... . . 3 0 Hawkes, rf ..... . 1 1 Harper, lf .... . 1 0 Heyman, lf ..... . 3 2 Whalen, 2b ..... . 4 2 Kent, cf ...... . . 1 0 Ferry, ef ..... . . 1 0 xHackett ..... . . 1 0 Kelley, 3b ...... . . . 3 2 Totals .......... 29 27 x--Batt-ed for Rice in ninth. By innings: Bar Harbor. . . ........, 0 0 0 0 Bangor ..... ...10 010 KI B9 0000 00900000000OOOQOOIQOOOOUQOQQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOODOOOOOOIOOOOOU v'. . .' '. . . . .--. . . . .w'.v-. . .'-.fs-'.rw.-'.-'. .''.''. . .-'.-f. . . . . .'-.--.-'. . . . .'v'a'. . .w'. . - . - -''. -W - - - - - - -''- - - - - - -' 0:0 3.3. .g..g. 02002020030 0020020020 o:00:00:00:0020:0 0 THE ORACLE 03010020020 0:0 0: ' ' s:00:o0:o0:00:o 0:0 0:0 n:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 o:00:00:00: ' REQUEST YOUR PRINTER TO USE EASTCO PAPERS! TER NUFACTURI li umm manufacturers of Eastc-0 Fine Writing Papers comprising Atlantic Bond Atlantic Offset Atlantic Ledger Atlantic Cover Atlantic Zllimeograph Systems Bond 'Sk' Eastco' High Grade Bleached Sulphite Pulp Eastco Rayon Pulp fSpruce Celluloseb 'Dk' Mills Located at BANGOR AND LINCOLN, MAINE General Sales Oflice 292 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY SPECIFY EASTCO PAPERS FOR YOUR STATIONERY AND PRINTING! : Z : ! 0:0 0:0 0'0 E. 'I Q? so if 3 0.0 I? 'F THE ORACLE Two base hits Jenkins, Whalen. Stolen bases, Leav- itt, Burr 2, Whalen 2, Rolf 2, W. Liscomb. Bases on halls by Rolf 12, by Flagg 1, by Burr 3. Struck out by Rolf 1-1, by Flagg 2, by Burr 4. Double plays, Kelley to Rice, Rice to Whalen to Jenkins. Wild pitches, ltolf 1. Passed halls, Smith 1. Umpire, Heal. Time, I hr., 37 min. MILITARY CContz'nued from Page 545 and certainly showed the fine spirit of the unit because the march was not compulsory and yet almost the whole regiment was present. RIFLE CLUB The rifle team has just finished a very suc- cessful season. Under thc coaching of Major Baldingger and Sergeant Clarke the B. H. S. rifiemen have hung up a most enviable record that future teams will find hard to beat. The teams this year consisted mainly of veterans, Mcliean, Crowley, Jacques and Miller having shot in all the important matches last year, together with Waldo Barrett a wel- come addition to t-he line up. These men easily won the gallery competition for R. O. T. C. schools of the first Corps Area, which entitled them to shoot in the National Intercollegiate match, which they won in the first Corps Area. In the most. important match of the season, the Hearst Trophy Match, sponsored by Wil- liam Randolph Hearst, the team won third place in the national competition and second in the eastern section, which includes all the states from Maine to Florida. For their excellent work the team members received medals at Broadway Park on Inspec- tion day. Mr. J. XV. Reardon, Associate Edi- tor, Boston American, Boston, Mass., who represented William Randolph Hearst, pre- sented a silver shield to Major Baldinger on behalf of the school. This shield will remain a permanent possession of Bangor High, along with the one presented to our team last year for winning third place in the Eastern Section. The representative of the Hearst publications complimented the Major on the record made 0201014134: Compliments oi Bangor Motor Co. Goodyear Tires Gas, Oil and Storage 0:0 szuzuzuzo 0:0 UNE HUNDRED PER CENT SERVICE AND GOOD WILL R. Be Dunning 81 Co. 'Sli' Plumbing' Electrical Supplies 'atv 54 to so amau sneer, oinoon, MAINE ozainiuioinioifninioia 102,101 514111 1 0:00:0 0:0 0'0 0:0 0:0020 0:0020 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0020 0:0 0:00:l 0:0 0:0 0:0020 0:0 0:00 IAILQEDI Ajr MORGAN HALIQ 'V 0 0 0 0 0 . 0. 0 0 .00.00.00.0 THE ORACLE 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0: the Class of 1930 Wherever you go - - Whatever you do, you'II find yourself ll ' ' 77 srttrng pretty if you are wearing a IEARBURY UNIVERSITY SUIT MODERATELY PRICED 35 40 45 WITH TWO PANTS MILLER-L RG Y CO. Bangor's Smartest Young Men's Shop. 18 BROAD STREET THE ORACLE by his team and expressed the hope that, since the team had won third place last year, and second place this year, next year they would do still better and win iirst place. The Major has already appointed Vernon Morrison, Claptain of next year's team and Roger Averill, Secretary of the Rifle Club, so that with the beginning of school next year, the club will be ready to function. And now a word from us who, as Seniors, are leaving the corps to those who are to take our places. Vile have strived to help those of you who were new to drill and to keep the record of achieveiuent for the regiment as high as possible and we now leave the unit to you with absolute confidence that you will continue to strive for the perfection that is the true goal of every regiment. And in leavetaking, let us not forget to acknowledge our deep indebted- ness to llflajor Baldinger and Sergeant Clarke for the able instruction and guidance they have given us. ROENTGEN AND THE X-RAY QContinued from Page 441 traordinary wound permitted one to view what happened on the inside of the person. By the use of the X-ray one can see the in- side of a living body. Extraneous solids like bullets lodged in a body, cast shadows and can be located. In order to make the organs more distinguishable, substances denser than the organs are inserted in them. The contrast substance for the stomach is barium in solu- tion, and for the lungs is iodine suspended in oil. Doctors, such as Roentgenologists, who have the knowledge of the diagnosis of shadow- graphs, can tell by the actions and appearance of the shadows cast by the contrast substan- ces in the organs, the condition of the patient. There are many diseases which can be discov- ered by the X-ray, and it can show where to operate in many cases. But the X-ray is not used as a tool in medi- cine alone. lt is used to look into all kinds of o:on10:a.s1o1en11r1n1u:an:enzar1en1o14v:es14h14 Jordan-Frost Printing Company 182 HARLOW STREET BANGOR, MAINE Telephone 1050 IJRAGUN