Hardin High School - Big Horn Yearbook (Hardin, MT) - Class of 1928 Page 1 of 132
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MMHMIlMIMIIIMIIMIMIIIIMMIIIMMIMIIIIIMMMMMMIIMMiMIMMMIIMIIIIMMMMIIIIIMIMIMMIMIMIIIMIIMIMMMMIMMMIMIMIIIIMMIIMIMIIMMIIIIIMIMIMIIMMMIMIIMMIIMMMIIIIMlIIIMIIIMimmillinillllimilllMMIMIIMI •iifntHiiiMMiiimiiHinniHHiMMtiiiiMiMnnHiiimiirtmtiiifnmiiiMmHftniiiMimiiiirfttiiiiitniMiMH I — 3 iii h! 1 ■ Ml Ml Hi Hi Iii i 11 § l|L i I i!2 III 1 'I I'j Iii ft Hardin High School IIIHtMMMIIMHIIIIIIIIIIIMI IflMHIIMMHHMHIlHIHIIHHHHHMIlHHIlHIHIHIIMIHIIHIII IMIMIIMI MM II UMIMIMIIIIIMMiailUllllllflll ■ MB ■ ■Bull MB I MB MB BB MB M M MB MB 1 MB M MMMMMMMIMIIMIMMIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMMMMIIIMMMMIMIlIHlIIIIMmMIIIMMIIIIMIMIIIMMMIt Mi i i Ml 11 |i Ml : I - IH sir I ? = I 1 j! Mi : III Jhi -i Fffie Big Horn 1928 fof Foreword That the 1928 Yearbook of Hardin High School may serve to perpetuate in your memory the worthwhile events of the past school year is the sincere wish of the staff. YEAR BOOK OF THE SENIOR CLASS of HARDIN HIGH SCHOOL Hardin, Montana George M. Harris, Superintendent St b 77 ■ Cowl, c ies ' irs t [4] [5] I............................................................................................................................................... ItaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaailtaaaaaaaaaattMtaaiaailMMMaaatlMiailMtBMMMiaBMttaaitmiaaaaaaaaill ■ - ■§ ib mm iM mm mm mm mm mm mm mm — -mm m mm ma mm mm ■ mm mm wm mm mm mi ■■ ■m mm mm m [aaaiaMiiaiNaiaiamHlHNMaaaaiaaaaMtaaaaaaaaaiaMtaiaaaaiiifaaaiaaaiataiaaiiaaaaiaiaaaaaaaaaiiifaiivviinitiarviiiNiiiiaaaaMaiiaaiaiiiaiiiiaaaiiaaaiaaaiaaaaaaiiaaaaaiaiiaiiiiiiaiaaMiaaatMiiiiMaiiiitiaaaaaMiiiaaiaaaiMaaaaiiaaaaaaaaiMaiiiiiaiaaiiMaiiaiMaaaa [9] w mm I I !) ji || h h h ji 1 : 1 ! 1 i 1 h h — h 11 h 11 ii ! 1 h I1 M 11 h{ ill — • II : I ii! jujpiufuujifng siyyvfj jy hohoh ) ■11 111 • - • I - — • ill Ii I:! in In ill 111 hi i 11 ill hi hi • 1 1 II i a. “ j 11 III II j hi III 111 hi Mi 111 hi • s II i III III • - 2 • — 111 hi III 2 MiiiMMMiimmi iHHiiiMMMMMiiMaHmHaiaiaHHiHHHiMaiHMMaMHMiiHHHiiMHiHiaiMHiimHiiaiiiiiiimtimaiiaiiaaHmimiiiiiimminaiMaimmaimHiiiaiiiimmiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiHMmtiiMmHHMHHHMMmiM MM iiaiaaMaaiaiaataiHiMHiHMiiiMMiiaiHHiaHHiaMMiiaaaaaiaaaaiiMitiiMiaaaiiiataMiiaaaiiiiiaiaiaaaaiiiaiaiiaaaaaaaaaaiiiiMiaaBBaiHiaaiiaaaaaiBaiaaiiiiiiiaaaaaaaiiMaaiiaiBaaaiMHBMiaaiiaaiiaaaaimiiBiHBBaaaaaiaaaaMiataHMaiiiiiaBaaMMiiitaiaaiaaMtaiHil lllllimillllllHIimilllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMItlllimiHHHIIIIIHIII IIUMIMIMMIIMMIIIMIIIMIMI IMIllllMIMItMIMmMMIMMIIIIIMIIIIMIMIIIIMIIIMIIIMMIIMIIIIIMIMMIIIIIMIMMHI m: (greetings Dear Seniors— For twleve years you have had the attention of the public. You have made great progress since your first day in the public schools. From the time you acquired your primary adaptations and entered the secondary period of your progress, you have shown steady advancement. You have had a very difficult task to try to find adjustment to the world in which you must live and to generate adaptability to a constantly changing world. Your problem in life is to control your environmental relations and not to abide in the acceptance of your environment. The aim of the public schools which you have attended has been to educate you for responsibility. To what extent you will accept this responsibility cannot yet be determined. There is evidence, however, that you will accept the challenge to carry the banners of human progress to the remotest parts of the earth. This book, which you have made, shows that you have learned many of your lessons well. It is different from other books published by Seniors in High School. It shows your interest in the welfare of your community. You have included in your publication the activities of all the schools of the district. You have placed no undue emphasis on yourselves as seniors of the high school unit of the twelve-year system. This shows that you have developed an idea of Tolerance, in which intelligence realizes its own fallibility; in which the open mind looks for worth in distasteful things; in which the imagination conceives good in outlooks and conditions other than its own. Your book shows, too, that you have a fine conception of Freedom. You have developed informed and well ordered imaginations which picture the choices possible in your lives. You have acquired, in some small degree, at least, the wisdom to compare and appraise these choices. You have the energy and the desire to control the events and materials to achieve what is chosen. 1 hope that those who read the book will see in it what was intended by the Class of 1928, and that they will get as much pleasure from reading this volume as I have had in knowing and working with the individuals who made it. Sincerely yours, George M. Harris. JSL ‘Dedication To Principal Raymond A. Gerber, who lias given us counsel, shown us the paths of cooperative fellowship, and who has devoted all his time and effort to the welfare of Hardin High School, the class of ’28 respectfully dedicates the 1928 Big Horn Annual. Roush Pino Schmelzer Asbury Ki.einhesselink Corkins The trustees of district 17H efficiently direct the destinies of a unique educational unit. To these men unselfish in their devotion to a public trust our community extends its sincere appreciation. 