Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN)

 - Class of 1912

Page 1 of 248

 

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1912 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1912 Edition, Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collectionPage 7, 1912 Edition, Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1912 volume:

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ZENITH THE SENDR CLASS OULUTH CENTRAL HRH SCHOOL VOLUME I I PUBUSHED ANNUALLY BY Illllllgllll' Miss Grace A Wrlght Evhrratunn Too much C xnnot he shud ofthe lwncht Whlbh W have derlvecl from the lunclly counsel WVl1lCl'l ourC,laas AdV1SCf has alwavs been ready and wxlllng to glve Our only rei ret IS that we have not ilu 'zys he 4 n rv xc alacrlty as we should have Nex CI thele-ss rhf fact that we hereby clecllcate our 7en1th to her swnholwfs th 1 h place which Q holds ln our emu em not only as 1 counbellor but xlao just as mum mfillllt 2 1 ' ' 1 ' ' cr g ' ' ' 1 2 '. : fr .2 ly to follow that advice with as much promptness and l ' , fx bg 'X ' .he ' - - , I . , x i - v E s r,,... The Zen th Board 74066 THR 5 MCR 71'vuu.4, 011111 ID ITOR 5 M44-0Pvn,b7if1,g, W E. Magner 1 mlm N w El M m 1515551431 JE. ACNER PRESIDENT C BB LA BARNES FR BREWER 5 WE MACNER D E STEVENS ERCOBB WCCROSBY VNEVERED SHBOYER ANDREW NELSON C05WDWEl01lUWlUIUiifl E X01 XOVYVQOA' jggmiuffm DK B !. S' S ' 11 0 0 l mmm I E I MM E 5 ' ' Egbgwr TRPETA0ilg2g3vls A C.A.BRON 'ERK gg egg 5 . .. N F1 7 7 Q 'X j ' V :J I5 ff it 5-'TBVVQ Q Q N33-A VN B Q KW MPIWDDEN R. E. Denfelcl Du uth Centra H gh Soho .-. O ..- .-1 - Principal Leonard Young V.'i.V-'J-V-':n7-'in 4:'-WL'-'V FACULTY 4-'. -:' .. -:' -:L- ..4 Our Hlgh School rs particularly fortunate ln 1ts faculty We boast and boast justly of havlng a corps of teachers second to none ln the West at least and lf we are to belreve that vvhlch vve are told a great deal better than the great majority of schools ln the East It IS not as educators l'ovs ever that we value them naost No matter how evcellent they may be as mstructors they are worth far more to us as frlends and although vve belleve that vse are to be congratulated upon them merely as guldes mto the flelds of learnlrg vse al o belleve that vve are to be congratulated upon them even more as companlons on the paths of everyday lrfe They have toxled vvlth us over the rough ard barren stretches been happy wrth us m the pleasant places and suffered vs 1th us vshen vve have been bruised and cut fy the cruel stones underfoot They have been true to us and 1n so dorng have helped us to be true to ourselves and our school It rs therefore vvlth feehngs of deep regret that vve bud them farewell and ID splte of our many offences 1nd shortcommgs vve ask that vve may retam a place ln thelr good remembrance even though that place be as sllght as thelr posltxon shall be promment ln ours Mr Young as prmclpal has shovvn stlll further proof of hrs great executrve povver and ablllty to keep himself vvell lnfornaed on all school questions Vlfe cannot make an adequate CXDYEQSIOD of our respect and esteem for the way 1n whlch he has entered 1nto our school lrfe Always klnd and yet alvvays firm no pupll can help but feel that Mr Y oung s mam characterlstlc 15 slncerlty We have nothmg but prarse for htm and hrs faculty Whlle lookrng about for ome novel and at the same time attractlve vvay of placing the faculty PICIUTCQ vse hlt upon the plan of msertmg them ln the order of thelr tlme of servlce Thus Mr Custance heads the llst vvlth a record of mneteen long years of teachmg Miss Taylor IS second vs 1th but vse vvrll leave that a secret and allovv the reader to judge for himself AU o o o 0 o 0, . Q ' A O o a in o 05 n' ,A 'Y, Y V A . - . 'Q , . , , , , . , ' 1 1 r V ' I 1 C v V Y , . . , , ' '- I . -, . f ' 1 ' ,- ' ' S 4 . X 'E A X N 1 4 2 L? if I if 9 fb k-Mi A F M CUSTANCE Latln and Muslc Mr Custance IS an lmported artlcle of very rare value In adclrtron to a classrcal trammg obtamecl at Oxford and other Engllsh mstltutlons of learnmg he IS the possessor of a remarkably hne taste for good muslc Hrs asslstance nn our warrous school functrons IS a large factor ln therr success The sme qua non of Hrgh School MARGARET TAYLOR Assembly Hall Mlss Taylor IS the power hehlnd the throne the regulator of our great school machmery Besrdes keeplng the Assembly Hall ln order she attends to the routlne work of the offlce If you have any doubts as to her effectneness skip a period and notlce the result To ask and have to command and be oheved GERTRUDE CAREX Art Miss Carey has done more than any other person to create an Interest ln art and to help IH the development of our artrstlc powers The drawmgs m any Zemth wlll show how well she has succeeded My art IS mu lxfe ELLA J SHIELDS Engllsh Mrss Shlelds 15 an authorrty on queshons of grammar l-ler cheery smrle and beautrful handwrltmg are always ln ev1 dence somevw here m Room ZIO What stronger Shzeld than a heart untamted3 GEORGE C-REGORY Foundry and Machine Shop Mr Gregory graduated from D C H S some trme ago but he lrked rt so well that he soon returned as an Instructor Here rs metal more attractzle T F PHILLIPS Physics Mr PhllllpS recelved hrs tralnlng rn llllnols but from the lntense mterest he has always had ln Central you mrght mlstake hlm for a natrve of Duluth A truer frlend of the school does not exrst Aye every meh a lgmg AGNES E. WELLS Advanced Mathematlcs The fact that Mlss Wells graduated from Mrchrgan Umversrty may account for part of her won derful abrlrty as a teacher but we are sure that most of rt arlses from her own personallty Her power to make her subjects mterestlng has lightened the load for many strugglmg students To love her IS a liberal education DEWITT C SPRAGUE Engllsh We don t know whether or not Mr Sprague constructed hls system of outlines durlng hrs course at Iowa College but all of us have spent many weary periods transferrlng them from the board to our notebooks The fact that we hear our taskmaster no mallce IS proof of hr pleasant nature A smgle thmg as I am now D W HIESTAND-Geometry Although Mr I-llestand teaches geometry he rs equally proflcrent as a professor of muslc The success of our orchestra IS due to htm None but hzmself can be hrs parallel o ' 5 u t . 9 - n , . 5, . ,, . . . , . , . - u - - uv - f , . na an 1 , - 7 . u . 1 as r u - - as . . . . , u - - n ' . . . 1 . . , 1 at - - vu , . v sa - - - n - a 1 - 5 u 4 - 1 - n , . . . . . Y , ns - - n GOODH UE Mx RA PATTERSON Stenography and lqypewrrtrng Mrss Patterson 1nd h r puprls ought to be rncluded rn the lrst of the Zenrth Board The wrllrn way rn whrch they have typewrrtten copy for thrs book and the excellent work w hrch they have done testrfy to therr krndness and effrcrency The record of her mdncss rs rnscrrbed Wrllr type rndelrble GRACE A WRIGHT Hrstory We admrre Mrss Wrrght almost as much for her plucky and aggressrve advertrsement of the Unrversrty of Wrsconsrn as we do for her abrlrty to teach hrstory A true frrend of the school3 Aslt any Senror Wlren once our Crace we have forgot Nolhrng goes fwjrrglrl EDWARD F GIEGER Manual Trarnrng Mr Greger may appear somewhat bluff and abrupt to the casual observer but hrs students wrll tell you that underneath hrs rough exterlor he rs a frne man and a staunch frrend A man rs largely what hrs hands hate made hrm ADDIE M SMITH Algebra To many of us Mrss Smrths smrles are the most pleasant memorres of Freshman algebra She has a very pleasant way of leadrng you up to quadratrcs so that they seem almost easy One of the few the rmrnorlal names Thai were not born lo dre JULIEN ROMIEUX French Mr Romreux has rndeed the true Celtrc tem perament However rmpulsrve he may be hrs three degrees from a French Hom sorl qur mal y pense ROBERT D BRACKETT Englrsh and Publrc Speakmg Mr Brackett rs one of those rare rndrvrduals who can combrne busrness wrth pleasure to such an extent that one does not notrce the busrness He has worked hard to revrve the mterest rn publrc speakrng however and has done a great deal towards accomplrshlng hrs object Much may be made of a Scoichman rf he be caught young CASSIUS B ANERX Manual Trarnrng Accordrng to Shakespeare Cassrus had a lean and hungry look Mr Avery belres hrs name rn thrs respec for hrs very appearance and manner are a sure cure for the blues A man s best frrends are hrs len fingers MARX K GOODHLE Englrsh Mrss Coodhue wrth her Jolly hall fellow well met attrtude towards lrfe and people has made Englrsh attracrtwe to many students of the school She rs an enthusrastrc booster for her alma maler Carleton College Good name rn man or woman rs the rmmedrale jewel of iherr souls VIRGIL B GINC. Englrsh Hrstory Few of the Senrors have been so fortunate as to become xery rntrmate wrth Mr Grng but those who have done so have found hrm a rran wrtally rnterested rn hrs work and capable of rmpartrng that rnterest to others A man of Vrrgrls own wrde understandrng ' J- ' ' ' ' A . ' . c ' D , 55 IE1 4 4 1 1 . . . . ,, ll . C 7 . . . . ,. 3 . ii 1 1 1 Y, . , 1 . i . , ii ' l , , ,, unrversrty show hrs abrlrty as a scholar and a teacher. .. . . . ,. U U V ll . ' YY 1 Y Il ' 1 . , li ! U I 11 I r V . . Y. . . - '- . - . , , , , ' - - - - .. ., , . . , - gg . 1 1 V 1 1 OU 1 f AYLQR ERNEST F CIBSOIN B1ology and Commerc1al Geovraphy Mr C1b5on 1ntere5t IH bugs nas led h1m to become an enthus1a5t1c supporter of the baseball and debatmg teams He IS actne 1n ex erythmv he undertakes One touch of nature malles the whole world ffm QLARA L HLGIIES Geometry M155 Hughes and a Freshman Uomff to the l unch room are at least tuo people who can properly demonstrate that 1 stra1ght l1ne IS the shortest d15tance between txso po1nt5 My way IS to begm at the tvegmnmg VVILHLLMINA CASE Latm MISS Case IS as good 1 l atm teacher as she 1 a frlend of the whole school and that s saymg 1 Good deal L1ke lVl1ss XVr1ght she IS strong for WISCONSIN Here s a Case worth havzng FRANK B CAREY Bookkeepmg and Qommerc1al Geography Mr Carey has undertaken the task of teachmg us the rud1ment5 of pract1cal busmess hte The graduates of the COII'mCYCl3l course wxll shows 1n a few vears the results of h1s work Honesty 15 the basl polzcu now as rn Pranlgtm s day MEROE CONLAN' French and Latln MISS Conlan although thxs 15 only her second year YVltl'l us has already shown her value IH laymg the founda t1ons for advanced work 1n Latm and French Well versed was she zn Latm and the tongues of Romance RITA KENIDALL Enghsh MISS Kendall IS a graduate of our own U!l1YCI'SllV and has entered 1nto the school l1fe 1.w1th the usual Mtnnesota v1xac1tv and enthus1a5m Would that there were more I1 e thzs one EDDITH NIAICHEL Typewrltmg Along w1th MISS Patterson and the type 1sr1t1ng classes we are deeply mdebted to MISS Ma1chel for her 1ntere5t and as51stance 1n prepar1ng the Zemth for the press Our prazses are our wages JAMES F TAYLOR Algebra and Geometry Mr Taylor IS a product ol the Hoos1er State and uses the long easy Ind1ana Stflde when he walks to school 1n the rrormng Moreoxer he IS a wery capable teacher of mathe mat1cs 1 am a HIGH more smncd agamst than SITIVIIUE WILBLR H SCHILLIING HISIOTY and CIYICS We cannot One too much PTHISC to Mr SCl'lllllI1g A splend1d coach of baseball and basket ball an all round sportsman and yet shghtly better 1f po5s1ble as a teacher than he IS as a prorroter of pure athlet1c5 A n1an s true talue IS not zn 1115 name . . v ' ' ' ' ' . T H D . . ' 1 , ' - t. uv 1 - - - - D t. u - 5, 5 1 . Z . L D D b - L . ' ' ' L ,, . . . . ,, 5 . - c . 4 ., c 1 . 5 . , . , . , e D . , . ts s 5 s . n - . A . , V , , . 1 ', J c , u - 1 . - . , u s s ,J s ' 1 T . , , - u . - an s H - sv , v - , nn - as v u . . , ' ss . . . . n s . T . O . . - , v a u u 1 . . . an , , . 1 Q! CURTIS R CA 4 , , ' ORXILLE HICIXAM Algebra and Englrsh Hrstory lndrana Unrversrty sent us another frne teacher rn Mr Hrckam Hrs great wersatrlrty rs shown by the fact that he teaches mathematrcs and hrstory wrth equal success The world lfnolvs notlrrng of rts greatest men W S DONAT Latrn and Englrsh Hrstory Mr Donat rs a Yale alumnus and rn addrtron to hrs degree from the brg unrwersrty at New Haven h has two degrees from Leander Clark College Iowa Hrs broad trarnrng rs no doubt partrally responsrble for hrs success rn teachrng Freshmen How noble rn reason hon: rnjinrte rn faculty' C-ERTRLDE ELLISOIN Lrbrary Mrss Ellrson s brrght smrle and krnd courtesy have made rt a real pleasure to vrsrt the lrbrary She rs a product of our own school and therefore nrce ls she not passmg fazr3 C1 A PHILLIPS Physrcs Assrstant Srnce the physrcs classes have grown so large that the lab rs hard to manage Mr PhllllpS has obtarned hrs brother as an assrstant Young Phrl as he rs called by the athletrc contrn gent rs just as frne a man as hrs brother whrch rs gorng some Enjoy thy youth rt null not stay FLORENCE AIKIN Sewrng Mrss Arkrn rs another home product After has come back to us She evrdently belreves that the teachrng of needlework as well as charrty should begrn at home A strtch rn trme saves nrne WALTER H BENSON Chemrstry When Mr Ehlman left us rn Septem ber Mr Ben on came to take hrs place as the rnstructor rn the new lab If the penetratrng pow er of the fumes created there rs any crrterron of hrs abrlrty he has been very successful Srnce I cannot govern my tongue lvrtlrrn my onm teetlr from can I lropt to govern the tongues of otlrers3 CLRTIS R CARMAIN Mechanrcal Drawrng Mr Carman rs neatness per sonrfred Even the absence blanks whrch he hands rn at the otfrce are models of correctness Wrth such an rnstructor the mechanrcal drawrng depart ment rs sure to fulfill rts mrssron T15 pleasant sure to see vour name rn prrnt ESSIE O CASE Drawrng Mr s Case has been an able co-w orker wrth Mrss Carey rn the art departrrent She has had specral trarnrng rn Detrort and Chrcago and at the Pratt lnstrtute rn Brooklyn o there rs no doubt as to her htness for her work Tlrrne be rltia joy and treasure CARRIE I CASTLE Englrsh Mrss Castle rs another Carleton alumna n the Englrsh department Unfortunately the Senrors have not had the opportunrty to study under her drrectron but Judgrng from the reports we have heard we should be glad to haxe Carleton send us more of the same calrber Exceedrngly lvrse farr spoken and persuadrng ll I I II V. I I TT s - ' , , C il I r I 1 S! . , . V V . . . , . . . V . , . .. . . ., . . -- lu as - . - - - + , . . , - , . . . . ,. . ,, , . - an . . . ,, , . . . . . . .. ,, taking an advanced course at the Michigan State Normal School, she - . , , I ' ' - ' . . .. ,I , . s ' . V O gg 1 l I I , , ,, if 7 ' . ' ' Y! . , , - . , V . . , S . tl I ' ,I . - ' . ' ' i - . Q , 1 V Y - .. I . . . . ,, O A WYLY vf-'Gy' 'f MALDE lVlAIlxEN Englrsh lVl1ss Nlarken rs another teacher wrth whom we Seniors have not had the opportunrty to become closely acquainted We appreclate our loss however for we hear much of her from the under classmen Free Ivzlhout boldness meelg wzthout fear qurclger to loolf than spealf her sympathies HARRX A O BRIEN Bookkeepmg lVlr O Brlen has had a very complete trammg for the work rn which he 15 engaged l-lrs regular course at Knox College has been supplemented by study at Columbia Unrverslty and the Gem Crty Busmess College of umcy Illmors A man from Ireland sure ue all lgnolv that' FLORENCE CALMNITZ Cooking MISS Gaumnrtz has made a very efhcrent head of the cooking department and has been widely appreciated as such The delrclous gooclles which the girls have often dlstrlbuted wrll l1ve long ln our memory But czvrlzzecl men cannot lrve I1Iltll0Ut coo s AUGUSTA G ZIEGLER German MISS Zregler was secured to take the plaf as IS shown by the marked advance of the German students Ich clzen ETHEL ROClxWOOD EDgllSh Mrss Rockwood IS stlll another of the new comers of whom we have llttle personal knowledge ln adclrtlon to the good opmlon of the student body however she has the emphatic endorsement of the faculty rn general and one of the faculty m partrcular Nuff sed She rs prettv to Ivallf lvzlh And nutty to tal rvzlh And pleasant to thm on SOPHIE R ST CLAIR German and Hlstory Mrss St Claxr rs a graduate of lVl1ch1gan and rs of the same hrgh standard as the other products of Ann Arbor on our staff of teachers Although a newcomer she has already made her pleasant lnlluence felt throughout the school I lfnolv you to have a gentle noble temper G A WHLX Commercial Arlthmetlc Mr Wyly has come from Ohlo to help Mr Carey teach the puprls of Central the elements of modern busl ness Hrs methods and hrs manner bespeak success He thought as a sage hut he felt as a man ALICE M SCHElDElxER Physrcal Culture lVl1ss Scheldeker once reslded ln the town across the bay but for all that she knows how to root for a team as well as to coach one Come and trrp rt as you go On the lzglzt funtastzc toe . .L Q . ' . .u U . - . ' ' ' ee left open by the departure of Miss Dengler. She has clone splendid work, l k ' . 7, lf . D . I 4 IL ALMI R 0111111111 11 L0g11p11y mms CI n111u11 1 Q an mem 101 0 101 Q xx 1111111 11u1 111e1e 110 mxm 011C-rs M110 M111 1611 Vou 11111 11111 ec 1100 1ourN SIL 1111141 .1 wry 30111 md 11111101.19 comp 1111011 U pllflllt 1 Q11 l Io 110 77 5 1, PCYITN VS 0001 31011 Un10r1u11a1e1X we 11111 196011 111131310 10 o1a1a1n 1 p1c1ure of Mr Pottx 1Ju1 1116 sp1enC11d Nsork 116 11215 done ag S110xs11 bw 111 Manual trammg ex11111111on affords a much better opporlumts 10 see 111111 he IS 11146 111an any p11o1ograp11 All nuiurc 11119111 slzmd up and 5111 7-,IIS mas a man' x qk C 1 MMS' f W 1.5 Cf' M. P -1 C' '711 Q1 1 '. Miss 1Jz1111:1-1' H1111-11119 1:us1- cv 'y 1 ' 1 s111 is 111 111001, as y 1 1 ' 1 1 ' 11115165 'ill '1. zu' 1 ' 1' M 1 2 111:.1' 1 V Sixfllll, l C Illll.-Q N ' 'f .11 . H' ' 2' V 1 X Il S, 1 'ga Q X 1 1.1 1 Us X QM SEI1 UR TMPSR Pr s R bert News V Pres Adl 6. M Ile 5 Vz enne. Kerr Tres Rex St Clan' Sergeants at an-ms Rudolph Fe 71. Elma A 0 Bnen Ed tor m chlef U' I N lte ms o A s are DorothyG bson R f! , , Qgfgg I J ' ' e Hlazurf 8 . 0 . ace U Z e ai e i r I EC. V1 . . . - . A I r, infut. , W 1 ' T' . ' ! s oci -uh i h . 'S i 6 U, 2 1 RMAROON Y 1 XXX QA Gi ,Q QQ? Q XJ 'MQ K 1 M W' 2 XY, Ax f' ff 3 6,2-U M R'LQ A 1 X f ROBERT MARS Presrdent uret lcmd and always courteous Bob rs by all odds the most popular boy 1n school He leaves behind hrm a long record of athletlc achievements as well as that of servrng mo years as our class leader He IS headed for Yale and IS sure to malce good ADH.A1Dh MILLER Vrce Presrdent Adelaide has held her office for four consecutive years Needless to say she IS one of the most popu lar members of our class Although her name Slgnl hes a prmcess lt looks as though she wrll be la Duchess msteacl VIVIENNE KERR Secretary Vrvlenne IS the prlncrpal reason why Rex uses the Lakesrcle car so often But we dont blame hlm for she has shown herself to be as good a manager lh practical vsorlc as she IS attractive m other ways The may m which she has handled our spreads and the SCTVICC she has rendered on the Zenrth Board show her perseverance and resourcefulness RILX ST CLAIR Treasurer Rex IS one Teddy who ss as not restramecl from holclmg ofhce by any thrrd term talk as he has been the keeper of our class treasure chest smce the autumn of 09 BCSldCS belng popular wrth both sexes he IS a football and basket ball player of no mean value Juuus Nome Edrtor ock rs the possessor of an rnsatrable desrre far Zenrth work and an expert knowledge of the art ot bluffrng He has accomplrshed somethrng however and rt may truly be sarcl lrterally as well as Frgura trxely that he leaves a parr of coprous shoes to frll DoRoTHY GIBSON Assrstant Edrtor Dorothy deserves all the prarse that can be expressed rn the Englrsh language and then some She bossecl the auctron took a leaclrng part rn the play and worked long and hard on the Zenrth Krnd cheerful and always ready to do twrce her share no one can help berng better for havrng known her ROGER SHERMAN POWELL Busrness Manager In hrs ofhcral capacrty Mut has done a whoe lot towards makrng the book a success Ar no trme has hrs rnterest lagged nor has he ever farlecl to do hrs part of the work Asrde from gettrng ads hrs specraltres are fussrng and frequentrng the haunts of prnk tea socrety CALDWELL HARRIS Assrstant Busrne s Manager Caldy has always been on the Joh and has proxed hrmself a hustler Hrs Englrsh work clemor strates hrs lrterary abrlrty Hrs toast on the Crrls at our Senror spread not only won hrm fame as a speaker but also establrshed hrs reputatron as a fusser But he s a man for a that , ' ! 9 , - , . . , . . ' 1 7 ' v , , . , I Q 4 at .', ' C , - , 15'-4 ALEXANDER MACDONALD Arllsr Mac IS destlned to be a second Whlstler IS worlc IS one of the promlnent features of the book Although he IS a thorough Scotsman he IS as clever Wllll the Scandlnavlan brogue as he IS wlth the brush l-le IS usually out ln the woods MILDRED PRUDDEN Artlst Few classes can boast of such a talented memb r as Mlldred She wlll surely attaln the hlghest suc cess lf she contmues to act her part ln llfe as well a she dld that of Nellle Goldengate ln the Senlor Play Her ablllty as an Illustrator may be gauged by a glance through thls publlcatlon Her wlnnlng smlles ancl sweet cllsposltlon have brought her many frlend BURDETTE Pll.l.sBURY Burdle has dlstlngulshed hlmself by belng one of the flrst to obtaln a pull wlth Mr Sprague l-le IS very fond of Mlnnesota Polnt ln the summer tlme As a corrpanlon and a frlend he IS a llvely good natured stralghtforwarcl fellow that everybody ll es MILDRED GEORGE lVlll chooses rather early hours to study and thereby shows her lncllvlduallty She IS essentlally qulet durlng school sesslons but IS nevertheless ready for fun She thlnks that some clay she ulll be w professlonal seamstress LEDRL Bax IS Ledru has dexeloped a llttle blufhn system that oos em all rn Hrgh School except rn Room 206 But even rf he cloes bluff rn hrs studies he Q y newer bluffs ln hrs frlendshlps and a more sincere fellow at heart you annot hnd BLAMHL MIPHAEL Blanche won much praxse and many compllments Sk, W by her charming portrayal of Kltty the mald n the Senior Play Wrth her sweet nature and cheer ful smrle he rs a true frrercl of ewery one ln the class CEORGL STILLMAN Strlly IS a fellow whose popularlty IS not con hned wrthln the walls of the school He has won fame as a basket ball player but hls most notable achlevement IS the way he managed the auctlon It was largely through hrs efforts that we beat the record ELSA BIFBERMAN Elsa IS always jolly and full of fun but you ought to see her srrlle a fem days before xacatron he IS a Ulrl perpetually happy Her greatet accomplishment IS runnlrg a Pxerce Arrow , . ' ' S nf I . ., . . , . t if ' V . . . . , . ft ' . ' V . ! S ' O' . s CHARLES LITTLE Chuck IS lrttle only m name He stands about srx feet IH hrs stockings and hls mind and heart correspond to hrs herght As a collector of cash he rs a wonder I-le makes every one rn 208 pay class clues and hrs favorrte story IS telllng how he bought a Zenrth for twenty five cents Q9 HELEN UPHAM Helen rs one of the Vxrgrl sharks one of the else Her frwnk nature and cheerful clrsposltlor have made her a favorlte wlth glrls and boys alrke HARRILT HARRISON Her motto mrght be thrs Work whlle you Work ancl play whlle you play She IS very cllllvent ln 5 A. the class room but her tendency for a good trme has often brought her to grlef ln the Assembly Hall Harrret IS a very actrve player on the basket ball team and won our class mascot She knows how to betray her Ignorance of a subject so gracefully that few teachers can glVC her a zero C AROLX N MOORE Qarolvn never wastes tlme lrngerrng 1n the halls for so sxsrftlv and sllently cloes she glrcle that you scarcely know she has past ln her ovsn quret may by her thoughtfulness she has made many frlencls and has proxecl a xery loyal one herself If yo,1 dont knoxx ask Harrret .. . ,, . . . , ' v ' , l I A I Y r V f fx . Y , ' ,, , r 'Q Aan 1 AA 1 ninety pupils in English, and a leader everywhere ' . . ' ' ' r . . .. . - . , A . ,, . . . . . A A D A IV.. A A A A A Y N 7 v I A V . 1 , , v A , ' v , 'fi 1, v, . . WARD BROWN Beany was one of the hlts as Derby Dasl wood ln the Senlor Play In addltlon to alnln hlstrlonlc lame he has covered hlnnself ulth glory as a baseball football and hockey star Vlhen you conslcler these thlngs and remember hls scholarshlo record you cannot fall to admlt that hls has been Ill en lable career I LCILF HOAR Luclle IS one of the most actne workers on th Zenlth Board a whlrlulnd on the basketball Hoor and one of the really brllllant students of the clas She and Lllly make the ocean foam at the Zenltn Board fudge partles It IS dlfflcult to descrlbe her vlrtues WNltl'lOUt acldlng those of Lllly because they are always together LILLY Mon Lllly IS another of the truly brllllant ll hts of IZ Illness was the only thln that kept her from belnof an honor pupll She IS ln love Wllll fucl e partl s and basket ball Her success ID Vlrvll sms one of the thlngs that made her chlef pall bearer for the lite lamented Dlclo l'lAfFL O NHLL Hazel has been leadlng the class ln monthly marks exer slnce the flrst reports came out when we were Freshmen so lt IS no wonder that she IS flrst on the Honor Roll If lndustry can accompllsh anythlnff rl tlee world Hazel mll arrlle tt -, -. - H V I , I, ' U SY ' O U , . lr , . r . . . - 2 V , . 1 ' ' C , - S. . ., , . . . . , U 1 D ' or O 'J . . . ' ' g C ' . 3 C 1 . , Y I ' 5 . . Y . y . . . J . 3 .. - .- - H l , . RALPH DLNNINC. If you can get Ralph to explaln a trrg problem to you he wlll actually be qulte senslble and do t xery well He has hrs Mathematrcs at hrs tongue s end all the trme Ralph rs endow ed xx 1th a hug heart and a large upply of class spmt Mm DORLAND May rs amhltrous along all worthy lrnes She has already shown her executne abrllty by the way she leacls the class IH mathematics She rs sure to make 5. EDITH CURTIS Ecllth IS rather small to be ure but she has a sense of humor and goocl fellovshlp blg enough for a person twrce her slze and those attractive qualltl s are the ones that count the most L ols LURTIS Loxs and l dlth Lolh came from Sleepy eye brl there rs rothrng Nery sleepy ahout erther of them Perhaps lt rs because Duluth has a more congemal atmosphere than her old home but thmes are moxma, when l.O1S rs around , 7 ' . . , . . . Z L . U Y V. I X s t , ' ' . an exemplary school teacher. L 1 ' . ' , S L Y . . ' il ' W - ' 3 a . ' Y' y A , L M1141 1.1L McIs.1LNN1111 Ir was 111th SIHCCYC regret t a move nest before gracluatlon Ho good txample of what en ra sure to gam an ennable pl Rcssr L D1cL has 1 most consc1ent1ous and mathcmat1 although the latter IS no hmdrance to an s an essenhal un1t 1n the Russel cal mmd 1n French He 1 excellence or he IS alxsax on the honor 1 hole of the cla s f s 1snt wlx fond of U1rs h t we sau Myrtlc uexer sh IS a C t l can produce ancl ace wherexer she may go I UNH 1 XX ILLNI R Eumce ha dexeloped a rare Bljllllt IH translat 1nU Latm and always scores a mnety on too shc rec1tat1ons IH Vlfgll ln her other stucl1e has a good Stilldlllg so ne la alnoxe t1e ab1l1ty lhe cl1ss could use many more axe1 wge 1n l1Le her C,1o1zc.1 'VlARr1x f sble but 1f you He stoutlx clemes that he IS us 1 ' H o ular xx 1th both boys could see l11m blush e IQ p p alid Qlll tllil 18 ddflnlled he1s ll wut 10116 hx h1s teachers lVloreoxe1 C M M k - 4 1' . . b., .t. l V . v .s , ' ' js l1.t. He '. ' ' D' l-. v . l v v , e - 1' ' fs ,, I K V. ' Q 4 f 1 A- lf' 4- ' V' ' S ' ' - ' Q ' V . 1 ' ' her daily 7 ' 4 ' ' , ' s, , 2 . r ' 5, sl 7 1 l ' 1 ' 1 Cc - VV , Y Q 1 1 ' .l e D' ' 1 .. , 5? MA' s 2 43 ' v' ' . ' ' '. 11 1 ort Vl fan. EDWARD O BRIEN Swede has rendered wery efhclent seruce to I7 not only as a sergeant at arms but also as our stage manager and as one of our best representatnes on the athletlc held In addltlon to these forms f manual labor he untes werv passable poetry me must hand It to Ed he s done noble MARY BOYLE Mary has reduced the art of managmg M Romleux to a real sclence Being lrlsh lt IS only natural that she should pay rrore attentnon to Ed than Crawshaw rn EHgllSh class Crawshaw doesnt care and Ed does Mary IS one of the Jolllest glrls ln the cla s xg DOLLY CROWLEY Wherever you see Mary the chances are pretty good for finding Dolly also Like Mary Dolly knows all of Mr Romleux s xx ealcnesses Louis ARDOUIN Although LOUIS IS a good wrestler and a better swlmmer he reaches the helght of his powers as an orlglnal wrt As such he IS sure to make a name At heart however he IS a deep thlnlcer and a good student E , I I 5. ' 79 V ' - I , U' at - - 1 s D 7 . ' . . 0 Y . Y I : . ' ii ' U! 9 it U! , . t. - ,. r. . . . . . . 'S . . 9 ' q gi ' 5 . A k ' . . Y.. ' . ' V E Y - . 5, 7 . V 1 2 ta i If q ' - 'f it ' ' , V ,, E fi ' , I . Y 7 ,. n . . , I A ! V H . I Ab ALEXANDER RLJTTCJLR Alex came all the may from Bay Lake to grad uate wlth our class and mcrclentally practlce publrc speaking He may come from the rural deestrlcts but rf he rs a good example of what Mmnesota sorl can produce we may all do well to Jom tue back to the lancl campargn AMY Rosrg To use a slang phrase exactecl rather by admrrm tron than any CICSITC to descrrbe Amy IS some loolcer ln adclrtron to worlung the heart strlngs of most of the sterner sex of our class she works harl on her German MARJORIE MCMILLAN Margle rs seldom seen without Amy or VICL versa They come to school rn close company and leave together And Marjorre rs Just as Jolly as her frlend That tells the story ARNE BERGUM Arne clldnt Join our class untll thus year but h made up for lost time by getting out for the football team and trymg out rn the oratorlcal contest for the Wallace Cup We wrsh me could have more mem bers mth a lrke arrount of spurt TORFIN BLIORCIL Torhn IS one of the less persons who can boat of a long record of convlncmg Mr Romleux He IS also an athlete of some note hrs p cnl lines bemg basket ball and baseball Another of lorf s specialties rs readmg Engllsh poetry Ask M Qprague CERTRLDE BRADT You would never thlnlc that this was only Gertrude s second year at Central for she has made as many frlends as most pupils of four years standmf ANNA BRAND A tlmld llttle prece who IS an excellent example f quallty not quantlty Hers IS a serlous cat of mlnd ewldently mfluenced by a xery dehnlte deter mmatxow to accomplrsh somethlng WILLIAM BINGHAM Although he IS a very retlcent fellow Vllllham s a rare person He represents a type almost extmct He has gone to Hlvh School for one purpose study vw. l v v S ,, gw U - - H - , , ' W . , . , - c 1 nr ' lk . T. .. -J - ,B v y Q X. ' ' ' 1 - 1 ' ru' K y I' ,,. . . . ,, Y . V 2 ,7 I ll ' ' ,' ' ' . 1 0 . - H xx ' V' ' 1 V V - , i 9 , . x ' , . . V . . Q A- , , N ' if :J ' -0 DOROTHY JONES oyeux and cursant are two French adjectlv s that descrrbe her but no two words French or Engllsh can describe the tremendous amount of class sprrlt Dorothv has shown GEORGENA BERCTOLD Ah' here rs a student here IS a frlendl Georgem IS a rrost practrcal bemg who newer does thmgs by halwes Here s to her' HOWARD CANT We expect to see HOWIC land a posltlon wrtn the uaker Oats company as the orrgmal wearer of the smrle that wont come off Hrs smlle was frozen on hrs face as a frrghtened Freshman and the only lhmg rt has done rn thawing out rs to gross broader 'l he class needs more lllce Howard FRANCES CAMPBELL She IS a very conscrentrous l1ttle soul who could make a fortune m blushlng She always walks m a hurry but rf hard work and strrct punctuallty count for anythmg she will get there all rrght . .. . .. -- - , I . , . . Q V' ' - ' . . 'lil 'I lt ' J! n . , H- .. Y 9 . . , - . H H - , . . , . 1 , FREDA BARTHOLOMEW Fun lowing Freda rs lmpulslve loyal and smcere It would be hard to hnd a better combination of deslr able qU8llllCS We msh her success m lrfe NATHAN Con EN Nate surely leaves an envlable record behmcl hrm Hrs stralght forward busmesslxke way of domg thmgs has brought hlm hugh marks and what IS more a host of frrends EDDIE ER1cKsoN Ed has all the scrence f mathematics stored safely away ln his lhead As Miss Wells for his character He rs an artlst of remarkable ablllty also and wlll some day make a name as a deslgner MILDRED EVSMITH Mlldred IS rather qulet and retlrmg and looks as lf she were too bashful to make a recltatron But when Mr ROmlCUX calls on her she makes lt evident to all that she should have been French . . . . - ' . . :V A I 3 . Y. W . . , ' ,Q xg f. CONSTAN c F FALSTAD Although studlous ln all of her lessons Constance ts round 'mth a Nxgl book rrore oft r 'har' ar, other She has a pecullar way of stammerxng wwhlch often proves fortunate rn Latm when she IS uncertam of endmgs JOHN FREDIN We have recently become used to hearmg ohn s name on the honor roll Someday he will do great things ln the mathematical world ohn rs usually to be found at work ln the chemrstry lab CERTRUDE FREDIN Hers IS a name with whxch we ar all well acquamted for It IS on the honor roll exery month Our reputatron for scholarshxp IS bullt upon the marks of such students Br RFNICE FOWLER Berenlce aln ays has a pleasant smile for all She d t e but not at the cost IS exer searchrng for a goo lm of her school ssorl. She IS a good student of exert b b t he abllrty m mathematics IS especlally su ject u r notlceable V Z- I .' V.. C .,, 1, I I I A Ll ll I I V , . . v . . is l A.. , ft o I . v . . , A I yrs! Edmand usually sllps mto school at a xery few mlnutes of nme but that IS nothlng against her for her marks place her may above the average student Wrth such a record one can afford to be almost late Louise MURCHISON LOUISE rs usually very qulet rn her classes but she IS as dehghtful as a compamon as she rs brllhant as a student She IS a veteran rn Zenith wsorlc and served as secretary of the board Her name w as on the Honor Roll EDMAND NISWANDER aw OSCAR MFLANDER Qscar rs a quiet dlgnlhed gentlemanly fellow xx ho has a smlle and a kmcl word for ex eryhocly Hrs great passlon IS a love to work for MISS Wells That mere fact msures hlm the homage of the class I-IAZEL MCRTFRLD Haul rs an lnclustrxous pupil of our rllustrlous class who narrowly mlssecl the four year Honor Roll When you like Into conslcleratlon the fact that she has taken a strarght four years of Latln her record IS marvelous ALICE OLsr x Alice IS a girl who has done her share to uphold the standard of the class and when all has been said no one can really do much more Elsie his played her part well ELWOOD O BRIEN I Elwood IS one of the most splrlted members of the dues Although he and Swede are not related desplte the Slmllaflly of thelr names each ln hls w1y has helped IZ to galn lts present standmg VIARTHA Osrsx Martha rs the possessor of a very qunet dlgnlty She IS serlousness personlfled No matter leow WlVld an lmagmatlon you have you cant rmagme her CUHIDU a class or sluppmg from the Assembly Hall But she works AUC E PASTOR ET A lice combrnes a llterary taste with a tremen dous sense of humour Besldes entertammg Chlck f Llttle every mornmg thls term she has kept the slxth ' L perlod Engllsh class m good humor also And she makes good candy , . . , . , 5 . , , , class. l-le even hunts up the treasurer to pay class N .. ,. 7 . . . . . , . . 1 'Y 9' , ' ' ' . M V . . . ' ,I 'T' S U - H U - ,- H SJ O ' . ' l U . - 4 -. - ,. Lf J . A 4 it I UCIFN YOUNG Cy IS a boy who IS liked by everybody m the class Although he never hurts himself studying he has the bram power behmd his work and that s what counts Cy wlll arrlve all rlght MAY GIBSON May IS one of the most actlve members of the Zenith Board one of the mrghty rn Vergll and one of Mr Spragues standby s ln Engllsh She IS also one of the few lucky ones who Wlll have the pleasure of travelmg abroad with Mr SCl'1llllI'lg Ma, counts one all rlghtl Doug IS short but comprehenslve and has beer a brrllxant member of I2 from the start Someday we expect to see hum become a second Luther Bur ii? aw! 'ES-I rung QUZO 309' -4-.-5-3- 5:25 MQ.. 9,-03: O-40:- iio-2. 3'3 'V sw gl ' cms: Eg:-3 CD carg- mo Q.-. 55.53 23: rv 'U SSE new ogg .asv 3-13 -xi-E 2310 SSH? 3 oe mia -I.. bank as hls chief mterest hes rn agrlculture LUFLLA HAKE xy ,- U - N - - - 3 . ' . 1 if by DOUGLAS COE V 71. .. 1, - - , ! 