Franklin High School - Post Yearbook (Portland, OR)
- Class of 1927
Page 1 of 170
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 170 of the 1927 volume:
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A659531 i5Q55 W?fwwQ.f4S4z'45'4.gi.'4af4'15fEQ M 'f i4f?'14 wiv W1 4534? few? NSN Q lf' 4 4 '42 df 32 , ,.,4WiA, 45-4 444 wiv ' v 9 k ? 44 Y' ' 599 'A , 2 22:-44 wg 9 ' 4,, , A , 4..,4'K,9-w,,4f4444agri, ?1'?,yEf4gsf.. 4-,Q-.44 g? W' 'N ' . , 4 2 224 v gpg A, Y, My N pm sf. 44?-gf: 45 4 3 A .-iv:--'I fel aw. , 'Mr r' , .. . . . , 4. ' ' ' ' ' 4 of-4. '47 3 -il ,, fffi., :Je iiifv. FWF 424245.11 kg ,ffm 1 5, J 41 ' . ' Q V - 4 . -5 aff, fx 2 Z 4. -Hia ..,. .4 ,ww .Q . 4, 4 4, .i. 4 be mst M716 1927 J Z 2 ,J 'LJ A SEMI-ANNUAL PUBLICATION Of THE GRADUATION CLASS I of FRANKLIN HIGH SCI-IOOL Table of Contents Dedication In .Memoriam Administration Seniors Refveries Organizations Literary h lblusic Athletics Humor - dds Wie, the June '27 Class, dedicate our issue of the Post to MISS MARGARET MONROE Who, by her teaching, her advice, and her friendliness has made Franklin a bigger and better school. W , WW I. A. INTELENDY Lizfes of great men all remind us We fan make our lives sublime, And departing, leave behind us Footprints on the .vanrls of time. Longfellow 17:-A f-AAA 771. ..4. - A if ff 'ff A A,'f'A. ' AAQQJZSVA-4 . +V-I1'KTN?'f 9I'fT'3 ' ' H ' ' '1'Af7.I'W'7 'Al 'h QQ' VET: 735532 - -.N-A-V 'E mi .. flag? ,1.,,z.?.'A?2 35, M... .4 .X V. 2, .Q J? V .lgigf-ig., A ,JZ .A-.1 r H 'L-A- i,.Vf.3x ,4-1V Q A rg .,. K, L?V ' 'A ',-. ' 'Y gr 'Q . 'rf V 3 MA ' XV YAVV- 'VD-3,4 K 'jug xv-:LV-L WJ.:-.AN ' 62- 'frm Q, 4, ','f.,- - .,.. ...A ,.... ,,,A,..Vc,:,, , ', ' ,Vi .' -Ar A A51 'Q Af- ff .-iff 'TA-1 sA?'Ls102f5lQ AATAA' 1A:'jf'92 'A- VAL 'N'35 3 Tfi ' IfI :'f'ff3? '-s-,,1f??fyT3ff.' 71 A' -171-'F ' ,III A' Y-'. 7?f ' A, ,227 ,Eff V .V A A 1.-Af -Wg' ., U 31 -. AAAAA A .QAAAAAB f' :A A PQ. V .1,-:Nj ,z:V,V,r .f . .'A, , ww- ,'A V 5 Ai 'A , A,g-'Sith 5 AA'fLT:- , .. , ,A ' i Q Ag ' A s., ' .3 i!,3KffjJl..V-f .. .A 5- Q ml A, .. . M., ,U-VVVQQZ-jeff, V. U fm V V , .V h.,A .8 E A. 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A- -'wifi-Af-AQ. -.L AQ . .V .V 'VV 'nf A my Q,,'a5'f7V A lAAAiWfA-VL '.1'fx2:'A 7' f- A-A?fi3VAAA- A ASYAE' AAA if ?'5-'LFQAHAA -4. fff'AA5.f-ZVA4 'if' Ai- AL i '45 L Vl 'J 'V-:eaff.,..A ,... ,-4 V..,.VV Q . -1. .V ..,. .1..,,.f .- .MV 5 rm-. . . .-P-.:, . -A --. A, V ., ,. 4-V, V1 . gf- V .V-22.3 . QW., f,,,-6. 2 VV ,181 , V ,N .J , V .,H..,,3 fr! Y A ,1f'VfAf-RSL-2A A 5A QV- AAA?--.. FA, -1- A' LV 3, -A '2. .3,VALL.g. - if AV-56 -A A ' 'Q :wc -fa' - -aw-: q Y :AJ VL - -V - ...-V l A - --1-VVVV --1, A..-VA. V ViV V-Q-5 li. ' 5 . Y- f-A-, mg.: L. QD.-. A 5.3 1 -7 F FAA- 3,5-T,-A V- 'F' ,V Aw-A- ..,, 4 A mmf Ag' VV -1 .-1?p-jAQV?Vigl ' jglvgjf-:.i.,.4 ,. ,- ,A 'VV-in :Q -114.43 AAA, A ft A 5. Af A AV V .1 g:Af,+A'W2.1A1+i-iff...-si-:fA'. A51 .1QVkg.f... . P gg., HEPES? Zehntbauer O'Dell Stretcher Thorne Whitney Mecklem Rice Bishop Glines Shul BOARD MEMBERS ROY T. BISHOP . HORACE MECKLEM GEO. P. EISEMAN F. S. PICKERING MRS. G. M. GLINES FRANK L. SHULL J. A. ZEHNTBAUER EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT CHAS. A. RICE, Superintendent of Schools E. H. VVHITNEY, Assistant Superintendent NORMAN C. THORNE, Assistant Superintendent BUSTNESS DEPARTMENT E. T. STRETCHER, School Clerk PROPERTY DEPARTMENT M. O,DELL, Superintendent of Properties Pickering l E Page 5 ,MMD 'V Y VSCWM ' if LEASURE mingled with regret marhs our feelings at each graduation. Four years' association and contact with the growing, developing members of this class have endeared you to us. Wfe have seen your best qualities and rejoiced in your strength, and have attempted to direct you to discover your own abilities and find your proper place. Opportunities to develop mental power and moral character have been constantly at your hand. Rightly used, this should multiply your opportunities in life. Do not thinlf your education is finished-it is only begun-it will be finished only when life has run its course. And as our best wishes go with you it is with the lzope that your mental growth will continue in college, in your daily habits, in your chosen vocation, in your constant examination of your own life, that it may ever grow in honorable usefulness. S. F. BALL, Principal, Page 6 WCVDSW U my sluzlents, comrades and friends, who, for four years have been an essential part of Frank- lin High School, I affectionately bid you God-speed. X ' Sincerely, ELLA E. WILSON, Dean of Gzrl Page 7 VYWDSK ' HELEN FRAMPTON, Serrntary I NELLIE SONNENIAN, Assistant Secretary Pagf 8 VYQW3 Wy' ' fNames on Page 101 U Page 9 X x M + , nf' VYCVDST vvv v-v' Firxt Ro-'w--Bessie Smith, Naze Drew, Alice Fields, Margaret Monroe, Helen Duns. Second Rofw-Ruby McKay, Mrs. C. M. Dickenson, Madeline Power, Helen Herner, Melinda Murray, Mrs. Martin. Third Rofw-Laura Hammer, Jennie Huggins, Louise Eccles, Louise Corbin, E. N. Southwick A-Eg-f fPictures on page 91 , First Rofw-Grace Reeves, Dana Small, Hazel Richards, Mrs. Oliver, Myrtle Groshong. Second Row-Amie Young, Lilli Schmidli, Mable Maule, Mary Townsend, Moreita Howard. Third Ro-'w-Marie Utley, Abagail Neikirk, Clara G. Burke, Mr. Rodwell, Alice Casebeer. Fourth Ro-w-Aileen Townsend, W. A. Dewhurst, Marie Smith, Helene Bourgois, Wm. Ridgeway. Fifth Rofw-Miss Manning, Margaret Garrison, R. B. Walsh, Bernice Zimmerman, Blanche Thurston. Page 10 N . A -Q .. z- . . . ,, ' ,.,. .,,, 'QQ:. ', ' QF 4 , 1 Q . Q QQ Q ' V A Q A- 'Q1' H. - '.j'f ' . . . ff- f . . .fag . f . , f , .. ' t ' . . Q.Q Q-AQ QQEQ LQ QQ -QQ Q .Q Q ., QTFQQ Q'-,1 QB? .,t,'. P':' f f',.ff ',QQQ, . 3 H. 5 . wg? ' 5fi'f3 : 1 1 ' .'.'Ef.1ffl'f .Q Q'. Q'QQ ',,QQ, ,. .,.Q Q,-'QQFQ Q ,, ,QQ ,QQ Q, Q -QQ Q, QQQ,6t,Q.-qQQQQ- QQ Q Q 'sjQ Q Q f QQ. QQQ Q . Q,, . ., QQ, -QQ3 Q , .x.V .Q Q , 4 s , '.,v.Q3Q Qi .- Q. Q. ,, . - ,,-,N K . 5 . f2ffJ.?.-2. 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QQ4: ,Aj-QQQ Q f ' . .-H '.l1e?'g'fgf,- - -Q, . .. . Q Q Q Q QQ-iw Q , -- A. 'gQ,+Q,Q , ,. V , 1 T T W' A Ig WC? to DESMOND G. ANDERSON OCKMAN President ice-President Tower: are mearured by their Jhaflowi,-and great men by therr arhzevementx. CH VEHJII7' Wher ere ix water, ere is ee Where ,there are braim, t ugh are not rhrweled. 1 WILMA M. COU Post Edito It if everlthat the merriext and ga ex row 5 over the truest a ee t. MOREITA HOWARD Honorary Member MOT'rO: Rate the taste above the prize. COLORS: Chigee reeiwana' QM. FLOWER: Japanese rose. Page II XV By nature men. are nearly aliheg by praetree they get wide apart. KATHERINE STEVENS Secretary The fragranee proved by every breeze that blolws, what need ix there to praue the rote? KENNETH E. AMES Sergeant-at-Arm: A good 'man i: better than anything elxe. RUTH WORD A dfvis 0 r VSCWSIT MILES E. DRAKE A bird in a furext ran perrh but on one baugh, and thix if ever the wire man'.v pattern. CARRIE NETTA BOHNA Llovelinen 'needeth not the for- ergn ard of ornament, but if, I4 when unadorned, adornedwe moJt. DONALD SIMPSON Thix- one know: to recite ar- fordrng to the book. Lois BEULAII INSKEEP Great gentlenerx maketh our heart: glow rn a raft, mellow lrght. MELVIN WILLIAMS He that hath a :lever brain Jpeale: and the world obeys. Page 12 REoLE NEVA BIDDICK A loving dixpoxition may be likened to a river without a rrpple. GLENN Roy ZIMMERMAN The ,fuperior man wixhex to be :low in hir word! and earnexl in hiJ conduet. HAZEL MARIE BURKE Only the wire one know: how goodnen doth brighten beauty. .fX . ff DAVID FAQ TE LX Ori: .rin e greaf man can still: a My 5 if ' - lk WILMA L. BATTIN II not the water of one'J own mllage goody are not the peo- ple of one'.r own mllage dear? ' I fa' U, on R E 'Q , i he hi ns FW' Y! X R- , ' N 1 . FLORENCE CORVIN Thi: one is made more elever by gqining the knowledge of all wise men. HESPER PATTERSON Mode:ty and eha:tity are the bigge:t ornament: in the crown of l0veline::. IRVING V. ATTIX He i: happy who know: hi: good fortune. GLADYS WESLEY The one that dare: to do all that if great ix indeed great h1m:eIf. LEONARD S. BARNETT He that with mn:ir inquire: 'm11nEt'o gwztni 1J'iZ2lDff7fY!lII. Page 13 nf x'- ki HARRIET M. KLUMPP I Yremeift even -tear: to. ery: I awn't even time to die. . . ARTHUR E. GILLA I i: ez brillia who nd: it hi amu: the pea . THELMA V. HESGARD The gfacioil: one that :peak- elh with :zlenre :ayeth murh indeed. ETNA L. MOORE What IZ jay to find a greater :ang amid the rlo14d:. MARION LASHBAUGH J lzird tluithfxtreng wings' jliex alone through the :lzie:. Viiwfxff JAMES D. OYCONNELL The .ftrong man fight: to overfonze the dragon! and rearh the przze. PAULINE J. DILLON .lg T77 ffever Win? i7ll'll'k?f'h'h1 own Heaven and earth. LA DEssA GIBSON If one be .experienred, he findeth mueh pleafure in the summon. lhzngx. HELEN UNIS Fortune is the rampanion of vzrtue. ROBERT L. DEAVER True gold never hath fear of fire. SL., f 3 Page 14 'II Q' WA FRED MITCHELL To be lirxt in the field: and last on' the :oueh i: the way to attazn sufeerx. DOROTHY B. HERIDER Only those whose .voulx have depth arfomplirh many thingy. REGINALD W. ATTIX It if :aid a gona' reputation 15 a fazr extate. ' N TI-IELMA M. MILLER The path of virtue if alwayx the path of peate. CATHERINE A. PRIDEAUX Wi.rzio1n in the rnind if bet- ter than money In the hand. sr i 72 WCWS , o MW MARY Yosml To be able to judge others by what is in ourselves - this may be ralleel the art of vir- tue. INAMAE TAYLOR To perfect diligence nothing: is diflirult. GERALDINE B. TURNER Consideration is the parent of wisdom. I , MARJORIE LANE The parent industry hath as a ehild success. KENNETH PORTER The superior one says that good-W or :ost 'n71 o mg, but ' are worth mueh. Page 15 ALICE LAWSON A joyous one desires that his span be extended to the en- joyment of life everlasting. EMMA HOGLE Thy sweet voiee falls like a dream afross the light of for- getfulness. DIVONA HoPE BONDS The name af the deserving shall be carved on the Cloud Terrafe. MARIAN F. MILLER It is known to the :lever per- son that persistenee and in- dustry built the wall around China. MARY ELLE NNA The wise e says ta have a K fend' rs to a friend. BZSEWWC ' JOHN WALKER By working regularly fvifh brush and paper mfh 1lay..a lung Jf07y is Ioan wfll wmff tm. CHARLOTTE J. Foks Tha patifnt one know: rhaf many Jtfolaf: of tha' brusl -Y make a. , LETHA CURTIS Ry giving much in Ihr' ,zgfurl wiolf, thx heart brfrmzrilz grfat and noble. AUDREY M. MCA LLISTER Thr wixf one hnowdh it is bfH1'r 10 do wr!! than to my II '1 WM4 C ROBERT MCGILVERA When 11 man if right tlz' 'whole Hrzpirr will lurn Io him. DONALD E. FERRIS Cravily, 1nngnani1nity, Jin rarity, 1'ar11f,vI1zf'5,r and hind- vzfxr rm' th: jzve mam 1111- tz1f'J. MARIUM J. E. SAvo It is known to' those who Jzfcrenl that Il .vmgerfr von: , ' J. EVELYN CRUIKSHANK Good worfls fmt naihing, but Lhly an' 'worth much. ELEANOR KOHANEK T-I rhrfrful .fpirit pierfex wen 510110. Sf ELDOR L. LLE ' a Ion road wx now tht 1 mf: rngih, .va z lzngth nl lay .rhow a g mmf: I 11 ,egg 3 hw YYEVDEVV LORETTA KIER Where one lllllll a rlwer mimi rlay into gold 15 refined. MARGARET GHORMLEY Crmlent if the true philom- phefs Jlone. IMOGENE JOHNSTON Illozlexly hath mon' charmr ilmn beauty. ELSIE A. MCMULLEN It ix ever lrue that all rloorxr open lo eol1rle.ry. MEI.v1N KATZ KY The Jil-en! zleep flyer' rqn'f .r igerythg l11'jolL1lJ fgglzlywr rifengtlz. Page I7 SIDNEY D. GIRARD So elewr a .mn of a flever m1m'.I daughter am I that an rzlvler man fetehex my -water. GLADYS C. LARSON Continurll fheerlulneu if a JlH7L of wmlom. GILBERT GORDON TAYLOR The .Iuperior one knowr that the font doe.: not make the 771071. LUCILE LEWIS Twn thozzmnd beauties glow in gelns, and goldg In love, Ifn 7llllll07l more. - . FREDA BARBER nf To' pfffret Wi'H'ig1'm7T nuthifrrg if difjifult. P' g. PMN, 5- 7 WQQDS Q J X X L . X SHI! erior an ir di:- .re by hir 'ant of 111111- t he if not dixtresxed by m J not knowing him. EVELYN HOGLE Kindneu if more binding ' than cl-lolm. ' FLORENCE C. MAHAN Though flung into the ouizxn. 1'll rixe from henealh, a firh in eafh finger, 11 pearl in my feeth. KATHERN M. SCHWEITZER For thrue who are grfnl, the great way 1: Huy. ROLLIN E. RUNYARD I've wronged no man, I work and pew my .v1'on',' I fear nn midnight knofk upon my floor. Page 18 GEORGE H. CAMERON A wise man zzdaptx himxelf in eirfumxlaneex as water Jhaper itself io the wxxel that forrlainy ff. IOLA CORAL HEIMEL The merry hoxfexx maketh her - -f guffsls ::!:o-merry. , ELEANOR ALICE DAY Charming manner: oflen make the most grzzrmur fortunes. MARJORIE KRUPKE Thr .vweelnf flowery! do not rlolhe them.relve.v 1n most brilliant pelnlf. GERfXI.D KERNS When fortune Jmiler, the win one fakes mlvanlage. YSCVDST HELEN LOUISE BROWN lhlild :peerh doth ever enehant the heart. HELEN IRENE BLACK Patienee anal the mulberry le become a .ville gown fnle KERMIT K. LIENKEMPER The brave hero ever walheth a dangerous road. nel FLORENCE GLENN BEALL It ir-a clever thing to let re- laxation ami enjoyment be found in polite urtx. MERRILL A. SISSON i9'T'thatruir1t'tn a iiins. ' ' Page 19 FRANK L. ADAMS The .vuperior one know! well that talk doe: not'cuok the flff. FLORENCE E. RUSSELL lferjuiee with patience be- come: wine. WARD TEDROW The -wire men :are not for that which they have not. HELENA HARRIET SKOLIL Thix one kno-ws when if the time to fixh and when 1: the time lo dry netx. JANET WATTS Your dont, straight soul it ' Zqftier' tharT't7ie 'moxt lofty pine. VYEVBM ' A GERTRUDE B. GUERRETTAZ Thekauguxt one know.I that humility if the foundation of all mrtuei. BERNICE W. DESANNO My hand muft ever do that Lll.i11.g.Lnr which my lile was lent. CLARA M. RENNELLS The 5eholar'.v harp hath a tlear note. JUANITA WOLSCHLEGEL Speeeh if ,fil'ver,' Jilenre, golden, Who .vpeakx Jowrf who lzeepx silent reapr. MILDRED BQARDMAN All people are ax bamboo ,rtirlexgrome more true and grareful than others. Page 20 DOROTHY M. RIPLEY 'Tix thy dream to make the rainbow Jing. to make a stone leap to the xlcy. DAISY F ARRAI-I From the highext to the low- ext, :elf-dewlopnzent muxt be deemed the root of all. MILDRED L. SHOEMAKER Srholar: are a natiorfs treas- ureg literary men are the jewel: of a feaxt. GEORGIA ETHY WARD The Juperior one know: that he who dealx with bookiand learning dealx indeed with prefiour trfrmlrex. KATHRYN W. PERKINS One 'weight of mirth if worth mnrh more than zz thouxand weight: of melaneholy. SZYCVDM' VELDA TRUELOVE Thefe i: ez box filled with preeioux :lone:,' among them kinzlnes: ix an imporlant jewel. 75 o A. H sON Dee ri: ve with :ilent may :I BYRON HAYDEN Conyeienre be I alway: lhe ehamber of jn:t1re. LEOTES R. MOBRA Your artion: are great anzl your word: are Jnzall. MATHEW OYDELL The elever one knoweth lhat feoerywnan iffwzrrhitertwnf hfrn own good forfune. Page 21 KERMIT JOHNSON Tho:e who have more talent: develop them more. DOROTHY V. RICHARDS Noble true :peeeh doe: not -want flower: of oratory. CELADYS JOHNSON True merit, like a pearl in- :lde the oy:ler, i: content to remain quiet till it find: an opening. VELMA BUSKIRK Diligenee i: ever the mi:tre:: of :z4ere::. EVELYN M. ERICKSON Thi: one know: Qzlzt to Qn- JM the'7Hm i: to get the rub. NEWS ELIZABETH D. VV.-XTSON Hr who .vingr drives awrzj: xorrawx. LILLIAN PAPE The rare one known' that, if ,fruit is liked, it ig rgrzwue to pluek the flowers. ELEANOR M. WINDERS By gift of a r1zy.vterio'u: golden idol, daneing graee wa: in the box of fates. IVAN HAWES Hr lhat halh a brave heart will eonquer the dragom. MARTIN J. ELLE Thir one lknows when the hour 1: rzpe to gather the Jzlkworrrz. Page 22 WARREN D. BROWN He who require: rnzzeh from himxelf andllittle from others' will keep hzmfelf from bemg em abject of resentmerlt. ANDREW TACCHELLA He rloe: thoroughly what he Jeff aboutg when he kill: a Tjmffhe 'd17rr-ifout-anfPo'u- RosEMARY PHELAN Every tapeftry is muyie to the eye if one but earefully Je- left: hi: threadr. VERA MAY POYNTER If you long for pleasure: you mart labor hard to get 1t. NELWYN EMMETT A ,vrrmll bit of plutlc if rnueh more heavy than a larger piece of luelc. VYCWM' EVELYN B. SHANER Become I zleyire zz good har- i'eJt, I plant my lenllzr rife :taller farejully, AGNES SHERMAN Thoxe who em' righteour live peacefully, EGGERT HELM ER A good tongue hqth Jeldom need to beg attentlon. ESTHER HART lily .foul if not faxhioned like others. To drive in their rut I might perhnp: learn, but to be untrue to myxelj would lead ta 11 mneldle. K' W 1 cf ROBERT SEYDEL It if not only abxolute .vin- ffferiky-suhich dixtin g ni4he4-Ahe4-- Jnperior. Page 23 JEROME E. KATZKY Jlanlv life if not a metal or stone. He rannot far pra- long the dayr of his fate, but he har fame, whieh lx the only lreruure that endures. BEATRICE E. MIDDAUGH The gentle one knoweth that labor Jweetenx reft. RUSSEL EUGENE DAHL No matter what the iuue, do your best. and let the Idol: and the Fate: do the rest. LAVELLE SWETNAM No pleasure equal! the plea:- ure of Jtndy. BLANCHE M. MORRISON The ,ruperior one remember: that whatwwefl-1-ke: not he doe: not to otherx. fs' NEWS WALDEN PHILLIP BOYLE He that .vmiler may rearh the endkof earth, yet never lark a frzenrl. HARVEY JONES A wise man weighx well adv vue from every source. GYDA S. RONNE ,More fuelg more fire. HOPE PERRY He that maketh proverbs in- deed workr. HARRISON IRVINE The -wire one buildeth hir future wzlh oz foundation of .vtrong refolution. Page 24 FRED CURRIE This one if so clever that he maheth friend: of dragon: at eonly as of lambf. - K fwf K E . U MARIAN R. DOWN He who reffufer to .verve either kmg or prmee 11 poxxened of lofty rerolutton, RUTH SHIMP .4 rontented mind is ez con- tinual feeuf. HORTENSE CAMPBELL The praftice of right living is deemed highestg the prac- fiee of any other art lower. FLOYD EUGENE YATES The image of friemixhip is truth. I k'iC?b?If ELSIE ELIZABETH WOOSTER Coldlix a very valuable thing, happmen' if worth 'mufh money. JOSEPHINE CRUTCHI-'IELD The tree of induytry will ever hear golden fruit. IRENE MILDRED VROOMAN .ffway and away I Jail in my light boat, my heart leapt with a great gait of joy. LUCY BORCHERT A merry heart doth good like medieine. HARRY L. CLARK When my taxk if done, I :hall not aeregt aryonyf but, refusing with a bow, re- turn to a eottage in the roun- try. ISAAC ISAACS Silenee if wisdom when :peak- ing if folly. ' CAROLINE SCHWEITZER A merry xoul if as red lag- querj it tranyformy the plain to a thing of beauty. VESTA BLAKE There if nothing on earth to be compared with a,'virtuou.r MARGARET B. WILSON The first thing a reholar doe: i: to develop resolutmn. JUNE R. JACOBSON A , wixe and Jim- ple--all lluyily hoard up the muiif of life. E Page 25 .,'-1 ,,., woman. . f ,,.L if f1:f', xm 7 IM !'? 6 'f' ,I ,. ff fav! , J f Q I , 1 f x..- ,. WCWSW if GLADYS A. JULIAN The virtue that wax received from heaven war ar great ax any mouniam. F JJ XJ , 1 1 K. ff CLIFFORD JOHNSTON The wire one diggeth a well before he hath thirxt. RAY L. BRISTOW Be it known that mmf: life 1: truly a performanee. MARGARET ALLEN X xl XJ' rr.: Page 26 I 'H' ,ww rw . .. - ... . , A V 511.145 ' Q- , ,fm -' .,, 2-wwf-ff-eff--'-1. :n,K.' .:ggf.f'1:1w- Y. , xr 1 ..,,q.3.1: p?wp5-, 1, A '. v gf..-'fm' F 'w w . 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' ,.. f 41 . 2 1 ' 9' ff .. .issag-59356.31 P2 1 5' 1 it 5 , -1 . . ff. it K 1 ' ff-'X' if j 'ik f, is , 4 4, if V6 but . V .- VVVV 1 ,. 1 , V V . asf' Q VV A RV V x. C1 ,Y V..-WV V V V VV VVVV mr 'T it w tif . A S VV V VVV VV V V V VVVV .V Q? V... , 5 ,+V, VV V VVVV Ns ,Vg-'MVVV V , V V 4, Xi YVVVVVVVVV -.... N V. VVV .f ja 4g QVVVVVTVV wr.: an VVVVWVVVVQV 3 1 mfs? 525' 3 .2 'piwifafw ? . fr S -Y .l....Q. ,.,g.:,i.1- A I , . , '55 'ffl' i 7 'Fgf'. Wff23f,r5 --.. L .... if 4. ' - . -. , , 4 Vf - g .. 55' i' 'V 4. f gif' - milf ' 'V ? fT 'f fWi 'Q-12:1 5.14. U f 'E' 2 1 , . : V:V .,,V 3, .6-VE V A , ,VJ V'VV V5 VVV 'VVVVYLV VVVVVVVVV VV VV Vi VV kVV.VVV ,gg Vg VV V .VW V. VV VV ,. V VV , , .. V. V , V .f ,gy ,f V . 1.1 ...., V.,. A . .,,, A. ...V .. f V,'V ..VV is . ' .V -. .. . . .. . f VVVV VV'h ' QEQVV V . . 'V ' -V. E,qQ2 ' QV Wf '.V. -. 'V ' rV, .V V'V - - VV.. lg. . ' .. ? - . L Q .g if ?, ' flw I ' . f N5 , fs -. -' MV .A V A 'f M . -1-v VVVV ' .. -f, ' ,K S' . si- , ' Q . f w g -,.,,' A I .1'-.ff-Q, K Wkuwvcixqi .A 1 'V-fi'b 7 'gf fL ' f 1535- -'LV. f.. 7 iw ' . ..X f i. fgjf. ,. 2.53, iM5iVE V VV YYCWS Favorite Spots Page 27 VYQVDST -Ag 59 w P if eg glassy -' 'AQ?ii'l'F'Q ivlii , uv fn f if Z K w iv N VIA Jw 4 ,H 'Nl 7 'of ' Class History The first meeting of the June class was held the last part of the Fall term. There was election of officers and other things of--passing interest, - -f The first class party took place at Wilma Couey's home in January. The main diversions of the evening Cas if so G T Q ..,. W. .... - 'l i - .M t i'ii,, iZVy W 7, , f A W f Ai f f- 5 if'f x S- -f ff X x W i 5 7 'WZ' Ei Jaws . ill fi ,.