Portland Cement A MAINE PRODUCT 'Dk' Acme Mfg. Co. Summer and South Sts. Tel. 387 BANGOR ora liuiuiuicrioinislioinicria 1010101011 76 THE ORACLE Interesting Facts About Some Bangor High School Alumni 969696 Ellen Irene Curtis, Bangor High 1924, BEAL COLLEGE 1927, was placed as Commercial Teacher in the high school at Sherman, Maine. Now Commercial Teacher at Castine. Margaret Urquhart, Bangor High 1928, BEAL COLLEGE 1929, was placed with the Travelers Insurance Company, Bangor office. Now in the Portland office. Leona F. Leighton, Bangor High 1927, BEAL COLLEGE 1928, was placed as Commercial Teacher in thc high school at Howland, Maine. Now Commercial Teacher in Foxcroft Academy. Grover L. Jordan, Bangor High 1927, BEAL COLLEGE 1929, was placed in the Bangor oiiice of the National Biscuit Company. Gladys E. Dearborn, Bangor High 1927, BEAL COLLEGE 1929, was placed with the Northern Oldsmobile Company at Bangor. Ruby A. Seavey, Bangor High 1925, BEAL COLLEGE 1927, was placed with the W heelden Electric Company at Bangor. Ronald W. Hagerman, Bangor High 1924, BEAL COLLEGE 1928, now Commercial Teacher in the high school at Smyrna Mills, Maine. Barbara A. Smith, Bangor High 1926, BEAL COLLEGE 1927, was placed in the office of Terrence B. Towle, Esq., Bangor. Now with the New York Mutual Life Insurance Company, Coe Building, Bangor. Lillian M. MacDougall, Bangor High 1925, BEAL COLLEGE 1926, was placed as Commercial Teacher in the high school at Island Falls, Maine. Now with Merrill Trust Company at Bangor. Dorothy Davies, Bangor High 1925, BEAL COLLEGE 1927, took the Civil Service examination and is now in the Department of Internal Revenue at Washington, D. C. GraceiCrockett, Bangor High 1928, BEAL COLLEGE 1929, was placed with the R. B. Dunning Company at Bangor. Elsie Kenney, Bangor High 1928, BEAL COLLEGE 1929, now with the Bangor Tire Company at Bangor. E. Madeline Phillips, Bangor High 1927, BEAL COLLEGE 1928, was placed with the Savage-Wetmore Com- pany at Bangor. Muriel A. Soper. Bangor High 1927, BEAL COLLEGE 1928, was placed with the Spring Service Company at Bangor. Now with the Merchants Profit Sharing Company, Coe Building, Bangor. Virginia Read, Bangor High 1929, BEAL COLLEGE 1930, placed with the Merrill Trust Company at Bangor. Above are the names of FIFTEEN of the more than TH REE HUNDRED young men and women whom we lmve placed, or helped place, during the last five years, in good-paying OFFICE AND TEACHING POSITIONS. What we have done for OTHERS, we can do for YOU. Catalog and complete information upon request. BEAL COLLEGE School of Business Training J. W. HAMLIN, Principal. Bangor, Maine. THE ORACLE solids to discover flaws and cracks, which might seriously reduce the strength of sub- stances used in making things, on whose strength the lives of people depend. An ex- ample of this is the examining of materials used in airplanes. Another use is in determ- ining the value and genuineness of jewels, and in determining the authenticity of pictures. lt is also used in science to classify the crystal forms of metals. Wlltrn eggs were treated by X-rays and then hatched, most- all of the chickens were females. These chicks started laying eggs earlier than others of the same age, and their eggs were larger. Other eggs that were treated longer in the X-rays produced chickens that had no wings. This showed that the X-ray produced a change in the hen that would have taken many generations to bring about in the course of the evolution of the hen. Roentgen did not know that his experiments with the energized vacuum tube were to lead to such an important discovery, but he would probably have worked harder if he did know it. His object was to explain the phenomena pro- duced by the energized vacuum tube, and by using his great powers of thought and imagina- tion, he not only explained the phenomena, but also discovered the X-rays. It is the study and therapy of these rays that has made them of great service to mankind, and has directly and indirectly brought much happiness to mankind. THE EIGHTEENTH AMENDMENT CC'ontinued from Page 46D Alcohol's direct effect in impairing the physi- cal capacity and efficiency of the nation was brought strikingly into prominence in the World War. It diminished the manpower of the nation. lt unfitted many men for military service and lessened the efficiency of multi- tudes of others. lt decreased the productivity ning:iguieigogauioznrzrngeriaxiiricnqrvzoie Compliments of Charles Murray Gasonne - Kerosene -Furnace llil Motor liils - Greases Dil Burners - Pumps and Storage Tanks v 'Dk' Tel. 1 7 BANGQJR, ME. ,Quang-niuiniq-:ini was nznguzng 1010101 vxnirg niuguianioxnycrienzyniogoicviavia ,iron ands Steel Heavy Hardware T we N. H. Bragg 8. Sons BHNGUR, MAINE we Automotive Equipment Radio 8 , go an vi s1cr1an1avQcricn1u1uvg1x1ucs4n1uQgisr:u 78 THE ORACLE Zfilbfatiwsai-iwfsiwifdfivfif N Clean Cut College Chaps wear Braeburn University Clothes That's why they look clean cut Join the Braeburn parade Miller 8L Webster Co. The Store of Modern Youth NSyf?3ffJ-3fQ? 3fQ?3ffFQfQ?s'1 THE ORACLE of those who were furnishing supplies. If it is essential that a nation be strong for war, it is just as essential that it have an abounding strength for the constructive tasks of peace. The physical standard of American people is obviously and certainly rapidly rising during the last few years, and, when the current births come to maturity, the country will certainly see men and women more robust and vigorous than this country has hitherto seen save in a few favored spots. Prohibition's effect upon education has been most salutary and far-reaching. Multitudes of young people, who otherwise would have been compelled to leave school and go to work to help support the family, have been enabled to continue in school and become better fitted for eflicient citizenship. lt may seem absurd to say that the trade in beer is a trade in death, but this is so, not alone because beer contains the poison alcohol, but because it displaces bread and