Bryant Junior High School - Junior Life Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN)

 - Class of 1932

Page 11 of 62

 

Bryant Junior High School - Junior Life Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 11 of 62
Page 11 of 62



Bryant Junior High School - Junior Life Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 10
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Bryant Junior High School - Junior Life Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 12
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Page 11 text:

THE J UN I OK LIFE 9 and baking pottery in the sun. It was a peaceful scene that I always will remember. We returned to the farm and the hoy went to town in search of help. I barred the windows and doors and we sat down to wait. I awoke with a start. It was the Indian’s heavy pounding on the door. What could I do? My mother awoke. The pounding grew louder and the grunts more frequent. We knew it was best to open the door. Mother went with my brother tagging behind. The door was opened and the same huge figure stood in the doorway. There was a terrified silence. The Indian spied my brother clutching my mother’s skirt and with a grunt jumped for him. My mother was quick and stepped before him. His eyes flashed. In a moment he had my brother in his arms. He ran swiftly from the room. My mother screamed. I heard a shot, and my father came running into the room. He had returned just in time with a sheriff and posse to sec the Indian with my brother. They had to shoot him down, which was not easy. They immediately set out in search of the Indian camp, but there was nothing to be found but arrowheads and dying camp fires. “And that,” grandmother said with a sigh, “was fifty years ago.” —Dorothy Bruyn. Just My Personal Opinion Laughter may seize you when you read of the queer characteristics of an Indian, but you yourself are not so far removed from them. Take, for instance, their precious scalp lock. Have you ever seen a girl or a boy, for that matter, who didn’t spend a good part of his waking hours on his hair? Another little matter under consideration is that of “War Paint.” We consider it primitive on Indians and also a rare joke, but it is perfectly natural when a girl paints her face to hide the one Mother Nature gave her. Beads, of course, we all like. Who wouldn’t? But it all leads back to the Indians. Didn't the early settlers buy the friendship of the Indians with bright colored trinkets? Bright feathers have the same lure. An Indian would give anything for them. All that has gone before generally refers to the fair sex, but now I will mention the other. Where is there a man or boy who doesn't like to sit around a big campfire? Show me the boy who doesn’t like to whoop and yell. Why do men like to hunt when all the meat necessary can be secured at the corner store? Of course! Why didn’t I think of it. It’s just their Indian blood coming to the surface. —Mary Louise Roll.

Page 10 text:

» T HE JllNI O H LIFE Grandmother’s Story m Father left early on a Friday morning for Emmctsburg to sell our grain and make our week-end purchases. My mother and I were left alone with my small brother. The bread was baking to a crisp, and I was churning the butter for my mother, who was not very strong. We had never been taught fear and when a heavy pounding was heard on the kitchen door, I ran immediately to answer it. Imagine my surprise when upon opening the door a huge dark figure loomed in the doorway. As he tried to push the door, the light struck his face and to my horror, it was an Indian. I had heard many times creepy stories about Indians from the neighboring farmers, but I had never seen one and never really expected to. It was too late to think of that now. My strength suddenly left me as I realized the situation. I was powerless to shut the door. The Indian grunted and motioned. I could not interpret this until the odor of the baked bread reached me. Then I understood. He wasn’t begging, but demanding the bread. I walked weakly to the stove and drew out three loaves, wrapped them in paper, and shakily tied them with cord. I was trying to take my time, hoping someone would come. The Indian’s squinting eyes followed every move I made. Finally 1 was compelled to hand the box to him. He grunted and disappeared from the doorway. During this time my mother had guarded my brother’s bed. She picked up a blanket and sweater. We crept silently out the front door and down the road to the nearest neighbor. In the morning a farm-hand ux k us home. When we reached the gate, we found the ground covered with white feathers of our prize chickens. The Indians had killed and stolen them. My courage was coming back; the farm boy and 1 searched the grounds. We had decided that the Indians had left when a string of smoke curling lazily above the trees caught my eye. We crept behind bushes and trees until we came to the camp. There were two Indians paddling a canoe near shore. Not twenty feet away was a grey-haired Indian carving what proved to be spears. It was plain that he was teaching the young boy beside him the art. The women were cooking our chickens



Page 12 text:

10 THE JUNIOR LIFE (Editor’s Note: Erling ELng has been recognized as ihe 9A short-short story writer. Here arc samples of his stories.) Tidal W ave It is noon in a small town on the Gulf. An impending storm has been threatening all morning. From a room in one of the hotels a view can he had of the Gulf. A shattering crash breaks the silence! Glass sprinkles the floor as one of the windows facing seaward collapses before a vicious onslaught of wind. Drops of rain blow across the room, spotting the opposite wall. Suddenly a tense voice is heard. Great God! A tidal wave! Citizens, eyes glassy with horror, stare at the huge, black wall of water suddenly revealed two hundred yards out in the Gulf. On its top is a crest of spray like the mane of some monster. The wave, its crest growing higher at an alarming rate, hovers hungrily above the city which suddenly is dwarfed to a bee hive by this gigantic upheaval of the sea. Then, without warning it bursts! The city is instantly changed to a foaming holocaust. Buildings seem to be humans helplessly fighting off the resistless enemy. Slowly the hideous din subsides. And it is now that the sea draws back. Buildings which had resisted that first onslaught crumble before that mighty undertow as the sea sweeps back its destruction. A mass of timbers, humans, roofs, cars, whole cottages are hungrily digested by that foaming, raging sea. This mass of destruction was once a small city. How helpless is man in the face of Nature! A Short, Short, Story The night was dark. From a tree outside the old house on the hill queer shapes could be seen flitting to and fro. And all the while it was raining. Suddenly a streak of lightning flashed revealing the attic's interior. It was empty save for a dark shape huddled in a corner while diagonally across the room from it stood a huge sideboard from whence issued weird groans from a small box echoing and re-echoing through the high ceilinged halls. The flashes of lightning became so numerous now that it was possible to perceive the tense drama being unwound inside the attic of the old house. Suddenly as though meditating some act of evil, the shape moved! Taking form, it crept slowly across the room to where the anguished groans were sounding forth. Suddenly, as though deliberating, the figure stopped short. Then, as though driven by some ulterior motive, it raised the box above its head and flung it down the shadowed staircase. The groanings ceased abruptly. The Binks Bath Salts Crooner Crooned No More!

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