1E==== ...........................................in 97Te 'BOOK Administration' Faculty Classes Activities Dramatics Music Athletics Grade School Crow Agency School Rural Schools Alumni Advertising Humor HE -ii 111 • 1111 • 11 • ■ i 11 • ■ 111 ■ t ■ 111 • . • 11 ■ i ■ ■ i ■ ■ i ■ 11 ■ i ■ i • • i (1111111 . ■ 11111111 • . i ii • m i i M 111 ■ • . • i ■ • i ■ a i ■ ■ 11 ■ a ■ ■ 11 • ■ 1111111 • ■ • • ■ 1111 ■ • .. 1111 ........................................................HIMIIHIHIHIIHMIHIMIHIHIIHMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIHHtmilinilllHIHIIIIMIMimillllllllllllllllllllHIMIIintllllHintllllllllH|.||ltiminillllllllllllimillllllllllllHIIIMHI : = The Faculty of Flay din High School I = I ii n 1 = Mi RAYMOND A. GERBER Meriden, Kansas. University of Montana, B. A. Degree. Principal. History. HELEN K. BAUM Keokuk, Iowa. University of Iowa, B. A. Degree. Literature and Dramatics. BOYD F. BALDWIN Fort Shaw, Montana, Intermountain Union College, Helena, Montana, B. A. Degree. Music, Science and Athletics. MARIE E. COMSTOCK Mount Vernon, Missouri. Southwest Missouri State Teachers College, B. S. Degree. Home Economics, Girls Physical Training and Citizenship. JANESTYER Minneapolis. Minnesota. University of Minnesota, B. A. Degree. Spanish, French and English. EVERT L. VANDERBURGH Geddes, South Dakota. Yankton, South Dakota College, B. A. Degree. Mathematics and Boys Physical Education. FAYE TABER HARRIS Pittsburg, Kansas. Kansas State Teachers College. English and Journalism. MURCHE A. THOMPSON Wheatland, Missouri. Springfield, Missouri. State Teachers College, B. S. Degree. Social Science. MARY OLIVE CRUM Lanes Prairie, Missouri. Warrensburg, Missouri State Teachers College. B. S. Degree. English and Journalism. MARTHA C. CREWS Fulton, Missouri. University of Missouri, B. A. Degree. Spanish, French and English. MAUDE O’HARA Lewistown, Montana. Milwaukee, Wisconsin State Teachers College, B. A. Degree. Stenography, Typing and Bookkeeping. JOHN VV. SEUSER Humboldt, Kansas. Hays, Kansas Teachers College. Instrumentation. JBSL ij 11 ii! i! i! i 11 1 if 1 i I i; IIIMIIIIIMIMIIIMIMU [14] ....................................................................................................... tWMIlltMIII m 1928 Class Prophecy The time, a golden twilight, The date, the sixth of June; The place, the Hardin High School— Ah! Our friends shall be here soon. The event, a class reunion; ’Tis the class of '28— Hurry! All you old folks— Or you’ll be counted late! Down the rose-strewn path of memory Come two of that good old class; Evan Gustafson, with his piccolo, IVith Ada Naylor, a fair lass. Jack Clifford and Thora Nelson Are playing dramatic parts; But please let me inform you, 'Tis on the stage, not hearts. Cecil Gray, an orator great, IVas last in Congress heard; And the voice of Frances Ewing, Soars in opera, like a bird. Rudolph Komrs is busy printing, David Hannant is the “boss”; Lorraine Reyburn is there, too. Without her all would be lost. In a home by the stormy seaside. Lives a maiden, lola Moore; A nd all in distress and misfortune May seek her wide open door. Cecelia Fischbach has her fiddle Tucked safely under her arm And a merry little tune she plays Reveals an abundance of charm. A doctor small but handy Has made life seem worth while, Here he is! Richard IValker, Always wearing his cheerful smile. Lela Johnson and Joyce Daniels, Two girls so sweet and jolly, Are making names for themselves In Bud Brotherson s famous Folly. J2SL ............................................... in.................. ininmiiHHi CECIL EDWARD GRAY, President “Gravely his thoughts ride liis word, as a good horseman, his steed.” Declamation 1-2; Scholarship 2; Band 3-4; Orchestra 3-4; Instrumentation 3-4; Captain Applejack 3; Extemporaneous Speaking; 3-4; Stock Judging; 4; Class President 4; So This is London 4; Student Council 4; State Music Meet 3. EUNICE CAMPBELL, Vice-President “A face that’s best by its own beauty drest” Glee Club 1; Basketball 2-3; Declamation 2; Extemporaneous Essay Writing: 4; Class Vice-President 2-4; Chemistry Essay Contest 3. ODESSA REDDING, Secretary “Fashion’d so slenderly, young and so fair!” Basketball 1-2-3-4; Declamation 1; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 3-4; Scholarship Contest 3-4; Student Council 4; Big Horn Annual Staff 4; Class Secretary 4; Commercial Club 4; So This is London 4; Vocational Congress 4; Extemporaneous Reading 4; Chemistry Essay 3; Spanish play 2. JOHN C. CLIFFORD, Treasurer “Shall I, wasting in despair, die because a woman s fair?” Class Basketball 4; Captain Applejack” 3; The Whole Town’s Talking 3; Student Store 2-3; Student Council 4; Class Track 1-2-3-4; Track Team 2-3; Advertising Manager Big Horn Annual 4; Big Horn Staff 4; Glee Club 4. CLASS OF 1928 Class Motto: “Not at the Top but Climbing” Class Colors: Purple and Gold Class Flowers: Yellow Chrysanthemum Miss Baum, Sponsor Mr. Gerber, Sponsor DOLAH MARIE ALLEN A smooth and steadfast mind; Gentle thoughts and calm desires ” Extemporaneous Essay Writing 3-4 Captain Applejack” 3; French Play 2 Physical Education 4. NELLIE DOWD BENSON Powerful in speech, thorough in action, and strong in character Class Basketball 1-2-4; “Yanki San” 1; Glee Club 1-4; Declamation 1-2-3; Extemporaneous Speaking 1-2-3-4; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 2-3-4; Lincoln Essay Medal 3; Editor of Big Horn Annual 4; Track 2; Captain Applejack” 3; Student Council 4; Big Horn Staff 4; Debate 2; The Boomerang” 4; The Gypsy Rover” 4; State Declamation Contest, Missoula 3; Extemporaneous Reading 4. RAYMOND FRANCIS