other comforts and luxuries which contribute to the general health and happiness. A decline in the death- rate has paralleled the development of prohibi- tion. lt has not been entirely due to the pro- hibition law, but the decline was so sudden and so striking, in such great cities as Chicago and Philadelphia, as to indicate a direct and startling effect of the dry policy. Prohibition is more important in what it produces than in what it prevents. Never- theless, it has prevented crime. We see that there is a marked decrease in larceny, robbery, forgery, and assault. It is presumable that reduction in the number of cases of assault is due to the fact that drunkenness often leads to violent and sudden anger, and it is under such conditions that manslaughter is most often committed. The coming generation, growing up without alcohol, educated in the history of its abuses against hygiene, commerce, and morality, will muster so vast an army against their fath- ers' greatest foe as to protect frO1n any and every jeopardy the legislation which safe- guards their national life. Liquor, in its nature, is dangerous to the 79 9:n yg4s1n1niu1ux3u1crian1up14 uinininia 1 rica, I Q u i COMPLIMENTS OF SHOES SWE Day or Night MAYNARD W. STROUT, Proprietor BANGOR, MAINE ALPERT'S ICE CREAM PARLOR 137 STATE STREET BANGOR, MAINE Smith's Specialty Shop 61 MAIN STREET New Coe Block Up One Flight CHALMERS STUDIO PORTRAITS BY PHOTOGRAPHY 23 HAMMOND STREET, BANGOR, MAINE Grace Bramhall Howes iaianu anh Organ STUDIO: SYMPHONY HOUSE Telephone 4765 Organists Furnished RICE If TYLER Pianos Radios Victrolas CENTRAL STREET o:u1o1o1u:lri1sienianiciiuiiurinissiurivitlic M fn o 060 00 ' so T H E o R A c L E Egg.. 4.,.,..,.....g..,..,..,..,..,..,. ,..,..,..,..,..,..g..,. ,. ,.,..,..,.,..,..,..g..g.. R. J. S M IT H Dents Removed - Glass Replaced AWNINGS, TENTS AND FLAGS 2 UNION STREET, BREWER, MAINE 3. eo TO B1-mean HARVESTER coMPANY For Furnaces, Heaters and Cook Stoves 0:0 Washing Machines and Water Systems .sz 82 Pickering Square BANGOR 103 Broad Street THE I-IENLEY - KIMBALL CO. Q The Greater HUDSON ESSEX The Challenger THE HOPKINS STUDIO Mary E. Hopkins Photographs, Amateur Finishing, Enlargements 2?Ag'2fJf,'12,',X'E5E 25 Bangor, Boston and New York Dye House Members of the National Association of Dyers and Cleaners ' BANGOR, MAINE , QUALITY SERVICE SATISFACTION 3 '..g..g..g..g..g. S: Telephones: Plant 47403 Central Street Ofdce 47415 State Street Office 2913 rg: WILBUR S. COCHRANE - Teacher of Piano STUDIO:-91 FOURTH STREET TELEPHONE 0 0.0 0 .0 . ,rg .gg -:Q 0:0q:00:n:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 efoozu 0:0 0:0 0!00:00:0 0:0 0:00:00:00Q0:0Q0 0:0 0:0 0l0QQ00:00:o 0:00:0QQ0:0 0:1 0:00:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:0o:4 0:0 0:0 020020020020 0:0 of r:n:gg:,, THE ORACLE 81 morals, good order, health, and safety of the people. It is sufficient to say that almost the whole field of social, economic, and moral wel- fare, has shown a radical and unprecedented improvement under prohibition. As never before, the eyes of the world are upon the United States of America, and what Kansas and North Dakota did for the States, America will do for the nations, namely, show them that a great people can grow and pros- per, educate their children, run their govern- ment, pay their war debt, pave the streets, and build their institutions without the help of a single tainted dollar of liquor revenue in their treasury 5 and in addition, help to make the whole people happy and sober, law-abiding, and prosperous. It cannot be stopped because it has conscience behind it. It will encircle the globe and spread its mantle of prosperity and happiness over every land. Prohibition is the policy of America, and loyalty is the policy of every right-thinking American. ENGLISH LITERATURE fContinued from Page 42D relating to C'harlemagne, Alexander, and the Siege of Troy were imported from France. They prepared the way for the master-pieces of the London poet, Chaucer, who is justly called the Father of English Literature. Gower was a noted contemporary of Chau- cer's. He wrote three long poems besides vari- ous short pieces. At the same time VViclif was translating the Bible from Latin Vulgate into simple English. He tif not King Alfredj is the father of English prose. Other noted writers of English prose in the fifteenth century were Peeock, who wrote against Wilclif, Chief Justice Fortescue, who explained the government of Englandg and Sir Thomas Malory, who put the romance of King Arthur into prose. William Claxton introduced the art of print- ing into England in 1474. The first work prin- CContinued on Page S91 0:1 ri: siniuinie ll l ll l l ll ll l ozn Eunormxn nun sions 2 Bnnat Permanent Waving and Beauty Culture ROY F. JENKINS, Expert Ladies' Hair-Cutter 11 Main Street-Tel. 4118-W Central Oflice Supply Company 18 Central Street OFFICE AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES TELEPHONE 226 i Conners Printing Co. Makers of Printing with Qtxpressien 179 EXCHANGE STREET Telephone 505 SEN IORS l ll We thank you for ll your patronage ll l ll PERRY STUDIO 2 W. I. ERB, Mgr. Q nxuxogozugoioivifixanzavgqofo sioiuz-v1ugun:o1n'o THE ORACLE .gn .g..g..g..g.q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.