4 A' fa, ' EARL HARRIS Cury as he rs known to us though hrs har has been short smce Freshman days missed the four year Honor Roll by I8 lO0 of one per cent That IS a case where the farlure IS apparent possibly b not real Curly dlstlngulshed hlmself as prop n-an on the night of the Semor Play HELEN BENSON Helen was Baby ln the Senior Play and filled that very dlfhcult part splendldly She halls from Tower but showed her good judgment by 1ommg our class ln her unlor year She has made many friends ln the Zemth Cnty ANDREW JOHNSON Andrew IS a real genius ln pubhc spealung and 11 malcmg brllllant hlstory recltatlons Mr Schlllmg declares that he has never seen a bett r test paper than Andrew wrltes He was the Wallace Cup orator this year BEATRICE HLGHES Beatrlce recently learned that Proctor IS not a desirable a re :dence dxstrxct as our own clty of Duluth Accordrngly she set out for D C H S and showed her wxsdom by Jolnmg the class of l9l 7 Although she came late she has made her mark ANNA ERICSON Anna is a gentle soul with the nicest kind of a disposition. She is sure never to be destitute ol M y friends. Quiet and unobtrusive as she is, she always ff' makes a hne recitation in English. WALDON HOUGH Waldon is a very quiet boy ln school and never makes trouble for anyone You can tell by the glint in his eyes howexer that he IS not as bashful and retiring as his appearance xx ould make him F 3 WALLACE CAMERON Wallace spends his spare time doing chemistry or running with the track squad He is full of class spirit and uses a lot of it 1912 has no better friend than Wally GERTRUDE FLINT We may have thought that Gertrude view ed life jf too seriously when we were underclassmen but now me realize that if we had done as she dld me might have had her splendid marlcs yr f in 'SA . Y . ,rru A AIW' ,. ESTHER Momx Esther IS a glrl who wlll make frlends wherexer she goes She IS one of the bright ones of the class and wrll someday make her mark as 1 German scholar eols MARx IN Her s rs a good motto when you do a thmg d lt thoroughly Lols has had her name on the honor roll continuously durmg her Hlgh School thoughtful to others there lsnt a sweeter mcer glrl ln the class LILLIAN MONAGHAN We feel certarn that Lllllan wrll make a success of anythlng and everything she undertakes rf h contmues on the path she has followed through High School She has the best w lshes of us all Q- ELSIE, OLSEN Elsl rs as good rn cooking as she rs rn English Although she IS wery quret and retlrmg she IS always ready wlth the correct answer when Mr Sprague asks her a questlon . , 29 ' ' f If L I Q , Y v , ' , 0 career. Lois is very observant. Always kind and . , l 95 ' ' , ' s e . is GUSTAF OLSON The fact that Gusty won the pTl7C for the best and most adaptable tltle plate for the Zemth shows hrs abrllty as an artlst much better than anv words can do Gusty has lots of class Splflt Cut of kindness he sharpens Swedes lcmves for l'lll'l xery often MABE1. SANDE RS My fortune for such a braln' French verbs haxe no terror for her and the may she translates Vergrl farrly talces our breath away Besrdes belng a sharlc m her studles she IS also a very accomp trshecl mu xclan TEK LA SWANSON Telcla s excellence ln all mathematlcal subjects s most pronounced and m all other studles she IS rell able No matter whether she makes a good recxta tlon or a poor one we are always sure that she has done her best And her poor recrtatlons are very few and far between ESLEY TIDBAL1. Esley IS one ol those qulet fellows who contln ually surprlse you wlth their droll remarks He Isnt exactly studlous but recerves sudden msplratlon at crltxcal morrents A A 3, fx . M 4 In K - U Q M - - if - ' , Q x. FRFD XWEINBERG Fred rs a representative of the press and as sucn ha done hrs utmost to advertlse our book H 1 always on the Job and trylng to glean a story from the unmterestmg detalls of our daily life H15 debatmg work has often saxed the day for Central MAE KLEIN Mae rs a French student of no mean standmg ua well as a frank llkeable compamon and a slncere frrend Whatever she does we know rt wlll be the credrt of l9l2 Omx E MCTAGIJE The most valuable jewels are often the smallest rn srze so says Benjamm Franlclm And we are lncllned to belreve m Poor Rlchards statement ss hen ue thmlc of Olrve SABELLA MACALLAX Hows pathetrc was the grief she drsplayed at th last srde rltes of our clear departed ueer Dldol How mtensely passlonate must haxe been her love Q for the royal VlCllm of Aeneas' hclcleness' .Q ' 5 . C S L 3 . .l l ', ' ll !1 ' Qi Q . - - . . . . , ' . Y Y :EL .L Y F I - V 3 . , V ' v to .. - . . ,, . . . , - . . . . . . , ' . Y . Y . . 3 Q . . 1 A ' I ' HARLAND STETSON Harland has served falthfully as the treasurer l the Athletlc ASSOClHtlOH Stetz IS also a good friend of Mr Sprague He and Lynn are usually found together .alll LYNN NIACLACHLAN Lynn was ln a Sophomore session room last year but a hard grmd has agarn placed hlm ln hrs proper class and IZ IS glad to welcome hlm back He was one of the scene shlfters on the mghts of the play and deserves all the pralse that can be given for hrs work Lols T ROTT Lois decrded that D C H S was a pretty good place after all and came back to us after hemg East a year Strange to say e drd not go hack after the Xmas vacatron Loxs makes good recltatlons ln Engllsh AB- -3 DoRo1 HY Pls RCE Dorothy IS contlnually on the lookout for a good trme and her llvely nature flnds a flttlng place to exercise Itself on the bastket ball Hoo She IS one of the old guard of the cholr 7 ' 0 ' y . 'jf L . . MORTIMPR STANFORD ,M Mort IS ratner small ot stature but he makes up ln pep and all round good heartedness what he lack ln phy lcal srze He w as one of the stars on our charnpron hockey team and stars all the trme when lt conees to Ql OXtlI1U class plrlt KATHARINE SMITH More room than rs here allotted IS necessary to sum up even a fractron of Kathermes wlrtues Smcerlty recelves hrst regard ln her deeply thoughtful a llght far back IH her eyes that peaks of a true appreclatlon of the fun 1n hfe WINNIFREIJ TOWER Why oh why Tower when she rsnt more than hve feet and four 1nches5 But she couldnt possrhly be a but mcer or more pleasant rf she were physlcally constructed rn accordance wlth her name hu SALXAR 5 Ely IS headed for dale and left us early IH tht sprmg for preparatory work at Hotchluss He has been a mighty good member of the class You wont find a mcer fellow anywhere Here s to hrm' V L. . , Z 2 . . . 5 . 's . '. . . Y . ,. t . . . . . O . . . . . . I nature. She is very quiet and reserved: but there is . . S . 9 V I Y I - . . V . V. ,, 9 Q 4 1 V D . . V , 2 . us Bruno 15 an accompllshed orator a Alas? ESTHER SEGERMAN Esther rs one of the Jolhest gurls ID the class She rs always lookmg out for fun of any description At bl cl en mg play mth w om she IS already a past mlstress LESLIE CROMNN ELL Leslie IS one of those who just mlssed the Honor R l ol and at that he worked harder than many who were favored with h h rg er grades Leshe has a blg store of class splrlt however a yet If he cheers up nd wlll get there LAWRENCE Wx LY Ruf debatmg star of the hr thmlcer whrch IS more than both He rs a hard x k xor er wrth a serlous purpose ln life and knows how st magnrtude and an all rounj to he a good fellow too MILDRED SHERWOOD Although there are ma we should hke more lf they were all like thls one, Jolly and never blue H Always neat and trrm, Mrldred would pass as a Parrsran model She manages to get through wlthout much studying, but h s e IS a brlght lass, so what's the use3 ny Mlldreds m the class Mmm ANDP RSON Althouqh she mav never make her mark ln th theatrlcal world as drd her namesake she IS sure to do so m other thmgs G 4 NVINFILLD DM IS Truly we may say of Wxnnle He has attalned great hewhts rn thus world The way he llfts hr SIX and a half foot body 1n the hlgh Jump has added student OI'l OCCHSIOHQ LILLIE ARKIXOLA Llllze IS a generous kmd hearted gurl who has a weakness for basket ball If you want sympathy or consolation she IS the doctor Hcoo FRIEMLTH From the wery moment of hls entrance lnto Central an Hugo has been the lncarnatlon of splrxt both for the school and the class As a collector of ads he has been one of the bxggest hustlers on the Zenlth Board fl V U I Q : s 1 sl F , v 1 . , , O ' . ' s .X , ' ' ' . E fs to our school records. Also, he is a brilliant French f A ' , . . .. ,. X , 1 ' 1 f, ,- li II Q OLGA GJLRDAHL Olga IS one of the few new members of the class but she has caught the IZ spmt m great style and rs dolng her share of conslstent work rn llfe If he had started vxrth us as a Freshman we are sure that we could haxe dnspelled her quretness G- x BERNARD HAGBERG Bernard IS one of the regular conslstent students of IZ and has made a steady advance rn all kinds of study The plodding process may be slow but lt IS sure Remember the hare and the tortoise ERITA MALLET udgrng from Merrta s recrtatrons we would label her a grmd but she rsnt mdeed she rsn t' Her success rs the result of genius well developed and properly apphed GAYLORD HALVERSON Gaylord IS a shark at exerythmg he under takes whether lt he school work or some branch of l outsrcle endeavor As a declalmer he won mucn applause IH the tryout for the lnterclass contest ' l , . . . - - . . . I S Y. V . . l 55' 1, is 'ss gre a. 2 ' . . k , lg.: ' F45 , . . ' f . 9 t A gl M J . . , . . u - ns - n - - s . v v - 1 3 . :IL 'Q' V n - rr ru - V I Y - .Q , , , IREM3 HARCREAX as lrene rs as Jolly a glrl as you are likely to find anywhere If you do not know her then lose no tlme ln makmg her aequamtanee It wlll he worth whrle jor-1N CURR1E awn has made hrs mark ln all llnes of class aetmty He has been one of the best representa t1ves we have had on the athletlc held and on the a class officer and leader AGN ES KN UTsoN The crovwnlng glory of woman IS her harr Agnes IS the falr halred gurl whom no one can for get She always appears sober and sedate rn publrc but to those who know her mtrmately she IS a Jolly COITIPHIIIOII RULDOLPH FRIEMUTH Rudle came back from Galahad thls year and has made hrs mark rn several ways He was one of the hardest workers on the second team m foot ball and has served as one of our sergeants at arms ,A basket-ball floor, hesides being a prominent flgure as Nr' g 1 HENRY HALENBP cle Throughout hls Hlgh School course Helnle has played basket ball made frlencls and lnclclentally kept hls name on the honor llst Helnle shlnes ln math and German ERNA RAKoWsm Erna has two great ambltlons one muslcal and the other llterary and she IS ln a fair way to reallzc both We expect to see her rame lmmortallz d elther as a wonderful CElllSt or as a second ane Austen ROY OLSON Roy IS a qulet fellow but he has a dormant sense sense of lllclng for fun whlch IS easlly aroused A an all round good fellow he ranks hlgh MARGARLT CILPIN Here IS one who IS always wllllng to extend a helplng hand to those who are lncapable of prepa lng thelr lessons It IS her nature to be generous lr Z ,, - - u ' v 1 Q , . lt H 1 , r , Y Y y l . I Q . I c Y, .Ll v uf . . . . 9 ff f V Q Lf v ' r.. - CHARLLS JERONIMLS Impulslwe generous modest ulth a xslt as keen as hls braln IS clear Dutch has made a hne record as a student and an athlete X ou xe got to 0 some to beat hlm for splrlt ARTHUR PETERSON Arthur IS varlously called Art and Pete by those who know hlm He stands about SIX feet ln hls StOCklI'lgS and IS as cheerful as he IS tall H has a QITllC for everyone FANNY KARON Doesnt she remlnd you of a Wenzell glflb Fanny has made a splendld record for herself durlng hex course partlcularly ln French and German H r Fngllsh recltatlons are the wonder of us all JAMES VEINER ' It has been proposed several tlmes that someon be employed to cut off Chlmmles muslcal halr but Mr Hlestand has declared that such an act would mean ruln for the orchestra If thats the case Rah for the halr' v n 1 y ' - - - ls as n 'R -- f ' . 1 1 s ' g n . . . A E' t 1 . . H n u n f , it . 6 5 . ' l 6- , . .. G ,- n .l , ' n - ts - - y n - - . 1 - v u - an , . HILMA KOEFOD Hllma IS as qulet as a mouse XNl'lllC ln the class room but the twlnkle ln her eyes shows that her temperament lSDt entlrely a stucllous one as those xx ho know her wlll testlfy ANNA GOODMAN Anna hasnt been wlth us very long but she has been at Central long enough to malce many frlencls and to convlnce us that she IS a valuable aclclltlon to any c ass ARTHLR HUTCHINCS Hutch has brought hlmself before the publlc eye by taklng enough subjects for a four year course all at the same tlme and gettlng hls name on th fall to glorlfy the class thats certaln ILDWARD Vocr Although Ed halls from Mlnncapolls he ha many excellent tralts of character Beslcles belng 1 good Engllsh student he IS an artlst of no mean ablllty Hls speclalty IS drawlng Mutt and ,I ff cartoons He IS a worthy membe of the lass l . L C. V W honor list too! A boy who can do that will never .3 lxavsu H HAIQRIS Bunl IS prohcxent ln so many lmes that 1t dlfhcult to tell Xshlch 1 hls forlt He IS a basket ball star a clexer worker xx 1th the brush and an a round athlete In addltlon to these quwlxtnes l as a facrllty of CXPFCSSIOH that makes htm an ldeal new spaper reporter EVA HARRISON Eva IS merry VIVHCIOUS and persexerlng She has made a name for herself as one of the best per formers ln Mr Braclcett s hfth perxod class 1n readmf' and publlc speakmg X.--3 ALIQE LLND AllC6 gets to school early every mornlng and uses all her spare time for study She IS so reserx ed and qulet that she rarely utters a xsord except ln maltlnv a splendid recltatlon BERTHA jox-nxsow Bw rdle IS her nlclcname and a xery pproprlal one too She IS exceedlnvly clexer ulth the use of the bru l ard her eyes 1 ZS Mil . ' . .S I H' I - 'E f, . ' ' t , . ll- A . . 1 N ,, me h - .' L l .V I , V n ' D , ft A V, ,... . V I . I. J f Y' , ' .A e , . U . A 0 ' 'g Sffm' . . MARY WHITCOMB Her s IS a laugh that It does one good to hear It IS just lllie ltS possessor jolly and slncere A Mary IS a vocallst of no mean merlt me are sure to heal from her yet THOMAS BEATTY Tom IS a valuable man about the school H as l9lS ln all the entertamments both as a performer an a stage hand He IS a member of the cholr 1nd a lnger of some ablllty WHITNEY WALL quate expresslon of the gratltude we feel for Whlt ney s untlrlng efforts for the success of the Athletlc Y ASSOClall0H He sure has made good MARION INc.ALLs Marlon reads French nolels just as easlly as sh does those ln her mother tongue and the result I shown by her success ln managlng to entlce good ' marks out of Mr R0mlCUX ui,-' ,X , . . W is ' ' ' ' , ' ' . s Y Q . . 1 ll . - - v V 'f .7 -, Fx fr . e ,. s'- ' ' , A , cl . ' ' ' . . . l . s . ,A J gg ' The space allowed here cannot contain an ade- Q . . . , fa -2 , , 4, , . . .i : .E - - i U H U -H . I . . Q Y U M . ' is A MERNA NEWELL We hawe often llstenecl 'mth great pleasure to Merna as she led the cholr Someday we hope to ARTHLR Oswm r .as made ms name promnent ln tne basket ball world by his uonclerful work as center e D C H qum but his name IS stl more promment 1n the minds of the members of I7 as a Jolly sincere frlencl hear her as a przma donna In some great opera It s not at all unlrkely MARGARET MCLEAN Hecky has done her share as a loyal member of I2 and has the best wishes of us all for hex future health and happmess ge of th . . .s. 'rw ' 'yu t 1 1 'F ffkflm, Atlkkitfl NN: S7 When rn the course of school events rt becomes necessary for one cla s to dls olve the bands NNl'1ICll connect rt to the rest of the school and to assume among the rest of the classes the separate and equal statlon to which the customs of the school entrtle them the decent respect for the opmrons of mankmd requires that they declare the causes which lmpel them to self commendatlon We hold these truths to be self evldent that all men are created equal that they are endowed by thelr Creator wtth certam malrenable rrghts that ansong them are llfe a trace of whlch may be found ln l9l 3 after mrcroscoprc exammatlon liberty to beat I2 rf they can and pursult of the honor roll that to secure these rlghts classes are mstltuted among puptls derlvmg therr Jut powers from the class adviser and the faculty and that whenever any class becomes through with these ends lt rs graduated and a new class ts orgamzed laymg rts foundatlon on such prmclples as to rtself shall seem most lrkely to make It the best class m school Prudence mdeed wrll dxctate that classes three years establlshed should not be affected by light and translent causes such as loslng the basket ball champronshlp to l9l3 And accordmgly all experience hath shown that manklnd IS more dl posed to suffer whrle evlls are tolerable than to f0SSlllZC as the class of I3 should But when a long tram of vxctorxes and successes pursues invariably and conslstently the same object and furthermore evmces a desire and a desrgn to make lt the best class that ever entered hrgh school here or elsewhere then rt rs the duty of the members of that class to come forward and admrt that they are only mere humans The hlstory of I2 IS a hlstory of repeated trrumphs and school cham plonshrps all havmg as their ultlmate objectrve the establlshment of a marked superrorrty to the rest of the classes To prove thus let facts be subnutted to a candxd world l908 1909 We entered thrs school September 8 l908 We held our first class meetmg November nmth and elected James lxellv presldent Adelalde Mlller vlce president Mary Boyle secretary Herbert l-lelmer treasurer and Robert Mlller edrtor We chose Maroon and gold for our colors We were beaten by a 6 2 score ln the annual Sophomore Freshman gam Noxember fourteenth We admmrstered a beatmg to the class of 191 l rn baseball x-X-K siL:t' 'I-1' I l N. 9 1- I r x - thu Y ' - L , - L ,W . . S ' 'P-' f . ' -' . J' ' , .. .:- . l , s t' 9 . ,I .N c . - D- , 4 . . ' 1- . ' ' ' . . V . - , , , . , . - - f . 2 . . Y . L. 2 , L . - .' - 2. e hmshed second 1n the lnter class track nreet i909 l9I0 e began our second year on a very satlsfactory loundatlon by electlnff Laurence Duby presldent Adelaide Mrller YICC presldent Vmenne lxerr secretary Rex St Clalr treasurer and Louls AfdOUln edltor e defeated the Freshmen ln the annual game by the DlggCSt score ln years e won the champlonshlp of the school both ln loys and grrls basket a e beat the Freshmen I0 9 rn baseball Our hop was successful socrally and hnanclally 9 Owxmg to the absence of our presrdent and edltor we elected Robert Mars and ullus Nlolte respectnely to fill their places but let the other ofhcers stand We won the hockey charrplonshlp of the school We were well represented rn all branches of athletlcs We held a most successful unlor Mld year party and gaxe a dellfrhtful unror Semor e elected all ol our last year s officers for our fourth and best term school e have led all classes m scholarship e conducted the rrost successful auctxon exer held IH the hrstory of the school Gur Senlor hop was a splendld affair We gave the best manaved class play IH the hrstory of the school We therefore the class of I9l2 whose names are herem assembled do rn the name and bv the authorlty of the good people of thts class solemr-lx publrsh and declare that thrs class IS and of rlvht ouffat to be the best class that exer left the Central H1 h School For the support ot thls declarauon xsrth a mcere falth IH the eternal and lmmutable connectron between each member of our number and ulth a hrm relnnce rn ourselxes me mutually pledve one to anotl er our fortunes and our reputatrons as scholar d rtml t Io: Xmaoux VV ' ' ' - ' . , XV . ,. . W' ' ' ' , ' r ' ' ' - bll. W - ' . l9l0-I ll. J. 1 , M .V , . , Y . ' J .- .- V .D J - . l9ll-l9l2. W' ' of W, I V . V . . 3, t.:.,, 'K 1 't.- .lsafzle-es. V E N U E-' 'Tx .Q +L U A4 cn CU CQ 'ua TE U U Error HOP K, X bl Snwvorn In Haste Dear Allce I am at my wrts end Please lend a helping hand Its just this w ay we want a novel way of w Yltlflg up the social part of our rllustrrous career Owlng to the death of our Prmcrpal ln our Freshman year we dldnt entertain But rn our Qophorrore year we made up for lost time for not only were the eats good hut also the open dance which followed Our unror year soclal record wlll he rmmortalrzed for how could anyone attendmg the unlor Mld year forget how the 4th dance was played Any Llttle Crrl 5 Then too I thrnk that the I I Semors wrll hawe to admrt that they were royally entertamed by us on une lbth I guess I told you rn one of my letters about the grand spread that we had rn the new Lunch room and lrow Caldy Harrzs made a place for hrmself wrth George Ade and Mark Twam wrth hrs toast on Grrls and about the splendid dance afterwards The Semor Farewell was a httmg ocral clrmax for such a brrllrant record as we have made M oplnlon of the Junrors was chanved after the way ln whrch they entertamed us for whatever else they are laclung rn their soclety tralmng IS complete Now see what you can do wrth this materlal I cheerfully confess that Iam sturrped Srncerely DOROTHY GIBSON J- 6- 'V X i 505 , KJ I X , fa s o 'Q s ff as gp, ,ip 5, Q W.. V. Ah li U K Qxsfkf ,I tx 1 'A . X ks V2-t, .lr .- 1 E- 5 ' 55 H' . . 3' 'Y-N. f 92 2 4 ef! 3 73 ,za 'A e J . . - , V C.. . . My ' J ' - . ' ,' ' A s ' ' . ' ' ' ' . y V D . Y . . T AU Tl H' Mr Custance again acted as auctioneer at the annual Senior auction which took place as usual on the afternoon before Thankseixinv Day The class showed its wisdom bv placing the affair in the hands of a xery capable and efhcient consmittee under the leadership of Dorothy Gibson and George Stillman Hveryltody seemed anxious to contribute to the good cause Newer had there been such a tempting dr play of pennants posters pillows apron and list but by no means least either in quantity or quality Lcmdu and mor randu The Assembly Hall mas packed with bidders and before any one realized it Mr Custance had uheedled tfzrce hundred and forty dollars and Pity cents out of them The students and the A ociated Charities furnished lit of peop' practical Thanksgiwing dinners Money vas gixen also to the Children Home the St Mary s Hospital and the St Luke s Hospital xx here the H1011 Sclool maintains a room rl-banlcsvixinv Day the consrrittee nas xery busv dlstrioutinv the basltet If all of tlsose xsfo were irrposexished hx the pirited biddinv of the auction could hate seen bon treir rronew was used me wre ure that thex would not l me suffered o piinlulls from those awful rfter effects - l Y , V. . O ' I A . V . . . . . i I L I c . . ' r - ' is -' . , -, ' S. . H. M v v w- ' , v ' . ' J 3 1 ss A ' I ' a is .e deserxing assistance. Over two hundred families in all were provided with , f ' e. I ' C, . V ' b I , ' Aa, . -O D 1 . e -, v 3 5. A V A ' . I .L VY S . . . . D . . , ' l A v 4 V 1 . . A V , . , I s V ' 'Q s z H' , . 1 ' L 5, pg-lang.:-Luigi!!-lxinsilxgllzx I SCHOLARSHIPL 1 ? i ? i i ? 2 K1 llllilllllllllilll It IS an uncomlron thing for the members of a Senlor class loaded down as they are YX1ll'l the long llst of graduatlon duties social and otherxwlse to XWIH special commendatlon from the prlnclpal of the school for their excellence lll scholarshlp Yet such 15 the re ord of I2 Several tlmes Mr Young ha last year as Seniors we haxe led the school ln the proportion of students on the honor llst So we feel that we have a right to pat ourselves on the hack Cn the Honor Roll for the four years of our High School career eleven pupils haue achlex ed a standing of nlnety per cent or over and of these elew en flve are boys Truly ours IS a well balanced class The flrst fue pupils of the llst are officially desi nated as Honor Pupil and It IS a notable fact that two of these are representatlwes of the male ser Naturally me feel no small arrount of prlde ln our record for It IS one such as few classes eler equal The llst of tho e on the Honor Roll follows Hazel O Nelll May Gibson May Dorlarld Andrew ohnson Ward Brown Lois MHFNIH Russel Dlce Henry Halenbeclt Eunice Wlllner .Iullus Nolte Louise Murchlson u L- la Tl 'I N IA mf' noted our 'high standing and has even emphasized the fact in chapel. This l J STUDY' 0 i Promptly at quarter after eight oclock on the evening of March twenty ninth the signal was given for the orchestra to cease playing and the curtarn rose on the first act of A Modern Anamas the play selected by Mr Custance for the annual performance The play rs a sparkling comedy full of rrresrstrbly funny situations and aboundrng with clean wholesome amusement throughout The story very briefly rs this Lysander Lyon rs a young doctor with a decrded tendency towards unveracrty He rs sent by hrs guardian Colon l Lyon who rs also hrs uncle to practice his profession at Guys Hospital London To rnculcate economrcal habits he rs lrmrted to a very small allow ance Seeing no other way to obtain funds for hrs rather fast life he marries a wealthy and aged wrdow with a slender hold on lrfe thrnkrng by this means to augment hrs fortune and at the same trme keep rt a secret from hrs uncle After marriage however he finds that he rs the proud O and happy 3 father of a forty year old stepdaughter whose greatest delight rs to play the her money to her daughter instead of her husband Lysander rs dumbfounded but determines to make the best of a hard srtuatron He comes to America with hrs stepdaughter and her money hrres a valet rn New York and immediately proceeds to Newport where he assumes the guise of a gentleman of fortune to interest a rrch woman so that he can marry again Lysander s Uncle Dick however has planned a marriage between hrs nephew and another ward whom the boy has never seen a certarn Nellie Goldengate an herress from California Unbeknown to the young scapegrace Colonel Lyon has come to Newport to vrsrt a specialist about a certarn mysterr ous illness which has as its most notrceable symptom a feeling of fullness after eating Lysander makes the acquaintance of Miss Goldengate but through .1 mrstake of Francisco hrs valet he thinks that she rs Prudence MayHower of Boston the daughter of a rrch chewing gum manufacturer Then Uncle Dick shows up and Lysander has to explarn not only hrs own presence but also that of hrs affectionate stepdaughter Baby She rs the chref comedy character of the play and her actron rs rntrmately connected with the movement of the plot which rs merely the consequence of Lysanders lres and counter lies When the prevarrcator finally succeeds rn engaging hrs daughter to hrs uncle the effect rs ludicrous Of course Lysander 5, Y il .1 -l part of a child. The ancient and decrepit Mrs. Lyon soon dies, but leaves f' ri F ultlmately finds out that the grrl he lowes IS the brlde that Colonel Lyon had OTlUlI1EillV selected tor mm Meanywhrle Prudence Mayflower dlsappomted when she finds that Lysander has been paving court to her by mlstalce seeks solace rn the form of Derby Dashxsood a dandy synth no more money than height Francxsco for hls part manages to Interest lxltty Babys mald Naturally enough the hnale dlsplays four well satlshed couples each deeply mterested ID them se yes Fl he class ones 1 large debt of gratrtude to Mr Custance for his super usron of the play to the Hlgh qchool orchestra for thelr large part ln th entertamment and especnlly to Lduard O Brien and hrs very efhclent corps of helpers who gaxe the best 9Xl'tllJlll0I'1 of stage management ever seen xt Central They kept the performance on tlme from start to hmsh yyhrch rs an uncommon rhmg ln amateur theatrlcals The play ws as repeated on the thxrtreth The cast follows Dr lysander Lyon an untruther ullus Xloltt Col Rlchard Lyon hrs dyspeptlc uncle ames Wlrarton Derby Dashyyood Lsq so Englrsh don t you know Xvard Broun Franclsco the Doctor s valet ywlth a consclence Roger Pon ell Nellle Goldengate a Western grrl from FTISCO Mlldred Prudden Prudence Mayllou er an Eastern product from Boston Dorothy Cuson Baby solld but sentlmental the Doctors step daughter Helen Benson ACI l A public parlc at Newport AC l II A parlor rn a Newport hotel III l yswnder s en lume the present Bu me s Manager Rogert Mars Stage Manager Edu ard O Brien Manager and Drrector A F M Cu tance JL It ' ' 'I I Y f I ' D 1 . . . . A . 1 v A ' , - 'Y ' ' tl' 11 ll 7 Y! ' . D v , D . . , 1, , . , 1 . l' ,. ve, ' C I 1 .c - 'le' ', I Q ' c I C y L , , . , ' . o ' , ....................... J r v . , ....,.......... , . . ' , ., , ' ' ........ ' ' , , ' . ............. ' O , , ........... , I , h , ve - .... , . . . Krtty, her l0Hg-SUECTIHQ mald ..,..................... Blanche Mlvhael ACT .fe xx. ' d . s', s D ..............................,.... l . C I 3 3 . ...-.-..............-...-..--..-v. F i D ........................... . . . s -1 Qi I :I fr '7 f . eff' X 7 t ,L ,1 , ff' 'fa I' wg l 'lfif J l y t L.. - LJ T A -f,i.e,- IN. unxetes September 5 We are back agaln at the same weary grmd and recene as first course a lesson m brrcklaymg from Mr Young September 6 Real work begms and the Freshres serve as ornaments for the cannon Hugo prolongs hls vacatlon September 8 The Freshmen crowd chapel Footballers meet to plan the season September September September September September I I I 2 2 The Athletlc Assoclatlon elects offrcers M Romreux delrvers the first of a long serres of lectures The Hrst Zenrth Board meetmg Our fnrst class meetmg Northland 0 D C H S 0 October 2 Miss Patterson appears vuth a dark lantern f October 4 unlor class meetmg No more pills the boys f decrde to can the maluns October 7 -Superror sends over frfty rooters and Mrss Schelclelcer to cheer for her Normal School October October October I I -Sophs have their first meetmg I6 First report cards We blush with prlcle C3 25 -Qome of our teachers leave for the comentron m Mrnneapolls Our hopes rlse October Z8 They all get back Our hopes fall' October 3I Hallowe en' Mr Sprague asslgns no lessons November 3 The most thrrlllng game of the season Superror Central 6 D C H S 5 Bu! there was areason November 6 Rah Rah Rah Duluth' We celebrate our defeat rn chapel and hear the Freshles challenge the Sophs to a football game November 8 Auctlon work begins November I0 Lunch room opens - Q s L I Ze . . . D 4.- . ' ' I . s.- ' ' . , or - . .C 8.5. I ,.... . XX . . ' . I I 1 .- ' . ,- f ' ey.. A I 1 November I3 Certalnly the I3th was unlucky Ask the Dorothys what nappened 1n cnapel Noxember I7 The Senlor 1rl exhlblt therr floumg locks of halr and find that they evcel 1n quantrty as uell a quallty lxtowember Z9 Mr Hlestand ard Loretta OCorman smg a duet rn chapel Our Auti1onIS3'0 60' I' December -I Bob tells lots they dellxerecl the Goods December D Donatrons come from the cooking department to Mr Dewitt Qllnton December 6 Mr Denfeld has hls annual gaze mto our brrght and smllm HCCS December 7 lnltral fudge party of Zenlth Board December 8 Schlller Bund grv s a German play December ll Basketball tournament begms December I3 Another sectron of Mr Custance departs today FIYSI hrs halr then the moustache and now a front tooth' 'I What next3 I-QTUII there must be somethlng ln the I3th hoodoo December I5 Last day of the tournament The unrors are declared th basket ball champlons December ZI Exams begln ln earnest December 22 Annual Xmas speeches by the presrdents Also a great soclal event the Senlor spread and hop Nou for the vacatron anuary 8 Everybody back Its cool m Duluth even our resolutrons freeze up anuary IZ Mildred Prudden hands ln as the toplc of her Senlor essay The Open Arr School and It was 33 below' wnuary ID Dorothy Cnbson ushers rn Leap Year literally by fallmg into the arms of Fuddy at the bottom of the stalrs anuary I7 We learn not to be mathematlcal freaks or lopsxded people from a peech ln Qhapel anuary I8 spread anuary 22 anuary Z6 February 2 February J booze YW Wally Heymar and Allce Mae Broun honor the Zenlth Board 1th thelr presence Cast for Modern Ananras chosen The orchestra gnes lts concert The ,lunror team clad ln clean collars recene Jerseys rn chapel Dr Fulton rnforms us that me each consume 22 gallons of per annum Some one had mme' Miss Wllson the worlds champnon typewrlter derronstrates at D C H S February 6 The second rnstallment of Freshres appear and are christened - s 1, ' I 1 , U - ' .- O s . ' . ' ' S . v - - . . ' . 'I . . . . I .1 V U .2 . . D . - . . ,. . . ,, . , . , r fr ' - . o f U . . I .1 - c . . 'L X , , . . . . 1 , - - H ss , L' X J ' n ,l . ' s J tt , . va - .1' Q , J -- 2 .4 - H A - , + . , . . . . . J. .- -. -. - J - 4. U an - n c , I J .. . -, .T , , ' . H U . V - s f . . , , . . . . . Middies They are almost mall enough to need nursemaids instead ot teachers February IZ Cheated out of a holiday' February I5 Zenith Board banquet in Lunchroom Mr Xoung explains the manufacture of whiskey I-low does he knovx3 February I 7 umor Mid year dance February ZI We get two days off and celebrate the birthdays of Lincoln an Washington in chapel February 29 No elopements reported from the Senior Class March I We uphold tradition and defeat Superior on our owsn floor March 7 May Gibson has six bars of Ivory soap for lunch March 8 Curses' We had a speaker in chapel but he had a cold and didn t talk' March I2 The cast of the play has a spread for Prudence Mayflower March I3 Again the l3th' Whitney Wall is the goat once more March I4 Teachers teachers everywhere' fhe convention you know March I5 The death of Dido is olemmzecl by the girls of the Virgil class and one lone boy who renders a touching parody on Antonys funeral oration for Caesar March 29 Mr Young acts as advance agent for the Modern Ananias The play at 8 I5 P M April 7 Class pictures in the paper April 8 Yawn' Essays due Adelaide Miller tries to swallow one of April I2 Senior Honor Roll 15 read Hazel O Neill is the smartest April I5 School is disturbed by the wreck of the Titanic April I6 Mut gets kicked out of Mr Spragues room until he comb his hair April I7 Harriet Ham on IS sent out of Mr Romieux s sixth period class April I9 Myrtle Hobbs sings in chapel April Z6 Interclass Oratory and Declamation contest held Dorothy Patton wins the declamation and Lawrence Dow the oratory axsard April Z7 Flhe Congle s of Apology meets Homer corrposes ome flowing sentences in a pacific strain May I Oratory finals forthe Wallace Cup contest are held in chapel Andrew johnson urns May 3 Declamation finals Dorothy Patton takes hist place Here s hoping May 6 lhe Zenith IS alrro t ready for the pre Maw I0 Vkfallace C up contest l'l Superior We take two first .. t - H . . A - s . . , v . Y . y d ' ' . . . g... .K 7 Q1 ' , . V . ' '. . . . I 16 ' 91 the new drinking fountains. Mr. Romieux almost loses his temper. - . 1 1 l 54 . 4 y, . ' KC UV K4 ' !Y 1 . ' .- . s .- s . . Y- . y y v . ' .7 4 N ' s . s . . C. I .fr A A ' . s 4' ss. H' .ff ' X . X ' . ' s. Nu 'N x IV x WUH L M Ol IV n N as una um una um unc mOIxlHU the plpe of peace 1 xmen m1Ixe 1 I1 I IIPII ci C CL OPI c JL H 10 xxm Jcgln to uorrx u VK C meet for the Ia t CI1 Q pdrtx 0 lr CI 0 tht Iit mo r Sprwue lb one xexr onyx cnlor xrc ree I lx X HI ue mlm 1 olc OIILII Ihg umors and Senior Inurx the hatchet but cI1nCe 1I1IC'1d OI LID? OYTIITIEIICGIUCHI Ddx 6, H if :mom ol ur choo le -W Wm' ly I I. - If-osl L' 4 HIM I-ith I1 IIA- If - L '-ffaj' In? Inj III. Mr. 'ushxn 1 , s IJAIQ Irom A I ' 'Ixs again. I.-' 20. lim. s.I I ' V' S. If-' 2-If f- N S ls. ' Maxy' 3U.fXX e honor the heroes of the Cixil xs If J ' I. f-f-IIII1 I st ay I f is nth. I -6----M.f QT, -'Q I1--. J X III. S' I sz I hli vCvIi. .I X IZ... Cihxss Aght. 'II Ze Il 'S s I I IB.-' ' 1 J ' ' s 1' J I-I.