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Page 18 text:
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Svninr Clllass Zlinll Q35 Eiatvw 1711,-xNc,:1-s 1f1.,x1f11,11'1 Y I li,-11111 XYIOI IJ Donn Essixcaiu -loiix Smrx C1111 Gt's'1'.x1-sox 1l1.o111,Nc11 Moms 1.1oi'1a S1'oox1,.11 11,.x C1R1.CiG R Ul,Ifli'1' Dow IJ G4 1,1oN1.1 Mc,K1N111 Doxixi 1: Roc.1'11s Rosif XV,x1,1u111'11cQ1'1a 1-'11 xxx T11R7liI'1 Cl1'Y1V11X'1 No1a'1'111xu1' NWALDO 1,1iSC11.-XU Fos'1'1f.R Auxlwx' As1A B1.Ac:11 -IOIIN B111 1.111 l:1',1iN Mc'K1NN1,x' BLN Wo1.v1-g11'1'oN XYX 1d1'11'N Cl1AliG - Ro1s1'11'1 15111-NNAN M1'111'1.1- B1-.,ixL,11 1'l1l,ll1N Rmxx XYY11 LIXN1 131111111111 1ix1x1A N1-,l.SL3N M,x11c,,x1:1i'1' fJ1X14.1 1-1 'ls ' 17111,11H14.1:x1.xx lf1.o111,Nc1 B.x1a'1oN , 1 1,0111 1' 111 15111 xx xx Ci1iAC1,,IqlN1iHAM Gun Nm 11 A1111 111.Ll 1,u1ix,x XY'111c.H1 N1 1,111 P11'111s 111 111' S1 1111 f Mffirers H956 Ifzlifofs Nofej JOHN BUr11E11, president, Helen Clagg, vice-president, Eileen Ryan, see- retaryg and Rose Wfaldburger, treasurer, guided tlie Seniors of 1912 tlirougli all class activities. Scarlet and White were the Chosen Colors, and tlie Class motto, appropriately enougli, was Not Finished, But Begunf' It is interesting to note that Mr. H. O. Baldwin, selected pliotograplwer for tlie 1912 Dodger, lias taken Senior portraits for every yearbook sinee. fltlgl' fo1r1'f1'u11
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Page 17 text:
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Glapiainsa JOHN BUTLER Foofball HUGH GILLEAS Baskefball WALDO PESCHAU Trrlrfa iilnnt Ball During the past season Fort Dodge had one of the best football teams it has had in many years. We met and defeated some of the strongest teams in the state. The season started out with two victories at home over Eagle Grove and Iowa Falls, both games played in a field of mudf, Zhtzkei '-Ball The basketball season was not so suc- cessful as predicted at the beginning of the year. This was not due so much to the inability of the players, as to the in- conveniences which they had to meet when playing on strange floors. At home, however, they won every game except the one with the Sioux City team, state cham- pions of last year.', Girark t'For a number of years the Fort Dodge High School has shown much interest in track work. Last season Fort Dodge at- tended two meets at Des Moines, the first was the Drake relay meet and the second was the State High School meet and both times we made a fairly good showing. At the Boone Valley field meet held at Algona we took second place, Hampton winning firstf, fE.X'fl'Hl'f.Y from 1912 bookj juzgr l'Z7il'fl'4'lI
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Page 19 text:
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ifihiturz nf the Bnhgvr, 1512-1935 IT IS ALWAYS interesting to find out what fields of work have engaged the interests of high school graduates of former years and with this idea in mind a Dodger editor made inquiries concerning the present location of former Dodger editors-in- chief from 1912-1936 and wrote to them. 1912-john Butler 77 77 7 7 77New York City Granger Mitchell 7 77 77 7 Fort Dodge 1913-William Wheeler 7 7 77 Cdeceasedj 1914-Rulison Parker 1915-Clyde Bedell 7 Detroit, Michigan 1916-Ethel Wgilker 1917--Florence Sheldon Ethel Bart James 7 a,,, 777New York City 1918-Annetta Schroeder Kraft ,,,, Chicago Katherine McCann Barton 7 7Davenport 1919-E. Mulroney McKenzie 7 7 Shelton, Conn. 1920 Asenath Dorsey -Edith Sylvester Alice Schroeder Wallace 77 Oak Park, Ill. 1921-Freda Schneider Larson 77 Pasadena, Calif. Margaret Nordstrum Aldershoff Ft. Dodge 1922-Erra Scotton Helen Ford Fullerton Minneapolis, Minn. 1923-Ruth O'Neill 77 7 77 7 Fort Dodge 1924-Laura Kolb Wilson 77 77 7 Marshall, Texas 1925-Carolyn Rogers Schultz 77 77 7 Chicago 1926-Elizabeth Armstrong Olson Ithaca, N. Y. 1927-Kenneth Greene 7 7777 77 77 Fort Dodge 1928-William Mulroney77 7777 77 7 Fort Dodge 1929-Willard Minkel7 Tujunga, California 1930-Everett Blomgren 77 Prairie du Chien, Wis. 1931-Agnes Boge 77 77 7 77 77 Fort Dodge 1932-Hazel Rowell 77 7 77 77 7 Fort Dodge 1933-Janice Maher77 Northwestern University 1934-Gertrude Frost 77 7 7 77 Fort Dodge 193 5-Betty Burnquist 7 7 Wellesley College 1936-Helen McTigue7 77 7 Fort Dodge The answers received by the staff from the former editors were both interesting and informational. Nearly all seemed to agree that the most outstanding thing they could remember about their job as editor was the great amount of work in- volved in the job and the great amount of pleasure derived from that work. The experience was one of lasting value to them as it helped to develop a sense of responsi- bility and ability to cooperate with others, and, in some cases, pointed the way to a future vocation. The greatest thrill came to most editors when they held, for the first time, the completed book. Accord- ing to many replies, the most difficult part varied from choosing a theme to writing senior quotations. Various are the present occupations of the former editors. Many of the girls have chosen marriage as their career. Ethel Bart, 1917, now married to Ben James, a suc- cessful writer, who published his first book in 1934, made a trip around the world in 1928 and a Mediterranean cruise during the summer of 1935 and is now a teacher in a private school in New York City. John Butler, 1912, is a lawyer in New York City. Granger P. Mitchell, 1912, is editor of the Fort Dodge Messen- ger and Chronicle. Annetta Schroeder- Kraft, 1918, Eleanor Mulroney-McKen- zie, 19193 Alice Schroeder-Wallace, 1920, Freda Schneider-Larson, 1921, Margaret Nordstrum - Aldershoff, 1921, Laura Kolb-Wilson, 1924, and Elizabeth Arm- strong-Olson, 1926, are all busy home- makers. Ruth O'Neill, 1923, is now a teacher in the Fort Dodge Junior High School. Carolyn Rogers-Schultz, 1925, is at present a secretary with the Standard Oil Company in Chicago. Kenneth Greene, 1927, is a traveling interviewer for the National Reemploy- ment Service, and William Mulroney, 1928, is credit manager for the Marso- Rodenborn Manufacturing Company in Fort Dodge. Willard Minkel, 1929, holds a position in the business office of the Southern California Telephone Company in Los Angeles. Everett C. Blomgren, 1930, is news editor of the Courtland County Press in Prairie du Chien, Wis- consin. Janice Maher, 1933, and Betty Burnquist, 1935, are college students, Gertrude Frost, 1934, a stenographer. page fiffz'r'11
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