-g. HUGGHRD f Funeral Director Patronize Sanborn's Barber Shop 7 Hammond Street, Bangor, Maine ALBERT J. FARRINGTON Photographs of Bistinttiun We make the better grade of Class Photos, not cheap, but good SITTINGS AT NIGHT BY APPOINTMENT 3 STATE STREET BREWER, MAINE Compliments of F. C. N. PARKE Taxiclermist 565 Hammond Street BANGOR, MAINE SOL LEAVITT Cigars, Tobacco, Drinks, Ice Cream and HOT DOGS!!! Compliments of W00dHl2lH,S Garage 146 Center Street,-BANGOR, MAINE 1.00 - PERSONAL STATIONERY - 1.00 200 sheets bond paper, 6 x 7, printed with your name and address, and 100 envelopes to match, prin- t.ed on back flap. PRINT copy plainly and enclose with 81.00. Paper will be sent you by mail. BANGOR BOX COMPANY L. A. PAUL COMPANY, Inc. Dodge Brothers Motor Vehicles-Dodge Brothers Trucks Full Line of Parts Telephone 1206-BANGOR, MAINE Automobile Accessories 00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:00:0 0:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:4 0:00:00:00:00:0 0:v 0:0 0:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0: THE ORACLE THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION CContim1edfrom Page ,401 lt was May wl1e11 the meeting opened, and IIOI1 u11til four lllOI'lI1l1S later did they exhibit their final IICCOIIIDIISIIIIICIII1. lt was all done behind locked doors. Many were the hours that the 111e11 grew weary i11 those hot summer days debating over some issue that seemed wo11ld never he agreed upon, until finally a SOIIIIPIIIOIII1 was reached by a compromise. Alexander Hamilton, tl1e great .New York representative, once got angry over one point under discussion, and left the convention. He was of the l1igl1er class of people and wanted a very strong central government. He went as far as to call the people a beastI But a genius like l1im couldn't I'0lll2IIIl away, so he returned later, and was o11e of tl1e signers. VVhat kind or people were they that got to- gether at the great convention? College gradu- ates? Yes, a majority of them were, how- ever, so111e l1ad not the opportunity that the others did. Among these were George Wash- ington and Benjaniin lfranklin. Vtfashington was a natural leader a111ong men wherever he went, for l1e had shown his excellent ability as COIIIIIIQLIIQIUI' of tl1e American forces during the Revolution. He was a tall, handsome man, with a great deal of dignity, and yet he loved I1is people, this accounts for his great popu- larity. He i111n1ediatcly was unanimously chosen tl1e presiding officer of the convention. Who else of importance was within those sturdy walls? Next to VVashington we find Iilll' 'tl+'atI1e1' of tl1e Constitution, James Madi- son, tl1e11 thirty-six years of age, and a very small IIIZLII in stature. He did IIIOTO than any other IIIILII to l1elp the f'onstitution become a success. Since a boy l1e delighted in studying the histories of Greece, Switzerland, and Hol- Iandg he knew wherein they had strong points and also weak pointsg he was intensely inter- ested i11 tl1e Magna Vharta of England. From these forms of g0Vf'l'IlIIl0I1I1S, he succeeded in sifting the best ideas for our own Constitution, and OIIIII-Illlfl tl1e others. Mr. Madison was recognized by all as the first-hand authority on oznic Ride in the beautiful new Ford COME in and arrange for a demonstration ride in the new FORD. You will know then, from your own personal experience, why it is such a good car to own and drive. Here, at an unusually low price, is every- thing you want or need in a motor car. S435 up, f. 0. b. Detroit. The S. L. Crosby Co. BANGOR, MAINE BACON PRINTING COMPANY Say if with Flowers From Brockway's Flower Shoppe Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere Tel. 287-W 15 CENTRAL STREET nilljbibiuinicsioioioiuic 141302011 83 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 I 910101011 'I' 84 0 4 oo v 1 .a THE ORACLE 3. 0? .g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g. ,. ., .g..g..3.g..p4..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..9.g..g.g..g..g..g..5.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.4. HERMAN Y. DYFR HERBERT ROUNDS ,f z 3 DYER ez R OUN D s Plumbing and Heating S AGENTS FOR HOMER PIPELESS FURNACES S :Zz BEN FRANKLIN OIL BURNERS 2 Telephone 7 27 Franklin Street, Bangor, Maine EEE 'E' Compliments of 251 2 Mlbbliles, ING. Q25 BANGOR, MAINE Q zi: CROWELL 86 LANCASTER ' 51 , Qrchmtects , 2: 6 state street, - - BANGOR, MAINE ffl 2 3: New Franklzn Laundry Q? E22 ::: :Qi Pioneer Engraving CO. ' 3Bbntu:QEngrahzrs 3, S 193 EXCHANGE STREET, BANGOR Gompliments of Scott and Geagan , The Students' Barbers :ZZ 104 HARLOW STREET, BANGOR 3 3 .g. L. H. THOMPSON, Printer BREWER, MAINE 3 o:oQu:u:n:4 ozufu 'Q ooze0:00:401020QQQo:u:no:oo:oQo:u:n:ovfoofoozoozuzuzq o:oo:oo:n:n:oo:4 stu: I THE ORACLE 85 past history. Next, we see the inventor, statesman, and publisher, Benjamin Franklin, a man who had served his country admirably, now eighty-one years of age, but not too old to sign the C'onstitution. In the first row is Robert Morris, the finan- cier of the Revolution, while another Morris of no less importance was also there. Gouven- eur Morris had an extraordinary mind for he invented our decimal system. He had come from New York to help his fellow-countrymen solve the big problem. Then there were, a Randolph, a Rutledge, a Sherman, a Pinckney, and many others of doubtless great fame. These chosen men set about to their huge task, to create some new government unlike all the others. As the people were very ex- cited over the situation, they did not present a word to them until it was finished for fear that the entire plan would break. Although many of those present were of the higher class of people, their aim was to set up a democracy. There were three distinguished conflicts settled by the Fonvention: 1 The Large and Small States Plan re- D l sulting in Article lg Congress should consist of a Senate, and a House of Representatives. C21 The lixecutive Department. The powers and duties of the President, and the manner of election. C33 The organization of the Judicial De- partment, and the extent of its pow- ers. The xeoule were divided in receivin the I g Constitution when it was first published. The two parties formed were the Federalists, for the C'onstitution, and the Anti-l edera1- ists, against the Ll0I1Sflt'llfI0ll. The latter feared a strong central government, but when the Bill of ltights was amended, everything went fine and the C'onstitution was adopted by the necessary tliree-fourths vote of the States. Thus ends the long struggle to establish a firm government. on which the United States Ozorilviaicrieiicnicxiullri in 101011 30101140 l ll Q II rv i 'EIIAI 'HODNVH 9-I1U9II.I'. Hind -IQPUII 199-US ii-Wd I tI0'IIIVd EJNIIIIHS EIUHS NIJISUH CIEIELLNVHVIIS XHOM paqaolg pun paun:-113 s1uH uxoqiaq pun mans paqoualg pun pans:-113 snag eunauad :gum noi apqm paxpolg pun pauuayg spupi Us go snag ,swag pun ,sagpnq ii SSHOOlId ONIZITIHHLS SSEYIHOGO H110 LH CIEENVHTO SLVH H1101 HAVH iSIIOHl3W 5JNINV3'I3 HSIIII8 IINV IJVII WOII:I NOII.33.INI NSIII AHM ll--.