- 1 f H Q, ily! 1 , cf - Vx ,Q 'f fat f u f f L F gok 141 il! if Y V W 5 3 f V , f 5. H '4 i6 f' li f F255 aff- 'Vll3f:g, ,Q ,il i1fx'Zf'l0 Ni? I A tl U 5 gl 1 fx ia ef- if sa A if fi ew ff Eg fffdlfgix 'I E - 4 .f 1 M they say in the society columnsj-were dancing andftand- ing around the stove. ' E Wilma Couey Was elected Post editor at an early meet- ing. Then the fun began-I Hurrah! Weyve got a new class pin, and it's a WoW!', Who said We Weren't original? , Another class party, this time held in our gym, was a big success. The Paul Jones got everyone acquainted and those Panatropic Blues made them friends for life. The class play committee decided on 'fWhat Hap- pened to Jones. CLaterD Great consternation among some seniors of the weaker sex as to Whom they would play lead opposite. Sing a song of Dixies and animal crackers! What could it be but the Freshie frolic? The graduating class of Jan. '31 shows promising material. The class play was a remarkable success. The cast did exceptionally Well, and did you see Walden Boyle as the dear Bishopn? Ha! Ha! Laugh, I thought I'd die! The topping climax of an eventful and successful term was, of course, the senior prom. This was a brilliant affair, carried out with original decorative motifs. Page 28 YYQVDST Class Prophecy rr I will tell you a secret, Chang replied. My breast with fvision is satisfiedj And I see green trees and fluttering wings, And my deflthless bird from Shanghai sings. Then he lit fifve firecraelaers, Ura-era-crachfu He lit ll juss-stick long and black. Then the proud grey joss in the corner stirred, On his wrist appeared ll small grey bird. And the bird snng with herlrven burst it seemed. The twilight comes down, drifting with ashes of incense and cherry blossoms. Oriental heaven, mystery, subtlety and hot, heavy odors mingle with spicy gaiety. In the center an irredescent something slowly revolves. This nebulous mass sheds mellow glory over the whole place. By that light, we may peer deep into the future and there see our fates revealed. So we go to Changys temple, and he performs for us the miracle. The light takes on a brighter hue because famous personages are to materialize from its mysteriousness. A shape is being formed. It is Evelyn Shaner, author of books, diligently carving her name on a precious jade stone--fame. There is Florence Corvin giving an indescribable something to poetry by the genius of her illustrations. It seems as if the coming of the next figure is heralded by the soul song of melody. It is Leonard Barnett, director of the world's symphony. We then see Kenneth Ames, who owns a large theatre. Loretta Kier is in the same vision, they seem to be together. Sea green light shaded with blue and flashes of gold. A man of the seas is next. Charles Norris, famous marine engineer. The ocean tones pass out and in their place comes a piercing blue. We see Des- mond Anderson, the man who by his mighty will controls the five continents. There is Wilma Couey who is showing the old world what a fine business ability she has. Shimmery darts shoot out as Katherine Stevens dances forth, most graceful and renowned of her profession. Ahl Another famous dancer, owner of the largest studio in Paris, Florence Beall. Somebody else in France--Pauline Dillon is the foremost dress designer! A dignified man at a desk is Charles Bill,' Bockman, president of a corporation. He spends his spare minutes writing bits of poetry which are really gems. The wave lengths of color dance, and no wonder. Here is Ray Bristow, the Paul Whiteman of the day. This is Fred Currie, who, when he is not dealing in stocks and bonds, lives at his exclusive club. Harriet Klumpp is certainly busy with all her duties as a leader of society. We are so glad to see that Clifford Johnston has put his wonderful business ability to good use and is owner of the largest bank ever exist- ing in history. ' 'There seems tribe amist forming:49V'e can not see clearly. Hope Perryris sailing in a yacht but everything is so hazy it is impossible to tell any more about her. The gauzy light is clearing and in its place are strong rays. Holding a flag and advancing with steady rapid step is hlary Behanna, leader of the women's movement. It is now as ever and no mere man shall hinder her. The designer of costumes for leading movie companies is Dorothy Herider. Freda Barber has a strong, steadfast Page 29 l6E?b'M' purposeg she is mayoress of a town and is cleaning it of its evils. The light becomes mellow. Nothing is harsh or glaring before Helen Black, who is dean of girls in a large college. Here is Catherine Prideaux surrounded by bright, shining faces, she is head nurse in a baby home. Eleanor Winders skips forth. Her name on any vaudeville program is always a sign of a full house. Two sweet girls, Carrie Bohna and Hazel Burke, are together. Their beauty shop is responsible for much loveliness. There are a dash of bright cloth, a field of white, and Coral Heimel, skiing in- structor at St. Moritz. A sweet-faced woman sipping ice tea is Audrey McAllister, who is married to a chain-store magnate. Kermit Lienkemper has his wish. He is a teacher of history in our own dear Franklin, and he is as near like his model, Mr. Down, as is possible. Eggert Helmer always was clever and now he is a renowned dry-humorist lecturer. Devona Bonds is physical education director of the city of Portland. Irene Vrooman and Caroline Schweitzer dressed in the newest fashions and dancing the latest steps are chief operators at the telephone company. Velma Buskfrkisa-lirusinesswomamwlm-l'ras , '2i'l'lhtl'1'ECl6TliSfl'lZi-T'3Tg6 store. Being foreign reporter of a newspaper is certainly interesting, so Hortense Campbell is enjoying herself. A chemist who has added more happiness to the world than we are able to tell is Frank Adams. We all decide that if our ship of matri- mony should not run smoothly we should employ George Cameron, who is a famous divorce lawyer. Ferne Carlson and Helena Skolil are together at the races. Ferne is a model and Helena owns a famous sport togs store. Girls must learn how to cook, so Velda Truelove has become a cooking demonstrator. Marcia Tucker is married and is very beloved by the little children she has in her Sunday school classes. Our visionary light takes on an orange hue. We are not surprised because there is Sheldon Allen, a real vaudeville artist. Another man who knows the true noble- ness in amusing the crowd is Reginald Attix, a really great clown in the circus. We are just finding out what a daring soul Bernice DeSanno has. She is a trick aviatrix. Lucy Borchert has a dear little shop where she sells exotic perfumes. Something dashing is coming, we can tell by the agitated glow. It is Walden Boyle, who is writing the funniest, snappiest, most readable sport editorials. Reole Biddick is noted as a most reliable dressmaker. Vesta Blake, dean of girls in a high school, enjoys her work very much. Rosemary Phelan is the suave and charming hostess at a select club. The illustrations in popular novels which have been causing so much favorable comment are made by Josephine Crutchfield. The incandescent mass flashes more red. No wonder-here is Robert Deaver, noted economist who spends his spare time in collecting old coins. Eleanor Kohanek and Blanche Morrison find it a great pleasure to own the most popular beauty shop in town. Charlotte Fors is a journalist who writes bedtime stories on the side. Gladys Johnson is married and happy. There is a certain subtle grace about the spirals of color. They reveal lovely June Jacobson, who makes the clothes for tiny tots. We now see Lois lnskeep, the leader of her lodge, being presented by the honorable crown. Esther Hart is a marvel. She is designing most beautiful homes which will makefher age-famous thru the centuries. Louise Brown sits in a flowered smock painting illustrations for her latest nursery rhymes. Evelyn Cruikshank is a teacher of home economics. The mass glows with purity. Here is a ,nurse wrapped in a cloak of mercy, Hesper Patterson. Florence Russell has taken Miss Drew's place as librarian. There is a place where one can get the most delicious home-made candy. Elsie Wooster owns it. lylargaret Wilson designs dreamy afternoon frocks for lovely ladies. Vivian Page 30 P' 's F.-'L, ,i .Elie ,. ' Attix, mayor, is well liked by everyone. Harry Clark is teaching history, he loves it so. The people are flocking to hear Reverend Warren Brown. Everyone is humming the popular songs which Wilma Battin writes. Though Gladys Julian is married she does much parent-teacher work. Clara Rennells is head of a foreign language department, and is noted for her hard tests. We are all surprised to see that the fates have made Harvey Jones ceach of the team. There is Imogene Johnston just finishing a book of short stories. We are not surprised when We see Ivan Hawes as a real humorist. What is this? Ah! It is Georgia Ward at her big chair where she sits, editing the leading woman's magazine. We are all overjoyed to see James O'Connell and Mathew O'Dell on the school board. Dorothy Richards, Marium Savo and Kathern Schweitzer are running a cut-rate and quality millinery shop. Doris Miller is a stenographer and enjoys her work very much. By being athletic teacher at Wellesley college, Janet Watts is thoroughly happy. Marjorie Lane has developed an original way of writing short stories which are certainly popular with the public. As a teacher of piano lessons, Marian Miller is winning a name for her- self. Fred Mitchell is captain of a shipg he looks so handsome in his uniform. We see Arthur Gillard as an inventor of unique stage apparatus. The life of an importer is very interesting. Perhaps that is why Martin Elle looks so content. Melvin Katsky is orchestra leader at a beautiful big theatre. What is Etna Moore doing? Oh! we see. She is a radio announcer, noted for her golden voice. Lillian Pape is married. Dorothy Ripley is secretary to a dowager. Poor Dorothy, she has so much patience. Of course, we are not surprised to see that Lucile Lewis is married. Again there is a hint of the business world in the lights. It is Alice Lawson and Nelwyn Emmett, who are buyers for a big firm. Marian Down, who made our clever features, is now doing commercial art work for a large advertising company. We all laugh as we see Letha Curtis writing advice to the lovelorn. LaDessa Gibson and Evelyn Erickson are traveling in Europe with a group of other teachers. We see the dearest little florist shop. The owner, who is arranging a bunch of carnations, is Daisy Farrah. Miles Drake is a noted children's physician. Donald Ferris' haber- dashery has more clever things to wear than any other shop in town. The lights turn a queer shade of rose, and we see Byron Hayden as a teacher of English. Betty Watson is the editor of the home economics section of Good House- keeping. Juanita Wohlschlegel's work of designing tinker toys is certainly interesting. The leading woman lawyer of the day is Mildred Shoemaker. Merril Sisson is a doctor and Doald Simpson is a weather man. lVIelvin Williams is the chief of police. Russell Dahl and Joseph Spaziani have seats in the state legislature. Charles and Mary Yoshii together have done more than anyone else to promote world peace. We see Robert Seydel as manager of Portland's baseball team. Marjorie Krupke and Vera Poynter are music teachers in a large office building which is owned by David Steel. Agnes Sherman is a great favorite as a playground instructor. Gyda Ronne is a model for a large cloak shop. Next is Rollin Runyard, the tennis-playing Latin professor. Harrison Irvine owns a large grocery store. Writing with a gold pen is Isaac Isaacs, the master of penmanship. Kermit Johnston is editor of a very radical newspaper. We see Louise Hutchinson as the most popular movie actress. Emma and Evelyn Hogle have the most select girl's school on the Pacific coast. 'dlffargaret-Ghormif is a Wial wcflier in with Poriand. The charmig heafusher whom We see is Gertrude Guerrettaz. Elsie Mclkfullen is a kindergarten teacher. Katherine Perkins is quite a favorite as a humorous speaker. A unique little novelty shop is owned by Beatrice llfiddaugh. Florence lVIahan is doing wonderful work as head of the Woman's Protective Association. Eleanor Day, our golden-voiced song bird, is now leading prima donna in a large opera company. Two teachers are Page 31 l?lQ?b?x'f Georgetta McPheeters and Gladys Larson. Thelma Miller and lnamae Taylor are married and happy. LaVelle Swetnam is the curate of an interesting museum. A big butter and egg man is Andrew Tachella. The clever book of travelogues which We see was Written and illustrated by Gilbert Taylor. Ward Tedrovv is very busy as government inspector of dairies. Geraldine Turner is a great social Worker who is certainly making a name for herself. The light comes and goes, ever changing, each time differing as do the person- alities We see. Gladys Wesley is a matron at a baby home. Gerald Kerns is a bond salesman and dear Jerome Katzky a dancing teacher. There are more still. Here are John Walker, professor of botanyg Floyd Yates, the self-made business man, Glenn Zimmerman, a missionaryg Robert lVIcGilvera is head of a big brotherhood, and Marion Lashbaugh, mechanical engineer. The light has been faint, glorious and riotously lovely. There have been hundreds and thousands of glitterings, and even the faintest glimmer has been a bit of personality. All this changing mass of color has from its midst shown us our fate. tly levelyeodorfsensueus, likea-Warm still-summe-1Lday.fAl1 fades away. A bare room, five burnt firecrackers, and a blackened joss stick. We are happy! QEQCX Q O o lg CD GN Q' J wg o 5' JJ Y-ck Page 32 O lIl'C?D'M ' The Class Play The June class selected as their play, What Happened to Jones , and presented it in the Franklin auditorium the evenings of May 6 and 7. What Happened to Jones is a three-act farce, overflowing with humor. Needless to say, it was suc- cessful, even more so than the class anticipated. The cast, selected with due consid- eration by Mr. W. G. Harrington, Was: Jones ................,,...,... .......... D avid Steel Professor Goodley ......,. ........ S idney Girard Mrs. Goodley ......... ..,..... I iarriet Klumpp Marjorie ............ ,,,,.,,,,,, L ucy Borchert Cissy ............... ...... K atherine Stevens Richard .....,. ,.,,,, C harles Norris Bishop ...... ...,... W alden Boyle Alvina ........... ....4..... E sther Hart Minerva ......... ....,..,. H ope Perry The Lunatic .........,..,,...........,....,....... .......,.......,......,.,......... R ay Bristow W ,,,, , Helma ....... J s,mt,J.,,u, ........ mama. ......... - ..., ...W .....,,,,. ...Leotes Mohrzug The managers were: Business, Kenneth Ames, properties, Robert Deaver, adver- tising, Sheldon Allen, costumes, Nlarjorie Lane. Laugh! I thought I'd die! Page 33 F, lZY'C?biVf Alumni A. W. NYGAARD, Jan. '19-Graduated from North Pacific Dental College in 1924. Dentist at Lents. ALDEN B. MILLS, '21-Graduated from Reed Col- lege in 1926. Executive secretary of the City Club of Portland. CUnmarried, but not with- out hoped MRS. C. J. PETERS QMarguerite Amatoj, June '20. O. A. C. for one year. Member of Alpha Gamma Delta. At present stenographerr for Pittsburg Plate Glass CO. 11fIARY E. RAKER, June '20-Graduated from Uni- yersity of Oregon in lfgllim Taught in Carlsbad, New Mexico, one year. For past two years a teacher of history in the Cumnock School, Los Angeles, a private boarding and day school for girls which is especially devoted to dramatics and expression. ' LAURA J. MILLER-Stenographer. MRS. EMERY VVHITACHER CHe1en Leej-Lives at Airlie, Oregon, is married and has two children, a boy and a girl. CAROLINE E. TYICEVVEN, '21-Spent a year abroad as a U. S. exchange scholarship student. Grad- uated from Reed in 1926. A teacher at Derby Academy in Hingham, Blass., a suburb of Boston. J. KENNETH PATTERSON, '21-Second year at Harvard 1VIedical School. Has gotten scholar- ships for exceptional scholarship records each year. Graduated from Reed in ,25. MRS. T. M. BOUSEMAN QMae Nelsonj, jan. '21. Took a course at Behnke-Walker Business Col- lege. A booklceeper-stenographer for Portland Tile Company. ALLEN W. EAST-Attending University of Red- lands in Southern California in preparation for medical work. PAUL EAST, Jan. '26-Working in Pasadena, Cal- ifornia. 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'28 Class Agnew, Willard Apa, Josie ' Barratt, Jack Bartrum, Kenneth Brady, Goethals Bridges, Margaret Brown, Warren Brunner, Catherine Burrows, Mabel Buskuhl, Dorothy Joy, Harriet LaBarre, Julia Lehman, Florence Limbach, Miller Lloyd, Helen Lovaas, Clara lX'IcGibbon, Marjorie MacLean, Dorothy Morris, Eleanor Morriss, Raymond Cameron, Robert Charles, Edmund Clearwater, Denny Cooke, Bernice Cooper, Horace Daugherty, Dwight DeGraff, Florence Dorner, William Easly, Millard Ehrstrom, Sylvia Esdaile, Thelma Gotham, Wilma Griffith, Carolyn Hardison, Wesley Heisler, Marguerite Henry, Bernice Hilands, William Hogue, Helena Hollingworth, Marguerite Houck, Robert Hunt, Guy Hutchinson, Fred Jacobsen, Paul Jonah, Lorraine Joy, Clifford Page 36 Nelson, Will-iam - Nicholson, Virginia Norwood, Roderick Peterson, Mary Poindexter, Eola Rademacher, Arno Regan, Kathryn Rinella, Tony Ringham, Maynard Rodgers, Cecil Rollings, Harold Roop, Irma Schmidt, Clarence Schweitzer, Will Snideman, Dawson Snyder, Ruth Stevens, Marian Stoner, Ernestine Teuscher, Fred Throckmorton, Roy Tucker, Marcia Yarno, James Hollis, Harold Bishop, George P in Yiiibbixf I, Page 37 1 4 N ' A Palena, Bona WSWS? 1 Ager, Walter Amos, Robert Amsbury, Maurine Anderson, Martha Anderson, Mildred Archer, Clifford Bagley, Donald Baird, Don Baldwin, George Baldwin, Mark Barcus, Bernice Barnes, Betty Jane Baron, Daniel Bartmess, Carrol Bates, Daniel Beallg4H-arriet - Becraft, Floy Beebe, Ruth Bell, Robert Beltz, Ruth Benjamin, Roy Juniors Driscoll, Georgia Duffield, Doris Dulla, Mary Ellen Dunshee, Helen Ehmsen, Catherine Edwards, LeRoy Edmeads, William Eastman, Dale Earlson, Ellen Earl, Lyla Elmer, Ruth Emery, Kenneth Empereur, Edmund Englefried, Helen Fehely, Glen ,Y Flannigan, Marian Flesher, Juanita Fredrickson, Edward Freed, Genevieve Freeman, Audrey Furev. Lucille Jones. Beverly Joy, Robert Kayser, Bernice Keeley, Maxine Kelly, Elizabeth Kinderman. Ruth Kjargard, Harry Knight, Blanche Kuerleuski, Ruth Kurtz, Hubert Lang, Michael Larimer, Don Leach, Irene Leach, Leonard laser, Georgia Lefter, Walterif Lehman, Doris Leitch, May LeMone, Anice Lerc, Ida Lewis, Mariorie Post, Anita Powers, Mildred Pruett, Avice Pyle, Donald Raisig, Marian Rask, Thomas Reck, Gereen Reeder, Aulden Reichlein, Idola Repp, Glen Richards, Ralph Rogers, Dorothy Rolfe, Austin Ross, Alta Roylance, Frances Ryder, Ruth Saar, Walter Salisbury, Mildred Sampson, Robert Savage, Glen Scales, George S.h.ulJz. Mary Bownian, Lloyd Bradbury, Madonna Bradley, Elizabeth Brady, Goethals Bean, Lillian Brash, Roberta Breckt, Genevieve Breedlove, Wilbur Bridges, Grace Brown, Bernadine Bruhn, Eleanora Burman, Mary Burns, Elizabeth Burns, Frances Burns, Grace Bush, Gladys Buskuhl, Dorothy Byram, Maroden Cain, Loren Carbon, Paul Carlton, Floyd Cate, Zoe Caughey, Harrison Chambreau, Evelyn Chirgwin, Ray Christensen, Harold Clever, Harold Coleman, Bernice Conner, Mary Constant, Amy Corcoran, John Cowing, Richard Cowles, Dale Craig, Clifford ' Craig, Louise Cree, Lois Cuddeford, Inez Cunner, Ray Curry, Genevieve Custis, Marjorie Dalyrymple, Donald Danford, Charles Davis, Earl Davis, Rolando Galloway, Gladys Gatzka, Margaret Geisler, Dorothy Gibson, Velda Gillis, Merton Glenz, Lloyd Glover, Robert Gold, Alex Gorman, Violet Graham, Agnes Graham, David Graver, Geraldine Gray, Richard David Greenland, Herbert Greve, Lenore Gribble, Leah Maud Grishow, Alma Grubbs, Margaret Hale, Edward Hall, Jeanette Hull, Laverta Hamblet, Grace Hamblet, Nona Hampton, Donald Hanchock, Helen Handsaker, Elaine Hansen, Dorothy Harrison, Joy Hart, Claudine Hervey, Ruby Liles, Ruth Little, Hollis Loundagin, Jean Lovegren, Laurence Lynch, Kathryn Lynds, William lXIcCreight, Jessiemay McDade, Val lVIcEwan, Imogene McFadden, Gerald McIntyre, Elizabeth McLain, Vida McMillin, Martha Mahen, Elizabeth Mclntosh, Jean Schwaning, Lorene Siegner, Constance Smith, Arvilla Smith, Dorothy Smith, Josephine Smith, Ruth Soth, Eleanor Springer, Lucille Stanton, Helen Stanton, Virginia Starker, Clarence Stevens, Alice Stevens, Howard Stevens, Margaret Stewart, Viola Manassassero, Theresa Manning, Joe Martin, Opal Maxwe ll Ra mond 1 Y May, Frances May, Theo Melocke, Leonard Messenger, Donald Metcalf, Margaret Meyer, Harriet Meyer, Henry Miller, Annie Miller, Florence Miller, Ray kd lXIiller, Robert Milner, Morris Strey, Harry Strong, Rosalie Sundin, Gus Sundswo, Edna Sutherman, Francis Sart, Alice Tachiba-aa, Worth Tanory, Elizabeth Tator, Carlton Thomas, Burle Thorne, Barbara Tichendr, Oral Tyler, Orville Tranton, Lloyd Uney, H a rold Updike, Olive Hangen, Arthur Haugner, Maurine Hays, Ethel Heacock, Dorene Henkle, Clarke Hewett, Donald Higgins, Ralph Hill, Evelyn Hobson, Hazel Howe, Harold Huddleston, Charles Hunt, Guy Hunter, Alice Hunter, Eliabeth Day, Guey Dean, Louise Dehuff, Grace Deluca Eugene Dennis, Eva Dennis, Fred Dexter, Harriet Dimock, Geraldine Ditto, Hilda Dixon, Margaret Dixon, Wanda Drake, Margaret Draudson, Ralph Driscoll, Aileen Huntington. Clyde Hurlburt, Helen Hutcheon, Neil Inglefield, Flora Jackson, Marguerite Javier, George Jenkins, Ernest Jessen, Dorothy Jewel, Alice John. Alice Johnson, Ellen Johnston, Mary Jonah, Lorraine Misenhimer, Flore DCC Montgomery, Marjorie Moore, Althea Morris, Raymond Morrison, Evelyn Munch, Ernest Neitzel, Irma Nesbitt, Everett Newcomb. Isabel Nielsen, Ethel Niman, Dorothy Norwood, James Parish, George Parker, Carroll Parshall, Stanley Parson, Adeline Patterson, Maple Pease, Maurice Perkins, Helen Vance, Jack VerBerkmois, Viola Vall, Albert Vose, Annie Voss, Lurline Vrooman, Howard Wagner, Bernice Wallace, Frances VVarren, Joe Watson, Grace VVatson, Pearl Weander, Janet VVise, Helen Perry, Calvin Perry, Janet Paterson, Alfred Peterson, Edna Philips, Iris Philpat, Hoyt Piazza, Catherin Page 38 Wells, Charles Vllenmerstroom, Victoria Wetle, Mildred VVhite, Herbert Wlhitlow, Mary VVigen, Hazel Wilkinson, Emma Wills, Helen Winn, Pauline Wochlert, Margaret W'oodham, Ida YVorrell, Nlelvin VVortendyke, Jack Yates, Dale VSQVOST Page 39 JB .. Q, f'm,,,a4 fa ' Acker, Melvin Adams, Florence Allen, Raymond Allen, Fred Alrich, Sunneva Ammer, Russel Anderson, Dorothy Anderson, John Aplin, Mary Armstrong, Hart Asher, Curtis Baker, Erma Baker, Kenneth Bang, Freda- Barber, Eva Barelay, Janet Barnard, Alvin , Barnes, James Barr, Eleanor Bartlett, Grace Bassett, Del Bates, Emily Beatty, Louise Bell, Howard Benjamin, Evangeline Beymer, Elaine Bickford, Genevieve Blackwell, Marine Blair, Marcelle Blake, Joe Blass, Donna Borin, Ada Bowman, Loyd Brandeberry, Mary Breedlove, Wilbur Brown, Lucile Bru els, Xvillard V a as2?:i,a1 , Bussard. Evelyn, Byrd, Dorothy Caldwell, Seth Calkins, Harry Cartozian, Gouren Child, Dean Christensen, Bernard Clard, Gordon Clow, Mildred Compton, Catherine Conlon, Robert Cooper, Charlotte Corcoran, Edith Cruchman, Lillian Cowing, Margaret Cox, Hazel Crane, Richard Crantford, Marjorie Crockett, Roma Crooks, Frances Cummins, Erla Currie, Doris Curtin, Victor Davey, Gladys Davies, Jane Davisson, Oma Day, Glenn DeBois, Wilbur Dentler, Evelyn Dickson, Muriel Dinihanian, Victoria Dippery, Tom Sophomores Dorman, Hazel Dougherty, Kelley Duriza, Grace Dinyor, Jim Ekterovich, George Ekstrom, Constance Ehmsen, Emma Ellis, Genevieve Elmgren, Ernest Emmet, Tom Errington, Isabel Eskelson. Harold Evans, Elva , ,Everson, Helmer Fabiano, Mamie Fague, Wilma Fairell, Elizabeth Folkman, Ruth France, Ruth rancis, acquiyn Franco, John Frey, Helen Fulkerson, Helen Gabrielsen, Gladys Geisler, Paul Gibbons, Edward Gilbough, Paul Gilhertson, Wallace Gillette, Rena Gilmer, Merritt Gjedstecl, Charles Grant, Robert Gray, Marjorie Greenslade, Harry Greer, Viola Gregg, Joe Gustafsson, Svea Jiiaas, Lillian adsell, Evelyn Hall, Lauretta Halpin, lkluriel Harris, Albert Harris, Dotty Hart, Lucile Hartung, Josephine Hathaway, Anne Hawkins, Ralph Heap, Beatrice Heckman, Mildred Heglie, Mary Heldt, Clarence Henderson, Florence Henderson, James Henkle. Lucile Hess, Dorothy Hiatt, Dorothy Hicks, Donald Hoff, Hazel Hoffman, Eugenie Hoffman, William Holloway, Kathryn Honsinger, Edwin Houser, Adaline Huff, Doris Huffman, Marguerit Hughes, Ruby Hunt, Margaret Hunter, Alice Hunter, Elizabeth Hurd, Robert Hual, Edroy C Jacobsen, Harry Jann, Jack Johnson, Kirsten Jones, Erna Jones, George Jones, Lillian Kadolph, Esther Kallander, Edythe Kasper, Frances Keenan, Frank Kehoe, Agnes Kelly, Aletha Kelly, Howard Kennedy, Caroline Keranen, Lilly Kerr, Marie Kuil, Agnes Kimsey, Kathryn Kincaid, Clyde Knauss, Donald Munch, Mary Munson, Alfred Neely, Eldon Neil, Francis Nekon, Wilma Newlin, Marcia Newman, Della Niederhause. Margaret Nieuboer, John Northrup, Eunice Nygren, Anna Olmscheid, Elmo Olson, Helen Olson, Margaretrg, Schunke, Beatrice Seratin, Donald Serven, Pauline Shaffer, Enimett Sheldon, Elizabeth Shield, Susanne Shing, Jack Shinn, Jessie Shipman, Mary Siegel, Lucile Singner, Shirily Simpson, Mary Simpson, Mary Skee, Arletta Ellen Krahmann, Ferdinand Kurlinski, Ruth Kuykendall, Doris Lamer, Wesley Lane, Ruth Langer, Edith Lange, Florence Langloris, Louis Larimer, Peggie Larkin, Max Larrett, Percy Lasley, Leo Laughlin, Irene Leaf, Vera Lee, Laura Leitz, Carl Leitz, Helen Lesseg, Maxine Lewis, Catherine Lipscomb, John Lovaas, Gertrude Loveridege, Lyle Lupien, Miles Lursman, YVilliam Lynch, Georgia McCallum, Harry McGhie, Bruce McKay, Gerald McKeehan, Kelly McMahon, Joe Maclnerney, Hazel MacRobert, LaVille Marriott, Marion Marsh, Rachel Mason, Wilma Maul, Cecilia Meissner, Marie Melton, Dorothy Meriwether, Mauric Nferrill, Wanda Nliller, Miller, Neita Sanford Miller, Miller, William Miller, Wilma Mitcham, Eunice Mitchell, Cleo Mitchell, Marie Mitchell, Ruth Moffatt, Eugene Moore, Althea Page 40 Ma: C Margaret Ann Osborn, Helen if g2?trlr:TIigI5,,i2ii,y M - Smith, Frances Pacel MalY'n Smith, Luella Padrick, Bill S . h Ed. h Padrick, Margaret Smith' R if Parish, Arthur gggjll ffm' Parker' Agnes Spatz, lOrville Packs, Lawrence Parshall, Stanley Paulmeer, Frances Roy Paulsen, Pawson, Carroll Pearson, Hope Perdue, Erma Perkins, Florence Petteys, Maville Peyer. Margaret Pfeifer, Ruth Phelps, Marguerite Phillips, Huber Pierce, Vivian Piper, Robert Palworth, Isabel Pomeroy, Glenn Porters, Eva Post, Wilma Potts, Edwin Proctor, Helen Pullon, Elva May Qually, Gertrude Ramsby, Frances Read, Viola Reaume, Alice Rick, Gerrum Reed, John Reif, William Renner, Helen Renwick, Richard Repp, Lois Rifer, Alfred Riutta, Emil John