--C' 'l'lm- Inst 1 sg p wrx j no s' I If. e as j - 0 :MPA 'EH can DLING A PAIR -Queens., 2-auip-f MQW... if H El.L.O' JUST A COUSIN OF MINE VVE RE GPF LIN! CLASS UFFICERS PRES WILLIACD ELDER VICE PRES FLORENCEQFIRS SEC JEAN QFIRSHFILL T mins RICHFIRB CULLUUJ CRHCE UROKDHN FWZ ,z - ln presentmg the followmg pages the umor Zenlth Board hopes that those lnto whose hands th1S book may fall wlll not be too severe ln thelr cr1t1c1sm for although our work may not be perfect we feel that our fforts have not been IH valn We wlsh to take thls opportumty to express our thanks and appreclatlon to MISS Goodhue for her assistance and m terest ln our work and to MISS Smxth The Umor our class advlser for help so Wll Zemth Board hngly glven to us for the Lawrence DOW Rlchard Cullum Wllllam Elder Dean Davrs Grace Vroman ean Marshall Mary Boyle past three years Eclrtor ei SVI I I J 1 . . . ,n xxx lf J W! Sc oo A 6-42 Gllazz Qratnrg EPTEMBER I6 IQO9 we swarmed the lower halls of olJ Central I-hgh open eyed wondering and four hundred twenty five strong That strength has grown wlth the advancmg school years It has grown ln athletlc abllxty and scholarshlp although not m numbers all from our faculty for observmg and then bettering We were put on the shelf In the Assembly Hall not because of age or mexperlence but to look down on the other classes from an Intelligent spectators pomt of vlew After electing ohn Kerns presxdent Marguerite Getz vlce presldent ean Marshall secretary Lawrence Kennedy treasurer Lynn McLachlan edltor of the Freshman sectlon of the Zenlth and Walter Lawrence and Matthew Brown keyhole pluggers and eyectors thereby showlng our ablllty ln the power of selectlon we turned to the further better ment of our class and school We were the first class to vote on the adoptlon of a school pm Of course we lost the annual football game YVlll'l the Sophomores belng beaten on a slushy held by weight and experlence In boys and glrls basket ball the teams that represented l9l3 were second ln the mterclass league ThlS IS a most satlsfactory record for Fresh men who are supposed to be a general door mat on whlch all the other class s wlpe defeat It IS dangerous for a new class to attempt to establlsh custom too soon so we as a door mat haxe always borne the welcome slgn rf the other classes were capable and accepted our vlctorles and defeats gracefully In our second year we elected Richard Cullum to preside at meetmg Ruth Prosser to take hrs place when he was unable to appear ean Marshall McLachlan agam to be our editor We contmued to advance ln efhclency We won the lnter class basketball champlonshlp beatmg the older wlser and surely more experienced classes just above us They deserve commendatlon however on their ercellent showing agalnst better players The year of I9Il l9l2 has been most successful We agam won from what should be a superlor class the school supremacy m basket ball I9l7 was agam the second best contender We have elected William Elder presl dent Florence Mars vlce presldent ean Marshall secretary Rlchard Cul lum treasurer and Lawrence Dow editor of the umor section of the 7en1th We have alw ays furmshed the required arrount of representatives 1n all sports our soclal affarrs have been all that could be deslred a success rn every way and our excellence ln scholarship can be verxhed by a glance at the A hst Although most students would be content to rest on such a glorious foundatlon as we have lald In the past three years we shall try to bulld the frost complete class that exer left Hugh School That we have our last and best year commg IS a safe predlctlon and we shall always trwe to keep the standard of the Black and Yellow Hoatxng proudly to do the writing, Leonard McCarthy to take care of the funds and Lynn 1 1 - A . I Y S . Mluxhtrh vinpw A 5opl1on'o1e it 111 l11 Cl 1 rl1a1r rmmmg tl1P It omtntx xxx tx X ll 6 on the cl lx 111 l1o11t ol 1m K ce N are 11 X llgure ecmecl to xtxnd C lotl1ed 1n the HONNIHU rolme ol Rome VQ1tl1 1 Qceptre IH luv 11nd I l1axe come for ll1c luoolx I gene to ou He growled 111 cpulcl1r1l toneQ For mim wmr Nou l11Nc tl1ro1xn It Al out ox 1t 1 rut xs1tl1 n1x 1o1e c KCIIC t1e loo l1on1 t1t p1le on n Qld pmv It t1ff1t to 11 lJreaQt e czwt a men1c111g Olmce at t e ON And descended wgaln to rest N cent no Nl lou o 1 o 11 11 e Ll lll Cmxrxm tlers 1 olxo M 1114501411 BAILLIF D u A , 1 - 5 1 Xl nl 05' n ' A l 1 llis lzooli all scz1ttff1 d lrty. All z1t on' , 111 tl1v m1cl:t ol' l11s l 1111 .s. N 1' shrill rf 51 1 l llf I H, Cl l 4 li I' l 1 tlw clvsli. Ad, ts'D' 'Sl lls -, H - z 1' D1 ' li lJ Y' Vlglw :tul 1 1' lux v'tl'1 11 Sl t l joy, :Xt last l1is trials wt-11 'c-r. llc ,lzxnfecl at tlw lroolas o11 tl 1 cl sk, lu t alas! s isa 'es 1'1zs re. tune Glnntvzt Well I guess you ll have to take rt Hunt Theres no o e le 1 your class and the umors What s the matter wrth Clmton5 He runs their class meetmg But he s not an orator He told rre hrmself that he couldnt make anv better peech than Ronald lVIcAllxster Arent there any other umors3 No and It s lVIcAll1sters fault Because he has won all therr athletic for them he IS the monarch of that class because athletes are demlgod ln thrs school he has an absolute power rn the class and becaue he rs not capable of anything other than athletics he wlll not permit the latent abllrty m other lrnes to be developed honors And they all bow down to hlm because they re afraid of hrm Well I don t blame em much He certainly has an awful temper The two speakers nsoved away from the cloakroom door where they had been standmg and at the same moment a tall athletrc lookmg boy whose most dlstmgurshlng feature was a fashionable pompadour of decidedly red halr moved away from the mslde of the door and stalked majestrcally down the cloakroom black rage on hls face He banged his books on hrs desk an.l walked straight out of the room mto the hall very acutely aware of the effect his sllent fury produced passed the most crowded part of the hall No better speech than Ronald Mc Allrster Clmton ll be sorry for that and so will Dillon when hrs llttle Hunt y gets left rn the soup ln the tryout I know It was the oratorlcal contest they were talklng about The day after the tryout they wrll have forgotten that there ever was a Hunt ln school Oh bother Ill have to tell Mr Dlllon that Im gomg rn for lt Well lf Hunt s there Ill have the pleasure of seem hrs face when he hears what At half pat erght that tempt anything pertammg to fact that not even those w ho Ive got to say mormng Ronald lVIcAll1ster regarded wrth con public speakmg and could hold their own to take up the dlsdalned subject ln defiance of hrs had not only openly professed a vrtal Interest ln oratory and glorled ln the wrth hrm rn athletrcs dared scorn At mne o clock h oratory but had also been challenged by a boy not the least athletrc to a combat not of phvlcal strength but of tongues From that day he and Hugh Hunt were worn enemies If the umors were surprised at Ronalds suddenly acqurred Interest rn oratory they w ere w rse enough not to show rt but llrczr rntercst rose rmmedmtelx to fewer heat and on the rrormng of the tryout they were as excrted as rl 1 antrcrpatlon of a football game Q . , , . n e s n li x U v' ' ' ' Y! .. . - , n ' ,, I V s . .. . . - , . - I , . ' v I 5 , I 1 ' ' Y! l , U ! ' Yi . ' . I 9 Y . I I ' 1 . . . I , . ' , Not capable of anything-bah! he muttered savagely, when he had .. 1 V y , . - - . - 4 Y ! . - , D Y 1 Q , Q , . . . , , . . , , rg . Y ' , ., S . . y . V. 1 , V . . . . . A . . . . ' . , U I , f v 1 , 5 , . Q , - . ' . ' c t. Ronald though he admrtted rt to no one had chosen hrs oratron wrth vrew to the dramatrc effect Though he nad been vrgorously coached he had not the slrghtest rntentron of followrng Mr Drllons rnstructrons He was gorng to make a speech not a frrst graders Frrday afternoon prece and he had practrced that speech rn the seclusron of hrs own attrc wrth a set of gestures and n'annerrsms that were rntended to make the lrsteners srt up and take notrce Although he was frrst on the program Ronald felt no nervousness H ascended the platform and searched the sea of faces before hrm untrl he located Mr Drllon and Hugh Hunt He began speakrng rn a low earnest tone that made Mr Drllon look almost happy but after that he clutched wrldly at the arr he roared at the Soplaomores rn the gallery he bellowed at the Freshmen rn the back of the room he thundreded at the unrors and Senrors rn the tablet seats he threatened he challenged he commanded and then he sat down As he walked off the stage he notrced on Mr Drllon s face anger and aston rshment strugglrng for mastery but on Hugh Hunt s was a mask of rmperturba brlrty He drd not realrze that the applause was rntermrngled wrth laughter for he was watchrng Hunt He lrstened to hrm lrstened as he never had before and yet he drd not hear one word He sat fascmated Try as he would he could not take hrs eyes from the figure on the platform Every gesture every rnflectron was rndelrbly rmpressed upon hrs mrnd It seemed that the words were Hunts words that no one else had ever spoken them No other man had made that speech Hunt had not learned rt It was hrs own spoken on rnsprratron and yet Ronald could not understand a syllable Suddenly rt seemed Hunt Mechanrcally he went from class to class Calmly he took Mr Drllon scathrng crrtrcrsm and went away rememberrng none of rt One thrnv he kept saymg over and over to hrmself That was Hunt s speech those were Hunts words and yet he knew that he could get the peech at the lrbrary rf he wanted He drd want rt He went and got rt He took rt home to read and as he read rt rt seemed as rf he heard Hunt agarn but he understood the words He remembered every ge ture every rnflectron he knew what was commg next He drd not need to watch the book noQbecause those were hrs own words He rushed up to the attrc to say them aloud but when he began to speak rt was Hunt speakrng not as well as he had rn the mornrng he hesrtated he almost forgot but rt was not Ronald rt was Hunt Ronald re read the oratron ani delrvered rt agarn rn Hunts vorce Before he could say rt a thrrd trme a vorce below starrs called hlm to drnner A troubled sleep was followed by another srlent day rn school and more work on Hunts speech hrs speech rn the afternoon After the fourth trral when he heard hrmself as Hunt agarn as Hunt had spoken on the mornrnff before he closed the book and returned to the world a glorrous human boy He was not as chastened a human boy as the Junrors expected In fact the only notrceable change rn hrm was a tendency to forget to lose hrs temper . , V. . L . , V 1 a V . , . rx 9 , - s . C . I , 1 l Y A I - J l , 1 1 Q' - . . , Y ' I - ' - ' l Y , , . . , stopped. The applause was deafening: but Ronald's mind was a blank. ' ' . . ' 'S , 1 , , , 5 , , ir. v . . y ' I A , 1 S . . ' '- . , . V ' V 5 I ' V , r D ! v ! ' - , Ronald was not troubled however He knew that he had farled because the words he had spoken were not hrs own he had learned them and had been acutely conscrous of rt but now he knew somethrng of hrs own and Hunts and he drd not sulk about hrs farlure The mornrng of the contest Ronald s attentron was arrested by the con versatron of two grrls behrnd hrm rn the car Isnt rt too bad about Hugh Hunt3 he heard the first one say What about Hugh Hunt3 rnqured her companron Oh havent you heard3 He fell somehow last nrght and broke hrs ank c Ronald heard no more That much meant that Duluth Central would have no orator rn the contest and that meant that Superror Central would wrn He made a sudden resolve and started to carry rt rnto executron the moment he entered the school He stopped long enough on the outsrde of a group around Mr Drllon to hear that gentleman say No I dont know what well do rushed mto the offrce grabbed a phone and after about two mrnutes conver satron set rt back on the wrndow srll and dashed out of the ofhce and down starrs Luckrly he Just caught a car and rnsrde of twenty mrnutes was berng admrtted to a house where he had never been before bv a smrlrng lady who sard Hugh 1S wartrng for you Go rrght up Hugh was propped up rn a charr by the wmdow lookrng very mrserabl but he held out hrs hand as Ronald entered Hello lVIcAll1ster Ronald crossed the room and shook the proffered hand Hello Hunt I I m sorry old man It seemed queer to call hrs enemy old man Say do you want to hear yourself delrver an oratron3 asked Ronald Hugh looked mystrfred but before he could answer Ronald had placed hrmself at the other end of the room and begun to delrver Hunts oratron He drd not know what he was sayrrg untrl I thank you I dont see why you learned rt but I d grve you a lot to be able to say rt that vsay crred Hunt And you you ll grve rt tonrght for for me and the the D C H S wont you3 Ronald drd not answer Here grve me a prece of paper and a pencrl I want to wrrte a note to Drllon commanded Hunt The note was short two sentences Hunt folded rt rnto a cocked hat and handed rt to Ronald wrth the rnrunctron Now make tracks for Mr Drllon I know he s gorng rnsane You take my place tonrght and tomorrow come and tell me about rt That evenrng rn a strange Audrtorrum Ronald lVlcAllrster sat and stared at the program rn hrs hand Agarn he was to be the frrst speaker but thrs trme all hrs usual self possessron was gone Hrs face was ghastly hrs lrps were parched hrs hands were cold As the musrc that preceded the oratrons was dramrng to a close uncontrollable fear took posse sron of hrm He had to hang on to the arms of hrs charr to keep from runnrng from the room A man went up onto the platform and sard omethrng about accrdent and Mr Hunt and frnally Ronald lVlcAllrster r ' Y ' D I . l I y Q n 9 9 1? I . , . , - JY . 2. H' - - ll 9 I ll ' , . I .. , . ' . n. Y 9 !! - , . . . r , t , r 7 - , Y .. , . . , ' 32 . .. - ,, . , - .. , , , . ., - .. ., ' , . . What are they going to do about the contest, Mac? asked Hunt. .. - . .. , . . n 1 , y . ' ' I il I7 . r - . .. , . ' , . , , . Y ,, . ., , . . . U ' 1 1 . ,. -' .... , . H . - . . . , . . .. . . , . . . , . , . Q Y , . . - . Y , V . . . . v - I ' ' , s . ' ' 16 I ii - KS YI C - . , ., . .. Ronald lvnew that rt was trme for hrm to get up and begrn hrs oratron but he felt too drzzy to w alk He rose to hrs feet and started toward the plat form It w as tne longest walk he had ever taken and the platform seemed ten feet from the floor In a far away vorce he heard hrmself say ladres and Gentlemen He looked for the first trme at the audrence and rn every part of the room he saw Hugh Hugh seemed to tell hrm to speak but rt seemed to be Hugh who spoke Ronald wondered why he was on the platform when Hugh was srttrng rn all those charrs rn front of hrm He wanted to go down oft the platform but no he must stay untrl Hugh s unrntellrgrble vorce stopped spealcrng Suddenly Hugh drsappeared For the fractron of an rnstant srlence rergned Then Ronald realrzed that he had somethrng to say to those people somethrng vrtally hrs own and he sard rt He wondered when he finally strode from the platform why they made so much norse why hrs frrends trred to wrrng hrs arm off why the natrve rnhabrtants of the town threw hrm such hostrle glances He was glad when the next speaker began for the norse stopped and he had a chance to rest He was very trrecl almost exhausted a football game had never so fatrgued hrm It seemed an rntermrnable trme before the rest of the program was hnrshed and the decrsron of the Judges announced He drd not hear any of the accompanyrng speech untrl and I take great pleasure rn announcrng that the cup has been awarded to the Duluth Central Hrgh School There was so much contusron and so many congratulatrons after that that Ronald s head was rn a w hrrl untrl he got out rnto the hall There four groups of boys were yellrng and from the largest group came Whats the matter wrth lVlcAllrster3 He s all rrght' Ronald rushed over and pushed hrmself rnto the mrdst of the bunch H held up hrs hand Fellows he crred Vlfhat s the matter wrth Hunt5 DoRoTHv STRONG v 1 I v . . U . . ' , ,4 ,, . . . - 1 c , . , , . Y - v u . , . . . . . , . - s 1 ' 1 s -1 s s - 1 - n 1 . . . H 1 . ,, . . , . . . . y v - w v 5 at v - - s Q n , . . A -1 n - u u - n ' ' - v - s , Qftlamiw Haw Plhc loud applxu v wt length QU JQ1 e And flom the platform xxhmc pxeglclc Our pllllllpal there Comes a call Vx hlch tus the xsholc Awemhly Hull All xshmpers Qtop the huhuh lou Is QIICDCCCI ind lltt CIHSSCS ZION Fxpectint xsaltlnv fol the phmq they whxdye hear on clnpel dn C lasses piss Hnc made thtn N on mto ou that t0rQc command I9 rmgmg yo! Its lmport uc Qhall nr cr folvct And lt the doom of par xdm' We ll Qurely PNIIICC no Qurpmc If stern Sl Peter QIIIIPIW Qtates As he smngs hack the pefxrlx gum C lasws p au I 1 E' ,, an K 0 1 1 4 s f 5 t tfd , .' , 5 E W7 ' sm. ' .Q f 1 , . X C x .. .Q ' 4 I V , U . .KS M 'K x ' Q fjsf- .. . Those words, sharp cutting as a lan it ' t -1'f t, ' . K ' , ' V ' . . K L , , O , 1 1 z 'Q K ' L 'A. ', . Q . ' ' ' -' nz Q, - 2.3. frlllnre Mage Ehzm Gbnr Ied braced hrrrself manfulls ard swung the door open He alwwvs feared an rnterxrew wrth Prof Lrttleton he was such a stubborn rndrwrdual that an atterrpt at argumert had a rrore drmrnrshrnv effect on ones monthlv mark than a week of zeros Good mornrng profes or fed trred to appear unconcerned lnhe professor was workrng over hrs specrrrens l-le had just frnrshed mountrng an rrrrmense butterfly and was preparrng another for the same fatc He looked up from hrs work long enough to say Good mornrng and rrr' medrately forgot Ted s presence Thats a beauty up there rn the corner rnt rt3 Xentured Ted rndr catrng the corner of the glass cage whrch Prof Lrttleton had before hrm What3 Oh yes yes that one got hrm yesterday Nrce to look at bn not good for anythrng too comrron Do you fund many varretres around here3 All those rn that case sard the professor proudly rndrcatrng a larg case that hung hrgh up out of reach of the meddlesome students ls that rrght3 Well well thats qurte a bunch rsnt rt3 Ted was really surprrsed The only butterllres that he had any recollectron of were erther whrte yellow or brown Catch them all yourself professor3 Certarnly certamly all wrthrn ten mrles of the unrversrty replred the profe sor restrarnrng a vam smrle that was deternuned to take possessron of hrs countenance A smrle seemed to put hrm too nearly on the same level w rth hrs puprls so he hated to be caught smrlrng My oh my how rnterestrnv Ted was a splendrd actor Prof Lrttlc ton really thought that he was rnterested or at the very least rmpressed Well well exclarmed the professor rmpatrently l suppose vou had a reason for comrng here thrs mornrng'-' Yes I wanted to frnd out whether l am to have the pleasure of takrng another year wrth you sard Ted laughrng nervously Yes yes l am afrard so Your work has been very poor lately Thrs was one of the rare occasrons on whrch the professor allowed hrmself to smrle He could at least show hrs puprls that there was no hard feelrng about t Ted could have heaxed a drctronary at hrm then but he controlled hrm self and smrled rn return lve worked pretty hard lately the student asserted Perhaps but what proof have I of that except your recrtatrons rn class3 Prof Lrttleton contrnued to mrle benrgnly Look out for the drctron ary professor' Well thats all I wanted to know Theres no hope of my gettrng through then3 No lm afrard not Good mornrng Ted slammed the door as he went out and muttered to hrmself all th way across the campus Fortunately no one heard hrm All thrs happened on a Frrday The newrt day Saturday was farr and warm C . ' . ' . 'L ' . , .1 . . . . , . . D 1 1- - 11 f - Q , , -L . . - su - 11 - 1 1 1 1 sr 1 - - 1 - 11 - - 1 5 - 1 ' U . . 1 - 1 1 1 - - 11 , r . 11 - - 11 U . ,, . . . . .1 1 1 -1 O . ss - 1 - - 1 - 11 . , , . - - 14 11 1 1 - 1 - U . . . . . . . ,, . 1 1 1 Q c , r , . U . . ,, . . 1 1- 1 1 -31 - - 1 , - u 11 - 1 - 11 1 1 -1 1 , . . . ,, as - 1 . ,, . . 1 1 - u - 11 1 1 - - 1 1 1 1. , - 11 1 11 , . .1 . . . 1 r 1 ,, . . . . . . . . S . - , . 14 1 1 . 1 , . 11 11 1 - - 11 , . . ' n , V - - 1 1 Prof Lrttleton plucked a thrstle from hrs thumb gathered up hrs hat and lrttle trn specrmen case strarghtened out hrs tangled net and prepared for an other leap The butterfly Huttered about unconcernedly and frnally alrghted on a stone near the waters edge Thrs was the professors opportunrty H advanced cautrously wrth net porsecl ready to swoop upon hrs unsuspectrng prey Another step a slrglrt shrftrng of posrtron and the net dropped on the stone but not on the butterfly oh no--the butterfly was soarrng about over head wrthout the least rntentron rn the world of formrng a beautrful addltron to Prof Lrttletons already lmmense collectron It was a beautrful specrmen one rarely seen rn North Amerrca It had been the ambrtron of hrs lrfe to capture thrs very same butterfly and he refused to be daunted by two farlures I-le watched hrs prey constantly but the unoblrgrng creature refused to come wrthrn reach rnstead rt showed an rnclrna tron to cross the stream and thus escape forever the professor s net Yes surely that was what the lrttle beast was about Desparr serzed the professor as he watched hrs beauty gradually rnclrne towards the opposrte bank There was one remarnrng chance one opportunrty to garn the glorrous prr7e Yes he would do rt' There was a fallen tree whrch projected out rnto the stream Along the trunk of thrs the professor scrambled wrth one eye always on thc butterfly Frnally he came wrthrn reach of hrs prey and made a mrghty sweep of hrs net rn an effort to prck the rnsect out of the arr Mrssed agarn he muttered and mrght truthfully have repeated hrs statement for the force of hrs swrng carrred hrm forward and he overstepped a lrmb at whrch he had armed hrs foot fallrng headlong rnto the current wrth one knee caught over the branch He snatched frantrcally at the over hangrng boughs but one after another they broke through therr rottenness and the manly hunter s only chance lay rn one large lrmb whrch was suspended several rnches out of reach After several manful efforts he clutched the bough and wrth rts elastrcrty bobbed about sometrmes submerged and sometrmes rrdrng the current bravely He made a mrghty attempt to clrmrb hand over hand up the branch but hrs added werght was Just what the roots wanted to drslodge them from the bank ard he soon gave up rn fear of an excursron down stream wrth a rotten brrch tree as hrs bark There was nothrng to do but wart Yes and watch the butterfly flutter about wavrng rts wrngs rn playful rarllery and seemrng heartrly to en1oy the professor s predrcament Help' the professor crred And the stream frllecl hrs mouth He swallowed and coughed and called agarn but wrth the same result He was bobbrng up and down rn even cadence and each trme hrs head rose above water he sent out hrs call for assrstance Occasronally he would farl to get hrs mouth closed rn trme and so would be oblrged to mrss a turn whrle he swallowed and sputtered For the rrost part he had to swallow and he was raprdly approachrng hrs capacrty Half an hour passed thus and the teacher was growrng frantrc wrth fear He drd not notrce a frgure approach and srt on a large boulder on the opposrte bank He was too busrly engaged wrth hrs attempts to get someone wrthrn - 1 , - , . , . e I y . , '. 1 -1 - . , . . v ' - r Q . ' , s A ' - s - s Q W - - 1 r 1 v U . . ,, . . 1 s , , ' 1 ' 9 n n , . . . Q 1 v , r ' . 1 - 1 Q ' y , . u vs - - , . u V v . . , reach to notlce that h1s cr1es had already been heard Flfteen mmutes more passed He was becommg chrlled nmt and hm tmp 0 the Supporting blank I was relaxmg He stlll kept up hrs calls for and but they were not so loud nor so frequent m fact the professor was just about to resrgn hlmself to hrs fate Why don t vou swim asked Ted as he came near the water s edge Prof Lrttleton was very nearly frlghtened mto releasing his hold You you-oh thank goodness someone has come at last Come qulck help me out of thls Do I pass or Hunk3 asked Ted apparently 1n no hurry Vlfhy you fall of course replled the professor but well dlscuss that after I get out Ted resumed hrs seat on the rock Come come sald the professor lmpatlently What does thls mean Do you mean that lf I refuse to pass you you refuse to rescue me3 It means that If you promlse to pass me I Dull rescue you yes I shall report thls as soon as I get back to the umverslty exclalmed Pro Llttleton angrily Better grve me the message professor Fl his IS outrageous For heaven s sake tell me how I can get out of this water Ted started to w hlstle and the professor remamed sllent for a few mmutes Ted was the first to speak Well how about lt How about what3 Do I pass or flunk3 Wnll you get me out of thls or wont you3 I asked you hrst Do I pass or flunk3 If I pass Ill tell you how to get out of there In the mean time I suggest that you swlm I can t swlm and you don t pass The teacher appeared to be declded A few mmutes later Ted called out Is lt cold down there3 Say young man do you reallze that I could have you expelled from school for th1s3 sald the professor who was growmg angrler every mmute Yes yes I know but here s my proposltron I wlll get you out of your trouble lf you wlll promlse me two thmgs FITSI that I will not get expelled from school and second that I wlll not Hunk Ill be back ln the mornmg to fund out your declslon on the matter Ted started up stream at a rapld galt Come come now the professor crled Enough of thls foolishness come and get me out of thts water Do you prom1se3 Prof Llttleton paused for a moment Well ll yes I suppose I must I dont flunk3 No And I dont get expelled3 No no row how do I get out of thls Why put your foot down and walk out The water IS onlv three feet deep - . I ' ' n ' .. -- ,.- O .. A ' Y ' Q -'- 1 c , U - - n , , Q ' . , ' . . . , M v - . , - n U H . - v . tt - 1, ' tt , - v y y ,- M n - - - .. . - 1 Q - - H s . an . . . n , . u - - - ya - 1 u - as , . as - - 1 - n v H - U . , . 4- n tt as an V - a yy an v - - n as , - a H - ' . - .4 - H . , . st - V , . . ,, . . . . . , - U , . . V. , s Q - ' Q . , . . , s - . . ,, - - U 1, - U - - V n , v - - U 4. - n . H -a . , ' ' ca - u - n u sv U 1 n st - n 1 , , . . u ' , ' u Team- nterc ass Champ ons et ba HSI! B OI' UD ji -ll Il,i M JUNIUW -I -1? f-gf-5 L MLN The Class of l9l3 has entered upon rts tlrlrd lap wxth tts usual success and enthusxasm We are already far rn the lead especlally 1n athletlcs Revlew with me our past record and sattsfy yourself that It IS an envlable one As Freshmen we naturally were defeated at the Freshmen Sophomore game Naturally becau e IS lt not natural that we should be overawed by the lnlg scl'ool ard our bwszer opponents3 However we soon got over our trmrdrtv for IH the basket ball erres we won second place whtch we conslder to be pretty falr for Freshmen But last year as Qophorrores we came mto our own We defeated the Freshmen at Football as IS the custom although we lost the servlces of ohn Wagner wl'o was badly lnjured durmg the Qame Next we declslvely won the basketball charrpronshlp of the sclaool lnhe Semors and Freshmen were easlly defeated and ID the fmal clrarrpxorsllp game the umors were taken mto camp after a hard fought contest The Sophorrore rremters of the falr ex al o won the school champron shlp rn the gurls lnterclass serles so rn basketball l9l3 carrred off all the honors Our umor Year prorrx es to be a banner one Svc D men of the football team are umors Half a football team IS a very good representation for any class Three umors have made the basketball team whrle on the school hockey team al o the Cla s of 1913 rs represented by three men For a second tlme we have won the school charrplonshlp ln the mterclass basket ball tournamert rlhe Soohorrores were n'othered by a -42 I3 score We nest rolled up a 6l 9 score on the Freshmen Cn the thlrd day of the tournament we defeated the gemors 35 23 ln the hrtal game after a hard battle we adam adnum tered a 28 71 beatlns' nlhe Dames were fiercely plaved and the vrctory was chreflv due to the umor s Great defen ne work Althouvh our record for the latter part of the year lS lnconcplete on account of the early pu hcatron of the Yemt re t v le dlfferent from that of the pa t au' I 'ffl 6 , Wd, l .. C S V - V J. . r -ox . V 1 1 ' v ' . . .Q . 1 S . V U , . ' . - A A . . A A 4 . 7 3 . . , ' l ' s s ' .A ' - J - . ' . - l ' - U - 1 ' s , 5 . 1 Q V C , . . 1 . , . . , . . . , . . 'I 3 h -- A' E, Q .C - ' v' o ' ' b ' ' t. . Ah. the is ro reason to believe hat it vill 1 s. O E GI U I-' Tu -'P J-J GJ .J cn G5 CQ nw 75 Qarrg Eagan at the Moat The old Alaskan mrner re frlled hrs prpe drew hrs charr nearer to the frre and contrnued hrs story Well srr when I got there I could hardly belreve my eyes The frrst clod of drrt I turned was Jes glrtterrng wrth the purest lrttle gold nuggets these eyes 0 mrne ever seed An before I left that place I d cleaned up the neate t lrttle prle ever you saw and I got rt yet Why am l tellrng you where the place rs3 Why because there s enough there for all that s why There arnt no lrmrt to the gold rn them drggrngs All you got to do rs to wreld your prck an shovel fur about twenty four hours and you can come back wrth as heavy a sled as any team rn Alaska can pull and you can repeat trll the end of trme so rt seems to me Harry Logan who was fresh from the States and entrrely unversed rn the Alaskan brand of Jolly drd not notrce the sly wrnks that accompanred the recrtal Nerther drd he notrce the artful manner rn whrch all the drrectrons and land marks had been brought out through the conversatron for hrs specral benefrt He only knew that he had traveled thousands of mrles for just such an oportunrty as thrs seemed to be Consequently he lrstened wrth the mrnutest care and made careful mental notes of all the drrectrons necessary to attarn thrs magnrflcent strrke Hardly had thrs story been told for Harry s benefrt before the mrners clustered about the frre forgot rt entrrely and were off on other tales more true rf not so rnterestrng They drd not notrce the determrnatron wrth whrch Harry left the cabrn nor observe that on hrs face was rmpressed the mad desrre for gold whrch would perhaps lead hrm to the North Pole Harry Logan spent all of that nrght rn equrpprng hrmself for hrs trrp and the rrsrng sun found hrm fatrgued but determmed off towards the hrst of the mmers land marks He had the best team that promrse of future payment could buy and he was provrsroned for a vrsrt to pornts north and east Logan felt no fear and he sang cheerfully as he urged hrs dogs out rnto the vast Alas kan wrlderness The old mrners had arranged therr story wrth consummate coherence and Harry found land mark after land mark Just as related We need not follow hrm thru hrs stages of confrdence doubt and desparr lnevrtably there came a trme rn thrs mad race towards hrs dream goal when the utter hopelessness of the project dawned upon Logan when he realrzed suddenly that rt was useless to keep on and that he had not enough supplres to sustarn hrm for half of hrs return trrp After remarnrng for some trme unde crded as to whrch course to pursue hrs natural courage and prrde trpped the balance toward the gold mrne and he struck out anew knowrng all the whrle the futrlrty of hrs task but strll persewerrng determmed to dre wrth hrs face towards hrs goal The drrectrons were strll clear but Logan wondered that they had not told hrm what a long trrp rt was Then he remembered that they had told hrm nothrng but that he had merely prcked up hrs rdeas durrng the conversatron He remembered well what one had sard, - -- . ' s , . ., . . , . . . , . . . . 1 - r Q . , o - - , - v . , . , . v o I 9? , . U. ,, . . . . r ' v . , . r v s Q I y , v - y . . . l O 9 ' n ' v a f . r , Q , . And after you corrre to th old cabin with the fallen tree across rt you start out straight north across the long snow desert where you dont see tree nor shrub nor lrvrn thing trll you come to the place Harry had reached this cabin and as he looked ahead over the endless area of snow unbroker by even o much as a tree or bush hrs heart sank wrthrn hrm He wavered fo just a moment then hrs courage asserted itself and he whipped hrs crippled team out rnto the desert We need not watch hrm as one by one he cut hrs worn out dogs from th traces untrl he had finally to shoulder hrs pack sack and start off alone leavrng hrs last dog dead on the sled Suffice rt to say that after traveling for three days from hrs sled he found himself with only enough food for one more lapse of twenty four hours He remembered having heard the old mrner say that he had left a cabin well stocked with provrsrons for hrs next trrp but Logan drd not seem to care much He had rn some way reconciled himself to dying l-le only dreaded dyrng alone If he could only be near' someone something even a tree then at least he would have omethrng to mark the spot where he had fallen A he drew nearer to hrs rnewrtable doom the dread grew on hrm the dread of dying rn thrs vast waste the only thrng rn all hrs vrsron which rose above the snow After what seemed to hrm aeons of walking he sank into hrs blankets at the end of the fourth day with a certarn joy at the rdea that he might never rrse again But hrs nights rest refreshed hrm slightly and when he awoke rn the nornrng he felt Just the slightest spark of hope arrse rn hrs breast just an unrn sprred courageous lrttle spark that fluttered out when he remembered that he had eaten hrs last morsel the day before Harry rose to hrs feet and looked about Hrs wrsron was clearer than horizon like a needle caused the spark to prrng into a veritable flame of Joy rf not of hope Undoubtedly rt was merely an old denuded tree trunk but how he yearned for rt' How he longed to fling hrs arms about that sprrrtless trunk and dre rn happiness In mad haste he rolled up hrs blankets and tottered off towards thr minute dark lrne on the horizon The sun rose higher and hrgher rn the sky and the lrne grew larger and larger rn Harrys wr ron but strll he was mrles from the tree The sun reached rts highest pornt and Logan wondered rf he could reach hrs frrerd before dark He struggled on bravely weakly H would at trnaes lo e sight of the tree while rn ome hollow and at such times he would hurry feverishly up the opposite slope to see how much larger rt would seem from the crest of the next hrll The pace was krllrng and Logan felt hrs strength slowly rnevrtably ebbrng away He felt hrs brarn grow clouded and hrs knees grvrng way under hrm He trroped and fell forwards half burred rn the row and rt was only after hrs eyes had wandered to the tree that he had the desire to rrse again He struggled to hrs feet and plunged ahead garnrn courage onlv from the thought that he would rot dre alone that he w as not the only dark obrect on this vast field of white sa - - ' , . - . . . . . , I 5 X , . . . . . Y . ' ' Y n Y - I , . , , . I - T l 1 9 ' s . s 1 , . . . . . . . A on the previous day and something caught his eye,-fa little dark line on the , . S . . , V y .i ' 's - . , S y . , O . . ' -f r . e ' . ' . . s ' , ' ' ' S ': ' r v I I .A , . S. . V . V ' - . s U , S The sun sank loys er and loy er 1n the ltv and Logan fought loryy ard mth Q L elo e da ly c Sloy ly the darlx lme Ureyy untll llarry yy as able to see the rouvht projer tlons yy here hmbs once had been and hnally Just as the hr t shades of darkness yyere falllnv he yyas able to drscern rhc yxeathered bark and darlt cayltres ol hrs neyy found frrend Courave alone ltept hlm strugvllnff on Strenffth h had none Reason he had none He had just an rnsane determmatlon to dle at the foot of thus lifeless trunk The distance yy as short and Logan mlled as he sayy beneath hrs feet the thrn lone, shadow throyyn by the settrng sun He lauvhed harshly trrumph antly as he threyy hrs arms about thc tree and sxnly to rest slmultxneously mth the sun For a long trme he kneys nothmv But rn trme there Came to hrs ears a HOL Harry the yorce called but Harry pald no attentron to rt Aqara lt called but l ogan only nestled closer to the old trunly Sloyyly a note of fear came lIllO the VOICE It called lnsrstently but Logan gaye no heed Harry Harry the yorce pleaded and then agarn Harry' Harry' panrc and despalr yy ere rn the yorce thrs trme Flnally Harry brouvht hlmself to re pond e he sand after seyeral e orts arry tae XOIQE sald reheycd rt rayrnv been an yyeled u1t ufwrnv that bed post and come back to bed ll gf! I 1 x Q ' v A s 'V L ' ' ' an insane deire to reach t..e tree b r r'n ss set in. v 1' ' 4 O ' A ' . 1' 1 5 Z, ' ,- l ' I 4 , c -', ' V S ., c , L ' ee . I D I . c V Y , .l A V ' :a ' . a A 5 ' o if . ,- . - L l 'L 5 5 H 1 ' c l. . , t ' 5 4 t . L 1 1 ' , , 4 5 ' ' . ' , D.. . . ,M trred, far-dlstant voice, whether from thls world or the world be ond he knew Y . 