-.-.-.,-..-..-.-,-.-..-.---EL ii' ' ' 'i' FISHING rooms' The largest Stock in New England as Look to us for All your Sporting Goods S We Supply ALL TEAMS 'DIC iomim svommo GOODS CII. WHOLESALE - RETAIL Q BANGOR, MAINE - - URUNO, MAINE I ozviliibinicailliuiuvioiulic 1 11010103011 .0 86 THE ORACLE J. . 5.0 :g.g..:..g.. ,. ..:..,..g..g..g..g..g..,..g..g..g..g,..g..g..g.4..f,.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..:..g .- Compliments of E. W. WILDE 99 Center Street Bangor, Maine The Haynes gl Chalmers Co. Hardware and Mill Supplies 5 RADIOS 176 EXCHANGE STREET, BANGOR, MAINE ANDREWS MUSIC HOUSE CO. HEADQUARTERS FOR ' Pianos, Music, Victrolas , Records, Radios 3 er Musical Merchandise, Strings, Etc OR soon FEET W LK-OVERS 'A 0'0 0 lu--...-1 -.... ...- 44 MAIN STREET-BANGOR 0 000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000 000 :Q 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0,0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.00:00:00:00.0 0.00.0 0.00.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00 00.0 0.0 0.0 ,:. THE ORACLE was to remain the one hundred forty-three- years that it has served this Country. Every- one, poor or ricl1, looks up with the utmost re- spect when the words, t'Constitution of the United States are spoken, as it is the Supreme Law of the Land. A BIT OF NATURE Qllonfinued from Page 381 Suddenly I was startled by a drumming sound, and then a partridge rose quickly from the very center of the forest carpet. As I stood there, silently for a moment, a half-white and half-brown rabbit jumped from the woods at one side, and hopped easily along and stopped about in the middle of the clearing. The little creature sta.yed there a few moments wiggling his nose, perhaps making up his mind which way to go, then' hopped out of sight among the birches. I looked carefully about before continuing on my way. Ahead I could see a fluttering of black and gold. I approached slowly, and as noiselessly as possible, and found a male and female redstart. The male was completely black above, even to a black bill. The tail was black except for a band of orange on each side, but the tips of the tail feathers were black. The upper part of the breast was black and the lower part was a dull white. The wings were black and the shoulders were orange col- ored. The female was a dull grayish color where the male was black, and yellow Where he was orange. These birds seemed in a nervous state, al- ways moving, and the male was continually spreading his fan-like tail, as if he were proud of his plumage. I watched them for a few min- utes, as they ilitted about me fearlessly search- ing for food. I went along, emerged from the woods and started up across the field toward the house. I was walking along happily, whistling a lively tune, when suddenly, from the ground before me, a bobolink rose from the grass, uttering his, Hboboling, boboling, spink, spank, spink, as he flew along. The male bobolink seems to ATWATER KENT RADIUS AND SPEAKERS ARVID I.. EBBESON May and Summer Streets biuioioiflieritnisricxiaricvicricxiuioioie COMPLIMENTS OF White 8L Hayes 1u:urio3v1oin1014u1o1nini011'ini rx: We Make Class Pictures Studio of Emma J. Taney 78 MAIN STREET o:01o1qr3cn1.n14.1--ici-1,nie.-0101 :Lavinia riuimvicrieriuioirinznz 21:1 ss THZE oRAcLE ozenioie 1 via iotniuinzui siuiuioiuioia l U I House Necessities Ironing Board Cabinets Drawer Cases Telephone Cabinets Panel Board Breakfast N ooks Q Etc., Etc. GET THEM HERE ' C. WUUDMAN CU. LUMBER 136 Exchange Street - Bangor, Maine Phone 229 l l Louis Kirstein 8: Sons ' REALTORS l SERVICE I ,. Kirstein Building : - 44 Central Street moon, MAINE l ozuioilvioiuieriui uiuioiuiniraioinioia 0:0 ii l !! i I II l I l have been colored much differently than other birds, with his coal-black breast, buff neck, and white rump. Again he uttered his song, and across the field I heard his mate's answering call. Oh, the joy of summer with its birds and songs, God's own gift to his people, yet many of them do not understand and appreciate these tiny, brilliant, bits of life, rare jewels on Wings. WHAT IS AMBITION? Cflontinued from Page 365 Ambition is not a thing to be bought or sold. The only way to have it is to acquire it, but once you've got it, it usually sticks. I know of boys who, upon being asked what their pursuit in life is, will answer I don't know, then with a shrug, Don't care. I'm thinkin' I'll be lucky if I graduate this year. Their thoughts go no further, their desire for fur- ther education has been wiped out, and their secondary education means nothing to them. Education in this advancing world of ours means everything. Before us, Education swings open her doors, beckons us, cajoles us, entices us to learn more with but a small con- tribution from us. Some of us turn unheeding, see others advance, and a few turn scornful eyes upon higher education, terming it school of loafersf' The fee for higher education is not the question, but ambition to obtain that education, anyone with the thirst for knowl- edge can overcome this slight obstacle of lack of funds. I have tried to show that your ambition measures your will power, and, after all, strength of mind is the backbone of everything. It helped Washington form a country and Lincoln to preserve it, it kept Germany within its boundaries, and showed Lindbergh a way to help bring about friendly relations with other countries. Thus, for centuries to come, if we have will power enough to push that lit- tle germ Ambition forward, civilization will keep on advancing, forging ahead for coun- try and humanity. Ambition has no rest! THE ORACLE 89 0 000 00 0000 00 0000 00000 000 00 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00. 