Roack, Juanita Roberts, Bernard Robson, Dorothy Roddy, Elizabeth Rodman, Hugh Rowland, Alice Rush, Hazel Sager, Clyde Salway, Cedric Sattlsr, Melvin Sauter, Ester Sauer, Edward Schaiffer, Iris Schellenberger, Lydia Schenk, George Schmidt, Lois Spande, Steven Stewart, Gayle Stile, Frances Stiles, Thelma Stone, Elsie Stout, Kathryn Stroth, Gertrude Stronack, Jack Strawbridge, Virginia Swanson, Edith Swetnam. Frances Tate, Lavern Taylor, Charles Teosckee, Edward Thompson, Bonita Thompson, Mabel Thompson, Marion Thompson, William Thraee, Jean Tomazolli, Lena Tomfohr, Raymond Turnbull, Elaine Trenary, lVIargaret Van Ronk, Ray Vifahlstron, Cecil YValker, Alfred VValter, Dorothy Watson, Wallace Wehlitz, Bunnie Welch, Norene W'est, Kenneth West, Ruth Wheeland, Elaine Whetsone, George Whisler, Eloise White, Margaret Wilson, Florence Woodyard, Wade VVynn, Mazella Yarno, Frank Yoder, Ray Young, Ardath Younger, Dwight Zachrisson, Alene Zenger, Howard Zimmerman, Margaret Zurbuchen, Helen SKSQVDS Page 41 !uff ' XV! i hbilhixff Altermattf Joyce Bader, Harold Barclay, William Barker, Albert Barmes, Robert Banet, Eugene Bean, Howard Beerbaum, James Bell, Frederick Benge, Gordon Bentley, Eugene Bigelow,-'John Bowman, Carl Brown, Reginald Brook, Gale Buce, David Buffington Jack We-Glenz, Don HE ,, Freshman Bo s Corey, Erwin Davis, Keith Doht, John Doane, Don Donaldson, Leland Dorner, Herbert Dulham, Paul Floyd, Albert Gerig, Reymold Ghormley, James Gilmer, Harry Golden, Albert Hamlin, Jerry Hart, Clifton Heller, Clyde Hicks Lewis Hurst, Alfred Jones, William Junker, Russell Junkin, John Kane, Edward Kanfman. Quincy Kenedy, Thomas Killits, Jack Kohler, Joseph Leabo, Lowell Leabo, Kenneth Lefler, Floyd' , Lenon, Harlow Linkloff, lklarvin Logan, John McCann, Kenneth McLain Alfred Merch arf Lou if Marshall, Frankie Mehashe, Sam Miller, Bert Morr, Preston Nachand, Horace Nash, Lennis Nielsen, Elbert Peck, Herbert Pvoro, Harold Ray, Francis Ray, Lyle 7, Riutta, Elmer Seroggin, Harry See, Carl Sefton, Lewis Smith Alfred Snedigar, Dudley Soth, Glenn TSpring, Merle W Starkonich, George Stone, Arthur Stuthard. Claude Taylor, William Taylor, Orville VVnlker, William Willner, Burton West, Paul VVham, Roy VVhite, Clyde Wilkerson, John Wilson, Eldon Woodard, Marvin Yvortendyhe, Charles . ' . Y , . . , . Cook, LeRoy Adams, Florence Ager, Jean Anderson, Esther Avanzino, Alice Baher, Elizabeth Barclay, Jean Barhens, Mary Barkman, Elizabeth Barnarel, Ada Bartum, Dorothy Belew, Pauline Beneke, Florence Bigelow, Elizabeth Burgger, Helen Cainese, Emelia Christansen, Agnes Collins, Thelma Cooke, Gladys Cross, Queenly Dapp, Hildegart Davis, Juanita Davis, Ruth Dempsey, Dorothy Home, Harvey Marks, Robert Freshman Girls Detheudge, Hazel DeWeese, Carolyn Dillion, Fay Dobbs, May Domaiko, Madaline Drews, Lucille Dresser, Marquente Edmonston, Bellie Rose Flake, Lauretta Flier, Grace Flier, Llewellyn Ford, Lorna Garland, Helen Garlick, Irene Gilmore, Ruth Grieg, Dorothy Grubbs, Dorothy Hammer, Mary Handley, Georgia Hanson, Ella Heikola, Elsie Heitkemper, Mildred Hessemer, Eleanor Higgins, Mabel Hinman, Gwendolyn Hubel, Margaret Hughes, Nellie Hunter, hlarjorie Isaacson. Phyllis Jarvis, Amanda Jett, Mary Jones, Shirley Kadey, Momie Kent, Ruth Lepiey, Edith Lewellen, Olive Littlefield, Ethel Lockyear, Emily McConnell, Gay McDonald, Verna NlcKeehan, Pauline McQuaid, Dorothy MacGregor, Florence Maniott, Elsie Page 42 Masche, Mary Jane Masten, Wilma Mastrandrea, Mary Mathes, Frances Miller, Grace Misener, Ellen Nash, Lauca Natta, Edvige Nesbitt, Marjore Newman, Alice Nickerson, Florence Nixon, Marjorei Oliverio, Venida Orlando, Josephine Pace, Annie Pearson, Alice Pescord, Winnifred Peterson, Annette Price, Catherine Price, Hazel Proctor, Jeanne Richards, Harna Russell, Beulah Sanders, Kathleen Sanders, Helen Sanford, Marjorie Sherwood, Evelyn Simonsen, Tordis Skipworth, Margaret Smith, Charlotte Smith, Grace Spencer, Vernice Stewart, Thelma Strubble, Doris Taylor, lvlarion Testara, Mary Thomson, Emma Trent, Rubie Watts, Clara White, Hazel Wilson, Jean Wishard, Ruth VVrehlert, Adeline Zerely, Helen George Bishop Clark Henkle Grace DeHuff Charles George Currie Hope Perry Neil Pairzin Student Body The Student Body is composed of all the Wide-awake students of Franklin, who are represented in the school government through the Representative Council. This council is composed of a representative from each registration room, who receives sug- gestions from those in his room. No persons are allowed to enter into any school activities until they have paid their term dues of twenty-five cents. ' Anything working for Franklin's Welfare deserves most constant support in every respect. Page 43 MTX Q awww 'Q M Marguerite Hollingsworth ,,E.dmuncl Charles VY Martin Elle WW Nlerriljisson Y Wilma Couey The Cafeteria Committee The cafeteria committee is composed of two faculty members and five students elected by the students at the regular student body elec- tion. This committee attends to all cafeteria affairs. Among their duties is the hiring of a head cook. The committee is organized with Mar- guerite Hollingsworth as chairman and Wilma Couey as secretary. Page 44 WYQWS Student Council President ........... ............,..,..............,..................., C HARLES BOCKMAN Vice-President ,...... ....., D AWSON SNIDEMAN Secretary ........ ........ K ATHERINE STEVENS Treasurer .............., .....,.,... B ERNICE BARCUS Sergeant-at-Arms ............,.,............,.................................. WALDEN BOYLE The Student Council was organized in the Fall term of 1925 for the purpose of protecting the property and interests of Franklin High School. This term a new committee has been appointed to check on such actions that bring discredit to the school before the public, as smoking, gambling, and cutting classes. The organization consists of the presidents of the active clubs, the School Daze editor, the athletic manager and two members at large. Mr. Down and llliss Drew are the faculty advisors, and Mrs. Wilson and Mr. Mefidy areilery helpful 'Tn' W' D T ' 'D Page 45 term' p Representative Council The purpose of this body is to represent the Student Body as a whole in the school government through a president and a secretary chosen in each registration room. The Representative Council serves as a nominating body for Student Body officers, as Well as for May Queen, and sees to the general upkeep of the school. This spring it sponsored a joint Open House and May Festival day. Page 46 Yiiipbim POST EDITORIAL STAFF ' POST BUSINESS STAFF Page 47 WCW M Fire Squad Fire Chief ...,......... ............,. ...........,..,,.,... ,..,.......... N E 1 L PAIRAN Assistant Chief ....,..,.............,...............,........................ ARTHUR GILLARD 11 The Fire Squad has greatly improved Franklin's fire drills. The squad consists of twenty members, chosen by the fire chief, who is elected by the Student Body. At the sound of the alarm the boys go to the sections of the building to which they are assigned and try to hurry the students out in an orderly manner. The squad has become so drilled in speeding up the fire drills that Franklin has lowered last term's record of one minute and twelve seconds to one minute and eight seconds. These boys should be commended on the good work that they have rendered F ranklin. Page 48 Tl Viiiibixf Louise Brown Ruth Smith Genevieve Hollingsworth Wilma Fague Senior Junior Freshman Sophomore Girls' League , In the Girls' League there are four splendid ideals that appeal to every girl. These are the development of character, service, leadership, and scholarship. The Work of the league is carried on by the main committeesffwhich are mem- bership, social service, finance, publicity, and entertainment. ,- The chief events are the initiation and the 'Tranklin F ollies, a .gaudeville given each spring with great success. Q The League this term raised one hundred dollars for the Near East Relief fund. Mrs. Wilson, dean of girls, With the help of other members of the faculty, aids the girls in their work. Page 49 KYYCWQI Editor ..,.............,......... Aysociate Editor ...... Nefw: Editor ........... Assistant ......,...., Sports .............. Assistant .,....,........... Library Rewiefw ........ Hxxzxtant ............... Literary ...,.... Assistant ....... Society ........ School HOLLINGWORTH ESTINE STONER LLOYD ........MERRILL SISSON ........,..,DON BAIRD ......WALIJEN BOYLE ........BYRON RUSH ....,,.HELEN WILLS .........GEORGIA WARD RALPH HAWKINS ......KATIIERINE STEVENS Feazurey ,..,.,. ,.,...., .,...,......... ,... . . A RNO RODEMACHER Ayfiymnf ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,.,....,,,,,,..,,.,,.,.....,,.....,...... .......... D A LE EASTMAN Mufif Nozey ,.,,,,,, ........ M ARTIFIA MCMILLAN, MABEL BURROWS Exrhange ,,,,,,,, ,,,,, ,,.,,,4,..,,,,,,,,,,4.......................,.. D O ROTHY HERRIDER REPORTERS JOE WARREN MARJORY LANE CLIFFORD JOY MARGARET ANN MILLER BI L SATLER MARIAN MILLER GEORGE ROOT GLADYS JULIAN TYPISTS MARGARET STEVENS INEZ CUDUEFORD BUSINESS Circulation Manager ....... ............,......,,w... ........ E D MUND CHARLES Amxtant .,..,,....,......... ........ R ODERICK NORWOOD Ad-vertzxzng Manager ..,.. ,....... M ARGARET VVHITE Axszstant ,.,.. .,.....,.... ...........,.......................Y...., B U D WEHLITZ Sta ........4.,,,.. ..,,,, E LEANOR MORRIS, PATSY DEGRAFF Publzeity Illanager ........................................................,....... NELVVYN EMMETT DEAN CI-IILO, JAMES YARNO, PAUL GROUT, ALICE LAWSON, WALTER AGER, GEORGE CURRIE. Page 50 X 1 -X ALJ 121 Trl-Y President .............. ......,,.7,........ ...,.... G R ACE DEHUFF Vice-President ........ .......... L ORETTA KIER Secretary ........... ...... K ATHRYN LYNCH Treasurer ...... ....... M ARION DOWN Editor ..................................,............e..... ...,..,.............,..,... F ERNE CARLSON Standing among the highest of the clubs of Franklin High is the Tri-Y. The club stimulates school interest and promotes enduring friendships. lt is linked in service with the Y. W. C. A. The semi-monthly meetings are held in the Y. W. clubrooms. The first of the meeting is devoted to the business of the club and the latter to entertainment. Once each term the girls go to Rock Creek, Where informal initiation is held. Formal initiation takes place the following Week. The Tri-Y has a leading part in all social affairs. For two consecutive years the club has Won the prize offered for the best concession in the Country Fair. A formal dance is given in the spring for the members and their friends. The facult-y advisors for the elubare lVI'iss Reeves and Miss Howard 3 With their aid and the co-operation of the girls, the Tri-Y will continue to be one of the leading clubs of the school. Page 51 YSQWM' The Hi-Y Club President ............,..., ........... C HARLES BOCKMAN Vice-President ......... ......... D ESMOND ANDERSON Secretary .............. ............. C HARLES NORRIS Treasurer ............ .,...... A RTHUR GILLARD Sergeant-at-Arms .... ..,....... L OCKE REEDER Editor ...........,...,.........,......,.....................,..,..,,,,,.,............. Bos MCGILVR.A The Hi-Y Club is composed of twenty-five wide-awake students who are striving to help the school. The meetings are held every Wednesday at the Y. M. C. A. The purpose of the Hi-Y is to create, maintain and extend throu hout the school 1 n 1 a g and community hlgh standards of Christian character. Each December the Hi-Y sponsors the Country Fair, which is the largest annual festivity held at Franklin. All the proceeds go to the Qualcerg athletic fund. Each spring the club goes to Seaside for three days to attend the conference of all the Portland Hi-Y clubs. The club is very fortunate in having as its advisor Mr. S. L. Eddy, a very influ- ential business man. Page 52 SR The Illuminati President ............ ............... ,...................,..,........ D A WsoN SNIDEMAN Vice-President ..,.... ......... G EORGE CURRIE Secretary .............. ................. F RED SEARS Treasurer ............... .............. E DMUND CHARLES Sergeant-at-Arms .,.... ....... L AWRENCE KRETZMEIER Editor ..........,......... ..................... M ARTIN ELLE Advisor ......................,....,.............,.,.................................... MR. RIDGEWAY N The Illuminati Club was organized for a two-fold purpose--to further the knowl- edge of present day problems and social welfare of its members, and to create a friendly feeling among its members, among the student body, and among all with Whom it comes in contact. Membership in the Illuminati is limited to twenty-five boys. It is the aim of the club to select for membership only those students who are Wide awake in student acgvities. Good ,Qgglarship is required, K If it will help Franklin, the Illuminati is for it. Page 53 RVN The Commerce Club Vice-President ....... S eeretzzry ,..,,,.... Treasurer ......., Editor .......,..,............ Sergeant-at-Arms .,..,...................,............,...,,............ .......B1LL BOCKMAN President ...........,...Y.... ,..............,..,...,..................,,..... ........PAULINE DILLON .............FLORENCE BEALL KATHERINE LYNCH ,.......FRANCES PARSHALL ...........FLoYD YATES The membership of the Commerce Club is limited to twenty-five members. aim of the club is to help the Commercial department in every way and to they can to bring the school to the front. The do all The club is in charge of the book exchange and runs the employment agency, which is to help students in securing Work. Page 54 UE? ff 'CU Franklin Bank Club President ....,............................................................... RODERICK NORWOOD Vice-President ....... ............... H ARRIET BEALL Secretary ...........,..., ........ V IRGINIA STANTON Treasurer ............,..... ........ M ILLER LIMBACK Sergeant-at-Arms ......... ......... M AX LARKIN Editor ,...................... ........... J AMES YARNO Faculty Advisor ....................................,.....'...,..,............. MISS TOWNSEND The personnel of this organization consists of a bank cashier from each registration room. The object of this club is to encourage thrift among the Franklin High stu- dents through our present banking system. This aim has been steadily realized through the co-operation of the cashiers. Miss Aileen Townsend is faculty advisor and is assisted by Dorothy Niman, who handles the bank returns each Tuesday morning. Save and Succeed. rig Y V i W i g g Page 55 I NWS The Order of the F The Order of the F has been very active in school activities since its organiza- tion three terms ago., Only men who have made their letters are eligible for mem- bership. The purpose of the club is to help Franklin and to promote athletics in a greater, cleaner and more sportsman-like manner. Lettermen are brought together to discuss athletics. Page 56 llliiibixf' W i Camera Club The Camera Club increased its membership considerably this term. As soon as the sunny days begin each new candidate will have to take at least one roll of good snaps about the school. Hikes will also be in order, and it is hoped that the members Will get many good pictures and snaps for their memory albums. Plans are being made to correspond with clubs and individuals of other states and countries in order to exchange pictures. ,, Page 57 SKSCVDST Spanish Club President ................,....,.......,......,.,.,.., .............. ........ V 1 VIAN ATTIX Vice-President and Secretary .....,,.. .......... E LLEN EARLSON Treasurer .,,.,......................,.,........ ,...,........ P AUL JAcoBsEN Editor .......,,....,......... ........ D OROTHY BUSHUHL Sergeant-at-Arms .,.,.... ................ DORIS HUFF Faculty Advisor ........................................................................ MR. ENNA The object of the Spanish Club is to procure for its members a broader knowledge of the Spanish people, to develop ability in speaking Spanish, to promote social inter- course among the students, and to accomplish things that are for the good of Franklin. The club reorganized this term and it has been sponsoring very successful meet- ings. Among its various attractions are illustrated lectures, programs and parties. The club is limited to thirty-five members in order that those Who really are inter- ested in the study of Spanish may fully enjoy the advantages of membership. Page 58 wb W' .weft ,ff YYQWS The Scholarship Club President ...................,...,...............,..................... .............,.. R AY CUNNER Secretary ..,,.... ......... L OUISE BROWN Treasurer .,.,. ....,.. D oRoTHv MOFF,AT Editor .....,. .......... H ELEN W1LLs Advisor ........,............ ....... .........,,,.,....,...,,,.................. M 1 ss SCHMIDLI The Scholarship Club is organized primarily for the promotion of scholarship in Franklin High School. The club takes the responsibility of checking over the grades of all students at the end of each term and preparing the list of those who are entitled to scholarship awards. Its officers make arrangements for the Student Body assembly, at which the scholarship kite pins, paid for from Student Body funds, are awarded. All members of the Scholarship Club must be owners of scholarship kites. The monthly meetings are devoted chiefly to business, although an occasional literary pro- gram or social hour is enjoyed. The clubeweleomes neweall-E students. -eff ff- s Page 59 VYCVNQT T Quill Club President ..,.......... ......,......................,...... ...... E V ELYN SHANER Vice-President ...... .....,,......,........... B YRON RUSH Secretary ...,......... ...... J OSEPHINE CRUTCHFIELD Treasurer .............,... ......... C HARLES BOCKMAN Sergeant-at-Arms ....... ............. H ELEN WILLS Editor ..,........................... ,,... ...................... G E oRG1A WARD Advisor ..,..,,....,......................................,.,................. MARGARET MONROE This term the Quill Club has been reorganized and under the present system has been able to accomplish a great deal. It has been engaged in both educational and social activities. Each quarter a different type of literature was selected for discussion and study. Marjorie Lane was the chairman of the entertainment committee throughout the term. The members combine the knowledge they derive from the meetings with their talent and produce contributions for the Post and the School Daze. The social times included several interesting and unique parties, and a very successful St. Patrick's day sale of artistic boutonnieres. The pins, suggestive of the club aims, are little gold quills and a block F. This is the first term the club has had an emblem. The president, by her energetic example, has inspired co-operation and enthu- siasm among all the members, and as a result the past term has been a rosy prophecy of future success. Page 60 SKYQWSVF Tennis Club President .......,................,.......,..,,..,.,,...,.......,.................,. CHARLES Yosrm Vice-President-Treasurer ......... HOWARD BELL Secretary-Editor ........ .......... ....... ..........,................. G E 0 RGE JONES Faculty Advisor ...,.....,...........,.,.,...............................,...... RTISS ALTSTOCK The purpose of the Tennis Club of Franklin High is to not only promote the sport of tennis for the glory of old Franklin, but for all other qualities as character and scholarship. The ultimate goal of the club is championship tennis teams for Franklin High, and tennis courts for Franklin. Quality, not Quantity. Page 61 Q Vfhilbimff The French Club Preszdent ....,.....,.. ................,. Vice-President ........ ..,.. Secretary .......... ....... Treasurer ............ ..,..... Sergean t-at-Arms ..................,.....,................................... .JAMES NoRw0oD .....JUST1N STOLL ..VIRGINIA LYNCH FRANCES BROOKS ...AUSTIN ROLFE The French Club was organized this term, and has for its purpose the furthermg of interest in French. The club,s advisor is Bliss Diary Townsend. Page 62 P' wg. YYQWS The Cecropian Club President ............. .,,...........,........,........ lk TARGUERITE HOLLINGWORTH Vice-President ....... ...,....,............. H ARRIET KLUMPP Secretary ......... A,,,.................... L OUISE BROWN Treasurer ...,.. ...... J OSEPHINE CRUTCHFIELD Editor .........,.........., ...,.....,......., H ELEN BLACK Sergeant-at-Arms .,.......,.,.......,.............................. NIARGARET GHORMLEY The Cecropian Club is composed of twenty-five loyal Franklinites, who each term, in groups of two, with lllrs. Wilson, visit each grade school in the Franklin district. They tell the girls of the graduating class something of the school life at Franklin and at the other high schools. The chief aim of the Cecropian girls is to help the Freshmen to feel at home and to advise and help them through their first term, so that they may become better Franklinites. Page 63 Viiilbixfi' Pantathalon Motto: A sound mind in a sound body. Flower: Purple fzfiolet and golden maple leaf. Colors: Royal purple and gold. A club, Whose purpose is to further physical education among the high school girls of Franklin, has recently been organized and reorganized. The girls are full of fun and ready for work. They enjoy the swimming, skating, hiking, dinner and theatre parties planned for them by their efficient advisor, Mrs. Burke, and they are fast learning to become helpers in the instruction of their class associates in the gymnasium. Page 64 M YXEWQK' H1 K1 K1 President ............. .......,......,....,........ ....... B E RNICE BARCUS Vice-President ............ ......, L UCILLE HENKLE Secretary-Treasurer ...... ..,..,.......... A LICE SVART Editor ...............................,.......,....,............................, VIRGINIA STANTON The purpose of this club is to promote interest in the great out-of-doors. The membership of this club is open to all girls who like to hike. Once a month, under the supervision of lVIiss Neikirk, excursions are made to many beautiful places around Portland. Page 65 SZSQWSK ' The Aristotelians President ................. ........ B 'IARTIN ELLE Vice-President ............ ........ W ILMA BATIN Secretary-Treasurer ............ ,..... ...,.. .,,,... F R E DA BARBER Editor ......,...........................,.........,,.,.,...,.......................... WILMA COUEY The Aristotelians organized for the purpose of learning more of the play and the novel, through the works of Shakespeare and Eliot. This term, under the direction of Miss lWonroe, they have written short plays, short stories and expository themes. The play they gave at the 'lApril Folliesi' won third prize. Each week they held 21 business meeting and gave programs frequently. Page 66 1' , VYRWSVC' Platonlans President ,...,.....,...,.,,.., ..,........ H OMER CHRISTY Secretary-Treasurer ....... ........ D OROTHY HERIDER Sergeant-at-Arms ,...... ....... L AWRENCE BROWN Editor ............,......,.. .......... W ILMA GOTHAM Advisor ..........,.........,,.....,.,,..,.................................... MARGARET MONROE The Platonians, a year Old Franklin High School organization, have as their pur- pose the study of the novel and the play. They have Written, short stories, short plays essays, and have contributed to the Post and School Daze. They have found inspira- tion in the socialized group. Regular meetings have been held every week on lVIonday Page 67 fflflilpbix The Lamechians The Lamechians, a comparatively new Franklin organization, under the able leadership of Mr. Harrington, are endeavoring to 'lfurther the best lnterests of Franklin to the best of their ability. The class has great promise and hir. Harrington has hopes of their accomplishing something worth While in the future. This is the second period class, and although small, co-operates admirably. The club was organized for the advancement of public speaking and the members hope to be expert elocutionists at the end of the course. Page 68 l gi' 3, VYCVDSVC' The Demosthenians The Demosthenians, consisting of Mr. Harrington's seventh period English seven class, meets every Wednesday in the auditorium during the regular class hour. Here subjects concerning the club activities are discussed and original entertainments are furnished by the students. These Weekly meetings are educational as well as pleasurable, since parliamentary law and platform deportment are practiced. Page 69 lc'iC?biK ' The Ciceronians The Ciceronians Mr. Harrin ton's third peridd Enfflish 7 class, was organized Q , 1 g s s Q 1 1: Q w this term, and under his helpful supervlslon is continuing the instruction begun by the previous class. This class, of twenty-five members, is Working for the advance- ment of public speaking and parliamentary law in Franklin High School, and has already accomplished much in these subjects. It is the ambition of the present Ciceronians that the Work of their club be continued by future classes. N-sf i Q Tx, K ., X Q ff! Page 70 1 .-:,a1,,gfQ.'11?1y.5.a:7y- L ei, W5 wl'5i:,,,H,:3'E,,q..,,,,.,..,,.X,AA4: guy, I ivan' any iw rj Y Q Y A W v fi' Rf' fi' L,'f.lwli'.':,iggEf'M'-wein fligf-f---3i5f5'f-T 'R 1'ff 7l.g fA 5., 'WS TEES- '11fy-f 'TY' '49 ' M X-'X'-Jig 53.3 .. 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AL :Q ,fi--' '-rg, Mal-ff.,-vwf'l '! ?,f ' GQ ' yi-A ' r Q.: W. aw 2 -' Y, 36,5 ., , g .A H3 I L, -F ff Q A ,, , V 14 -' is-v' w- 5 X -,Z gl 'f 4,i3,NfH2Lf..-.-,- . 1 wwf, W: Lk 1. iz?'f gl L f T' 1,..f.:L 3. ,, wf 2 I 7 H ' -H A M ,VA . M . . ,.,,s ,Q .Jm ,.f , ,M,, ,,. -1 -Q L 1 KVYCFDS The Glee 2 This term's chorus-is composed ofthirty-two to forty members, chosen from a group exceeding 328. Of this number, thirty-two make up the Forest Grove Chorus, which has competed for the past four years with the high schools of Oregon for the state music championship. The winners are awarded cups. Last year the Franklin Chorus won the Class A cup, which has to be won for three consecutive years by the same school before it can be claimed by them for their own. The Chorus also won the sweepstakes cup, which means a great deal to the department and to the school. However, this cup was only won by one point, Eugene being the close second. The following place: fwere fwon hy the Chorus: Large Mixed Chorus ..........,......,,.,..,..,..,,,................. ,.....,. S econd Small Mixed Chorus ...,...,,.......,,..,,....,.,,....,.....,... .....,,. S econd Boys' Glee ...,..,,....,,...,.,...... ........ F irst Girls' Glee-Class A ,.,,,. ........ F irst Girls, Glee-Class B ...,,, ........ F irst Boys' ,Quartet .,...,.,....... .r....,. F irst Girls, Quartet ...,......,,.,...,.. ......., S econd Soloiytx-Girl'.v High Voice: Evelyn Goodloe ..,.,.,,........ ...,,..,,.,. F irst Eulaine Cox .........,....,,... .,,.,.... T hird Girlie Lofw Voice: Alta Greenleaf .,.... .....................Second Eleanor Day ...,, .tt,.,,,.,....... ,...... T i ed for Third Page 71 Za, Q ,flnfi...J, Ulu1xtNAn I4.L.L.1A-fx .. The Franklin High School Band MR. H. N. STOUDENMEYER ........,,............................................ Instructor LEONARD BARNETT ................... .... ..............,..........,................. D i rector KERMIT LIENKAEMPER .........,...............,....,..,.............. Business Manager Our band is made up of thirty-three loyal Franklinites. Following is a list of a few of the functions of the band: Furnishes music at all assembliesg plays at all games, to which all members of the band are admitted freeg furnishes music between acts of the Senior class plays, furnished music during the intermissions of this year's April Follies, and many other entertainments. Solo Cornets-Donald Dalrymple, Kenneth Baker, Gordon Barnett, Harry Calkins. First Comets-Clifford Craig, Cecil Rodgers. Second Cornets-Stanley Dalrymple, Lester Smith, Duane Pinkerton. Third Cornets-Donald Miller, Robert Piper. First Clarinets-Harold Brown, William Hilands. ' Second Clarinets-LeRoy Porter, Ralph lVIcCullough. Third Clarinets-Carl Leitz, Raymond lllorris. C Melody Saxophone-Gordon Padgett. Alto Saxophones-Donald Hewitt, Clyde Sager, Russell Broms. Tenor Saxophone-Hoyt Phillips. First Trombones-Ronald Hewitt, lVIerritt Gilmer Second Trombone-Fred Hutchinson. Third Trombone--Edmund Charles. Bass Tuba-Kermit Lienkaemper. Snare Drums-Robert Smith, William hliller, Vivian Attix, Ward Tatro. Bass Drum-Robert Hurd. Page 76 i V ' v'x'h - 1 f , ,,., A' ' . ', A ' N -, ? . . . 'T ' v f A Wi ' - Wil. A .V-V, ' ' P: V ' V k' 'E 1 V E ' L 'R A f 'S f.4,:f'5-. ' 5. - L Vi' 'F W ASV gg, g :if m-w'f - ,AN, A , ' ..-- Vw . , .'., . ,, ,V .r1, . .4, 4, ai - A J. -' - F Q ' V.,4 ' Qi. '-v.i1-5'-Afi7'f3Q',g4.- v' i3 if - rf-A gl '--Q---fl? . V , A-2 1' I ' 'f.j f,g v V- 'ff V -1. .f --' V .VV- 4 f ffl? 4 , ib A' A-f V l . 4, V V K L. Vt, M ,M -,I .I 9! K I A rt UV. gjy' v Qiiw ', ,- :AQ A V 'k ' ',,,,' 1 935' V lv . L. ' .,' , .V VI, .zym A W.. Q A Ti .fK?534gQ jf 1 T- Fi-il, - f 4 Yfffw--.. ' E V-S-if., ' ji ,V V. ' . 'Vf- ' Vf wr. 'V 1.. 'L 1:4 f iw - '7 ' 'AA 'A -1 -,-4+ 7' 'Th :J . 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Y ' '55 -.V.wn, ,, Y, A v - ,l-lk-ZA. if-F: V.. , ' Wx 1:,,,VgLgVxV,V r -il aus, r . , A: S L ...X . . f V : ' ig V Vw 1 V . V4 4.'.ff'-1 235. J ,xii 'A .ii a 'TA R.4lQJk.. I' AIN' Lf ?L,'x1 Q.. .f'.' .f 'E '13-,T 5 if, V H 2 ' 4 'Y - m, ' .V - ' --,iis-3 hyd' if ' YT L ' fig? W' I 1 1 . . Y - r t?5 V9 'ff!Vl '-.r'f3f--?vn:- A 4! 5332- :L VV , ' , -V . A .f .- - . x v9,Vf-f.. ,g !fVf..2fF4f,X , V . ' Q' 2-e V ' A f f .- 1 t ? - W ' 7' ' '- x 'V 'V .V N ' f ' 3 - A I 3 , ,,,, Q Vliiibix HRROWS By Charles Bill Bockman Dedicated tothe QUlUERS ofthe June l92Z Class Viiiibixf Arrows Life, the grim Archer, looms before me. Long have I sensed his presence, But vaguely, vaguely, Now the sharp realization bewilders me. In my hand I have an arrow. I place it in a quiver Among numerous shafts- There are many different styles. It seems but yesterday that I started whittling, But slow has been the process. I remember I found the piece of wood and started to make it. For what, I knew notg something prompted me. off WI X N 4 ql V4 if S if I gf' V W 'W l s F l M i x M! Iliff Now' it is finished, Sender ziidnstraight, W ' But how strange, Everyone else found pieces of wood, and whittled arrows. Steadily and surely shoots the Archer. Grimly, grimly, too. There is but one quiver left ahead of ours. The bow is drawn back, Gravely I watch, Around me is a group also watching gravely. One by one the arrows speed away. One strikes a rock, and is shattered. The owner runs and picks up the pieces. And pitiably tries to stick them together, Then turns away in despair. Away another whizzes. It is roughly hewed. We shake our heads doubtfully, and look Questioningly at the Archery But his expression remains steadfast. We peer after the arrow, it surprises us. I Its journey gives it grace, X And it flies fr-ue. X f, There goes one now. It is resplendently winged with ostrich plumes, But, alasl it stops short in its journey, And thumps to the ground To remain still. xx 9 xi If Again the bow-string hums. That one oscillates, then curves in its course, To land in a swamp. It is sucked down, down into the gumbo. CSad, sad whittler.J It had a crooked shaft. Page 78 SZYCWS The dust of the road receives this one. It is soon warped to ugliness by the sun and rain. ,Twill not be long before a cartwheel Grinds it to dust. Ah! Our hearts thrill with pride. There is a shaft, long, clean, strong and straight. The bow' snaps trueg it sizzes away, And disappears. TT Where? we ask. The Archer remains mute and grim. Look! In the bottom of the quiver Are unpretentious shafts. They are not striking, nor flaring. Purposely were they fashioned so. Long and patiently labored their makers, Constantly, constantly, too. They winged them with reliability, And barbed them with perseverance. The bow-string pulsates rhythmicallyg Rapidly depart the arrows. True and unwavering their directions. Their arc forms a halo over the earth, Lightening the worldls shadows And the Archer's grimness- White, glowing, Yet bursting in many colors As they bury themselves Deep in the targets of service. How beautiful they are, And how enviable! The quivers are moved up one. Again the bow twangs. Steadily, steadily shoots the Archer. xxxxx wc gg, Page 79 X at ' .N X Qi fi? . ' X Ui .ad N QQ xt Q0 ti I K 6 Nia, L,,I KN. y ?I ft 94 S ,ess ,A YQ .6 Q K' 4 A if A X if N4 ' Vlwbixff ' Marjorie's Party By KATHRYN REGAN Sally Jo Hartley hummed a bit of a popular piece, gently swaying her lithe shoulders to the tantalizing, half-barbaric rhythm. Wasn't it Friday, and Wasn't she going home from school, and wasn't lllarjoriels party that evening, to which she and her chum, Jane, were invited? Of course, Sally Jo was happy. The party was doubly enticing due to the fact that lwrs. Hartley and Jane's mother were objecting strenuously to their daughters' going. However, there was determination written all over Sally Jo's radiant face. Abruptly she ended her humming and, turning to Jane, ejaculated, Say, Jane, won't that party tonight be keen F I suppose so, was the slow response. Why, Jane Allen, don't you ever get excited ? gasped Sally Jo, placing her hand on her forehead to feign illness. ' 'Qf-course, Hbtrt-ff' I-j11mped -ovexgbaekwardvevery-tifme-something-interesting- happened, where would I be ? I don't know, but you might get dizzy. There was a fire in Sally Jo's big brown eyes. Then they softened and she placed a wee peck on Janels cheek. I'm sorry I said that, Jane, but you're so calm and everything. VVhy, life's just one big bang after another to me. Gee, it's almost an earthquake! Here I'm all excited about tonight, while you aren't even interested. Well, I am a little. I'm encountering serious difficulties about going, though. So am I. Every time I mention it mother looks terribly long-faced. What's the objection, anyway? f'Well, you see, explained Jane, 'fthey donlt know Marjorie or her family. That's a funny objection, sighed Sally Jo. Our mothers are-what was that phrase we read in your new book ? lVIid-Victorian. Yeh, thatls it. They donlt Want us to do anything except smile. 'KI know it's hard, Sally Jo, but they have our interests at heart. If we were the right sort we'd stay home from this party and not mention it to our families again. Since we arenlt the right sort, we don't have to stay home, replied Sally Jo, with a shake of her small dark head. Cf course, they think they're doing the best thing possible for us by being careful where we go, but theyld be doing me a greater service to let me just amble along with no thought of anything except a good time. The girls then began a typical feminine conversation about clothes, shows and the latest haircut. Thus time passed quickly, and soon the girls reached Sally Jo's house. Running up on the Hartley porch, Sally Jo shouted at Jane, who was turning in at her gate, 'fCome on over after whilef' All right, returned Jane. Sally Jo bounded into the house and threw herself upon the davenport, much to the chagrin of some long-suffering springs. lVIrs. Hartley, on the other side of the room, put down her endless embroidery and gasped. Sally Jo, evidently taking no notice of her motherls consternation, musingly asked, 'fWhat shall I wear tonight, mother F ' I wish you wouldn't go, dearf, But, mother, Jane and I aren't babiesf' That is true, but remember that you are younger than I. Well, uh-uh-but if We don't go, lllarge will never forgive us. Oh, here comes Jane! Page 80 WQYDST Jane came into the house without knocking, and scowled upon the mother and daughter before her. Did your fifth cousin just die? questioned Sally Jo, jumping up from the davenport. Don't be a goose. This is a critical situation. Mother is making a terrible fuss about tonight. You see, Sally Jo,,' explained Mrs. Hartley, 'fMrs. Allen has her objections, too. Can't you see that We are right ? Oh, wellf' sighed Sally Jo, we might as well give in. l'm tired of the whole business. Yes, I suppose so, Jane replied, with her lower lip protruding. Mrs. Hartley was amazed and delighted that there was no further struggle. To express her gratitude, she told the girls, A'Jane, you stay for dinner with Sally Jo and then we'll go to the moviesf, 'fThanks a lot, Mrs. Hartley. I'd love to, gulped Jane. It always had been difficult for her to thank anybody. After she had gone to bed that night, Sally Jo thought about the evening, and concluded that it had been enjoyable. There had been pineapple pie for dessert which, in Sally Jo's estimation, made up for the lost party. Seemingly the two girls had ended their predicament. However, there was yet another incident which had a direct bearing on their trouble about going to the party. The next morning Sally Jo, fresh-looking in her youthful print dress, was Watching her mother bake cookies, when she said to lblrs. Hartley, Say, moms, Mrs. Allen made the best cookies yesterday. Yes, they were good. ' Why-why, you were over there, mother ? Yes, I was. I didn't mean to tell you, but as long as you know, don't say any- thing to Jane. It would make her angry. Sally Jo religiously carried out her mother's request for two weeks. Finally the strain became too great, so she told Jane what had happened. After this lengthy recital Jane languidly announced, Yeh, I knew about it all the time. My sister told me just ages ago. Sally Jo rolled her eyes skyward, saying, 'fWell, it all proves that We are true friends. Each of us tried to shield the other from the truth. We're exceptional girls, seeing that a woman can't keep a secret. The Road to Rome By IMOGENE JOHNSTON I gaily travel without fear, A winding road and fair, And know, with gladness in my heart, That Rome is anywhere. W K T For my town of wondrous beauty, With its streets of smiles and sighs, All my land of Roman splendor Is reflected in your eyes. Page 81 9 fr Q.. Wan- ,QM 7 REDS With Pirates in Chinese Waters By MARION LASHBAUGH Say, Jack, what kind of a get-up do you call that?,' Fred Johnson asked, as he pointed toward a dragon-like shape about ten miles to the south of their launch. The two boys, Fred Johnson and Jack Hosford, had bought an old launch for a song and now were making a cruise in Oriental waters. Can't make it out exactly, Jack replied, Hbut it must be some kind of a Chinese contraption. Probably a junk with a load of hogs bound for Peking. Letis, run down a little closer and have a look. They accordingly headed the Hlldystery J toward the strange ship to have a good look at a genuine Chinese junk. When they had covered about half the dis- tance the sturdy little Sterling engine started missing. Hlklust be some water in that gas we got at Shanghai, Jack ventured. He Went down and drained the water and sediment out of the carburetorg but then, with a cough and groan, the engine stopped entirely. f'Wasn't enough water in it to hurt anything, he yelled up. lWaybe scmething's the matter in the engine. Jack rolled the flywheel a couple of times and discovered there was no compression in the forward cylinder. He took out the spark plug cage over the valve and looked in. Exhaust valve is broken off in the forward cylinder, he explained. :'And l'll bet we haven't another one on the boat. We'll have to get this relic to take us ashore scmewheref' Fred said, as he looked again at the ship, which was now fairly close. . Carved dragons adorned the railing from stem to stern, giving the boat a creepy, snaky appearance. There was no flag on either of the two masts, which were tipped with dragon heads. Looks suspicious. We'll try them anyway, Fred returned. lt's our only chancef' The junk was quite near now and began to swing around. The square patched sails drooped against the masts as the boat swung about against the breeze. The boys shouted to the half-naked coolies lining the rail, but evidently none of them under- stood English. They kept up such a sing-song chatter that it seemed a wonder how anyone could understand them. As the boats came together, three husky Chinese came over the rail and swung down to the launch with a rope. Several feet of it hung free and Jack grabbed it before the sailors reached the little boat. A wave swung the two apart, but Jack pulled on the rope, bringing them together again, and Fred gave each man a steadying hand as the sailors reached the deck. The Chinese seemed very much surprised. One of them made the rope fast to the forward stanchion, while the other two talked. They seemed to come to an agree- ment and motioned up a rope ladder over the side of the ship. lVIight as well, Fred said. 'fhflaybe we can find one that can speak English. And up they went. On deck they came face to face with a veritable giant, towering at least a foot above most of the other Chinese, and broad in comparison. He was finely dressed in long silk robes, his dark, square face and twinkling eyes showing a marked contrast to the yellow, beady-eyed coolies along the rail. Where were you going? he asked in perfect English. They explained their predicament and asked if he would take them to Shanghai. We do not land at large ports,H he answered. We are what you call pirates, but if you wish to sail with me as members of my crew, you will be perfectly safe Page 82 - SZYCVOSK' and may be put ashore some place. You seem sensible and not arrogant, as so many of your race are. Otherwise you would have been bound and swung on deck with a rope. This speech was slow and deliberate, showing English that had been unused for some time. The boys, of course, accepted his proposition. They were shown to their quarters in the fo'c's'le, where the Chinese sailors had their bunks. It was dark, and there was very little room. There seemed to be an invisible wall down the middle of the fo'c's,le. Cn one side were good clean bunks, some of them occupied by men much like the captain. On the other side the bunks were filthy' and looked as though they had never been straightened up. The occupants of these bunks were small, with sallow weasel-like faces. How do you get along with those coolies ?U Jack asked the captain. I donit. They get along with me, he answered. A glance at his powerful shoulders and arms and the strong but well-shaped hands would convince anyone that he wasn't to be trifled with. 'fThis isn't a bad layout at all, Jack said, Uexcept for those yellow rats over there, and they have to be goodf, The two boys made the best of the situatioiind turned to their work with a will. After a couple of weeks of sailing anddrifting around, they sighted a boat very much like the one they were on and immediately set out toward it. Toward dusk the other boat altered her course to the northeast and put on more sail. 'They were up at sunrise and saw the fugitive only a mile away. Men were run- ning to and fro on the deck like ants. The captain and two of his men were on the foreneak watching the other sloop and talking. 'flliust be some old acquaintances, according to the devilish grin on the skipper's face, Jack said. Yes, Fred returned, 'land l'll bet they get a warm reception when we catch them. When they came on deck after breakfast, they found the whole crew armed to the teeth with all manner of guns, daggers and knives. The captain approached them with long strides. He was smiling as he started to speak. 'fCome with me. You have proved that you can fill men's places, and now you may consider yourselves of us. They entered the cabin and he reached into a large chest, pulling out two belts, each with a good gun and an eighteen-inch knife. Handing one to each of the boys, he said, You can do your share with these. The three went out of the cabin and started forward. As they neared the fo'c's'le they heard a soft step behind them. Turning quickly, they saw a rat-faced little sailor just ready to strike with a long, thin knife. The captain's fist shot out and the sailor hurtled over the rail and into the water. You donit fool with them much, do you ? Jack smiled at the captain. That is why we get along, the big fellow said simply. About the middle of the forenoon they approached the other boat and a few shots were exchanged. As the distance grew shorter the firing increased, and as the two boatszgratedrtogether, the nnzn pougd over Ythe rail, knives flashmg and,guns roaring, like so many yelling, jumping demons. Within a few minutes the men had divided themselvesf The six big brawny fellows of the other crew were heavily beset by seven yellow demons trying to get their knives through the wonderful guard of the giants. The big fellows seemed immortal as they dealt death right and left, only receiving a few slight cuts in return. V They gradually worked around the deck to Where the two boys and the captain Page 83 YSCVDST and his eight bronze, fiery giants were holding their own against some twenty-five of the yellow dancing imps. The rest lost all heart at the loss of their leader, and with wild screams they fled toward the forepeak with the big huskies after them. Here they surrendered, touching the deck with their foreheads as they begged for mercy. A sharp command from the captain stopped victors in the act of finishing a good job. Of the thirty-odd men of the smaller type, only eleven were now alive. They were bound and placed where they could be watched. First aid of alough kind was ad- ministered to all sailors-victors and vanquished alike. Then the hatches were broken open and the cabin ransacked. The hold was full of rice, cocoanut and Oriental rugs. The bales of rugs were transferred to their own ship and also enough of the rice and cocoanuts to replenish their stores. All valuables and weapons were taken from the cabins and gathered up from the deck. Thisf lasted through most of the night, and the gray streaks on the eastern horizon told of the coming day. The eleven prisoners were unbound and left on the pilfered prizet The big captains had a crew of Ygnbf fifteen menethe eight 'big fellows he had before, the five from the other boat, and the two American lads, but as he ordered up the sails to get under way, he remarked that it was a bigger and better crew than he had ever had before. ' The two boats were separated by about two hundred yards when, from a porthole of the abandoned boat, came a rifle shot that took a chip from the wheel between the helmsman's hands. Three of the sailors disappeared below decks and then there was a grating and sliding sound as if heavy iron doors were being swung. Smoke belched from the side of the ship with a deafening report that jarred it from stem to stern. They hit the other boat at the water line, tearing a hole through which a man could crawl. The eleven men marooned on it were panic-stricken, because they knew they were doomed. The only lifeboat had been destroyed during the battle of the day before, leaving them no means of escape from the sinking ship. You see, the big captain told the two boys standing beside him, we deal with them as they deal with us.'l The victorious ship with the crew now wended its way leisurely southward to dispose of the valuable cargo, at a little landing hidden in one of the innumerable coves in the small northern islands of the Philippines. Here the two boys took leave of their Oriental friends and started for Manila in their launch that, by this time, had been rigged up with a sail. As they said good-bye to the captain, he handed them each a small heavy bag. F- l s.2 Page 84 -1-eww.. VYCVDST Chinatown at Night By CLARA RENNELLS Here, the lights are gleaming, There the shadows creep Down a sombre alley, Through a narrow street. just a part of China From the Eastern Sea, Dreamy, oriental, hlasked in mystery. Now, the darkened doorways Close their secrets keep, Now, is brooding silence, Sinister and deep. Comes revealing daylight, Flashes faint alarm. Chinatown awakens, Gone the midnight charm. ,ef 'Nw ' ,.f5fX iff 1 .