Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT)
- Class of 1929
Page 1 of 132
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1929 volume:
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.:::m :. ' :: ' i ' r: i t n VOLUME I Published by the Journalism Classes of GLASGOW HIGH SCHOOL Glasgov , Montana me HOOT MON OF GLASGOW HIGH SCHOOL IN THE TREASURE STATE 1 929 FOREWORD Nearly a decade has passed since Glasgow High School has issued an annual. The lean and the fat years have been with us, and both have left their marks. With the coming of better days has come a fine new school building, and the students of Glas- gow High feel that they too must keep pace with the spirit of progress, so the Hoot Mon now makes its initial appearance. In the years to come the alumni of Glasgow High School will glance over this book to recall memories of bygone days. Then, not only should our annual show school history, but also give glimpses of the allied atmosphere. Since pioneer life is so closely related to the past and present of this community we have chosen the pioneer as the theme of our book. CONTENTS I Administration II Classes III Activities IV Athletics V Junior High VI Humor i ' illllllill l i l llΒ MI|l$|yHJf tl ii | ii il| li fMgB | BMi | To THE MONTANA pioneer whose prophetic vision and triumphant endeavor made pos- sible the blessings w e today enjoy, we are proud to dedicate the Hoot Monof 1929. ' β β β ' β β I ' t P4:i flffrflWyrffFirm|n.r;inVH 3tf -β ' - High School Building. Glasgow. Montana. Dedicated January 11. 1929. IN APPRECIATING the work done by those who advised, planned and constructed our fine new high school building we must not forget the tsuc- payer who so willingly bears the burden of its cost, and we take this oppor- tunity to express our appreciation. - .-. -. ' -.civ.; β’β’:- ? --, ' .v; t EVERY movement has its leaders, so it was with the pioneers. These were men of great fore- sight and industry, men who were wiUing to leave behind the known and seek in the distance the unknown. Such men knew how to wrestle with its problems; how best to work together for the com- mon good of all. They succeeded in so great a degree that we of Montana today enjoy the quiet- ness and peacefulness of her prosperity. The sturdy pioneers also realized that in edu- cation lay the only means of progress. So they started this great movennent of which there has been no equal since time began. As the pioneer made the community and had his place in it, so, too, the teacher of today takes his place in the community and makes the school and moulds many lives. Many personalities exist to be dealt with, and these must be taught to cooperate with other people. In so doing they must be recog- nized as an important factor in the community. -2 β t it : : ?% ' m C. E. Hoppin. H. W. Magruder. W. W. Hurd. John Hurly, O, M. Christinson BOARD OF EDUCATION W. W. Hurd - - President H. W. Magruder C. E. Hoppin O. M. Christinson John Hurly A. B. Friedlund Clerk The power behind the throne. To these men we express our appreciation and gratitude for their untiring efforts which helped to make possible our new high school building. t:; ' :;t : ' ' i i !:% 1 R. L. Irle Superintendent of Schools Hamline Univ.. Ph. B. Univ. of Minn. A life of competency leaves no time to be lone- some. Glasgow Higii owes a great deal to Mr. Irle for his unceasing labor in making our new school one of the best. Herbert Garlough St. Paul, Minn. Principal of Senior High Macalester College, B. A. Univ. of Minn.. American History Our principal argues that woman shall never triumph over man. Has a weakness for tardy essays and fruit salad. Dorothy Alexander Belle Fourche, S. D. MacPhail School of Music. B. M. Spearfish Normal Music Supervisor Ralph F. Mowery Bozeman, Mont. Montana State College, B. S Smith-Hughes Agriculture General Science Dorothy M. Harkins Faribault, Minn. University of Minnesota, B. S. Home Economics β 4- Agnes J. Andersen Lime Springs, Iowa St. Olaf College, B. A. Mac Phail School of Music Mathematics. Public Speaking Guy H. Weaver Whitewater, Wis. Whitewater Normal Univ. of Wisconsin Athletic Coach. Commercial Helen Hoover Crosby, N. D. N. D. Agr. College. B. S. World History, English Frances Martin Excelsior, Minn. Univ. of Minn., B. S. in Ed. Latin, Librarian Harold J. Soroos Valley City, N. D. Valley City State Teachers College. B. A. Industrial Education, Physics Alice A. Mattison Weyerhauser, Wis. Univ. of Neb.. B. A. Univ. of Wis. 1 Normal Training, American History Marian Coventry Linton, N. D. Carleton College. B. A. Univ. of Chicago English, Algebra Andrew R. Woodside Clinton, Canada Lynchburg College. Va., B. S. Univ. of Virginia Chemistry. Biology Nellie M. Sayre Indianola, Iowa Simpson College, B. A. Univ. of Iowa. M. A. Univ. of California English Maria Murphy Valley City, N. D. Valley City State Teachers College, B. A. Commercial, Science β 5 β THE PRIMARY thought of the early settlers in Montana was to build their homes. This re- quired a great deal of painstaking effort as the work had to be done entirely by hand. They hewed down the trees and fashioned them into logs w hich were in turn fashioned into log cabins. After the settlers had built their homes they built a school. The early school house was a crude one-room cabin, hot in summer and cold in winter. They didn ' t have the comforts and conveniences in those days that we have now. The floors of these log school houses (when they had floors) were usually of half logs with the curved side pressed into the ground. These were known as puncheon floors. The classes were composed of all ages and sizes of children and the curriculum was largely devoted to the three R ' s β readin ' , ritin ' , and ' rith- metic. The teacher was usually some man or woman from farther east with no more than a grammar school education, who had come to Montana to homestead, most of his time holding down the home- stead and taught school only when convenient. Despite all these hardships and inconveniences these schools developed steady, law-abiding citizens, who have made Montana what it is today, The Treasure State. S ' rfei ' : S v$ fe fe Mi , β’-β β’β’β’?Β£ v.: β’β : -- ,: -Si lt SENIORS President Vice-President Secretary I reasurer Eldon Schuster Mildred Johnson Marjorie Hurly Paul Etchepare We, the senior class of nineteen hundred twenty-nine, have worked steadily and faithfully for four long years. Sometimes we wearied in well doing but continued our course. As freshmen we entered the portals of Glasgow High forty-eight strong and went to work with a will. Our motto was, Work and Win. Superintendent Sawyer and Miss Mattison, our principal, helped to steer us along during our freshman and sophomore years. As sophomores we num- bered but few less than in the first year, and our motto of Work and Win was still preserved. Our junior year arrived. Some had fallen by the wayside because of exams, but others came and filled their places, so we entered on the last half of our high school career with Mr. Irle and Mr. Garlough to direct our course. β Now in our senior year as Commencement time draws nigh we number thirty-two. Our class colors are old rose and silver and we have kept all through our course the motto of our freshman days β the motto we hope to keep with us always, Work and Win. R. L. 29. -7 β Roy De Haven De Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Operetta (1), (2), (3) ; RoiinduD Staff (4) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Seventeen (3) ; Dramatics (4). Cleverness personified : never exerts his mind. A liter- ary man. God ' s bles.sinRs on your beard. Marjorie Hurly ' Marj Glee Club (1), (2), (3). (4) : Operetta (ll. (2), (3) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) : Cla.ss Secretary (4). A girl who does not need to worry about dieting. Ro- mantic to the last word. Champion of Woman ' s rights. I ' m a woman and I ' m proud of it. Dot (4) ; Operetta (1), (2), (3) ; Dorothy Hovey (Jlee Club (1). (2). (3) Roundup Staff (4). Likes argument. Expects to be somebody ' s atenog. May the bloom of her cheeks never extend to her nose. Paul Etchepare Itch Glee Club (ll. (2). (3), (41; Operetta (1), (2). (3); β Seventeen (3): Football (ll, (2), (3), (4): Basketball (2), (3). (4) : Debate (21, (31 : Class President (1), (2), (3): Class Treasurer (41; Orchestra (2), (3): Ag Club (41 : Stock Judging Team (4) ; Dramatics (4). Never over works him-elf. Likes to think himself a lierpetual bachelor. Me for the South Sea Islands ! Charles Hoffman Chas. Glee Club (1), (2t, (3), (4): Operetta (1), (2), (3); Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Basketball (3) ; Football (3). Never lacks for the appropriate retort. A merry heart maketh for a cheerful countenance. Erna Hansen Hoot Mon Staff (4). An excellent student : has her own ideas and sticks to her work, her word, and her friends. Whatever 1 have tried to do, I have tried to do well. Peggy Morton Peg Glee Club (3), (41 ; Operetta (3) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Roundup Staff (3) ; Class Secretary (3) ; Secretary Extra Curricular Council (4). Has an unusual personality : interested in everything. If you want to know something, ask Peg. There may be people smarter than I, but I can ' t believe it. Robert Cornwell Bob Football (2), (3), (4); Ag Club (4); Stock Judging Team (4). A good fellow. Dependable ; if you want anything done, call on Bob. Oh, Peg, wait a minute. Dale Smith Smithy Basketball (2), (3) ; Football (3), (4) ; Glee Club (2), (3), (4) : Seventeen (3) ; Operetta (3), (4) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Roundup Staff (4) ; Dramatics (4). A good natured, jolly fellow. Likes to be with the fair sex. How he can jig ! The kiss snatched hastily from a side-long maid. Callie Peterson Pete Glee Club (1). (2), (3), (4); Operetta (1), (2), (3); Seventeen (3) : Roundup Staff (4) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Dramatics (4). A likeable girl. Play first- -study maybe. Let others do the laboring. And I ' ll do the rest. Mildred Johnson Tubby Seventeen (3) ; Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Class Vice-Presi- dent (4) : Dramatics (4). Give her time and she ' ll do it ; has an interest in the junior class. May her chin never reach her nose. Eldon Schuster Debate (2), (3), (4) ; Seventeen (3) ; President Extra- curricular Council (4) : Track (3) ; Class President (4) ; Orchestra (2), (3) ; Winner in district extemporaneous speaking (4). A scholar and a student. Makes grades with an ease few people possess ; has an unforgetable chuckle. I persevere and I accomplish. β 8 β Β ilΒ« Roy Johnson Swede Olee Club (ll. (21, (3), (41: Operetta (1), (2). (3) ; Class Troa iircr (3) : Roundup Staff (4) : Dramatics (4). One of our carefree students who loves to tease the girls. Our younK Don Quixote takes the road : To show his rratitude he draws his pen, And seeks this hydra. Scandal, in his den ! Evalyn Michel β’Billy Extra-Curricular Council (A). A very Kood friend when you b:- ' come acquainted. Always ready lo do her part A faithful friend is she. Gertrude Vegge ' Gertie Normal Club (3), (4). A future pedaKojrue. Always s ood-natured and pleasant to her friends. lUondes make the best hou. ekeepers. Jack Fagan Jacki acKie Ak Club (41. Still uninjured by Cupid ' s arrows. Good natured. Accuse not Nature : she hath done her part ; Do thou but thine. 1 ena Niel son Normal Club (3), (4). Very easily embarrassed ; modest and cheerful. No mouse was ever half j-o still as this lass. Velma Spangler Normal Club (3t, (4). A Kood natured jrirl who will make a good school ma ' am. If it is not seemly, do it not ; If it is not true, speak it not. ' Rene Hoot Mon Staff (4) ; Operetta Everyone likes to Scotty ' Irene Hilden Glee Club (2), (3), (4) (2). (3). A dependable and 1 rust worthy piri knaw her and be with her. Her niodest manner and her graceful air Show her wise and jrood as she is fair. Russell Scott Football (2t, (3). (4). Can be found anionj.!: the niourner.-i who have been let down by a certain jrirl ; a jrood fellow. I ' know a maiden fair. Take care, she is foolinir thee. lieware ! Ruben Lewow Muleskin Basketball (2). (3l. (4): Seventeen (3 : Football (2), 3f. (4): Glee Club (2 , (3). (4): Operetta (2i, (3); Hoot Mon Staff (4) : Roundup Staff (3). A jrood fellow ; bluff seems to come natural to him. Ship me somewheres east of Suez, Where the best is like the worst. Where there aren ' t no ten commandments. And a man can raise a thirst. Loucile Finney Dramatics (4). Takes life as it comes ; enjoys a good joke. studies burden her. Jolly, Jenerous, Ida Disrud Normal Club (3), (4). One of bur future teachers. Just as pleasant as Norris Kjos Football (1), (2). 31. Capt. (4t ; Go Slow, Always late to English class : doesn ' t quite understand the girls. A football whizz. Moments to me are precious. Hear me. Mis? Sayre- β 9 β rinney Doesn ' t let , Jabbery. ' Tillie Mary (S). Evelyn Bohan One of the few girl wave. Silence is oi Clayton Button : β¬M: : Reo Boley Entered oiii class this year ; doesn ' t let his studies inter- fere will) his education. A Hon amonjr the ladies is a most dreadful thing:. ' Ethel Moore Normal Chib (3,i. (4). Very iiuiet around school, but we think she has her fun. Wlien there ' s work for us to do. She ' s there and pladly too. Frances Walker (3} ; ' Fran Operetta (1), (2), (3) ; Glee Club (1), (2). Dramatics {4i. Very excitable j)ersona]ity, likes to ask questions. A good dramatist. She talks without thinking, Hut never thinks without talking. Mary Pointer Normal Club (3 1. (4). Will she ever wield the pointer and teach others not to use ain ' t? A likeable girl. Be not the first by whom the new is tried. Nor yet the last to lay the old aside. Fern Moore She is dignified and keeps aloof from everyone ; likes to sleep in class. Hunts half a day for a forgotten dream. Bert Sammons Bertie Yell Leader (4) ; Football (2). Spends his spare time taking care of the frosh. Likes curly hair. If I don ' t get exempt I ' ll flunk. One of the few girls with a permanent. May it ever wave. Silence is one great art of conversation, Butt His high school career consisted mainly of two great romances. Nevertheless, a very good fellow. Ain ' t love grand I 10- fnii THE JUNIOR CLASS Ambrose Friedl - - - President Lillian Button - - - Vice-President Joe Martinkoski - - Secretary and Treasurer Three long years have passed by since the juniors entered high school, fresh from the eighth grade. Despite Mr. Huber ' s earnest and faithful drilling, his excellent methods of instruction and his worthy advice, secured by many years of experience, the juniors were only average freshmen three years ago. They thought they knew just as much, were just as important and amounted to as much as they ever would in years to come and were nevertheless just as green as average fresh- men. However, some excel in athletics, others in mathematics, others in Latin, and still others in dramatics, but nevertheless, they are all juniors. It was only last year as sophomores they eagerly and cleverly participated in Stunt Nite and the high school operetta, and some assisted with the junior prom. It was only the year before last that they had a very successful party in charge of Mr. Steinke, the math teacher, and attended a series of basketball games never to be forgotten. And it is this year as juniors they managed the junior prom with much success, that outstanding social event of the school year. And again they appear in Stunt Nite; in a series of plays; in the district music meet; upon the basketball floor, and in the various social gatherings and activities of the school. The crowning event of all their endeavors will be commencement night next year which will end their high school career. Until then may they con- tinue to be faithful and loyal students of Glasgow High School. H. H. ' 30. β’11 β Leslie Bjorstad Never did care for girls, but wait! Harriet Christophersen Gentlemen prefer blondes. Lucile Carlson One of those bright Baylorites. Gilbert Aitken Dead-eye Ike since the basketball season. Charles Cotton Called Cave on account of cave man tactics. Myrtle Christensen Ever changing. Byrnece Anderson Quiet in appearance, with motives unknown. Vernon Copeland His moustache was a big hit. Cyral Walsh A promising sheik. Hazel Cornwell β’Well namedβ her eyes are truly hazel. ' Constance Muskett Does her task