1 , . , 1 V 1 . X 1 Y My ' . . I l V iv' rv. v ' - 1 C ,'- L ,l- ' D' I V' C A . s . HY .Q , 2 . ' ft NH I .N k, .uw i I, -D S ,. ' . h DD. D ., ' ., C ' . k'I.v',.,k 'A 7153311 .V fakgyi, - L5-1, 'kxjv UHE5 Dally hltle zeros Formed by teacher s hand Ev, Make the httle Sophomore H I Flunk to heat the band f 11 Mr Custance m muslc There are some umb helles oxer there Wharton to Brackett I thunk Ill drop ir-3 thls publlc speaking course Ixe got all the fundamentals S- J Brackett Yes you ve got all the fun but not all de mentals MISS Harrrson A hyperbole IS a clrcle where the ends nexer meet Mr Schlllmg Mr Goermg when IS the 9 presldent 1naugurated3 Q X Mr C Why on Decoratnon Day 0 ,1 ff ,, f W4 N I fwljyvii H LQ! I . rllf+-11 6 if of f di V as my as af as as If E U A . . H a . , . RN -. ' I-an an an ar. an I PRES MARY N ALISON B OC I RT ES FESLER KENNETH 7 IO IHP RI ADFRS OI THF ZFNIIIH We the memhers of the Zemth Board as representallwes of the Sophomore Qlwss extend greetmg Inasmuch as me haxe undertaken to set forth a few pages rllustratrve ol our work and ela s aetrxltre ue hope that the ame may meet ulth Noun approval and that they may reflect credit on both Cla s and chool The Board extend thanks to the members of the Cla s and to Nlr C 1 e our aduser for their kmd help and hearty eo operatton ALI ox Brzoxxx I4 5 , Q N - pull U 1 'tilt V+' TW ll l ,llf hr, t f umm 1, I I A: intl Y- ,,,, -- Nr.., I S. v 1 S . .V A S' 1 S v V' yy . K . ' ' 5 s . s 1 s 'ss ls, T I wcrrr-1 E FISHEK 0Bra1inrg ani! Eerlamaitnn On the twelfth of May l9l l occurred the yearly contest for the Vi allace Cup D C H S was represented by Roger Lerch IH oratory and ullus Nolte ln declamatron The Duluth entrants acqultted themselves well taking first place m both ewents Roger Lerch leowexer spoke hfty seconds ox t1me and was drsquallhed entlrely by the vote of the two prmclpals from Superror altleough h1s number was admrttedly the best of the exenlng Mr Young lxke the gentleman he IS refused to vote because he consrdered hlmself an mterested party Thrs mamfest IIUUSIICC made Superlor Central the wmn r of the contest The total scores of the sexeral schools glven below wlll satlsfv any questlon as to the superronty of Central C H pomts Central Hlgh Supenor D pomts lrvlng Hugh Duluth D pomts Nelson Dewey Hlgh Superlor pomts The thmg that makes the Duluth students feel bady IS that a rn al school should stoop so low as even to thmk of retammg the trophy under such condx tlons not to speak of clemandmg It and that the prmclpal of such a school should dlsgrace not only hlmself but al o the pupils under h1m by counten ancmg such a procedure Superror recened the award but D C H S won the contest on the ments of her speakers and the school from oxer the bav has forfelted all rrght to respect from anyone by rts actlon It w rll surelv re celve lrttle from us Duluth IS not complammg howexer we do not feel anger but contempt and dlsgust D C H S wlll enter the contest thus wear represented by Andrew johnson rn oratory and Dorothy Patton m declamatxon determined to wm rf possrble but determmed to wm falrly lf lt wlns at all D. . .s. ......,....... ' .......... 587 ' ' , ' .......,....... '38 A A ' , .................. '37 ' D ' , ' s........... 5.30 ' I ' QW Swmruw mamma 'S ll! The wheel of fortune has agam made ltS yearly revolutron The Schlller Bund a German Lrterary SOClCty whrch was organlzecl slx years ago has passed through a successful year Instructrve lrterary and muslcal programs have been glven at each meetm The play Elgensemn whrch the club presented on December 6th l9ll was a great success The Cast was lxatrma hrs wxfe May Dorlancl Emma thelr daughter Louxse Murchrson Alfred Emma s husband Phrl l-lalenbeclc Elrzabeth servant Fanny Welnber l-lelnrlch serwant Henry Halenbeck T e ofhcer for the year were Presldent Fraulem Zlegler Vlce PFCSICICHI Erna Rakowslcy Treasurer john Fredm Secretary Henry Halenbe lc Hmm HALFTNBFLR I! X 5 X gy 0 u K , fl y f at I G ' l i sa - J Ausdorl, H l'lCl'l Iflall ............... OSCHI' Melandef' h s ' z Nr TX I llzl i N K Illaff X IQ I FW I l r L X 9 X N If M IMW I A I .v g 4 1 1 K-1 THE HIGH SCHOOL ORCHES FRA Presldent ames Vlener Vlce Presrdent Erna Rakowxslcy Secretary Louis Whlte Dlrector and Faculty Manager Durght W Hrestand FIRST VIOLINS ames Vrener Eleanore Kraft LOUISE Murchlson Nathan Cools I..1lI1an Laskey Fmlly Smrth Ferdmand Collatz Otto Clsen Gertrude Seeley FIRST CORNETS Waldron Hough Mortlmer Stanford PIANIST Marletta Mrller MEMBERS f 'l SFCOND VIOLINS CLLLO Beatrlce Miller Echth Karon Homer Krause Mxlton Sttckles Knox Wlnton Mary Wlnton Warren Moore Greta Ferguson Edtth Weston Georgla Evans Erna Rakoxsslcy Vrctor Levln CLARIA ET Frank Bartlett FLLTE Arm PlccoLo Freclertc Campbell TROMBONI-3 SECOND CORNETS Lotus Whrte LOUIS Bergtold Harold Lund DRLMS Ano TRAP-s AQSISTANT PIANIST Thomas Beatty Vera Bronson APPEARANCES January 76 l9IZ Qoncert for Benefit of Athletlc Assn February I7 Iumor Hop March I4 Banquet and Dance at Spalclm for the Teachers Conwentlon March I5 Teachers Conxentron rn Assembly Hall March 25 Matrnee Musrcal March Z9 and 30 Semor Class Play ll me .T I EW. tw t I ' , Qt A X U, L g V C- - f j . t Vp-I--X ky N l X, 1 I' .1 Q t 29 I ff fwfwv L. I for . I IV CJ-,xx . ' ,t '. '. , J QQ: . ,AV IXCI' P I tr-f f 1 A if X I 'tj ki' I N 'I 'lllll ml' - X -if ix 9-it A- Y 1 I 'Z if 1. ' Q- x wil, Q -'I . -X --'C' 'J Mfr- . ' EJ I - . T V . Y V . , I g 452 L 3 L., ,S e gp. ft L Q Y XS XX 'xx-4 .Z it Ng? XT. i Pres A F M Custance Secretary Merna Newell Treasurer Thomas Beatty The H1 h School Musical Socrety founded ln 1892 has to tts credrt twenty years of successful work Readmg and and mtelllgent rendltlon of chorus work are 1ts spectaltles m order to tram puplls to be able to take part rn cholrs choral socletles etc A trlbute of pralse should be palcl to the capable dlrector Mr A F M Custance who has kept alne the muslcal lnterest of the school and as IS usual wlth htm made xt a success Durlng the year various selections have been studied specral attention haung been glven to the Gllbert and Sullivan operas A publlc concert gn 1 at the Masonrc Temple on March twenty fourth conslsted entxrely of selectlons from these plays An lmportant factor ln school llfe IS the on whlch chapel IS held wlth special music on always enjoyed by both faculty and students A number of the gurls of the cholr asslst Temple of the Mystic Shrme The excellence talnments have llterally acquxred national fame chorr XVl'llCl'l smgs every day Prldays l'hese numbers are at the ceremonxals of Aad and cleverness of thelr enter Solorsts at the meetmgs of the soclety have been an mterestmg and enjoyable feature There IS need of a better room for rehearsals and of a stage better surted for a large chorus rn order to glxe concerts ln the proper manner Advantage was taken of the advanced tage to render the effectlve operetta A Trial by Jury a most amuslng and enjoyable entertainment Congratulations should be extended to the dlrector and rrerrbers of the Musical Soclety for the success of thelr w orlc MAX E GIBSON IZ fy! , ff! ,pf W 'U If ', t V'.,. f 'tiff' fl , -4- A ISL!!! . f' fl 4, ,X R tiff A I 54- i V .., My M'fwxIi,f - -1 Hu j, 1-3 - Z , ,flf lla ,-L . ff X r T ,xtrllxl V. .- . . .- . . f lt Vlce PTCS.-MHFIOH Ingalls. ' IA .4 r ' f - . . fr , .g . J , lx 1 ' ' W -- ' . l . l f . tl 'X , , , - - . Xl Xl lll I f ' - l I , K N ' l I , U .' - x I A , 'Q' . fi . . . , ' K V. . . . ' . . Ye: Y . . , . . . - . G , X . a .r 1 LS 'Y ' A v v y 3 X 0 . - 'Q .X I '5'T1:'l The MlddlSS are here' They came quietly rnto our mldst m February and althouvh we have not had tlme to make therr acquarntance they are welcome Unlllce the other Freshmen they were able to fund thelr way about school wlthout drffrculty after the first few days and drd not contmually pester u w1th nonsensrcal questrons such as Who rs Mr ROITICUXD and Where IS the ofhce5 Poor chrldrenl They eudently fourd out very soon after thelr entrance At hrst a lack of pace rn the Assembly Hall prevented the Mlddres from attendlng chapel but after reseatmg had taken place they were allowed to enter rts sacred precmcts and were greeted upon thelr hrst appearance by the locomotxve clap Althouvh they are rather nneek and doclle as rs shown by the fact that they were qurte obedrent when Swede ordered them to slt 1n the balcony m frrst perxod strll we haxe hopes for thelr rrrprowerrent We trust that they wrll take an exarrple from the Semors and grow up to loxe therr teachers Agaln we ay Welcome Mxddres' CALDWE LL l'lARRIs ff xQ , WW' I ' XII NK L. llD Tiff? Rhstlf-Nl? in Jon e A Freshman stole a penny To Jall he stralghtu ay went The Jury saxd Not gullty So he was ln a cent Pupil Recltlng ID Enghsh I-Irstory All England lose up and xsent oxer to France W IVI Cm Enghsh class XV hen I came mio my room the sun went out A Freshman was once asked to dechne suck After some hesltatlon he replied Sick dead hurled Glrl ln algebra I got Zb for an answer Mr Hlckam VVeIl that can t he Freshman I wonder rf the professor meant anythlng bv gmng me a trcket to hls lecture on Fools 3 Semor Whv5 Freshman I read on the ticket Admlt One EIXI 'w I all If I 4 Law -'lr X FI , y, N-rf tl A 3 'f P w I I ' ' KK ' if I 54 56 '55 96 55. 515 7 . 5:5 fi 515 54 9:1 fri 55 96 -'F 3' -56 515 '31 X5 55 :F 55 '35 -E1 3- '55 56 65 5:5 -I . ' ll ' V! f ,X f I S 1 ...1 --1 Uhr Miami nf the ifrwhwa Ten llttle lqre hues on the mnnon ln x l e Swede O Brien taelxl d one then there were nlnc Nine little Freshles got to school lxte Mr X oung Caught one then there w ere ewht Eight llttle lqreshxeb Jubt dropped down from l-leaxen One went hack agam then there were sexen Sewen llttle Freshxes dar d to play some trlcks One trled xt on M1 s Tnnlor then there were Qlx SH llttle Freshles strugglmg to lteep alwe Fne little Freshleb malung for the door One didnt get there then there were four Four llttle lqreshle as happw db could he One Jomed the Funer s Club then there were three Three llttle Freshles dldnt lcnox what to do One found some aclcl then there were two Two llttle Freshxes thought they d haxe some fun One a lied Mr ROmlCUx the tlme then there was one One lonely lqreshxe truvvlmv hard lor breath He hunted for a U1 lealt and thereby met lm death HAROLD F Cot I 3 tx . s x ' ' ' S n J 1 A z in 1 . ' 4 , 1 f C 'i 1 1 x ' A 1' 5 ' 5 M . t 3 . ' , ' D . 4 ' . ' - v v 1 . I A P h - ' ' ls C V' ,4- ' -','. One went to the Lunch-room,-then there were hve. . , . . . . V I 1 Q . . V . 4 Y V 4 S 151' 0 2 ot 5 '.- . 1 W E M CD I-' T: -'P 23 .Ad rn at CQ ' rn E O G' I5 E .-CI fn O sq L!- 11 LQEXLICS FOOTBALL l'he Freshman Class should be corrphmented for tts rcprcsentatron on the gridiron Smce the annual class game was not plxyed the Freshman team was unable to prove rts strength and abrlrty thus lc urng the Sophomores as rvnorant ol therr superlors and as concerted as exer BOY S BASIXFT BALL The team although defeated showed remarkable grrt Drscouragement was an unknown quantrty rn any game and the team proxed itself worthy of rts class The lme up was as follows Center Matthexs Brown Forw ards R Whrtesrde Capt Cordon Whltesrde Guards Doufflas Moore Franklm Neff Below rs our record Freshmen I4 unrors 61 Freshmen I6 Qophorrores Z3 HOCKEY Luck w as surely agamst the Freshmen rn hockey f l t the So homores seweral trmes before rn practrce games the ou men Jea en p come mrght haxe been expected Nexertheless we are proud of our team 11 therr defeat and look forward to seerng them wm the school champron shrp nefct year Our team consisted of these players Center ames Baker Wrngs R lxerr Qaptam Point R Gunderson Rover Lours Xxfood Coal C Rrchards Coxer P0lDt Russel Duncan or had not the Fresr sprte of XVARRMJ Moomi In GIRLS BASKET BALL lhe grrls haxe certarnly coxered themselves wrth glory rn the school therr record bemg better than the boys lhrs rs due to our xrctory oxer lxst vear s champrons lhe scores of the games are to be found below Freshmen J Sophorrores Il Freshmen 3 -lumors 7 ffuf, J ,nav , E l I C5 , A : ,i , . .D c . ' I . 1 4 4 ' . , , I C . h . . Y , . , , V . I I V ' . Y O V . Y 'K ' Freshmen 6. Seniors 45: , J 2 , , . ' . ' , A- ' . , t- ' . V ' I ,I - . , . . 1 1- I . . 1 Q - , , ,. . V . Y N '. . . A . D J qv- V I I ll V C- ' . f 3 . , . -. SOLDIERS f,-QQ 3 OF A KIND CLASS FEET URES The teacher took thrs for rmpudence and remarked crrsplw that ohnnre mrght take hrs books and go to the Assemblv Hall And lohrrme went But how was he to hnd thrs room3 Before he had followed those classmates who chanced to have programs lrke hrs own He was strll tarrdrng rn the hall r hen the bell rinv and the stu ents thronged out of the rooms He followed some to hrs sessron room and mechan rcally looked for hrs lunch but no frrendly yellow bag rewarded hrs search for he had forgotten to brrng rt He wandered drsconsolately through the halls untrl the bell rang and then followed some students rnto Manual trarnrng where he succeeded rn cuttrng two of hrs frngers Naturally enough he was happy when two o clock came After roll call he lrstlessly went out to look for a car but how was he to know what car to take? Besrdes he couldnt remember where he lrved If only some sympathetrc passer by would help hrm' He became terror strrcken and two large tears rolled unchecked down Johnnres cheek whrle a lump of sorre rndrssoluble materral lodged rn hrs throat I am lost' crred Johnnre and I cant thrnk' As he heard hrs own worce he gare one wrld Jump at frndrng hrmself not lost rn the street but exceedrngly cold rn hrs own room Must hare been a dream he shuddered I knew that teacher wa drppy And he cuddled up rn the charr for a comfortable and dreamless nap RAE ABRAHAM 410-N 'avi' ' L s .I . .. . .. . - . . Q A ds - x 1 3 .- I I 1 ' A V r , L . . . , . , 1 1 , , . , . . , . . . , . . , r . .. -, . - .. . . U . , . ' 4 . , , . .. ., .. . . , . . y 5 . ,, . . 1 , .F , 1 J. - to be a frrend of hrs came up and wrth a cheerful slap on the back rnqurred good naturedly Lost agarn ohnnre3 Perhaps by the trme you re a Sophomore you may be able to walk through the halls alone If lm not mrstaken your room rs IO8 and that rs Just down the hall on the rrght hand srde And wrth another laugh at poor ohnnre s expense he was gone ohnnre found hrs way to hrs sessron room after this wrth lrttle drfhculty and all durrng the twenty mmute perrod he glanced Xacantly out of the wrndow When the bell rang he followed hrs classmates rnstrnctrvely rnto hrs frrst perrol class whrch happened to be Englrsh The day s lesson was a set of sentences wrth blanks rn them the chorce of two words berng provrded to frll the vacancy ohnnre was called upon to recrte first The sentence read thrnk guess I Wrll go As he rose he looked at the book wrth a puzzled arr but sard not a word Whrch would you use and why3 asked the teacher Now ohnnre drd not have the slrghtest rdea whrch was rrght and the algebra teacher had expressly told hrm not to thrnk I would use-g g guess he stammered At thrs every hand rn the room was rarsed but the teacher pard no Why John3 she asked Well because people shouldnt ever use thrnk Why not3 she asked rnsrstently Because one should never even thrnk of thrnkrng ohnnre crred trrumphantly feelrng sure he had made a brrllrant recrtatron A burst of laughter greeted thrs statement and he was pre emptorrly told to be seated He sorrowfully watched a zero berng placed after hrs name Hrs second perrod was vacant and hrs thrrd was algebra He went through these safely as he w as not called upon rn the latter But rn the fourth he met hrs Waterloo It was Englrsh hrstory and rt was hrs luck to be asked for the character of some krng ohnnre of course drdnt know t but he decrded to make one fatal stab He happened to say just the rrght thrng and began to congratulate hrmself on hrs accomplrshed blufhng but alas the Gods were not wrth hrm You hawe sard remarked the teacher that the klng was an extremely thoughtful man Now do you consrder that a good trart of character3 No -Iohnnre replred readrly thrnkrng rs somethrng no man should do 9 , , .. . J . . , , . , . - , , J . , , . . , , 4 , . . J ' 9 ..I 6 . J . ,. l n 1 J , , - , - - , , , Q ' - Q A I , . 7 - . , . I . , 1 , . , , , .. . ,... .. . . . . , ! I Y ' PHIZE ETUHY The Art of Thmkrng As .lohnnre sat before the blazrng grate fire rn hrs room after one of the hardest school days he had ever experrenced he pondered deeply over the words of hrs algebra teacher ohnnre drd not make an rmposrn figure as he sat there but ohnnre never drd and that nrght he looked exactly what he had been called the meek before 1 green Freshman small as to srze but xery much rn exrdence as to books ohnnre had corrplarned to hrs teacher of hrs rnabrlrty to understand the xx ork Dont rsorry about rt the teacher had sard krndly But hon can l help thrnkrng of rt3 ohnnre had asl-.ed Dont thrnk was the laconrc reply Now rs hat puzzled Johnnre rv as host rn the rs orld to axord thrnkrng l'l was strll wvonderrng orer thrs when he dozed off rnto a troubled slumber Before he kners rt rt was mornrng and hrs rrother sms knockrfrg on hrs door for hrm to get up He qurckly dre sed hrmself boarded a car and rod to school As he ualked rnto school he drmlw wondered rshere hrs sessron room was but the profes or had told hrm rot to thrnk and hors was he to frnd rt xsrthout thrnkrng3 He stood rn the center of the hall hrs cap rn hrs hand urth a vague puzzled arr for some trme xshen an upper classman who happened P?,g S511 LJ-4 . . . ' u , , ' J ,, ' ca 9 J , v 1 3 g , . v r U 1 v- . - I . I . e . . , . Q . s- . , - . Z MS A ,' . , , , Xqfwgf C LASS Last September as tremblmg but perseverlng and enthuslastxc Freshmen we entered the Central Hugh School bent upon a memorable career and all well knowmg that we could not reach honors and glory at first but must work patlently step by step toward the end At the first meetxng of our class we elected Floyd Lawson presldent Margaret E Smlth WICC presldent Martha Wall secretary Eugene Rlce treasurer Townsend l-loopes and Regmald Reed sergeants at arms and l azer Nausbaum mascot At our second meetrng we chose blue and gold as class colors and made plans for the annual football game It was on November eleventh that this event was supposed to occur but the Sophomores after looking upon the determined faces of the sturdy little Freshmen feared defeat and so arranged wrth the weather man to have the day so cold and stormy that the game was not played The next lmportant athletic event was the Freshman qophomore basket ball game The Freshmen after careful consrderatlon decided that the Sophomores needed encouragement and therefore allowed them to wm the game the score belnv twenty five to srxteen The hockey game came next and the Freshmen feellng qurte conhdent played xery well but the Sophornores succeeded rn gammg the wlctory Not only 1n athletrc work haxe we enthusrastlc Freshles entered heartxly but IH our studles also So far we have been a credrt to D C H S and hope that 1n the three wears left of our journey through hrgh school we shall mamtaln the excellent standlng x hrch our class as mented M 'S , 1 V , , v Y 1 t 1 - y 1 v Y s , Q ' ' I A , . y Y Y - , , 7 - V 9 V , c o ' ' 'n , . . 1 v . . . - V c . 'l5 MARGAH VICE PRES EUGEN TREASURER E RIC FLOYD LAWSON PRESIDENT WARREN MOORE EDITOR R SECRETARY LL Fc STEPHEN Mc OWFERT ART! ST 1 4 Q c-.fs i9 9- , . K I Q., ISTOBY BIATRICE TORSYTN CHAPTER I And rt came to pass 1n the frrst year of the relgn of Leonard the first that a great multltude was come 1nto the Temple on the hrll slde And they were called Freshmen and hated of the other trlbes ln the Temple And when they had come to the temple for many days they met together rn a great room and chose a certaln man called Baker as thelr leader and one to take hls place lf at any tlme he should be absent together wlth a scribe who set forth rn a book a record of the trlbe s meetmgs and a treasurer who kept the trrbes gold Now lt came to pass that the trlbe of Freshmen was called upon to play a game of football wlth another and a mlghtrer trlbe the Sophomores And vlctory fell to the Sophomores but the defeated drd hope And rt came to pass that the two trrbes came together rn a grand assembly And after many days the trrbes left the Temple And so rt was CHAPTER II And lt came to pass 1n the second year of the rergn of Leonard th hrst that the trlbe of Freshmen reassembled ln the Temple but they were called Sophomores and mlghty were therr works Brxlllant were they rn scholarship and wlsdom IS better than strength And a w1se man was chosen ruler and this man was called Craig albert he was grven an helpmeet by name McLean and there M as also a scrrbe called Bleberman and a treasurer called Broun And they governed the trlbe ss 1th great wx dom And ln trme the trlbe defeated the weaker trrbe of Freshmen 1n a game called basket ball And great was the orross and larrentatron of the Freshmen and they rent thelr clothes And so rt was D H u Y-In called a hop, and great was the rejoicing thereat. ' s . v S v A I QM!-5 ff? 6 f f 41 QM? W X aff! MWWWWQ Kd K ll-LJ Jig V ,ff ' - if' JM J Z FIX NM 2 L fy I Q ff .J fd 35 X 2 3 itltltza Etzlglnr ll grt gnu vf gnu hun I tnatrh nut My blg cousrn Annre s come to our house to stay An help my football brother wrth hrs Caesar ewery day An help srster wrth her history and ard my brother rm By domg hrs geometry and llnglrsh for hrm An then all we chrldren when the lessons all rs done VVe gether round the parlor grate an has the rrostest fun A lrstenlng to the storles at Annre tells about An Mrss Taylor at grts you Ef you Don t Watclr Out' One t they was a Soph more boy who newer would obey An when he went to the Sembly Hall one fine winter s day He joked wrth all hrs frrends about the les ons he would bluff Untll Mrss Taylor heerd hrm n en he guessed he d sald eno Cause she took hrm to the office an to Mr Young I guess An en he was just good an scared an xery polrte les Mr Young ould can hrm an he knew rrght well that then He newer could come no rrore no rexer rrore agarn So you d better member thrs cau e ef you don t WNltl'1OUl a doubt Mrss Taylor ll get you Ef you Don t VV atch Out ' U3 . 1 i U . . .. . v , . . A ' v s n , . , , ' s v - u . . , . , . ' v , . , . v Q v 1 1 1 1 - v ' v V X S V - - - y u 1 v - , . rv - n v - s , , r 1 - v - . y A r V - v v y v v - , , 5 . - y v n onet there yn x emor Ulr ud allu laugr an grm ln the Assembly Hall he allus rarsed 1 dm onct when they was ylsrtors an Mr X ounv yn there e mocked em an she shoclxecl em an she sard she clldn t care' Just as she was laughm untll she nearly checl They yy as a great tall lacly a standm at her lcle Who sn ltched her to the platform lore she Lnoys ed what she s about An Mass laylor ll get you l' f ou Don t Watch Out' An my hug cousxn Atnnle says at when the room rs strll An vou hear the fire tearrs a rushln clown the hill' An ey ry one s a trym fer to see what they can see You cl better glt your lessons an work just lrlte a hee An you cl better mmcl the rule an rot turn al out Else Miss Taylor ll gut y u El you Don t Watch Out' rgfgf, x 'iv L W X -29 P fx' -' -'ms' 51' e S rx' Anf -- -' s 1 4. 1 ', An' 'V 'V .' J D-is 3, Sh ' ' ' ' ' q ' . An, V ,. rv -Y . t - l' . sl , as Y V ll l b hs l. I , -. v ' I vo D. f Q all l - of ff !'r ir 'lt x, 1. 1 ,,,, hxkl A HJ ,sl J LJLU EW UQX ' tlbnlg at Svnphnmnrr HERE wasnt a grrl ln the Lee Vern Hugh School that wouldnt have glven her eyes to go to a hop a masquerade ball at that wlth my brother Tom and I his own lrttle sixteen year old srster was no exception to the rule And no wonder Tom the handsomest boy ln Hugh School hve foot ten ln hrs stoclung feet captain of the foot ball team presrclent of the Athletrc Assocratxon and the center of attraction m every circle was well worth the adoration he won But I clld hate to have the glrls flock around me just because I was Tom s sister and exclalm Oh Molly Sherman I thmlc you ve got the grandest brother you know I met hlm last summer at the etc or Say Moll your brother cer tamly takes the candy he s what I call class I always hated a gushing girl partrcularly the slangy lcmd But Tom had a temper a beast of a temper and thereby hangs the tale It was Wednesday mght before the umor hop which was to occur on Frlday Tom came home ln hrgh good humor at peace wrth hlmself and the world at large so after supper we possessed ourselves of glngham aprons and sallled forth to the lcltchen to make fudge We scullled around between peeks at the bubblmg concoctlon ln the sauce pan After a whlle I got down to the really vrtal questron Sand I Tommy Tucker are you goin to talce your baby srster to the hop Frrday n1ght3 Take-take you to- Of course why not3 I contrnued serenely But Molly glrl how I detested bemg called Molly girl rt was bad enough to be one wrthout bemg contmually taunted you re only a Sophomore Only a Sophomore I echoed then flaring up lllce a young Amazon well I like that humph what are you but a flunlc Senior and that s nothing to be proud of Tom flushed pamfully as well he mlght saying wrth mcreaslng warmth It s a plty lf a fellow cant go anywhere without his sister taggm long Taggln long well I ll be that shows the appreclatlon of some people of course It Isnt because I cant go rf I want to for Charlie Paine Isnt such a such well I dont know what but I wont go wlth hlm and you dont want me to either so there I contmued placldly to swmg my foot and beat the candy as perched on a corner of the table I watched Toms menacmg scowls from the corner of my eye Oh I knew how to handle Tom after sixteen years of daily spats As far as Im concerned you can stay at home because I dont intend to take you savagely from Tom Oh arnt you3 wlth annoymg sweetness No so you mlght as well keep strll I ou shouldnt spealc to your lster that way Tom Who ns the favored lady thus tlme that fat Julla Overton or Beatrxce Lushmg I should call the .6 if 0 , . . . 1 - 11 11 1 1 1 I -:gg ' 1 ' fb' ' ' t :'E l- ...? .' ' 1 9 -' 1 , . . - - 1 11 - 1 1 1 1 - 11 11 f T - 1 - 1 . , ,, . . 1 - 1 -L , . - J - 11 11 - 1 - 1 1 - 1 . U . , . 1 . . ,, 11 n 11 11 - 11 - 11 - . . 1 1 - - - 11 1 11 , . 11 11 - - - 1 1 1 ,, . . , . 1 1 1 u 1 - - 1 - - 1 - 1 1 11 11 1 - 1 1 1 1 - - , i . . 1 1 . . . . . Z 1 1 , . . L at T , 1 - 11 1 , . 11 1 1 - 1 11 , . 11 1 1 11 - - , . . 11 1 - 11 , . 11 r 1 1 . S ' . , . former over done and the latter gushmg I chrrped sarcasm persomhed I lcnevv m a second rlom had reached the llmlt of hrs endurance h sprang up rn genume wrath I tell you Molly he thundered just let my frrends alone lf you please I can manage my own affairs without any suggestions from you I arose wlth a languldly reslgned and salntly expresslon and murmurlng somethlng about brotherly love sarled out mto the slttmg room wrth the alr ol a duchess It was the nrght of the hop and softly snowrng wlthout slerghbells jmgled and a lazy old moon sailed above Flom s lrfe had been one of mrsery smce our spat of Wednesday and he was racked by the tortures I lay awake nlghts to devrse Such thmgs as exaggerated mventorres of Beatrrce Lushmgs harr goods I left ln conspicuous places about the house vshere he could not fall to see them As I sat by the window rn my room now watchlng the tvnnklmg street llghts and plotting revenge Toms cheerful whlstle came down the hall from hrs room where he was dresslng for the masquerade He vwas gomg as Romeo slashed sleeves and Jaunty befeathered cap would send the vxhole famlly mto gales of merrlment I came down stalrs a lrttle later just as Tom was setting out and standlng on the landmg I went through a serres of exaggerated farewells rattling off quotatlons from Shakespeares lmmortal love story commrtted to memory ln honor of the occaslon When the street door slammed after Tom I rustled out rnto the slttrng room stlll busy wrth plans for revenge Srttmg at the plano I thumped out every waltz or two step I knew seelng vrslons of Whlrlmg dancers through a blur of tears The lrttle Dresden clock trcked Revenge' and father tlred of my pltlful SIIIHS and the seemmgly endless drummmg arose and abruptly left the house Brrdgets vorce came from the lcltchen 1n unmlstakably Irrsh accents Shure mum she was sayrng and where may that bottle of camphor be I put here yesterday3 I drd not hear mother s reply for at the word camphor an Idea popped mto my head and I seized upon rt joyfully Lawsre but my head aches I muttered staggerlng out mto the llbrary g guess I ll go to b bed mo mother Mother breathed a sigh which sounded reheved and expressed her sorrow telllng me to put an extra qullt on my bed for the wmd was rlsrng I reeled upstalrs clutchrng the bamster and moamng audlbly and half an hour later I had spread the contents of the medrcme chest out upon my dresser and was helpmg myself freely as a proof of my srncerlty At half past ten fTom would be home rn an hour I ralsed a groan whrch drew mother and Budget to the foot of the starrs rn alarm Oh I m s so s suck I gasped as they leaned over my plllow a httle later . ,, . . - Q 1 ' V . 4 . . . Z C .. ,. . . 1 I 1 ! V- , , . . , . . . 7 . . . V , . . V , . Y. . . . , . O . . X , , Q ' Y . ' and to see him capering up and down the hall in red silk tights, gorgeous yellow . Y . Y 9 U . , . . W , . ' ' s , . . - . . . , - , , . - .. ,. . ' l l U ' U . , , , N , .. ,, . .. , . ,. . . . , . , , . . . . ., . ,, , , , . . - .. , ,. ! U - - -' ' , . . . V . . . , . . . , . ll 9 ' If ' . ' - - , , 1 One glance at my face on w hrch I had spread half the red rn my parnt box rn a rrost becomrng though thoroughly alarmrng rash and mother flew tremolrng to the telephone then I heard her grve Doctor 'Xmc numbc When she returned I had sunk mto a coma and held my breath for so long that I was purple under my vermrllron coat My only hope was that Doctor Ames would be a long whrle rn comrng and strll worrying over thrs problem I decrded to become delrrrous to rncrease the excrtement I opened my eyes and seerng Brrdget s awe struck face rose on one elbow and pornted a tremblrng fore frnger Get out of here I crred wrth exaggerated shrrllness Dont you know thrs rs a Turkrsh Bath3 Brrdget burred her face rn her apron and wrth heavrng bosom addressed the Vrrgrn rn tones that would melt a heart of stone Come Towser come Towser I sard next thrs trme wrth mother as the object of my attentron nrce doggre and rrother nearly farnted ust then the door opened and slammed down rn the lower hall and Romeo carve boundrng up starrs callrng Mother Molly where are you 3 'J Mother was on her knees besrde the bed head burned rn the qurlts whrle I patted her shoulder murmurrng nrce Towser good doggre Tom stood gasprng at the foot of the bed and as my eyes fell upon hrnr I crred rn tones of genurne delrght Why how do you do Mr Ford so good of you to call Mr Ford was the sleek fat pastor of our church a gentleman whom Tom partrcularly Whats the matter wrth lVlolly'9 choked Tom eyes startmg from hr head red plume dangling over one eye Shes srck sobbed mother she doe nt know anyone and down went her head agam Oh Molly-dont you know me srster3 gulped Tom grasprng my cold hand rn hrs own brg palm Certarnly Mr Ford I replred proceeding to shake rt that was a splendrd serrron you gave last Sunday dear I wrsh Tom would come Here I am Moll crred Tom eagerly wrth a ob rn hrs xorce don ' you know me me lVlolly5 Hes such a dear good unselhsh brother I contrnued somebodv frnd Tom lm not a dear good unselhsh brother Tom crred vehemently Im not I m a brg beast I turned my eyes wrathfully on Brrclget Go and find Tom qurck I commanded I must see hrm before I was sobbrng a gentle refrarn to rrothers snrffs from the foot of the bed Oh mother Ill dre before before Tom comes home from the dance I ll never lrve to grve hrm that prnk shawrng set he wants so bad for Chrrstmas . . . , . Y I .V A, v , I I' D I. , , , . . , ' s .. ,. - - - 4. , . r , . . . ,, ,, ,, . . . . ' , . . . ,, . . ,, . . , - - ,I , tr H - - - as A - , , 1. , ll , f - .. - . H - . T - .. H C , , tt , - H . - . , a , . .. y - H an , H Q , v - M , .. . . -, - f , - , r. - . - - .- , - , , v . . ,, , Y . , . as U - - - - - rr , . V 5 , A H 1 , . .. . N . .t , . . . , H .. . -, . -. . 1 I I 9 A . - U ' LL ' ID , L , .. - H - - , , '- A . . .. , - . I - T' i- , . . . . A 1 . . ,, Real tears were rollrng down 'lom s pallrd face and he sard Dont loolt at me that way Molly tell me you re not gorng to dre I gazed past hrm rnto space and presently down ment hrs head on those avs ful slashed sleeves and I wrshed vaguely that the football team could see therr captarn When Doctor Ames arrrved at length rt was Tom who wrth agony rn every lme of hrs face met hrm at the top of the starrs It s Molly he groaned whrle I chuckled rnwardly Oh Doctor rf she should clre rf she hrs vorce broke and the doctor patted hrs soulder reassurrngly I felt that my cause was won but there vsas strll the doctor to reclcon wrth so when hrs shrnrng bald head appeared rn the doorway I moaned n prtrful accents delrghted to see the doctor s start of surprrse Well well thrs rs more serrous than I expected he murmured feelrng of my pulse but hrs annoyance gradually turned to rncredulrty I kept up the comedy callrng the doctor osre osre was my bosom frrend and attempted to descrrbe to the astonrshed old gentleman Just how my I-Ie left the room wrth a puuled frown and when half way down starrs I sent a shrrll bye bye osre after hrm Strange as rt mrght seem I soon grew better and they all thought rt was the gluey stuff rn the bottle whrch Doctor Ames had left wsrth mother that drd rt A few days later when all of us were assembled rn the srttrng room I told them of my clesrre for revenge and the way I had carrred rt out to the great delrght of father who slapped hrs lcnee and exclarmed Mollre ll be a great actress some day take my word for rt I apologrzed to mother for the anxrety I had caused her and then turned to Tom who sat wrth eyes and mouth agape unable to realrze what he had heard At frrst I thought he was gorng to be angry but soon he sprang up wrth a laugh and thumped me on the back Gee Moll you re a wonder hovs d you ever work rt off so slrclc exen the doctor If I had your muscle I replred rubbrng a sore spot on my lately abused shoulder and you had my brarns wed malce a wonderful parr but then I added mrschrewously Im only a Sophomore DH - - , . . .. . , . , , . .D V V v Y. , li I Y U! C ' 4 . D , . ,, . . . ,, . . 9 i-1! V I , Y - . ' . - Q , . Q f ! ! , . - ,J U ' I. new party-dress was berng made. ' Si ' ff A ' , r - I , - , . Y. Y. . . V I - , , , .. . , 7 . .. , . . I , . , . V . ' .A .. , . . . 1 V 1 V Y D ,, ' . .. H . . , , , , , ., - . V .. . . , ,, , , . 'l-4 . ., . WWOMORE NWLETHCS IIBFDIH As Freshmen we drd not accomphsh much ln athletics because of our unaccustomed surroundlngs We lost the football game by the close score of SIX to nothmg We held fourth place m the basket ball serles and ended our Freshmen year wrth such a record But we felt that better tlmes were commg Thrs year as Sophomores we have been very successful The weather man prevented our wmnrng from the lowly Freshmen m football but when the basket ball season came we showed our superrorlty by defeatmg them twenty two to slxteen Although we drd not fare the best m the mterclass serles thls was because of the new rule allowmg hrst team candldates to play 1n the class games smce the school team tryout w as not held untll later rn the season Thrs regulatxon permitted the strong umor team to enter and Not content wrth defeatrng the hrst year men ln basket ball we also defeated them rn hockey by the score of two to one As the Zenlth goes to press before the baseball season IS ln full sway It IS rmposslble to tell of our vrctorres ln that sport but It IS certam that the Sophomores wrll keep thelr well earned place on the athletlc held SOPHOMORE. GIRLS BASKET BALL CHAMPIONS When we were Freshmen It was predlcted that we would probably hold the class champlonshlp 1n l9l2 as It seems to have been the Sophomores happy fate to be the vrctors In former years We have mamtamed the record and only hope that fate wrll be kmd and gulde us as successfully through our two remammg years of basket ball v ork as rt has rn l9l2 The members of the team are Forwards essle Brown Blanche Thur ton Centers Rowna Hansen Ruth l'1sher Guards Grazia Vmcent Ahce Holahan 33 5 S A A in-w vu l I Y . . - V . . . Z l -. Tl ' V , . . 5- FC 0 ffl O Soph Glrls Basket-ball Team 14 t 'vest X TOKES '32 i::? 'S'- Nip LLL., Mrss M I want these recrtatxons to be more formal Mr B Shall we wear dress su1ts3 Miss P What rs an rmportant use of alcohol3 Brrght Puprl It IS used to flaxor perfume uestlon ln Hrstory Explain Papal Bull Answer The Papal Bull 1 a large whlte bull kept by the pope to pumsh people for thelr sms Mrss W Tell me what you know about Wycl1He Mr Brown Wycllge was a man who was much hated so when h I6 the people persecuted hrs bones Sophomore to umor How do we know that Caesar had a sweetheart named Br1clUet3 umor I dldnt know he had a sweetheart Sophomore Oh yes because when Caesar came to the Rhine proposed to Brldvet brldge lt Teacher 'vlfhat rs the drfference between lrghtnmg and electrrclty Puprl X ou don't haxe to pay for llghtnrng ,a . g',.'l 1 ' x ' ll A ' -vicsls' ,gf A Sxge.QsEXQQ'S, , . sk sckrgvg ,XM .-MSN ' ,'-4-acts, fees-sh o- ef I fffsi, r . fx Mt. rs -:-. 1,- -NX , r '-Pr, f mi 1 l 'l l V 4 5'5 1 ,I lx Nfxtvti fav, 4, 'A' , ,Qs 1 g-J ,. 1 1-ki P- f - -5-.N 4 V 95 ' fied, Sf-3 qdt rrwv , 1: sz .X x X 1 , 5fi.5, ' I Q 5,l',If,, , 51 -fs f1Ti.t 2..' I V' L' - I , , ' -- .