- gg 9 f yd- -, ' f ' ' ff? - F, I, ,fr 1 Q FP ,X J - ,,V,,, , R mf -cb , 'i.i.a4 'lt I 35 4 Page 85 .Y . X 9 h i l?iQ?b'Q Chin Chin Koba Kamag or, The Might of Little Men By TNIARY YYOSHII Long, long ago in Japan during the period of Feudalism, there lived a young girl named Namiko-San. She was brought up by her grandparents, who loved her very much and did everything for her. She had maids to help her with her dressing, dining and playing. As a result she became very lazy and was very dilatory in putting things away. A Whenfshe was twenty-one, sli became iieqbrifle offwanaga, a Japanese war: rior. She was required, of course, to leave her grandparents and her maids to live in another city. lwanaga, being a warrior, was away frequently, and so she became very lazy, indeed. She was so lazy that every morning she would use a new tooth- brush, because she did not want to place the old ones back in their places. Instead, she putgthem under the mat. Y, K V V Une night at twelve o'clock, queer little men dressed in kimonos came out of the mat and began to dance and sing: Chin Chin Koba Kama, Sleep, princess, sleep. Namiko-San was very much frightened, but was afraid to tell anybody, since a warrior's wife is supposed to be brave. At length she could endure it no longer, and so when her husband came home she told him all about the little men. Iwanaga was quite surprised and amused, but seeing her so frightened, he promised that night to hide behind the screen. As usual, at midnight, the little men came out and danced and sang. The warrior drewi his sword and struck at the little men, whereupon they all became tooth-brushes. Namiko-San was very much ashamed and ever after she was very careful about put- ting things away. Sea Gulls and Sea Winds By CHAS. BILL BOCKMAN Tiny flecks of sea foam Thrown by a breakeris wrath High into the air, And gyrated about, madly, dizzily, Till the wind, In a mad caprice, Churns them, and with a blast Sends them sweeping in strange formations At a lazy cloud-target. Suddenly the wind deserts them, And leaves them, suspended In mid air, To float aimlessly about, And settle slowly, and silently, Down, down, down To the lonesome bosom Of the sea. Page 86 lc'1E?bixl' The Devil's Garden By ANITA Posr I swear as God is my witness that every word herein is the truth. Signed, David Long. It was our first night in the South Seas. Harry Bright, jack Hammond and I had come to make a research -of the flora on the islands. We sat smoking on our cabin porch in the balmy starlight. Then the moon rose. The moon-God, what a moon! It drew, it lured, it fascinated, and we went mad. All around seemed a paradise of beauty. Not a sound, not a breath-just an incan- descent light falling like a golden mist. It was a most beautiful sight and yet most sinistek-iAWcaressing-breeze camafrom nowhere, bringing a perfume almost over- powering in its sweet cloying quality, heavily bewitching. We wallowed in ecstasy. Like maniacs we ran into the jade duskness of the jungle, heedless of danger, unconscious of all things except that enticing essence. We stumbled along blindly, crazily. Once we landed in a snake nest. What saved us I do not know. We drew closer to that magnetic odor. We saw a faint path leading further and we raced' down it and tore through a wall of bush. That wall hid a fusion of nature's most glorious and most evil art. It was like a garden of jewels-gleaming jade, scintillating diamonds, burning rubies, sparkling amethyst, glowing opal, all covered by a film of golden dust from the flaming yellow moon sifting through the heavy scented air. The air was incense, beautiful, soft, magical. We stood silent, bound by the spell of its beauty. It seemed as if the world were a mere myth and we were in paradise. We soaked in the magnificent sight, its color, its richness, its compelling odor. In the powerful stillness we drank until we were filled. Then we began to examine our earthly Eden. Bright gave a croak of maniacal joy and bounded toward a huge flaming crimson flower as big as his head. He wrenched it from the plant and fell with a shriek of agony. That cleared our heads a bit and we went to see what had happened. He lay moaning, grasping the broken flower. The beautiful thing had curled up into a dark, ugly, wilted ball on its long watery stem oozing with sap. Bright was holding his arm, writhing in terrible torture. Hammond held him still while I examined him. His whole arm was a nasty brick color, and where the sap had trickled across was a dead white line like a sear from a hot iron. I did not know what to do but break for a clearing and fresh air. I turned to Hammond, but he was staring with crazy delight at a flower seed ball of a silvery sparkling substance. Slowly like a snake he wormed toward it, hand outstretched. I tried to yell, but the air seemed to be a blanket of cotton. Closer he went, gloatingly, passionately, and then he stiffened and fell over. When I reached him all his muscles were locked hard. Through his hand stuck. a silver sliver from the seed ball, winking and twinkling with malignant brilliance in the yellow light. It had given him tem- porary paralysis. And I? I was wild with delirium, burdened with two senseless men in a devil trap. The garden ofbeauty was gone nowg its-appearancerwas mocking and ghastly. The air was heavy and poisonous. Paradise was lost, the devil frolicked free. I must have raved a long while, for the moon was gone, all was black and evil. I dared not move lest I run into some form of devilish torture. There were Bright and Hammond helpless as logs. I tried to think. God! God! why did he create that place, a devil's garden, cunningly hidden, powerfully evil? I was getting crazy again. Page 87 ggs' .. Vfbipbixfi ' It made me wild. I raged with brute rage and with one savage effort I jerked and lugged my men through the noxious growth. lt was hell on earth. That's all. They found us next morning, shattered, torn, crazy. Bright's arm was like a dead branchg he died shortly afterward. Hammond is in an asylum. l am a marred and scarred man, maimed by a diabolical nature. An object of pity, I shall try to live the rest of my life in solitude. Jewels, flowers, moonlight-I shudder. God keep my mind whole. Tradition TT By CHAS. BILIQTBBEKMAN The heart of Chang is sore. The spirits of a score of ancestors K Smother his thought. Long centuries have passed since they lived But their voices still direct him. Their traditions are desert blasts Which wither shoots and buds, The shoots of his individuality And of his personality, The buds of his originality and initiative. Long, long he kneels before a leering image, And mutters incantations. His swaying body wreathes the joss smoke rhythm-ically. His eyes are closed reverently, And he praises the voluptuous mass. With fire And fervor, he praises it, But only because his father, And his grandfather, And his grandfather's grandfather's grandfather did, But ever as the intonations of his voice Whisper from the far corners of the chamber, His heart strains in revolt, And his soul in opposition. Poor Chang, sick Chang- The desert blasts have burned his eyes. He gropes, but only finds the image Towering mockingly, mockingly. Page 88 u P' -1 VYCVDSVQ ' l .N W 'wi' :lc xlib- 'll 5 1: i 1 Y if P 'J A 7 ff, fi s A 5 vp TTL ak flu W it a . Q , Q v Z . . E 5 His First Love , WILMA FAGUE A cf' Little Ching Chang Chow was sitting on the floor, e U -5 Q' - writing his lesson for the morrow. He was thinking -,, 'jp-3,74 hard for his seven short years and, as he wrote or A: rather drew the three women that stood for gossip in his language, he lazily kicked off his shoe and scratched his foot in the same manner, and for the same reason that the modern boy scratches his head. What would he give her that would place him above the others? What would it be? There, he had it. He would give her a doll on Doll Festival Day. The days flew as little Chang saved every piece of money in a regular Scotch fashion. Then that delightful day came. Happily he trudged to the store and bought the much-prized doll. Uh! how carefully he carried it, as he hurried to her house. Would she like it? Goodness, if she didn't, what would he do? It was small to be sure, but it was pretty. He would tell her it was, and then tell her that she looked like the doll. Thatls what he'd do. But as he neared her house, his courage began to sink. Would he dare? Should he? Gathering all his courage, he stepped timidly on the porch. Entering, he discovered that the room was quite fully in fact, there were at least five boys placed in different degrees of discomfort and embarrassment. His rivals, horrors! And they all of them had the same kind of bundles. His last chance for success in her eyes was gone. VVhy, oh, why, had they all had the same thought? Just then the object of the rivalry appeared. Every boy's heart beat twice as rapidly as he looked to see whom she would smile the sweetest upon. She was dressed in dazzling white with just a bit of red. How neat she looked! What wonderful dolls! she exclaimed when each boy presented her with a package. I'1l love them as I used to do mine at homef, Then the thirty-five-year-old American doctor gave them each a sweet smile. Page 89 SZYQWEW Two and One By CHARLES BILL BOCKMAN Two trees, giant firs, Stately and symmetrical, Silhouetted against the radiant evening sky. From my heart comes the question, 'fAre you lonely, 0 firs? You are so high-so high above earth's bosom. By the breath of the wind that rocks them, they answer, No, for we are two. H One moon, A giant white hot globe, Frosted in spots, illflysterious, enhghtening, benevoTent, K Bravely silvering the darkened heavens. Answer me, 0 moon, are you not lonely In your utter isolation ? Again an answer, whispered by moonbeams, No, for like one great consuming love, I am sufficient unto myself. The Practice Hour By FLORENCE TVTAHAN A prim little figure seated at the piano lost its primness as the hour of practice drew to a close. The monotonous exercises were varied by a loud thump denoting a burst of childish impatience from the young musician. The little girl turned her head to look at the clock, which she had placed on the table. A wrinkling of the- freckled nose preceded a deep sigh of infinite dejection as she turned again to herf lesson. Slowly the halting notes gained velocity and the practicing was resumed. One shoe with hanging strings was about to fall from the foot which tried vainly to reach the floor. Shaking her feet the child dropped the offending shoe to the carpet disclosing a stocking which needed mending. Her head with dark shingled hair was bent studiously above the keyboard. A string of glass beads crumpled the collar of her simple dark dress. Once more she glanced at the clock. Then she rose with a little grown up air of duty done, put on her shoe and hurried away. I 1 5 v Q ' 'xt ' ' x Y W Page 90 VYQVDS Romance By KATH ERIN E STEVENS Father,,' said lXIargaret, 'fare you going to tell me the story of Fanny Perkins? VV'all,U replied Captain Pate, knocking the ashes from his pipe, let,s set here. You see, it was this way. Fanny was right handsome, had good manners, but rather queer. She used to take a trip to the big city ever so often and bring back baskets of toys and trinkets for the little ones. Then the Captain paused and glanced toward the tiny village huddled at the foot of the grayish blue hills. It might have been any villageg there was nothing unusual about it. An artist would have been delighted with its rough beauty. 'fYet, as I says before, she was real prettyg but she had no use for the young meng that is, not until Daniel Hills landed. He was a large, husky man, with light hair and twinklin' blue eyes. He was gocd-natured and 'peared to have a way with him that pleases. He and Fanny began pairinl off, goin' to picnics and things. They seemed to be gettin' rather thick when it came time for his ship to take leave. Captain Pate again stopped, lighted his pipe, and resumed the tale. Wall, they just up and got married by Parson Billings. He was to go back and finish the rest of his year with the crew, and she promised to wait for him. While he was gone, she went ever' week to the postoffice behind Ted Morry's shop, and would send or get a letter from him. She seemed happy, still made trips to town and brought things to the kiddies. lt was dark by now and lllargaret moved closer, urging the Captain to hurry with his story, which he told in his slow, drawling voice. 'fThere came a day when she got no letter. Another and another went by and she got none. She still went to the postoffice, but with no result. Disappointment fastened its claws on her, and she began to keep more and more to herself. l Ever' day she'd walk down to this here dock and wait for his return. Yep, sometimes she'd spend half a day here. She made no more of them journeys to town. She hardly ever ventured from seein' distance from this dock. Fanny got thinner and thinner, but she didn't 'pear any older. Once we got word Dan had been killed in a fight at sea, but she'd never believe it. Then we heard he had been arrested for desertinl in England. Anyway, he had disappeared. We all felt for Fanny, but she kept more' and more to herself. Years passed, and her hair, once a reddish golden color, was turned to silver, but her face and figure stayed the same. From a distance you might think she was a young woman. 'fEver, year since my granddad's father lived here, we've always had our lWay carnival. The folks and our kin, for we are more or less related, would dress up in fancy garments, go down to the village and have a high old time. Wall, Fanny stayed to home while we went down before Joe's store and made merry. It was about seven o'clock when one of the schooners docked. We fed the crew and showed them a good time. Une of the fellows was tall, rather thin, but showed he'd been somethin' sometime or ruther. His hair was streaked with gray. I hadfft taken particular notice of him until he stcodmbefore me and put .his.hand over his head and eyes. I glanced at him and then at one of the fellows standin' by. 'He's off,' said Jim, pointing to him. 'Off what ?' l asked. 4'fHe,s crazy,' answered Jim. fWe picked him up at Granada, where he was stayin, with an old Spaniard who lives near the wharf. It seems like he was in a Page 9.7 WCVDST fight, got knocked out, and lost his memory. He's been actin, queer ever since we landed. Ever seen him before? 'K KI reckon I have,' I says to Jim. Captain Pate arose. Margaret followed him as he slowly walked toward their home. He was so changed that I found it hard sailin' for a while to connect him up with Daniel Hills. I took him to Fanny, and words can't tell what she looked. When he saw her, he near went wild, and then he collapsed. We carried him in, and she nursed him until he came conscious two days after. Seein, her had riled his memory, I guess. Anyway, he got it back. They're as happy as two children. Wall, drawled the Captain, this is the tenth time you've heard this story. Ain't you ever goin' to let up on your old dad F he chuckled as he opened the door to their hut and lit the lamp. 'Pears to me you might get the ending if you look out the window. Standing side by side and facing the sea could be seen two forms. Silence hovered around. The breeze stirred the waves, and the moon cast glimmering shadows over the water. A cloud floated across the moon, the light retreated slowly and darkness remained. The Rain By WILMA Posr The rain is calling, calling, As the wild birds call in spring. The rain is falling, falling, Like pearls from a broken string. The rain is sobbing, sobbing, As the hopeless sob with woe. The rain is throbbing, throbbing, Like notes from a master's bow. The rain is beating, beating, As hands beat on the door. The rain is fleeting, fleeting, Like dreams when the night is o'er. x 723 '42-35? X J, T X M wff'5:e xN J f,-FZ! Page 92 vsevsst The River By BYRON RUSH The other day I crossed a river and the water seemed strangely beautiful. Here it was light and clear and seemed glad to be going to the sea. As I looked farther, though, the shadow of rotting wharves met my eye and the Water seemed black and sinister as though it were waiting .... A gull soared and swooped, then soared again. It seemed so clean and graceful that I forgot the blackness and rot of the wharves. A boat was coming up the river and on its tiny deck a man stood, dirty and unshaveng yet somehow I looked at the gull again. Perhaps it is the river that makes men like this. Proud and free and alone! I have seen old sailors ashore after years at sea and they seemed always wistful, as though they were searching for some- thing. A bit of stuff, a chip or two, floated by, tossed by the will of the Water and suddenly Life was before me, resistless, sometimes light and clear and sometimes black and ugly. And yet men struggle against the thing called Fate. Someone jolted my arm and the mood was lost, the river was again a river, but I was not the same, for I had seen myself a chip, a bit of flotsam on the hurrying tide of Life. ff J - lfii',Q'53??'f-I i- -E 1' ig?-g:ff ef'-.if ' S' ...V ' :L ,.. if : jt'f', 2' Mixed Dates By WARREN BROWN l've got this party all planned out, Ruby Johnson said. We can't play post- office, or winkum, or danceg so we'll have to play tame games. We'll play forfeits, have a treasure hunt, and a continuous story. They will take up about all the time. VVe're going to serve punch and cake for refreshments. Ruby Johnson was a small blonde girl. She talked all the time, and when a party or an entertainment came along she was always the first one to start planning. She had been appointed along with Jimmie Smith as one of the committee of two to arrange for the party. Jimmie was a light-haired, blue-eyed, bashful boy. He had never been out with a Page 93 l F' -,, , Vfbiibixft' girl and seldom spoke to one if he could help it. It was a trying ordeal for him to help plan for the party. During the committee meeting he had hardly spoken a Word. 'T11 have to be goingf, he finally said. UI have to do a lot of work, and it must be done tonight. As he went to get his hat he took out his handkerchief. At the same time two orange squares of cardboard fell out of his pocket. What are those ? cried Ruby as she picked them up. Why, they are tickets to the class play over' at Westport next Thursday. fHow did you get them? What are you going to do with them ? fl don't know. I got them from Jack Nash, he had four compsf' 'You don't know what you are going to do with them?', fWell, not exactly,', said Jimmie, getting redder and more embarrassed every moment. Do you want to go ? Sure, Well, you see, we won't get home until real late, beciause it is a long ways over fheref: Oh, that's all right! 'Tll have to be going, or lyll never get that Work donef, So long, Jimmief' So longf' The next night Jimmie came to the party. He was dressed in a white sweater and dark trousers. When he arrived he was very self-conscious. Among the girls who came to this party was a little French girl-Louisa Du Bois. She had dark hair and eyes, and was considered one of the prettiest girls in school. She had fascinated Jimmie by her smiles, but he was so bashful he dared not try to become acquainted. When the time came to leave, she was the girl that he found by his side. They were at her home-the time of parting was near at hand, because it was getting late. 'iWhat are you going to do Thursday night, Louisa? Nothing.,' Do you want to go to Westport to the class play?l' Sure.,' Well, you know it will be late before we get home, because it is a long way over theref, 'AOh, that's all rightln Then youlll go with me ? HYeS.53 'Alt's getting late, Jimmie, so I'll have to go in. Well, good-night, Louisaf, 'fGood-night, Jimmief' Four days elapsed-it was Wednesday. The girls of the Senior class at the Union High School had gathered to talk over the events of the last four days. 'iWhat do you think of it, girls ? cried Louisa. Jimmie Smith is going to take me to the class play at Westport tomorrow. He is going to take me, Ruby cut in. When did he ask you? Saturday.,' Well, l like that. l wonlt go with him now. ' Neither will I. W H The next day Ruby and Louisa were walking down the hall at school when they encountered Jimmie. I K K C Page 94 rg fe. WICVDS Well, big boy,', said Ruby sarcastically, you thought you could have a date with both of us, did you? Well, herels where you get let off. You can go and find another girl now.', 'KYes, you can find another one now, Louisa said, as they went on by him. Jimmie had a study period and was outside talking to his friend, Jack Nash. He had told him all about his double date. Well,,' said Jlack, 'Kif l were you l would try to find another girl, and show Ruby and Louisa you canf' Yes, but who can I get? '5Try Agnes Phillipsf, She wouldn't gof, Ask her, anyhow. All right. Jimmie was dressed upg he was going to the class play and was going to take Agnes Phillips. He did not look as bashful as he really felt. Agnes was a girl with light auburn hair and brown eyes. She was very attrac- tively dressed. They were at Westport High School. They found their seats and were com- fortably settled, when in came Ruby and Louisa, accompanied by Jack. The three of them found seats directly in front of' Jimmie and Agnes. The play started and continued-that is all that could be said of it, if taken from Jimmiels point of view. He could not enjoy the play. The room seemed stuffy, the play slow and dull. All the people seemed like terrible monsters. He could not enjoy the play because he was so worried that Agnes would find out about his double date. Jack made it worse by turning around every few moments and making insinuating remarks. Finally he turned around and said, Well, Jimmie, you'd better take my advice. Girls are just like street cars, never run after them. There is always another one coming. YQSHW Eivi- New Page 95 lZSC?D'Q4 The River of Heaven By GEORGIA WARD An old legend is told in China that centers about a beautiful river. Many years ago, it was believed by the superstitious natives to flow from Heaven, a continuation of the Milky Way. Anyone who drank of its Waters, so they said, would have immor- tality and would live with the gods in Heaven. At this time eastern China was ruled by an old emperor, Wu-ti. When he heard the rumors about this marvelous river, he at once grew desirous of having some of the precious liquid. He had a much trusted minister, Wen-tu, a young man who loved to explore new countries and bring back tales of the strange places he had seen. Sending for him, he said: Wen-tu, I am about to ask you to go on a perilous journey through the unexplored regions west of our landf' Then, telling him of Indeed, I will be glad to obtain the precious Water for you, no matter what the danger, was Wen-tu's answer. As Was his custom when he explored a new country, Wen-tu took with him, besides his soldiers, a great many people to colonize the territory. Among those who were to settle in the new region were the families of a boy and girl who had been playmates as children, and were now devoted to each other. The old legend has not preserved the names of the two. The people merely call them the Ox-Boy and the Weaver-Girl. With much ceremony the band set out and traveled for many days without event, keeping steadily Westward toward the country of the River of Heaven. At last scouts who had been sent ahead to Watch out for the hostile Tartars who inhabited the country brought back the word that they had seen the great river flow- ing through a beautiful country. With joy Wen-tu's followers hastened forward to the banks of the River of Heaven. As the scouts had said,'it was beautiful and the people rejoiced that this new territory was to be theirs. As it was late in the day, they began to lay out a camp for the night. Not very long afterward, all was silent, save the noise of the mighty river. 