BUZZETTI To the sports born; His life; his all. Basketball 1-2-3-4; Class Track 1-2; Track 3-4; Captain Applejack” 3; ‘The Boomerang” 4; Class President 2; Big Horn Staff 4; Student Council 2-4; Boys Glee Club 4; Executive Staff, The Boomerang” 4. ADELLA MARIAN BREKKE An embodiment of all that's fair, Surrounded by a sea of music Orchestra 3-4; Girls’ Glee Club 1-3-4; District Music Meet, First Piano 2; State Music Meet 3-4; Yanki San” 1; Miss Caruther’s Return” 2; Ghosts of Hilo 3; The Gypsy Rover” 4; Class Secretary 3; Captain Applejack” 3; Spanish Play 2; Annual Staff 4; Secretary of Student Council 4; Winner Lincoln Essay Medal 4; Instrumentation 1-2-3-4. m GERALDINE CAMPEAU (Transferred to Great Falls) HERBERT LESTER BROTHERSON “If all the world were apple pie.” Class Basketball 1-2-3; Track 1-3; Glee Club 1-4; “Captain Applejack” 3; Declamation 3; Bigr Horn Staff 3; “Love Among the Lions” 3; “The Boomerang” 4; The Gypsy Rover” 4 JOYCE LOIS DANIELS “With solace and gladness, Much mirth and some madness, AM good and no badness” Lewistown 1; Moore 2; Glee Club 1-2-3-4; Piano 1-2; Extemporaneous Speaking 2; Extemporaneous Writing 4; Debate 2; Declamation 3; Annual Staff 4; “The Belle of Barcelona” 1; Spanish Op-peretta 2. CECELIA MARY FISCHBACH “Hail, thou goddess, sage and holy!” Orchestra 1-2-3; Basketball 1-2-3-4; Make-Up Manager, Junior Play 3. MAURICE COLBERG f'fVho would true valor see, Let him come hither ” Band 2-3; Instrumentation 1-2; Student Store 3; Student Council 3-4: Junior Play 3; “So This is London” 4; Class Track 3-4; Basketball 4; President Student Store 3; President Student Council 4; Glee Club 4; Commercial Club 3. LELA MAY JOHNSON “Fair as the day and sweet as May, Fair as the May and always gay ” Declamation 1-3; The Whole Town’s Talking” 3; Captain Applejack” 3; Little Theatre Contest 3; Interclass Debate 2; Instrumentation 2-4; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 4; Glee Club 1-3-4; “Ghosts of Hilo” 3; Yanki San” 1; “The Gypsy Rover” 4. lOLA FRANCES MOORE “All that in woman is adored, In her sweet self we find ” Glee Club 1-3-4; Basketball 3; Auditor. Student Association 4; “Miss Caruther’s Return” 3; Student Council 4; State Meet 4; “The Gypsy Rover” 4; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 4. DAVID S. HANNANT “He was but brave and loyal; A man among men” Judith Gap 1-2; Class Basketball 1-2-3-4; Class Track 2-3-4; Class Treasurer 2; Class Play 2; “Captain Applejack 3; Football 2; Big Horn Staff 4; Student Store 4; Band 4; Vocational Congress 4; “Love Among the Lions” 3: “The Boomerang” 4. j-gfrggi......nil...I...II.......mm ..................................................................................................... IIOHmmmillHHmil.....••• •..... ..• IMIMMIIIMHMMIIIMIIIHimMnillMIIIIIIIMIIIIIMMIMIIMMIIMIIIIMIIIIIMIMMMMIIBMMMIMMIMMIMMIMIIIMIIIItlllMMMIMMIMMIIIMIMIMIIIIMIMIIMMIHMHMMMIIIIMMimiMMIMIMIMMIIIIMMHIIMIMItMlMtlMIIIMIMIMIMIMM ; . RUB1E ELLEN BARNES “Her hair was thick with pretty curls That clustered 'round her head ” Edgar, Montana 2; Glee Club 1-2-3-4; “Yanki San” 1; Miss Caruther's Return” 2; Basketball 1-2; Executive Staff; “The Boomerang” 4. PEARL MADONNA ELDER “With thy clear, keen joyance Languor cannot be.” Strater High School 1-2; Class Basketball 3-4; 4H Club 1-2; “Much Ado About Betty” 2; Perfect Attendance 1; Physical Training 4; Extemporaneous Writing 4. MARION F. FRANKLIN “I reflect on the frailty of man and his joys ” Community High School 1-2; Track 3-4; “All-of-a-Sudden Peggy” 3; “Captain Applejack 3; “The Boomerang 4; Executive Staff, “The Boomerang” 4. june r. McAllister “She walks—the lady of my delight, Her flocks are thoughts—she keeps them white ” Basketball 1; Declamation 1; Extemporaneous Speaking 2; “Captain Applejack” 3; Glee Club 1-3; Scholarship 3; Orchestra 4; Executive Staff, “The Boomerang” 4. ....I............................ •■Hill I llllllt llllll I Hill IIIMIIH Mil.Illllllllll llllllll Hill I till I till Hill I WliiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiH.......I.....Illllllllll................................................................................MMMMMMMMI ESTHER ADA NAYLOR “Thou rightly do inherit heavens graces.” Vocational Congress 4; “The Boomerang” 4; French Play 2; Scholarship Contest 2; “Captain Applejack” 3; “The Whole Town’s Talking 3; “Love Among the Lions 3; Student Store 4; Declamation 3. EVAN ARCHIE GUSTAFSON “IVho hath his life of rumor freed, Whose conscience is his strong retreat.” Glee Club 1-4; Instrumentation 1-2-3-4; Hand 2-3-4; Orchestra 2-3-4: Class Basketball 4; Boys’ Vocational Congress 2-4; Annual Staff 4; Big Horn Staff 4; “Captain Applejack 3; “Yanki San” 1; “The Boomerang 4; Class Treasurer 3; Student Council 4; State Music Meet 3; Track 3-4; Agricultural Club 1-2; Scholarship 2-3-4. THORA M. NELSON “We love her for her gentle ways, IVe love her for herself .” Class Secretary 1; Declamation 1-2; Student Store 3; “Captain Applejack 3; “The Whole Town’s Talking” 3; Little Theatre Contest 3; Class Basketball 4; “The Boomerang 4. JOSEPHINE H. OLENIK “Serene will be her days and bright And prosperous will her future be.” “As A Woman Thinketh 1; Glee Club 1; Class President 1; Scholarship 2; Basketball 3; “Captain Applejack 3; Physical Training 4. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111(11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 l•lllllllllll•ll••llllll•IIIIIMIIM•l••lll•llll■lll•llllll•llllllllllllllllllll•lllllllll•lllllllll•IIMIIIIIIIIIIII■llllllllllll•lll■•lllllll•lll• ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................Illllltll......HIM........... 1 I RUDOLPH JERRY KOMRS “There shall some tribute of fame be paid, before his life hath reached its final day.” Big Horn Staff 4 ;Track 3-4; “Captain Applejack” 3; Executive Staff, “The Boomerang” 4; Glee Club 1-4. AUDREY F. SCHISSLER “There is a garden in her face W here roses and white lilies bloom.” Glee Club 1-4; Extemporaneous Writing Contest 3-4; Girls’ Athletics 1-3; Musical Recital 1; Executive Staff. “The Boomerang” 4. J. RICHARD WALKER “Smiling he lives, and calls life plea- sure. Glee Club 1; “Captain Applejack 3; Class Basketball 3-4; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 3; Track 3; Big Horn Staff 4; Executive Staff, “The Boomerang” 4: Vocational Congress 4. LORRAINE R. REYBURN “She was fairest of all ” Centralia, Mo. 1; Moberly, Mo. 2; Class Basketball 1-2-3; Glee Club 1-2; Class Vice-President 1; Class Secretary 2; Commercial Club 3-4; Ghosts of Hilo” 2; “Back to the Farm” 2; Scholarship Contest 3-4; Treasurer Student Association 4; Big Horn Staff 4; Big Horn Annual Staff 4; The Boomerang” 4. j I I !i h 11 h h h f I i [I 11 ; i I i h II 11 ■ • ! i ii : !1 !i ii I : ■ ■ : ' m I ••••§• •!•••••••!••§ • 0t90t0t990tttl900tttt90Ct00tt09ati9lt9te09(t9e9iS99ataata9ta9a0a0ea0aatlaa 0ea0eae aaattai9Cflfl0t9ai0tfatatlt9e1 FRANCES LOUISE EWING JVho can foretell for what high cause This darling of the Gods was bornf Glee Club 1-2-3-4; Yank! San” 1; Class Basketball 2-3: “Miss Caruther’s Return” 2; 4H Club Work 2; Ghosts of Hilo 3; Captain Applejack 3; The Whole Town's Talking” 3; Extemporaneous Speaking 2-4; Extemporaneous Essay Writing 4; So This is London 4: State Music Meet 4; The Gypsy Rover 4; Student Council 4; Big Horn Annual Staff 4; Mansions 3. HELEN LAWSON She was a phantom of delight Basketball 1-2-3-4; Class Vice-President 3: Student Council 3. BIG HORN CANYON BIG HORN RIVER IHIMIIHIIIIimMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.....1111111111111 ............................................................................................................................ iilllllililllllllillll.............mini.................................. IIHII........•iiiiiiiiiiiii Li qi.................................................................. Senior Class History As the snows deepened on the nearby mountains and the long night of ’24 approached, a band of enthusiastic Eskimos gathered at the Grand Igloo, Hardin High, to begin the journey over the Freshman trail to that most desirable trading post, “Graduation.” Tuttle and Russell, seasoned guides who knew the trail, led the company over the frozen tundras toward its destination. Winifred Sibley was elected to drive the lead team and Herma Logan was her assistant and relieved her when the trail was rough and difficult. Thora Nelson agreed to care for the finances of the journey. Many forms of amusement were entered into and among the foremost was basketball. Raymond Buzzetti showed his skill in this sport and played on the first team. The gentler arts were not neglected and Harvey Wilcutt and Donald Huffman furnished sweet music for the travelers. Nellie Benson brought honor to the group by placing third among the mighty speakers. Most of the members floundered through deep drifts of semester and final exams and were joyful to see the trading post, “Sophomore”, drawing near. As they descended into the pleasant valley where grass was turning green and eider ducks were nesting, the weary travelers were glad that the first lap of the journey was ended and that rest and recreation had come. Repairs were made, and when the warm sun showed himself less and less frequently, and the nights grew longer and longer, Russell and Winslow were eager to be on the way. Raymond Buzzetti managed the lead team and drove with a quick, sure lash. Eunice Campbell, with the intuition of a woman, offered advice and helped the driver. Jack Clifford agreed to hold the pocket-book and pay the bills. Time hung heavy on their hands, so the old sports and pastimes were resorted to once more. Raymond Buzzetti lost no skill in playing basketball. The women, not to be outdone by the stronger sex, also made good records in athletics. Odessa Redding and Cecelia Fischbach were on the girls’ first basketball team and the tribal girls placed first in the basketball tourney and a similar place on the track. The trail was monotonous and the dog teams slow, so Harvey and Donald continued to entertain the tribe with sweet music. Marian Brekke joined in this refined art and was considered best of all the pianists in that district of the north-land. The tribe paused with excitement and interest while Marian journeyed to Livingston to enter the state meet there. Nellie Benson and Herma Logan proved their skill in writing the language and their stories were sent to the far-off country of Bozeman. i Silver-tongued orators of the tribe, Cecil Gray, Lela Johnson and Ada Naylor overcame the tribe of ’29 in a battle of words concerning semester examinations. Herma Logan traveled to Missoula to enter the state declamatory contest and later she represented her tribe in the all-tribal drama, “Ice-Bound.” Practical arts were studied and cattle at Bozeman were well judged by Evan Gustafson. A terrible blizzard in the form of final exams, assaulted the tribe at this time and those who survived reached the halfway house, “Junior”, just as the caribou left the moss-dotted plains for higher and cooler regions. .....