-1+ , f- -L i4f4 ':: ' f x ' X 1 -5 ,., :g,:i ' W 11 ,V f 11 5 Nurs., . D .. V - - H .. Y V . ., 55 Y- -H5 3- 56 56 - .. - V H - - . .. . , H 93 75 55 64 56 -Y- Q . . . H .. - ., ,, . . . Z S . , 3- 55 914 3- 35 ,F . .. . ., v 1 KL v I v v - . . , - ' 3 d' d ' 99 915 A4 515 55 35 - .. - U D . J . . U . , V Y v ., .. - . Z , , - ' . , he . ,, . . ., - C -D 55 515 E4 3- at 515 : , .V . I . A . . . ij.. ON CI'IlCal'd Ill IASQCYTIIJIV I LISI IVIIQQ Palmer Wllat IS me-mt up: I dont Iuoxx exactlx Idergue I aIIs Mm Y Does anyone know the Umted States3 Mm S Colorado Sprmgs Two Sophs ln conwersatlon Q I hear you are the Hover 7ncI H cs a bloomlng rdlot Pupll tranelatmg I'lI1Il Ire Icmv eee Iexrher Nou gne lt lI'l the perfect tense Pup1I Ihe Ixmg has Hecs ueetlon 1n I atm Wlmy ls the xx ord s rp 'Xnm er Because lt costs so much to 110 rt WW ef -WWII XX X hate that RIIZDSIIICIIC proof ln gcometrs by the lunar ecI1pse3 but I thmk lt has something to do YNltI'l where there are am pllgrlmages ln of the famrly femmme3 U - K V : -. . 525 515 3:7 3' 515 525 I Z nn 4 i . .. P as 9 I v -V, . . 65 :F 'Hi H4 JF 515 'M Xi: -' , , , 55 '35 55 3 5:1 HL 1.1.-K' V - ' 915 M 3 55 :ti :F ' . ' .. ' : I ' D H M. 525 M -'25 3:5 515 515 h i Q v . U 4 A- r H . , . D . ' V X'x f 7 X. I ' 4 1 ,Q?'w ,ff it ,I UQ' x f .X .yjg, ,I Al I ifj 1 VI: FFIEQQHEN DFFICEHS PRESIDENT FLOYDE LAWSON VICE PRES MARGRET SMITH SECRETARY MARTHA WALL TREASURER EUGENE RICE ZENITH BOARD EDITOR WARREN MOORE HRTIST STEPHEN MCGIFFERT HISTORIAN MURIEL smm-1 MRRJQRIE WILLHRD RAE ABRAHAM DOUGLASWRLKER RUSSEL DUNCAN BLUE GOLD IQ! f Vx Smce we are allowed a sectlon In the Zenlth we Wlll try our best to make thlS work a credlt to the Freshmen and the Zerxxth We wxll M Ta lor for her also take thls opportumty to express our thanks to xss y Interest ln the class WARREN MOORE I5 YR' Uhr Annum OFFIC ERS President Ruby Flaaten Nice President Erna Ralcossslcx 'Secretary Fanny Weinberg lreisurer Marx Sayer lhe Anonn held its first meeting of the year on Monday September eighteenth l9lI at which the aboxe officers were elected The club also changed it policy slightly and decided that quality and not quantity should be the aim in selecting new members Programs hawe been presented throughout the current year Owing to the interest shoun in the work of the club by the members wll of these affairs hue been successful logical Laboratory which Mr Gibson kindly offered for our use At the end of this school wear all of the member are looking forward with hope to the coming of next autumn which will they beliexe uher in another year of succcss and prosperity 1 year cwen more sucees ful than the one just past ind one in which the fxI'lOI'lll will be bifwcr better and more helpful than exer before Faxxx XY ralxBERc Q 0 . . f - - . 1 - , . ie Y C V 1 L H, ,s s J' , . 4 - V I V , C 5 L - I V K . In addition to the programs, a Thanksgiving Party was given in the Zoo- t iv, v A ' . v' v . i is .' , s 1 i ' ,' t . -: C , ' i' L -' Y s ', c.,z i 'i ia 'V img, 'hr .Buntn Mr Brackett vxsrted all the Freshmen and Sophomore Englrsh classes early ln the hrst semester and appointed out the need of a soclety for th advancement of oratory debatmg and declamatory work among the students of the two lower classes In response to hls suggestion nearly two hundred enthuslastrc students met rn the Assembly Hall durmg October and orgamzed a lrterary soclety There ensued a lxvely pOllllC3l campargn whlch resulted ln the selection of the folowlng ofhcers President Homer l-loldren Flrst Vlce President Eugene Rlce Second Vlce President Harold Tufty Secretary Seward Kempton and Treasurer Arthur Helam The prnze whlch was offered for the best name for the society was given on the vote of the members to Homer l-loldren who suggested The unto Mr Holdren s earnest endeavors and vital mterest for the good of the socrety were promment factors m glvlng lt a good start and secured the slncere and The unto meets every Thursday for busmess and a lrterary program The programs have been very successful as IS shown by the large attendance at the meetings In the soclal lme too the society IS equal to the best In October there was held ln the gymnaslum a party whlch w as enjoyed to the full by about one hundred members ln November a basket ball game was played between the rrval classes This contest was the only trme when class spmt has been ln evldence ln the orgamzatlon as Freshmen and Sophomores have always been treated alllce Vlrtue and true worth not age receive first regard ln the Junto The December social was ln the form of a slelghrlde to the pumpmg statlon at Lakewood The term of ofhce IS two months This IS to enable more of the members to show their executrve abrlrty The offlcers at the present time are President Mllton Stlclcles Frrst VICC Presrdent Muriel Smlth Second VICC Presldent Mlllet Davis Secretary Leonard McCarthy Treasurer Franklm Neff DoRoTm PATTON O e y V . . , , . ' 1 ' ' . : , : , . . . . . , .. ., , , J - enthusiastic support of the members. 7 , ' , . . . . , , Fi Q 1 ATHLETIC During the past year athletics have played then usual important part in promoting the spirit of unity so much needed in high school life More than any thing else perhaps they haxe served to bind togeth r the four classes of the school and to augment the feeling of fellowship already existing between the faculty and the student body Vvhen the teachers A , exince such a whole souled interest in school athletics as Mr Young Mr cannot help but appreciate their support And the school wishes to thank the faculty for the loyal may in which it has without erception promulgated the doctrine of true sportsmanship It wishes especially to thank Mr Phillips for his untirmg efforts for the success of the Athletic Association Mr Schilling for the splendid is orlc he has done as a coach in basket ball and baseball and Mr X ounv for his rrore than fatherly interest in xx hat we have clone To Mr Colton too we wish to gne the credit which is his due for proxm such a ialuable and efficient coach of our football team Although he is not a member of the facultv in the tricter en e of the term he has surely earned his letter as a teacher of foot all Again trom the ulrole school thanlts to all if .6 l-,r Q C fi .f 3 .a f 5 0 N K ' 4 il . . r V it ,y , ,M ' 1 I , . w, a t. Schilling, Mr. Phillips, Mr. Gibson and many others have done, the school , , v v- lv ' v l . . -l g . , ' s ' s s , j U ' ' Tl-u.e:'ruc 19 SSOCIATIUH 2 Q52 rx 6.117 Orrncsns Pass Rosen-r Hans VP Cues Jeno:-omus Sec KENNETH Hnnms Tzss HnRl.nuoS-re-rso fl Q 1: LN .4 Y I X ' JN 1' x X .I SNS, R XM ,z X51 . - 'Q U . 4'-E, , . , 4 . 0 I 0 0 0 STXIIMINT Duluth C Cntml Illqh School Xthletlf I1 Oll1llOIl nt I ax Rec: rpt 1 1 on 1 d Sei on 1et1c Du t 1 utlpts I oothtll 51 1 Rccmpts B1 Ixct Intl Q94 on Suh cr1pt1on Bu Ines Vlen 5 1 ol P0 nr Qrchc tr1 C oncert Opcrctta I 11I hy Totil hu Duluth Street R R Duluth News Trrhunc CAd1 Duluth Herald fAcIw 'Nlorthnrn Hdx 1 C I qu1pment lxellx Hclx e Co Iqmpment bmlth 61 Sm1th Drugs Addms Ath -X s n Rental Ground Bourcl Trade Inuy I 1 Iep 1one D1 pwtchen Q C Colton LOBCIUH Football F p n es N1 1t1n team fFootIDaIII wen eo XI tn t111n5 Ba Ixet It ot11 Igillftl? 01 tM1x run ent 9 K 7-I 73 D 90 OO 20 23 78 73 100 33 IJO OO 600 -400 00 7 10809 SBI 986 33 8 Ser. I, I9Il toIVl IO. IQIZ. CQSI h1n tt9I0-I9Il Q15 I ......,....... 15 5.20 All I' vs lliirs S-1111-stcrI .... ,,...., ..,.... I . Z3 R-'V : fi 1 sonI ....,.........,..,,.. 831.50 A C 13' - 1 1 's I ..,......,........ 3g .33 .T s ' l S f S' .51 I ........,...,...... -3100 Q11If St' 5 ........1...................,. 5.50 ' s 1 ' ' ........,..,......,.......,. -I-1.50 , H ir'1 Jury ...................... 6I.0' Dig. 1 5. Northland Printing Co. ...,....,....,......... 60.90 ' ' .......,,...,.... . . ' ,...,.,.........,....,.. - . ' 1 1 vm Io. If ' I ............... 'I . r ' -' v. ffl ' I ..,.,...,.,....,.. ll.5O I ' ' ' Q I ...........,..,........ 15.76 1 . X 5 ' . I I ..,...,.,,.,. ' . W' I 5 ....... ........................, 7 .90 's 1 ' ......... . .... ,.,......,... ..... 2 . 50 I. N. Q I A g Q I ..........,..... . ox 9 s 'ASN g 5 .............,.. 38-25 Ifxg s ' 0511 g 11 ' C s' -I1III ......,.,,.... . ' 'I' 'I ,........ ,...,... .... ,... . .,............. 5 I , 3 4.21 1. ' :hanc 1-' I0. l9I2 ........,........,.. .. .!S2.Il In Hit 15111111115 Loyalty to the school as an lnstltutlon and to those who haxe represented lt on lts athletic teams has alvxays been a notable characterlstlc of the students enrolled rn the Central Hugh School Thls IS especlally true of those who have attended 1t for four years and have gone out carrying wlth them vlvxd recollections of the spxrlt and enthusiasm of those f0ll0WlDg the ban ners of the Red and Whlte At the enthuslasm and Jolllflcatlon demon stratlons at chapel yell leaders have called for the school yell yells have been arranged and practiced for speclal occaslons and games the members of the team wlth captam and coach have been announced by name and to these calls there has always been a warm and enthu Sla5llC re ponse from the student body These calls have never been concluded wslthout mentron of the man who has managed the team and who has planned Mr Ph1ll1ps3 has been a hearty one Indeed Mr PhllllpS IS a graduate of Carthage College lllmons of the cla s of l900 Whlle there he played four years as left halfback on his college team Mr Phlllxps came to Duluth Central ln the fall of 1905 Durmg the football season of thrs year he was both coach and manager Smce that t1me larger classes and an mcreased arrount of school vsorlc have made It lmpOSSlblC for hlm to do both and he has gnen his attentron to the management For the last srx seasons he has carefully and falthfully looked after the mterest of the Central ln arranglng the schedule securmg ofhclals loolung after the comfort and welfare of the members of the team and attendmg to the many detaxls whlch take so much tlme and attentxon Q Q o 4 x ' 1 , . ' ' s . the games of the season. The response to the call, What's the matter with Hrs loyalty to the school and hls zealous actmty and efforts for 1ts success have won for hum the highest respect and regard of all of the students who have known h1m The wlsdom of hrs advlce and counsel and the fellowship and comradeshlp of his leadershrp and dlrectxon wrll always hold a promment place rn the recollectlons of thelr Hlgh School days rn the mmds of those who played on the hrst and second teams That he rs often called Phil by those who know hlm best IS no attempt at famlllarrty but rs an expressron of regard and esteem Phll now that you have decrded to ask to be relieved of further management of football rn Central we wlsh that we mlght have one rouslng meetmg of all of the fellows of all of your teams that each one mrght say for hrmself the things left untold whlch come from the heart and can not come from the pen Even though we well know your modesty few of us rememb r hearmg you make a speech at chapel we would mslst upon the speech w would luke so much to hear After the last hearty handshake of appreclatlon at partmg we would slng together and after separation each would hum LJ hrmself as he went out mto the night He s a Jolly good fellow LEONARD YOUNG v Y V , - v - an - so v w n - u - - 1 v T Q - - - as as v - 1 - rt 1 - n , . ' -Q.-. illnnt hall Prospects for a wlnnlng team looked ex ceedmgly dark when only Captam Mars K 1 OBrien lVlcLaran Brown and eronlmus ot last years champronshlp machme returned to school Coach Colton however set to work and after three weeks of gruelllng practtce placed rn the Held one of the best teams that ever represented Central Through the sheer perverslty of fate our boys lost to Superlor Cen tral but too much credit cannot be given for therr gameness and light The hrst game agalnst the strong and heavy Northland College team resulted rn 1 he nelther slde bexng able to score pewa Falls but as they declded not to play us Central went up against the blg Superxor Normal team on three days notice Duluth fought desperately but a fluke pass and a neat goal from the held made the score 8 to 0 agamst us On the next Saturday however me won over Grand Forks heralded as the champions of the Dakotas by a 13 to 0 score On October Zl Central llned up against the fast Industrial Alumni team ThlS was a very hard fought contest as the Industrial boys tried desperately to even up last year s overvs helmmg defeat Our team won I8 to 0 On the next Saturday the VlfglHl3 team champlons of the Range gave Central one of the hardest games of the season Wlth the score 3 to 0 agaln t them the red and whlte vtarrors came back strong 1n the second quarter and after an uphill fight won handlly I0 to 3 The blggest game of the season occurred on November thlrd at Hlslop Park Superior The defeat by Normal stlll rankled and the Duluth boys looked forward to thls game as thexr one chance to retahate Interest among the student body ran hugh and when the eventful day arrlved D C H S had more rooters on the slde llnes than drd Superror The day was brlght and clear but very cold with a brlsk squally wind from the west Duluth klcked off to Superlor at exactly three oclock and the most brtterly contested game ever played at the head of the lakes was on Durlnv the first quarter thlngs looked very dark for Central The heavy Superior backs tore up our lme for substantial gams agam and agam but ln the lat r 4 ?. ,Q a. ,t , . J , . . . MI' ' ' U O I -. . . l , , f , . CIIAUNCEY COLTON, COHCI1 The next contest was arranged with Chip- . 4 , n ly . - Q Q U ' i I , . . . ' Y . , . . . , . , . s . Y . . . . . . - . I I n v v' I Y. l Y ' . . , , , . I D . . . . . Q . 6 perrods our boys steadred and both outplayed and outfought therr heaner opponents The second quarter was the fatal one Duluth flgllllllg desperately and usmg a fast shrft that bewlldered Superror advanced the ball untrl lt rested on her rrwals fue yard lme Duluths ball first down and only hve yards to go' Every man put hrs heart and soul mto the next play but the ball was fumbled' Rlll the speedy Superror end caught the ball on the bound and sprinted the length of the held for a touchdown Matt and Dutch made herolc atterrpts to stop hum but therr efforts were unavalllng A few seconds later Superlor klcked the goal Score D C H S 0 Superlor 6 Then rt was that the Central lads showed thelr mettle Each one fought as lf hrs llfe depended upon the outcome Once Superlor recovered one of her own punts on Duluth s seven yard lme and ln the succeedmg three downs she advanced the ball just one yard The Duluth boys were desperate Playlng agamst heavier more experrenced men away from home they had every dns advantage And yet ln the fourth quarter the spectators saw football such as IS seldom seen away from a umverslty held Inch by mch foot by foot yard by yard hghtmg every mmute Central forced the ball to Superror s one yard lme Here the blue and whlte stood fast and the ball was lost When It was punted out there were exactly fifteen seconds to play To the thousands on the slde lmes rt dld not look as lf Duluth had one chance ln a hundred to score But the crowd was reckoning wlthout consrdermg the spmt of Central On the first play Matt Brown fnghtmg llke a mad man lrterally dragged hlmself twenty seven yards for a touchdown staggering over the lme with half f the Superxor team clmglng to hrs back When the frenzred mob of students had been cleared off the held Dutch punted out Once more the Fates took a hand ln the garre and a sudden gust of wlnd carrled the ball back over the goal lme The whistle blew and the greatest game ln years passed mto hlstory Central 5 Superror 6 Central lost but there was no stmg m the defeat It was a contest such as those we read of where the losmg team grves lts all for the honor of the school Our boys outclassed thelr opponents ln fight and gameness an headwork They proved themselves worthy of the colors whlch they wore The school IS proud of them A llst of the seasons games and thelr results follows September 30 Northland College October 7 Superror Normal October I4 Grand Forks October Industrlal Alumm October 78 VlfglHla Alumni November 3 Superlor Central -l otal D ponents -1 V' , . . , . ' . v . , . 0 . ' . . ' d D. C. H. S.- 0 0 D. C. H. 5- 0 ' 8 D. C. H. S.-I3 0 Z1 D. C. H. S.-I8 ' ' O - D. C. H. S.-I0 ' ' ' ' 3 ' D. C. H. S.- 5 ' 6 ' ........ . C. H. S.-46 Op I7 'Z AX LAPTAIX. MARS Left End Bo s thrrd and last year on he Central football team was all that hrs past performance promrsed As a leader H kept the team well together and set the best sort of an example for hrs men keeprng them on therr toes and fightrng all the trme wrthout lettrng hrs added responsrbrlrtres d crease hrs personal efhcrency As a play r he was the same old Bob always on the Job qurclc and unfarlmg rn hrs abrlrty to srze up a play and equally sure rn meetrng rt down the freld under punts and forward passes and among those present when anv thrng was happenrng that made hrm one of the best ends that ever wore the Red and Whrte Wrth hrs graduatron Central loses a man who has done much for school ath letrcs and one of the best examples of the true type of sportsman MATTHEW BROWN Fullback Scotty the captarn elect has deserved thrs honor by hrs work during three seasons on the squad and two on the team After worlcrng at end and halfbaclc he at last found hrs natural posrtron at fullback and was the most consrstent ground garner on the team Unusual speed and strength made hrm equally effectrve through the lrne and around end and at no trme was he so dangerous as rn a trght place Next year startrng rn the posrtron where he belongs he promrses to be one of the best backs rn thrs sectron of the country .. b, .. . t ' . .e without losing any of that knack of being The Team EDWARD O Barrarw Rrght Tackle Ed the Fighting Swede started hs second year under the handrcap of a neu posrtron srnce the rnecperrence of materral necessrtated the shifting of the xeteran from guard to tackle Nevertheless he rapidly developed and surprised everyone with hrs shrfty and aggressive game and the close of the season found hrm the most relrable spot rn the lrne He met ome exceptionally good hrgh school taclcles and though always outwerghed was never outplayecl and thrs rn spite of the fact that he was rn bad shape nearly all the time He played the Superior game wrth an ankle that would have lcept most men on the srde lrnes Swede s great improvement during hrs career on the squad has been due to his faithful work and wrll rngness to learn It rs men of this type who will always be the mainstay of athletics and the strongest argument for their continuance REX ST CLAIR Rrght Guard Rex waited until he was a Senior be fore tryrng out hrs football abrlrty but won hrs posrtron farrly by hrs steady and consist ent work. While rarely in the limelight he was always taking care of right guard and doing his very satisfactory best in every way for the good of the team. l-le played the game every minute and let others do the talking. there will be long remembered by those who CHARLES JERONIMLS End Dutch playing his fourth year on the squad and second on the team at tim s played the game of his career and when in the game was aluavs to be depended on to give everything he had His luclcmg and low hard taclcling saved many yards for Central during the season The Dutchman atoned for past mistakes in his last game for sau ll JOHN CLRRIE Left Tackle John is another man who brought expert ence on the second team to help ln his first year as a regular and his work at tackle was steady and consistent throughout the season l-lis strongest points were his charge and his speed He was always down the held under kicks often beating the ends He deweloped into a more than awerage drop kicker and when called upon gave a good account of himself in this department .. .. . . , , v , , his school, against Superior, and his work v V , . Y .- , Y . . . V . , . 7 . 7 KENNETH HARRrs Fnd Bunk profrtrng by hrs experrence o'r the second team came to the front raprdly last fall One of the most conscrentrous and hardworkrng men on the squad he sac rrfrced hrs personal glory for the best rnterests of the team He played end most of the season and not untrl the last part of tne Su perror game drd he have a chance to show the publrc hrs abrlrty as a halfback A good consrstent end and an excellent punter Bunk was a valuable man Hrs team mates hope that next year he can play at half where hrs hard plungrng sure catchrng and deadly rnterferrng are certarn to brrnf hrm the creclrt he deserves JOHN: KERNS Rrght Halfback ohnnre stepped from the second team to a regular posrtron last fall and hrs game proved conclusrvely that the promotron nas deserved Nexer a brrllrant or spectacular performer ohn always drd hrs share of rh work and a little bit more. He could be depended on for a few necessary yards through the line or off tackle' but it was on the defense that he was at his best and many an opposin back has good reason to remember his hard tackling. MARLX CRASSWLLLER I eft Halfback ARTHUR OSMAN Center Art played hrs first hugh school foot ball last fall and was the bxggest man on the team On the defenslve he was a power and dlscouraged all attempts at lme plunv mg by opponents and hrs passing at center was sure accurate and dependable Thls rellabrllty was a large factor rn the success of an offense based almost h Il d passes ws o y on rrect Crassre was mrghty green when the handlmg hlmself and an aptltude for the game oxercame mexperlence and lack of werght and hrs sxde steppmg 1nto holes rn the llne and oft tackle and snaky runs through a broken field were Important feat ures of many games Next year we hope to see hum gam many rrore yards mlth the adwantage of more welght and a years experxence . U 7 . . on , , . so season opened, but a natural ability in ' H , . . A , f . , EARL COFTL Left Guard Coats the other rrember of the sllent palr xx ho played the guard positron was also playmg hrs first season of football for Central B10 strong Wllllflg and always smrlmg he constantly cleaned up the terrl tory rn front of hrm and made opposmg lme men fear that srrrle rrore than otner men s from ns Wrth mo more years before hum he promlses to be one of the best lmemen I WARD B ROWN Quarterback Beany was not satlshed with baseball and hockey fame and came out for foot ball IH answer to the need for more cand dates for quarter and though he lsnt any bugger than a drmlc of water he learned the game rapldly and made a great record Hrs catchmg and runmng back punts were a rewelatlon hrs taclchng unfallmg and despxte hrs mexperlence he had the confidence of the team and used the judgment of a veteran ln running It , . - v ' I A ' . l 'D' . vl I v v 1 ' - . , . . V l . Y . , I ' 1 no matter who represents the school on the h'll. ' v Q- . , , , . . MELVILLE MCLARAN Quarterback Mel one of the few veterans on the team had the hardest Job of all at quarter He made up for lack of werght by sheer grit and the close of the season found hlm drlvlng his team hard and fast and more effectxvely than any freld general who opposed hrm He has stlll another year ta play and wrth past expenence Centrals nvals may well fear the man who now dr rects the brg red team n u no 9 , . 1 . n g s S BASKET BALL TEAM Champlons of the Lake Superlor Reglon Basket hall The basket ball season of I9I2 will stand out clearly as one of the most brllllant ln the history of the game ln the Central l-hgh School It was all the brighter because at the begrnnmv of the school year the prospect of a YVll'lI'llIlg team was not conslclered good by many who had seen the work of the veteran qulntet of the two preceding seasons four of whom were '10 longer m school Thls meant the development of an almost entirely new team The record of the second team of the year before and the mterclass serles just completed showed that some excellent new matenal was avallable and the hopes of the fans were hrgh Coach Schlllmg took charge of the squad and rt was soon seen that the chances of a wm VR ll H gCHILLINl Lowll nmg team were above par and gomg up all of the time The first game was played with the 26 to I5 ln favor of the Normal ThlS was so much better than the score of our strong team of the year before ln the same game that the boys were encouraged rather than dlsheartened and the team settled down to steady practice and hard work The flrst game on our own floor showed that we had a team of the first rank The team work was evrdent throughout the game The contest was fast and a splendid serres of games was assured The team work and mdlvxdual play lmproved as the season progressed and ln a game where opposing roughness dld not prevent rt was certamly bewildering to the opponents to see the way ln whrch the ball was worked to a man who had a clear throw for the basket It has been the ambltlon of Central basketball teams to beat Superlor Central on therr own floor The team thls year scored that trrumph Thls feat and the mamtalnmg of the record of the school of newer havmg been defeated on lts own floor wrll make the team of l9l2 and lts coach Mr Schxllrng long remembered ln the annals of athletics rn the Central High School - o 13 , Q V . Superior Normal team on their floor and resulted in a defeat by the score of CCOII E C5 0 l-' 'U CD an -C I 1 BASKE F BALL RECORD Superror Normal School Artlun Hugh School Bralnerd Hlgh School Blame Hugh School Northland College Ashland Hrgh School Superror Normal School Ashland Hlgh School Blame Hlgh School Northland College Cathedral High School Maakvt hall E ititlvn ARTHL R OSMAN Center r was te ony mar horse e from the hunch of xeterans that made up la t years grext team of stwrs Ask anyon xhout Qsmans great work of the present season A more ran x player could not b found and hrs xsorlt as the pnot of team play could not be excelled Osman led thl years team ln grand style fast and experl enced rn detarls a ure shot and a good general hls playrn x a one of the featur of thus sea ons success Basket bull stock for next year has gone up Art rs c p tam elect for l9l 3 The brg center scored D6 baskets thrs sea on D. C. H. S. I5 ' D. C. H. S. 26 ' ' ' D. C. H. S. 69 ' ' D. C. H. S. 41 ' ' D. C. H. S. 37 D. C. H. S. 39 ' D. C. H. S. 33 ' D. C. H. S. 41 ' D. C. H. S. ZI ' ' D. C. H. S. 47 D. C. H. S. 42 . ' D. C. H. S. 41 l points. Opponents D pomts so '9 F- '- A t ' h lg H ' l fr ' M I , as ' a - 194125 REX S1 CLAIR Guard leddy another find of the seasom developed a talent m basketball whl h ranks hlm among the best guards ex er wea mg the red and whlte St Clan' became a wonderful defensne player and by means of hrs rangv abnhty lntercepted many an offensive play By figurmg prommently lu the team work and IH hrs scrappy way of worklng lt wlthm range of the forwards We are sorry to lose Rex He contrxbut d 9 baskets to our total score JOHN CLRRIE Guard C urrle at the other guard posrtlon played a great garre and deserves much credlt for hrs aggressxveness ln playing ohn was a valuable floor man and though playing guard the greater part of the season was shlfted to center and ran the team ln hnc style Currle developed mto a dangerous basket shooter durmg the season obtammg Z0 held goals Hrs loss wrll be felt on newt year s team Q05 l 1 f - .. ., ! , ' ' -. ' 'c. in . Y Y P Y 1 I ' Y . n n l Q '.-w ' :J-7' ' ' Q il ' , , 5 . D . . . AX:-I :- Vt V . . l getting the ball, he was always successful in X V ' ' .' ' Y A l D E' l l l l , V ' . . . . J it I - 1 1,95 1 ' , Q-, z:113,- . -V .1 25' -L - '4 E on lXFINlNETH HARRIS Forward Bunlcs worlc at forward thIs seasom easIly entrtles hIm to a place among tlIe leadmg players of the state Harrls proved to be one of the best Hoor men ever playlng the game at Central He was equallv effectne as an OHCDSIVC and defenslve player and durIng the season played both ends of the game to perfectlon He returns net year and great thmgs wlll be expected from Im Bunk landed 44 baskets durmg the season x--x WILLIAM ELDIQR Form ard BIll the scrappy captaxn of the unIor team more than came up to expectatrons on the Central quIntet Elder ss as In the game from start to fInIsh fast and heady playmg In a style of team work where hIs accurate basket shootIng was In great evIdence and he rarely faIled to respond to the conhdence xx hIch the team placed In hIm I Ieturns for another Ureat year Durmg the season he secured 58 baskets 5 lt 5 . . . r I li . . UQ Q ' I It ' , I ' . ,XA . , ' gt ' ' ' ' . B'll 'J 'E GEORGF STILLMAN Subsutute Strlly played suh this year and was only kept on the bench by the star work of the regulars He played IH several games and showed himself a fast heady player Few players have developed more gmg r than he and the confidence of hrs team mates was never wrtladrawn when George got mto the game Stxllman would make 1 wery valuable man for ne t year s team but alas' he is a Senlox GIRLS BASKE I BAL L CfCI11C de lil CTCIIYC A girls basketball team representatlve of the whole school rs an Innova tron but we hope rn the future to make the grrls team as lmportant and notrceable a factor ln our athletnc held of action as the Loys team IS at present Although thus year s team was largely an experlment stxll the results have been as good as could be expected The team at present lmes up as follows Forwards Lilly Moe Jessie Brown Captam Guards Alrce Holahan Harriet Harrrson Center Dorothy Prerce Srde Center Rowsra Han on Substltute Marian Todd Lccruz HOAR I7 Fm l - , .. - U .. H - If X ' , . , - 9 , - 1 Y . ' t , ' ' .fi , l l 4 is t , .- .. N La . . , . - - . . . v - I ' , t . . . . X . . , . . , - - . V I O 1 I V! . . vi ' Q V , , .... G rs Basketba Tea ,-. ,-. ,-4 ..- ignrkrg. That hockey is steadily gaining headway in D C H S was shown by the mterest taken ln the lnterclass games The first game of this serles was between the Freshmen and Sophomores The lce was covered wrth snow so that effectlve team work and shootmg were lmposslble and the game ended wlth the score 2 to l 1n favor of the second year men The second game was played on February the fourteenth with the Sopho mores pitted agalnst last years champlons now the Seniors The game resulted rn a very one sided vlctory for the Seniors who clearly outclassed then' opponents ln team work and knowledge of the game whrch ended wlth the score 5 to 0 By far the best and most excrtmg game was played on Thursday mornmg February twenty second between the Semors and thelr old tlme rlvals th umors The hrst half was very fast and the team work of the Senrors very pro nounced The perlod ended with the score 3 to 2 for the Semors The second half opened wxth a mad burst of speed on the umor sxde Owens seemed to be a whole team ln hlmself and registered three successive goals for hrs class It looked as lf the Senlors were to lose thelr tltle wlth onlv five mmutes to play but through thelr splendld team work and the won derlul shootlng of Brown the graduates obtained three goals and won the contest by a score of 6 to 5 On the umor slde the playing of the defense and especlally that of Mahan at goal was the only thmg that saved the younger men from an over whelmlng defeat while the playlng of Owens was a large factor ln keepmf' therr OHCIISIVC play effectlve For the Seniors Brown Stanford and Vvharton were the stars wlth Brown the greatest of the three The lme ups follow SI INIOR5 JLNIORS Frermuth Goa Mahan MacDonald Wall Point Kerns Wharton Qover Point Crassweller Brown Roxer Fraker Vlfagncr Qtanford Left Wm Vviisgafi lVlull1n Rr ht Wing Owens Harris Center Du Moe Scores Brown C4 Owens 4 Du Moe Stanford l-larns Referee Wood Tlmelteepers Cray Parsons EARL HARRls v . Y . . Y . 1 . . , . . , . ' s V , - r v v ' ' - - A , s -1 v v - s s - a . s ' . Y . Q J , f - a 1 o - y s , Y , . Sv ' t , .,........... ...................... ' .... , 7 U . .. .................. 3, ......... U . . ..... ..... . ., ' v V J. CD, . - - .2 H', . I rark 2-Xthlrilrn lqraclt athletlcs at Central haxe leen on the dechne for the l st few years oulng to the fact that there rs no plrce for the athlete to tr un nor a held thlt N1 Que an athlete the full benefit of hr effort The contests that hue Je n held durlng the last three xear haxe been indoor meets and haxe not had the revulwr number of esents lhe Zemth 1 pubhshecl too early to record any actual achlexements the way of meets won but thls prlrv the trick athletes ire xery ardent ln their efforts to have a team A farr slzed squad has been YXOI'lClIlU regularly on the Duluth hills and the outloolt 1 faxorable for a succes ful sea O'l MAT1HFxx BROWN lhe season of l9I l xx as from many stindpomts one of the rrost success ful ln the hlstory of baseball at Central Interest rn the sport x hrch had almost dred out was reused IH l9l0 ruth the re ult that last rear a good team recened faxrly good support After one defeat the hrst game of the season Central worked hwrd and von the mne games wluth remamed on the schedule lhese uctorres gan our boys the charrplonshlp of the hlsxm Ports Hlvh School League ln uhxch the h1 h schools of Duluth and Superlor and the Xlormal School of Superror were contenders Credlt for the success of the team must he Unen to Schrlhng x ho ln addrtron to coachmv the basketlill team undertook tht arduous taslx of rrouldxnff the ba eball mwterlal into Hpe joe Boyle O o ' ' I , A Z1 ' 1 f, ' c 2' L S li , c 'll U ' s . 1 A. ' l e -' S ' Q, ' 0 1 ' 3. S . 1 ' ' c ' . In Q ' 3 S xg ' 4 '. 4 ' . . A , D D , A . ' S ' S e S 1. EEIZPIJEIII. ' , . ' ' e 5, . : ' -5,- V U K v V , ' ' ' , ' ' 5 ,' . . ' 1 Y A . . Ie b ,Q 1 r. D v1 A Y D , V A g . ' . . ' ' ' 0 ' Mr. - , v , U -te , ' . . . , ' ..' 1 O 5 ' 1. Sli . ' , 215 IWIII 1 1 reeened IIXCIY Although for a eI1amp1on earlx to record pred1ct 1 trong good held gc s C 1tChe1 Pltehex I Zrd Ba e 3d Ba e Qhort top I eft I:1elCl C enter I71elcl I1C'l ll HIC L YU T C to OX IDL IYICII Ilnold Ixellx MOTTI on H1r11 Ralph VK alclrom Fclsxarcl Nolte Melulle lVIcLar1n VI 1rd Brown oe Boyle Fhen Qpencer S1 ruol Duelett Wllllam Lundberg IX of these men ulll not be hack there are st1Il trong 10p h1p team th1s wear As usual the Zemth goes to press too the games but Vllll Ward BIOXNII as Captam 1t IS safe to and creclrtahle team fo1 IQIZ BASEBIXI D I RI-C ORD Supa-r1o1 H1 lt C Ioquet Industrml H1 h Industnal H1 I1 'Nelson Dexxex Supe r1o1 Norm1I Qloquet SUPCTIOI I-I1 1 Supenor Normal Super1or Fat Iqncl cap I , vis a j j' 1 a I 12d the tea well. h Is Base ...,....,...... ' 7' 1 e s ,.................. J ' Right Field ..........,.. Matthexx' Brown D. C. H. S. 3 ' ' lg IO D. CI. H. S. 7 I 3 D. CN. H. S. Z6 I '. lg I I D. C. H. S. I3 Q ' 'g 8 D. CI. H. S. I3 .I 'V' I D. C. H. S. I3 . .V ' I I 6 D. CI. H. S. 8 ' 0 D. Ci. H. S. I6 A A gl I D. Cx. H. S. 8 ' ' I . C. H. S. I5 4 , s L Z A Sporting QJQQFII wonder 1 Com1 1-.ex N ox After o mrny lxnoclx 111 hnally lancl the bl purge If Frank l eroy Chance 171111 C0n11nue to prance rhe 1 aw 11111 rn 114 Qotlnm fans Cursc 1 Conme A11 e ICS X11 u e 1he mme 1aC11Cn 1 1nn1n the 'la once a a1n It Nappy 1431016 ls the same 1rub1y boy l'ha1 he 1 as 1n the ye1r1910 And the xx onclerlul Cobb Wlll do better non than before If Matt of New Xorlc Wrth hls facleaxs ay uorll V11 e as ex ameb ab of ore Or 11 Cyrus X oung W1ll fmally be hung On the shelf 1ha1 s been wsa111ng for yearb If Wagner the Great XX 111 h11 up the ga1t That moxe poor old Nluggsy 1 te s But the b1 1oren'o51 thln lxe been uondermg 1h1Q prmg ls hon 11111 our team et aong W1ll Centrale pep boys Be the beaeon 5 b1g UOISC And work the old comeback ame b1rong3 O - O O 1 ' F. I' ' 1 s 1 ' we Y .g Q Z ln nj 1 Q es 1 1 1 13 - I' ' .e 1It': ll s rr ' 1 ln v' A g . g g A 3 , V . Q li If the young 'lgiger mob . V 1 .. ., , r I 7' 1 nn iv f ll los 1 v gf ' ' y :+ ' f , ,S .. ,. O ar :Wi Ag. ' - ' A g ,E V . ,M 5 . . ' g l , . ' 1 g A . Q PEEK VVE DE E GOOD 5 HE.lN1E am Himrellanrnw Eliterarg W Ghent Qlvap Hear Aifmr FIRST PRIZE Srom Number3 Melrose 797l Hello Hello Lou know w ho thrs ISU Helen3 No Ruth Oh hello Ruth Say wasnt that Engllsh test awful3 Slmply herce and I dldnt know beans about rt lut let s not talk about t That rsnt what I called you up about Dont you thmk rt would be real excrtmg to do somethrng shockmg3 What now 3 Trust you to be thrnklng of the exertmg ll1ll'lgS I thmk that rt would be srmply great rf we glrls could get up a leap vear party The grrls ask the boys go for them ln carrrages send them Howers and take them home Oh Ruth' You genlus Vvhat s the 1dea3 Well say that about slxty glrls w rll go We can get a hall reasonably and rt wouldnt cost each grrl so wery much wrth the ewceptlon of the carnage and two couples can go ln each of those Co on for plty s sake I thunk that the more mysterlous you make an aflalr llke that the more lun there rs IH rt don t you3 lVlyster1ous3 O oh' that sound great' Well It could be a masquerade We would have the grrls take xows that they would not say a smglc word to any boy untrl they unmasked That would be awfully easy to do for dont you see Lou the boys would come up to the glrls before a dance and choose partners Programmes would be rmpossl ble for ro one would know who anyone else was Ewerythmg would be rrotlons We wrll grve the grrls toys that they dont know or dont lrke and pau them off crazy Ruth can t you speak louder5 I can t hear you Must be someone on the lme llstemng There thats better they haxc hung up Now what w as I say1ng3 Oh yes about palrmg them off Xlow l ou cant you thlnk of some rrore outlandish 1deas3 Q , , 0 tu an sa va sa as sn - ' ny 1 . u u U n , . 