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.00.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.00.0 0.0 0:0 0.00.00.00:0 0:0 0.0 0.00:00:00:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:00:0 0.o0.00:00:00:0 0:0 f00:00.0 0:0 0.00.00.00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0'0 0:0 050 A A W N 1? lllllll. llill ll llmll lllll lmll llllllil ll l ll ll ll lllllllllllll E BY CONSULTING G. T. HOLT - Specialist in Optometry 18 State street, BANGOR, MAINE 252 Phone 3785-W 5,3 EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED ATTENTION. sEN1oRs1 We will frame your Diploma in 1 inch Ebony Black for 81.50 0:0 ':- and your ISI 0 Class Picture in the Same for 82.00 DON'T FORGET gig The Picture and Gift Shop, Inc. 'z' :ij 11 Central Street, Bangor, Maine Phone 266 ,. ....................... .vvqvvvvwwvvvvvwvvvvvwvvwvvqaqqqqqqqqqgqqqqagqaqgg qaqqqgqgqqqgg ENGLISH LITERATURE fContinued from page 81 Q ted was 't'l'he Game and Playe of the Chessef' C'axton was an editor and translator as well as a printer. To the zealous care of this first Eng- lish printer, and to his literary interest in the was due largely the revival of and poetic literature which fol- lowed in the next century. The ill-fated Sir Thomas More was the ablest representative of English scholarship in the next century, or Third Period. Sir 'lll1Olll2l,S Wyatt and the Earl of Surrey introduced thc Sonnet into English in their translations of Petrareh. Surrey, incidently, rendered more important Service by giving a translation of part of the Aencid in blank verse, which became the metre for Serious, dramatic, and epic poetry. lfldniund Spenser iS distinguished for his translation, but more for his own original ad- ditions to linglish Literature. The greater glory of the Elizabethan period early poets, imaginative belongs to the dramatists, who then leaped into sudden fame. The earliest English come- dy waS Ralph Roister Doister, written by Nicholas Udall. The first tragedy was F er- rex and Porrex, composed by Thomas Sack- ville and Thomas Norton. None of the dramas which appeared before 1580 took a sure place in English Literature, but within the next decade a crowd of draina- tists arose, Whose works are recognized as part of the inheritance of English speaking people. Christopher Marlowe was the greatest of these. Others were Robert Guene, John Lyly, Thomas Kyd, and Thomas Lodge. The lat- ter wrote Rosalynde which furnished the basis of ShakeSpeare's As You Like lt. All the writers of the Third Period are sur- passed by Shakespeare, who presents Such consistent, well drawn characters that one is inspired with a belief in their existence. His many works are so well known that we need not go into detail concerning them. The foremost of the Elizabethan draniatists, next to Shakespeare, was the learned Ben 90 THE ORACLE ozooioxoievxoxoxuxoxognzoznxnznxuisoxcozo Make this your Headquarters for FRUIT, SANDY AND DRINKS u:oo:oo:oo:n:s sto You will find here Courtesy, Service, Quality Fair Prices BMIGDR FRIIIT 00. JAMES ECONOMY, Prop. 20 Central Street - Bangor, Maine 'DIC' Compliments of Thurston 86 Kingsbury Company Wholesale Grocers 'Div n11 n:ri1b21bi1bjoj4v11si4lclcQ0 Johnson. Among his greatest works are Sir Epicure Mornrnon, Captain Babadil, and that exquisite little poem, Drink to me Only with Thine Eyes. We cannot leave the Third Period without mentioning Sir Walter Raleigh, whose literary genius was subordinated to the necessities of other ambitions. He wrote very pure poetry, and his one big work was his History of the World, which, although not a very good his- tory, had distinction as a literary performance. At the beginning of the Fourth Period, the reign of King James, Shakespeare was still the greatest living writer. But his career closed in 1613. The famous dramatists who followed were Beaumont and Fletcher, Tourneur, Mid- dleton, Dekker, Chapman, Heywood, Web- ster and Massinger, the last of whom was the best, but many of his plays are lost. Sir Francis Bacon was one of the greatest writers of that time. No better summary of his literary merits can be made than that of his friend Sir Tobie Mathew, who wrote thus: A man so rare in knowledge of so many sev- eral kinds, endued with the facility and fecility of expressing it all in so elegant, so significant, so abundant, and yet so choice and ravishing a Way of Words, of metaphors, of allusions, as perhaps the world has not seen since it was a World. His greatest works are his Essays, Wis- dom of the Ancients, and New Atlantis. In this period were also George Herbert, Sir John Suckling, Richard Lovelace, Robert Herrick, and Izaak Walton. Walton is well known for his Complete Angler, The Ang- ler's Song, and others. But the crowning glory of the literature of this period was John Milton. Overflowing with classical learning he wrote the masque Comus, when he was very young. Later he wrote the three masterpieces, L'Allegro, Il Penseroso, and Lyeidas. He wrote Paradise Lost and Paradise Regainedf' after he had lost his eyesight. And thus closes the history of English Lit- erature from its first known beginning to the eighteenth century. 00 00 0 0 00 0:0 '0 V0 '0 20020020 0:0 Q00Q0:0Q0Q00:0 0:0 0: :00:0 Q0 0:0 0:0 0:0010 0:0 0:00:00:00:00:q 0:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 Q0 0:0020 0:0 0:00:0 0:0 0: ag. 0 ng. -:-:f-:-:-:--:-':+-:w:-f:-:w:--:'-:-':o-:----z,-:--zffzwz-'zur-' . '-:-:-.:-':w:-:-:-':-:-:-:.f:.-:--:--:-:-:-:us-:--:-Q -0 --ew:-.:--z'zur-:-:-Q:-:--:-1-2-fa-:-:'-:-:-:nz--:--:-fan::--:--:nz-: ---M my fn : if P4 tn 5' :a Z 'N :5 3 E :Z 'U E 5 ES If' rf- 5 W Q5 5 'Q -1 W I E F7 M' 'E D, m 3 I :L m I 252 Q , -1 ... co Z , , as N 5 jg -4 sr -I zz M 2 mu fn .. . -- 0 CD -f- in U UE' 5 0:0 Q S N Q3 Q 2 cp cn 2 O : IE: an 1 U 'U . F1 fp , :i E Fl ' o pu 32 H .,, af . 3 V3 . m W 2 B- 2. Q H 2 l P E fb 'I' Ego,-'ELF Esivvg, EJUQQIZQ CD :frm :+ rn' 3 qu 8 2 m g ,EI ,U U, Q 2 Dr Q ig! 