-....1 21....................................... M Senior Class History (Continued) While resting in the halfway house, furs and sleds were repaired and when the fierce ice bear had thickened his coat in preparation for the long winter, those of ’28 yearned for the trail. The faithful director, Russell, had for her companion once more, Tuttle, and with much enthusiasm the company began the last half of the journey to the famed trading post, “Graduation.” Donald Huffman, with Helen Lawson as assistant, took command of the foremost sled. Evan Gustafson checked the finances and Marian Brekke recorded the notes. At the grand festival, the mixer, the tribe of '28 was royally entertained and ate heartily of the walrus fat and duck feet provided by the other tribes of the Grand Igloo. The guide, Tuttle, was called to the West and the tribe waited until Styer came to take her place. By the time the long night had passed, with its storms and days of bitter cold, the tribe of ’28 was nearing the end of the journey. Raymond Buzzetti was a star basketball player and traveled to many villages and trading posts to exhibit his strength and skill. The women’s basketball team was made strong by the superior playing of Odessa Redding and Cecelia Fischbach. The boys won first place and the girls second, in their respective basketball tournaments. A thrilling drama, called “Captain Applejack”, was produced to amuse the various tribes. Thora Nelson, Donald Huffman, Ada Naylor, Jack Clifford, Frances Ewing, Maurice Colberg, Lela Johnson, Marian Brekke and Evan Gustafson played the leading parts in this play. To further improve their dramatic talent, Thora Nelson and Lela Johnson took part in the Little Theater contest at the Grand Village, Missoula. Smooth and persuasive speakers were not lacking; Cecil Gray was awarded fifth place in the extemporaneous speaking contest at Billings, and Nellie Benson took a longer trip to Missoula, where she competed in the state declamatory contest. Clever penmen were as numerous as the wolves in the roving packs, and to test her ability, Winifred Sibley fastened snowshoes securely and, with pen in hand, set off for the trading post, Bozeman, where she was recognized as the fifth essay writer in the fertile land of Montana. Nellie Benson worked hard and long and was awarded the Lincoln Essay medal for her efforts. At the annual festival given in honor of the departing tribe of ’27, the tribe of ’28 served the best food the land provided. Walrus steak, reindeer tea, fresh green moss, and frozen snow were eaten with relish. At the promenade, the gym of the Grand Igloo was beautifully decorated with fresh, sweet-smelling boughs of cedar and pine and a delightful time was had, dancing through the slowly falling snowflakes. When the cold wind of exams had passed and all had survived its blighting fierceness, and the sun crept back to the North and melted the ice from the streams and lakes, the tribe of ’27 challenged the tribe of ’28 to a tug-of-war. The tribe of ’28 arrived on the scene of battle in a body and cheered its champions on to victory as they dragged the members of ’27 through the icy waters. j [27] Senior Class History (Continued) From this height of success the totem poles of the trading post, “Senior”, could be seen and with heavy tread and thankful hearts the tribe pressed on to the village. During the pleasant summer days, snow shoes were made ready to fasten on impatient feet, harpoons, whips and harnesses were replaced and warm garments fashioned for this last lap of the journey was to be a strenuous one. Gerber and Baum undertook the task of finding the trail. The wise and capable musher, Cecil Gray, was assisted by the experienced driver, Eunice Campbell. Jack Clifford once more kept the silver and Odessa Redding typed the notes. “Mush! mush!” shouted Cecil, snapping the long lash, and the teams and sleds moved off with the joyful company shouting with delight. Maurice Colberg, a worthy man, was made president of the association of tribes. Lorraine Rcyburn was treasurer and Marian Brckke secretary of this organization. The all-tribal basketball team showed good judgment in choosing Raymond Buzzetti the captain. Maurice Colberg was a valuable member of this team. Cecelia Fischbach played on the all-tribal girl’s team, of which Odessa Redding was the capable captain. Long trips were made to distant posts. Odessa Redding, Ada Naylor, David Hannant, Richard Walker, Evan Gustafson and Cecil Gray attended the vocational congresses in the distant Bozeman. Dramatic talent was not lacking among the members of the tribe. Maurice Colberg, Frances Ewing, Cecil Gray and Odessa Redding played leading parts in the drama, “So This Is London.” A very humorous drama, “The Boomerang”, was presented by the company. David Hannant, Thora Nelson, Evan Gustafson, Eunice Campbell, Nellie Benson, Bud Brotherson, Lorraine Reyburn, Raymond Buzzetti and Marion Franklin acted with exceptional talent. The pageant, “The Gypsy Rover”, could not have been so successful, had it not been for Lela Johnson, Frances Ewing and Bud Brotherson. With keen wit and ready pen, Marian Brckke earned the Lincoln Essay medal and Lela Johnson, Frances Ewing, Audrey Schissler and Joyce Daniels sent essays to Bozeman to be judged. Cecil Gray was proclaimed the third speaker in the surrounding district and once more journeyed to Billings. Beautiful music was desired by all the tribe and this Marian Brckke supplied by her exceptional