from day to day, And does whatever comes her way. William Uphaus Ride ' em. cowboy! Reginald Bittle Touch-me-not. Mary Daum Give me my gum. Lucile Bergos Will be a school ma ' am some day. Travers Harman Hopes to be president some day. β’ 12- ' ' ll j ' i ::β β :;β f George Parke He ' s tiny, but O my! Clara Peterson Hails from Nashua. Susan Unrau Quiet and unassuming. Joe Martinkoski A promising young printer. Richard Fried 1 The answer to a librarian ' s prayer. Elinor Hagen Often seen In class, but seldom heard. Howard Stevens (Pat) He would joke if he were dying. Nellie Kokkeler The last to ever enter a quarrel. Ronald Baker The all-around athlete β the all-around gentleman. Margaret Murray In Scottish plaids .she does the Highland Fling. Frances Simmons Silence does not indicate lack of wisdom. Ambrose Friedl The bone of contention for his big brother. Richard Hoppin Glasgow ' s Paderewski Thelma Helgerson Tillie the Toiler β she neither spins nor toils. Lillian Button The Colleen Moore of Glasgow High. Robert Spears Prefers O. P. cigarettes. β 13 β ii yy ' L Bertha Stensland Quiet and modest as a nun. Frank Walker So quiet, so modest β just good. Sidney Erickson I ' ve never worried, and I ' m never going to. ' Vivian McCormick Life is indeed no holiday. Marie Britzman Jolly and friendly. Orville Stomsvik Came back after a long vacation. James Watson Knight of the green hat. Susie Stomsvik I ' m sure care is an enemy to life. Genevieve Olson Plays hooky on the sly. Eugene Forsman Doesn ' t let his studies interfere with Mildred. Byron Armstrong A lad so very mild and meek, That evsn his shoss refuse to squeak. Hortense Mcintosh Has interests elsewhere. Esther Jones Shvj ' s married now. Wendell Olson He knows his horses. Otto Dokken A descendant of the Vikings. Mary Dohi An A number one student of Glasgow High. β 14- fe C M Alice Byer Famous for her perpetual grin. Guy Fagan A dasosndant of the Emerald Isle. Herman Slewing He ' ll get along with the aid of no one. Molly Anderson Her long blonde tresses still hang down her back, Edna Chase O, those ruby lips! Warren Gamas Felipe indeed, but where is Ramona? Durward Byer Called Prof. because of his scholarly abilities. Madge Burrus She has a true teacher ' s face. Maybelle Cotton To all friends, a friend. Scott Johnson Has but one weakness β Maybelle. Hermon Weber His chief weakness is the fair sex. Shirley Bohan Men may come and men may go. But I babble on forever. Helen Harebo Her artistic ability may make h3r famous some day. Eugene Tourtlotte I remember a number of things, but none distinctly. James Christinson The Durable Dans. pride of the basketball team. Irene Simmons Is successful at whatever she attempts. Andrea Jackins (Not in picture) β 15- p SOPHOMORE CLASS We are the class of nineteen thirty-one. The process of our education is similar to a ship ' s voyage. We started with seventy-seven passengers. Mr. Irle was our captain and Mr. Garlough was the pilot. Because of many hard- ships of life many passengers vsrere forced to discontinue the voyage. We vkfere alvt ays considered green because v e w ere freshmen, but for many occasions the freshmen were the only good volunteers. At the beginning of our voyage there was a big rally. Toward the close of the rally, our initiation followed. There were many embarrassing moments for the shy green students. The second lap of the voyage continued on the same ship with the same captain and the same pilot as before. We made all efforts to correct the mis- takes we made during our first lap and put into practice the better ideas we developed. Many girls became members of the Girls ' Glee Club and the boys became members of the Boys ' Glee Club. Those who were talented to play instru- ments joined the orchestra under the directorship of Miss Dorothy Alexander. We remained an unorganized class but still we managed all our business with the least of trouble. We hope as we start on our third lap as juniors that we shall improve ourselves more than we did in the first half of our voyage and become better students of Glasgow High, and a class of which she will indeed be proud. E. E. ' 31. Top Row: John Smith, Walter Knaff, Lee Montgomery, Ralph Keagy. Kenneth Christinson. Lee Burroughs, Thomas Flint. Middle Row: Annie Barstad, Olive Hopstad. Bernice Mihm, Mercedes Hanson, Esther Erickson, Malee Arnold. Esther Nielson, Elise Stensland. Ingeborg Barstad, Esther Anderson- Judith Eliason. Bottom Row: Cathryne Putz, Enid Jones, Pauline Putz, Leanor Hall, Lillian Eliason. 16- 1l Top Row: Helen Midge, Eleanor Puchalla, Victoria Barrett, Bertha Dokken, Clara Kjos, Madelyn Walsh, Frances Ramesz Middle Row: Ernest Erickson, Richard Hallett, Casper Mabee, William Forsythe, Richard Bollard, WUliam Smart, John Rusher, Ray AUman. Bill Alvord, Benny Lswow. Bottom Row: Edith Watson, Annaruth Cooper, Hazel Schwenke. Aileen Christinson. Top Row: Mary Knight. Verna Keagy. Gwendolyn Anderson, Olive Knaff, Jennie Hopstad. Ruth Bronstad, Nina Kjos. Middle Row: Emma Erickson. Margaret Baker, Myrtle McGlocklin, Ruth Johnson, Sophia Czyzeski, Lorraine Lee, Lucile Arnold. Bottom Row : Arlo Rasey, Donald Rader, Richard Stiley, George Button, Charley Pierson. Not in Pictures: Clifton Bruce, George Blanchard, Gustav Vegge, Ralph Schwenke, Ronald Osterberg, Clarence Nace, Ralph Hurlburt, Gordon Browning, Jack Baylor, Jose- phine Cygan. β 17 β -=Β -..β’ β’β’, β a ' . β β’.. ' St. β’ .. β’ -.c - aLTHOUGH the life of the pioneer was a busy one, devoted chiefly to the building of his rude sod or log house, and wresting from his crude environment his very existence, a little gaiety now and then crept into his almost monotonous life. Perhaps a quilting bee, a house warming, a spell- down, a debate brought the people together a nd these were enjoyed as social activities. But the one outstanding social function, which most clearly characterized the social life of the pio- neer, was the country dance. The word was passed along for miles that there would be a dance in some home or schoolhouse. Entire families came and soon the old fiddler tuned his fiddle and the dance began with everyone on the floor. No one was too old, too young, too fat or too poor. About midnight the stove lid was lifted ; the coffee pot set on the coals and soon all were eating the lunch of cakes and sandwiches brought by the ladies. Then the dance was resumed til the wee small hours of the morning. β 18 β THE GLASGOW ROUNDUP GLASGOW HIGH BOOSTS THE BEST Published by Glasgow Students of Journalism STAFF Editor-in-Chief Roy De Haven Associate Editor Roy Johnson Business Manager Dprothy Hovey Humor Editor Dale Smith Sports Editor Paul Etchepare Senior Reporter Callie Peterson Junior Reporter Joe Martinkoski Sophomore Reporter Esther Erickson Preshmau Reporter Virginia Shanley Faculty Adviser . Nellie M. Sayre THE ROUNDUP STANDS FOR 1. Better cooperation and understanding betv een students and faculty. 2. A more effective liarmony between the school and the com- munity. 3. The highest achievement in scholarship, sportsmanship, and school spirit. 4. Development of good citizenship through encouraging the best initiative efforts of every student. The Roundup is the weekly nev spaper of Glasgow High School and had its beginning in 1927-28. Before that time the school had no paper, so journalism is now taught to the juniors and seniors in order that they may put before the friends of the school the events and news of school life. Miss Sayre is the faculty adviser and it is .through her efforts that the Class of ' 28 started The Roundup. We, who followed in their footsteps, are mighty proud of our paper. While it is only a page in The Glasgow Courier, it is tlie voice of the student body, and it is there that our chief literary, poetic, and humorous out- bursts greet the public. In the years to follow may The Roundup carry on. : : ' - -l; ' ! v-: S HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA Miss Dorothy Alexander Director Richard Hoppin Piano First Violins Second Violins Nellie Kokkeler Jeanette Pease Casper Mabee Helen Czyzeski Edna Holderman Marion Reece Jean Ardyce Rasey Frederick Spears Ella Mae Dempsey Clarinet Cello Richard Hallett Adelle Rasey Saxophone Comet Arlo Rasey Bill Kampfer Jack Baylor 19- Β .! ' ' :if(|s v cc f ' 5tV. GIRLS GLEE CLUB Director Accompanist Miss Dorothy Alexander Margaret Murray First Soprano Callie Peterson Harriet Christophersen Mary Daum Helen Harebo Thelma Helgerson Hazel Schwenke Nellie Kokkeler Second Soprano Edna Chase Fern Moore Marjorie Hurly Enid Jones Vivian McCormick Dorothy Hovey Ruth Bronstad Lillian Eliason Altos Emma Erickson Peggy Morton Irene Hilden Margaret Baker Judith Eliason β 20 β v .! ' ;.{ w , ;r vx ' ! ' ' ' - ' Ir: BOYS ' GLEE CLUB Director Accompanist Miss Dorothy Alexander Richard Hoppis First Tenors Arlo Rasey Ralph Hurlburt Rubin Lewow First Bass Charles Hoffman Caspar Mabee Joe Martinkoski Second Tenors Richard Hallett Gordon Browning Dale Smith LeVerne Baker Second Bass Bill Alvord Lee Burroughs Harry Wright β 21 β Eldon Schuster, Richard Hoppin DEBATE Debate was carried on this year in a public speaking class, thus eliminat- ing much outside work with no credit. Four teams were formed, and the twp teams who won the first debates gave a public debate. Eldon Schuster and Richard Hoppin were chosen to represent Glasgow on the interscholastic team. The five towns in this district were Havre, Saco, Shelby, Harlem and Glasgow. The first four towns failed to debate, so lost to Glasgow by default. The state question for debate was: Resolved, That the United States Is Attempting to Give Too Many People a College Education. Glasgow was invited to a debate tournament at Belt where Belt and Libby were the winners of their respective districts, but owing to the illness of Eldon Schuster our team did not attend. This is Eldon ' s fourth year of debate and Richard ' s first. Eldon also won the district extemporaneous speaking contest held at Poplar. Because of illness he was unable to attend the state contest at Bozeman. β 22 β ,li ( Ci iiU t ii- -!- ' ! ' lMΒ«:m Top Row: Richard Stiley, LeVerne Baker, Ralph Schwenke, Richard Uphaus, Howard Billingsley, Ralph Hurlburt, Orvllle Potter, Guy Fagan. Middle Row: Bob Cornwell, Gustav Vegge, Jack Pagan, James Christinson, Scott Johnson, James Watson, Russell Scott, Chas. Cotton, Wm. Uphaus. Bottom Row: Eugene Tourtlotte, Gordon Browning, Mr. Mowery, Paul Etchepare, Tom Cornwell. AG CLUB The Ag club is a new organization and is wide-awake and growing. It owes its existence to Mr. Mowery, its competent advisor and is organized to coincide β with the Smith-Hughes course in agriculture. The club meets twice a month and conducts meetings which are instruc- tive as well as entertaining. Some of this year ' s activities have included a Fathers ' and Sons ' Banquet, Candy Sales, outing to study nature, and moving pictures. Altogether it has been an expansive year and the future of the club is assured. β 23 : ' ;; a ' : v-: Cfeβ¬:M; James Christinson, Scott Johnson, Mr. Mowery. Instructor, Paul Etchepare, Robert Cornwell. STOCK JUDGING TEAM The stock judging team was picked this year from the members of the Smith-Hughes class having the highest averages in judging. The team went to Bozeman to compete against twenty-four teams and placed seventh in the state. In the contest of the ten teams along the hi line to decide who would go to Portland, Glasgow placed seven points behind Simms, who won. The scores were 2,263 and 2,256. With another year of training ahead of it, Glas- gow ' s team hopes to do even better in next year ' s meet. β 24- s -β .β’ ' .β’..β’.;::β’;β’$ ' ' β’. β’;β’:β β - ,- - ' ' . ' β β’;β c - W -- ' ' ' - : : Top Row: Helen Harebo, Velma Spangler. Leanore Hall, Genevieve Olson, Edith Watson, Ingeborg Barstad, Claris Brown, Judith Eliason. Middle Row: Irene Simmons, Bertha Stensland, Esther Nielson, Bemice Mihm, Frances Simmons, Miss Mattison, Gertrude Vegge, Ida Disrud, Tena Nielsen, Elise Stensland. Bottom Row: Mary Pointer, Ethel Moore, Edna Chase. Esther Anderson, Lucille Bergos. THE NORMAL CLUB Helen Harebo Enid Jones Hazel Cornwell Edith Watson Miss Alice A. Mattison President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser The Normal Club was organized early in the school year 1927-28 to pro- vide a Home Room for the members of the Normal Department, which in- cludes seniors, juniors and sophomores carrying the regular Normal v ork of the high school. From the first the club has met once a vi eek in the regular Normal Training room. The first year ' s activities were chiefly programs appropriate for rural schools and Round Robin letters to former graduates of the department. The past year, the club concentrated on story telling for children, games for class use and some letter writing for associate members β the alumnae. Club members have paid dues, fifty cents annually. Social events sponsored by the club include a social hour for the grade teachers and an annual party for members. On March 22 the club gave an assembly program consisting of the two-act play, Not a Man in the House, a pantomime, The Lamp Went Out, and music. It is hoped that the club will continue to function with greater interest and more value to members. β 25 β ;.!- ' ;:g|; i f HOOT MON STAFF Editor-in-chief Business Manager Assistant Manager Picture Editors Literary Editor Art Editor Class Editors Athletic Editors Joke Editors Calendar Editors Faculty Adviser Ruben Lewow Peggy Morton - Joe Martinkoski Mildred Johnson, Helen Harebo Roy De Haven Irene Hilden Callie Peterson, Byron Armstrong Dale Smith, Ronald Baker Charles Hoffman, Pat Stevens Marjorie Hurly, Erna Hansen Nellie M. Sayre β’26 β ' Mmm Literary THE PASSING FRONTIER About 1830, Washington Irving, who was the famous author of classical legends as well as serious events, discussed the trip of Captain Bonneville in a book of the same name. He (Bonneville) represented one of the fur trading companies invading the western wilds for the sole purpose of obtaining furs for milady ' s and milord ' s garments, and Irving, describing the location of the mouth of the Yellowstone River, where it enters the Missouri near what is now the state line between Montana and North Dakota, made the following obser- vations and prophecy concerning the country in that vicinity, which of course applies to the section of the state in which we live: An immense belt of rocky mountains and volcanic plains, several hun- dred miles in width, must ever remain an irreclaimable wilderness intervening between the abodes of civilization, and affording a last refuge to the Indian. Here roving tribes of hunters, living in tents or lodges, and following the migrations of the game, may lead a life of savage independence where there is nothing to tempt the cupidity of the white man. The amalgamation of various tribes, and of white men of every nation, will in time produce hybrid races like the mountain Tartars of the Caucasus. Possessed as they are of immense droves of horses, should they continue their present predatory and war-like habits, they may in time become a scourge to the civilized frontiers on either side of the mountains, as they are at present a terror to the traveller and trader. For many years thereafter, it seems that his words were truly prophetic. A story told by the Indians living at Fort Union is to the effect that one of their number was sent to Washington by the fur traders to impress him with the strength of the Great Father. Desiring to inform his friends at home of the w onders he had seen, he made a notch on his w illowstick which he carried with him, to represent a white man ' s house. By the time he had reached St. Louis, he had used up several sticks and w as unable to make enough notches after arriving there to keep count. Upon his arrival at Fort Union, he was driven from camp and finally committed suicide because the Indians thought he was fibbing in his descriptions of the wonderful things he had seen. For many years there v as no development in the eastern portion of Mon- tana, real settlement being in the gold fields of the western part of the state. To reach the gold fields one had to go by boat or land up the Missouri River as far as Fort Benton, then called the head of navigation. Many Indian Wars occurred in which the Indians were not alv rays the aggressor. In the march of the white man to the west my own