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Page 54 text:
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x x lx , ' P '. . 1 'W lf. lff' J y' 'A I Nfl -0.5 Ni E li H vi .vw a,,,',2..ii gy!! fj.4..xlil - ilu . , -..J HALLOWE'EN AND FRESHMEN INITIATION The first school party of the year was held on Hallowe'en eve in the gymnasium. The Freshmen were also initiated that night and it was cer- tainly a joke to see the blindfolded students led in, either by Miss Hahn or Mr. Sullivan. The Freshmen were required to do a number of foolish things before they were permitted to enter High School. Games were indulged in the rest of the evening and were enjoyed by all. Refreshments appropriate for the occasion were served. Each and everyone pronounced lt a successful party. ALUMNI BANQUET On Tuesday, December 29, 1925, the C. P. G. H. S. basketball team, and the C. P. H. S. Alumni team were the guests of Mr. Sullivan at a ban- quest given at Baylor's Cafe. The following three course menu was served. Fruit Cocktail Potatoes Gravy Dressing Roast Chicken Cranberries Ice Cream Coffee Cake After the meal several jokes were told, and Charles Brown of the University of Illinois gave the team a few suggestions on the art of keeping training. Several members of the teams were absent on account of sickness and various other reasons. The dinner ended each player hoping that such a get-together might be accomplished every year. FAREWELL PARTY On the evening of January 12, the Sophomore class and the High School teachers assembled in the High School gymnasium to give a farewell party for Myrtle Hasselbring, one of our students of the Sophomore class who was moving away. The evening was spent in playing games and playing tricks on each other. Mr. Courtright, the class adviser, amused them with his tricks. Refreshments which consisted of sandwiches, pickles, cocoa, cookies, and ice-cream were served. We regret Myrtle's moving away very much for we lost one of our best Sophomore students and a participant in many school activities. COUNTRY GEN TLEMAN PARTY The assembly of students was divided into three groups, the Rockets, Meteors and Comets. Miss Opal Judy was chosen captain of the Rockets, Miss Rosella McCray, captain of the Comets, and Mr. Elmer Walder, captain of the Meteors. Heretofore the school had only had the privilege of selling the Country Gentleman but this year it was also given the right to sell the Saturday Evening Post and the Ladies Home Journal. The school received fifty per cent of the proceeds from the sale of the Country Gentle- 1926 IPAGE 481
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Page 53 text:
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'T' ' ' 'ik if 'g':T7 fYi. , lN1ir l:- , QQ g l 1'iifl'Yifliii5:5Qil591 f.aA e A ' Ixfi jfff' ,f fag. :ui .L :Ji lr' s j JOKES Can you imagine: Miss Chappell doing the Charleston? Clyde Harweger with his hair combed? Walter Barth not running around? The Junior Class not up to some meanness? Johnnie Fry studying? Mary Dryden not making faces? Miss Rietz and Carl not arguing? Mr. Courtright the build of Mr. Shaw? Harold Kogler teaching school? The Sophomores quiet in Botany Lab? David Hamrick not arguing to raise his grade? Oma with dresses to her ankles? Lawrence not bossing the job? . Beulah ientering the office - I just stuck my finger in my eye, Mr. Sullivan What am I going to do about it ? Prof.-'Td pull it out if I were you. Miss Chappell fsighing as she looks at the proofs of her second sittingj -- Oh, just take any of them. No one will know who it is anyhow. The members of the Caesar Class strolled into the class room. Bernice- What smells so funny in here? Bertha- Must be the dead language. Miss Hahn-- No, it's the rotten grades. Prof. fin Law class, discussing Sullivan and Barth, and Knake and LeConte as partnershipsj-- Now how could Sullivan and Barth take an- other partner into their butcher shop ? The printer gets the money, The editor gets the fame, The students get the annual, But the staff gets all the blame. Mr. Courtright had just finished giving the Physics Class a lecture on gravity. Now, he concluded, it is the law of gravity which keeps us on the earth. P But how did we stay on before the law was passed? inquired Jack. Miss Chappell- Sir Roger was called a knight of what ? Harold Gogler- The Ku Kluk Klan. f 1926 '- IPAGE 471
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Page 55 text:
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1 xx in M- ',i 1 ' . 5595.55-I.tsv:ri1ff . f - f.9fimL..l man and twenty-five per cent of the proceeds from the Saturday Evening Post. The losing team gave a party in honor of the winners, the Meteors, who won by a scant majority over the Rockets. The Party was called A Trip To The Moon and it was certainly enjoyed by all. After a few games refreshments were served and the guests and hosts went home. , THE JUNIOR-SENIOR BANQUET The 1926 Junior Class gave a banquet in honor of the Senior Class on Thursday evening, May 20. The banquet was held in the Methodist church basement. At 6:30 o'clock the Junior and Senior Classes and the Faculty sat down at the candle-lighted table with its navy blue and orange decorations. The first course of the banquet was a fruit cocktail. Second was the salad. Meat loaf, mashed potatoes, gravy, escalloped corn, and rolls were served next, with ice ceam, cake, and coffee as the finale. The Sophomore girls clad in white were the waitresses. Paul Geiger, toastmaster, welcomed the Seniors. He then introduced Paul J . Brenner, Senior Class President, who thanked the Juniors for the honor which they bestowed upon the Seniors by entertaining them. The toastmaster called upon Prof. Sullivan for a toast. Mr. Sullivan responded with a toast which will be long remembered by all who were present. The toastmaster next introduced Lawrence Baylor, who, although unprepared, was there with a snappy bit of repartee. This concluded the banquet, but the evening's entertainment had only begun. The Juniors had their cars outside in which to take the Seniors to the Lorraine Theater in Hoopeston. The show, Tramp Tramp Tramp, was thoroughly enjoyed by all. The Juniors, however, being capable enter- tainers, did not intend to stop at this, but resolved to make a night of it and escorted the Seniors to the Sugar Bowl. There they ate, drank, and were merry. At a late hour all returned home, the Seniors knowing that the J unior- Senior Banquet would always bring back memories of a wonderful event, the Juniors feeling pride in such a successful undertaking as this. This was the first Junior-Senior Banquest ever held in our school. Probably there will be others, but none will ever be better remembered than the one given by the Juniors to the Class of 1926. 's1926 ' IPAGE 491
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