musical talent. Sweet voices were numerous and so entertaining that Frances Ewing, Maurice Colberg and Iola Moore departed for the capital village of Helena to compete for state honors there. June McAllister helped furnish Eskimo jazz, after all basketball games, for the merrymakers. There was great rejoicing in the weary company a few days later when the smokes of “Graduation” appeared on the horizon. The tribe donned caps and gowns and a more worthy or loyal tribe never entered the gates of the famed village, “Graduation.” Halls IIIHtlMMHUMtlt (This essay, with four others, was submitted to the State Extemporaneous Essay Contest at Bozeman. It placed tenth from a field of several hundred.) Great, dim corridors—echoing and re-echoing the hundreds of footsteps— long since gone. They are all gone but one can still hear those memorable sounds, passing down the halls, getting farther and farther away, until they die out, leaving only an echo. A faint echo, it is true, but sufficiently strong to guide and strengthen the lives of the makers of those footsteps. In the minds of the traversers of these halls, lives their memory, what they meant, and their destination. It would be a truly wonderful thing if halls like these could go on and on, not stopping at the old brown stone door, but stretching away over the long years of people’s lives, guiding them to their final destination. This magnificent old building, the St. Augustine School for Boys, was about to be torn down, and in its place was to be built a modern public grade school. I, a member of the firm that was contracting for the destruction of one of my dearest and oldest memories, had come away from the directors’ meeting with their unfeeling criticisms still ringing in my ears. “Too dim,” “too high ceilings” and “too much like a cathedral,” seemed to me as sacrilegious and irreverent. But such is the unreasonableness of minds that hold a dearer memory than other minds! I came out to the school, and standing before it I visualized it as of old. I could see boys coming out of the old brown stone door, caps in hand, and of a quiet bearing. There was always something on each boy’s face that bespoke of the sanctity of that school, and what it meant to each of them. Not a sectional school, not one condemning noise, nor fun, nor any natural elements of boys’ lives, but one that possessed such an uplifting influence, that it seemed that the basis of the school was not only truth, loyalty and allegiance, but its very construction contributed toward an atmosphere of integrity and honor. As I stood there, seeing it all, and feeling it, too, a new vision arose. I saw a glaring, red brick building, fairly bristling with newness and modernity, with a business-like and matter-of-fact aspect I saw issuing forth, a stream of boys and girls, emitting raucous cries, hoydenish yells, running, slamming, shouting. I saw the beautiful old trees gone, and the entire yard covered with playground equipment, and my mind revolted. It is odd, but natural, that the mind, in revolt against a foreseen change, should aggregate and view in worse aspects, the future scene. I then entered the old building itself, being possessed of the keys. An even stronger hold was taken on me when I found myself in the old familiar haunts. The schoolroom gave me some rather humorous remembrances, as class rooms are apt to do. I visited them all, connecting each one with persons dear to me. I finished my tour of the rooms, and passing down the stair, started down the main corridor. It was nearing dusk, and the shadows fell long on the floor. Everything was musty and empty looking, but forceful in memory. I could see the Master of the School, his footsteps slow and even, his bearing and manner kindly and impressive. I stood there, breathless and enthralled, until the vision passed. I started again down the dim hall, but all manner of thoughts assailed me. But I knew it was impossible to keep the building for the sake of sentiment. I held one great consolation, my memory of it, along with others dear to me. And, among those memories, in the long years to come, when the building holding the dearest memories of my youth and its old associations with dear friends, is gone, I will still be able to hear footsteps, echoing and re-echoing down the dim old halls, and imagine it was the olden days, when, in reality, it will only be the footsteps of Time! Joyce Daniels. If Frank became bashful, And Donald was quite bold, And Margaret Ping used slang, Would our class still be pure gold? If Billy didn’t laugh Or if Louis didn’t frown If Clara didn’t talk, Would it be a great “come-down” ? If Bill Watt danced the Charleston, Or Lenora didn’t smile, If Helen hadn’t curly hair, Would our class be worth while ? If Dorothy lost the money, That the Junior class has made, If LuVerne turned down Bud, Would our reputation fade? If Lillian didn’t tease Beulah, Or Hazel jilted Juell, Or Evelyn didn’t primp so much, Why should we come to school ? If Marion ever got angry Or Lavona couldn’t speak, If Wayne ever got quite tall, Would they call our class a freak ? If Helen didn’t turn around, Whenever Gerold did pass, If Henry Jensen got quite fat, What’d happen to our class? If Sarah never had her Spanish, Or Evelyn no beau; If Marie bobbed her hair, Where would the others go? If Marjorie never rode in Fords, Or Wallace didn’t stop; If Robert didn’t knock one down, Would we still be on top? If Juniors didn’t run the school Or win the tug-’o-war; If they didn’t give a prom, What are the Juniors for? IIHHMHMMHMMMIIIMIIIHMMIHMH !'