4. 1 - sv v - a - tt - - Q - - r - N u y 1 - - s v . . .. . . ,, ,. ., . . .. . ,, U . . . . . r ' n y vu u - y - as ,, . . . , f r , . . , . . . . Q - v - vs c ' . tt - y as , . ,. . . . . L - . . . . , ,, , . tt - va u - - , , . , . f 1 . v u , u , Y V . , v , t . . , . . , , , . - - a v . n tt y u va , M . . . H . . . 1 - y y . , 4 . , . . , . . . -v r . , H t . c . No I cant about the masquerade but I could tell that person who rs lrstenrng agarn a few thrngs Oh Ruth' You know that krd brother of Mr Bradley s that he rs always talkrng about3 N es You mean hrs brother rn law Fd3 Yes You know he goes to Macalester Vvell drphtherra has broken out there and hrs home rs so far away that he rs gorng to stay at Bradley s untrl rt rs safe to go back He rs an awfully good looker at least hrs prcture So rf you decrde to haxe the dance please put Ed Hrllsburv down for me All rrght Lou Well that person evrdently wants to use thrs lrne so we had better shut ff And say Ruth' May l take your French thrrd perrod tomorrow 3 Sure Good bye C-ood bye Art Merrrng chuckled to hrmself as he heard the clrck of the recervers He was a very good frrend of both these grrls but that neednt prevent hr playrng a lrttle harmless Joke on them He would wart for further develop ments and then The next mornrng found Ruth busrly acquarntrng her frrends at Central of her plan for the leap year party All appeared very enthusrastrc for the plan and agreed that Mrs Hart would be the rdeal chaperon The news spread lrke wrldfrre through the school and by the end of the week Ruth had the necessary money from all of the grrls She recerved permrssron to haxe the Assembly Hall Frrday after school and after statronrng trust worthy guards at the doors she w as ready for busrness wrth her assocrate hotesses The grrls had before thrs had only a vague rdea of the wonderful plan The first thrng the genrus drd w as to make all swear that not a word of the meetrng would get farther and that they would not back out when full partrculars were known to them The grrls were loyal and the oath w as taken Ruth then told them that she had made out a lrst of boys and that Mrs Hart was gorng to choose at random some boy for each grrl to escort These boys the grrls mrght drslrke or not know but that was to add to the fun Mrs Hart would hnd out rf the boy would accept hrs rnvrtatron The next step was to drxrde srxty grrls rnto the vrolet darsy rose or carnatron classes so that each grrl mrght send whatexer flower rt mrght be for her boy to wear for hrs rdentrfrcatron ln all there w ere about sexenty frxe rrls gorng The remarnrng frfteen were to send any flow er they desrred The reason 1 s s . - - , . . . 1 ' y rs. , . i . .. - ., , , o . , . . .. ,, , 5 , 4. , , , - . .. ., , . , , , . , , , , 1 , U . , D for thus dlvlslon was to be drsclosed later The day of the party the glrls were to recelve the address of thelr company and they were not to try to fmd out who It was Meanwhxle thmgs were progressmg beautlfully for Art Merrmg Ed Hlllsbury had arrlved at Bradlevs and Art having made hls acquaintance put hlm wlse to the plan of the grrls When Ed recexved hrs lnvltatlon from Mrs Hart Art advlsed htm to accept just as he was dolng For this was hrs plan The lnvltatlons read that the dance was to be a fancy costume affalr Wouldnt rt be fun for both of them to dress as g1rls3 They could have therr costumes ldentlcal and though there was a drfference ln helght the general effect would be confuslng The ldea dldnt appeal to Ed however and h sard so Look here Merrlng That s all very well but those girls are trylng to glve us a good tlme and this IS a blame funny way of showlng appreclatlon Dont you see that lf we were glrls at that business there would be a scarclty of boys and the glrls would have to suffer for rt I know sald Art that s where I frgured the fun would come m Ed was game for most stunts but thls one struck hlm as being a llttle too funny He told his slster Nell about rt and she told Lou That nlght Ed took Lou to the Orpheum and comlng home she broached the subject to hlm Wouldnt lt be fun to turn the tables on Art3 she asked I-le seemed to thunk that you would make such a hne glrl why dont you go as an orlental maid I was to have taken you but I wlll take some one else and you wlll take Art Ed was very undeclded He wanted Lou to take htm and yet It would be a good one and would serve Art rxght I-le hnally sald that he would Ruth and Lou were very busy glrls for the next two weeks but when Thursday the twenty nmth arrrved everythmg was complete and the Hlgh School was throbbmg wlth excitement At last nlght came and such a night' The weatherman at least was on the gurls slde for rt was so cold that It necessitated bundling up and thereby made xt stlll more d1fFlCUll for any boy and glrl to dlscover each other s ldentlty Lou slnpped over to Bradley s for a mmute that mghr to see how Ed looked Even out doors she could hear shrxeks of laughter from the kitchen and no wonder There was Ed, trrppmg about the room ln volumxnous white chma sllk bloomers strapped ln at the ankle Just above a palr of whlte satln 1 , . . . 1 . . . . 1 1 H . . ,, . . . . . . . , , . , . . . 1 1 . . . , , -1 . , , x. u - 1 . - - 1 ' 1 , . , . . . . 1 . . ,, as 11 - as 1 1 11 1 1 1 u 11 u 11 - - - - 1 . , . 1 sn 1 - 11 ss . . , 1 - 1 1 - 11 - 1 so 11 - - , . . 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 . . , . . . , 1 1 1 . . , . . . 1 - - ' 1 . , , 1 1 ' 1 sandals A white sash was draped about his waist and fell from a loose knot to his knees A sort of Zouawe Jacket of pink satin trimmed in gold tmsel covered a china silk waist braided in gold Rope upon rope of multi colored beads hung about his neck The brown wig was veiled in the eastern style with a white veil under which was a white satin domino Bracelets Jmgled at every move of his arms which were covered with white silk gloves for Ruth had remembered that no two hands are alike and to be on the safe side had asked each girl to wear either long or short gloves Ed certainly was a fascinat ing figure He had chosen a spray of narcissus for his flower Promptly at eight oclock the carriage came and Ed set out for the Merrmg home Art answered the ring and invited the muffled silent figure to come in speculating all the while as to who it was It had been arranged so that they would be the only couple in the carriage Once inside Ed with a coquettish movement pinned a spray of narcissus on Art s coat Who could she be3 The silence was becoming oppressive Art had shown signs of wanting to talk but they had been promptly discouraged by the unknown They were looked closely at his companion but to no end He thought of a dozen girls that might be she but somehow she was different from all of them And he wasnt the only one who was surmising as to her identity Her costume was so unique that it caused comment wherever she went The first dance after the grand march was Every Little Movement Has a Meaning All Its Own but the boys had found that to be true before the dance Art seeing that his efforts in the Sherlock Holmes lme were futile in desperation asked the mysterious one to go to the Orpheum the coming Saturday After a moments hesitation his invitation was accepted with a nod l-le refused to let a clown have the next dance claiming it himself However it was only for boys wearing pink roses as the dance music was I want to be a Wild Rose Wont you tell me where you live so that I can call for you3 Decidedly no from the emphatic shake of her head Well then wear a spray of narcissus and walt in the Orpheum phar macy I will wear a spray too The fair one put a damty fan up to her veil and laughed internally Blame that veil' Who could she bel' She was a beautiful dancer whoever she was soon at the hall, however, and as they entered the brilliantly light room, Art We couldnt dance thls so please grve me the next he sard as he saw a monk a Spanrard and a dewrl race towards her She assented Not wrshrng to lose a moment of the dance he stood up ready for the vsaltz I m Fallrng rn Love wrth Someone humming rt suggestrvely as they started off That xx as the last dance he had wrth her untrl the eleventh and that was When the Darsres Bloom Confound the luck' Why wasnt hrs flower a darsy3 But they could talk or rather he could There was some consolatron rn the fact that after that dance they were gorng to unmask He would hnd out who she was and vsouldnt haxe to me t her rn any drug store on Saturday afternoon But Fate ww as unkrnd for they were just nrcely seated when Mrs Hart rushed up and told the unknown that someone wanted to see her at the door Wrth a lrttle nod she excused herself and hurrred after Mrs Hart That was the last Art was to see of hrs orrental Mard Mysterrous but he drdnt know that untrl Mrs Hart came back alone and sard that she had gone She made no excuses and gave Art no satrsfactron as to who she was except that she was a newcomer rn Duluth Art was to go home rn Mrs Harts carnage He heaved a heart broken srgh but cheered up when he thought of Saturday afternoon Why hadnt he made rt Frrday' Saturday he w as at the pharmacy at a quarter of two a spray of narcrssus rn hrs button hole a large box of candy under hrs arm and two pasteboards Hello Art where do you thrnk you re gorng3 Art removed hrs eyes from the door wrth a vrsrble effort to greet Ed Hrllsbury who had come up from behrnd Art told Ed that he had mrssed the trme of hrs lrfe by not gorng to the masquerade and proceeded to rhapsodrzt, about the lrttle queen as he extravagantly termed her frankly admrttrng that rt was a c se He even grew sentrmental when he spoke of the narcrssus untrl he saw that Ed also wore a spray What a corncrdence' But Art s eyes were glued to the clock It was now twelve after tvwo and he was too vsorrred about that to thrnk of anythrng else The srlence was broken by Ed who sard laughrngly as he put hrs arm through Art s We ll have to hustle or we ll mrss the hrst part Art looked at hrm rn bewrlderment then put two and two together 1 great lrght' He flushed angrrly See here Ed what does thrs mean3 It means that rt s one over on you that s all Ed replred sweetly and contrnued As long as you have the candy and trckets we mrght as well use them And as they turned to go out he whrstled lm Fallrng rn Love Wrth Someone Dorxorrrv GrBsoN I 2 . , . v V - - .. , - Q 5 9 , U ,. ,, . . . V , . . . .. , . . ,, , . . , . V . . V . - . . ' f e - . . . . , . , . V ' y I I . , . . . . - ' , , . . V 7 - - - .. ,. , . . . . , rn hrs pocket. I-low trme dragged! Two o clock,-frve after,- .. . , . ., , . . , . , , ... ., . . . , . .. ,, - . ' a . , . . . , V 7 . - , . , . ' . , . .. , . . .. ' v' , V I if .. . ., , . .. .. , ., . 9 I O Y 9 , . ,, . .. . . . . . Y! , , , . I tuna Lher Elma Pmfr Por yr As I tumbled off the cannon 1nd to conscrousnen I came I decrded that theee Sophoworee after xll were rather tame Ior Id expected y orse thwn rhwt but then you ltnow hoolts tell How men who ict with p xtreme e en the wrldegt lnernts cxn quell But when 1 Sophomore Qnl I met my fmt decmon hunted I'or ln thr second contest I were prteously woreted A look a blush a SlClCXN1St glance wrth fear I turned quite pale For the female ol the specree IS more de1dly than the mwle I heard a Qtern yorce call my name and found that I w ab cauvht Ihe xorce was Mr Taylor hut I drd not care at all X he concluded wrth the order Go to the A Qemlbly Hall' But when M1 s laylor lectured me I felt my cheel-.b Urow red Ior her rem xrltf were cuttrnff and they mxde me lr mv mv held I could not hear her Qarcasm whrch cut me lrlqe a Hull For the female of the QPSCICQ rs nnore deadly than the male HAROLDF Cori In , 93 L' , i . .I c , L I ,,' ' ' - . -, I . ' f 1 'Q I .' V t 1 1 , ' ' ' 1 ' ' . ' 1 ' , ' . at z r . ' C M , j I 5 ' : M ' 'S . ' . ' ' - 1 M A -. L I C . While thinlxing less of algebra than students really ought, z , ' ' -' , L 1 ' O . . . 5 - 1, 5, f s ' - sc 1' . . 'SC , I. , , .. D . , 7 f 2 x ' ' ' D, . 1 , 2 0 v r 1 ' L 5 , ' ' I L' 2 ' c I , I . -' c . , . Lllurk unit at Hung SECOND Przrzrz STORY School had begun as most schools usually do wrth confusron as a cloak for rdleness Wrth the first month over the ordrnary routrne was on football practrce started and real rnterest was taken rn the school lrfe Thus at least drd school start wrth ack Smrth Wrll Steele and o Snerder The last named because of hrs consrstency of play and hrs popularrty rn hrs umor year had been elected captarn of the football team and was man agrng hrs men lrke a veteran It was hard to choose between ack and Wrll The latter was very brrl lrant at trmes and played a good game all round whrle the former was a con srstent ground garner and could always be relred upon to make hrs yards although hrs speed was somewhat undeveloped They had been frrends durrnrf therr first three years of school and strll felt the same towards each other as far as the rntense rrvaly between them would permrt When a school rs known throughout the country only by the brand of husky football warrrors rt pro duces one vwrll do almost anythrng to represent that school on the grrdrron ack was naturally a warrior The Smrths hrs lrne of Smrths were a Hghtrng race no matter how domestrcated the name may sound He bemg an atrons l-le loved the clash wrth another body the accompanyrng hard knocks the tacklrng the mtense eagerness before the game and the satrsfactron after the vrctory durmg hrs rrde home He reveled rn the delrcrous shower bath as the water trrckled over a sturdy body the healthful hunger of exertron the supper and the sweet sleep at nrght Strange to say he cared lrttle for the flatterrng lrnes rn the newspapers the cheers the slaps on the back the rnrtral or even for the fact that he represented the school l-le loved the frght wh n rt had been started but he was not offensrve and was not drslrked People have always admrred a hero of any krnd and Jack to hrs schoolmates at least was qurte a hero Wrll as has been sard before was a very brrllrant player at trmes and could generally be trusted to hold or get hrs man When he drd get hrs man rt was he alone that accomplished the feat especrally rf some recent crush were lookrng on He was the sort of fellow who was naturally lucky both rn school and on the held He was always the one who happened to g t an open freld before hrm or to have the man carryrng the ball trrp and fall agarnst hrm In school he studred one part of hrs lesson and was called on for that part or else always had a broad shouldered boy or a largely corfel 1 O g ' . . J . , . J S J . 1 . - ' o only son, em-bodied the pent-up spirit of frght that had been dormant for gener- . , e girl rn front of hrm to shreld an open book He was neither serrous nor con srdered selfish and was therefore quite popular with the ever popular farrer sex He was never caught at anythrng shady and was one of those rare mortals who seem to have the theory of A Lincoln concernrng the people refuted and pulverrzed It was a week before the trme when those bugbears of the Hunker the monthly tests came round and also the week preceding the last and biggest game of the season Every athlete was working All wanted a chance to play against that team across the way and all had one great ambrtron to defeat them twrce ln succession and thus establish a record Heretofore each team had won and lost each two years The players strove to outdo each other rn breaking through rn using hands tackling getting the Jump and in trying to outplay their best friends Practrce was harder than any big game they ever mtended to play rn but lt was worth something to beat that other team Each man put all he had mto football Hrs studres were a srde issue He read football between the lines every class room door was a set of goal posts and the break he made for lt at the end of the period was only excelled by that which he made for the dressing room after school ack was such a man but he worked even harder He felt sure of hrs that he would make a star But hrs studies and hrs parents interfered Hrs father was a man who had newer played football and like the rest of the older generation to whom association was the only football rn their boyhood days he characterrzed the present American game as voluntary surcrde French was acks bele nozr and try as he would those irregular verbs stuck to hrm like leprosy He hated French and all rts accompanrments H hated the classroom where rt was admrnrstered and he hated his French teacher for the simple reason that she taught French All the World hates a hater and ack had the unhappy faculty of getting rn wrong and gettmg caught He managed to stay just on the ragged edge of suspensron which cut every time he moved He w as growrng desperate and resolved to get through thrs disagreeable subrect by means honest or other wise He told several friends about hrs resolution on the w ay home from school one day He displayed hrs ponv It was the soul of a pony rn rts brrefness completeness and comprehensrw suggestrveness Will Steel denounced hrm as a cheat and everything contemptr , H . , , . . , 5 . . . Q , J . ' - ' place if he worked, sure that he was the best man for his position, sure, even, v v , . . . . Q . . G e , V . . . . 'A ble A fight started and the boys were separated wrth the usual let me at rm s Thrs desrre was more than genurne on ack s part but rather rnsrncer on Wrll s They went therr ways xowrng vengeance on each other Next day srxth perrod came the French test Wrll resolved to play rt wrth hrs usual luck notwrthstandrng the fact that thrs test meant as much o hrm as rt drd to ack ack on hrs part took the chance of every pony player that of berng caught ack took hrs seat behrnd Grace Greene and rn front of Vvrll Steele pal he thoughtj and almost tremblrng Thrs trme he felt real fear the fear of berng caught He knew the results rf he farled rn hrs exam or rf he farlel to evade the watchful eyes of the teacher at the desk Moreover she had a provokrng way of gettrng up to walk around the room at the rnopportune or opportune moment and lookrng for all the world lrke one of those srgns whrch glares drrectly at you wrth the slogan underneath your credrt rs good He was so frrghtened that he forgot what lrttle he knew and seemed to lose the power to thrnk Now however the teacher had turned to wrrte 'the second questron on he board Instrnct told hrm rt was trme to act He reached rn hrs left hand coat pocket and extracted the paper whrch crackled fearfully He placed rt rn the hollow of hrs left hand Thrs rsnt so bad after all he thought That frrst questron rs easy The questron was merely a short rule He was preparrng to turn over hrs note where the conjugatrons were wrrtten whrch would answer the second questron when the teacher qurckly turned around He pushed the paper rnto hrs pocket wrth a qurck movement that seemed clumsy to hrm whrle he felt hrs heart beat lrke a metronome set at prcsio Hrs fears were ungrounded however and he was qurckly relreved when the rnstructress resumed the wrrtrng Satrsfyrng hrmself that the coast was clear he agarn sought hrs frrend rn need Somethrng had happened' Hrs pony was gone and hrs left hand coat pocket was empty He looked carefully on the floor felt rn hrs other pockets merely as a matter of form and exclarmed Gee' Needless to say he felt manv trmes as badly as the mere utterance of that rnsrgnrhcant and unpoetrc word can convey What was he to do? Surely not say Teacher I have lost my pony He resolved to try copyrng that expedrent of the grade school before the pony comes rnto our lrves He was non plussed but he resolved to do hrs best He shrfted srdeways rn hrs seat and glanced at what Wrll was wrrtrn He was amazed to see a gloatrng smrle on Wrll s countenance as well as a self satrsfred and trrumphant look half genurne and half bravado An arr of confidence often decerves a susprcrous teacher And there on Wrll s desk wrth a convenrent book near at hand to lrp over rt was the mrssrng pony' Now jack was confounded and vexed Here he was unable to tell on Wrll and unable to get hrs pony He turned to the front Trme was flyrng he had only twenty mrnutes left The boy on hrs left had hrs back towards s Y l s . . . . . t . - 1 J , -I u - ' 1 , s -I . . . . , 6 f - - , . ., . ' - , . , . . , . , . s 1 - ' And a voice seemed to add, If you have a pony. , . . - . , . . , V ' . .. .1 ' . . - V . , ' . , , . . . - 3 . . . V gr , - . . f .', . . - Q. v . . Q - . . , - . . . h1m and shaded hls paper wlth hrs right arm rl he gurl on his rxght wrote left handed The only chance left was 1n front and Grace had moved enough to display her paper ID such a manner that ack could see without much effort or chance of bemfr detected H1 prospects brlghter he whlspered hls thanks Grace understood and moved not for she was an ordinary g l wrth her femmme tact and resourcefulness not totally undeveloped The fortunate was just starting to copy when somethlng told hlm to look p The watcher was coming down the alsle lookmg almost strarght at hrm with the same credlt slgn stare He relaxed despalrlngly ln preparatlon to recelve a shock but the volce of the teacher brought hlm to his senses What have you there W1ll3 she asked IH an ordmary but convlctmg tone He followed the popular tendency to turn around There was Wrll hls breathmg lmpercephble his nostrils dnlated hxs eyes starmg and hs complexlon suffused wlth a pecullar feverish red No sound for a moment then a crackling of papers a few steps to the wastebasket and a calm vonce saymg Take zero for your mark The remammg tlme was of a dreamy nature to ack It was a mixture of rapxd wrrtmg thxnkmg so as not to copy word for word apprecratlons for to speak to Wrll elther sympathlzmgly or gloatmgly He drd not even thank Grace m a satlsfactory manner He kept saymg over and over to hxmself I have passed I have passed Never drd the thought of by what means he had passed enter his mmd and lf lt had he would undoubtedly have applled a conscience smother to the effect of what was I to do or anybody else would have done the samc thing He went out to practlce wlth a llght heart and worked harder than eser before Whlle dressmg ln the locker room he heard his name mentloned among those who were to play the team across the way He was happier than any prospectrve brldegroom ahve Wrll had played hrs hlghest card and lost He felt crushed subdued lnsrgnlflcant He was beaten at his own game luck and he could do nothxng more than curse lt proverblally Friday was slgnal work only Numbers became a new and easy language to ack and I dare say he wxshed that he knew hrs French with the facrllty with whlch he remembered that mathematlcal tongue That mght he forced hlmself to slumber peacefully Saturday w as a model one for football crlsp urgmg and electrlc Jack walked to the dressmg room early m the afternoon where a few had arrlved before h1m Some were talklng cheerfully but thlnkmg serlously while slowly dre smg w hlle others were havmg bandages adjusted or some sore spot rubbed The coach came soon after to put a damper on the hugh spmts and to gne them final mstructlons Some sat on the benches and the more lmpatlent stood around . l l , . O D .S . , I , . 1 . . 7 ' I lf y ' .. . ,. . . - . , . . . , - v , I . - , , .. ,, Grace and self-congratulation. He hurried from the classroom, too triumphant . . . . . ' . 9, - ' , , . ,, . . . I . . . h , ' ' Y Y I Fellows he began were going to have a hard game today a darn hard game and I want all of you to go out to Ivm because you can and you know it You ve not been beaten this year neither have they You because you ve fought They because they ve had good luck This IS to be a game of fighters against fortunates and the only way you can vxm is to hgh! fight fight' I-le seemed to snarl and bite off his last three words Ive coached you told you all I know about football I have given you some good plays and showed you how to carry them out You ve prac ticed and worked worked hard Now all that isnt going to do you a bit of good unless you tight If you are men you ought to know how Then he turned to Bob ones Bob get what Ive just said and let it knock that silly idea out of your thick nut that football is play We dont play football we fight it' Under stand3 Bob answered not by a nod but by a glare The coach under stood and knew that he had said enough oe I haxe told you pretty well what I want you to do and I know that you can do it Bust em up on those shifts and play them off their feet Then to ack to use a little less fight and a little more headwork Your fighting overcomes your head and you get aimless ometimes I have taken you out of former games for rushing around as if you were crazy I dont want to have to do that today You know what I want dont you'-' He seemed to coax in that last sentence Now fellows win today for your school and your future Play low get the Jump get mad and get lhzs game' Come on Few words were spoken on the way to the game Every one was thinking in the sullen atmosphere and waiting for a chance to get at em On the field .lack saw the green grass the brown earth that patched the turf in places the blue sky the red sweaters of his team mates and the gaily decked crowds on the side lines but all seemed to combine as a washed over water color into a dull gray mist that floated before his eyes Another moment and the whistle blew The game was on At the kick off the opponents lanky right half gathered in the ball only to be downed after a twenty yard return Then plays were put through right tackle in tearmg succession and though the sturdy ORe1lly met them all singly he was invariably pushed back a few counting inches before his team mates could aid him The delayed pass worked wonders and seemed to worry the school team The first quarter was only a mild beginning and yet both teams worked their hardest The ball lay on the forty yard line when the whistle blew Using a few off tackle plays together with line plunges all ewolvlng from a line shift Sneiders team worked the ball to the enemys two yard hne .. ,. .. . . , . . , , I . . , . . . g . , , . . I . . w D! U Y 1 I ' .. , . , . , . ' .- Y! J ,- .. , . . . . . , , , , , n 1 , ' I A n Q Q l 0 - ..-I Y . , . , . . ., .l .- This is a peculiar thing to say after what I have just said: but you ought . S . . . . , , ,. . ' , 1 n l I , , . . ' ' ' ' ll l U, Q L n U 7 3 . . . , . . Y . . . . , . ' . , . Y. . V . . . . . , , . 1 Y - There wrth a touchdown alrrost rn therr grasp the school team fumbled' There was a lucky bound and the enemys end was sprrntrng down the freld wrth ack and a team mate rn hot pursurt ack dove twrce for a tackle takrng fearful chances of rnjury only to rrse agarn and take up the chase ust as the oppo nent crossed the goal lrne he tackled hrm blrndly armlessly and then lay besrd hrs man sobbrng and mutterrng The goal was krcked and the rnvadrng team had a score of srx to nothmg agarnst them Then the frrst half was over The boys walked grrmly srlent to the dres mg room where they sat lrke blanketed sphrnxes 'lhe coach came rn and told them brrefly that the game was not yet fmrshed that there w as strll time to go out and iight as you never fought before That bunch can be lrcked fellows he concluded and you are the men to do rt Drrve everythrng out of your mrnds except that one brg rdea that you are gorng to wrn Now go out there and grve em therrs' Hrs first words had stuck and these addrtronal commands seemed to make the boys new men After the opponents had punted one of the school players agarn fumbled the ball for the enemy s left end to fall on on the seven yard lrne Three downs succeeded and the ball advanced just three yards through the sturdy Irrshman But luck seemed agarnst Snerder and hrs men for rn sprte of therr gallant playrng the school team was not as fresh at the end of The ball contmued to see saw tantalrzrngly at the beglnnrng of the last quarter and many feared that the school boys had taken therr brace too lat But agarn off tackle plays brought the ball down the field untrl rt rested on the two yard lrne under the shadow of the enemy s goal And agarn the ball was lost thrs trme on downs The ball was krcked out and Black the lrttle quarter seemed pressed rnto the ground so fiercely was he tackled on the twenty seven yard lrne But he got up all rrght and started hrs srgnals Some one sard that there were frfteen seconds left oe Snerder grrmy lrmpmg but strll frghtrng for a vrctory whrspered rn the quarter s ear Play 203 he sard Thrs was Jacks number and the boy knew that he must do or d1e A few yards and he felt an Impact that almost unbalanced hrs mrnd as well as hrs body but he recovered hrmself and kept smashrng ahead hrs rrght arm extended lrke a buffer and hrs knees gorng lrke prstons He advanced wrth the regularrty of a locomotrve He was met by three men on the lrne and the rest of the team obscured hrm from srght He recognrzed no one but kept pushrng on rn the drrectron he had taken He was a verrtable keystone and to move seemed rmpossrble but there was a groanrng sob a downward strain and he placed the ball over the lrne wrth a strength that seemed superhuman A shrrll screech told that the game was ended The goal was yet to be krcked and after the cheerrng had lulled Berlrn drew back wrth the rnten tron of krckrng rt over the crossbar from the arms of the recumbent quarter O . ' A . ' 9 ' J .J f , '- . - ,l - , , . 2 9 ' v . ' ' . S' . ' Y . f ' . . H , ,. .. - ,, .. , Q . . . , . ,, . . g , r . - , . the thrrd quarter as therr rrvals from across the way. , I ' e. , - , , . - J r - . . . . . . , I V V ' .. .. . , . . , . . . - , . - . . , n . . U , I y v , I Y V Y i - It was a drfhcult angle but the end was confident Hardly had the prgskm left hrs toe however when an unlucky gust of wmd blew lt far from the goal post and the contest went down IH hrstory as a s1x to hve uctory for the team across the w ay But we of the world gentle reader whlle we may applaud the vlctory of a player who wms from a sclentlhc opponent by a lucky card know down ln our hearts that we have rn reallty yielded the palm to the loser who played the better game The boys were more than downhearled On the way home lrttle was sald All undressed and dressed wearlly llke condemned crlmmals exchang mg therr prrson clothes for the gallows robe They felt that all was over for them Each was dlsappornted ln himself Therr advlser said nothlng untll they were all ready to go Colncldentally all were ready at the same tlme The coach stood near the doorway and began speakmg Hls words were not lost and there was no need to call for sxlence as he had done a few hours before Fellows he began ln a tone almost melancholy I am proud of you You dld beat that game although the score was agarnst you I knew you would Thls IS my last and best year of coachlng fellows of the school You drd what I told you to you played well I am proud of you and I w ant to say good bye to one and all as far as football IS concerned I-le shook hands wrth all of them gmng to every man what each fancied to be a more frrendly congratulatmg meamng grlp than he had glven the others Hrs pressure on words and hands helped them more than anything else could They were glad to know that he was satlsfled and therefore were satlshed wrth themselves The followrng Monday all went to school to tell and be told how It happened Thelr pralses were sung and yells gnen Every one seemed content to grlnd agam except Will He knew not what to do and hrs agony was mcreased as he heard the followlng when the French teacher was nelther lookmg nor llStCI'llIlg You played a Hne game Saturday lqhank you Grace and so drd you last Thursday You saved my neck and I Want to thank you Dont mentxon It I wont Then quickly Are you goxng to the Senror hop3 Not yet meanmgly Wrll you Oo wlth me3 And the answer There are many thmgs to rmagme rn thrs story VV1lls feelmgs at all tlmes jack s emotlons and so on so here rs another namely Grace s answer Louis ARDOLIN IZ , . Q Q ' ' u v a ' V v 1 n 1 a f . . , - v . , . y u an - u n v 9 - , . V . , v ' , - an - , ' v 1 1 r - s v v v r 1 -f n rv - , . va , . u v - ' an .1 u on - 44 - - as . , . u U - , . u e. . n f D . . .... , , . 1 . , . . , n q y 1 Q - , a , . Ut IWW The mlluence of a good man no matter hon slight hrs Contact mth certam lIlCllWldLlHlS has been IS always notlceable ln 1ts effect upon them Although there may be no apparent results of such an Influence at once the passmg or tlme IS sure to bring them out Especlally IS thls true of younv people lhe exarrple of an uprlght honorable man makes nts mfpress upon the youthful mlnd and as the mmcl grows more mature hls many acts of kmclness are farthfully recalled by the memory and the character of the lnclmclual f whlch such acts are merely the physlcal expression IS almost delhecl Such at least has been our ewpenence ln our relatlonshlp to our beloxed prlnclpal Mr Smxth We came 1nto actual contact wtth h1s llvlng example for only a few months but the remembrance of that example has grown more and more lnto our consclousness untll today the thought of hum and h1s pure unselhsh Irfe IS a moung force ln the regulatlon of our Ines Sllght as was our acqualntance wxth Mr Smlth there IS no member of the class who cloes not honor and rexerence hls name and there IS no member of our class who has not been mfluenced by hxs prlncnples of gentlemanllness and honesty Thus xt IS flttmg that we as the last class that was permltted to knos Mr Smith personally should leawe some token our love for hlm Accordmgly we have sacrlhced our ambltlon to make our bool: the best Zemth that ha ever been publlshed and lard aslde a portlon of the amount Oflglfliilly desxgned for the expenses of thrs publlcatlon as a contrlbutlon to the Smxth Memorlal Fund That thls act has resulted ID a less attractne Zemth than ne could otherwuse have put forth we do not doubt but 1n the esttmatton of the cla s our sacrlhce IS north much more than the additional ornamentatlon of our book , . , , . . D . 