great grand- β 27 β β ' ' β ' i β β β β β β β β β β’β ' ' father, while a member of General Sully ' s troops, was killed at Fort Rice near Mandan, North Dakota, in 1863. The early visitors to our section knew only the streams and valleys, so did not know of the possibility of farming in the so-called benches lying in the valleys. Following the trappers and the hunters of bu ffalo, were the big cattle out- fits who ranged immense herds of cattle in Northern Montana β then the com- ing of the railroad with its development of small sidings, of which Glasgow was established in I 888 with four tent saloons and one restaurant. It is even reported that as late as the nineties, a herd of antelope actually passed through our tow n. Finally, however, the wilder days, with their picturesque cow men, gave way in turn to the sheepmen; then in the early part of the present century there began to be a vision of the possibilities of our country as a grain producing section. The crop of homesteaders was for a time greater than the crops of grain produced, and some people residing in Glasgow today were among those who predicted that it was a waste of time and effort to try to raise crops and that it would have been better to leave the range for livestock rather than destroy its value in trying to raise crops. Only a few years ago, one could drive from Glasgow in almost any direc- tion and hardly see a house on the prairies, the only settlers were those living along the streams where water could be obtaind for stock. Now, most of Montana, including Valley County and Northeastern Mon- tana, have probably seen the last of the rough old days when men wore six- shooters and chaps were more common than overalls. Today our prairies are covered with homes; our lands are being rapidly broken up, and successful farming is now a reality rathej than a mere hope. There are still many sheep here, which are producing large incomes for those who are engaged in their handling, but the future of our section seems tied up in farming. We may reasonably indulge the hope that many of the little ham- lets reported as being descriptive of our towns today, with good public build- ings, school houses, and constantly increasing population, better schools and social advancement, will lift our state to a place never dreamed of by the so-called old-timers, not excepting from this the noted Washington Irving. Our section of the west has developed with the progress of agriculture, while other sections of Montana owe their prosperity to other causes as well. Mining is still a large industry in the state, with copper and allied products manufactured from raw forms into forms ready for the markets of the world. Oil and gas are now important products in other sections, while in the extreme western portion of the state there are still vast forests of fir and other lumber, to say nothing of the fruits, particularly apples and cherries, raised in that por- tion of Montana lying west of the main range of the Rockies. Our state, third in the Union as to size, is no longer a state for which any author is likely to make the prediction that its population is hybrid and of the β worst elements of the nomads of mixed races. Every prediction now may fully be that we shall continue our onward progress until we rank, in our develop- ment, as first in certain lines of industry β farming in our section at least, will not be least. With the development in this respect we may also hope for de- velopment along social and educational and other lines for a better and happier people. β M. H. ' 29. β 28 β ' ' n i - v! ' - fmmwjMt MY HOBBY Everyone has something to do in this world. Some of the things are not so enjoyable as others. To me the thing 1 like to do best is to go out and really learn to know Mother Nature. Not only to know her when she is dressed in her beautiful gown of spring but to see her in all her different moods. We humans are much like Mother Nature. There is the spring that comes to everyone. It is the happy, beautiful time of life, a sort of an awakening. The summer is still a lovely time when all nature is at the height of her glory. To all there is a time when we feel we, too, are at the height of our glory. Then comes autumn, which may be likened to the later years of our life. One can then stop to think that all the things of this life have to end, just as the beauti- ful green things of nature all die with the first frost of winter. Mortal men die and leave the tree of life just as the little leaves that came to life in the spring fall off in the winter. Our nature is much like the nature of this world. There are times when we are more or less gloomy and sad, when our life is dark and stormy. What pic- ture is better suited to show this mood than a dark, stormy night? The wind howls, the rain beats on the window, and the night is very troubled. Then comes the dawn. It is a beautiful sunshiny morning. All the sadness and trouble have passed. In such a happy mood it is hard to remember that there are troubles in this world. One has to think that this is nature ' s way of helping us through our cares. I hope that my favorite hobby will always be to be able to enjoy the out- door life. β F. S. ' 30. A SENIOR ' S SOLILOQUY To flunk or not to flunk, that is the question, Whether ' tis nobler in the mind to suffer The long assignments and outrageous studies. Or to take arms against a sea of lessons And by thus opposing them, end them. We stop; we sleep; no more we burn the midnight oil in futile working, But in the flurry and the thousand natural shocks That come when graduation day is near, And the class of ' 29 has reached the crossing, We find that some are lost along the way. We slept; perchance we dreamed; ay, there ' s the rub; For in that sleep w e lost what dreams we had Of ever shuffling off the stage below. Free at last from all the weary lessons we have learned. β E. H. 29. β 29- A JUSTIFIABLE LIE Once upon a time, there was a farmer in Missouri who had a large apple orchard. He seemed never to get a crop of apples that he should get from that size orchard. The reason for this was very simple β his neighbors had very taking ways. The remedy for this, however, was not so simple. He had put up No Trespassing signs and various other things, but to no avail. One day a scientist traveling through the country remarked on the beauty of the Northern Lights. This scientist stayed for a time with this certain farmer to study a plant peculiar to the mountains of Missouri, so the farmer got familiar with him one day and said that he had heard of another name for Northern Lights and wanted to know what it was. The scientist told him that the scientific name was Aurora Borealis. About a week later the farmer hit upon an idea. He got out a large board and a paint can and painstakingly painted a sign. Then he took it out and placed it in the orchard. The scientist who had seen the operation became curious to know what the sign read. One day he went out and read the sign. This is what it said: Beware although there are a few garter snakes around here, the Aurora Borealis abounds in the apple trees and gives no warning when it strikes. That year he got a record apple crop. β C. H. -29. A FACULTY MEETING AS WE THINK IT IS 9:30 A. M. β Any Saturday. Mr. Weaver: Miss Murphy: Miss Harkins: Mr. Weaver: Miss Anderson: Mr. Garlough: Good morning, folks Am I late? Yes, late but not latest. Where is Mr. Garlough? He was still eating when I left the boarding house. I hear those footsteps, be quiet. Are we all here now? Miss Sayre: Well, it is about time. I haven ' t much time. I have a couple of the annual staff up in my room, and they may even be gone by novsr. Miss Martin: Isn ' t that a gorgeous tie Mr. Garlough is wearing? It brings out the color of his eyes. Miss Murphy: He must have bought it in St. Paul. I understand any- thing from St. Paul stirs his soul so. Miss Coventry: It ' s funny he wouldn ' t buy a St. Paul alarm clock. Mr. Garlough: The meeting will come to order. Miss Harkins will you please put your gum in the basket? β Thank you. Miss Mattison: Why do we meet today? Mr. Garlough : We meet today to discuss the affairs of young ladies and young men who are under our guidance and direction. The time has come β 30 β ,1. β β ' ;Sl - S Β₯ when we must take a hand in these affairs so that the participants may keep their minds on their work. Miss Murphy: Whew! Miss Sayre: What did you have to bring that up for? Mr. Garlough: Last night as I looked out of my window what did I see but a boy and a girl hanging on Murray ' s front gate. When I went to my eve- ning meal what did I see but a boy and girl parked in a laundry truck. Mr. Weaver: Did you ever use a spot light? Mr. Garlough: Yes, and what didn ' t I see. A Chevrolet, a Whippet, a new Ford, Willys-Knight, Buick, Chrysler, Studebaker, Dodge, and last but not least Bob Spear ' s uncovered wagon. Miss Mattison: Isn ' t it romantic? Mr. Woodside: Is it really that bad? Mr. Weaver: I find it very convenient. 1 can take my Ford and we go riding with no lights to blind us and no cars to pass us, and some how or other we eventually come to the journey ' s end. Miss Coventry: Gee, but he is hard struck. Weaver, of all people. If I buy a car will you ride with me. Miss Harkins? I ' d be tickled to death. The meeting is adjourned. R. J. ' 29. Miss Harkins: Mr. Garlough: Miss Harkins: Mr. Garlough: A FACULTY MEETING AS IT IS 9:30 A. M. β Any Saturday. All but Mr. Garlough. Here he comes. Good morning, everybody. Fine morning, this morning, What is the purpose of this meeting? To discuss the problems confronting the school, the Miss Mattison: Are we all he Miss Coventry: Miss Mattison: Mr. Garlough: is it not? Miss Anderson: Mr. Garlough: foremost of which is tardiness. Miss Murphy (sw eet and lov f) : Whose tardiness? Mr. Garlough: The ta rdiness has tripled in this school in less than ten years. Miss Sayre: So has the student body. Mr. Garlough: I never thought of that but nevertheless it is a big prob- lem for me to handle. Mr. Weaver: Is there anything else to be brought up? Mr. Garlough: Howr are you coming writh stunt night? We have to make it go over big this year. Miss Anderson and I are coaching a Marcheta act. You understand we merely tell them how to do it. -31- ' M Mr. Weaver: Of course we understand, Mr. Garlough, and I am sure your little stunt will go over big. Mine do. Miss Hoover: Let ' s have a party. Miss Martin (sugary) : Let ' s do. Mr. Weaver: Let ' s invite the grade teachers. Mr. Woodside: Weaver, you mind reader. Mr. Soroos: Weaver, you spoke not only for yourself but for others. Mr. Garlough: All right you are going to have a party. Miss Harkins: We will have a lap lunch. Mr. Garlough: Fine, I ' ll come early. Miss Sayre: Yes, early for lunch. Mr. Garlough: 1 wish to bring up some of the minor affairs of the stu- dents. Do they all get their work in? Are they always in good behavior? Miss Sayre: The only way to quiet that Junior English class of boys would be to give them poison and put them under six feet of ground. Mr. Garlough: Too bad, but seeing such conditions exist, I suggest that we adjourn. β R. J. ' 29. BOOSTING THE NEW HIGH SCHOOL (Glasgow High School Song, Rewritten by Miss Dorothy Alexander, Music Supervisor.) Faithful and true-hearted. Let us cheer our dear New High, We revere her and defend her, And her colors proudly fly; We will stand for her, united. Of her deeds we gladly tell, Her colors streaming, Glad faces beaming. So here ' s a cheer for her that we all love so well. Chorus: Joyous and ever loyal. Let us boost for our New High, Let ev ' ry heart sing. Let ev ' ry voice ring. There ' s no time to grieve or sigh; It ' s ever onward, our course pursuing, May defeat ne ' er our ardor cool. But united, we will boost for her. Dear Glasgow High ! β 32 β h( y ' i M C ' SOLILOQUY OF A FOOTBALL The end of a perfect day, sighed the football as it lay in its accustomed corner in the coach ' s office, and a hard day it was, too. I ' ve been in many, many games but today ' s game was the roughest, 1 believe. I never sawr Glasgow so full of vim, vigor and victory as they were today. I really was frightened once or twice; I almost felt like running off the grid iron into the safety of some shady nook where I could watch but not be molested. Dayton has an excellent football team, her men are all larger than ours but not a man on Dayton ' s team was so good a player, so good a sportsman nor so good a fighter as Glasgow ' s. 1 wish 1 could talk β I would ask Ruben what it was that made him play so wonderfully well this afternoon β was it weather β was it for Glasgow ' s honor or was it because he knew that everyone believed Dayton would win? What- ever it may be that made him play so well today, why doesn ' t he always have that something behind him? His second touchdown was an almost impossible feat 1 held my breath every second while he was running β I was afraid he would not make it, but he did, with hardly any effort. Who was the man who said it is a handicap to be small? What would ' Shorty ' Parke have done those two times this afternoon when he slid between the legs of that big fellow from Dayton and dashed down the grid-iron if he had not been small? Some people may think one nothing more nor less than a piece of pig- skin full of air, but they are wrong. 1 see more of a football game, hear more confidences, get more thrills and hard knocks than any other participant of the game. But in a game like the game today between Dayton and Glasgow 1 do not feel badly because of the treatment 1 receive. I ' m willing to do my part to help dear Glasgow High. Now I must settle down for a good rest and be ready to do my best in the game between Glasgow and Pokeepsie tomorrow afternoon. Good night, everybody. βP. M. ' 29. A HASTY DECISION To be or not to be, that is the question. How many times haven ' t we heard that old statement! But, how many times have you heard, To jump or not to jump, β that is the question ? Had ancient Hamlet been hard-pressed under the same circumstances under which I was mentally and physically forced to make my hasty decision, I ' m quite sure he would have uttered, To jump or not to jump in place of To be or not to be. β’r V β’x The rolling plains of the rangeland stretched for countless miles to the westward, bathed in golden sunlight of a warm June day. How peaceful, how inviting they looked ! The range to me has always been extremely fascinating, β 33 β and I can think of nothing I ' d rather do than to go for a wild, free gallop over the hills that fit so snuggly together and are so close to Nature. Can you wonder then, why it was that 1 saddled my pony on this par- ticular afternoon and set out on a fast lope, determined to ride, ride until my restless spirit found sufficient sanctity and my mind had been turned for a moment from the common, everyday things of Life? On, on, ever westward Bunny raced. I loved to feel the wind in my face, to see my pony ' s tossing mane and to watch the rocks and sagebrush slip rapidly by. There was a magnificent exhilaration and an enormous joy in it. However, the sun soon sank lower, and 1 realized that 1 was many miles from home. 1 realized also that 1 was terribly thirsty and that 1 must have my pony ' s wind for the return trip. Joy manifested itself, indeed, when, as 1 topped a ridge, 1 saw a creek with trees and flowers along the bank, belov . 1 noticed a small herd of cattle grazing near by but never once gave them a thought as 1 proceeded to dis- mount and water my horse as well as myself. Of a sudden. Bunny pricked up her ears and looked back. To my horror and consternation, what should 1 see but a big red animal coming towards me, head lowered and crowned by long, out-spreading horns, at full speed. A loud bellow followed, but by that time 1 had mounted and turned my horse away. But what way could I go? 1 was in a small bend of the creek, a sort of a peninsula, and the animal was charging from the only opening. Water on three sides! Death on the fourth! I had but a moment to decide what to do, and hasty indeed was my decision. Looking back at the place where 1 had taken a drink, 1 noticed the creek to be narrow but to have very steep banks on both sides. Jabbing the spurs into poor Bunny ' s flanks with all my might, 1 turned her straight at the narrow part of the creek. Now the animal was nearly at Bunny ' s heels and 1 put all my trust in her. What if she failed? 