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' .g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g. ' ' .., g..g..g..g..,..,. COMPLIMENTS OF james Bailey Co. BANGOR, MAINE li-ASK ONE WHO KNOWS.4--'Fl W. J. CHEREELLSL ERQBBER SHOP QUALITY AND SERVICE Cleanest shop in city CHILDREN A SPECIALTY Newest Styles in Footwear as soon as created ALL SIZES AND WIDTHS IN STOCK CORRECT FITTING Agency for Arnold's Glove Grip Shoes HUB SHOE STORE 115 MAIN STREET FOR ELECTRIC SER ICE Bangor ll dro: Electric Compan PHONE 4500 General Office-33 State Street Commercial Dept.-31 Main Street MARK EVERY GRAVE FLETCHER U BUTTERFIELD C0. Cemetery Memorials 86 Central Street Bangor, Maine Telephone 1547 ARMY Cl' NAVY TRADING COMPANY 14 BROAD STREET PUTTEES-BREECHES-TOQUES-SCHOOL COLORS THE ORACLE ' .g..g..g..g..g. .g..g..g..g..g..g..g. .g..g..g..g..g.. The Fashion Smart Summer Styles 'COAL- for - BACGNC ROBINSDN Co- Women ' WOOD ' Misses Children 13 State Street Phone 88 Moderate Prices Wood 8L Ewer Co. FW . .frr 'D S si Qtfaeeffgfui . YOUR 955, 11 ' ,U W mcg? 0 H im USED 4-,r ' n ' Y EI . gizm W Q FURNITURE Wu. t W -AHEWMMGESQQWQ W TAKEN al1lilI'- , IN 1 it , At McAvEY s EXCHANGE D 1 ' 18 Cross Street CHRYSLER CARS DODGE SPEED BOATS Let us Demonstrate UTTERBACK-GLEASON C0. 281 Main Street Phone 1881 00' 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:o0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:a0:0 0:0 D: ' ' 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:00:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 020010020 0:0 0:0 0:00 94 00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:0 0'0 2? 0:0 0:0 0:0 0'0 'Z' 0.0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0'0 0:0 .f. 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 Q .0 f. :0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0'0 'i' 0:0 0'0 .f. 0:0 so :0 6664 66 0 0.0 QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ6494496664666 0 0:00 966066666006 096646QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ 0:00:00:00:00:00:0 0:0 0:00'00'00'00'0 0:00:0 0:00'00'00:0 0:0 0:00:00:00:00: THE ORACLE Compliments of Palace of Sweets Co. 'Jie Home Made Candies and Ice Cream 'Div We serve Luncheoneiies 'ble 56 Main Street - - Bangor, Maine A Word to Graduates Concentration at the outset in your chosen elective and individual instruction by spec- ialists will save your time. A two or three year intensive course in the DESIGNERS ART SCHOOL will not only develop that talent in drawing, painting and design, but fit the ambitious student directly for professional work. A preparatory four weeks course in July will aid you in determining the direction your talent should take. Exhibition of students work, june 2 - 27, 9 to 4 daily A catalog on request 0:00:00:00:00:00:0 THE DESIGNERS ART SCHUUL 376 Boylston Street - BOSTON, MASS. Compliments of Stevens Vulcanizing Plant 'DIC 574 Main Street BANGOR - - MAINE .qnaqggq Q pagqqqqqqmpr .qgga .gs qpqgqqmgqqqqgvqqmqqqaqqqq aqqqqqqqqqq pp.n4qmqpg4QqqqQ94 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, New York se A School of Engineering and Science 2-lv The Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute was established at Troy, New York, in 1824, and is the oldest school of engineering and science in the United States. Students have come to it from all of the states and territories of the Union and from thirty-nine foreign countries. At the present time, there are nearly 1600 students enrolled at the school. Four year courses leading to degrees are offered, in Civil, Mechanical, Electrical, and Chemical Engineering, in Architecture, and in Business Administration, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology. Graduates of the engi- neering courses are prepared to take up work in any branch of engineering. Graduates of the course in Architecture are prepared to practice their pro- fession in any of its branches. Graduates of the course in Business Admin- istration are prepared for careers in business or for the study of law. Gradu- ates of the courses in Physics and Chemistry are fitted for research and teaching in these fields, as well as for practice in many branches of applied science. The course in Biology prepares for research and teaching, for work in sanitary engineering and public health, and for the study of medicine and dentistry. Graduates of any of the above courses may continue their work in the Graduate School of the Institute. The Master's Degree is conferred upon the satisfactory completion of one year's work and the Doctor's Degree for three years' work. The method of instruction is unique and very thorough, and in all de- partments the laboratory equipment is unusually complete. Interesting illustrated pamphlets giving information regarding the courses of study and the methods of instruction and containing views of the campus, buildings, and laboratories, the student activities, and the work of graduates, may be had by applying to the Registrar, Room 008, Pittsburgh Building. ore ozn greg ozoozooz 'Q 'Q 'o 0:0 0:1 o:os:oe.'u:1 0:0 ozoozc Qoznzq Q0 Q 0.0 95 0:0 51 5 QQQPQQWWJ'''4?94????Q44Q999Q?66QQQQQWQWWQQQQQQQQQQ WQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQif '44466?4446 o 3 WW 96 THE ORACLE 0 0 ..,,, 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000 . , 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.00.0 0.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.0 0.00.00.0 0.0 Q0.0 0.0 0.00.0020 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.00 0.0 00 Q020020Q002002002002002002002002 00 00 f 0,.,000000000000000 00000 .00.00.0 0.0 0.0 0.00.00.00.00.0 0.0 0.00.00.00.00.00.00.0 0.00.00.00.00.0 0.00.00.p0' 00000 0000000000000000000000000000 0.00.00.00.00.00.00.00200.