1 , o . , . , , , . , . . , , A ' s , , , 5. It would be rmposslble to mentlon IH the brlef space allotted for ths purpose the great number of those to whom we are mclebted for thelr mterest and help rn trying to make this book a success lqherefore rf many who ought rlghtly to have therr names ln thus artrcle are omitted we trust that all wlll understand that lt IS not from any desrre to dlscrlmmate We shall mentron howexer a fevs of those to whom me owe a heavy debt of gratrtude Frrst of all Mrss Wrrght To her we are rndebted for much more than the mere success of this book and words wrrtten here can but feebly express our apprecratron for her never laggrng mterest rn us and our affarrs The memory of her kmdness IS sure of a permanent place ln the hearts of all of us Next we must express our thanks to Mr Young for hrs very materral help both rn the form of adwrce and actual copy for these pages He has been a true frlend of our proyect Mlss Taylor IS responsrble for a great deal of the statrstlcal lnformatron throughout the book She has always been ready to help us rn our work and may be sure of our hearty appreclatron of her servrce pages of thls Zenlth If thanks conveyed rn thrs poor form are capable of paymg hrm he IS well paxd Although we have already expressed our thanks to the typewrltlng department It can do no harm to repeat them here The value of the practical servlce of MISS Patterson Miss Marchel and thelr puprls IS mestrmable To Messrs Phrlllps Schrlllng and Colton we are lndebted for help rn YVl'lllIlg up the athletic sectron and, prrmarrly for so conductrng themselves that there was an athletrc section to wrlte up Mr Phrlllps provided us wrth the frnanclal report of the Athletic ASSOCl3tl0D xwhlle Messrs Colton and Schrllrng gate us the lI1dlNldl13l Wflte ups ln football and basketball To Mr Benson and the ladles ln charge of the Lunchroom we are lndebted for afforcllng us surtable places to hold our fudge partres and spreads MIS Carey has been the greatest factor rn creatrng an mterest ln dravvmg for the Zenrth The serwrce of Mlss Mlldred Prudden and Mr Alexander Mr. Sprague has spent much of his valuable time in perusing the unprinted .S .... '. Macdonald rn hllmg up the empty places has been very valuable We talte thls opportunlty of thanklng them all The three hrms who have handled the materlal for the book have all gone out of thelr way many tlmes to help us rn the dSl3llS of composrtxon M Dwvorshak rn regard to the photographrc work the Duluth Engravmg Company ln the manufacture of the cuts and rn the artlstlc features and last but not least the employees of the O F Collrer Company who have helped us ln manv ways by therr 3dVlCC and suggestrons We owe the hnanclal success of the book to the ready response of the Duluth busmess men to our call for ads and to those who have purchased the Zemth both schoolmates and those m other vs all-is of llfe We can suggest nothrng better by ws ay of thanks to the readers of thls publlcatlon than that they become acqualnted wrth the aclvertlsers herem represented first by a glance It has been the polrcy of some classes 1n the past lf we may be par doned the use of slang to deal ln slams We have trled to ellmmate all real sarcasm and especlally personal sarcasm from this Zemth Where we have been personal ln any way vse have had no hard feelmg for the subyect of our remarks and rf anyone rs offended bv reason of any statements prmted upon these pages we hereby apologlze for our umntentronal rudeness and WISH to express our heartfelt sorrow for our rmpollteness The promotron of good fellowshlp has been our one great arm We have endeavored to show that the Duluth Central l-llgh School rs a bulldmg rn M hlch all of the classes are unltecl and not a mere Uathermg place for four blclcerrng mobs of young humanrty We must leave the reader to Judge of our success rn accompllshmg our ob1ect THE ZENITH BOARD A through these pages, and later by actual personal contact. Owxmg to the fact that each succeedmg band of Freshmen appears to know less about our Hrgh School than the one precedmg lt we have declded to publish thls brief catalogue descrrptlve of our burldrng and rts lnmates The Duluth Central High School IS a large sandstone burldxng YVltl'1 four entrances and a clock tower It IS mhablted by seven drfferent kmds of anrmals -Semors unrors Sophomores Freshmen Members of the Faculty Mrce and anrtors The first four classes quarrel the Faculty wrangles over a way to stop rt the amtors clean out the debrls wrth a basket a harr broom a dustpan and a vacant look on their faces The Mlce eat what IS left The Hlgh School rs run by the Board of Educatron and Mr Romreux Nl Young does the work but doesnt let on so he doesnt count measles whooprng cough etc prevalent among the lower classes A sllght compllcatxon mlth one vrctory causes an rmmedlate swellrn of the upper portron of the cranlum srmllar to mumps called lhrrleenzlrs Vlctory a state peculrar to the class of 1912 Confounded by I3 with vzctmuze Freshman bacterra from Eng fresh mtoxzcaied presumptuous meddle some raw new not knew and man a quantrty not found rn I5 Sophomore from Eng sofl and more Hence softer than the other classes especlally about the head also a type of bacteria slrghtly more advanced than Freshmen Jumor rndehnable-often erroneously confounded wrth unto Semor one who has seen hence an experrenced person , V I ' 1 1. , -I ,J . ' . y , , J . ' . . H . Defeat-fthe feet, opposed to victory. A contagious disease fakin to v - 4- 1 D, A cur. , ' Q A 'L' ' A, . ,, - , , . 'L ,g -D ' ' Q I h v lr . ' -f' I J- Bllllarcl ball an artlcle easlly swallowed by certam members of our number a hlghly lndlgestrble plll of enormous srze colored llke an Easter egg Newer seen tn 207 Braclcett from Eng brac el something to hold up or support a shelf I thus case the meamng should be mverted 1 e the shelf should do the holclxng up From lts earller form lt means a hold up a dayllght out rage perpetrated on xnnocent puplls Boob-a harmless plant found around school growing 1 the ucmxty of Cra I gs and Walls It I5 somewhat related to Frakerberrles NCSbll weed and ever green Red Ruttger An accentuated form lS found ln Holdren moss Drmlung fountam a playthmg the Freshman s substltute for Huot s Cannon from can to pul out and prep on a place to put Freshmen out The ETSI part IS descrlptlve of the results of so doing Ask Hugo not Vlctor but Frelmuth Crawshaw a semi mtoxlcated gentleman who wrote an exceedmgly volumnlous and umntoxlcatecl dry book deslgned to drlve students to hls own con dltxon of lnebrlacy Deane- a corrupted dlmlnutlve of deus a god a cherub a seraph Edward Cameron s nxclcname Mut Mutt abrldgecl form of muitonhead an adjective srgnlfymg that tallow has been substltuted for gray matter m the constructlon of your cramum the pet name of R S P Pecullarlty pronounced prgalarzly accordlng to Prof R0mlCUX a seml Insane mannerlsm typlcal of the French race Pony from Lat pono lo place fnde conceal a domestlc animal very shy and ret1r1ng the truest frlencl of manlund Grlzzly Bear a close appllcatlon best rn the dark resulting from l-llgh School hops and synonymous YVltl'l Rough on Rats ' Assembly Hall from ad Lat to at or rn and the French verb sembler to seem a place which we seem or pretend to go to every day Synonyms xx hxspermg gallery Taylor shop etc Tablets are placed on ex erv seat upon whlch suxtable lnscrlptlons are to be wrltten Outllne from out and lme an englne of torture designed to brmg out the lmes of worry on every pup1l s face It ws as devlsed by D C Sprague MISS Wright and others Chemlstrv Lab fcommonlv supposed to be a place 'where Ch6mlSlTX . 1. . . . ' 'F' : , - C., I . Y v mf s -- . r , -- D . on. . f ' , ' J- V H 'T A . 1- C D ' . l . . - . c , l . . . V 5 3 . V Mutton-head-fsee Mutj. ,f ' -L , ', 3... , 'Ac , D w' . .. . W ' 1' .i 1 ' , ' I' is stuclled but lab accorcllng to Webster means a great ialffer Hence the Chemlstry Lab IS a gentleman who talks excesslvely about Chemlstry and other thmgs See Webster s unabridged D Office Eng of and ICC a place where you get a receptlon as cold as a cucumber from the refrigerator after bemg locked out of class You and not the refrlgerator belng klckecl out l09 the number of a famous cell at Fergus Falls recently afhxed to the door of Mr Brackett s room Phllllps Gk phll love and Eng lzps a lover of llps by metonomy one who loves the female sex ln general unto-an onomatopoetxc Word about as delightful as lt sounds Sweater a garment worn by Mr Sprague whenewer the weather gets below 70 degrees ln 208 PRONOUNCING GAZETEER Burdette Plllsbury accent on the buf Chxck Llttle accent on the poultry Alex Ruttger accent on the red top SCl1llllIlg accent on the chxll De Wltt Sprague accent on the D111 Benson lo g e accent on the bean Romleux accent on the lox able part no accent ln French Ward Brown accent on the war Ed O Brlen accent on the salty part Hugo Frelmuth accent on go and mouth Earl l-larrls accent on the curly and the hair Vlvlenne Kerr accent on Rex ullus Nolte accent on the Jewel and the he CURIOUS AND FAMOUS SPEECHES Who s golng to be the goat3 W VV You go jump ln the lake' R St C Classes pass L Y ef W- xv ' l s ' , . . ' f -D .. -C .qv ., I .-. J . g C J as as as as as x Dot Jones-accent on the period. C n an,- J . 1 . Y .h as as as as as as Now I want everyone to stop whrspermg M T Look rn the drctronary D S Lucren take that gum out of your mouth or youll lose your manhood I Fawst local qurnt W VV The play IS to be gnen by boys hence It -,ull remam a secret Mr I-Ioldren Ladles and Gentlemen C H If there lsnt any room well make some W W Slantern lldes Y Got your spread t1cket3 D7 varretres C S m Czar' R D B UNFAMILIAR QUOTATIONS fWhen the Unexpected Happened Mr Schlllmg Im gomg to gne a test to morrow on hve of the followmg SIX qestlons MISS Taylor Have some gum boys but dont let Mr Young see you CIICNVIDQ It Russel Dice just a mmute old scout Ill tell you the answer to that question when the teacher rsn t loolcmg Ledru Bevrs Darn' Rex St Clarr Clmme a Fatima Mlss Shlelds during a test Im golng out of the room for twenty mmutes Mr Young after a speech rn Chapel I heartily agree wlth Mr and feel myself compelled to add Homer Holdren Never tell the truth when you can get another guy out of trouble George Stillman I hate grrls Robert Brackett Kiss me Swede ChICk Lrttle This IS on me boys Dorothy Jones Nothlng Mr Young Somebody see lf they cant make this drmkmg fountarn douse Mlss Taylor when she comes past Miss Taylor Francrs Dewer I wlsh you would stop making me laugh Harland Stetson Don t bother me I m studying Mr Cmg Ha ha R Powell Ill beat your face rn Elsa Breberman I couldnt thlnk of gorng to the hop Id rather stay home and sew Mrss Taylor You grrls stop talkmg and let LOUIS Aryewm study Swede O Brien Football rs too rough for me Mrss Taylor I ve decrded that you may all talk after the w armng bell ,, . . H .. - - - H tt . , ,- , . - 1. - u ,, . . . . , ,, , . -I . . U - an . , . - . . 4. . , y H 4. - H I-A U - U C- - . J UI, - H 56 JF 56 95 3- 95'- . . ., , . . . . , , 1 . . ,, - 5- Q . , , . . . , . ,, . , . - y v - 1 - U - H H , . - U - - n . . . U y . . ,, v , - . ., . . . , , . lv- H H 1, - 4- - H U . H . , . . . ,, . . ,, . , . ,, . , . . . . - 1, - u - - - as . , . U , . . n . , . . H H . . , . U v - 1- , rt y . - y - 1 H -. ,, . . . . . ,, - V . , . , - .1 - U - .4 y - - n mfhjtttq Sayings Not chestnuts but Wallnuts Mr Sprague Read Vamty Farr Pendennls or Henry Fsmond and wrlte an outlme on xt Wmchester Whlt Do we have to have lt for tomorrow? W W Say who IS this fellow Motlf we ve been talkrng about3 Dltto It says here that Spenser s rhyme scheme was a b a b b c b b c How do you pronounce that vword3 Llkevwlse Wllllam carried on the war untll hls death and for one hundred years afterward Also-Ore rs heated below by heat which ns heated by heat Once again to Mr Benson What s 1n that bottle wlth nothmg m 1t3 Mr Sprague What IS the opposlte of muto mutatum 3 Weary Whtt effo jeffatum VV W When asked to read I cant read to day Mr S Glad you admlt It I always knew lt Mr B When they put bakmg soda ln bxscurts what makes them r1se3 Hugo-X east W W lnterruptrng Yes yeast and bakxng soda have the same proprletles Our loved one alias Wmdy W Readlng from Keats O attlc shape' Mr S What does that mean3 W W Large llke a garret Whlt cRC3dlHg agaln Weaxe the warp and weave the wsoof Mr S What IS the xsoof3 Whlt A nolse a dog makes Mr S Whitney what rs a buttress5 Whlt A female goat W W I was thlnkmg Mr S What an unusual effort' Mr B C-we an example of a saturated solutlon Whlt When a man wlth water on the bram gets delmum tremens he Mr B Get out' and he goes D ones Loquor means to speak Mr Sprague rl hls tendency 19 somewx hat mcreased when an 1 IS s ln stxtuted for the second letter B C to Beany Broun who IS maklng faces Am turn that mu around Wahd Cthreatenmglyl Dont you sav anvthlng alaout Mugs to me 5 0 K J . il . V, ' 4 .-C . D I , . . . . ,h . .-4 U w 7 ' I - . . ni V n I '. lac. . J , . H V C . . -Jvc . 5- . . .l , A . . .T ' , D . K -7 55 55 P6 96 95 56 . 4 , ' ' H ' u - 5:5 56 55 96 -55 - - C ' , ' ' ' D- ', il L ht. 91 4 Y l V ' .A ' J AL V! I Some Ggagebtes How they would hue looked 1n the headlmes ot the mornmv paper Dldnt lxnow Mr X oung w ws near threw splt ball wt Miss lay lor C 1ught copymv by M1 H oung who came rn unexpectedly Lwughed at Holclrens speech Brwcltett captures X1ll'XlI'lS before thev mn escape Pushed Mr Xoungs face mto the clrlnkmg fountaln thought he was fellow student Braclxett trxes to be funny Ledru Beus enters the rxng May Cjtbson flunlcecl ln a test lnrled to use pony ln Sclullmg s room Looks the other x 15 w hxle hllmg ml-:well Powell Fralxer and Co atterrpt to llft plano off the stage Whrt starts to chase Matt Brown Homer Holdren spoke jfamllar jftction Thls IS an easy test C-ood show at the Empress thls week Dustless erasers Ventllated rooms Nlce young fellow Entertwmmg speaker I hue a bloody nose mu I be eXcuseCl3 Do that agam and you go out Hard luck I cut out smolung Entertamment by tlunto Miss laylor Im suck Y ou are the best player on the team Please excuse Arthur Hutchlngs absence He w as rll vesterday ewenmg Lxterary SOClSly Free at X M C A I forgot my excuse Ill brlnv lt tomorrow Now I lcrow xou can do thxs you re brlght enough There are a few Zenlth sllps left Y ou mnt bluff thxs course rn publlc spealung O c . C ra - v - - - e- H . c c 1 . c ' . . . - . ,, c n 1 . , . , . . 1 M c . c . 1 4 V r ,- , , . . . . . c -m ' El vs - vs - V 1- s. - 1- , . . . , , ,, . . . ,, '. Nc 7 l . . . . ,, , , , . . . . - n H 95 55- 515 all 'Y' 315 I 9 . - n - n as - H A n . . ,, c . -v c ' ' - , 1 . . - n H - an - as - V - - - as , .. . 1 an - v V - n c . c . .. ' . - - -Q ,f H , .... - - - vs D . , D . I V ' 1 ' - n A , . 1 , H .D . - - an 1 . , , , . . . ,, c e - . 1 'hr Mrahuatra nw, Mary Anderson Ward Brown Sclentlfic Course SClCI'llll:lC Qourse C-lrls Basket ball 12 ootball I2 Baseball ass Hockey ll a d Hockey I2 Plfth Honor Pupll Semor Play Zemth Board ll a cl I2 Athletxc Assoclatlon Llllle Arkkola Smentlnc Course Schlllerbund Muslcal Society Choxr 61? le lil'-.!!r c1..+f1'l Xsf xf' ' ' l ' . F ' f '11, . . Cl M ' l I '13, A. . l . , n , . . . . . . , h '- ' ' . 'l0. , - , ,n '11. ' ' l - , ball' . 5 . Cl A 1 , ' .- B li - ' , 1 C1 112. Frances Freda Bartholemev English Course Sclentrnc Course Muslcal Somew Muslcal Soclety H d C t ouar an Helen Benson SCICHIIHC Course Lann Course Athletrc Assoclatxon Baby ln Semor Play MUS1 D I C cal S t Ch0lY oug as oe Due y Screntlfic Course Geofgena Befglold Athletlc Assocxatxon German Sc1ent1F1c Course N C h P111 th 5 1 09 afhan HH loma lan ocley Sc1ent1f1c Course Ledfu Bevls Athletrc Assocratlon Forum SCICHUHC Course Z cl 0 A hl Ailgggahgsar 9 t en Leslle Cromwell Latln Sclentxflc Course Wllllam Bmgham Athletlc ASSOClHtlOH Commerclal Course Athletlc Assoclatlon Olm Cuffle Englxsh Course Torfm Blofge Athletlc Assoclatlon Basket Smentrnc Course I2 Football I2 ass Second Team Basketball I2 I0 1 C1355 1211511121 ball I2 A1111e11C Seilgnlfffarms ,O an Assoclahon Wlnneld Davls Gertrude Bradt Scxentlhc Course Speclal Course Athlehc As oc1at1on A B C1 Ru sel Drce n1lg?1g1,5EnC0uy5e Screntlflc Course Mus1cal Socrety Honor Roll Athletrc ASSOCIB tron Enghsh Course May Dorland Musical SOClEly Choxr Phllo German Sclentlhc Course mathlan Soclety O9 Schnllerbund Third Honor Puptl Dorothy Glbson Muslcal SOCICIY Ph1lomath1an English Course Soclety 09 Ralph Dunnmg l..at1n Sclentlhc Course Athletlc Assoclatxon Anna Ericson Sclentlhc Course Eddie Erickson Manual Trammg Course Athletlc Assoclatlon Mlldred Evsmlth Latin Course Muslcal Soc1ety Constance Falstad l..at1n Course Gertrude Flmt Berenlce Fowler Engllsh Course Muslcal Soclety Gertrude Fredm Latm Sclentlflc Course ASSlSt3Ht Editor of Zemth IZ emth Board I0 a d I Semor Play Chaxrwoman of Auctlon Commlttee Musical So clety Phllomathlan Socxety 09 Ch0lr Class Prophet May Glbson Latm Course Second Honor Pupil Musical Soclety Zemth Board Phxlomathlan SOC1Cty O9 Cholr Olga Gjerdahl German Sclentlflc Course Anna Goodman Engllsh Course Bernard Hagberg Manual Tralmng Course Athletic Assoclatlon Luella Hake Engllsh Course Muslcal SOCICIY Chou' Phllo mathlan SOCICYY 09 Musical Society Phllomathxan Henry Halenbeck Soclety 09 German Sclentlhc Course ohn Fredm Honor Roll Secretary Schlller Sclentlhc Course bund Athlellc Assoclatlon Treasurer of Schxllerbund Ath Gaylord Halverson leuc Assoclauon German Sclentlhc Course Hugo Frelmuth Interclass Declatmer I2 Ath German Course letxc ASSOCIB lon Class Hockey ll and Irene Hargreaves Athletic Assoclatxon Zemth Speclal Course Board I2 Phllomathlan Socxety 09 Rudolph Frelmuth German Sclentlhc Course CaEr:5lihH8gIll:Se Sergeant at arms I2 Athletlc Asslstant Manager of Zenith Assoclatlon Class Debating Team I l Ath Mlldred George letlc ASSOCIHIIOH v . . . , . - . , I . .. . , - . Z ' ' n ' ll . . . - . . . I . , - ' . . . ' . ' ' . ' '12, , , . . . , . 1 . 1 l , . - . I U Commercial Course. - -' . . 4 .I ' I 5 n - . . . . . . ' Y . Q J . , ' . - I . u . ' I . , . , u 1 . . .. 1 I. - ' 'l2. . . . . . , . , . , . . . I ' . 1 Y . 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Myrtle lVlcKenn1tt Engllsh Course Beatrlce Hughes Phllomathlan Soclety Muslcal Engllsh Course SOCICIY Athletlc ASSOCIHIIOD Orchestra Andrew ohnson Meflta Mallet Eng1lS1-1 Q-oourse Fngllsh Course Fourth Honor Pupll Wallace Robert Mars Cup Orator IZ Class Debat Selentlfle Course lng T am Il Athletlc Asso ass Presldent 11 and clatlon Interclass Qrator I2 President of 1911 In 08 Pres, Dorothy ones dent of Athletlc ASSOCXGIIOD ll Latm Course a d I2 Captaln of Football Muslcal SOCICIY Pllomathlan Team I2 I'00IbaII Team I0 Society QQ II Manager of Senlor Play Basket ball Second Team Class Basket hall I0 Schlllerbund and I2 Zenlth Board I2 Fanny Karon German SCICDIIFIC Course Vlvlenne Kerr Lois Marvin Latm Course Latln Qourse ass Secretary 10 11 a Phllomathlan Soclety 09 Honor IZ Zenlth Board I2 Chalr Roll uoman of Senlor Dance Com Cscar Melander mlttee German Sclentlflc Course Schlllerbund Athletlc Assocm Cu Declalmef I I 561110 ,On Play Honor Roll Athletlc Blanche Mrchael Agsocrarrorr Engllsh Course Edu ard O Brlen Semor Plwy Mu rcal Soclety Speclal Course Chou' ootball II a d I2 tage Adelarde Mlller Englrsh Course 09 Yge Ilireigilenlzofzlglllg Board eant IZ Athletxc ASSOCIHIIOD Manager of Semor Play Class Debatlng Team I I Athletlc Ildltor of Zemtll Class Ser I 2 Plwllomatlnan Socxety 09 Alice Olsen C halrwoman of Semor Farewell German Sclentlflc C ourse Qommrttee Schrllerbund Musrcal Soclety L-llly MOC El le Olsen Larm Course German SCISHIIEC Course Zerrrrh Board I I and I2 Glfls Schlllerbund Muslcal Soclety Basket ball Team I2 Class Gustaf Olson Team I0 and I2 Captain I2 Manual Tralnmg Course Musical Society R Ol O oy s n Lllgan Mona?-ghgn Sclentlflc Course Carolyn Moore Team I2 Athlelrc ASSOCIBIIOH Latm Course Hazel O Nell! Phllomathlan Soclety 09 Latin Scxentrflc Course Esther Mork First Honor Pupil German Sclentlnc Course Martha Gstby Plnlomathlan SOCICIY 09 Cholr Commerclal Course Musxcal Socrety Musical Society Hafel Mgrlerud Allce Pastoret L at1nM OUESC English Course muse um 'Son Arthur Peterson German Screntrfic Course Commercial Course Honor Roll Secretary of Zemin A PI k Board IZ Zemth Board I0 glgesl hulgfs y and I I Musical SOCICIY Schll ng ls Ourse lerbund Roger Pom ell Latm Sclentlfic Course lidgljglilshlxleztlixleder Athletlc ASSOCIHIIOD Business Musical Soma Manager f Lenlth Zenltlw I N I y oard I 0 and Senior I U Finn Zoeurse Play Class Debatlng Team Edltor Zemtlm I2 Edltor of lo Class SCCIIOH Il Zemth Board Mlldred Prudden IO Debalmg Team I2 Class Latin Screntlflc Course Debatmg lewm I0 VI allace Artlst of Zemth I2 Ioll Zen U ' l . , . . . - P - If Q , . . a V Q . C . S. . . ' . F ' n ' . S 9 ' Y . ' I - I I I ' I nu . , . . , , I o g . . , S. 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V 4 1 ' 1th Board 09 Senior Play tlon Muslcal Society Cholr George Stillman Erma Rakvwsky Latm Sclentlflc Qourse German Sclentlhc Course Vice Presldent of Orchestra Vlce President of Schrllerbund Anoma Phllomathran Socxety Amy Rose German Sclentlhc Course Anonla ll Alexander Ruttger Latln Sclentlfic Course Athletic ASSOCl3llOU Re St Clarr Screntlhc Course C ass Treasurer I0 ll a d I2 Football I2 Basket ball I2 Class Basket ball I0 ll a d I2 Captaln ll Zemth Board I2 Athletlc Assocla tlon Ely Salyards Latm Course Athletic Assoclatxon Mabel Sanders Latm Course Phllomathlan Soclety 09 Esther Segerman Commerclal Course Phllomathlan Socxety 09 Mlldred Sherwood Latin Course Muslcal Socrety Cholr Phllo mathran Soclety 09 Katharme Smlth Engllsh Course Glrls Class Basket ball Team I0 Mortlmer Stanford Class Hockey I2 Orchestra Athletlc Assoclatxon Harland Stetson Manual Tralnmg Course Treasurer of Athletlc Assocla Chalrman of Auctron COmmlf tee Basket ball I2 Athletl Assocratlon Chairman of Semor Farewell Class Hockey I2 Class Basket ball I2 fekla Swanson Latm Course Esley Tldball Manual Tralmng Course Athletrc ASSOCl3ll0n Lois Trott Latm Course Musical Socrety Helen Upham Latm Course Glrls Basketball I2 MUSlC3l ames Vemer Manual Trammg Course Athletic Assoclatxon Presldent of Orchestra Edward Vogt Manual Tramrng Course Athletrc Assoclatlon Fred Weinberg Sclentlflc Course Debatmg Team Il and I2 Class Debatmg Team I0 mth Board 09 Vice President of Forum II Eumce Wlllner Latln Course Muslcal Soclety Lam renee Wyly Manual Tralmng Course Debatmg Team II and I2 Athletrc Assocratxon Lucxen Young Engllsh Course Sergeant at arms l l Athletic Assoclatlon 9 ' ' ' - X n ' . ' 1 5- ' - ' l ' ' . ' s '09. ' - ' , . . ic . ' . ' . l ' , ' n 5 I - n N ' v l I n 1 . . , . , . H ' f Y. Society. Philomathian Society I - ' '09. . J' ' ' . . Q . . . , . ' ' 9 . 1 . , , , , ' . ' . , . . I . , . ' , , Y ' 9 . , v Q . Ze- . . s Q 1 Y . . . .y l - . O I ' 9 , . . Q ' I 7 Y .,r I . I 1 . ' , , n s n 1 . , , I w Abrams Adolphson C-eorge Altman BCSSIB Anderson Agnes Anderson C-eodfrey Andrews Wlnlfred Ardouln Louls Arneson Laura Barllre Irma Balllle Maryorre Bawden Richard Beatty Tom Berg Clara Berg Emma Berg Simon Bergevm Wanda Bergstrom Ray Bergum Arne Berkson Ida Bevrer Sylvia Breberman Elsa Bodey Marlon Bogan Ralph Boyle Mary Bray Mamle Brooke Truman Brophy John Brow er BCSSIC Buckley Rose Burnsrde Clayton Butchart Ellls Brand Ethel Cameron Wallace Campbell Bruce Caulkms Harold Qtunivr JUNIORS Clark Mar aret Clark Velna Cohen esse Cook Nathan Cook Norman C ooper lsabel Cossle Myrtle Crassweller Mark Crowley Dolly Cullum Richard Currle ean Currrer Ella Curtls Edrth CUftlS LOIS Dahl Esther Dahlen Lrllee Davldson Olxve Dever Francls De Yorlck osephlne Dodge Lucren Douglas Ruth Dow Lawrence Duclett Srgurd Du Moe oseph Dunn Roderrck Durham Kenneth Ehlenbach ulla Elder Wxlllam Ellmgsen Wrllre Ellis Sam Emmons Thomas Faust Charles Fee Allce Ferguson Epple Flder Clara Freldman Esther Flaaten Ruby Fort es Gertrude Forbes Hazel Forrester Ella Fraker Walter Frestedt Edlth Friedman lrene Cnddmgs Leland Clddmgs Ray Giles ean Clllpln Margaret Cnngold Sadre Cxlover Albert Csoermg Ernest C-oldsmrth XVlDUlffCd Crettum lrvlng C-ross Alma Crude Louis Gustafson lVlar1e l-lalenbeck Phrl Harker Mabel l-larrls Kenneth l-larrlson Vrrglma Hartz Lester l-lauslalb ean Hector Rena Hxllyer ohn HOpklHS Wxnnlfred How de Astrrd Huber Elsre Huber Vrolet l-lutchm s Arthur Ingalls Maman Jacobson Ray nr f IOC , 3 ' , , . , . 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I I Osman Arthur Tower Wlnnrfred enlcs Anna erommus Charles ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson Henry Mabel Srgne Swava Walter ohnston Stanley Kent Hazel Kerns ohn Klatzky Esther lxlem Mae Kolstad George Kraft Eleanore Krantz Clemens Krause Homer Larsen Verme Laslcey Ltlllan La Molgnan Arthur Levme lrma Levy Llllran Lmdalh Olga Low Mrldred Lowry Raymond McClaran Melvllle McClenaghan Grace McCuen Gertrude Macdonald Gordon McDonald Marguerite McDunnough Nora Maclntyre Maud MCIXCHZIC Lee McLean Margaret McLean Thorton McNally Earl Mcrl-ague Olive Macaulay Isabella MacLeod George MacM1llan Marjorle Mahan George Mars Florence Marshall Jean Martm George Marvm Clrfford Mason Marlon Mealcrn Dorothy Melander Rhernhold Merrrt Edna Merrxtt Merrrll Mules Harold Mrller Bertha Mrller Mildred Mllne Marjorle Mrtchell Ruby Monaghan lmelda Mooney Allce Morterud Evelyn Mullen Luclus Neff Florence Nelmeyer Mabel Nelson Matllda Nesbitt Wrlllam Newell Merna Nrclcelson Florence OBrien Elwood Ogrlvte Amy OGorman Loretta Olsen Esther Olsen Otto Owen ames Patterson Loulse Paulson Slgne Peclc Marjorre Peterson Florence Phelps Doris Plerce Dorothy Plllsbury Burdette Pond Harold Prudden Weston Pugh Ollve Reynolds Allce Reynolds Nena Rrsattr Sylvra Rrstan Esther Rudd Esther Sahlberg lohn Sargent Rhoble Saxme Sadre Saylor VIVIHH Schaeffer Margaret Schlamann Vera Seeley Gertrude Segum Celestla Seymour Dorothy Shogran Vlolet Srbbald Francis Slckklnen Charles Slddall Vrolet Signer Edward Snmon Mary Sleeper Walter Smrth Elfva Solomon Mlflam Swanekamp Fred Stark ohn Stanffracher Pauline Stephens Ethel Stoltz Alvern Strong Dorothy Sulceforth Howard Swendby Margaret Thomas Morris Thompson Cecllla Thompson Earl Fl ownsend Eleanor Tschrrgl Lllllan Van Vlret Fred Vrvlan Edgar Vrvlan Edna VIVIBH George Walllne Wxllnam Wasgatt Arthur Wachtel Dorothv Waterhouse essle Wall Whitney Wetzler Alice Whlpple Eumce Whlpple Florence Wleberg Vlctor Wrlson George Wlersch Charles White Louis Worcester Olrver Wolfrom Clara Vvyly Ruby Zlmmerman Walter Zuger Helen .I 1 A I ' J . 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' , Acker l-racle Alford Helen Allan Ruth Almqulst Leah Altman Phillip Anderson Aldor Anderson Alice Anglln Geraldine Armstrong Harold Bachand Rachel Baker Clifford Barrows Kenneth Benda Berg Lsther Bergqulst Harold Bergstrom Grace Beresford Margaret Besschenbossel Arthur Besnah Mar aret Bleberman Luclle Blelle Charles Black Dorothy Blanche Grace Blanche Margaret Blakeney Horace Boldt Laura Bondy Rosalind Booth Tess Boss Agnes Bowman Leslie Boyle Nora Bradley Harold Brandt Myrtle Brenton George Broadbrldge essle Brocklehurst ames Bromund Roland Bronson Vera Brom n Brown Brom n Broun Bron n Burgess Burrell Alison Dan Elsie Esther l lncoln Clrlvle Martha Y I 7 ' 1 I 9 v I ! U , Y ' f ' ' s 1 4 4 o I v . V , , I I ' . ! I C V 9 . V U F 9 , joe , , O 9 l O . , . U V , Y s g s Q ' ' 1 ' ' . . , . I V I ! , Culkin, William Gibson, William U . V 5 . . . ' - ' I A ' .I 7 ' 3 . , . g , ' , ! 7 1 , U V I Y ' 4 1 . ' - ' K , , ' I , ' S. , ' SOPHOMORES Bush Gladys Butchart Everett Cameron Edw ard Campbell Frederic Capen William Carlson Hilda C arlson Martin Catherall Ralph Cheadle Florence Clark Ellzabeth A C lark Douglas Clark Elizabeth Clouse Mabel Collatz Ferdinand C ook George Cooper Myra C orson Hicks Coulter Mabel Cox Bertha Craig Margaret Craig William Crulkshank Agnes C urrle Virginia Curtis Hazel Dahlman Ellen Davis Bruce Davis Millet Denfelcl Gilbert Dlnham Lillian Doble Lillian Donauer Max Dom Gladys Drver Helen Duby Gladys Dunlap Arthur Edmlnson Theresa Edelson Able Ellis Blanche Elston Marie Engstrom Minnie Erickson George Erickson Hlldur Ex ans Frank Ex an Mildred Everett Charles Ex smlth Ruth Fesler Rachel Fesler Ruth Feyllng Angela Fisher Ruth Fltspatrlck Roy Flelshmwnn Marlon Fleury Ted Fllnn Paul Flotten lngebrlght Folger Mabel Forks Roklt Forsberg Allen Forsyth Beatrice Frelmuth Rebecca French Helen French Mlgnonne Friedman Arthur Gerlack Florence Gibson Elizabeth Gibson Ethel Gilmour Able Goet7 Earl Goldberg Frieda Gooding Marlon Gonska Albert Gorman Edna Gorman Ruby Gotkln Lena Grandy Fred Grant Grace Grochoxwsky Mildred Grover Irving Gulnn Marv Gunderson Olive Ha er Edst ard Hagland llllle Hammel Rachel Hammerback Verner Hansen Fsther Hanson Hattie Hanson Mabel Hanson Rowena Hay Chfford Helam Arthur Helmer Amy Hessey Frances Hessmer Edlth Hodgdon Katherme Holahan Ahce Holdren Homer Proudloclc Charlotte Hoover Walter Hovland Tillie Honlgmann Carl Hopkms Dorothy Hoyt Margaret Hultqulst Carl Hunter Douglas acobsen Chrrstme ensen Ellda ensen Lena ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson Conrad Doris Esther Evert George E Harold Susan McCawley Wrnnfred McCormack Pearl McCrea Ivy McDonald Dorothy McDonald oseph McDonald Mane MacDonald Norma McGh1e Lourse MacGregor Donalda McHugh Ethel McKay Douglas McKenz1e Gertrude McLean Mary McLeod Chester McNally Leo McManus Albert Macasklll Mma Macaulay George Macdonald Duncan Macdonald Sarah Mallet Dons Mattson Wllll8m Manson Drusllla Maxwell Marlon Mendenhall Marlon Ohman Older Olsen Olson Olson Olson Olson Elbert Pearl Pau Albert Car Mable Grace ohnston ennle Karon Anna Karon Edmth Kempton Seward Keown ldalme Kerr Maude Kleserlmg Mathew Kmg Beatrice Kolhng Ruth Kraemer Charles Kugler Ralph Larbach Harold Larson Chauncey Lawrenz Walter Le Tourneau Evelyn LCXAIS Howard Lewls Louxse Lounsberry Esther Luxon Ruth McCabe John McCarthy Leonard Meyer Hazel Mlddlecoff Dolly Mlller Abe Miller Beatrlce Mlller Edson Mrller Marretta Molr Hazel Moore Morey Moritz Nelson Nelson Nelson Nesbltt lrvmg Georgla Wrllram Helmer May Walter Henry Nlckelson Wllllam Nyburg Alyce O Brlen Paul O Brlen Ruth O Donnell Charles ODonnell Phyllls OGorman Samuel Palmqurst Gertrude Parsons Harry Pastoret Susan Patterson Ellzabeth Patterson Norma Patton Dorothy Pearson Agnes PCdflZClll Vergll Pelto Edward Perry Elsie Peterson Arthur Peter on Ellzabeth PhIlllpS Estelle Plaunt May Plutmslcy Frances Poterek osephme Pugh Warren ulgley Harold Qulgley Patrence Reyner Marjorle Rrbenaclr Dorothy Rlcle George Rlsattr Alfred Robert Lester Robert Byron Roberts Ellsworth Rosborough Gerald Ross Adelalde Ross Russell Rowe Dorothy Ruden Ernest Rutherford Margeret Ryan Dolores Salter Margaret Sandstedt Frank Saxme Alice Schlller Fred Schleunes Clara , .. . , . . , . 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Scrlven Edward Shaplro Abe Sherwood Seymour Shlelds ohn Slbbald May Slnclalr V lola Sloberg Carl Smallwood ames Smlth Dorothy Smlth Grace Smlth Wllllam Smlthles Harold Stafford Florence Stark ames Stavrun Arthur Stenberg Ruth Stevens Percy Stoker Harry Stone Elmer Sulllvan George Sutherland Agnes Swanstrom Eddle Szymaleokl Raymond Tarbel Park Aaberg Inga Abel Janette Abraham Rae Abramson Mary Albert on Laura Allen Stanley Alllson George Altman George Altman Louls Altman Mary Anderson Anderson Anderson Anderson Anderson Anderson Anderson Anderson Appleby Applebv Arthur Emlle Florence Guy Meta Raymond Ruth Sophle Edna Hazel Taylor Ruth Thomas Cedrlc Thompson Dorothy Thorsternson Martha Thurston Blanche Flsher Es her Todd Marlon Tower Laura Tower Laura Trewartha Loulse Troyer Bunler Tufty Harold Tyrll Penelope Vlncent GTHZIH Vlncent Vlrgll VIVIHH Ollver Vroman Grace Wagner ohn Walker Robert Wall Helen Walsh Eva Watklrs Elmer Watson Geraldlne Watts Gertrude FRESHMEN Armstrong Albert Aske MBTIOH Babcock Grace Baker ames Balmer ohn Barnard Katherlne Barncard Nlna Barrows Lyman Bartholdl Lee Bates Fred Bauers Albert Becotte ohn Beerhalter Clalr Beers George Bennett Ernestlne Benson Agnes Berg Mars IH Bergqulst Ames Berne Ruth Bernt Hans Webb Florence Webb Ruth Welnllerg Fanny Wesslnger Esther Westerburg Thure Westholler Frldolf Wheelock Gladys WhltCSldC Charles Wleland Harold Wlllcutts Marlon Wlllesen Myra Wllllams ullen Wllllamson Louls Wllson Thomas Wlnshlp Wllllam Wlnton Knox Wlnchell Hazel Wonderly Ha7el Wonderly Gladys Wood Ellzabeth Young Anna Young Ethel Zahl Dagny Zeldel Sam Berrldge Harold Bergham Sam Blrmlngham Mary Bjorkman Leonard Blalr Bertha Bondy Mlldred Bondy Mlflam Boyd Wllfred Brandt Hllda Brennan Loulse Brlndamour Carrle Broman Ida Broms Anna Brown essle Brown Henry Brown Matthew Brown Mlhnle Browa Ralph Brower Verne Brunner julla 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1J 1 1 1 1 ' . . 1. . 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Q -1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , '1 1 1 1 1 1 1,1 1 1 1 1 1 1 'J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I ,1 1 1 Burnside Hazel Byce Grace Cannoa Hester Carlson Frances Chrrstensen Marne Chrlstopher Alma Chrrstopher Nellre Chrlstopher Carl Chubbuck Elma Clark Charlle Cleary Mary Clrfford Byron Close Dorothy Coe Harold Cohn loly Cole Ewa Cole Florence Cole Thomas Collrns Homer Cook Hamrlton Cooper Proctor George Coson Leslie Cox Frank Cox Vera Crarg Horace Crosby Dorothy Currier Fred Dahesten Walter Damelson Dorothy Deetz l eona Denfeld Fred Derry Ethan Dersnah Eva Desjarden Clarence Dever Margaret De Waard Sretze Drbell Merle Dlclc Irene Drama Martha Draper Warren Drurr Rachel Duncan Russell Dunning Charlotte Ebelrng Edward Eckholm Esther Edwards Helen Egner Earl Elder Luclle Fllmgson Leroy Emerson Edward Erickson Arnold Errekson Car Errckson Betty Eva Vrctor Evsmrth Inez Falstad Edwm Farrell Frank Ferguson Greta Frnal Gertrude Flndley Margaret Fischer Manvrlle Ford Petronel Forsell Gustave Forsyth Ross Frank Elder Frermuth Edna Frrck Louise Frrtzen ohn Fugelsoe Esther Gallagher Agnes Gates Everett Glngold Benjamln Goermg Ray Golden Sam Gomberg Esther Granqurst Helge Gray Rhoda Gronseth Esther Gujer Elton Gunderson Robert Gustafson Charles Haakons Hugo Hagluerg ullan Haggart Laura Hagstrom Hulcla l-lalvorsen Wrlhelmlna Hardy Forest Hare Mar aret Hamson Wrllram Harvey Barbara Hase Fred l-lawerty Bernice Hegardt Gertrude Hegardt Gordon Hegland Clarence Hem Harold Helmbach Bercra l-lermhach Marela Heller Ethel Helmer Ellzabeth Henneberry Edward Herrel Sumner Henderson anet Hlcken Allce Hlll lmby Hoar Esther Hoff Clark Hokanson Harry Hollen Elsre Holmes Rose Hoopes Townsend Hovde Valborg Huber George Hultqurst Myrtle Hunt Pearl Huttle ohn Huttle oseph Ingalls Kathryn ackson George ensen George ensen Srdney ensen Sybrl entofl ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson ohnson Edu ln Clarence Edna Edward Harold Irene Margaret Robert ohnston Anna ohnston Mary Joseph Harry Kalmback Gordon Keuhn Reuben Kelly Arthur Kelso Marjorle Keow n Percy . 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J , , - .l J , . . ,l . . , , . , ,l . . , , . r 3 , , , , . . , . . , 9 V 9 Y Q lxer Robert lxeyes lrene Keyes lxatherme lxmg Edna Klatslty Rose Knudson Rolland lkoselack Frank lxrelurtz Pearl Krlstensen Mrlton lxrrg Bermce Landgren Arthur Larson Ruth Laskey Stanley Lawson Floyd Le Rrcheux Eugenia Le Vasseur Apolon Lelbovrtz Sarah Lennmg ulla Levy Mandel Lleberman Sadle McRae Margaret McDonald Agnes MacDonald Esther Macfarlane Agnes Mackay Henrrette Mad on Carl Maggnu son Xesa Markoxsltz Hattre Mapp Elsle Marrotta Mary Mason lrank Mason Venrta Mauseau Walter Melander Carl Merrrtt Anna Mrchaud Lharles Mnddlecoff Ewell Mlller Gertrude Mltchell Mrldred Mrtchell Wrldey Xloye ll rances xlusbaum Lazar Xlylen Anna O Brren Archle O Brren ean Olln Henry Olsen Agnes Olsen Alma Olsen Anna Olson Edum Olson Myrtle Olson Srgne Olson MClNlH O Nelll Richard Osaorne Helen Osman Ralph Owens Floyd Page Davrd Palmer Flora Paxcoe Percy ' ,-, , 1 s, ' , , ' 1 ' , ' ' , A , . ,, , . . , , . , S , . . ' ' , s . 7 t , 7 4 ,4 , , 'A 9 I 1 V . ' l ' T ' . , . . ' y , ! I I 9 U t U O ! . . y . ' r X Y 1 ! ' 5 . U . , . . , . ' Liesl-ce, Emma Mobley, Irman Patterson, Gilbert . , . . , x ' A . ' . 1 ' s 1 Y ' , , . . . y , v . . . ' I .9 . . .7 V V. i D I V I ' . , Q ' , . , , ' 4. . I , , s V V . 9 , , ' ' . J 1 l 1 I 9 ! ' I . V U D V. I Y I V Y 9 ' '! . , J ' . Llnder Mrrlam Lrtman Morrrs Lodgard Olga Loken Olga Lonegren Gerald Luepka Raymond Lynam ohn Lynch Florence Lynch Leo McCabe Ben McCabe Dssrght McCabe Lester McCarthy Lllllan McCarthy Ralph McDerm1d Margaret MCGIECII Stephen McGonagle Mary McKay Dorothy Mclieen Harry Mclfennett Cllflord Maclfenzle Archre MacLeod Rdoerrclt Mclennan Marlon Mcpharl John McOuade Morton McRae Jessre Moerlce Leo Moore Moore Moore Moore Moore Douglas Law rence Rhoda Vrrgmla Warren Morterud Wlnnlfred Mueller Fred Murray Marlon Mushynslu Edmond Myron Ronald Naslund Leonard Neff Franlclm Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Nelson Aagot Ernest Esther Lawrence Mable Mamle Myrtle Reuben Roger Neun Henry New borg Valborg Norberg ohn Nlorslu Mamre Pearson Ernest Persgard Ruth Peterson Chauncey Peterson Elmer Peterson Marshall Peterson Rueben Pettlbone George Pfarr Robert Phlllrps Chester Pretlla Fred Plutmsky Anthony Plutnlslcy Stella Poplcrn Samuel urgley Howard Ramstadt lrlllan Rathburn George Reed Reginald Rrchards Inez Rrchards ohn Rrchardson Allen Rrsattl ames Rlttel Blanche Robertson Grace Romxeuwc Charles Robmson Florence Rodney Wallace Rudd Valborg Rudmrtzky Esther Rundbeck Ida Russell Clmton Russell Walter Sahlberg Lllllan Sahlberg Spencer Salnovltz Abe Salyards Myra Salterstrom Amy Saxme Ruth Sayer Mary Schlesser Sylvia Schnelder Bessle Scott Robert Seeley Edlth Seeley a Segog Dorothy Segog Dwlght Sellers Edward Seymour Phll Shannon Florence Shehan Anna Shaplro Llllran Shore Samuel Slbbltt Ellard Slgnrelle LOUISE Sllbera Morris Srlk Hyman Simon Bessle Sjogren Carl Stenberg Miriam Stenluncl Mary Stepnes Anna Stevens Raymond Stewart Marle Almer Fndthjoff Ames Margaret Amundsen Elsre Anderson Henry Appleby Wxlfrld Balmer John Stewart May Strckles Mrlton Storne Harold Stoltz Bertha Strashan Helen Strand Helen Sund Harold Sund Martha Sundqurst Carl Su aner Wllhelmlna Swanson Frances Swenson Matle Taylor Amy Taylor Guy Taylor Lachlan Thayer Dorothy Thompson Ralph Trsdale Clark Towne Hunter Troff Carl Troff Paul Trolander Evangeline Trott Dudley Troyer Mark Turner Mrldred Van Bergen Alexandra Voss Esther Wagner Josephine Wahlgren Margaret Walker Douglas Walker Edrth Wall Martha Walsh Edward Walt Rebecca Walz Vma Wannebo Beatrlce SUB FRESHMEN Hall Francis Hanson Kathryn Hedeen George Hendrlckson Margaret Herbert ,Iella Hesness George Wasley Loulsa Watts Ernest Watts Florence Webster Lots Vvebster Marjorle Werso John Wendt Hazel Westaway Mary Weston Edrth Westover Clayton Weverke Lloyd Whlte Clalre Whltely Wayne Whrteslde Berton Whlteslde Gordon Whlteslde Roger Whltemore Edlth Wlck Alma Wlck Anme Wlck Nora Wlelde May Wlk Lydla Wlllard Marjorle Wlllesen Irene Wllll3mS Thomas Wrllner Wllllam w mron r rances Woleau Alma Wood Benjamln Wood Louls Woolley Vlfglnla Work Edrth Worley Marlon Zalk Louis Zuger Robert Zuroxsky Ida Paulson rlsther Paulson Esther Peterson Cust Petersen Henry PhllllPS Lllllan Randall Margaret YA b Y Q , ' . i 1 , , 1 , V U I . 