1 didn ' t stop to think whether or not I thought she could ' make it. But 1 did think, She must make it! 1 felt her muscles gather for the jump and pre- pared for it. A quick, powerful lunge, a moment of suspense, and Bunny landed me safely on the opposite bank with four inches to spare. My good, trustwforthy cow pony. Never has she failed me. I turned and saw Master Cow check himself and barely escape falling into the creek, so great was the momentum of his huge body. He could not follow and had to give up the pursuit. My decision, but mostly Bunny ' s faithfulness and speed had saved the day. β H. H. ' 30. ANTI-SABAISM Be it known that 1 am not an admirer of the fair sex. Be it known that I am not a woman hater. Be it known that 1 am, to use the best word in my employ, indifferent. Women, young v omen, old women, middle-age women, can affect me only materially. No mental anguish over the female of the β 34 β u i, r, Vi-..-..-.--: VAJ M ' T t species can keep me awake or β worry me. No sudden awakenings nor muttered denunciations disturb my slumbers. I am indifferent. 1 have known many others who have been indifferent. I have seen them fall, one by one, much harder hit than the lovers of the unfair sex. 1 have come to accept, in a sort of fatalistic way, the inevitable coming of Cupid ' s arrow. Yet until it comes, 1 shall continue to go happily on my way, neither helping nor hindering it, oblivious to the joys of love reciprocated or to the hell of amour not returned. Life, they say, is just one damned fool thing after another. Love, to go further, is two damned fool things after each other. I have been spared the latter, and if it is worse than the best of life, if it is better than the worst of life, if it is more confusing than the simplest of life, or simpler than the most com- plex of life β may Venus continue her neglect of me. Not for the world β not for love vyfould 1 lose my freedom. Not for heaven would 1 sacrifice my liberty. Not for all would 1 trade my will to do as I wish. Yet β vifhen the last moment of my free-will comes β when Cupid looks on me, and claims me for his own β may 1 be prepared to go, with bowed head and humble heart to the altar of matrimony. God grant that I may fall as hard as they who have v rorn smooth the path before me. God grant that I may enter that fourth dimension of oblivion β of blind love, so completely different from my present surroundings, so full of happiness and sorrow, of joy and dis- tress, of life as it is found supreme β God grant that I may enter with my face to the ground and my defences thrown to the winds. Ah β freedom is dear, but fate is inexorable. What must be, must. A sweet bit of fatalism, and an easy solution to all problems. 1 care nought for women. Women care nought for me. A nuisance, perhaps β then shun them. They shun me, and until the day of fate β eat, drink and be merry β for to- morrow vi e may die, or worse, fall in love. β R. D. H. 29. BOB SPEARS 1 gaze dovifn At My feet; 1 ponder. Thinking How far aw ay They seem. Can all the Rest That lies Between be Me? β 35 β ' itl ' l ' - ' M EARNING POCKET MONEY A series of Blaa ' s meets our ears as we come to a small shed with a wire fence around it. Entering we find six tiny motherless lambs. Some are able to stand and others are still too weak from starvation to do more than weakly ba. As we measure out only a cup of warm milk and set it down the largest lamb quickly drinks it all. He is then put out in the pen, and the bottles are again filled with enough milk to feed three more an equal amount, after which they too are turned into the pen. Over in a corner on a bed of straw lies a tiny thing too v eak to raise its head. It is fed from a spoon, but only gets a tiny amount. It will have to be fed every hour to be kept alive, and will probably have to be wrapped in a blanket to be kept warm. The only one that has not been fed is a new member which seems rather timid. A half cup of milk is put in a pan, and by letting it suck the tip of your finger until its nose reaches the milk, it starts to drink. But alas! only for a second does it drink, for it soon comes up blowing milk in every direction, and we must jump to keep from getting a free milk bath, which the feeder takes and doesn ' t seem to mind at all. After several such happenings the lamb settles itself and drinks quite heartily. Some weeks later we again visit the pen and find the milk is measured out in pans and there is much more of it. A lamb is turned out one at a time and allowed to drink from one pan, but it must be watched or it will drain all of the pans before stopping. Several are fed this way when a little fellow with all four legs black and one black spot right in the middle of its back appears. Whet one is this? Well, this is the little fellow that had been fed with the spoon, but is now a perfect lamb as a result of good and careful care. In the latter part of August we again visit the pens and to our surprise we find the lambs have been put in a much higher pen, and outside is a long trough in which two large pails of milk have been poured. As soon as the one who has poured in the milk hollers All Aboard and the gate is opened, out comes a scrambling, blaaing bunch of lambs and fight for places at the trough. The milk soon disappears because instead of six there are now twenty- three. A mixture of bran and ground rye is fed β a large handful to each. All in all feeding lambs is very interesting work but could be cleaner for the caretaker if he had time to feed each separately, but as they must be fed at least five times a day even as late as August the time taken is a great deal, and when they are smaller they must be fed nearly every hour. in the latter part of October part of these lambs are sold ; others are kept to start a flock, and more money is gotten when they are sheared in June the following year. So after a very tedious summer ' s work the caretender has earned from fifty to one hundred dollars of pocket money. β H. C. ' 30. -36 β f!y: ' ' k ] ' ' C !: ' SjW - M:f ALLEY RAT ' S LETTERS By the Alley Baby Dear Alley Rat: How can 1 learn to be a printer? β Black Bat Tom. Dear Tom: Be a devil. β Alley Rat. β¦ Dear Ima Nut: What cheese makes the best sandwiclaes for gaining strength? - β Diet E Tics. Dear Diet: Limburger Cheese is the strongest. β Alley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: Why is that football player sitting on the radiator? β F An. Dear Fan: Just warming up, you know. β Alley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: Why the can of flea powder? β R Unt. DearRUnt: To stop the itch of my dogs. β Alley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: Are you a fireman ? β W Arm. Dear W Arm: No, 1 go to G. H. S. βAlley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: What is dew? β D Umb. Dear D Umb: All sorts of bills. β Alley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: Why is she so homely? β Crit Ic. Dear Crit Ic: Her body was built by Fisher but that was no excuse for the face. β Alley Rat. Dear Alley Rat: Do you know Teresa Green? β Dumb Ness. Dear Dumb Ness: Nope, I don ' t. Dumb Ness: Well, they are. βJ. M. ' 30. β 37 β GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTENβ A EULOGY Poor fish. Not in a sarcastic tone but in a sympathetic mood. Did Anonymous, the Httle gold fish, ever harm anyone? No, but someone had to harm him. Living a peaceful and perfectly innocent life in the bowl on the row of books on the English desk, the little gold fish reached the end of the lonesome trail. Lonesome? Yes, here ' s the story: Nearly a year ago two small gold fish made their appearance in the English room and were named Anonymous and Ditto. Whether they came from the Milk River or from regions unknown is not known, nor does it greatly matter. Great favorites they became and were happy together for several w eeks. But alas! There is always some disturber of the peace. This time it was a tall junior boy v fho, every time he approached the desk to confer with his teacher would also confer with the fish and stir them about with his pencil. Such attention was not appreciated by Ditto who left this world of strife shortly before the school year ended. It was a survival of the fitter and Anonymous proved to be of sterner stuff. Another school year came and poor little Anonymous, after spending the summer with many other fish at a kind neighbor ' s, came back to start another school year. A more loyal student never lived. Never absent, never tardy, it attended four classes of English each day for five days a w eek, and became the favorite of the junior class. It acted as sort of overseer, although it didn ' t see much. Gold fish eyes are rather weak, you know. So the days went by and nearly a year had passed. Did a junior boy sitting near the desk grow tired of the merry gleam of gold that darted here and there in the bow l ? Or why were some matches and a small cigarette stub found floating together with the lifeless body of Anonymous? Anonymous who had never violated that law of school life which states, Thou shalt not smoke a ' Lucky Strike, ' an ' Old Gold ' nor a ' Chesterfield, ' neither let it be a ' Fatima ' nor a ' Camel. ' A certain member of the class ventured to say he had come to the con- clusion it was not a Chesterfield since it is a vsrell knov n fact that Chester- fields are mild as May and always satisfy; it could not have been Lucky Strikes for all fishy things use them, so it must have been an Old Gold because although there is not a cough in a carload there is not a decent smoke in a train load. But, why the hard heartedness of sop- ' e people? Last year ' s tall junior took poor Anonymous from the bowl under the pretense of giving it a burial, but returned with two other seniors and a post graduate carrying it pickled in a bottle of alcohol. But as one junior says, there is a moral in this story for all cigarette users: So perhaps Anonymous neither lived nor died in vain. β By the English III B Section. β 38- H Mx CAN YOU IMAGINEβ Peggy losing her gift of ' persuasion ' ? Bob without his hatred of reciting in classes? Paul without some love ? Smithy reading Current History? Chas. without his good nature? Margie without a fiction book? Dorothy without shyness? Callie without beaux? Eldon refusing to make public speeches? Bert not rushing ladies? Frances coming to English on time? Jack not learning his speeches in Problems of Democracy? Norris not engaged? Roy Johnson not in love? Ruben without his bluffing qualities? Roy De Haven ever studying? Gertie married? Velma taking Public Speaking? Tena dyeing her hair black? Ida with a windblown? Irene six inches taller? Mary not sitting next to Bert in Problems? Ethel not finding all the data on all subjects? Fern losing her dimples? Evalyn M. not giggling? Tubby not liking rubies? Evelyn B. without a perm ? Lucile F. without anything to say? Reo not afraid to recite? Erna calm and contented ? Clayton ' s hair on fire? Russell Scott without his red sweater? THE ART OF HORSEBACK RIDING Remember, gentle reader, as Leigh Hunt states it, that talents are not to be despised in the humblest walks of life. Years ago, thousands and thousands of horses roamed wild upon the plains, brought over by the Spaniards in the early days and allowed to rove about as they pleased. Some of them were quite small and shaggy, but many were as beautiful as they were wild. When the colonists first came to America they had no ways and means β 39 β of travelling except by means of horses, which they drove or rode. Then as the eastern part became more settled, people rode chiefly in carriages, and rode horses more for sports such as hunting. As the frontier moved westward, the people of the East used horses less for riding, while the pioneers in the West used them more. Often they had only oxen for driving and a horse or two to ride. Th en when this great West of ours was used for ranching, and thousands of cattle were raised, people nearly always rode horses when going any distance. The Indians adapted them to their use, and when the white man came, he : did the same. From the time the boys and girls were three or four years old they were trained to ride, and by the time they were grown, they were as much at home on a horse as on the ground. The only way of getting from place to place, for rounding up and branding cattle or for carrying the mail, was on horseback. For carrying mail, suggests the Pony Express. The Pony Express was a method by vs hich the United States mail was carried from St. Louis to San Francisco with pony relays. The rider rode his pony as fast as he dared for a ten-mile ride, changed horses at a little station, rode his new horse another ten miles just as fast, and changed again. In that way, the mail was carried from St. Louis to San Francisco in ten days. However, as the West became more settled the wild horse began to be crowded out the same as the Indian; the only difference being that the Indian was allowed reservations of National land, whereas the wild horse was caught, killed, or driven out. As the ranches began to die out and automobiles began to come in, farms began to grow . There were some few stock farms, but most were grain farms. Now, there was very little use for the saddle horse except to herd a few head of dairy cattle. Some of the Oldtimers still rode, but most of the new farmers began driving automobiles in going from place to place. Finally even the Oldtimer, not to be outdone, got himself a Ford and travelled with the rest. The only use for the horse now was to pull the heavy machinery to till the soil for the farmers. In a short time tractors were introduced in the West, and before long there was hardly room on the farm for the horse. However, there were still a few sections of land in the country where farming was impossible, such as the Badlands, where the soil vi as poor, stones abundant, nothing grew, and the hills were too steep for anything but a goat to climb. Here the w ild horse still abounded. But even then the white man wasn ' t satisfied. Just as he drove the buffaloes from the plains by killing them for the price of their hides, he now organized state horse drives to exterminate the wild horse. Sometimes not only the wild ones were taken, for all unbranded stock as well as much branded stock was rounded up, herded together and shipped to the canneries to make canned meat for the French. Now there are few people who even know how to ride the slowest and most sedate of the remaining cayuses. They have never learned to ride and are afraid of the animals. An easterner came to Montana a few years ago and was entrusted by his uncle with a gentle old cow pony. He started the horse and rode slowly a mile or two, but when he turned to go back, the horse, hungry and in a hurry to get β 40 β ' m back to the barn, started to trot. The poor man was so frightened that he let go of the reins and grabbed the pommel of the saddle. Then it was the horse that w as scared, and he ran for home at a full gallop. A few days later the same tenderfoot hid behind the corral gate when the cattle were turned out. Other people who have lived in the country for years and have never learned the art, should they ride a few miles, would be heard to say the next day that they are so stiff and sore from the exercise that they are unable to sit, move, or lie dov n comfortably. Thus it is that as the West becomes settled and eastern civilization comes in, the art of horseback riding goes out and with it the glamour and pictur- esqueness of the old Western frontier days. β E. H. ' 29. THE RUMBLE SEAT If you want to be old, if you want to be young, if you want to be brave, or if you are in pain ride in a rumble seat, and your troubles will be all over. They say nature is grand. Moonlight, your best girl, rough roads and a rumble seat, what could be gr-ander ? In the year of 1 880 as the covered wagon continued to roll on Montana plains, your grandmother sat on the lowered end gate holding hands with a freckled faced urchin, destined to be your grandfather. Strange isn ' t it? It ' s funny, but it ' s true. Even the pioneer had a rumble seat. In the year of 1 900 when your mother and father discovered the beauty of romance, luxury entered into the affair and the double buggy became the family hack. Mother and