'Not suspecting that they would be molested, the guards also fell asleep. Then suddenly, without warning, a great band of the fierce Tartars swooped down on the sleeping camp. The Chinese were, of course, awakened bythe onslaught and did their best to protect themselves, but the Tartars were of such great size and such skillful horsemen that nearly all were killed, or carried off by the unrelenting bar- barians. When the morning came, it was found that Wen-tu himself had been killed. The people despaired of ever reaching their homes again or of taking any of the precious liquid to their ruler. The Ox-Boy and the Weaver-Girl were among the captured. Although they were unhappy at the misfortune which had happened to them, they were overjoyed at the fact that both were alive. Their joy was not to last long, however. The chief of the Tartars himself came to look over his captives, and when he saw the Weaver- Girlis beauty his eyes glistened with greed. The fact that he had two wives of his own made no difference to him. He ordered the Weaver-Girl to be taken to his home. The Ox-Boy was in despair. He did not know whlat to do, but he could not bear the thought that his sweetheart should become the bride of this cruel Tartar. Page 96 l?iE?b?K ' He spent the whole day and far into the night praying to his gods for help, then exhausted, he fell asleep. The next morning there was great confusion. The chief had had a terrible dream and none of his wise men could interpret it. He had seen in his dream his own body being eaten by magpies, while his new bride watched with a smile on her face. The wise men were afraid to tell him that it was a bad omen, so they saidi that they were unable to interpret it. When the Ox-Boy heard this, his face lighted up. He hastened to the guard and told him that he could interpret the dream. He was taken to the home of the chief Tartar and admitted to his presence. With fearlessness he stood and told the chief that the gods were angry with him for taking the Chinese girl as his bride and that unless he gave her up he would suffer some great calamity. The chief was very superstitious and believed in dreams, so he decided to take warning. He again called his wise men together to decide what should be done with the Weaver-Girl. At last they decided that a person dangerous to the well-being of their illustrious chief should be put to death. Then the question came up as to the method by which she should be put to death. Finally the wise men decided that she should be drowned in the sacred river as a sacrifice to the gods. Thus, the chief thought, their anger might be appeased. The Weaver-Girl was beautifully dressed and led to the banks of the river, ready for the sacrifice. Of course, this was not the result the Ox-Boy had desired. He had thought that she would be set free so that they might go back to their own country and live happily. Instead, she was to be killed. lt seemed hopeless now that they would ever again be happy- After a long religious ceremony, the wise men made ready to sacrifice her. Sud- denly two magpies came through the air, seemingly from Heaven itself. One perched on the shoulder of the Weaver-Girly the other flew to the shoulder of the Ox-Boy. An omen! An omenl cried the wise men. He, too, must be killedf' The Ox-Boy was seized and dragged to the riverls edge, while the magpies hovered above them. The two were plunged to the black depths of the river below to be drowned together. The legend runs that the gods were so touched by the devotion of the two that they took them up to heaven to dwell there in eternal happiness. Once a ye.ar, the story goes, the two meet by the River of Heaven on the seventh day of August, the day on which they were drowned, while the magpies hover about'them. son.. 4 ,hui any Page 97 Viiflbixff .lawbone By IMOGENE JOHNSTON Pete Bailey shifted his tilted-back chair to a more acute angle, and his wad of gum to the opposite cheek. He grunted disgustedly as he stared into the empty street. The street was as it always was, month in, month out. Quinablangan itself, in fact, the whole island of Mindanao, never changed, but it brought disastrous changes in white men. lt made them ugly-tempered and suspicious. It made them wonder why they had come, and why they did not leave. But they seldom did leave. The enervating south wind sapped their energy and killed their ambition, and it takes both energy and ambition to break ties with a place. A trade station in Mindanao may be remunerative to the owners, who may live comfortably in the States, but it can hardly be said to be profitable to the resident trader. This Pete Bailey had learned in the months during which he had received the rice and sugar and hemp and betel nuts at the station, iandddoled out 'th-Eprovisions' and trinkets and cheap cloth in return. The street was deserted, as it usually was at that time of day. It looked hotter and more sultry than ever. Around the corner came a two-wheeled carramata driven by a white man in immaculate white-a white man who looked singularly energetic for Quinablangan. He was sitting upright in the cart and, unbelievably, whistling a popular tune. The scowl on Petels face deepened. He had a deep hatred for Ward Temple, that had mounted steadily since they had come from San Francisco on the same steamer months before. The hatred was as meaningless as it was bitter. Pete hated his spotless white clothes, his slight English accent, his everlasting cheeriness, and air of being at peace with the whole world. But with a caution inborn in him, Pete Bailey had never allowed the other to suspect his hatred, although sometimes he could hardly suppress his views of the intelligence of one who would live in Quina- blangan through choice. True, Ward Temple had a large, comfortable house and his native servants were well trained, but even that did not compensate him, in Pete's opinion, for the heat and dust and deadly monotony. But as the carramata disappeared from sight beyond his doorway, Pete forgot Ward Temple in the moody fit of despondency that had seized him so often lately. The place had got so terribly on his nerves that of late he had contemplated breaking away. But there were certain difficulties in the way. Foremost among these was the fact that he had no money, or at least, not enough to take him very far. He had taken the post thinking that he would stay a year or two, in that time making a com- fortable stake,,' and then return to the States. But these plans did not materialize. There was woefully small chance of a fortune being made on Mindanao. He would not have hesitated a moment in leaving the post without a trader who would have to come from the States, but with the absence of sufficient money to leave, he stayed on. I could take a chance on leaving the post for a while, and hop the Susan Lawson for Nagasaki if I had some coin, he mused, then sat up with a start. Something shut off the light from the door. A ragged native entered and was standing inside the door. Pete had seen him before around the town. He was called Agrefina Valases, a hanger-on of the type found about any post. He was dressed in a dingy, ancient pair of cotton trousers and an even dingier and more ancient shirt. He was not one of the fierce llloros of lllindanao, but probably a Tagalog or lggorote, who had found his way down from Luzon. Pete looked at him sourly, waiting for him Page 98 SGEWM' to speak. Finally he seemed to summon courage. Sabe jawbone?', he suggested with the air of asking a question, the answer of which he already knew. He was not disappointed. Ujawbone, nothin', grunted Pete, who had abolished jawbone,,' native credit, when he first came. l don't savvy nothin' but diner0.', The man shrugged philosophically and turned away. Then he turned back and held out a dingy hand to Pete. Com frara Ud P he inquired hopefully. In his palm was a ring set with a dull green stone. The ring was worn almost through and had turned a dull brassy green. The man's finger was circled with green where the ring had been worn. The stone was not beautiful, either. lt looked like nothing more than a small section of whiskey bottle worked down to an oval. The set was so deeply crusted in grime as to almost obscure its color. Pete laughed shortly. Nothin' doin',,' he refused, and tilted his chair back with an air of finality. The man stood for a second with his hand outstretched, then with another shrug he turned and went out the door. Pete Bailey's reputation showed plainly in that the man did not try to wheedle him. After the man had gone, Pete Bailey sat for a long time in his tilted-back chair. He dozed a little in the sultry, lazy afternoon and did not waken until an energetic step crossed the threshold. Pete blinked himself awake and looked up. lt was Ward Temple with an even more cheerful look on his face than usual. HGot any alcohol ? he inquired, then, as Pete indicated a bottle behind the coun- ter, he went on enthusiastically: love, I've just made the most astounding find. Accident, too. Filthy as the dickens! Only alcohol will clean it. He held out an object to Pete, the ring of dull green brass and whiskey bottle stone. That's a fladneth,', he said, Hpurest stone there is. Only a dozen or so known to exist. He poured a little alcohol on his handkerchief and rubbed the ring vigorously for a few seconds. Gradually it lost its outer coat of grease and a cloudy depth in the stone began to show. Finally he held it up to the light and squinted through it. My word! he said. It's even better than I thought it was. Friend of mine paid ten thousand for one not half so good. Long after Ward Temple had taken himself and his ring away, Pete sat and stared dully into the empty street. He had had a fortune in his grasp and had let it go. Thoughts of the Susan Lawson and Nagasaki, of a fortune and the States trooped in mournful succession across his mind. Ten thousand dollars. Ten thou- sand dollars- ese at an The same native hutsg the same ramshackle trading post, the same road, dust- white, deserted, unchanging--fifteen years had made no difference at all in Quina- blangan. Pete Bailey still sat in his tilted-back chair and dozed fitfully. But time had not treated him as kindly as it had the town. He had grown more indolent, and fatter, and his face had become puffy, and it had turned an ugly, unhealthy white. He shifted heavily in his chair and ruminated aloud as he was wont to do. Might catch the Susan Lawson next week for Nagasaki. Rotten old hulk. lf fnhad the coin- Page 99 fa' ,E l5QW'Q Gentlemen! Wait Until Leap Year! p By C. F. It was the last night before leap-year, it was the last hour before leap-yearg in fact, it was fifteen minutes before the fatal hour. Also-Mary and John were sit- ting in the parlor. Although there was plenty of furniture in the room, they were using only a small portion of the sofa. Mary seemed perfectly resigned and happy, but John seemed very uncomfortable. He began to fidget and watch the hands of the huge clock slowly tick away. His collar seemed somehow to tighten about his neck, his hands became cold, and little dewdrops began to sparkle about his forehead. Perhaps she would ask another man to marry her and forget all about him! At any rate he would not let her slip from his clutches! So, taking a deep breath and clutching her hand, he said: 'fMary, in just fifteen minutes, Mary-fifteen minutes by that clock, Mary-another year, Mary-like the six thousand years that have gone before it, Mary-will have gone into the great past and be forgotten in oblivion, Mary-and I want to ask you, Mary-tonight, lVIary--on this sofa, Mary-if for the next six thousand years-Mary! John, she said with a winning smile, you seem very much excited. Can I do anything to help you, John ? Just sit still, Mary-just sit still. In just twelve minutes, Mary-twelve minutes by this clock, Mary-like the six thousand clocks that have gone before it, Mary- will be forgotten, Mary-and I want to ask this clock, Mary-tonight, on this sofa, Mary-if when we've been forgotten six thousand times, Mary-in oblivion, Mary- and six thousand sofas, Mary !-i' John, she said, more smilingly than ever, you seem quite nervous, would you like to see father? Not for the world, Mary, not for the world! In just eight minutes by that awful clock, we'll be forgotten, IVIary--and I want to ask six thousand fathers, Mary -if when this sofa, Mary-has been forgotten six thousand times, Mary-in six thousand oblivions--I want to ask six thousand IVIarys six thousand times, Mary !-U John, she said, you don't seem very well. Would you like a glass of water ?', Mary-in just three minutes, Mary-three minutes by that dreadful clock, Mary-we'll be forgotten, Mary-six thousand times, and I want to ask six thou- sand sofas, Mary-if when six thousand oblivions have forgotten six thousand fathers in six thousand years, I want to ask six thousand Marys, six thousand times, Mary! Clang! The clock had struck. And it was leap-year. So, turning around, Mary sweetly said, Hjohn, it's leap-year. Will you marry me ?,' Yes!', Moral-Gentlemen, wait until leap-year! Page 100 nr VT' ,K , , , . ,, ,,., 'tw ,R ,,,, ,. 3411 Y .,. ,, . ,q, , ,, .W , A. , 4,,, ..: A W, , M ,,,A ,M . WB, Q amd' Y' , w WSW' Q if ww. ,J fi- . ya. . f f xi 'Y ,fu .- . ,M ,W ..,,. W .w,, ,,,.,., . .la m,i,,Tj'f Mg, 3 + 911, , i 3 - '-.fig 4.1913 A afigfi ,QL iw 335 2555, W 'fig Lift lf! -lg, x azwn .-.-y,j, A ia W, ,, W, ,.... . . ,, -,,, ,,7, - ,MRA . ,Aw , V . . ., , ..,,,, ,,,W,,, . ,A Y, M, M . . .. , , ,. , -YT A A -,. 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NYSQVDSV as fe in Coaches BASKETBALL COLTON MEEK-A peer at the game of basketball, Colton has given us five cham- pionships in the last eight years. He is a character builder, an exponent of clean play and a Wonderful example to follow. When basketball goes its way, Colton turns his eyes toward the cinder track, and puts out a track team that is hard to beat. ' WRESTLING DESMOND ANDERSON-OUT s t u d e n t coach. A Wizard on the mat himself, he teaches the art of Wrestling to his fellow students in great styleQ Des has made an excellent success of his position and We hate to see him leave. BASEBALL ROBERT DowN-A man who knows the game of baseball from A to Z, his discipline is Without an equal, and the result that he gets from the boys is exceptional. Down is now coaching his second season of baseball at Franklin, and we are to be complimented on having such a coach. Page 101 SGQWQVY ' Athletic Managers WALDEN BOYLE - - - ---- Basketball new WaldeneeplayedAnf-B?-25 .and!26 and .thfenrlbe-.l,, cause of the nine-term rule, assisted Colton by managing the team during the last successful year. ARNO RADEMACHER -------- Track Arno has handled the track squad very nicely and has been a big help to Coach Meek. Arno also was a sweet little 440-yard man. BOB SEYDEL ---------- Baseball Bob is by far the best manager that Franklin has had in a long time. Bob Works hard, and has a great deal of credit due him. Coach Down would have been set back quite a bit if he hadn't had Bob. AUSTIN ROLF - 1 -------- Wrestling Austin is a clever little manager and has helped Des quite a bit. Page 102 WCWSK ' The Basketball Season Franklin went through one of the most successful seasons of its career during the basketball season just past. The team fared very badly in the pre-season games, but by the time the Com- merce game rolled around Coach Colton had a very well balanced team. In the Commerce game Franklin nosed out the Stenogs to the tune of a 33 to 25 score. Scales and Kretz played fine ball. The next week Franklin beat Grant High School, 43 to 23. Franklin took the lead in the first half and had a comfortable 11-point lead at the end of the half. The Generals came back in the third quarter and began to creep up on the Quakers. With but 6 points to go to tie the score, Franklin jerked out of their slump and scored enough points to win the game, 43 to 23. Don Baird and Kretz were taken out on fouls. Scales played a wonderful game, while Jim O'Connell, a new' man on the team, played a good defensive game. K The next game was quite an upset for Franklin, Washington defeating us, 32 to 28. Franklin led at the half, 18 to 15, but the Colonials came back and snowed the Quakers under an avalanche of baskets. George Scales played a wonderful game, as well as did lWac lNIcFarland and Irish O'Connell. Lincoln, then a possible champion, was swamped under the fierce basket shooting that the Quakers displayed. With the score 11 to 10, in the Railsplitters' favor, Franklin began to play basketball and came out victor by the score of 30 to 20. Scales played his usual fine game, and HKretz,,' Mac,' and Don also played good ball. In the high score game of the year Franklin beat Benson, 44 to 41. At the quarter it was 14 to 6 in the Quakers' favor and the half ended with a count of 26-16. The Mechanics then proceeded to catch up to Franklin and the last few minutes of play were highly exciting, with the fighting Quakers holding a 3-point lead when the whistle blew. lVIcFarland found himself in this game and tied for high point honors with Kretz. The last two games of the season were considerably easier than the former games, but Franklin let down and only defeated Jefferson 29 to 21, while Roosevelt was set back by a 40 to 21 score. By defeating VVashington, Lincoln threw Franklin into a tie with the Colonials for league honors. That Tuesday night of the championship game the crowd began to come about 6 o'clock, and when it was time to begin the game several hundred were turned away. The game was a very see-saw affair, with first one team and then theother team holding the lead. 'At the end of the third quarter Franklin led, 14 to 13. Qnly two baskets were scored in the fourth quarter, one by Dolph, which sent Washington into the lead, and the winning basket was made by Kretz. Dawson Snideman played stellar basketball. Page 103 P, M4 KWC si. H. II, A -c9,,q,ag I uwf'4'A Page 104 fp e,. 5' Eh J ,,l.L,.. l Basketball Men GEORGE SCALES A man of exceptional ability in the basket shooting line, he garnered enough points to lead the league and make an all-star berth. George piloted the team Well and was an important cog in the scoring machine. LAWRENCE KRETZMEIER A dangerous man at all times, Kretz came through in many a tight game to put Franklin on top. Kretz Was third in scoring, and landed an all-star guard position. DONALD BAIRD Don displayed a fine brand of basketball and was well up in the scoring column. As our captain-elect we expect great things from Don, and we sincerely wish him luck. DAWSON SNIDEMAN One of the mainstays of our defense, Dos gave his best to the team and was always in there fighting. A little Weak on offensive during the regular season, he began scoring in the championship game When scores were badly needed. GEORGE MCFARLAND Mac played a wonderful brand of basketball during the season, and was a vital asset to the team. He found himself in scoring possibilities this year, and Ucame through splen- didly. JAMES O'CONNELL With the coolness of a veteran, Jim put up a wonderful defense and was at all times a hard man to elude. The first year on the team, Jim handled himself like an old head. K . ROBERT HOUCK Although inexperienced, when Bob got into the game he did his best and that is quite a good deal. Bob is a hard worker and we expect a great deal from him. DEAN CHILD Dean is the lad from Medford, who displayed such playing ability that he landed on the first string. More Will be heard of him in the future. FRANCIS NEIL Bud has several terms yet to go and he is inevitably headed toward aniall-star position. ISAAC ISAACS Although his last term in school, Ike deserves a place on the squad because of his ability and hard working qualities. Page 105 VYCWS Page 106 l av Vlildbimff ' Track lbqELVIN WORRELL-A dandy miler who has come through fine in his trial runs and a great deal is expected of him. EDMUND CHARLES-A half-miler who will score many points for Franklin on the cinder track. ARNO RADEMACHER-Arno, along with running the high and low hurdles, and the 220, is doing a fine job of managing. MARTIN ELLE-A good 100 and 220-yard man who is hard to beat. Martin will be a mainstay on the team this year. GEORGE JAVIER-George has run the 100 and 220 very efffectively in past years and is expected to come through again this year. Javier is also a broad-jumper. LAWRENCE BROWN-Brown has been a steady worker, and this year will be a deciding factor in the 440 and 220 races. DONALD BAGLEY--Don has several years yet to run, and the half-milers of the future will have to watch out. ART GILLARD-Aft Speed Gillard is expected to show great form in the half mile and will help out the relays considerably. ROBERT HESS- Small, but oh my is the coach's saying when he looks Hess- Ward. Bob is a steady man at the distance events. l.VlAX LARKIN-A dandy 440 man who works hard and will bolster the relay events considerably. CLARKE HENKLE-A field man, and it takes a good man to beat Clarke at either the shot or discus, and points are expected from him. lVIERRIL SISSON-A miler par excellenceu, he is following closely in the foot- steps of his brother, Bayard, an Aggie miler. CLIFFORD JOY-The javelin event is bolstered considerably by NCliff . Joy might not rank with Barnard, ex-Franklin champ, but he works hard and deserves credit. CARMINE HARDESON-Carmine broad jumps and runs the 220 in great style and that is saying quite a lot, when you've seen him run. GORDON BARNETT-Gordon jumps with ease and shou o a n toward placing in the high jump and broad jump. RAYMOND CUNNER-A hard-working half-miler w as other seasons in which to make himself dangerous to the 880-yard men. JIM OlCONNEL-Kt1TlSh,, is a hold-over from the shot-relay team of last year, and his right arm heaves the Weight with sureness of purpose. LAWRENCE KRETZNIEIER-l925 champion of the pole vault, 'fKretz is out to regaiiinhis lost crown, and from the showing at the state meet he will. DON BAIRD-Don gets over the high jump bar with ease and is counted on to bring home the Hbaconu in that event. VICTOR CURTIN-Vic has been running in the distance events and will give the rest of the boys some real competition. Page 107 cr 'N P' 'ff WWDCMC Page 108 P , Y 'ish VYQVDS Wrestling Wrestling at Franklin has been a thriving sport ever since our coach, Des Ander- son, took the reins. During the past wrestling year Franklin became prominent in that sport. They became very proficient at the business of bone-crushing, and the only defeat that they suffered was at the hands of Benson. During the season the Quakers wrestled Oregon City, Benson, Reed College, lllultnomah, West Linn, Corvallis, and the Portland Y. M. C. A. -JK 916 SE BRADY-l05 lbs. Brady was a clever Wrestler who gave the boys in his class a hard fight for the belt. REEDER--l75 lbs. Locke, besides being the state champion in his class in 1926, was the wrestling captain during the past year. Locke did all in his power to help out Des and he made a wonderful captain for the boys. ATTIX-126 lbs. Reginald was a hard worker, and when he went onto the mat he went on for all he was worth. PETERSON-105 lbs. Al, the flyweight, was very clever in his mat work and it took a good man to throw him. HENKLE-Heavyweight. Clarke was a dangerous man at all times and was always counted on for points in a meet. SEARS-126 lbs. Ralph has a lot of credit coming to him for his achievements during the last season. VVe expect much from him next year. MCGILVRA-ll8 lbs. Bob, in