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00 00000000 Everything in Hardware, Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Wall Papers .g..g..g..g..g..g. MOONEY'S NEIGHBORHOOD STORE TRADE WITH PEPPER AND SAVE MONEY Telephone 1203-M Corner Main and Cedar Streets We Deliver Free OSCAR A. F ICKETT CO., Meats and Vegetables 12 Broad Street, Bangor, Maine C. B. DERBY COMPANY 26 P. O. Square - - BANGOR, MAINE 312.50 STEIN'S - 87 Central St., Bangor, Me. 812.50 Why Pay More? Blue Serge Suits for Graduation S 1 2.50 UBIIIDHIIIBIITS ef SPIRWS SHUE HUSPITM. ,xiiii,,a,Q'gj,f1t,f,,i'Q0,'Q,fQ',i'Qi,nilf,'12Q',fed Expert Shoe Repairing-120 Main Street, Bangor, Maine DAVID BRAIDY BBMPANY - - Values That Keep Friends ClothierswOutfitters - - 14 Hammond Street, Bangor, Maine BARNET LANDON - - - Merchant Tailor Rooms 101 and 106, 44 Central Street-Bangor, Maine l.. W. SUMERS CUMPANY - - - GBIIBIBI IIISUTBIIBB 26 P. O. Square-Bangor, Maine Eastern School ol Beauty Culture 16 P. 0. Square, Bangor, Me. Mr. and Mrs. Vinal Clancy-Telephone 3564 Compliments ol Faulkingham's Barber Shop 141 State Street, Bangor, Maine 20 0200 020020 020 020 020020020020 020 020 020020 020020 020 020 020020 020020020020020 020 020 020 020 020 0020 0 THE ORACLE MORE EXCHANGES The Arcturus, Caribou, Maine. While yours is an interesting and well managed paper, we would suggest a few cuts and a literary department. The best of luck on your diffi- cult tennis schedule, Caribou! The Meteor, Berlin, N. H., although a stranger is certainly welcome. The Meteor has an exceptionally good appearance as well as reading. School News is unusual and inter- esting-Keep it up! Much credit is certainly due to the editors of The Aegis, Beverly, Mass. We again find the literary up to its usual high standard and K'Near Jokes as good as ever. We es- pecially liked As We Have It. Come again and come often! From the Norco News , Pottstown, Pen- na., we learn that the cure for love at first sight is-a second sight. Your activities are well written up and your Alumni department shows an unusual amount of work-Call again! Helio, South Portland, Maine. Who wouldn't welcome an allround good publica- tion such as the Capers send out? Spot- light is both interesting and original- Pen sonals is also good. Although we think that a literary depart- ment would improve The Rohistat, of Rockwood, Penna., we find yours to be an ex- cellent paper. According to your basketball schedule, Rockwood High has a team to be proud of. The Recorder, Syracuse, N. Y., might truthfully be called an Old Standby. From the Sidelinesu is always good, while Peri- Scopics continues to serve its purpose. We would suggest that you try an exchange col- umn. Irate Dad-What do you mean by bring- ing my daughter home at this hour. Wm. C-le, '31-Well, I've got to be in school by eight. ozniuioivi 11: 10101011 11914 if 2 11011111 3 Your Graduation Suit Should be Correct You will be sure of Correctness if your Suit is bought at BENOIT'S The Store of Correct Apparel for Men and Young Men Compliments of W. J. Largay Company 110 Exchange Street Bangor, Maine Permanents a Specialty USING THE LATEST Frederic's Vita Tonic Process Wilfred's Facials Most modern equipment for Shampoos, Finger Waves, Marcels, Water Waves and Manicures QErma's Beauty bbnppe Miss Erma Roundy, Proprietress Phone 4621 98 Court Street, Bangor .QQnic-:minivan-1uni4n11n1ax14ni1r1qx1cn11bilo14 ....g. Q I ni-nqoj0?1n14v?cv:4njeriu1u-ivy: 0:01011 . THE CRACLE, I Stover 81. Prilay Shoe Company 2 are 4 23 Main Street Bangor, Maine H . Qc THE KLYNE STUDIO - Cor. State- Street-and P. 0. Square BANGOR, MAINE . ,Compliments of . THE GOLD-DUST TWINS :hojo N' MORE ALUMNI William J. McCarthy of the Catholic Uni- versity, Washington, D. C., and a graduate from B. H. S. '24, was chosen to represent his class at the graduation exercises in June, which is a great honor, he getting the highest rank for three years in the Law class. Charles P. Whittemore, of Bangor is among the seniors of the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce of the University of Pennsyl- vania,'who has completed studies forthe Rc- search Department of that institution, is at present engaged in the final writing of Geog- raphy of Nicaragua and its Part in Relations Between U. S. and that Country. Senior Research of this type is one of the most im- portant features of the Wharton School cur- riculum, each member of the graduating class being required to complete successfully a piece of original business research before receiving a diploma. , Donworth Drew Johnson, '28, apprentice seaman, U. S. N., has been chosen honor man of the twenty-fourth company, U. S. Naval Training Station, Newport, R. I. He has chosen radio as-his work in the navy and has been designated for transfer to the radio school at Hampton Roads, Virginia. f Barbara Whitman, '27, is one of the 'chosen artists whose music will be broadcasted from the .New England Conservatory of Music, in which she is a student, on Thursday evenings. The hour is 7.30 to 8 o'clock, over st-ation WHDH. Joseph E. Houlihan, Jr., 727, and a student at Holy Cross, has been elected assistant mana- ger of iiThe Tomahawk, the -weekly student publication of the institution. He is the only Maine man on the staff. John Barry, '28, a Sophomore at the Univer- sity of Maine, has been chosen editor of the Prism, year book publication of the Univer- sity. J' He is a member -of the Kappa Sigma, and is active in journalistic, athleticand so- cial activities at the college. WEASY WASHER an EASY ,IRONEI1 ,df ' ' '154 At a priceless than that of many washers aloneg you, can now have th is complete EASY laundry equipment-both .Washer ' and Ironer. ' In four seconds you can replace the wringer with the new EASY Ironer. Q Then you are ready to iron ajbig family wash in a third of the time required by hand. Anyone can iron with this full-automatic Ironer. A touch of theniinger applies or releases 1Q0 pound pressure. Come in and iron several pieces yourself. PM dsybu sefltwid e Take aiiyazitage of our low down payment.. Have and use this complete laundry equipment 'While you pay for it. on the con- venient monthly terms. ' EASY wringcr can be refildeed' y .by EASY Ironer QWrtj3gerePoet r 4 a 9a ' aine Easy Washer Co. p e i K' ylffelephone 2962 U, y,,, y , a - 541 Columbia Street H - BANGOR., MAINE f
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