father spooned in the back seat on the way to church. The change was not satisfactory, so they had to hold hands under the hymn book to keep up the right spirit. Later they rode in one of Henry Ford ' s creations and found the thrill that they missed when their romance first began. As time passed on and the modern limousine was produced they looked into the future and saw that their children were going to miss the thrill of grand- mother ' s romance. So then it is in this year of 1929 we have the modern rumble seat. A seat that is symbolic of our modern flapper, a little dirty, a little rough, but awfully nice. It isn ' t the soft, easy things that develop the good people. It ' s the things that are rough and hard, the things that leave no trace of snobbishness or con- ceit. The person who can ride ten miles in a rumble seat and then get out and high hat the bunch in front just simply doesn ' t exist. Thank God for the rumble seat, for it is truly a seat of youth. β R. J. -29. β 41- K t P : THE PERFECT JUNIOR AND SENIOR GIRL Height Lillian Button Weight Eleanor Hagen Carriage Margaret Murray Hair Harriet Christophersen Eyes Callie Peterson Lips Dorothy Hovey Teeth Mildred Johnson Complexion Evalyn Michel Dimples Fern Moore Voice Maybelle Cotton Manners Ida Disrud Hands and Arms_Thelma Helgerson Feet Velma Spangler Smile Irene Hilden Laugh Helen Harebo Grin Erna Hansen Giggle Frances Walker Deliberation Mary Pointer Good Nature Marjorie Hurly Wit and Humor Loucile Finney Mind Peggy Morton Friendliness Shirley Bohan Quietness Tena Nielsen Romantic Evelyn Bohan THE PERFECT JUNIOR AND SENIOR BOY Height Orville Stomsvick Weight Joe Martinkoski Carriage Robert Spears Hair Warren Gamas Eyes Paul Etchepare Lips Roy Johnson Teeth Rubin Lewow Complexion Russell Scott Dimples Travers Harman Voice Cyral Walsh Manners Ronald Baker Hands Dick Hoppin Feet Eugene Forsman Smile Shorty Parke Laugh Norris Kjos Grin Leslie Bjorstad Giggle Charles Hoffman Deli beration Bob Cornwell Good Nature James Christinson Wit and Humor Roy De Haven Mind Eldon Schuster Friendliness β’: Smithy Quietness Byron Armstrong Romantic Clayton Button THE GRANDFATHER CLOCK The grandfather clock stood in the corner near the portrait of great grandmother and great grandfather. It had been standing there ever since grandmother was married. Tick-tock, tick-tock was all the clock had ever said, but today I seemed to hear it telling me some of the interesting affairs that had been carried on under its face ... of loves and disappointments ... of great balls, and belles of other days dressed in rustling satins and brocades dancing stately minuets. . . . Hark, I heard some voices, quavery at first, and gradually getting louder. Tibbie, shall I wear my light chintz and benton kerchief, or my purple and white Persian? Either are smart enough for a country lass, was the answer. β 42- Tibbie Drinker, don ' t you dare call me country bred, just because you ' re from the city. Why not the blue shallon? ' Tis vastly unbecoming. Janice Faunce! Can ' t thee let the men alone? 1 will when thee will, airily laughed the girl. Do unto others quoted Tabitha. And suddenly the voices died out as suddenly as they had come. Tick-tock, tick-tock ... 1 again heard, or seemed to hear it telling me some of the interesting affairs that had been carried on under its face ... of grandmother ' s wedding, and feasts and stately company ... of children ' s patter . . . Johnnie, Johnnie, come quick, and see this sword! It ' s all mouldy and dirty and it ' s half in the ground! 1 can ' t get it out. . . . Little girls playing dolls, and little boys playing soldier with shining swords ... of spinning and weaving ... of carding wool ... of sewing and quilting bees ... of births and deaths, and soon another generation of youth passed beneath its time-worn face, with new joys and sorrows, loves and disappoint- ments, while the grandfather clock calmly and unhurriedly ticked on until yet another generation, loud of speech and careless of manners, ultra-modern and amazing, arrived. Well, little one, what ' s the secret sorrow you have on your chest? Won ' t father buy you that dress you want for the sorority dance? N-No, it ' s nothing like that, 1-1 just like the way you dress and act, that ' s all. That ' s simply noble and notorious of you and appreciation of your re- mark is something, I haven ' t anything else but β what ' s under the aureate curls? H-How to be popular? What makes you think 1 know? Do you picture me as having to use tear gas to keep the men away? I ' ll just bet you do. Well, supposing you win your bet, what makes you think you aren ' t? When a girl hardly ever gets any bids to parties and sits out most of the dances when she does, and when nobody honks outside her door, she knows. There, there, honey lamb, maybe there ' s something to be done about it. I ' ll tell you something, wee Jane, that your best friend wouldn ' t tell you. Your breath is as sweet as a cow ' s β and w hile that may not sound like a compli- ment, it is one. For one thing, you don ' t travel the boy ' s speed. Another, be yourself. Come on, let ' s go get some ice cream and talk it over. To spin, to weave, to knit and sew Was once a girl ' s employment. But now to dress and catch a beau Is all of her enjoyment. Again the words died out and 1 was just getting more than interested, too. And whether outworn, or in scorn, the clock looked down as if to say, I ' m out of date. This pace is too fast for me β and stopped. β M. H. ' 29. β 43 β P4 WHAT I NEED TO MAKE ME HAPPY How many times haven ' t I heard that popular jazz song, so characteristic of this pleasure maddened age, β I want to go where you go. Do what you do. Love when you love, Then I ' ll be happy! Indeed 1 have heard it from young and old alike, large and small. Prob- ably not all mean it, 1 hope not, but 1 v rill admit that I ' ve heard it sung in such an ardent manner and with so much fervor that I feel as if 1 ought almost to believe it. Yes, I know, some really do believe it. Do 1? Maybe I have sung it, but it just comes from hearing it repeated so many times. But as for the feelings behind it, β they ' re far, far away. What then, my friends may ask, would it take to make you real happy, utterly contented and completely satisfied? Is there anything in this wide old world that would be capable of such an orgy? Indeed β and very little, too. Riches, piles and piles of money β money to buy gorgeous clothes, fine limousines, mansions for homes and parties and cocktails and wonderful jewels! Some may pause here, aye, even stop and not want to go any farther, but as for me, what would I do with riches? True, 1 could satisfy all worldly desires, but do they really count? No! Fame? Fame by which my name would ring from, sea to sea and from shore to shore, whereby 1 would be praised and glorified and worshipped? No! That would be too unreal, too unlike living. It would be merely existing. Power? Force through which 1 could humble people, indeed, β nations, and make them kneel at my feet and say, Master, our lives are yours! No! Such force is brutal and far below what God intended. In such a state, 1 could never be happy. Knowledge? Would all the learning in the world, knowledge of all things, crammed into that very small brain of mine make me happy? No, No, never, 1 would surely be miserable then! What good could that do after I have left this earth, taking it with me? No, my desire can never be compared to any of these. You may be sur- prised, were 1 to tell you out of a clear sky that all in this world that could ever make me purely happy through and through, would be an everlasting Montana springtime with its warm, sunny, golden days, its soft green grass and exquisite sunsets, a vast Montana rangeland, swept by a warm breeze, dotted with tiny prairie roses and with gently rolling hills which appear like velvet folds as far as the eye can reach; a fiery, beautiful Montana mustang that could feel my mood, know my voice and be a real companion, and a peace and quiet that can only be found where Nature is as God created her. That, all that, to me, would be needed for sheer joy. A strange desire? Maybe for some one else but not for me, when one considers that 1 was born and raised on the open prairies of Montana with a β 44 β horse for an only pet. To be able to leave all this busy world of hurrying people, noises, and hustling and bustling and fretting and worrying and hoping and studying this very day would indeed make me happy. Just think, eternal sunshine with no one to bother or nothing to think about β surely, then, I could be near my God ! β H. H. ' 30. LOST, FOUND, WANTED AND FOR SALE Lost: An opportunity to get better grades. β All of us. Found: A fine set of officers. β Juniors. For Sale: A lot of Greenness. β Freshmen. Wanted: To exchange, an inch of height for an inch of breadth.- Robert Spears. For Sale: Our pretty hair. β Harriet Christophersen. Wanted: Some Senior Dignity. β Juniors. THE FLAPPER OF TOMORROW Some months ago, 1 heard, upon good authority, that there had been unearthed in Europe, the bones of many pre-historic Europeans of the smooth stone age. While such an occurrence is not unusual, this one in particular was exceptional in that trinkets buried with the bones revealed much of the life of the owners. Probably the most interesting part of the discovery was a bone vanity case, found with the skeleton of a woman. This vanity case was much like those on the market today, and contained a red powder resembling rouge. Geologists have long known from similar discoveries that the men of that day decorated their faces with war-paint, but that flappers existed then is a new discovery. Ancient Egypt also had its flapper, along with many other things con- sidered modern. Of course, the flappers of the neolithic age and of ancient Egypt did not drive limousines or violate the eighteenth amendment, but they β were as much in advance of their times as our flappers are in advance of ours. It is only human nature for the conservative element of society to be shocked and outraged at the actions of the progressive element, so that flap- pers must have existed as long as humans have. Throughout the middle ages, and, indeed, throughout much of modern times, women have been kept in oppression and have not been allowed the liberties now given them, but even in earlier days a progressive element must have existed or these changes would β 45 β not have come about. While true history does not record the differences between the progressive and conservative people, stories written by both ele- ments reveal that some differences existed, and imagination need not be stretched to imagine the feelings of the older people toward the wildness of the younger. If, in the early part of the twentieth century, a woman wore a dress so short as to show her ankle, or if her face were highly decorated with cosmetics, she was disgraced or perhaps outcast from society. Today, if a lady wears a dress so short as to show her knees, or makes her face unrecognizable β she is merely a flapper, and flappers run society, or at least their own society, as they will. Twenty years ago, smoking or drinking would have killed a young lady and her mother would have followed her from the shock. Today, smoking cigarettes and drinking liquor, while looked harshly on by the clergy and the conservative element of society, is accepted by a majority and if a mother does not like it, she is at least not killed by it and she may even take up such pastimes herself. The race of today does not seem to havs suffered greatly from the wildness of the flapper of yesterday, and who can say but the race of tomorrow may be benefitted by the progress of today? What, if this progress continues at the compound interest rate at which it has been growing, will the flapper of thirty years from now resemble? A car- toon by a popular artist recently depicted a life cycle wherein clothing con- tinued to decrease until woman again wore fur coats and carried the club of the neolithic age. Will this come true β if not literally, at least figuratively, in that woman ' s clothing will grow less and less, and woman ' s modesty in direct pro- portion to it? if it does, what will be the effect? Twenty years ago, woman would have been ostracized from society for wearing the clothing of 1927. Who can say then that an apron and a string of beads, with perhaps a bracelet, earrings and finger rings, will not constitute the street dress of the woman of 1957? And who can say that the majority (clergymen and older people, who must, in humanity, be conservative, excluded) will not take as kindly toward the outrageous dress and behavior of that day as the modern vs orld does to- ward the flapper of today? β R. D. H. ' 29. ROCKING CHAIR PHILOSOPHY Thank goodness! Now that the family has all gone out to dinner, 1 can rest a little while. It certainly seems nice to have a little time to sit in peace and think. My periods of rest and quiet are very few and far between since I came to this house. When I was new, and I ' m not old now, I stood very proudly in the win- dow of a furniture store for many days until 1 became very lonely. Many people came by, but they scarcely noticed me until one day a car stopped in front of the building, and a middle aged couple got out and came to the win- β 46 β ' i ' r h(j7 β .β .-.. . . ' ' ii ' :β β β’β ' β β’.β I ' v ' v. ' ; ' .= -. ...,-2.- β’.., .-.. : ,.-- . ' -.ox 11 dow. They conversed there for a short time and then walked into the office. 1 wasn ' t sure but thought they had been talking about me and sure enough, in the afternoon, two of the workers carried me out to a delivery truck and brought me to this place. 1 found that I had been purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, for that was the name of the people 1 had seen talking by my window , and was placed in the living room of their house. 1 was very proud of my new position for a few days, but, β then the Wilson ' s five children returned from a visit in the country and I ' ve had very little rest since. The smallest one crawls over my arms and jumps up and dovyrn on my cushion, while the rest of them knock me around and rock me all over the room. My varnish is terribly scratched, and 1 have some horrible scars from the many scrambles I ' ve been through. But even those aren ' t the worst of my troubles. There is a large overly- heavy lady living next door, who is a friend of Mrs. Wilson. Every day she comes over once or twice to exchange the time of day and talk a fev minutes. Each day she marks me as her resting place while I shudder with fear at her size when I see her coming. Always with a little grunt of content and satis- faction, she sits down on my cushion while my joints cry out in protest and agony. Is it any wonder that 1 am getting old too early? My rockers are getting weak and shaky, some of my springs are broken, my c ushion is sadly w orn, and the other day 1 heard Mrs. Wilson say I had served my day and was nearly due for the garret. Somehow, it hurts my feelings to think of being discarded and put in a dusty old garret where cobwebs can gather over me. I ' ve done my best and it hardly se ms fair. Listen ! 