! hi ■ : . E : I : hi hi !11 ' in i'i ei- II i! CLASS OF Donald Asbury, President LuVerne Ford, Secretary Henry Jensen, Vice-President Dorothy Fischbach, Treasurer Miss Comstock, Sponsor Mr. Baldwin, Sponsor Class Motto: Kind Thoughts and Kind Deeds Go Hand in Hand’ Class Colors: Purple and White Class Flower: Wisteria Louella Anderson Donald Asbury Russell Atkins Louise Benson Marjorie Brotherson Francis Crosby Evelyn Dyvig K'Frank Ewing Dorothy Fischbach Voarold Fish LuVerne Ford James Franklin Louis Funston ROLL Beulah Gilbert Mabel Graf Stanley Herman Clara Hershberger Hazel Hussey Helen Krone Henry Jensen Alpha Jones Evelyn Lewis Wayne Linthacum neien Miner Lillian Miller Mary Olenik Juell Ottun Margaret Ping Marian Plummer Wallace Quest Marie Reichel Lenora Reno , Robert Scanlon Sarah Schilreff Margaret Sullivan Natalie Turner William Watt m i M ii! ■ ill i .1 tlMMIIIMMIHMI Junior Class History In September, 1924, a band of cowboys and cowgirls galloped up to Hardin High. They had come resolved to lasso every bit of knowledge possible. The first year they spent on the range, “Eighth Grade.” At the first roundup, held with the big boss, Miss O’Hara, Margaret Ping was chosen foreman; LuVerne Ford, straw-boss; and Dorr Huffman, bookkeeper. The only feat worthy of note was the capture of third prize in the American Legion Essay contest, by Violet Mayo. They spent the year getting acquainted with their duties, and in June, disbanded for the summer. As September, 1925, drew near, the cowboys remembered how much they had enjoyed H. H. S. and decided to return. There they found their new bosses to be Miss Tuttle and Mr. Denman and they were taken to the range “Freshman.” Dorr Huffman was chosen foreman; Louis Funston, straw-boss; Ruth Roberts, Bookkeeper; and Doris Vickers, treasurer. One of the gang, Margaret Sullivan, lassoed and drew the honor-of-winning-the-Lincoln-essay-medal. Their smallest cowboy, Wayne Linthicum, represented them in the all-high play. They were guests of honor at a big rodeo, given by the other ranches, because they had won the Big Horn subscription contest. Not long afterward they found that they had become too experienced to remain on the “Freshman” range, so they went to report to the bosses, taking a rest meanwhile. 1926 found the old band ready with fresh horses—and brains—to enter the larger range, “Sophomore.” They found that their new bosses were Miss Freese and Mr. Ostergren. They held a roundup and elected Louis Funston, foreman: Dorr Huffman, straw-boss; Evelyn Lewis, bookkeeper; and Doris Vickers, treasurer. The cowgirls distinguished themselves by winning first place in the basketball and baseball tournaments. Gerold Fish, Doris Vickers and Dorr Huffman represented them in “The Whole Town’s Talking.” Not long afterward, summer came, and it was time for labor to cease. When the gate of the ranch of Hardin high opened in 1927, the same band of cowboys galloped in. They had proved so efficient in their work the preceding years that the new bosses, Miss Comstock and Mr. Baldwin, announced that they were to go to the large range, “Junior.” This year, Donald Asbury was chosen foreman; Henry Jensen, straw-boss; LuVerne Ford, bookkeeper; and Dorothy Fischbach, treasurer. The first honor lassoed was the highly hearlded Junior play, “The Charm School.” One cowboy, Francis Crosby, showed his ability as a marksman by shooting third place in the extemporaneous speaking contest. Stanley Herman represented them in “So This Is London.” A successful year was closed with a big rodeo in honor of the Seniors. [35] FAVORITE SONGS “Breezin’ Along” by June McAllister. “Where’d You Get Those Eyes?” by Lorraine Reyburn. “Baby Face” by Mary McDonald. “Among My Souvenirs” by Miss O’Hara. “Freshie” by Arnold Corkins. “I Wonder How I Look When I’m Asleep?” by Jack Riggs. “Get Away, Old Man, Get Away!” by Nellie Benson. “Handsomest Girl In Town” by Audrey Schissler. “ It Made You Happy When You Made Me Cry” by LuVerne Ford. “Prisoner’s Song” by Louis Funston. “When My Shoes Wear Out From Walking, I’ll Be On My Feet Again” by Mr. Thompson. “In My Gondola” by Rudolph Komrs. “Someday, Sweetheart” by Thora Nelson. “Down On the Farm” by Kenneth Campbell. “They Go Wild, Simply Wild Over Me” by Jack Clifford. “I’m Going to Dance With the Guy What Brung Me” by Joyce Daniels. “Down By the Winegar Woiks” by Maurice Colberg. “I’m Afraid You Sing That Song to Somebody Else” by Marian Brekke. “Me and My Shadow” by Thompson. “I Can’t Forget You” by Eunice Campbell. “Gorgeous” by Lela Johnson. “It All Depends On You” by Natalie Turner. “Blue Heaven” by Ruth Miller. “All Alone” by Helen Krone. “I’m Sittin’ On Top o’ the World” by Ray Buzzetti. “Roll ’em, Girls, Roll ’em” by Minnie Bailey. “It’s a Million to One I’m In Love” by Vanderburgh. “Why Did I Kiss That Girl?” by Herbert Dunham. “There’s Something Nice About Everyone” by Josephine Ebeling. “Somebody Stole My Gal” by Gerold Fish. “Highways Are Happy Ways” by Odessa Redding. “Bearcat Stomp” by Bud Brotherson. “Looking at the World Through Rose Colored Glasses” by Rubie Barnes. “She Knows Her Onions” by Miss Comstock. “Sleepy Time Gal” by June McAllister. “Do You Believe In Dreams?” by Marion Franklin. “After I’ve Called You Sweetheart, How Can I Call You Friend?” by Cecil Gray. “Fifty Million Freshmen Can’t Be Wrong” by Freshman Class. “When Day Is Done” by Mr. Gerber. “The Little Red Schoolhouse” by Mr. Ford. “If I Had a Boy Friend” by Lenora Reno. “Schoolday Sweethearts” by Helen Lawson. “Whose Who Are You?” by Clem Owen. “Sing Me a Baby Song” by Frances Ewing. “Just Another Day” by Hardin High School. OH W. IT V.OOV S Qe o Pot us a v aw- vec W MHKt TL' i ; 1 ,V .Vt '1 . ■ j .