his last year at Franklin, came through in fine shape and won his letter easily. SATTLER-l6O lbs. Bill, the big boy with the fighting heart, has made a big impression with the wrestling fans, and Bill is due for a bigger and better success next year. SEXTON-l35 lbs. Willis in the past has shown his fighting and wrestling ability and has learned enough to be a formidable man. H. CLARKE'-ll2 lbs. Harry has another year to go, and from reports will make a hard man to beat. GLENN SAVAGE-160 lbs. State champ in his class in 1927. Glenn is in the same boat with the other underclassmen-his wrestling career is mostly up to the future. lllore luck to you, Glenn! WQRRELL--147 lbs. lllelnis a toughmman to contend with, and one of his best assets is his never-say-die spirit, which more of our athletes should have. Page 109 samiw Page 110 if . VYCWS Baseball VHUTCHINSON, Pitcher-Fred has been our mainstay as hurler this season and still has another year for Franklin. HICKS, Pitcher-Hicks is just a Freshman, and lots is expected of him in years to come. He has a dandy arm, and will bear watching. HAUGEN, Pitcher-Art has been troubled with an injured arm and hasn't broke in, but he has it in him, as he showed last year. BXIESSENGER, Shortstop- Babe is by far the best infielder we have and hits the ball like a veteran. R. SEARS, Outfielder-Ralph is a nice little hitter, who in a year or so will be a hard man to beat out of the lead for hitting honors. F. SEARS, Ouifielrler-Fred has another year in which to show the boys up, and he is liable to do it if he keeps up the same gait. BALDWIN, Outfielder-George is by far the best and hardest worker and his per- severence will some day make him a leading player in any league. HOUCK, Catcher-Bob is another hard worker who broke into the lineup against Benson and did exceptionally well. SAFFORD, Pitcher-Don is another Freshman hurler who will bear watching. Coach Downs will depend much on hgin years to come. HUDDLESTON, Third Base-Charlie is the fastest man out for baseball, and he has a canny ability for running out hunts. sf PETERSON, Outfielder-Al is axneatl little fly chaser who smacks the ball often. DAVIS, Infielder and Outfieldkr-Rolando is breaking into the baseball ranks, and has conducted himself very well. LYNDS, Ouffielder-Bill is another newcomer and will be one of Coach Downs' main supports next year. These three stars, Post readers, are Irish O'Connel, English Scales, and Scotch Baird. Irish saw service in the outfield last year and is repeating in a dandy way this year. English is a reliable man on first base and has been a steady hitter. Scotch was the regular receiver in most of the games and holds the Franklin hurlers down in fine shape. Page III ff . SZYCWM ' Franklin 115-pound Team Mr. Ridgeway, the assistant basketball coach, put out one of the cleverest teams for its Weight that the city of Portland has ever seen. Great credit must be given Mr. Ridgeway in the hard work and great results that he gave to Franklin. Mr. Ridgeway also coaches the Freshman team and builds up Wonderful material for Coach Meek. This ll5-pound team, weighing an average of llS pounds, went through a very successful season, winning the city and state championships in their class. They are a classy playing little bunch and play ball like the champs they are. The players are: Front row, left to right-Tichenor, Neville, Isaacs, Thomas, captain. Back row, left to right-Mr. Ridgeway, Rogers, Williams and Hewitt. Page 112 l Ov Vfilpbhff Soccer Soccer at Franklin during the last year did not fare so minus the services of a coach, turned ,out a very well balanced the league standings. There is a lot of hard Work to soccer congratulated on their fight and tenacity of purpose. The left to right, top row: Clark, Deaver, Taylor, Asher, Peyton, row, Cameron, Shaffer, Elle, Brown, Pettis, Barratt. Page 113' Well, but Martin Elle, team and placed well in , and the boys are to be boys are, reading from lVIorriss, Neal, bottom Vlblibixf ' ' .LY l RAY BRISTOWW gggg up g BILLY MILLER The Yell Kings These two lads have been out at all the athletic functions during the last year and deserve to have a prominent place among the athletes. Ray is graduating in the June class, but Bill Will be back next fall to lead yells in the snappy manner in which he is capable. Franklin in the past has been noted for its classy and loud yells. This is due in- directly to the excellent yell kings that it has been our fortune to have. So here's to you two, Ray and Billy may your after-life be as peppy, Page 114 -gffi' 'V - 1- FMA! ,,A .L,-,QE Lf., ws. 'Z p A ,- I -- glavgu i -fg V wi' F. Q: z Haj, Ygf 722' Wfnrg I 1 -1 ' f-30, i A:-QE?-,-Qzpk-1 ,.gI'.'fj'g:. rg.-4? I qv? fl 59.5. A. W. :ia-A R -ix? ?' jill ,,,2,J' M' ig' 5 ,Q-M if f ,, H 'I-L gig .4..4:,,g.Uf4 --1.3-54. - 25 '1 !-ET' 1 f. 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M. r' f 4 if 'pf 3 ' X F-'fr k -P'k?4rA' ...idx -..'fLTMggli'pQ I f .5.4 ?g1-fx ,i In 2:2 'A ' ,V H , . V- M' fu' .sf-,L 1 . V if ' 'igfif 7' .. Q , , . . . . , , , . 5.3. 4 WM A Q .. . 1-3 -, A 3, W9 ,gf--1 I Q ,Q .i V, 'aw-1,1-, ..- ',-1' i f QSM ' : jf' at fri ',,f Ali fx, -' Q' 24.55 .FEA ,fig-fflfilr fM..,.1f liifl.. ,1.:Q1fEfiT ,-i511g2,1g, w .i.gb.2 1, .,., Elf w. 1-2559? P' Q, A I -'fm-:IIQ...-E M .-... I M,-5 4...-....-.,..-....-,..-. .-..-...- -....-....-.................-...,-....-....-....-....-...-I...-I..-I.- I-..........-. -... ... 1. 1 I . zqf' 1 ' - figfm, Z ,'::12, l 'fy 4 I mgffqqmifmg? 2 . PM ' w ypv . ' I, 'I-' , V' I 'MQFFQI -1 I E I - 1 14i'4:pa , -' ' ' 1 'r ' ' ' f 23's X A 1 ell- 'I I ff 2 fs 5 -fn ff' ' r! rf I, 1 ft rr F-'f 'I,, ' fi, ' I - ,nu ff f. r , -II 'I r I p .-f 1, .- vl' Q, ,gg ar- VTSIIIII ,bgg- , .mf f-5 - E,,ffI,,f- ,I-In m I. f 'E I E- H: iz: 1- sa: III fn- MI 5 g If,,'.I --- r- ' ,gn nl - 1 WVIQII I i .QI .U Is: :ff W Eg :sz :zu IMIVEIQI, E ,Z : .If-vm. fr, rl: II 1 'I ff I I 'ff CY SE, iff If Kff m 'ff an gg I:III:'Ia'I'I'I , I I . X. I 1,1 5 EM, rn, I..li.:i-.II, N I I.. if :U M- M- Q-I I-II I II If II z i Iggg :gg m ,EE LII 'gf pl nn rm I III I IIIIII' : lf4r::,g mn - .un un Ill I III HV, I In-, 'lvl uf F' PM in ' If- ' Iv' f' f . r., gg: ff, ,,, 5 .H nl ,N :gl I ul yjfrj : Evriuf' 'll' an ls! 5 I VM' 'Wf ' I gun npr,-M VE' W, V, 3 ..'-Twig '-A ' ul !:- -g.,,' 1 I!! .- if V I ' I I I , '--2- ,-QQ' .- I ' EX J .999 2 Xxx 'L 'PF ' I SEX 'Q A 'WW-5, E ix. E BEFORE and AFTER maimfioze I MAKE I PORTLAND'S OWN STORE I YOURSTORE I I I i ,ESTABLISHED l557 I E00 T THE QUALITY STORE Im .EE. I or PORTLAND. OREGON uv I I FIFYH, SIXTH, MDRHISON, ALDER STS. I I I I 'i '1W 1l'l- IIII 101III1lIlI1ul1ll-ul--lluiuullunlnu-n 1 1nn1nn-.ni illnllm-.IIII-.Im.... 1 ,II 1 4. Page 115 mmf Pay? 116 klltiipbixft' .Q.-....-....-....-...-...-.....-....-....-...H-..-..-u.-I.-ng :g..-......-...-....-......-....-...,-......-....-....-....-....-....-....-.!. R- KGHARA 81 CO- I FREMONT TAILOR I I I 2 IMPORTED CHINESE NOVELTIES 2 for I P f t 1 A Goon SUIT I ! ncense - er ume - Pot ery l l PHONE SUNSET 2320 .g...-...-...........-...- -....-....-...,- ......-..........-....--9 4.-....- - -..,.......-..........-..........-....-....- -.....-iq. Are you sure now T' inquired a restaurant diner Who chanced also to be an over- seas veteran. Are you positive that this is beefsteakiw '1Sure it's beefsteakf' replied the belligerent waiter. i'Wassa matter?,' Well-when I find a fly buzzing round a steak I think nothing of it, but when I find a horsefly-darned if I don't get suspicious. A ae as Spaghetti should not be cooked too longg about 10 inches is long enough for most people. 'f ' ' I 'W' ' 'l'm-l - ' ' ' 'n f I BEST PICTURES AND COURTEOUS I I The Qtar beatre I I TREATMENT ALWA YS at the I 55TH AND FOSTER ROAD .f..-.......- ... -.... -......-.... ....-...............-..-..-..-............ - - - - - -......i. The man from Ilflontana was comparing notes with a long, lean, lank Texan. Ever hev any trouble with hoss thieves?,' asked the man from lVIontana. l'Wal, yes-oncef' drawled the Texan, the cussed rope brokelv we we we Soph.: Did you take a bath ? Frosh.: No, is one missing ? as as A Lawrence Brown: Have you any eggs that have no chickens in them Fi' Grocer: Yes, sirg duck eggsf, Ei.-4-iiI.-.Iu-m.-1...-...I-.ru-....-....-...I-1...-H..-..,.-.lu-,Q ,Q W. J. tg, MT. TABOR DRUG CO. Ifancy Groceries DRUGS '1'o1LE'1' Goons I multi. ang Xfgitables I 2 f . V. . E U 2 f' Row 2 I I I THRU SEI'fiiICE egg G I L 60th .uid Drusion TAIJOI 2114 l l TAb0r 2758 3201 50th St. S. E. 1 Q'-nu-.I-m1-m---....-....-1...-..m-...I-.W--I...-nu-u---nj. up PORTLAND sfo Page 117 YYEVDS :1---- -111 - Af'f - -i-f - -f-f - ---+ -- '--- -- -f+f - 'fxv - -1Xf - Afff - -f-f - -f'H - '1-1 - -f1f - -f1 - 'f-1 -'-'- -1'f - '1'f - ---- - -1'f - ---- - -'-- - -f'f - -'- - -f'f ---as l ANNOUNCEMENTS i For l JUNE '27 CLASS U761? Furnished by Us z I QQWGSKET Engraving 6? Klbrinting o. 1 5 l - 390 Ash St., Portland, Oregon I 5 iw 1 l ,....m1 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,,,Q,, Porter: 'lWhat do you want, an upper or a lower berth ? Passenger: Which is cheaper ? Porter: The upper is lower than the lower on account of being higher. ln other words, the lower the higher, the higher the lower. lwost people prefer the lower even if it is higher on account of it being lower. In the upper, you have to get up when you go to bed, and get down when you get up. Passenger: l'll go in the smoker Where l can sit down when I sit up.', ..1..,,1 1.,.,1,1 1..1.,.,1 1,-,,1 1..,,1 11.111 1,..1 1,1 1,1 1 1 1 1 1,,,,1uu1 1,,,,1.i 'S' S' ---Merchandise of merit 1 44-sgnly T i I 1 ' 'Merchandise of Merlt Only i ' i off.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.,Q,., Page 118 -1 ' UUNXA was s , Q X ff'-. f f if 1 L 1 w XX f L 15 'Z KV, I , ' A P 9? . . Q vc X 0 'S Z1 . 'J She. 4 ' ff Wf'f M r 'A - 6 Xt H A I'-' fg T Q v J 7 , fl Q I 3 , S C o.vxE.5'x'lV1 Yun-I v f Fwvvl ' n ,, K-ki, o OWS H J I --' Aww feel? ..,' ' ' W V 'N wa JW13 L W ::.w2..w?Y. X615 rn is-iiillftlg . , 'mf 56043 Q WMM? 81Af X mf s' , K' 5 1 6221-Fair' i 'V X V A I5 46 I? my W iii? l pa Y 1 fl V ,1 .kh- CX p- X- ',..' , QA 4-' 1 A A 4 M V-fnfa, bl ul 9 , P L w 1 'ff ' W ff 1 xl f , - ' . LZTZXVYIQK1 9 ' y Aa gywfq- ce X 5-,mmm A an 'f' . , vfro' . 04-5 il 5 -.M ,QS x QM Q wet Q- - . p W4 w Kvxowvw .1 f R0 I I Y , I' Q 65,5900 NOXX 1 X FYGVYX NH CDVQAQXG Q X QWS'l.m'i ' ' -who ' . , xxvxqqx ' W Qu Viiibbixf ,gg Q, 0-Fun--ulnil:nvnnvunilulilluillu-null:nlnnvuuvuuvun-0? i TOWQRQEQTRFEZL1-111g T KATSKY PHARMACY - . . . . : 5 UP TO DATE g Q Au2L'3::fr...FQ?':',.:.':.'2.?':.:I: rSif.i.Y1'Zie5flf ' FOUNTAIN 1 l FIFTIETH AND DIVISION L l 4932 FOStE'1' ROIUI i 'P TABOR 5503 4' 'f'--I..-im-.m-...-nn-..H-..H-....-H..-.nf-im--...-.W-.1-f. '73 i T 1 T '1 ' 1-'II'-2. sg...--Iu-m.-m.--m--m--.m-m.--m-m.-m.-lm-lm-I...-,!, 1 A DR. N. c. HALL L A HOLM s DRY GOODS 1 L DENTIST I 1 BEST MERCHANDISE I 2 5 E At Lowest Prices 3 L OPEN EVENINGS N Y L L 1049 Hawthorne Ave. Q l 493815 Foster Road bU. 0018 l ! TAMH. 5653 ! -gn-....-..-.-....-...-.........-.,..-..........-........,.-...-...-Ag. -5.-........ - -.........-....-....-....-....-....-.. - -....-..p .,ADoctor.H 'fD ,m. your sleep L , , Patient: No, in other people's. I'm a parsonf' -PE SF Sk Handsome young boss to pretty stenographer: Got anything doing for Sunday night, Nliss Brown ? Stenographer Chopefullybx No, not a thing. H. Y. B.: Then try to be at the office earlier Monday morning, pleasef' SIE -is 916 Kermit L.: This cold weather chills me to the bone. Lucy B.: You should wear a hat. SK HG 916 Teacher: What do you know about metempsychosis ?,' Les. Kane: It's hard to say. +I--M --------------------------- H-----Q 4 Q . T You can whzp our cream, But you can't beat our milk RIVDRVIEW DAIRY Co. EAST 0295 T I A -5-.-.... -.--.... - .. ... - ln1nn..n-It-ini 1 1 ....-1 1 1 .. ... ... -. imiiuofo Page 120 '3' YYCWS - ..-....-...,-....-H..-....-....-.1..-...-...-....-...-....-....-....-....-...........-....-...-...-....-....-....-....-....-....-....-....-ug. EETERSON . Tomo June Class Photographs Q SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS , 1 P2 l Satisfaction Guaranteed L T Q 214 PITTOCK BLOCK I W l f L E +-- -... - ..-- ------------ f ------------- .... - .... - . ..f. P 121 55 2 YYQQTD3 .!...-....-....-....-....-....-.....-....-I...-.....-....-....-....-....-+ 5...-.................-....-....-..........-.,..-.....-....-....-.,..-....-,!, L Mt. l Q Compliments of L A H2lXX'th01'1l0 at 48th I Q L EO TABOR 8660 'E' 49th and Hawthorne TAbor 2916 l ig...-....-....-....-....-..,.-.....-...........-....-r...-I...-W.-.r..-,!, i M ARINELLO PIONEER SHOP i T E-elzliltlvliginow S T Cosmetic TheI'gugL1lZ1520lElgIpert Graduate i EARTH,-OR ANYXRTHERE ELSE i i Mareels, Oil Permanent, Hair VVavi1Ig I i 450 WASHINGTON ST. BROADWAY 2489 T i MRS. C. M. BAKCSY 1 , , , BEacon 7516 g -Iv-I...-M.-H..-U...-ur.-I...-H..-....-....-...I-H..-.H--ml-MQ. T 219-10 Central Building Portland, Oregon I uire you ' positive t'hat-the-defen'dafrt-was4ntoxicatedTofiieexe? A Sure, your honor. He put a penny in the patrol box and then looked up at the courthouse clock and groaned, I've lost 14 pounds., Bl? -JE 916 He took her rowing on the lakeg She vowed sheld go no more. I asked her why-she answered me: He only hugged the shoref, SK if -BIG B. Allen: I can see good in everything. B. Smith: Can you see good in the dark? H 916 916 ik Soph.: What would a cannibal be who ate his mother's sister ?,' Frosh.: 'Tll bite on thatg what? Soph.: An aunt eater, of coursef, yy inn-uu1 -- 11-uln--m1ml-nn-m.-un-m1-- .1nu-uu- Seeberger Hardware I J C KAHN HAR1gIiI?AqIIiETAIfiiI?EoiilifiIoAL 201 AILISKY BLDG' SUPPLIES, ,PAINTS AND GET XVOURTEEAACQIQSE RING' AT i VARNISHES I L CLASS PINS I ? 1116 I-Iawthorne Ave., Portland, Ore, T +-nn-mr-1-H..-I-H-lm--nu-m--m.-..n-.m- -nn-nuff CARL GREVE I SCHOOL BOOKS g A I . B 'ht S 1 d E- I T The Square Deal Jeweler i T Oug 7 0 d an Kchanged T JEWELRY SERVICE v DIAMONDS l L I-IYLAND S BOOK I WATCHES i i STORE 351 MORRISON STREET 5 i 204 Fourth, Bet. Taylor and Salmon i Page 122 Viiibbix rr- 1f1f - f'f1 - Wflf - f-f' - -H'1 - 1+11 - 'f'f -We +QY+ - f'fY - f'f1 - f'H1 - f1f1 - 1 - ff1 - iifl - -fff - f+f' - 1+1l - 1ff1 - ff-f - +1'f - ffff - 11f - 1'f1 - 1f'f - ff-f - 1f'f --ff I T0 the Graduate i Let us serve you in the years to come as we have durlng your career at Frankhn i 1 5 THE 1.14. GILL Co. Booksellers, Stationers, Office Uutfitlers FIFTH AND STARK STS. -1-..- .,., - ---- - ...- - .... - .... -- .... - .... - .... - ..,. -..N- .,.. - .,., - .... - .,.. - .... - .... - ,... - K... - .... -.. ------ ..-- - -A---n-:L ix X 'Z Z' A X 'T ., ff at Qxj X-ffff' X-2' f 5 U 4 X D obo ' O eff A my X W wi? ik Mjqrkxxxzxx f 6 CY, 9 Nm La Q 1.4 V V -S X ? ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 'Z' E i Take Her to 6 CIZEZIUOO f-I I-I 2 I I 2 She knows that the Hazelwoods are Port1and,s V most metropolitan dining places and that she may order anything she wishes from orangeade hh to a WQISII rarebit. X E GIVC Her HAZELWOOD Candy Q She knows it is as fine as the best made anywhere in the world! 388 Wasllingtoll 127 'Broadway E. Broadway at VVhee1er I -Q---M-.M-H-.-m.-H.-m-- - - -- axl- - r-r- - r-r- - r-r- - - r-r- - -a - r-1- - rlr- - ,rrr -M-Q-M r.r1 -M-1.1--m.-my-..a y Page 123 SKYCWSW Boy Cto druggistjz UMa says to send her a dime's Worth of asafoetida and to charge itf' Druggist: What's your name?H Boy: McGiffoney. Druggist: Here y'are. I Wouldnit Write asafoetida and lVIcGiffoney for a dimef, if sie sf 'lPrisoner, before your trial starts, you have a right to challenge any member of l the juryf' Well, your honor, I'd like to fight the little shrimp on the end. 0!0u11m1nn1nn1 1 1nu1m-11:u1uu--un-un1-m1nm1uu1un1nn1 1 uvuu 1 uwuu 1 1 uuui 1 1uu1u1 - 1 11m-IIl!0 2 L I l I N EEE' EE if E N ii 7 Follow the Crowd to l l L Q L V 9 5 he Students uffet 5 Where five cents will buy more good eats than at l any other place on earth l ME. AND MES. R. M. LEWIS Proprietors i 5 5 I I .i.i-................-....-M..-....-....-..,-,,..-....-.. .. -....-....-,,-....-....-,,-. ........ ...-....-. 4. Jush had my Watch fikshed an' it's sthill Wrongf' Why, Wha'sh matter With it ?U 'KBlame thingish pointin' to noon, an' it'sh midnightf' ae we we Eula Q.: After I take gas, how long will iti be before I know anything? Dentist: How long since you took gas before ? 4.-....-....-....-....-....-....-....-............-.....-....-...,-....-...Q Q.-....-......,.,,...,.,-,,.,-....-.,..-,,.,-......,,,...,,..-,...-....-...!. Q FOSSLER'S MARKET Q Q HAM-JACESSQN C0-, INC- Q I MEATS AND G-ROCERIES I I M fntlng. 1 E Y . E E u tlgraphmg Q I I. T. FOSSLER, Proprietor I I D. t Ad rt. W. I PHONE SUNSET 1212 E g2cAnkengeSt:f:?g 1 9209 FOSTER ROAD 1 BEac,,n 3452 +..-m.- -M1I-I.-.IH-im-4..I-im--m-....-H.-1...-H..-gg. ,.i.........-..- - -I...-ml-ml-nn ---- mi-ml--Q. Page 124 VYCWQVC Page 125 'Q' l + WCVOM' 1 1 I 1 I 1 1 The Popcorn Man A Is Here Every Day With ! 1 I i I FRESH BUTTERED POPCORN, PEANUTS T I CANDY AND CHEWING GUM 1 rs F1'ank1irrSt1Tdents C OJS6'8 MQW do If Fifth and Washington I T i Q A GREAT BIG BAG- FOR A NICKEL i ' 1 l1lI1illllThllTllllT llll THEY llll TMNT llll TNI!-v lull'-Hill llll 'TIIII1' llll T llll T llll T llll 1llll?HllTHlli T T T 'i ll Tl+ What's the idea, Pete, Wearing your socks wrong side out ? There's a hole on the other side. Sk if 916 Now I ax you, said the Indian as he raised his Weapon over his victim. as ae as The fellow who indulges in hot air usually lacks steam. 4.....-...-..-..-...-..-..-..-........-...-....-..-..!. 4..-.1-1.-..-..-..-.1-1.-....-1..-..-...1....-..-hz, I John L. Clark Chas. S. Hacker I I I : Compliments of 5 3 0 Z 1 PALACE MARKET 1 1 Shmgled All Around 1 ' 1360 Hawthorne Ave. I I 2 1 TAbor 8277 LTAbor 3513 E E I l Pg.fx?h.:iEfifsp2ffedY l 1 I ,,, The back, with hair iohg Q 4...-.1.....-....-..-.1..-.1-.I-..-....-..-..-...-II.--1- I, W em-,ugh on the sides to E ' ..l'i:r ' cover the ears, is the new 2 : ig L S ffzwezf- spring hair cut featured! I E E I I ' at the K 2 A H ,- Z1 ' ' 5 E i E ' V : N i.lFAC?fUl?Ill1gAND DLmGN ' 1 L E L ' ' 7 - ' 1 I ' I Hass 1 1 - 111'Ehees 2112- 1 ! I 1 1 , . . 1 I f Qiigy E : It s Quite Different and 5 : I I Attractive I l Room 410, Maegly-Tichner Bldg. E -b-....-1..- -...-......1.-1.,-...,- -1- - -....-1.52 Page 126 F' SZYCWQK ' 0 9 'S Never judge a lroy lay flue numlacvol lwoolcs he carries. llwcy may nol be lava lbw-m1-un-nn--um1nu1un-un-nu-M11-H-lm1m1-nn-,!, .gnu-lm--Iu-In-I-n1m..-un1141.1un-u-l1ml--m-nn1uu- L i Late Model TYPEVVRITERS T All Standard Makes i Sale Terms: 35.00 Monthly if desired 2 Late Models Rented 3 Months 356.50 up Wholesale Typewriter Co I 113 sixth sr. Tel. BR. 7481 3 --..,,....m- 1 .. 1.,,1,.,,-..,,......,.1nu1 ... 1,.,.-,.,f BACKUS 8: MORRIS Herldquarters for D. Sz M. ATHLETIC GOODS 273 Morrison St' t, Near Fourth ..-.........-...-.....-....-.,..-....-....-...g. -ln -....- - -, .,-- ----- I -I--ny YKEKDDEI4' .!.,,1.m1.m1 1 1 1 1 1 1,4,,1...1...41,..,1,,,.1,...1..,11nu-..m.1,,,,1.,,,1,,,.1n1.1.0.1H..1,...1,.,.1,.,.1.,,,1.,.1q 'Q' l I Now Everybody Speaks I 5 of the Sweets and the Eats L Yes, business is good. Why shou1dn't it be? We serve 5 the very best home cooking in everything. Quality as f Well as quantity always Counts A A g A complete line of high school books ana' the f best in high school supplies Talways on hand T I T 11 1 IPBIUES SAME Ali! GIUYSA LL1 11 1 5 COME ONCE AND YOU WILL COME ALWAYS i Q THE QUAKER CAFETERIA 1 g L. Silkworth, Proprietor 1 I ofa 4- .1.,,1,,,1..,.1,.,,1m.1,.,.1m....m1m.1m41 1.,.,1,,1 1 1,,,,1n.,1.m1.,,,1,.,,...m1.1.m1m,1 1 1.,,,1nn1n. :-wzgzr E7I'?of7' 'Dr-T Eggsgullb fn8 :S.F,f fU 353:--2 B.'3 r'ognC c'amnO E I-has ro EWLZFAA m 'ru?m F'v-hw 1 'P-1 0325 BO:-r'v-1 'J' FP 95 5 f'ngr'.I67 C1.- U' S?-I mU :r- '12-1.-.3 DEER 'cT C f'2 :vb BQ UNA, N: :ADH Qi... rn 355241 UUQDQQ P-1 CL-U, off Q Wrmw 600217-,-I F51-02 11114432 Y fT:r- TQUVE-1 555 :P-440 Dglfrobl c:.,,,'1g 0 we-:sf gO'rn EHS Q- D 'r'b 535' 5' HE Uqgmw ff OE. :fr-15: Fblfbqq QD-O :ff S5-no Ewa? UQr:lz4Q-Q- ESE 916 916 SK . O'De11: A'That's funny. . Tedrovv: What? . O'Dell: 'AOh, I was just thinkingf, W. Tedrow: Hoi Ho! That is funnyf, 5''EEE'ET'1ii5 ZH'fT'iEZfT'5lF1EEES 5' '3'u 'm '7' - n - '' - -'MQ' 1 BARGAIN FURNITURE l Q 0115 and Gas 4 Q STORXE Q Q COMMUNITY SERVICE I SUNSET 3877 STATION ! S. E. TAFT 5741 F0sterPlEJoI:gLAND, ORE. A 92 AND 44 AVE' ! -If--I-'------I--n--u-M-----------1--I----I---9 +- Ilf- - --f- - -I--'- ---I - --I- - ---- - ---f -I-1----I--In-I-I-I---1' 1 - N-T'- H- -u'-u - H- H- n-u'- - '- 9 2 - '- -' - - - '- - -n - '- '-'i' I ROSS sz GREENE L I NEHALEM AVENUE L 1 Third Floor-362 Alder st. PHARMACY T CI-ASS PINS - RINGS 1 T 1599 Mnwaukie Ave. Phone sn. 2395 Q : Watch and Jewelry Repairing Portland, Oregon I , 1 . .j.......-...-..-I.......-I..-....-I.,-.......n-A-....-..n-4. .3...-....-I.-....-...-....-..........-....-....-....-....-....-..n-4- Page 128 YYCWQVC' Page 129 -nn-nn1un..-un-u 1 1nu..... 1nn1un1nn-uuiun 1....1l.,.1..1,,,.1,.,.1 1.11.1 .... 1 1 1 1 1... A.. ee f fliiiwixfi' A . .y ..... --9-in A -.A --nu-un1.uu-un-un-uu1uun-un1nn-nu1nn--uu-- W. S. MYERS See us for SPECIAL CLUB PINS BRoadway 6836 512 SVVETLAND BUILDING P I W l 4- W 'F ,,...u1l1n-11.0. Mrs. Word: UD0 you understand the difference between liking and loving? Guy I-Iunt: UYes, malamg I like my father and mother, but I love pief' 916 -DIG 914 He: Hlliy, my, you've changed over night! She: HSure, didn't you? 911- Bk Sk Doctor fto Atchison Dingoj: lVhat did your father die of? Dingo: i'Ah don't know, boss, but it wasn't nothin' serious. 'I' 'i' -1--1' BURKE'S GARAGE 5403-17 72ND ST. s. E. I General Auto Repairing and Storage ' Dodge Bros. Sales and Service 1 Office Phone SU 2030-Res. Phone SU 2550 'Q' ...-.. - .....-....-..........-....-.....-...... - .-....-...g. A Quality Meats . . . 1 DIVISIOH Meat Market - M'BEE BROS. Two Deliveries il Day I 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. : TAbo1' 7236 139-I Division St. i .g.......-..- ......- .- -....-...........-.... ....-....-.i. Page ,,1,,,,1.,,,....,,1..1u,,.1,.,,1....ul1,...1ui41..,,1..,,1 CHAS. STRELLMAN 6504 57TH AVE. str. 2549 .,1,,,1,..,1.,,.1,,,,....m.1,.,.1. 1 1 1.,.,1nu...m11.m u-nu-W1nn1nn1uu.-.uu-nn1nn1nn- 1 1nu.-in Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Plants and Shrubs Powell Valley Market 82d nu tl Powell FOUNTAIN AND LUNC.HES GROCERIBS 130 1 1 1m.1 1 1 1 1 1 1n1ul.an1 1,.,.1 1,1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ... 1,,,,1 P, . IKEKDDSIIC ' A E 5 2 I 5124 Foster Road SU. 1629 5 I SUnset 5633 Firestone Tires I I 2 T i W E B E R I 7 1 CRESTON GARAGE? I RELIABLE UPHOLSTERERS I - I ANDY W. GRIBBLE T I DAVENPORTS, EASY CHAIRS f I : I 2 ' I 2 Y 2 5 We make everything in the upholstery I I GEN ERAL AUTO REPAIRING I 5 line I : I I Spegi,-11 dgsigns on l g POYVCII St1'0OI2, :POI'tI3,1'1d, Ofeg0I1 I 3. I - I -....-....-..,.-....-....-....-....- -....-N..-....-....-....-iq. -iv-....-....-....-....-....-....-..,.-....-....-....-.....-....-....-...g. .?...-....-....-....-....-..n-....-......u..-,...-....-....-....-n..-,!, .g.u-n..-...-.....-....-....-....-..........-....-....- -....-..,.- - ol' L . I I FRAZER'S i I Real Sandwzches i I i ED'S PLACE i HIIGH Sigcfgnnt QAS1fTD1ES ' ' 2 : nexce e Dun alll BIVICE x I SZND AND DIVISION I I Forty-ninth at Hawthorne TA. 1559 I -i--....-....-...........-....-.1........-....-.....-....-....-.....-....-...9 +-....-...,.-,...-....-....-.....-....-....-....-....-.....-....-....-...g. Do you act towards your Wife as you did before you married her? ExactIyg I remember how I used to act when I first fell in Iove With her. I used to lean over the fence in front of her house and gaze at her shadow on the curtain, afraid to go in. And now I act just the same. , xx Z h gxy y X Ti C134 ' Q3 ,H XfI me Page 131 -M......-...........-..,.......-...........