1 1 , ' I I H A , ' ' 1 1 1 ' , 1 1 , I I 1 7 1 , 1 1 , . , U I , 1 l 1 1 D , , , . . , , ' . . , 1 1 - . , , ' X , . ' . 1 1 l , ! j - , I Y y . , ' 1 1 D , , , - . , . . , ' D ' . ., , . l ' I I ' , . y . . Siegel, Ruth Viener, Esther W ' , . . . , . ' g , ' , . . n , 1 , , - I , , , . . . ' . . ' V . 1 , ' , - f - ' ' 1 ' , ! 1 , . ' , , . . . . ,. ' Y 1 ! . U Q , . y . . ' . . Q 1 V Ba snngxsalte Edward Berg Agnes Bergford Rolf Berkson Abe Black Lyman Bladln Anna Brown Harrlet Callan May Qarlson Sterllng Chrlstranson Clrfford Comstock Margaret Connor PYlSCllla Cork Ral Donaghy George Elllngsen Mane Els erhoy E S18 Enguall Clarence Erlckson Harry Ferro Leo Flroved Zalda C-rlbert Ernest Forton Edlth Haggart eanneth Hollrhan Irene ack on C arl ensen lxatherlne ohnson Elmer ohnson Wm lxarron Harry lxolstadt Agnes l exme Sadre Macfarlind Geo Merrltt Yvm Merrltt Wm Messick Lorena Marluus enme Mattson acob Miller Pearl Mltchell Dean Monsen Margaret Morltz Helena McLaggard Srdney Mclean Ceo Mc u1de Marlon Olson Wm Patrrck ohn 012' N 'W '5'e15i ' -Ax, on ? 1 I fx! f N Rosenblad Russel Rudd Edmn Sampson f lorence Sandberg Roy Searles Gretchen Selseth Qlarence Srlx er Bessle Sorenson Roy Sosnosky Lena Stlpe Rose Teppen Helen Thatcher Allan Thomas Carlrsle Tufty Norman Wallace Beryl Watts George Webb Burt Wrllrams Emma Wrner enme Wlnton Mary WIPSOH Walter S I v I , v I ' ' , J . , ' . J . , ' . J . . , . , ' v y v Y I 1 Q J . , ' ' 'I ' ' 1 . ! c V ' I , I , V - , , , - , ! V 9 0 . . J . ' , - J . , , . ' , l , , Y U V U 5 I Y I Q 9 . , ' . . , J . , ,, , . h ' . , Q C v . . , , , . , J ' . J O b rr V ' -.1 . 'Auf Rst- ,si ' . fx J N af-.. 3,55 P' ' X Q x 0 K ., c 'he Alnmm Anznrmttnn One of the prlme objects of the Alumm ASSOClall0H and a factor that more than any other should hold the organlzatlon together IS the ralsmg of a scholarshlp fund m memory of our former Prlncrpal Charles Alden Smith Tom ard thls end over slxteen hundred letters have been sent out to the Alumni The response to date has hardly been what should be expected although the average contrlbutron of those loyal ones who hare responded has been most gratlfymg It rs our earnest hope that thls page may come to the attentlon of enough of the Alumm to add a declded lmpetus to the growth of the fund CENTRAL COMMITTEE Chairman Donald K Hams On the 28th of December l9IO the hrst annual banquet of the ASSOCIH txon was held at Panton 6: White s Tea Rooms The success of that dellghtfal gathering speaks well for the future and reflects great credrt upon the efflclent work of the past officers It IS planned to make thls annual gathermg permanent and far reachmg ln brmgmg together at least once a year the loyal Alumnl of our school Th A ng tuynhr ah-Q rmrlrvxl YOIIDU nnn the most PYr'PllPnf results that he has accompllshed ln the short tlme he has been wrth us and extend to hlm slncere thanks for the asslstance he has grven the Alumnx To the students of the school and to the members of the dlfferent orgamza tlons we Wlsh to extend our congratulatlons upon thelr Cfl:6CtlVC work 1n upholcllng the honor of the Red and Whlte and may your success contlnue l!9Rirrr5 12 Presldent Edu ard Furm Vlce Presldent Hazel Owens Secretary Vlolet Robinson Treasurer Victor Rakovwsky o o 0 X , ' ' 1 t , ' V . w Y , . Y 7 1 , Q , , , - , . , . - D O P cc mhrxn rnn l P 11 ...- . ---- ......... --..-5 .....-...-, - ....-.r-,. - -....D ..l,-.. .... .,,,-. , , 1 u , . Q ti v ,- V 7 1 AUVEU Sanitary Soda Pure Flavors Qulck Serw lee it 5 Q83 Soda FOUHt3lH B01 CE S DRUG STORE ill W Sul erlo St AN ENGLISH THEME It s really pathetic to see a fool husband xx 1th so good a xufe Hubby s a fool wlhe a good angel The only thlng more pathetlc rs to see a fool wrfe wlth a good husband A husband who after workmg hard all day returns home to hnd hrs wife at a club meetmg baby slttmg on the kltchen range the chandelrer and amle bulldmg Indian forts out of papa s best cigars About seven o clock mamma returns from a meeting of the Mothers Club and seemg that Wrllre s clothes are rn rags and falling off remarks m a motherly fashion Why Wlllle where are your safety pms3 Ar one thlrty amre starts crylng Mamma took twso sleepmg powders before she went to bed She always takes sleepmg powders and Lydla Pmkam s Pmk Pllls for Pale People when amre IS cuttmg teeth Papa the good husband rrses from hrs bed and walks toward amres cradle On the way over he steps on a tram of cars amle stops crymg Papa gnes vent to several expressions descrlptne of rail roads ln general and then remarks that there IS no sensatlon qurte so pleasant as to step on a tram of cars ln the dark The tram rrrpelled by some mysterrous force always starts and papa lands where the tram used to be The next mormng mamma asks papa rf he slept soundly' Truly a more pathetlc state of aftalrs newer exrsted than that of a good husband vwrth a urfe CALDWELL HARRIS U . l 'I ' D o C V Q 1 If ..' 1 ' rf , . . . . , . , I . - , . . 'I' ' 7'-----r M- - -- L- - -f---H C In Y. In ' saumg papa s supper fur a boat nn the soup, XX'.ll.e ha..g...g by his toes from . . . . . , . . J . , - . . . . . . . . . . , ,E .. . . - ,, , , - - ' J ' ' , Y ' f . . . , J - , . . . , ' , , J U , I l ! O . , Y GAY Sc STURGI S B llIkel'S and Brokers !26 W Superior St DITCCI Prlvate Wlre to Boston New York ChlCagO Calumet Houghton and Detrolt Mlch B T GOODELL M8 ager B th Pho les '20l W J NORTH A It Dfanuger c57'eol'i69 Www '7-1 W S parlor St Near F rst Ave W Duluth Minn I M Chicago Ill Qluncy Ill XX Llmu Ohlo fy if Women s and Men fy Outer G'1rments At Popular Przces X X 3 14' 3, f F ? w-X X, sg XM' il 1 . I 7 , P ! , . . . ' ., n 0 l L . . . s . O 1, .. . u . 1 . . X S I .fb . - ' MXN , . .La .. AX! . - - .,', NX T g 0 1 g o 1, ,fi X . Xu 4 9 . 9 . 1 'ft :'.-,'i'? -Y il' -,. f I ,, fYtl.,' z 4 ' 'S fy 51f7, 4 I :stir ff c '.- XE Q3 1 . -Q U ' l'f f ! . :A ,ugh If mt S 'Wt ln f ,. ' S ' 1 1 , I , . . Y ii! V ly .kit ' if XX f fi f , Ns ff X, A1 f f .r - f .. ThlS Much for the College or Hlgh School Fellow -RNS: Kia.- -1.-5, 55-it ss. i -f.. .,.,.33,, TY? Nc, -wo'-Z' dbxzixxy x- Qlibv lf :Y Qofm-:-9 1:-. -. xc- -Nz- 5, xx x aaggym W wa' 'Nw tga --5?-QQSQK.-xg xx- xxxlflib ff' we ww 'W Q- 'fi .bt Lg.. 1. N. 355-it QM 3 0 ME Nc- NNW x :-2+ K' tk .-X 6 X 1. QQ Q 995213- 35 9:-u. get N. E 3 xx'- .A Q3 0 '-.+'? So' 4 -P- aw-sw, -5- EN? Knife .f N5 is SE:- ,go 525 New-ima N05 who expects to graduate or qultuate thls Sprung End your student days and be gm your busmess days 1n TII I I SYSTEM Clolhes for Young Gentlemen Be you an honor man or just a squeeze through these clothes are golng to make you look better, feel better and do better, be cause they have tone, class and a certaln blt of dlgrnty w h 1 c h StflkCS home Tallorecl wrth an exactness whxch assures elegance, shapellness ancl rellablllty They re the last word ln style and enjoy that money IH the bank look Hop ln and see them first chance you get Better stlll take tlme by the fore lock and come tomorrow 5515 O0 to S35 00 jo' 11,011 Wxlllamson 6: Mendenhall O 0 4-:-:-:-'-ae-:-. .-:+:-.-.-. 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' ' 2 'E:E:E '52 '-:5:2:3:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5 Er:-.-. . . 1-. 555:-. .11-. .-3535.2-5 .-.-f5f5i553i5f525i3i5f5f ' 'f-'-'-'-'-'-'-'-'-:-:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:55:55:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:515:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:g:g::5:f:f:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5g:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:5:- ' - The fellows you hobnob Wlth wear THE L SYSTEM Clothes for Young Gentlemen You young chaps with good red blood ln your vems can no more neglect these blue blooded gar ments than you can dodge a candy shop wlth your best glrl on your arm We have not forgotten about your shlrts hats neclcwear shoes and other haberclashery We want you to come and take a look at the clothlng and furmshmgs That IS the way to find out crackerjacks we say they are That s what we want you to do They are the lund of clothes and furnlshmgs for all young men who dress up to scratch rlght ln style pattern and attractlveness ln the llttle and blg thlngs that count Wont you have a look3 Glad to have you QC 'Ys gn mei ff to S1500 to S35 00 M' F M215 Hffz N Wllllamson 61 Mendenhall Covvnc. 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'lifll'1'1'-212225-Zflilzflitftfifl' WOMEN IN GENERAL And The Hugh School Gzrl In Particular Wlll ever Hnd thls the store that satlsfies All the new style fancnes are shown here fxrst whether lt be a snmple llttle belt pm or an elaborate evemng dress The questxon of what s what m prevallmg fasnons IS solved m a smgle v1s1t to our garment sec tlons on our spaclous second floor Dresses Sults Coats Mxlhnery and Exqulsxte Muslmwear that are desxgned by artlsts and that meet the needs of the needs of the crxtlcal young woman PYICCS are notably low THE YOUNG MAN TOO Flnd m our men s sectlon mam floor the shlrts tles hosiery and dress accessorles that are rlght up to the mlnute ln correct ness Buymg wearables 1n thls department IS a good hablt to have Cultxvatelt fm 411 77 Q g-2 M Silk Headquarers For The Northwest WOMAN SUFFRAGEU WHY CERTAINLY' What earthly dlfference does lt make rf they break mto stores and smash the wmdows m with brlclcs unhmge the gm shop doors3 What care we If they pester us wxth walls and crles for rxghts and let their cause be led by those whom we call perfect frlghts'-V What care we If they ralse our tai by crowd mg every 13113 We re wlllmg more to pay the tax than to proude thexr ball Of course thelr suffrage street parades mcrease thelr chance to wm and every martial outburst of the female trlbe has been a very potent argument to show the reason why the ever gentle falrer sex to rule the land should try' Their paxlng hammer reasoning and all the wreck they ve wrought show all the men that suffrage IS the very thmg we ought to grant to noble woman wlth her qulet wmmng ways It s sure to benefit the race m many splendld ways' Our worthy wives who llve at home wlll put thelr arrror on and go to consort wlth the rough and rabld Amazon' The fact that they wlth malice and dellberate mtent destroy the pubhc property wxll surely not prevent the lowmg creatures purposes to cast thelr llttle Note IP such a way that peaceful rule to our land shall be brought Woman Suffrage' Let xt come and rule the land we love but lf t comes I glve my word that I for one wlll move . . . I o KK n U1 v . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . - . . . r- , . . . . . 4 , , , , . ,, . . .. . ' X 1 5 1.67 if ,' I ff , , , , , Q , , V D . . , I v A v v y. . . . . , . . , , ' Z ' - v ' Y Y - v v- ' vl l r . . . . , . . . , . . ' ' Q 1 1 ' U l ' ' I P IISIIUCR 1 RINFI li BLODGETT SHOES OXFORDS w an yy For Schools PUMPS E153 00 5153 50 954 00 S4 50 and S55 00 Q kRD 5 h CJ VVED31 Sill FIQIQDIQ S1 ' Y Q 0 , 0 L A A ' A ' E 323 WV. First Street . , . , . , . . . uic e air. c S ine. 2 xxx x id ' 1 CIIOICI 100 IH I' XR Such as wlll be appreclatecl by any Y oung Woman or Y oung Man who wants neat styllsll footwear Ifor Thr 1 oung I ldy Every good style m Patent and Dulls also the Whlte Nubuck Canvass or Tans Both Pumps 'md New Colomals Pr1ced53 00 Q53 50 54 00 10 56 00 I or Ihr- Y oung, DI ln lime Dress Shoes Pumps or Handsome Tan Shoes or Oxfords 34 00 34 30 SD 00 to 86 00 Eueryfhmg lbal rs proper or Dress or 'Uacafron rs ound al VII I KNDS M S A PLFA 0 er my heart tlele corre a feelms And I ets mx bram 1 reelmg Hullv Gee Im gom to Hunk For tlns lest I can not clo lt An I lxnou Ill llxe to rue t Cue Q mv bram IS made of suet Cau e I lfnon I m golng to Hunk Mr Sprague I do be eech you Ch' let mx petltlon leaelm you On my knees I clo entreat you Mr Sprague I mul ot flunlc' Oh I xslsh that I mere laraxer But I can not ll us! not xx aver Mr Sprague I a lc a favor Can I lcmclls mike rl up3 X ours xerv respectfully jorlx EDWARD O Bmrx i W ' 1 v J 'A ' 2 1 1 , , . J Y . I . , . , . . 3 f 1 Y 3 2 , . , . , . . . ' f f Y qi Q 1 1 li, L 218 '..'up0ri0r Sl. -' 1 A . S I V, O er my enhre soul Us stealmg. 1 s Y' L- ,- V 7 ' , , cl ' ' ' 1 , sl V ' A L , S y . . 1 . , s . . C , . , S n . - ' I ' 1 Q I I H . , s ' , I I n . -, ' , V Meet me under the Roses. S thls IS our l0th year ln our present locatlon so lt must be I0 years that we have been ln thlS Good ,fBook and we are mlghty pleased to be here as we have always enjoyed a llberal patron age from the school and we extend a cordlal request that the new classes wlll contmue as of old to look on our Big Back Room as a meetmg place or a Down Town Club Room Thrs Sprung we have replaced the grapes wlth Crlmson Rambler Roses about the room and over the Pergola and evervthmsz has been clone to make the place comfortable and mvltmg to our patrons VICTOR HUOT CONFECTIONER FLORIST if SODA BUFFET Home made lce Cream and lces The Only Soda Buffet on Superior Street serving Zi' lg W cami fi.-5? Mr Qaffmg MI! fZ0f 6a f0!77f0 fefe mffzout 5 box of WPFLJEH W Delzcnous HN 24 fZocolat:es'7 Bo o EEZTN 515152- - aff? X gl WJ! SAE X ff Y V Y f f I 0 fy if-f , 1 7, , ,, 1 j ff ' ' 1 w- . SK?-i.-' 9 1-K-1. 97, r'.:f:,-ff - ' ,Q i I f g ng 4 , , -f ' l- l -:J-Q I , ' ' . Q: - i'?'L- ' ' ff ' ,ff 4 f., -,H ff?- E fp. , 1 SEX.: f , V ' N -V K, fp ef., . 51 4'?-'1'n?,,-n ,G - K Qc -- C J, r-:B v-1.5. ,. .gT- 6 ,L V :cz . fgaffh'- 1T ,,,+ffTNf'2 I l ' f-'T' ' il-3, bwjf- Y F, I 7? 1 H ' f-11'-4-K' W...JgY li? 'fffi' Fixx, --:?,f1f'?f Zfifiif,-1if1f'i' ' 1:-Qifx - '- 4 9 ,Q 0 . ? f f J fr fl l V we - i V H QEZQ ' , ' ' 5 ,f , 2' Ni ig L 1' - k ,1 - f - Y ,ff I 7 1 Excellent SBIVICP and Good Wdlue l FUUNIJ n H w H A E501 T001 S CUTI I RY STOYI S P KIYTQ ADD Y ARNISHFS I-IE mcreasecl SCFVICC the SatlS factlon dCf1VCd from Hzc ory Goods make lt well Worth ll'1SlSt1I1g always on lmavlng the Hickory md Kellx Ilows 11101118011 C0 M IIOLI SAI I IIARDWARI DULU T II N1 0 f 9 4 , of T 1 6 All 'I I IN Y - - TH MSQ Ku g 'Co. DU R- , u ' ' E TRADE MARK Gl'ARA.' ii ' F ' ' F f 4 g , A 4 q 5. 4 g A L L Y v A O , - Q Q , k 1 ' . k a . V 1 V V - 7 l ' ,f x, Q ' if . E E Mo KENZIE The Photographer, Is The Man you Want for your Photographlc Work Both Phones WHO S WHO3 Ihere was a prof in our school And he was uonclrous mise He had a beard upon his chin H15 hair was black And xery long HIS rule was law H15 temper Iron He lectured you Hie a1r ot blue And couldnt sympathize 7 . . -- .1 ., . A I 3 And piercing brownish eyes. ' 1 s g. V 9 , . g lgh Sch 001 Glrls SHOULD NOT BI4 COME LNGAGFD too soon after Qradnatlng but when von do see that vour engugernent rlng colnes from BAGLE1 X' CODIPANY AIMS TO PLEASE RAY W FBNTON EVERYTHING IN PRINTING ilzslrzcl Manager THE WHITEHEAD Ba HOAG CO Speclalty Advertlsmg Cold and Enamel Pms and Badges Dzslrzct Manager PROUDFIT LOOSE LEAF QU Newest Cleverest and Handlest Bmder Made 31 9 LONSDAI E BUII DING l RUITS AND PRODUCI Qfiip Knudsen Frlllt C0 I8 0 W RI SI Pl RIOR W5 IS DI I UI H NIINN H . . 3 Y , J 4 A . 9 9 o 9 P4 s . . Y , , . 7 r If 1, 0 I 3 'Y , . I 'Y , . . c i l 1 I Y Y 1 4 I L 41h 5-if exgxsgfz .x,4r.ff I 1 . Q 2 -22 '. ichi-gun Street. 1 v 1 y 1 v r 1 v p 2 9 A o A 9 A A THE KAMERA SHOP LCLIPSE I IIOTO SUPI Li CO Expert Developmg and Prmtlng for Amateurs uallty and PIICCS Rlght Complete I..1ne Supplles Ansco and Buster Brown Cameras Cyko Paper Ansco F 1Im 17 FOURTH AVENUE WEST LUNINIPRCI KL BUILDINI First Student What IS the rawest break you ever heard of5 Second Student The time Vvasgatt put an egg ln Ruttger s pocket Mr Romreux after readmg Extase suth true poetic appreclatlon heawes a heartfelt slgh at the end Dorothy I I dont see anything funny ln that poem IVI1 s Taylor asslgnmg seats Stand up and sit st1lII I-Iugo fln Engllsh It rs sald that all of Shakespeares dramas were someu hat dramatrc and hrs poetry someu hat poetlc Teacher I am beautxful What tense IS that3 Puprl Past tense Teacher collapses CRANE VALVES CRANE PLUMBING FIXTURES CRANE if ORDWAY CO 8 10 East Michigan St DULUTH MINN Manufacturers and Jobbers of HEATING. PLUMBING AND POWER PLANT MATERIAL See OL11 Slfxoxx roor11s IDEAL IRCO BOILERS AMERICAN RADIATION ' D 1 Y . N 9 ' ..Z . .'i 5:5 515 45 515 -'15 515 . . .. ,, Y. . . . - . 1 515 55 -35 5:5 515 515 515 515 515 H5 55 65 515 515 H5 95 65 515 '- . C .J 0 Q . - , rl DULUTH PHoTo ENGRAVING succzssons TO C 0 NI N Y The News Trlbune Erlgravmg Plant DESIGNERS COIVI MIEIRC I AIL PHOTOGRAPHERS jeweler coulcin t expect to seu a srxty uuuax Watch by showmg a dollar one and explamlng that lt was slmllar ln form and design Nelther can YOU exect to sell your goods by showmg your prospective customers near cuts of them ln your advertr mg The purpose of a cut IS not to brrghten up the ad but to SHOW THE. GOODS and rt cannot do that unless rt IS the goods Sure enough cuts of your merchandise w1II help you SELL your merchandlse you can get the cleanest and therefore best cuts possible to the en gravmg trade at THE DULUTH PHOTO ENGRAVING CO successors to the News Tnbune Engravmg Plant Ill The ONLY day and mght plant ln the Northwest NEWS TRIBUNE BUILDING DULUTI-I IVIINN rs' ' Il I f , - ,Q - I f . , , M I .. I L, Lf I , ,. , . ,.l ' ' . . X fx 11 ln. , .,,:. ' flu -f ,tu tVf-J T'-T LHC' 7 ,, xg rite I 2 .gtk Cz? TWIIR XVI ' ENG. AV ,fry rw 'f 4 I JH I I'W,lw,1I.:.44I,i It,f'1,l!,t. X E ' ' 1 1 '. . . 11 , .' . , .I-II-.. H . . . . ,, . . . . H ,, cc ' ' ., . , . Conservative Management MODERN FACILITIES CENTRAL LOCATION Ground Floor Entrance Under Supervision U. S. Government SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Most Modern Flre and Burglar Proof Safety Deposit Vaults .3 INTERESI' 3 On Certlflcates of Deposlt and Savlngs Accounts are a few of the MANY FEATURES OFFERED DEPOSITORS of the ORTHERN NATIONAI ANK CAPIT XI S 300 000 00 SURPLUS S60 000 U0 LOCATED IN ALM ORTH BI ILDINI Tallest Modern I71re proof Bl.llICIlI1g ln Mmnesota Look Up You Cant MISS It OFFIL l'l 1 ex I DIREI IUI N X IIBI IOHN R NIIILHELL JOHN G II II I IANI II I XNLIN R IIIIX IO IS IHLI! IAP HXII X XIXXUI I IX I' G U 'I IRINLII - 0 - f - 6 0 0 0 ,f A , -.5 Pr -Q 1 1 'u u 4 A Q. fu g Q L, ' Q, g Q ' I IS: .I. I.. WASIIIECIQN. l're-fd mt J. V. LYIJEII. Cashier IOIIN li. WILLIAMS, VIl'f'-IIFCS. .IOSICPII IC. IIURAK, Asst. Cashier J if: J.L.X'AS 'RN, . -' .. ' , 4' . ' ....S, J. J. ICK . 'ND, I-' is .' ' Q' .S ' , . 'AN, . U .' S. , 1' , B . -.S .P ., X '. 1 . ' ITII, J. V. , 'D IR, 'E . 1. ' 'IIT PKUVRILIURU Ur 11-xn. Central Busmess College E. have clurlng the past years of expenence ES 0 t both as teachers and managers of busmess colleges arefully STUDIED THE NEEDS Kjiw OF THE BUSINESS WORLD and have endeavored to CStabllSh and conduct a School worthy of your patronage P .ji , l V , l js 5 :tif c Q 1' ' . PEER A. T. IVICPI-QE ON -- AA .1--.-A A fxu- ww lr' I .il- H , . , diff - Lv Q 'A 'N ' I S ' Z -.s.: , V ,, 1. Sfb l , C . Q ! . Sl-IORTHAND ASSEMBLY ROOM THE CENTRAL 235323 Located at 30 East buperlor Street lTxso bloc ks below thc Central Hlgh Qchool on Nuperl wr Qtreetl The wonderful growth of thls school for the past three now holdlng the best clerlcal posxtlons ln Duluth and the Northwest thelr success IS due to the careful consclentlous work of our teachers and we assure those who may enroll wlth us ln the future that they wlll recelve the same palns tal-:mg conslderatxon and thorough lnstructlon that has been the means of mal-:mg our graduates so successful ln the past V I' ' X l L L' if M . years is due to the large number of successful graduates : . . , . . Y Euluth illimanhv 8: From D UL UTH to fr- Hlbblllg IJIIIQIIOIII1 Sharon Vlfglnla Ex eleth C0lPP3lll9 Bow ex Taconltv Wlarble Nleadows landQ 9 Q 'Y O Biwabik nrthvrn Qieulhmg Three 33 Flrst Class Passenger Trams Dally wg Modern Steel Coaches Electrlc Llghtecl and Cafe Qbservatlon Cars Between DULUTH and all MISSABE RANGE Pomts Czty Ticket and Frelglvf Office 426 WEST SUPERIOR STREET DULUTH MINN if 0 f1',j 1 X 'Su V' . n 9 Q 9 fZF'f5'1' . . . 1 , . He:1S0n SDOClll8tl0I'l 1ntl'1e sense of an attempt to make money from an lncrease ln the value of property apart from lts earmngs IS a factor ln all real estate transfers qpeculaholl IS not gambling qIl0I'llllltl0ll IS not pure chance but xmplnes the use of reason The Parnler speculates ln weather futures when he plants seed m the ground Vullles are at tlmes not based on mcome or supply and demand but represent slmply a COndltlOIl of the publxc mlnd The BBSIS of residence real estate values IS socxal not economlc Use your l'03Q0ll thru the office of LITTLI' X NOLTE C0 Established ln Duluth 1886 jfine Camera llbottraits STUDIO 105 West Superuor Street LOUIS DWOIQSHAK W W W Ph W W W Ho here Suede O Brren got hrs poetlc genrus h h A FEVV THINGS THA1 WILL NEVER BF KNOWN here Mr Sprague learned to use h eyes hy Mr Custance parted wslth hrs mustache hy they call Reaclmg ancl Publlc Spealcmg a stucly e real contents of the closets ln 208 and 207 ether Homer Holdren not the poet, ever Smlled ere Mr Romleux learned so many dishonest school practlces vw we all passed ln Engllsh u'r You can get lt at K e THB HONII' OF 000D Sportlng Goods . is f . C , ' - Q gf h Q af' 'WJ NOI'llIBfll l'lllWB Bu - - 5 ,Aj F- . , 'S 5:-' . I . , 'Q School of SllOl'fll and Success Shorthand Spencerlan touch typewrltmg Palmer method of Penmanshrp Gregg Qfhce trammg Day and evenmg sesslons open the entlre year Students may enter any week F or aclclrtlonal mformatlon call Wflte or telephone Grand 2354 ALB1 Rf IOHNSTAD Mir 31.3 West I'1rst Street DULUTH MINN ASONNIEV T A F M L Thou peer of Latm teachers great thou art Thou man of Roman face and little halr Fl hou forcest knowledge on us IH thy lalr ln ways that often nearly stop the heart But when ln Vlr ll we have got a start And lf for muslc we appear to care Why then rndeecl tts saxd we do brcl falr To ln the Semor Play recelve a part Although thls system really eerrs to me A little naore than falr to some poor lclds And not qurte falr enough to others yet lm sure that lf me re Qoocl enough to he ln such a Senror Play me ll get our hrcls lo come and jom the clorus o dont fret , X f'X X K X , X1 . . I L 1 , . L l Q Y 9 1 V - 1 44 1 9 s , V .. , . l fo . . . 7 Y . , g Q v' V Y Y Q . . I . . ' 's . . , . , . V . x ,s , l FEE, ij 431333 5 ' aa I 4 w M' 1-13513 PM f numb C 2 Glass BIOCR sf0l'C The Slvoppzng Center of Duluth 1393 D j GRUESEN eweler and Watchmaker THE OLD RELIABLE BUSINESS Z5 YEARS IN DULUTH Thlrd Avenue West and F 1rst St DULUTH MINN Manufacturers of Beddlng Jobbers of Furniture DULUTII, NIINN 1 -'V 11' 1 -H... ei Y li- ff 'fd'-3 a1.! 'ai , SN' I I . fg M lu, xx - 212u::f1- if 3- mr: I 7 -ZA ' V , , , 4- Y I n I, ' 'iff' 12, ' 9 il.'T1i:i. ' '1-wsu--we f : 4 wiv S.: Iifgiiii I ti lgafihi E - Xv':Qj,f - ff . 1 ' if -:ff-ffff lr? L ' '...u.,,7L,..,...-...vuco V-llliifg V , 1 1:4 im f,,-fessmaaggsassf 5 jj , -- - '- Lgwtlfn E -Q Y fff?-' Z 'th T I Dh . OD osite Wolvin Bu'Id' Q 0 . . , . - 0 DE W ITT SEITZ C0 THE. POLITICAL PARADE Dear Commonvs ealth About two weeks ago as I was walkrng along Superror Street I notrced a very fat and cheerful lookrng man tryrng to dodge other pedestrrans and at the same trme endeavorrng to progress at a reasonable rate of speed Thrs seemed very hard to do as he was puffing lrke a donkey engrne The fat man had bumped rnto qurte a few people In one block he collrded wrth a personage rn the form of a Sugar Corporatron and the bump ss as enough to put that monster out of busrness for good In the next he bumped rnto a thrng called Standard Orl but although rt was hard hrt the can survrved the shock vuth strength enough to retarn a foothold although rt changed rts name A lrttle later a brg black bear came ragrng up the street wrth a bee rn hrs ear although the bee drd not bother hrm half as much as hrs own clumsy attempts to extract rt The fat man caught the frenzrecl anrmal and skrllfully removed the troublesome rnsect upon whose wrng was prrnted Anglo Russran Treaty l832 The bear went on hrs way a lrttle out of sorts but wrtlr hrs rage appeased The fat man allowed a farr marden by name Recrprocrty to pass wrthout mrshap but was greatly vexed when the reckless son f ohn Bull fact avordecl everythrng good and at least trred to hrt everythrng bad But down the street rn front of hrm comes a roar The roar rs rn the form of a row of great whrte showy teeth and a large parr of glasses The newcomer comes plowrng along the street and does not hrt or avord anyone I-le rs no respecter of persons or property l-Ie knocks everythrng good or bad There rs not room rn the street for other than he and hrs brg strck everythrng must get out of hrs way and not hrnder hrm from reachrng hs destrnatron by the fourth of March next Suddenly however there looms rn front of hrm our friend the fat man It IS too late to avord a collrsron they bump heads on' Then down they go rn the mud only to rrse and begrn throwrng rt at each other The knocker scores hrst and second huts before fat begrns to tight After they are both thoroughly besmeared wrth frlth their frrends separate them and beg them to stop actrng lrke two year olds and allow the people to settle rt at Chrcago rn June But who knows what the outcome wrll be a vrctory for vxell for Roosevelt or Taft3 Yours truly A Wrlson Democrat RALPH MCCARTHY I5 I 9 Y . . . . , , ! V ' . - ' ' ' ll . I U1 T , ' ' ll ' Yi ' . ' . V. . , A ' V. . . I . v. l . H . Y V T P ' I Y L - . .. . . ,. . ' . 1 . 0 J . knocked her rnto the street a few mrnutes later. The corpulent gentleman, rn , . ' ll l YU ' l - , . . , . , ' . . , Q I I ' , - Y ' l . .. .. . . . ' 1 l . V T.- . , , . , , . Qmtertrzrxx Lxnlmxrm Nzrtmual qsiillly nf Eiluluth ES 1879 Capltal Surplus and Profits SSI 750 000 O0 O F EIC E R Hamxlton M Peyton Presxdent Wllllam C Hegardt Cashler Isaac S Nloore Asslstant Cashler Colm Thomson 2nd Asslstant Qashler Checkmg Accounts Invlted 3 per cent Pald on S3VlDgS Accounts Safe DCpOSlt Boxe for Rent at S3 00 per year Money Sent to All Parts of the World at Reasonable Rates Self lclentlfylng Travelers Checks For Sale O E T 9 C 1 ,X 4 , TAQLISH E EJ 9 ' a a - Chester A. Congdon - - - Vice-President ' s . . 7 . . , pal or3 Mr Spr Haxe you read the Fssay on Burns3 Pu 1 H es I was burnt lat year Cnsctndo glggle from D Stu ent I want the I lfe of ul s Cmsar Llbrarxan Brutus rs ahead of you Of all sad words of tongue or pen The saddest are Exams agam' Freshman Say what IS th faculty3 to help the Senlors run the school Mr Benson What IS one of the commercial uses of vsater3 Swede To fish ln Mr S What was the fall of Bacon due to3 Upto date Iumor The ll'lVCStl23fIOl'l of the meat trust Mr Hel tand nlo orchestra Nos what IS the conductor responslble Recrult The nxckles French W arsis WA D D E 73 resses and Nllllmery Neck Wear 26 West' Superlor St DULUTH MINN pt! ' , ' . s . if as as as al as d - ' U f -I iu. -sf if as -fs at as as as as af as as - , ' e . Sophomore-Aw, don't you know? The faculty is a bunch of guys 'd ' . ar ai -as ff- is as M as as A-1 as as A1 as an as 96 as . 's Q 4 lf v, ' ' ' f . , . I . The Columbo Suit TeS ttht n ty tfo rtee fifty The S14 50 Columbo Sult for young men IS a new Columbla Specxal deslgned for those who llke to dress well at a moderate expense .N The Columbia 11 ui a's if 3 Ll H- . K U U ' ' O DULUTH, AT THIRD M N - Av . ws 1'. OLIVE I ON NIINIINGQ G HE OLIVER IRON MINING COMPANY is the iron ore producing branch in the Lake Superior dlstrxct of the United States Steel Corporatlon Out of the total shipment for all mines of 32 130 41 I tons durmg the year I7 284 538 tons of which I3 908 998 tons came from the Missabe Range I 004 426 tons from the Vermillion Range and 2 371 I I4 tons from dlstrlcts Michigan Mmnesota produced durmg 1911 23 222 296 tons of iron as follows Missabe Range 22 036 143 tons 'mIx g I 038 4 Cuyuna Range I47 429 Smce the openlng of the Soudan Mme at Tower in I884 there has been shlpped from lron mlnes ln Mlnne sota to January I l9I 2 278 456 O42 tons of ore 246 94I 327 tons commg from the Mxssabe Range The figures for the Mlssabe Range are truly remarkable when lt IS re membered that the first ore of the range was shlpped from the Mountam Iron Mme ln the year I89Z twenty years ago The ore from the VCYTUIIIOH Range and aIso from some properties on the Missabe is mmed from shafts The bulk of the ore however from the Mlssabe Range is taken out by means of open pit work by this method the gravel cf' J I ,pl UL 'dm 'L E Y , . , , , . I9I I, the Oliver Iron Mining Company is credited with , I , . , , Y , , I ' , 1 , ' . . ' ' ' Y , 9 . , 1 Vcr. on Ran c , ,.,,72. , if , . . . . . - J y 1 9 Q y 1' , . , , . . - . Q . or over burden is first removed and the ore later extracted by means of steam shovels The United States Steel Corporation controls two railroads ln Minnesota designated as the Duluth and lron Range and the Duluth MlSSabC and Northern The former company has ore docks at Two Harbors and the latter at West Duluth During l9l l 6 934 269 tons of ore were handled from the West Duluth docks 6 367 537 from Two Harbors and 9 920 490 tons from Superior The bulk of the ore shipped from Superior clocks IS carried by the Great Northern Railroad from the Western Missabe Range the rest of the ore is from the Cuyuna Range and is handled by the Soo Line The United States Steel Corporation through the Pittsburg Steamship Company maintains a large fleet of boats to transport the ore to lower lake points and taken altogether it can be readily seen how much the operations and especially to Duluth The buildings of the steel plant now well under way will add greatly to the Minnesota lron lndustry Owing to the extensive operations conducted by the Oliver lron Mining Company the highest standards in mining are followed in the extraction and handling of the ore and also for the protection and welfare of the em ployees and those dependent on them The officers of the Oliver Mining Company are W Olcott President Pentecost Mitchell Vice President H lVlcl.,ean General Manager J H Heardmg Asst General Manager . . . Y . , 9 ' ' , Y , , 3 U f 1 Y ' i 1 , Y 1 a of the Oliver lron Mining Company mean to Minnesota, - Y f Y , - , . The Fracst Nattunzrl :Bank Qluluth 'illlmn Capltal and Surplus TWO MILLION DOLLARS Albert l. Orclean Presxdent Davxd Wllllams Vlce Preslclent 1. Ll Walter J johnson Asslstant Casluer Wllllam W Wells Asslstant Casluer Savmgs Accounts Checkmg Accounts Three per cent lnterest Palcl on Savlngs and Tlme DCp0SltS Safe DCpOSlt Boxes for Rent o o i 4 Q O - .. :- 1 ' A gunna A 1. D.5ht ---- Cexsnxex . . . The best we can do IS none too good for those who entrust thelr pr1nt1ng w1th us We always try to gxve our customers sornethmg a llttle better than they expected We d rather agreeably surprlse a patron on our quallty than save a few cents by cuttlng off comers on the Job Good enough IS not good enough 1n our plant The best our workers can produce IS all we care to se Your good Wlll your satlsfactlon IS worth more to us ln the long run than what we mlght save by sklmplng your work Because we belleve that when you are pleased you d rather say nlce thlngs about us than the other l-und and what you say to your frlends carrles more welght than what we mlght say If you prefer q ual 1 ty lf you want your commerclal and advertlslng prlntlng dlstlntlve let us make lt so We know how and you ll get the best we can do 0 F COLLIER PRESS DULUTH d Fl th p Bl 4th A 1 .1 1 s B th Ph I7 q 9 0 qlsc H ' ' ll. qi . , . . , . 'll ' , , . . I-:H . , . . , . W U . . I , Entire Secou oor Win ro ook Corner venue Wes an ls treet o ones HONOR BRAND IS BETTER ARTICULAR HOUSCWIVCS ln orderlng Canned Fruits and Vegefables :Kea Co fee Extracts Olives RGISIHS Curranfs efc should always mentlon HONOR BRAND lr IS a guarantee that you are getting the best that can be had Cowan Peyton Congclon Company DULUTH MINN Sl bymlof W R t r I 9 9 9 9 1 f 3 , , , , ' DISTRIBUTED BY For a e ocers e oast he Fines Coffees Grown V ' s . -w,AJ-V. -., , :L Hixx?-i Mm f - , x. - ,F Fx, A f v--- , -.....f . ' -S I , ' Q1Z.F ,154 I ,.--c. ' 5 A, Y 441' ,,..,, .Q f 5 : ,- ..f - ny--- all lun -un 'bln . . N '35-'h 71554 . ig.- ,Q . ,-fl' , 41' 1- twxtmm Ju. i . Jifff igt 'L'. , FPf+fffLA -mnwmwbwqg if '1I '2?'U 4' ffff sm 4 VICTOR CULUMBIA Graphaphones CABLE PIANOS II' YOU ARE INTERI' STED IN A Graphaphone come here where you can make a comparlson ofthe different Instruments If you want new records we have them because we nelther loan nor send records out on trlal dont buy a Red Seal record that IS three fourths worn out EDMONT 330 W Superior St Mlss R+Say Dot Mr C told Grace that he thought I was the mcest ll' Il IOWII IJOIII you lIlll'llS 1 lldu UCLLCI aan mlTi lU N Dot No dearle let hlm keep on thlnlcmg so uoth he Your llps look red tonight Sald she Well yes perhaps But Papa darling that s all rxght It s only from the chaps Soph I slmply cant do Latm Semor Oh thats easy enough all you requlre IS a httle horse SCIISC That sald the unregenerate youth as he watched the huge wheel of an automobile cab pass heavmly across the mldst of hxs aged father that vs what one mlght call trans parent They saw two men by the roadslde slt And they both bemoaned their lot For one had burled hls wlfe he sand And the other one had not Ex 1 . - Q I . . 9 0 0 - 1 - . .IN 1. ' I .Y I - 1 1 ...-.. -.l. LJ 1- -JI g l l ' . ' ' Lau! T ' ' 3- 64 39 3 95 96 u - - n Q , ' - - u v , Q n . , . i ' , if . -Ex. 3 64 96 95 :F 55 . , . Q D Y - ' ' ' li !' TT- Q 17' 3 5F 3 95 3 3 u 'n - , . . . 4- - v ' - . -Ex. 3 55 95 35 FF 3 P v . 2 Please glve us a call when Wantmg anythmg ln the Hard Ware or Sportlng Goods Llne IH We Wlll treat you rlght Quayle Larsen Co TIHED STUDENT! VACATION BOUND? Now 1S the Tlme We have the Place You are the ones who should S60 the Beautlful Lakes and Streams of our Northern Wlld 14901 the Thrlll of 1ts Bracmg Alr lts Glorlous Days and Starllt N1ghtS rrainp through the last Great Border Forests where Slghts of the Stately Moose the Whlrrlng of Feathered Came the Call of the lndxan brmgs Fresh Dellghts and New Experlences as you dwell ID Nature s Wonderland Others fl'01Il Seventeen States Last Ye nr Explored these Haunts where Nature ylelds her Greatest Benefxts WHY NOT YUU 'P Better get our folder Lakes of Northern Mlnnesota Better let us plan a trlp Better get the hablt 'lm DUI UTII ik IRON RANGF RAIL Ho XD Cowrvuu C all or Address 4- e :ge Age DI I l TH NIINYI SUT X 0 N ll0 . . . . -. . . 1 . o , , .. .. . . , , . . N1 , ' ' 2 0 cc ' Q 1 Y Y 41 A A 1 v A L x L H. JUHIYSUN, G nc-rul Pass ll r nt. 5 5 mm.. ll 'll' -. ' V A A M A ' A N'?Sf5lll ' sn. .75 il. SEI-I 0l'I'0SI'l'E PAGE THE .X I . 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Suggestions in the Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) collection:

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Central High School - Zenith Yearbook (Duluth, MN) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916


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