1 hear the Wilson ' s coming back. 1 hear the children ' s lively laughter as they come in and β the neighbor lady is with them. Here she comes. Ouch! Oh-oh-oh-ohl I wish they had put me in the garret yesterday. β E. H. ' 29. -47 β WHO ' S WHO Singer Ruth Bronstad Basket Ball Star Ronald Baker Musician Dick Hoppin Artist Helen Harebo Reader Erna Hansen Broadcaster Marjory Hurly Orator Eldon Schuster Flapper Mary Daum Ladies ' Man Bert Sammons Scientist Roy De Haven Debater Paul Etchepare Best Trainer Norris Kjos Football Star Bob Cornwell Speller Mildred Johnson The Sheik Joe Martinkoski The Clown Charles Hoffman The Flirt Callie Peterson The Actor Dale Smith The Actress Frances Walker The Thoughtful Girl Velma Spangler The Thoughtful Boy Byron Armstrong Shorthand Shark Peggy Morton Typist Dorothy Hovey Literary Roy Johnson The Shining Star Ruben Lewow PREMONITIONS What do β we mean by a premonition? Webster defines it as a warning or sign, often a feeling, of w hat is going to happen. The modern high school student would define it by simply saying that a premonition is a hunch. Never outside of English classes w ould he call it a warning or sign, often a feeling, of what is going to happen. We may ask why such a common word as premonition is not more grammatically defined by students who have had nine, ten, eleven, or even twelve years of education in grammar schools, junior high school, and high school. It cannot be explained except by the fact that the modern tendency is more toward slang than towards grammatical English. However, a premonition will always be a hunch to most of our young Americans. All of us have premonitions at some time or other in our lives. We have a hunch that certain things are going to happen; sometimes our hunch turns out just as we thought it would and sometimes vice versa. Many of the chances taken in big business deals are results of premoni- β 48 β t M tions. Fortunes have been made and lost within a few hours because someone depended on a hunch and took a chance. There are people who depend upon premonitions for a living; for example, the stock broker in the cities de- pends upon his hunch to get him the right stock, and often it is the hunch which makes him sell his stock when it has reached a certain height. We may safely say that premonitions play a large part in the lives of the modern people, especially in the lives of the money-making and money-spending Americans. Premonitions are very interesting things to study. Volume upon volume could be vi ritten upon the subject and it v ould not be exhausted. Authors have used premonitions to add interest to literature of all sorts β history, drama, and fiction. In history we have famous generals who have let the tide of war hang upon the thread of chance the result of a premonition. Napoleon did not know that his seizure of the French government would succeed, but he took a chance. He must have had some premonition of the outcome of his step. Likewise, other great generals have been made famous because they were not afraid to take a chance. They had some kind of premonition which guided them and made them more confident and able to lead their forces on to battle. In the World War many moves were made on the force of an investigated and proved hunch of some officer. Inventions are made on the strength of a premonition. The inventor has a hunch that certain things v rill vs ork out a certain way, and he enlarges upon his hunch, which sometimes v orks out, making the inventor ' s fortune for him. In this way premonition makes history. Authors have used premonition as an added bit of interest to their work. Some authors use a great deal of it, while others merely use it occasionally. Shakespeare, in Romeo and Juliet, uses a great deal of premonition. When the reader reads Juliet ' s prophecy of the tragedy, he thrills with interest and expectancy of what is to come. Juliet ' s words, O God! I have an ill-divining soul. Methinks, I see thee, now thou art so low, as one dead in the bottom of a tomb, prepare the reader for the tragedy that is to follow. Later, w hen Romeo was exiled in Mantua, he dreamed that Juliet came to him and found him dead. Again, when Friar Lawrence came to the grave of Juliet, he proph- ecied the tragedy which had taken place there. These things stir the reader ' s interest and anticipation for what is to come in the story. Just as Shakespeare used premonition in his drama, so do the authors and dramatists of today. However, the use of premonition is more prominent in the works of the older dramatists than in those of the modern dramatists. Modern mystery stories and plays contain a great deal of premonition. Authors of such literature like to play upon the importance of premonition in its effect upon the nerves and actions of people involved in mystery cases. Such has been the importance of premonitions or hunches upon the lives of people, their inventions, and written vyrorks. In the olden times pre- monition was much more important in the lives of people than it is today. People of today dwell more in a world of hard facts than ever before. They do not rely upon premonitions, only so far as they believe such premonitions will serve them in business deals. The world of today is a business w orld and has no time for the fanciful existence of other days. β M. J. ' 29. β 49 β V.Β -i G. H. S. BOOK SHELF The Crisis Report Card Day The Crossing Commencement Night Reign of Law Extra Curricular Council When a Man ' s Single Roy Johnson The Sheik Richard Hallett Alice-for-Short Alice Byer Wanted a Husband Marjorie Hurly The Three Musketeers Eldon Schuster, Paul Etchepare, Ruben Lewow Eyes of the World Vclria Spangler The Green Hat Fat Watson The Genius Rcy De Haven The Lane That Hath No Turning The Halls The White Monkey Chas. Hoffman Uphill Climb Prof. Byer Growth of the Soil Jack Fagan Personality Plus Callie Peterson Sentimental Tommy Tom Cornweli Dancing Star Harriet Christophersen Holiday Touch Dale Smith The Loving Are the Daring Micky Friedl The Story of a Plow Boy Eugene Tourtlotte Smoky Cyral Walsh Seventeen Bill Al vord The Sturdy Oak _ ' Bob Cornweli Old Chester Tales Peggy Morton Great Expectations Erna Hansen The Gentle Grafter Dorothy Hovey The Pest Ralph Keagy Old Fashioned Girl Loucile Finney A COUNTRY DANCE Scrape, scrape, scrape went the fiddle. Bum ta-ta, bum ta-ta went the organ and strum, strum, strum vsrent the banjo. Altogether this little symphony orchestra lacked only harmony; however, they made up in motion and rhythm vhat they lacked in harmony. The fiddle was being operated by an elderly man who energetically sawed aw ay as if his entire life depended upon his scraping. He kept time by stomping lustily with both feet and occasionally spatting tobacco juice at the coal pail ten feet away. The organist was a little, weazened up man who seemed to be expending β 50 β (( ' ' hU;, : C t too much energy in proportion to the windy tones produced. The fault, how- ever, was in the organ. It must have been made somewhere back in the days of Nero and was now very sorely in need of repair. The beads of perspiration stood out on the forehead of the poor fellow, and I had great fear that he would fall exhausted to the floor at any moment. The banjo player was manipulating an Uncle Tom ' s style banjo. It was complete except for three strings. But now let us view the dance. Near the trio of musicians stood a large, deep-chested, giant bellowing commands as if he were Napoleon or Julius Caesar. Swing yer partner to the right; squeeze her tight and around you go. All join hands and circle to the right. Now to the left with all your might. Grab that lady and don ' t be slow. And the buxom belles and gallant swains obeyed with all the dexterity and alertness they possessed. Alas the dance is ended. The males escort their exhausted partnrs to their seats and then fall against the w all. The old men, mothers holding their babies, and fathers stoically view the performance and say, They can ' t do it like we uster. Will 1 enter the next dance and be trampled down amid the whirl, melee and confusion? 1 should say not. If ever one should trip and fall, he would be trampled into bits and wiped from the face of the earth. But later 1 did try it and got through it all right, alive; but no more. I was dizzy, confused and exhausted. 1 had all 1 wanted of Henry Ford ' s favorite style of dancing. β E. S. ' 29. The girls have taken our collars and cuffs. They ' ve stolen our hats and shoes; They copy our walk, our slang, our talk; They take v rhatever they choose; They sport our neckties β vi hy, in fact, There ' s nothing at all we can save. For ourselves alon, but this one thing, The luxury of a shave. β 51- z CALENDAR SEPTEMBER 1 1 . School begins after several days of registration. 1 7. Re-registration; a changed schedule makes us do it all over again. 2 1 . Miss Jeannette Rankin gives an assembly address on International Peace. 22. Faculty party. Old teachers have breakfast at Milk River ford for new teachers, school board and wives. 25. After a series of ring meetings the seniors chose their class rings and Commencement announcements. 26. First assembly pep meeting. Kermit Birmingham and Eldon Schuster preside. Capt. Tillie Kjos presents his team. 28. First rally and bonfire; freshmen boys prepared for initiation by wearing gym suits. 29. Scobey defeats Glasgow 6-0 in first game of the season. OCTOBER 1. Hoot Mon and Roundup staffs elected. 6. Wolf Point and Glasgow tie in football 0-0. 8-11. Lockers assigned to Senior High School. Room for two people in each. 1 I. Attorney John M. Kline addresses assembly on Fire Prevention, night gow ns, etc. 13. Glasgow defeats Poplar Indians 21-0. 1 6. Home rooms are organized. 20. Glasgow football team traveled to Havre; came home to the doleful tune, The game is ended but the memory lingers on. Score 37-0. 24. Report Card day. Survival of the fittest. Many doleful faces. Seniors organize; plans laid for a big party. 26. Last but not least, Glasgow played Chinook 27-0. We got the goose egg. Faculty reverts to type and have roller-skating party. Gentlemen of the faculty armor themselves with cushions; few bumps, much awkward- ness. NOVEMBER 1 . First meeting of extra-curricular council. Tardy essays and school- activity ticket sale discussed. 2. Faculty have second skating party. Mr. Garlough proves to be a lap- lander. 7. After election bets were paid, some of the senior rings were still in the care of Mr. St. Clair. 9. Senior-Junior party. Prof Byer dances every dance except lady ' s choice. Major Raymond de Crecy of Paris, on a good-will mission, speaks to the assembly. β 52 β fc i ' ' ; ' ii - s t 1 3. Miss Robinson went to Texas on a business trip and at Ardmore, Okla- homa became Mrs. John Ostrom. I 6. Junior class organize with Ambrose Friedl for president. 23. Junior-Senior party; planned by juniors. Prof Byer brought a girl and didn ' t dance all the dances except lady ' s choice. 28. Extra-curricular council have charge of assembly. We sing our new school song. DECEMBER 8. Candlestick sale for benefit of Hoot Mon; sold a lot of roses. Mr. A. R. Woodside arrived to take Miss Robinson ' s place as science teacher. Glasgow-Scobey basketball game at Scobey. Scobey wins 26-20. 14. Glasgow defeats Saco there 19-16. G club have pep assembly. 19. Lockers issued to freshmen; not big enough for two. 21. Tramp day. Last day of school before vacation. Hooray! Whoopee! JANUARY 4. Saco wins the first game in the new gym. Score 27-20. 5. Malta-Glasgow game at Malta. We meet defeat 25-22. 7. We again attend school; must study hard to make up for two weeks of vacation and fun. 9. Glasgow goes to Hinsdale and wins in basketball 18-15. 1 1 . Dedication of new high school building. Chancellor Brannon is speaker of the evening. 12. Nashua-Glasgow game at Nashua. A 47-2 victory for us. 15. Scobey plays a return game here and wins 25-1 7. 1 8. Pep assembly. Plans for basketball tournament discussed. Wolf Point scalped us 36-4 in basketball game. 19. Glasgow defeats Poplar Indians at Poplar to the tune of 19-12. 2 1 . Girls ' basketball practice begins. 22. Debate team chosen. Eldon and Richard are it. 23. Hinsdale plays basketball here. We win big. 25. Sophomores have dancing party; lady teachers are still able to walk on Saturday. 26. Wolf Pointers scalp us 34-10 in basketball game. FEBRUARY 1. Ag club Fathers ' and Sons ' banquet. Nearly one hundred are present. 2. Stock judging team goes to Bozeman. We defeat Poplar 32-1 in basketball here. 4. M. E. A. faculty luncheon. Roundup editor, assistant editor and joke editor all absent at De Molay conclave in Helena. Girls edit the paper. 8. Malta defeated Glasgow here 20-1 5 ; one of the best games of the season. 9. New teachers entertain the old with a valentine party. They play bridge mostly and dance some. β 53 β : ' : ' tk ) ' i ' !: ' ! sri li 1 4. Dr. Klemme, president of Inter-Mountain Union College talked in assembly. He stressed cheerfulness and work. 14. 15, 16. We are hosts for the sub-district basketball tournament. Glas- gow won third place. I 6. Eldon Schuster won sub-district extemporaneous speaking contest. 2 1 . General assembly. Mr. Mowery and Paul Etchepare report on the stock judging trip to Bozeman. Bob Cornwell had previously made a strong talk to get out of an assembly talk. 23. Better Speech w eek begins; poster contest. 22. 23. District basketball tournament at Poplar; Gilbert Aitken now known as Dead-eye Ike. Eldon Schuster wins district extemporaneous writing contest while at Poplar. Ronald Baker had his picture taken there. MARCH 6. Hoot Mon staff and music meet pupils furnish assembly program. Margaret Murray dances the Highland Fling. 8. First Athletic banquet. Ruben acted as toastmaster. Mr. Irle presents the athletes with their G ' s. 1 6. District Music Meet in Glasgow. We win the cup given by Glasgow Chamber of Commerce. 22. Mother and Daughter banquet for freshmen girls. The downtrodden freshmen come into their own. 25. Normal training department furnish the assembly program; present the play, Not a Man in the House, and the pantomime. The Lamp Went Out. 29. Mr. Henry, field agent of Billings Polytechnic School, told of his trip through the Mediterranean countries. APRIL 3. Many sophs and junior boys conspicuous by their absence Friday P. M. Play baseball in the ball park to keep warm. 12. Second Annual Stunt Nite. De Haven expounds on Woman. A huge success. APRIL 19. Junior-Senior Banquet. 23. Mrs. Irle and Mrs. Huber entertain at all-faculty dance. 26. The Glee clubs and orchestra give a farewell party in honor of Dick Hoppin, who is leaving this year for Great Falls. MAY 2. Senior Sneak Day. 3. Physical Education Demonstration. 10. High School Play Rose of the Southland. I 7. Junior High Operetta β Hansel and Grettal. β 54 β I ' lim. 26. Baccalaureate sermon. 29. Class Night. 3 1 . Commencement. Speaker β S. E. Fairham. Of all sad words of tongue or pen. The saddest are these, I ' ve been stung again. β Almost Whittier. SUGGESTED STATIONERY For the Aviator β Fly paper. For the Sheik β Sand paper. For the Motorist β Carbon paper. For the Hijacker β Bond paper. For the Pugilist β Wrapping paper. For the Banker β Note paper. For the Suicide β Newspaper. For the Politician β Oil paper. For the Undertaker β Crepe paper. For the Student β Copy paper. β 55 β m P4i ATHLETICS as we know them today, did not exist for the pioneer. As a school activity they are of more recent development. There were wrestling matches, broncho riding and such things, but few group contests. The country was new. Man must build homes, struggle and w in his food, and even the country itself from the wilderness. - Such activities were exercise enough in earlier times. There was no need of organized athletics then, for he continually exercised his muscles on the frontier when he started his race with nature in the spring and ended with his victory in the fall and had earned food for his family ' s maintenance through the winter. With the passing of the frontier and the com- ing of more leisurely comforts of civilization, life failed to supply the physical exercise necessary for one ' s best development. Organized athletics then came into the school, and thus sportsmanship wrhich supplants the urge once made by necessity. β 56 β iltP ' ll 1W ffiff lΒ« i M Bi Bg 4 :. FOOTBALL Guy H. Weaver, Coach Robert Cornwell, Manager Glasgow High School opened its 1928 football season with only three of the 1927 men, Cyral Walsh, Ambrose Friedl and Richard Friedl, back in the line up. Coach Weaver called an early meeting of prospective football men, and started the season ' s practice the first week of school. An entirely new back field was selected and the line was built around the three veterans. The line centered about Jimmie Christinson, who showed up remarkably well for his first year at football, and the back field around Captain Tillie Kjos. Gordon Browning and Sid Erickson each gained a regular position on the ends. Tuck Friedl and Cy Walsh established themselves as tackles. Micky Friedl and Ronald Baker worked as guards. In the back field with Kjos as fullback, Parke at quarter, Montgomery, Etchepare, Johnson, and Bollard as halves the combination was complete. Other men on the squad deserving much credit were Keagy, Walker, K. Christinson, and Le Verne Baker. Robert Cornwell served as manager for the season. The team seemed to have a jinx of injury as Tuck had a badly sprained ankle and a fractured shoulder; R. Baker a fractured shoulder and Micky, our punter, had his right ankle sprained. Playing a hard schedule the team fought their way through a season with one tie and one victory. Yet, we must give them due credit for the manner in which they played the game. β 57- β - r β’β .