-,...-....-,..,.......-..,.--as 4...............-....-....-.........-,.,.......-....-...,..,...-..,.-,,..- 43 ., , 'gl v ': '- ' -II:-1 .1 , CQaaa!!h!EIVWZYTYSKEQQQQEE -QL ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' m A ' ii '3 n 'n ' ' H ' ' ' 'u 'f' Insist on We :V d if E - . san v , A PERF ECTION l f f- 'mes ig l Q ,,.:.: 2 l ll ' COMMEBCIAL PICTURES 2 KANDY i it lg v t Q'2l?'f' Qnifiqgifanyi HT Once Always 5 i Bgiiawgv aiifiiiiwmfdina L l 5 - - - 1 :digg Q ON SALE EVERYWHERE I Mllhnneus 1 'P cum-M1un-nn-an1nn-un-unn-nu-nu-nm--un-uu- -nu-nu-iinina-nn-un-nn-nu-nm-mninn--un-nu-n -1- -r 'Yr Practical Shoe .Man I I CHINA TEA GARDEN F991 SD9C13llS.l3 T T PLACE Pon YOUR PARTIES I ' H Kinds K 3 5 Special attention giveirtorizrss-partier 5 E- L- IRVIN Q Q Unexcelled Chinese Cooking L 1001 Belmont I I asm THIRD ST. BEAcoN 0427 -.. -..,.-,.,.-N..-....-M.,-,.........-....-....-...............gi. .3...-....-.....-....-....-..........-,...-....-....-.,..-.........,-..,.-4. Bank President: But why do you wish to work in a bank? Serious Youth: I believe there's money in it. ae as at Father: UWho came here to see you last night?,' Ruth F.: A girl friendfy Father: Well, you might tell her she left her pipe on the pianof, To make a long story short-cut out the love scenes. -..,.-..,.-....-..........-,...-....-,...-....-....- -,,........-....-..,.....,.-....-..........- - .. - .. - ... - -.........!. I l 1 sToPzLooKaREAD! E In sincere appreciation of your patronage, we Wish those Who are leaving us every success and those l who remain inueh joy in Franklin High Q MAROCN AND GRAY MR. AND MRS. GEO. E. SCALES, PROPS. i .,.-t. ....-....... .ii. - i- .i.i - .i,i -M .....---... .i.-ii Page 132 WCWQK Page 133 ,A A 'P f r . .5...n.-..-....-u.-..n- .. -........,.......-..i-H..-..u-t,..............-.n-...-..n-..........-....-u....n..-....-...-M... 4. Best Pictures Always meager Tibtatre I LENTS STATION .L -...-.. ......... ..u-....-....-.n..........n......-..,. ...---.... 4- Father: 'KThere was something funny about you last night, daughter. Offspring: I know? but I sent him home asiearly aswi couldf, A Z as 95- 916 Not many boys are homeless, but some are home less than others. in-un-.-n-un-u..-....-m.-.m-.m-.1--M-ln-n..-....-.2 Q Compliments of A MORELAND THEATRE T QMILVVAUKIE AT BYBEE T 4--..M-....-.................-,..-M-...-..n..........n-i.-....-..i IDEAL ELECTRIC BAKERY l 'Q' MODERN BARBER JACOB TREBELHORN, Prop. I COLLEGE QUALITY BAKERY GOODS I 234 First Street, Corner Main TAb0r 7842 E : Save time and money, if you can Near gm lzlgew Bagda5i7t'i.'1heatre L 5 enroll b6fO1'6 July 1 aw orne at : . . PORTLAND, OREGON 3 S mePEQfi0Y,'Qhg2c,fQ':i g innini111-.1111-...-11111.-...11...-.11-.n HENRY BERGER J R. Barn Studios 293 BROADWAY AT COLUMBIA AT. 0821 .L -....-.. ........... ....-....-.,,.-..,... ------ ---- - -1- Paye 134 F' c . uh.-if f 4' . 4 :N H 4 xx i fx If 9 R61 5 1 ' R K I 2' ' . 4: l .vi ,I A l ' f f I' ' 4. I z I n W .Qi v A Hy, dy. YK NN f A U X ii W ff 4 , 1 , T QS LIL 'M 2 3? m Q X fq'x.- A j ,Hmm ' Y X 'm 4 , J Hmm. G! , QQ 5 3, ' K 'HI X ol X 1' P i f 6 ' JW L4 'az 5 f'-,Wilt N 1 1 lk x W W Y, W I 4 ,lx ff: - ' X ' 7 f T' ' P We - Z fb rf ' '00 X 1 F ,ye 5 Max gf' XX in S' Page135 gs l YYQVDS l a?on-uu-uu-uu-uu- .l-l - -lm-nn- llll - llll -nn-ml-nn-,g, ?n-lm-.m-- -m.-.m- llll -lm- - -lm-nu-nn--m-,g, E l E ln1X K l Q CONGRATULATIONS T i CORONA i l - l DEALER .aft AAAA 'I T Seniors I T r I B Q1 fe' 4 HARRY L MAYER S L Rm my 7169 5 l , , , . 2 l - : T MEN s WEAR L i Oregon Typewriter 1 E ' 5 T L Hollywood Theatre Bldg. i CO Inc' 1204 Sandy BM, ALL MAKE? 531331, EZENTED AND 1 5 l 92 Fifth st. Portland, ore. e 'l'--'III-I 11111--1111 nn-Info 'i'-nn-un- wuun inui:-n-nn-nu1nuinn--an--nu-I-n1lun1n.!. Yes, Lawrence, Alice said that last night she dreamed she was dancing With you. HYou fhrill me all to piecesfH ' 'I ' f' -and then she Woke up to find her kid brother pounding her feet with a flat- iron. BIG H6 BE Who is that dizzy-looking girl in the red dress?,' Do you mean my sister ? No, the other oneg the one in the blue dress. 6- e-------H-'- '--- - -M'-- ---------------- -'- - - - - --H--+ I L 0 l I . Y Cl61lC8 l l 1 THE KEY T0 EDUGATION 1 l True education not only opens up stores of knowledge but develops the alert I T mind. The chief glory of modern science is i l THE SCIENTIFIC SPIRIT T Higher education in the field of applied science combines technical study with 2 5 the fundamental training essential to citizenship. Its degrees open the Way not l l only to leadership in the several pursuits and professions in life but also to a I T larger community service. i OREGON STATE LAND-GRANT COLLEGE T Maintains schools of Engineering Qcivil, electrical, mechanical, chemiealj, 5 - Mines, Forestry, Agriculture, Pharmacy, Home Economics, Vocational Education, i of Basic Arts and Sciences, Industrial Journalism, Library Practice, Physical 2 Q Education, and Music afford sound basic and specialized training. l Commerce, and Military Science, all offering accredited college work. The School I L For catalog and other information address l The Registrar 5 Ore on State A ricultural Colle e Q l I Corvallis +-- -... ------------ -.r. - ..-. - ,.-- - -.-. ------------ ---- - - -ii Page 136 P' '63 W4 fi W5 I ' R ff- cfs -un-n1---un-nn1m1m-m1uu--m---i1ul-up-.? ?an1-m-nn-m-.m-M11-n--m11.m-u1.1m--m.1uu--ln-,g, I 5 2 I 5 DECISEJEESENESS l T E. D. GEIGER I . . . . L I G L Alisky Building, 3rd and Morrison I T 70037 I THE SCHOOL OF PERSONAL i AI H-Y AND SERVICE I 5 I QU J 3 SERVICE l T 1 Special Summer Rate: T T East Lincoln at 54th Street l WE PLACE OUR GRADUATES TABOR 4926 TABOR 4912 I DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES 5 , T ..-..,.-...,-.....-1...-...-....-....-...........-....-.....-....-...i. -!'-....-....-.... ---.--.-- ..-........q. 5 Ne- Q Q ., Q ., , Q i f!:. ' - ee:2aaas1!!!!!mm ,li A - ' V, Viixgiii-Htl' - '. -A A , ' i5!:::a:::::::' Wiiiiiiiiii Qghimu Illllmuullln ' LUN K' lx' ' 'V A s k s He Cjumping little brotherlz 'KYOur sistefs spoiled. L. B.: K'NaW, she z1in't either. lt's that perfume you sent herf' - '--- - '-'l -- '--- - '-'- -'- -- --'- '-'- - '-'- - '-'- - '--l - '--' - --vl - --l- - f--' - lvl- - -'-- - --If - --'- - ---- - '-'- - ---- - '- ---I-I----I-wg FOR 30 YEARS Efve1'ything for ihe office . . . I Mereliaiidisers Of Office Furniture and 2 the Smaller Office Necessities T PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS OF THE BETTER KIND RlETlNGb0. l 1...,1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1m..1nu14,,,......,1.,..--41.11, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1,,1,,.,1,,+ Page 137 5 4 SIYCVDM' afsn-un- 1 Limit:n--:mvuuvunil:anvrnnvunvvuuixuul-,? i i 82nd Street 86 SON ,LO HIERS : FURNISHERS 5 1 FILLING STATION 1 , 0 T HATTERS L ! SZND AND DIVISION STREETS I I 366 WASHINGTON AT WEST PARK L 'F-nn-mn1ml1nu1nn111I-inn-nuint'-nu--nu-nu--nu-mi. T PORTLAND, OREGON I -g---m'-'-'--------I-I-m----u-f-1-------'-f----n-'-H-H------'-1. .ga-n....................-......t..-,...-................-.i..-..........-.,. WILSON'S AUTO APPOINT1VgIiJNT2i2?Y PHONE GENEREEEXZIEE WORK EXPERT MARCELLING Q AND SUP?LIES Q Q ALLEN BARBER SHOP g l 4940 Foster Road SU. 6930 1 1 4936 FOSTER ROAD 1 'i--....-....-....-..........-....-....-....-....-....-....-...-....-...p -!-......-....- -........,-.................-....-...- - -....-...4. Kenneth Ames: Do you like codfish balls?l' Blanche lVIorrison: I don't know. I'Ve never been to anyf' H6 SK- 916 Blanche: It cost Kenneth twenty lessons to teach me to swimf' Eleanor: The rascal! He taught me in five. 916 -JK SK The part of the auto that causes the most accidents is the nut that holds the, steering wheel. BK 916 Sk Papa, the preacher was here to lunch today. You don't mean it. Yes, and he swore about mama's cooking the same as you do, only he put his hand over his eyes. 916 BE 916 Mr. Down: What clause in the constitution concerns prohibition? Ray Bristow: 'lThe eighteenth commandment. '?Ui'NT i 'lll TllllTllll'illlli llll 1 llll 1 llll Tlllil 1' Yllb 1 IIYI -Q ?lI1 Illl 1 illlli IIII 1 IIII 1 IIII 1 Illl illli IIII illlli illivlllli-'g' i B 1? 1 E sa L T Tizdeozilnztlzee Sidi L g I f As Strong as the Largest Mlfiffif 15335521 Hfisfewisiiflilin Q T DYERS T , MENS SUITS CLEANED AND 1 T The I i PRESSED 51.00 I Special Attention Given to l SiHET'3EESl335'iNSSX'EE ?3lf'H1Eli?T l T Ladies, Clothes I T GRAND AVENUE AT EAST ALDER T 72nd Street and Foster Road 'i 1 1 -lllli IIII 1 IIII - IIII 1IHl-I1Iv- IIII 1 1IvI 1 III- 1 rlvl 1114! 'i'-nn-nu-nu--nn-- uinn 1 nnnn -nn-nn--nu-enum--nuns--lull-:lun-:luis Page 138 lilwhixfi ' I sw- f-1Y - f-f1 - -ff- -f-H- f-f- - 1--1 - ---f - -ff- - f--1 - 'ff- - f--1 - f-f - 1-'f - ---f - 1'-1 - --'f - -'-1 -'-r- 1-'f - f-f' - '-,f - ---1 - -f1- - f--f - -11- - '--f - 1-f' - Q--f -1- i 1 S X ESTABLISHED 1901 - l xi? f1f. l - iv Good - ALL WAY S- I 2 Al L Clear Creek Creamery Co. ways g CARVER, OREGON FOR TNVENTY-SIX YEARS i -1-..- ,..- - -... - -.-. - .'-. - .-.- - '--. - -... - --l- - .--- - .--, - --.- - .--. - .-.- -1- ..l- - .... - .... - .... - ..-. - .x,. - .... - .... - .... - -... - -.-. - -.-. - ,--. - .-.. ---4. An Irishman and an Englishman Were standing on the deck of a steamer returning to their native lands. Watching the coast line the Irishman sighted the coast of Erin and shouted: Horray for Ireland! Horray hell! said the Englishman in disgust. That's rightf' said Pat. Hlvry man fer his own country. USES OF A PlG-ml. , . c E N w rs i cs l Xllw Tl XM Qlll Q - l H25 3 A A 3 AQu:zznc:al mood rw Wx. A., ww Z Page 139 45' i in ff SE If D M i Tu-uI--nA-nn-nu--In-u-I-nn-uu-mi-un--uu-un-ml-4, SI-IOPPE i T W. J. MCCREADY EXPERT MARCELLING T CO. For appointments call SU. 4235 E 5 Mr. scout ear line at 82nd sr. I I SU. 5037 6022 72ND ST- S- E. Patronize a Franklinite-Hazel Burke ? -f--,.,,-,,,-,,,,-,,,-,,,-,,,,.,,,,-,,-,,-,,..,.,..,,,-,,.-.4. -..........-....-...t-..........-....-....-n..-.....-....-....-....-,g, 3...-...... -...,-.,..-..........-....-....-i..-....- -....-...A+ JOSEPH SCI-IWEITZER I L WI E BRO an co T i S S' TAILORS TO ILADIES f , DEPARTMENT STORE :iso Tenth sn., Cor. Yamhill, Portland 2 D716 92ND Sl- S- E- SU- 4781 BEMOH 6016 L ! Portland, Oregon ..-...l-....-...........-....-....-....-....-.H-...-.....-....-up +-...........- - .-...-....-....-....-....-.....-........ -...-...p MAUD MULLER ON A SUMMER'S DAY Over the hills and far away, She was a phantom of delight, She tore the azure robe of night, And fired the shot heard round the world. It grewg a star-lit flag unfurled! The guests are met, the feast is set, Lest we forget, lest we forget, There is a true man's birthplace grand, There is my own, my native land. Our hearts and hopes are all in thee. Poems are made by fools like me. 916 916 46 Disconsolate One: I Wish I were deadlu Consoler: HVVhy can't you marry her--or did you?', H! ' Y Q - - ! - Egsjkggggxah I .ga-..... ---- ....-..........-...........-....-..,.....m-....- .!. Sfqfqgfgsftfwzjxx A I Always in the Lead and Our Prices I N1 xv' NXQQEY - - - ' Nik' v'N'N'VNNYVx 2 Are R1 ht 111 I g I x , 2 I NSIQQNQZXSNQQZEQQ , ILLECTRICAL FIXTURES Q X fxflfyqhfxfxj, 25,3 1: I : AND APPLIANCES T . , 5 1 , : f um ' I Remeinber Our Number i ' 1 EAST 1513 , f l :' QM M i 127 Grand Avenue Spalding Equipment 5 will Help Your Game ., , L i Semff0,C.,,,,,,g i ELECTRIC CO. l . ' .i.-..,.- -..,.-,.,.-....-....-..,.-....-....-..,.-....-,.-.,..-..gE BROADWAY AND ALDERE Page 140 KYYCWS 11101011xifrioifxicxiuioioxoinioiciniuioi 111111101 1,1 M.,...?,,,, ., W. ,,... ..-MW .. Ki m igt 4 . - - 'xl' 1' 'fgfffs L'L, p v, i' Q? rf 'L'il?-Zttktu 1 ' - .- , -:,. ' ff 'AQ-v' , . .Q M f QNSFH' x ' U5 R. ' I .... , 3 Et LQ I N 4 1 1. f f- ,af N M J s ggg gpm ? M A , .. N V t I . I W , M., ., , l Q V .. ,4 E I .. , ...Q , we ' Q ' ' i . , A ., 114 IW, .,.. ..V, Qi . ,,,.. . . ..., L H gijssfz . .s M A x.fwi??If5l'f53H? New Daylight Home ofthe Largest Printers o School Annuals in the Northwest X9 SONS PRINTING COMPANY DI i 592 YAMHILL AT TENTH PORTLAND OREGON Telephone Beacon 6247 slain: 113 112 1 11:31 v2uinio3oi1i 311111111 rixiri Page 141 VYCWEK' I l F . Page 142 VYQWS Payc 143 IZI'tZ?b?Vf -,.... .----- ..-....-..,..............-....-..,.-M..-....-,...-.....-....-..I-....-.,..-...-....-I........I-....-........f A P P Y T Y L E I For Young Men and Young Women T ON CRE-DIT e E h. I Budget Yfour . K I I I --tl ' . , ,wh VCI-Vt Ing I Clothes A . I I New ln 0 Buying at ur irrin W Styles, Fabrics the Efisfffm WASHINGTON AT TENTH and COINS ....., ..--. - - ... .-...I-..........-....-,..........-........,..-.....-..........- - -....-....-....-...,.- ......1f..-if its inn 11--1- -i--- I m-mn Qu in-ull v111111 1111 '- 1 'f' ' I I 5 2 2 I I I ATwa.ter 0216 -. -- -.- . .i. . . . ,LII , , W, 5 G R E E N 41 I L L I ' ' I I I , DAQ.: IQY I I i 'Q I I E A4 -,.,- I I I 'TQ '-L6 5 S I I I 287 Morrison St. Portland, Oregon I ' I , ..-,...-...,-.....-I -..,.-..,.-....-....-...,-..,...,.,.............gI .g...-..........-....-..,,-..,..-....- -.....-..........-....-...........-40 Teacher: Tommy, why do you spell bank with a big HBH? Tommy: 'Cause father said a bank was no good unless it had a large capital. ..I-..........-....-....-..,.-.....-.....-....-....-....-..I.-....-MI. Q,-,.,.......-....-.W-r.,.4..,..-....-.....-I..-I...-....-I..-..I-IT B. B. DONUT COMPANY NIPPQN FLORISTS Quality I whinesaie and Retail Q Cake, Raised, French, Special French I I Cut Flowers and Floral Designs for I Doughnuts Our Specialty I I All Occasions I TA. 4134 1263 Division I 3715 sixty-third st. s. E., Portland, oregon I ........-....-..I-...........-....-...I-....-....-....-.,.,-I..-II.-ei. 4...-..........-....-....-....-....-....-I..-....-.W-...I-....-....-.if -....- ... - ..- .... -..,.- .,.. - .... -....-.........I-..I.-.....-....-...........-....-.....-....-.....-.....-.....-....- .... ---- . ....-...Q I EADERSHIP IN LE ARNING I 1 .L I THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON offers the student the cultural her- 5 itage of the ages together with scholarly and professional training I , ,designed to train the young Oregon man and woman for algaffieient and I successful life. 3 VVork is offered in the following professional schools: 2 ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED ARTS MEDICINE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MUSIC : EDUCATION PHYSICAL EDUCATION I JOURNALISM SOCIOLOGY 3 LAW SOCIAL woRK I Other subjects are offered in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, the Extension Division, and the two summer sessions. 2 Entering freshmen enroll September 19, 1927. Classes begin Septem- , ber 26. I The UNIVERSITY of OREGON I W'rite to Registrar, University of Oregon, I Eugene, for catalog and other information. ....... -----.- ....-...,-I..-.....-....-....-....-I...-....-I..-....-.......,..-.... ------- ...--4. Page 144 P' l we B 1u,.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1...1M1,.,.1,.,,1,m1.m1.m.1.m....m,1.m1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11.1 F ERY PRACTICAL BU INESS INSTITUTE A Business Training School Do you contemplate a business training? If so, you have the right to the best training. VVe are qualified to give you every advantage that any up to date school can offer. VVe are in touch with the business world and have had practical business training. Training classes are being conducted in all branches of modern business including courses on clictaphone and new noiseless typewriter. Spalding Bldg., Washington near Fourth BEa.con 0125 Mother: How are you getting along in arithmetic? Johnny: We are getting as far as the gazintas. Mother: The gazintasg well, what are the gazintas? Johnny: Why two gazinta four twice. HG 516 -316 Lucy Borchert: Isn't it a swell day for the race ? June Jacobson: What race? Lucy B.: Human race. as sr: exe N. Y. Gentleman: Helen, what is the world's greatest time saver? Helen Frampton: I donit know. N. Y. Gentleman: Love at first sight. ......- - -....-...I-....-....-....-....-....- -.,.-.......!. 5...-....-....-....-...................-....-M..-.................-...-K SODA FOUNTAIN I l s'rAR sHoE REPAIR sHoP Real Good Drinks AT GRAY'S CROSSING MT. SCOTT DRUG co. I I WORK NEATLY DONE - TRY ME LENTS I I 6035 Eighty-second St. ..-.. -....-1...-....-....-....-....-M-....-.....-. -.....-...gf -i-......-..,.-....-....-....-....-....-....-...-I...-....-.. -...- .................-....-...,-....-........,.-H..-.....-....-.....-....-.mg 3...-....-.....-....-....-....-....-....-....-...I-....-..........-.. For Beauty Service Appointments SU. 1036 I I . . : . ., d P. M. 5 2 B gnyMPaifI Zfgtgig' E Eizieiilt igpeiiators I I E E 7 ' BEAUTY BARBER S1-10p I I Its Quality That Counts 6020 92nd St., Lents W. J. Van0x-der, Prop. S : 4938 Foster Road SU. 6721 Our Prices Please 'em All I I ......-..M......-....-.......u..-M-,...-.....--....-....-....-....-.g. .i.-,,,,-,,,,-,.,,-,,,.....,..-.... ..... ....-,...-....- Page 145 SZSCWM ' I , 3 A, N fa I I3 K y I AI I II A JA q tsl ? 75411 Is , if Q A fi I Q, H, X I 3 353? MDX ' -- -glee fa A A ? Z J '3 5 ,. ,A K 1.7L A A Z A A A II ILQ ZZ! 5 X3 29? 5 .N W 5 5 ' Q x 1' 3 f 'TK Ltfa Ao I 'sly' 'Awe 86 SI!! 'ggi Wg-9 D27.:n RFia.v1R LLMOLG B5 f The ?o0Y'cl'1 en V5 cnilgl A Q -1, ,rf .ff 1-Q - 'XA 1' 'T' ' . X- Twze. '- J 'I S - v a. - Q, 'h tx ! I- , v Cz? 'Yoli N 29 f M' :Qu---uu-nu1nIn-mn11011nn--nn-nn-uu-nn-nn-In-1uu1nn-mx--nn-nu-nn-un-nn-un-an-1uu-un1mn1.m...nu-In-n AA A A -I- HONEYMAN HARDWARE COMPANY Q PARK AND GLISAN ST. i VVRIGHT E DITSON GOLF, TENNIS, BASEBALL 1 AND ATHLETIC SUPPLIES 3 AECIIEEY EQUIPMENT 3 P01'tland's Largest Ha1'du'a1'e and Sporting Goods Store I I f 'P -I- Page 146 - CQ!-.J 3' 'F ' H 3 ' ' gm .A.L,. - 4 -r-- ---f -- -f-' -4- ---1 - -- - '--1 - -ff- - ffi- - --'Y - -'-1 ---f- - ' --I' :'--'- - ' - -H1' - -1 - ---f - - f - '-'1 - '- - '- - lvf- - '11- -I---- I+ BIRGER TONSETH I BUNGALUW L I THE BAGDAD ELORIST T I T 37th and Hawthorne 1 5 TAEOR 5642 I STAPLE AND FANCY i I E e GROCERIES THE GLENCOE FLORIST PHONE TABOR 3448 48?Agg1gRB'ig'5gnt I 41st and Lincoln T I I T I VVQ Deliver 2 L When You Say If With Flolwers 5 T i Say It Wzth Ours I 'iq' IIII i IIII T T Illl 1 'T li llll T 1-ll T T l'll 1' l'll T img' i' llll l llll '- llll T llll i llll T llll -1 llll TWT ' lll' T T -HH-Mi' A few days after a farmer had placed his two children in a school a book agent called on him and said, Now that your children go to school you ought to buy them an encyclopedia. Buy them an encyclopedia? Hanged if I do! was the reply. Let them walk like I did. X exe as Monroe Smith fbeing arrestedj: But, officer, I'm a student! Officer: Ignorance is no excuse. at we as The absent-minded professor shaved the cat and kicked himself in the face. su- ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- - '--- - ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- - -X-- - '--- - '--- - ---1 - ---- - '-f- - '--- - -- - -1-- - ---- - ---- - ---- - ---- -W- ---- - '--' ---Q TRAIN Eon BUSINESS I I at i BEHNKE-WALKER i I The School of Business Specialization and Lead- f- L ership. I i ITS teaching staff are specialists and leaders, T 5 with the ability to crystalize your university, 4 I college or high school education into a real I i earning powerg i : ITS graduates are employed by the leading firms 5 I of the Pacific northwest as bookkeopers, stenog- I i raphers, salesmen, secretaries and managersg T 2 ITS ern lovment de artment is suceessfull lac- 2 I P . P . - 1 Y P E in all its raduates 111 ositions of trust and I - S - . . g P E l responsibility. Pres. I. M. Walker I T B Our business is to help you in business. T : X ,,,,,.l5.--157:-.M Catalog on request. E I --41+ 'e'F-- I I ll! ll u N- . fr' llil' -I I W ' ' I 'I IE: BUSINESS COLLEGE - T 1 11th and Salmon Streets g ,- m e gitgxlll V I Q' Phone BEacon 3138 Portland, Oregon I I I I ' ' - 'l,,, ' I .fiiirv Member of the National Association of Accredited T Commercial Schools vim-in ----- m.-Im-im-m--im- 1nn-uI:-nn-nniun--un-un:nu1uu1lnu1nnu1nnu1u -un-uu- Page 147 P.- YYEVDM' .yu-m.--m-ml-.In-m.-lm-ul.-...I-in--ml-lm-un---u-,!, ?-.-.m--.m-m.-m.-m.-m.-.m-n..-m--lm-ml--m-lm-,!, FOR UP TO DATE DRY GOODS, Gra.y's Crossing Pharmacy L SHOES AND MENIS FURNISHINGS ! I 8129 Woodstock Avenue S. E. L L G., E, LEWELLEN'S - PREscRI1gTJ:ig1IgrT EIEECIALISTS L I 6310 FOSTER ROAD I I Let us supply the ice cream for that party I 'i--..1..- .-H....-...,.....................-.....-....-....- .... -....-...g -1--....-....-....-.....-....-....-....-....-..........-....-....-....-Mg., I think I can make it, said father to Ann. Now the flivver's in pieces, and so's her old man. M A 1 5 if ses H 'D ..o. - I an SPSS I I 'IIN f I I s I 5 . l WM . Faiq .A' A. i' GZ W. Boyle: That dog is Heinzf' When my shoes Wear out, I'l1 be on my feet again. ----I-nu-1m-m.-m.-m.-,m-....-.m-lm-ml ----- nu-.m-.m-.m-m.-m.-.m-.m-m--m.-.m- ---I--I-2, ' TEACHER or PIANO Q R U HIGH SCHOOL CREDITS GIVEN RES. STUDIO: 6917 WOODSTOCK AVE. ------- SU. 1922 I WEST SIDE: 208-209 FINE ARTS BLDG. ------- BR. 2501 i -...-.....-....-....-H..-....-..,.-...,-....-..........-....-....-I...-..K. --------- .-....-....-,...-....-...f. -me-unn-un-nn-:luiM1uu-nu-nu-nn-nu-nnn1uu-Q. ganiun- - -urn-nu-nu-un-uu-nu -1-1 nn-Q, MA'S RESTAURANT : Comvllmffnts VVAFFLES A SPECIALTY E - - 4925 Powell street Q l ' Nygaardf n DINNERS TWENTY-FIVE CENTS AND UP i I D. D. M. I .......-....-........,.-....-...-...-....-..-...-....-....-...g. .i.-.... Page 148 -.. .... .... ....-..,i VYEVDM ' . 1 ., ij V 4. A ' QIEJMIA f Qioix , W U -2, . df? ,R fm W W 'P X W I 'W A f , -1 ' 1 ','J f ,I XX I X f' 9 5 Eff f IhIhlllmm Muhllul I hmm - ' -f f'.4-r.Q.:.s- 'Ill' .s- .21- The Klrxg Is Re sfolfed + - --'- - '- -f-- - Kf-- - ---- - -1-' - -'-l --g :1-l-- -- - ---' - ---- - ---' - ---' - ---' - ---' - '--- - '-'- - -1-- - ---- - ---' - - - -4. I FOSTER ROAD PHARMACY Q L CRESTQN MARKET Q i 6146 F ter Road ' l 3i370S'1l'TfffETeuSQf0f' L 1 MT. TABOR DRUG co. I L MEATS I I Goth d D H I l Alwyf .4ppfmam Your Trade I -10 .... - .... - ...- - ...- - --1-- ---- - -1- +-- -1. P 149 ff' J. r , ! , Y-.V 1 ,gf .,-- .Qu Qdfaw-, 4,,..fRf1n,, . QN ONE or AMERICA'S EXCEPTIONAL BUSINESS COLLEGES X r I 5 I .shi '4 WhLDoes the Northwestern -O QL of' A few of 111: many Norll1nr?!Ile:agi: recenlly placed in good posiiiom y our EmD1oumcnlDeparlmenl, which renders free service la NorlhuJesIern graduates and lo employers desiring compzlenl axsislanls. 'ff' Attract Students of Such High Type? Is it because it gives personal attention and opportunity for individual advancement? Or because it maintains high standards in strictly modern courses? Or because it has so completely equipped every department? Or because it employs a faculty not alone to teach and train, but also to inspire? Or because it is as fully accredited as any such school can be? . . Therels some good reason for ambitious, purposeful young people are enrolling ' ery day. We invite you to join them-at least, to investi- gate.' Tefgphone, write or callx for our latest free book, Move Your Future Forward. Remember, we do not employ solicitors. RTHWESTE ss- ,, E 50110010 Commerce QI w.f'f -A DAY SCHOOL- 1 hbSYear NIGHT SCHOOL-Monday, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. 341 SALMON STREET AT BROADWAY-PORTLAND, OREGON Page 150 W fifgilf' ffVYQ?5fYf - 4 Qfqzziogmphf , YWW lwfmk 5 V fgwllyr X ,A, - fbi , , -. 5449, ,Aww , U26-M . fl? I I-fazej Hhlla wfafffww WZ! GH pagan C,ifig, 3, g QWQ' 744 , .,fsA1leAJQvZ1ff!bf+f1 f , zigzag N 'V W ay . new . W, A4 SJ f ,Ji ,- .N X ff ,' 1' 1 I' Aj U 'f ' f x ' L ' vf gf fw b V W YSQKPDS ff j ' . x ' V - XX wx. . , ' ' 1 zfrogmpbf V ii Q j5 ff f' + F ff gn G 52 iMl ' if d '??8j' .. C 'SMGSJGI ff,,'1a,f,Jmw 0-fbUQnN..Q l'T ' ' ' W ,-, , , Wgffz diff X25 QQ ww QR WMM M - . Q gg MLZW N -i q ft SW? 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