β . , ' .v:5 -1 β’β β β . -.-. : ' ' ., ' rt ' Β±. Top Row: Bob Cornwell, manager; Ralph Keagy, Kenneth Chrlstinson, Dick Bollard, Le Verne Baker, Scott Johnson. Willard Walker substitutes. Middle Row: Sid Erickson. right end; Norris Kjos. captain, full back; George Parke, quarterback; Paul Etchepare. left half back; Lee Montgomery, right half back; Gordon Browning, left end. Bottom Row: Cyral Walsh, right tackle; Ronald Baker, right guard; James Christin- son, center; Richard FYiedl, left guard; Ambrose Friedl, left tackle. THE SCORES Glasgow . Scobey 6 Glasgow Wolf Point Glasgow Havre 32 Glasgow Chinook 26 Glasgow 23 Poplar β 58- iliΒ« BASKETBALL THE SEASON Although only three letter men of last year ' s basketball team were back this year, the new material which was coming in looked as though Glasgow might have a very promising basketball team after all. But the season proved to be much like the football season, with much sickness and many injuries. Only one game was played before tournament time, w hen the first five were all able to play. Jimmie Christinson became ill early in the season and was disabled until the tournament; Parke was ill and missed two games; Etchepare likewise lost three games and Baker sprained his ankle and lost out on five games. It seemed impossible to become or- ganized. When the sub-district tournament came, Glasgow ' s team seemed to snap out of it and lost to Wolf Point in the first game by a score of 16-1 7, thus the best they could get was third place, which they took with ease. Wolf Point won first place. Malta received second, even though the Wolves beat them much worse than they beat the scarlets and white. By obtaining third place in this tournament, Glasgow was permitted to go to the district tournament, where they won over the strong Culbertson team by a score of 34-35. Baker and Parke got on the sub-district second team and Parke got on the district second team. Next year Glasgow expects to have a little stronger team than this year, although they are losing two first string men, Lewow and Etchepare. β 59 Top Row: Bob Comwell, manager; Browning, L. G. (sub); J. Christinson, G. (sub); Spears, C. (sub); Aitken, C. and F. (sub); Tourtlotte, L. F. (sub); Coach Weaver. Bottom Row: K, Christinson, L. G.; Etchepare, C; Lewow, R. F.; Parke, L. P.; Baker, R. G. THE SCORES Glasgow 20 Scobey 26 Glasgow 19 Saco 16 Glasgow 20 Saco 27 Glasgow 22 Malta 25 Glasgow 20 Hinsdale 15 Glasgow 47 Nashua 2 Glasgow 17 Scobey 23 Glasgow 4 Wolf Point 36 Glasgow 12 Poplar 19 Glasgow 36 Hinsdale 6 Glasgow 10 Wolf Point 32 Glasgow 32 Poplar I Glasgow 15 Malta 22 Glasgow 16 Wolf Point 17 Glasgow 31 Hinsdale 13 Glasgow 26 Poplar 12 Glasgow 20 Saco 14 Glasgow 35 Culbertson 34 Glasgow 9 Wolf Point 23 Glasgow 19 Malta 22 β 60 β S ' rfel ; v- nm -61 β GLASGOW JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL The Glasgow junior high school was organized to relieve the crowded conditions in the seventh and eighth grades of the South Side school and to give to the pupils in these grades a program of studies much richer in content than had ever been offered them before. During 1928-29 courses in general shop for boys, home economics for girls, and also physical education were offered, and the junior high pupils were given the advantage of instruction by special teachers from the senior high school, also allowed to use the same laboratories, shops and gymnasiuins as the senior high school pupils. During 1929-30 grades seven, eight and nine will be organized as a sep- arate unit and plans are nov being made to eliminate some of the needless repetition of material formerly given in the elementary grades and to so revise the course that the transition from the junior to senior high school may be made ' more gradual. Locating these pupils in the new building gives an opportunity for a new social program aimed to develop leadership. Eventually it is hoped to develop a guidance program which β will help students to select their vocation and guide them in the subjects they should pursue in order to be successful in that vocation. As Glasgow serves a large rural area, it is hoped that pupils now enrolled in these one-room schools will avail themselves of the many opportunities offered in a real junior high school. -63 - ? .β .β . --. ' . :β -V : β β’. ' β’β β β’: : ' ' β β . ' - ' -c- Eierman, Huber, Bowen, Nordgren (See Senior High Faculty) JUNIOR HIGH FACULTY Roy Huber Mathematics Marian Coventry English, Algebra Maria Murphy , Vocations, General Science Guy H. Weaver ' Boys ' Physical Education Ralph F. Mowery Smith-Hughes Agriculture, General Science Lora Eierman . History, Civics Hannah Nordgren English Marjorie Bowen Girls ' Physical Education, Geography, Hygiene Harold J. Soroos Industrial Education Dorothy M. Harkins Home Economics Dorothy Alexander Music Frances Martin Latin -64- NINTH GRADE, GROUP 1 Top Row: Esther Stuber. Mildr3d Walsh, Georgia Birmingham, Belva Smith, Viola O terbΒ° ' g, Helen Dasher, Ruth Hubbard, Sara Priesen. Middle Row: Paul Hoffman, Richard Lemke, Maurice Weber. Peter Unrau, Eugene Anderson, Foster Kreis. Marriott Kline, Leslie Splan. Leonard Langen, Russell White, Rob-rt Hube , Harvey Jackins. Bottom Row: Virginia Shanley, Vera Wesen, Ida Combs, Margaret Hill, Christlnj, Harmeson. NINTH GRADE, GROUP 2 Top Row: Harold Eliason, Walter Pierson. Edward Rusher, Nelson Gamas, Frederick Spears, Clyde Rusher, Willard Walker, Howard Johnson. Middle Row: Irene Olson, Edna Holderman, Wauneta Billingsley, Wava Buell, Eva Poust, Lucy Ramesz, Olga Opsahl, Edyth Chase, Irma Hubbard, Gwendoline Muskett, Ruth Samson, Torborg Pedersen. Bottom Row: Lois Browning, Leah Orvis, Helen Byer, Dorothy De Haven, Edith Peterson. β 65 β 7 β ' β :v ; ' f- - ' β’ β β :-.- ; ' ' ' β ,.VΒ ' ' .vl ' iV 5; β’β β β β β .-.β’β β β y i ' . ' ' l glM. 8 ' _ 5 i ' f Β -P 11 Β . fc ' ji 1 ! ' β’ i 1 1 ' PHpi H 4 β NINTH GRADE, GROUP 3 Top Row : Wilmo Armstrong, Georgia Harebo, Loetta Christinson, Ruth Plapp, Marian Hagen, Rosa Runnion Nellie Cowin, Alma Stomsvik. Middle Row: Clara Burger. Lois Slaughter, Arline Smith, Z-elma Bollard, Helen Czyzeski, Margaret Daum, Evelyn Stomsvik, Olga Egstad, Aileen Thon. Front Row : Orville Potter, Sterling Foust. be Verne Baker, Howard Johnson. Not in Pictures: Edwin Aitken, Howard Billingsley, Helen Berger, Willard Hubbard. Lee Mclntyre, James Montfort, Clinton Stomsvik, Mark Whitbread, Harry Wright, Orville Anderson, Kenneth Bronstad, Neil AUman, Viola Burger, Mildred Clark, Palmer Dasher, Richard Uphaus, Alton Wesen, Ella Mae Dempsey, Arline Bergos, Lenora Christenson, Dorcas Cole, Maude Kincaid, Fay Jones. James Perkins. Eloise Ruffcorn. Ruby Stuber. β 66 β ?L EIGHTH A GRADE Top Row: Frβ¬d Bruce. Glen Larson. Gsorge Gallagher, Russell Peterson, Lester Hurl- burt, Paul Hallett, Spencer Farrington. Milton Stomsvik, Tom Leedham, Roy Lockwood. Middle Row: Celestine Bretzke, Thelma Dasher, Alice Mitchell, Jessie Forsythe, Char- lotte Spears, May Mann. Mary Coleman, Margaret Evered. Gertrude Breigsnzer. Ethel Paulson. Bottom Row: Burton Hallett, Vern Chrislinson, Dorothy Blackseth, Jean Hurly, Wini- fred Pease, Lillav Floyd, Alice Dohi, Philip Smith. Not in Picture : Wesley Aitken, Glendon Olson, Sigurd Vegge, Ethel Anderson, Lorraine Hake. Marguerite McCormick. Gladys Moore. -67- ii s: EIGHTH B GRADK Top Row: Iver Martin, Frank Sampson. Ralph Taylor. Robert White, James Billings- ley, Charles Jacobson, Harold Schwenke, Selmer Enger, Harris Smith, Hans Olson, Victor Smith. Middle Row: Marian Reece, Blanche Combs, Stella Torgerson, Olive Hudson, Helen Humphries, Bernice Midge, Florence Schuman, Mabel Paulson, Effie Harmeson, Martha Knaff, Helen Combs. Bottom Row: Helen Rasmussen, Ruth Stensland, Dorothy Brown, Crystal Erickson, Marguerite Jackline, lone Kjos, Eunice Burrows, Not in Picture: Chester Anderson, Alvina Anderson, Agnes Blanchard, Evelyn Enger. β 68 β i 4 i H Jt il l SEVENTH GRADE, GROUP 1 Top Row: Georgia Taylor, Goldie Morton, Audrey Sierts, Marie Lyons, Garnet Wohl- ford, Marjorie Logas, Emma Olson, Edna Britzman, Eleanor Sonju. Middle Row: Gordon Magruder, Duane Boley, Amot Martin, Robert Hall, Orval Markle, Duane Smith, Maurice Nelson. Joseph Harman, Lewis Archambault, Rex Thill, FYancis Irle, Archie Castle. Bottom Row: Laura Hurd, Cecile Strain. Evelyn Engstrom, Elizabeth Kline, Betty Puchella. t ' ' ' ::ti :: ' ' -0 ' s ' : ' ilifiL K SEVENTH GRADE, GROUP 2 Top Row: Isabelle Osterberg, Prances Krause, Mary Ellen Poust, Thelma Dykstra, Sylva Michel, Ruth West, Ardythe Lund, Betty Yotter, Minerva Alger. Middle Row: Mark Rusher, Norman Pedersen, Paul Perkctt. Clayton Wesen, Roy Anderson, Charles Peterson, Jrβ Matt Murray. Laurence Rybuck, Tom Ebersole, Robert Arnot, George Dignan. Bcttom Row: Jeanette Pease, Plorence Gamas, Lucille Forsman, Elizabeth Ruffcorn, Dorothy Harebo, Lorraine Bretzke, Merle Uphaus. Not in picture: Glen Bruce, Edward Stevens. Edna Stevens, DeEtta Johnson, Con- stance Kockel, Helen Nelson. β 70 β β 71 β THE PIONEER was not without his sense of humor. It proved to be his saving grace. This was as it should be for happy is the man who can make the best of things and come triumphant through every situation. For as Stevenson said, There is no country without some amenity β let him only look for it in the right spirit, and he will surely find. It is humor that adds the spice to life and makes it seem less flat and insipid. The most charming people possess this sense of humor and with it that sense of appropriateness that must ac- company it. They recognize true jokes and do not enjoy those which are coarse and rude. We hope that the humor section in the Hoot Mon vkrill appeal to our readers and they will en- joy it. β 72- M..-iiy IM CHARLES ' PRAYER Holy Moses and the angels, Please have pity on me 1 pray. My brain is feverish and I am nervous. They ' re selling Hoot Mon ' s today. Save me from my wrathful classmates When the jokes ' bout them they see. May the fellows treat me kindly. May the girls still smile on me. I ' ve a sneakin ' feeling I am hearing Threats and thrashings wished on me. Holy Moses and the angels. Guard me well I pray of thee. Amen. β’73 β 1879 1929 50 Years of Lighting Progress This year is the Fiftieth, or Golden Anniversary, of Edison ' s invention of the incandescent lamp. The first lamp made by this great w izard vs as very crude, but was the foundation upon v hich today stands the greatest of all modern con- veniences, Edison Mazda Lamps Every American citizen should pay tribute this year to its foremost inventor, THOMAS ALVA EDISON May this kindly servant and noble benefactor of all mankind, be long spared to continue his w ork and to inspire us to carry forw ard and enjoy the many conveniences vv hich have been the out- come of his creation. Great Falls Power Company β 74- i ' L GLASGOW, MONTANA Buy Baby Chix at Home We Specialize in Full Blooded Chix of All Breeds, Hatched in Our Mam- moth Electric Incubators. I Riverside Hatchery Β I James O. Weaver Attorney at Law Glasgow, Montana OFFICE IN FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLOCK Miss Hoover: What was the most im- portant date during the Roman period? Bill Alvord: Antony ' s date with Cleo- patra. Miss Sayre ' checking up on absences): Where is Mildred Johnson? Frances W.: She is trying to get in her locker. Miss Alexander: How are you able to sing with that wad in your mouth, Rich- ard? Richard Hallett: Sing around it. Ronald Baker: We have a new player on our football team and he is real goixl. I think pretty soon he will be our best man. Margaret Murray: Oh, so sudden! Will you marry me? No!! (And they lived happily ever after). Tom Flint (Going around to class rooms collecting tardiness slips, put his head in- side the door) : Miss Coventry, I want your slip. Northern Montana ' s Best Music 1 r THE WARDROBE CLEANERS Best Floor at DORR ' S LAKE VIEW HALL Moved to the Medical Building Will Still Give You the Wardrobe Service Out Where the Fun Begins Three Miles East, Six Miles South ' We Know How β’75- Tommy Flint: Why don ' t Sophomores have red hair? Eldon S.: Ivory won ' t rust. Miss Hoover: Who was Shakespeare ' s wife? Kenneth Christinson: Mrs. Shakes- peare. Let ' s go, team, yelled the farmer. Piper-Howe Lbr. Co. FRANK FORD. Mgr. Quality - Service A Safe Place to Trade ENGSTROM ' S QUALITY DRY CLEANING BEST WISHES TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF 1928-1929 Glasgow Motors, inc. Glasgow, Montana -76- We Sell WESTLAND GASOLINE DURA OIL AND WE GIVE SERVICE WESTLAND OIL CO. J. c. PENNEY CO. A Nat ion Wide Institution WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATEST Teacher ; What is a detour? Scott J.: The roughest distance be- tween two points. Calhe: I wouldn ' t marry you if you were the only man in the world. Dale:: Of course you wouldn ' t; you ' d get killed in the rush. Overheard among the lockers: Roy D.: A fellow doesn ' t have to be crazy to be in love but it sure helps a lot. Found in a senior boy ' s paper on My Ideal Girl : I want a girl who appreci- ates men; in fact, she must appreciate all animals. Shirley B. (after a test on Hamlet ): I felt just like Ophelia when I took that test. Miss Sayre (who had just looked over her paper) : Yes, and your sentences sounded just like Ophelia ' s when she was crazy. SEND IT TO THE LAUNDRY We Wash Anything, Even the Baby We Call for and Deliver TROY STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 88 E. M. Morton, Prop. β 77 β Miss Hoover: Benny, how can you se- cure a straight line in a paragraph? Benny: By writing next to margin. James Perkins (in general science) : You can ' t get diseases fro m drinking cups. Mr. Mowery: Why not, James? James: Did you ever see anyone drink- ing cups? Who Miss Sayre (in ESiglish TV class) : was Horace? Ruben ( sleepily) : An American author. Miss Mattison: A good illustration of how cruelly the people were treated in colonial times for a small violation of the law is expressed in Hawthorne ' s ' Scarlet Letter ' . Robert Spears: Yes, and another good example is ' Ben Hur ' . Miss Hoover: Ralph, use conscious in a sentence. Ralph Keagy: Kiss me again, I ' m still conscious. A. W. BECK Glasgow, Montana General Electric Wiring System ADD BEAUTY TO YOUR HOME Promote Comfort Conserve Health Save Drudgery By Installing Mo(Jern Plumbing and Heating ELMER JOHNSON Glasgow, Montana β 78 β f ' : : ' ' - ! :h i fl -. - f Mark Whitbread: I wish I could change the alphabet. Wava: Why? Mark: I ' d put U and I closer together. Mildred: I ' m a little pale. Sarcastic: No, you ' re a little fat tub. Bert: Aw. I know this stuff so well I could say it backwards in my sleep! Miss Anderson: The only trouble is you say it backwards when you are awake. Mr. Garlough: Have you ever heard of puppy love? Bert: Have you a Webster ' s dictionary on your desk? Mr. Garlough: No. I haven ' t. I don ' t need one. Bert: Well, I do. Sid had been sitting in his seat doing nothing except twiddling his thumbs for a half hour. Miss Harkins: Sidney, is that all you can do? Sidney: No, ma ' am, I can turn them the other way. Progress For 35 years we have watched the growth of the Glasgow schools - - from a one-room shack to the present splendid buildings - - from one teacher to many - - from a handful of pupils to nearly seven hundred. This is Progress May it con- tinue. A. M. St. Clair Co. | JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS i Established 1894 Glasgow Montana { BURGESS VARIETY STORE Novelties, Gift Goods, Chinaware, Glassware, Hosiery, Paints, Cooking Utensils and Con- goleum Rugs. Quality, Service and Right Prices T. O. BURGESS, Proprietor Glasgow, Montana β 79 β iiPK Miss Coventry: Do you know what letter comes after h ? Maurice Weber: No ' m. Miss Coventry: What have I on each side of my nose? Maurice: Looks like powder to me. Marjorie H.: There are several things I always count on. Paul: What are they? Marjorie: My fingers. THE BON TON Home Made Candy and Ice Cream Butter Kist Popcorn SAM ELLSWORTH, Prop. For Real ECONOMY Buy Your Dresses at THE ECONOMY SHOP Otto M. Christinson Land Co. FARM MANAGEMENT, FARM LOANS INVESTMENTS AND INSURANCE Glasgow, Montana β 80 β v ' lljlf hl. 7y Gordon Browning (using the word phenomena in a sentence) : Phenomena is a serious sickness. Miss Anderson (in Problems of Democ- racy class) : What is probation? Charles H. (looking rather blank): Is that what the probate judge does? Found in a freshman general science paper: Diagnosis is a disease of the nose. Bill Alvord: I ' ll be in the study hall this period after this. Miss Harkins. Miss H.: Altogether? Bill: Well, I ' m going to try to be all together. Did you hear the one about the girl who was so dumb she thought that the doctor gave her a compliment when he told her she had acute indigestion ? Miss Hoover: Lee, have you done your outside reading yet? Lee Montgomery : No, it ' s too cold. NORTH SIDE CASH GROCERY Geo. E. Birmingham, Prop. FANCY GROCERIES- STAPLE GROCERIES ' We Aim to Please ' Telephone 3 We Deliver Hall Drug Co. Prescription Druggists Johnston ' s Candy Eastman Kodaks Ice Cream Toilet Goods School Supplies Hall Has It β 81 : - .β’. ' .-. β - β’ . ' : ' ,1. . ' IT- 1 Miss Hoover: Tell about Tyre (mean- ing a famous city in Phoenicia) . William Smart: It is part of a wheel. Where was Shakes- In Stratford-on- Miss Coventry: peare born? Torborg Pederson : Avon. Miss Coventry: In what country? Torborg: In New York. Mr. Woodside: Why is this bird called a chick-a-dee? Ethel Moore: Because it looks like a chick. Mr. Garlough (Announcing in assembly about the new lockers to be assigned the senior high students): There is room enough for two people in every locker. Choose your partners. Of coui-se, I prefer that a girl choose a girl and a boy choose a boy. Jack Pagan (giving an oral report in Problems of Democracy) : His name was Flaherty and that was all I could find on him. We Ask You TO DRIVE THE MODEL A FORD BEFORE BUYING ANY OTHER CAR. Grossman Motor Co. Service 1 Quality Lewis -Wedum Co. i Department Store STYLE DURABILITY PRICE Quality is our first asset and best advertisement 1888 - Forty-One Years in Glasgow - - 1929 -82- I crept upstairs, my shoes in hand, Just as the night took wing; And I saw my Dad, four steps ahead, Doing the same darned thing. Quotation from school e.xamination paper: George Washington married Mary Custi.s and in due time became the father of his Country. Miss Sayre joy? Micky: Misery. Miss Sayre: Of sadness? Micky: Gladness. Miss Sayre:; Of woe? Micky: Giddap. What is the opposite of Miss Robinson: How many molecules are there in a liter? Ruben Lewow: I know! β Nobody knows. Miss Coventry; Maurice, what is wrong with this, ' Cosettβ¬ was wrote by Hugo ' ? Maurice Weber: It should be, ' Cosette was wrote by Victor Hugo ' . Miss Murphy: What is meant by monoxidized? Zelma Bollard (sleepily); Exhaust sick- ness. Did you ever take Mr. Woodside ; ether? Ronald: Naw, who teaches it? Shirley: This jewelry all belonged to a millionaire. Thelma; Who? Shirley : Woolworth. Sophomore to Freshie: Why do you part your hair? Freshie: It improves my looks. Sophomore: Ha! Ha! Every block has an alley. Paul: I got 96 in my physics test. Eldon: Honestly? Paul: What did you bring that up for? Mr. Garlough (sitting down to dinner at his boarding place and seeing a dish of cranberries on the table); Oh! we have beets for dinner. QUALITY NOT QUANTITY HAUGE ' S CAFE If You Like Our Coffee Have Another on Me β Bert β Cool Barber Shop SATISFACTION I Glasgow, Montana . i 1 L. E. Montgomery DENTIST Office Rundle BIdg., Phone 29 Glasgow, Montana β 83- .β β’..β β’v-. vXP. . β’ ' ' - - ,- ; β !Β£. ! ' β’- β β’ β’ ' β’ft V.-. β’ β’-- - β’. ' β’ ' β i.iv ' Miss Robinson: What kind of bird is this? (Showing a picture of a screech owl). Dale Smith: Hootch owl. Miss Coventry (looking in Ellis ' Studio window) : Isn ' t that a beautiful picture of Old Faithful? Mrs. McLean: Why, that ' s a picture of the burning oil well. Moral: See America First. Mary Dohi (Writing a news article for journalism class, included the following) : The home economics class (meaning room) will also be improved and reno- vated. Mr. Woodside (in biology) : What caiises food to come up after it has been swal- lowed? Benny Lewow: Oysters. Miss Hoover : How long should a ' thank you ' letter be? Frank Schuster: It depends on how many gifts they give you. Valley County Abstract Co., Inc. OFFICIAL ABSTRACTERS G. A. Bertsch, President A. Z. Bertsch, Sec ' y-Treas. -84- Ma, who is Mike I never Leslie Splan : Huntry? Mrs. Splan: I don ' t know heard of him. Leslie; Well, in music today we sang, ' Mike Huntry, ' tis of thee ' . Callie to Peg (Heard in the girls ' dress- ing room): Why does a rabbit have a shiny nose? Peg: Because its powder puff is on its tail. Miss Sayre (reading about the early Egyptians) : I ' ve been reading that the pyramid builders were paid with onions and other vegetables. Marjorie: No wonder they were so strong. Miss Robinson: What is the charac- teristic of a water mammal? Olive Knaff: They can swim. Miss Sayre (in English III class, while the wind was blowing quite freely outside and rattling windows) : Be as quiet as possible here in class for there is enough wind outside. Oxy - Acetylene Welding Car and Truck Spring Service Lathe and Machine Work General Blacksmithing Car, Truck and Tractor Repair Phone 108-W HALLADAY ' SSHOP Corner Third Ave. South and Eighth St. Glasgow, Montana Northwest Service Stores, inc. Glasgow, Montana, Branch Profits Small; Business Great; That ' s the Way We Operate. A Great Concern in a Growing City. We Deliver Phone 24 β 85 β WHOOPEE! What would we do without them, That ' s what I want to know; This world would be the heck of a place, Where could we poor men go? Whom could we tell our troubles to? Where would we get our romance. How ' d we spend our evenings With only stags at a dance? We owe the girls an awful lot. That ' s why I write this rhyme. What ' d we do without ' em, boys? We ' d have a whale of a time. First Irishman: My legs are just as long as yours. Second Ditto: No, they aren ' t. First Same: Yes they are. They reach from the seat of my pants to the ground and that ' s all yours do. Second Ditto: But my pants are higher than yours. Shorty : I am just as tall as you are. Spears: No, you aren ' t. You just come up to my chin. Shorty: Well, anyway, you are just as low down as I am. Your feet go down just as far. Clarence H. Roberts Attorney at Law FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Glasgow, Montana H. A. YOTTER HARDWARE Glasgow, Montana Your Trade Is Appreciated COLEMAN HARDWARE MAJESTIC AND R. C. A. RADIOS EXPERT RADIO SERVICE Glasgow, Montana THE ANDREWS SHOP Mrs. Forrest Andrews GOWNS, SUITS, FURS, MIL- LINERY AND FASHION- ABLE ACCESSORIES Glasgow, Montana -86 S THE FIRST NATIONAL Glasgow, Montana Welcomes Your Banking Business. Thirty-Eight Years on Front Street. JOHN M. LEWIS, President R. M. LEWIS, Vice President R. M. YOUNG, Cashier A. B. FRIEDLUND, Asst. Cashier Miss Sayre (in English IV) : Where did the name ' Aes Triplex ' come from? Dale Smith (hastily reading foot note wji ' ich stated that it came from an ode of Horace running: He was armed with oak and triple bronze β et cetera ) : From an ode of horses running. Marcus went to see the doctor a few days ago and learned that red cheeks are a sign of health. Yesterday he let it drop that one of Mary Daum ' s cheeks was healthier than the other. DRS. KLEIN GRAY DENTISTS Suits No. 3, Medical Building Glasgow, Montana The senior philosopher discovered the reason why the girls of Glasgow High School powder their noses. They do it so as not to outshine the boys. The Boys ' Glee club were singing a Christmas song in which the word moon- light appeared. Miss Alexander (to boys singing very fast) : Boys, I want you to slow down in the moonlight. Traveler: When I was in China I a woman hanging from a tree by hair. Awed listener: Shanghai? Traveler: Oh, about six feet. saw her James Watson: What do you call a man who drives an automobile? Eugene Tourtlotte: It depends on how close he comes to me. Dale: Callie : Dale: Callie: Dale: Callie: I ' m going to kiss you. (No answer). I said I was going to kiss you. (Silence). Say, are you deaf? No, but you ' re dumb. -87 β MM, tV :::.-:: Mr. Garlough: Just write your par- ents ' names on this line. James Perkins: Mamma and Papa. Mr. Garlough: Robert, what was the financial situation of the U. S. at the end of the world war? Robert Spears: It was very bad, wasn ' t it? Mr. G.: I was asking you. Robert S. : Well, I guess I don ' t know either. (1 minute). Space Specialty Shop Ladies ' Ready-to-Wear MRS. L. K. SPACE Fifth Avenue South Glasgow, Montana SCHOBEL HATS WILSON BROTHERS HABERDASHERY BOSTONIAN SHOES THE TOGGERY Weigel Gregory SNOW WHITE FLOUR Is Not Only Good, But Noticeably Better It Will Stand Abuse Manufactured by GLASGOW FLOUR MILL Glasgow, Montana CO. β 88- --β’β’β ' . β β’ -- S β’β -;β .β’ - ' β’β’ ' . ,V r β ' :: ::- Β si Mrc. Tourtlotte: Gene, didn ' t I hear the cock strike two as you came in? Eugene: You did. It started to strike ten. but I -stopped it to keep from waking you up. Miss Sayre: Charles, perhaps we should print the advertising section on tissue paper. Charles H. (innocently): Why? Miss Sayre: So they can see through the jokes. John M. Kline R. S. McKellar C. D. Borton I I Kline, McKellar | Borton Attorneys and Counsellors RUNDLE BUILDING Glasgow, Montana THfSTORCOf TODArAND TOMORHOIV Line.! Carried by Us Worthy of Your Consideration: For Young Women Bobolink Guaranteed Hosiery Mandalay Silk Undergarments Welworth Fast Color Wash Frocks Star Brand Footwear for All Occasions For Young Men Honor Built and Parkway Suits Star Brand Shoes and Oxfords McKibbin Hats and Caps Hallmark and Serval Dress Shirts Ellis Studio Glasgow, Mont. :; : ' ' ; i ' - ' ' : ' H FOR GIFTS THAT LAST GO TO CHAS. E. BEHNER CO. Jewelers and Opticians First National Bank Bldg. Glasgow, Montana Charles Hoffman: The doctor told me I ' d have a tobacco heart if I didn ' t stop buying cigarettes. Smithy: Well? Charles: So I started buying choco- lates and now I have a sweetheart. Mrs. Irle (substituting in Chemistry for Miss Robinson) : Give me a definition of sodium chloride. James Christinson: It is salt. Ronald Baker: No, it ' s powdered brine. Joe M.: Oh. say. ' Hattie: What? Joe (singing on) : dawn ' s early light? ' Can you see by the There was a terrible accident over in Glasgow the other day. Two taxi-cabs collided and thirty Scotchmen were seri- ously injured. Waiter: Are you Hungary? ' Guest: Yes, Siam. ' Waiter: Den Russia to the table and I ' ll Fiji. Guest: AH right. Sweden my coffee and Denmark my bill. Paul: Going in swimming today? Ruben: I don ' t swim! Paul: Well, going in bathing? Ruben: I don ' t β aw, quit it! Micky (walking down the street with the boys, thinking about his book report) : I have to re ad one friction book and one non-friction book this semester. Miss Alexander: Now the boys ' quar- ette will sing All Through the Night. Peggy: Holy Smokes! Let ' s leave now. THE ACID TEST Say, that girl ' s a peach! She may be, but I call her grapefruit. Why so? When I squeezed her she hit me in the eye! Roy Johnson: I just shot my dog. Roy DeHaven: Was he mad? Roy J.: Well, he didn ' t like it very well. EDUCATION ADDS TO YOUR APPRECIATION OF THE BETTER THINGS IN LIFE. THE MODEL GROCERY M. A. Walker, Proprietor Phone 117 β 90 β : β¬P= Read the School News in the Glasgow Courier MONTANA ' S GREATEST WEEKLY β 91 β $ : ' ' ' ; (i ' : --- K i :p4 SOPHOMORE SOLILOQUY I love the students who are bright And next to them I ' ll sit, And if I listen r.ard, I might Get my lamp of learning lit! Miss Anderson: Who can name some- thing of importance that did not exist a hundred years ago? Bert Sammons: Me. Leedham ' s Carpenter Shop T. W. LEEDHAM. Prop. Auto Glass, Top Body Work Phone 191-W Glasgow, Montana GUARANTEED PURE PENNSYLVANIA OIL MATTSON BROS. OIL CO. CLEAN AND PURE GASOLINE A THING DONE RIGHT TODAY MEANS LESS TROUBLE FOR TOMORROW FARMERS-STOCKGROWERS BANK Glasgow, Montana β 92- Paul Etcliepare drove his Ford up before the school house one cold morning and covered it with a blanket. A little boy across the street yelled at him and said: Too late. I saw what it was. Mr. Woodside: What insects live on the least food? Mildred Johnson: The moth, it eats holes. Drs. Hoyt Smith Medical Building GLASGOW. MONTANA MITCHELL SHOE SHOP Most Up-to-Date Shop in Northeastern Montana We Rebuildβ We Do Not Cobble L. M. MITCHELL, Proprietor Glasgow, Montana WHERE DAD AND MOTHER BOUGHT THEIR FURNITURE CHAS. E. PETERSON GLASGOW ' S FURNITURE STORE FOR TWENTY-TWO YEARS -93- fecfe iAi ' iv:- f It Pays to Look Well Getting ahead in the world depends in a large measure on the opinion others hold of you. Your friends judge you as much by how you look as by what you wear. Our long business ex- perience tells us that we must carry a large, va- r i e d assortment o f stocks to satisfy our patrons. It also shows that featuring good merchandise is the best policy. When in need of anything for young men and boys do not forget that we will give you the best there is to of- fer. R. H. FRIEDL Glasgow, Mont. β 94- hl tM ' ' :?!S :--t?, ' ' ' i -( ' :- - Si x SHOES Elmer H. Kjellman Shoe Store Front Street, Opposite Depot HUNGRY? Miss Martin: Last Christmas we had eighteen grown ups and two children for Christmas dinner. SKELETONS! (Headlines in Great Falls Ti-ibune) : LARGE CROWD HEARS JOINT CONCERT HERE Miss Hoover: All oral book reports are due by Friday. Benny Lewow: May we get our bi- ographies out of the dictionary? Russell St. Clair: What ' s a hypocrite? Ambrose Friedl: A fellow who goes to school with a smile on his face. Pat: Why do they call our language the Mother Tongue? Ronald: Don ' t know, unless fathers so seldom get a chance to use it. An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less. Mr. Woodside: We get brown honey from buckwheat and white honey from clover. What kind of honey do we get from alfalfa? Dale Smith: Green honey. Peggy ( in Problems of Democracy class) : Give me a reason why so many people get divorces. Frances: One reason is because the laws are so laxative. Magruder Motor Company WILLYS KNIGHT WHIPPET and ST UDEBAKER CARS SIEBERLING TIRES PHONE SEVEN β 95- e: ' --; -i v; SPWC S ALVORD ' S GROCERY Solicits Your Grocery Business For Several Reasons NAMELY: High Quality Merchandise. Reasonably Priced Merchandise. The Best Service We Know How to Give. Money Back on Goods Not Satisfactory. Monthly Accounts Carried by Us. All Orders Delivered. We Appreciate Your Business. Phone 14 F. D. Alvord, Prop. Mr. Garlough: Do the Chief Justice.s of Peace act as cop? Marjorie Hurly: No, they marry peo- ple. Paul: This is my photograph with my two FYench Poodles You recognize me, eh? Ruben: I believe so. You are the one with the hat on. are you not? Callie (trying to sell Hoot Mon ' s) : There will be pictures of the faculty members and a lot of other good jokes in it. Junior English ,iass. Charles Cotton readiiig tragically in Macbeth: It is the bell that summons thee to heaven-or-to- hel-1-1-1. Class files out to biology test. HI-POWER GASOLINE HECCOLENT MOTOR OILS A Hard Combination to Beat H. Earl Clack Co. Service Stations WHERE YOU GET FINER SERVICE THE CITY MARKET ... ' e -Xh LEBERT GALLAGHER Fone 174 β 96 β ' m mmj ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The producing of an annual may seem to the ordinary person to be just an ordinary thing, but it is full of many new and varied experiences. When we started to make this book, we at once found many difficulties vhich at once seemed not only difficult but almost impossible. But we were very fortunate in having to help us those whom we believe to be the most capable that could be obtained anywhere. As supervisor and helper. Miss Sayre has kindly and efficiently helped us, unselfishly working night after night, and week after v feek. We wish to thank Mr. Ellis for his splendid cooperation and photography and the Beygeh Engraving Company for their work. We wish to thank the Becktold Company for designing the covers and The Glasgow Courier for their printing service. We wish to express our thanks also to the business firms who have helped financially to make the Hoot Mon a success. We extend congratulations to the future staffs and wish them all the best of success. Staff ' 29. β 97 β JUST MEMORIES KcAa CO ftAi 2 o Β Β« J e ' ' ' J ( i tj -7 dJ y. ' rf ' ? s ev jOf-ni ' ' ;; i - sf ' 1. JUST MEMORIES β 99- JUST MEMORIES 100-
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