-• ••• •'• . I ,i • .'• t ( mimiT-T......-............................ him............................................... MMMMMiiMHiiii ii iiiiiiiiHiiiiimiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiHMMiiiM«Hi M«iimMiiiiMM miiiiiii« Mi« « g IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIHMMIMtMIIMMIIIIIMIIIMMIMMMIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIMMIIMIMIIIHMIIIIMMMIMIIIIIIHIII MIIIHIIIIIM MIMMMIMMIHIMIMIMMIIMMII IMMMIMHMMIIII MMIIIMMHIIMmiMIHHimmHIIIIMIMHMMIMMMIHMMIMMM Sophomore Class Poem The road to knowledge is long and hard, And steep are the hills we must climb. And ever bravely must struggle, he. Who would reach the heights sublime. There are lessons to learn from books we read, There are rules which we must obey; We must learn to put off until tomorrow Only tasks which we can’t do today. Not only from books are the lessons we learn, As our journey to knowledge proceeds, But as elbows we rub with those round about, We learn far greater lessons than these. For lessons of patience, endurance and faith Are of greater value by far, and Lessons of honesty, goodness, and truth Determine whatever we are. And so with our wagon hitched to a star May we struggle along wjth the rest Of our fellow classmates, and along all the way Gather only those things that are best. J.HL IIIIIIIIIMMIMMIMMIIIIMMIMMMIMIIIIIMIIMIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIMMMIMHIIIHMMIMMIMMIHIHMIlllMIMIIIHIIIIIMMIIMMMIIMIIIIIIIIMMMlimMIHIIMIMIMMIIlll. CLASS OF 1930 Laurence Labbitt, President Mary McDonald, Secretary Helen Lewis, Vice-President William Johnson, Treasurer Miss Crews, Sponsor Mr. Vanderburgh, Sponsor Class Motto: “Don't Put Off for Tomorrow IVhat You Can Do Today Class Colors: Navy Blue and White Class Flower: Carnation Dorothy Allen Frieda Beck Grace Burton Lena Clark Dorothy Connor Helen Corkins Herbert Dunham Berkely Dyvig Ruby Graf Wranda Grove Thomas Ferguson Helen Ford Merle Hanes Grace Helwich ROLL William Johnson Jennie Kifer Kdna Komrs Hazel Kobald Laurence Labbitt Wallace Larkey Cecelia Larkin Helen Lewis Galen Naylor Harriette McAllister Mary McDonald Lydia Mehling Lois Miller Ruth Miller Carl Moore Mildred Newhauser John Olenik Sadie Ping Treva Rhinehart Jack Riggs Edell Riggs Blanche Smith George Sullivan Max Thompson Hazel Turner Mildred Trussed Kendall Wolcott S IINMIIIIMIIIIIMIII......Hill iiiiiiiiiit iiiim tut.........•••mi J22L i , I 2 Mi Mi M! |){ hi i i I v | i I i Ml hi = i nlll••ll••llllltl•••lll•l•lllllllll■•lllllltlll•l•llll•ll■ Hill ll Mlllllll ..................... uiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiMWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimmiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiiiiiiii Sophotnore Class History The old sailor eyed me queerly for a few moments, when I asked him to tell me the story of the blue and white ship that lay in the harbor. This ship was a beautiful schooner and was named, “Sophomore.” “The Sophomore,” began the old sailor, “is the best ship I have ever seen, and, I might add, I have seen a good many ships. The best thing about her is that she improves with use and is very strongly built. “In the year 1925, Mr. Harris and Miss O’Hara contracted to build her for a crew of boys and girls who had come from the seventh grade of the Navigation School. The ship was nearly a year in the making, and during that time the members of the crew were making ready for their troublesome voyage. “When September, 1926, rolled around, it found the crew on board their sturdy blue and white ship, all ready to leave the harbor for the Port of Education. The ship’s officers were Ruth Miller, captain; Bill Johnson, first mate; Treva Rhinehart, keeper of the log, and Tom Ferguson, ship’s agent and buyer. On the first voyage, Mr. Ferris and Miss Johnson were at the helm, and were very good sailors and did their duties well. “The voyage was very much of a success, and the members of the crew learned readily. “Neither Miss Johnson nor Mr. Ferris were coming back for another voyage, so the crew was very disappointed and had to choose two new skippers for the next voyage. “In September, 1928, after a three months leave of absence, most of the crew reported to the ship where they met their two skippers, Mr. Vanderburgh and Miss Styer. The crew chose Laurence Labbitt, captain; Helen Lewis, first mate; Mary McDonald, keeper of the log; and Bill Johnson, ship’s agent and buyer. “The crew, as a whole, did its duty well, and when the rocks of examinations loomed up, the ship was but little hurt, although a few unworthy seamen were stranded. These were heard to say, ‘This is a lesson to us. If we ever get on another ship we’ll tend strictly to business.’ “Immediately after the scare of the rocks, one of the masters, Miss Styer, fell overboard and couldn’t be found, though we heard later that she had been picked up by the steamer, Minneapolis. The crew, therefore, found another able sailor, M iss Martha Crews; she seemed to bring new life to the ship. She was an inspiring leader, and did everything she could for the glory of the Sophomore. “In January, the Sophomore met the Freshman, a good ship with a good crew. The two crews decided to throw in and have a party. It was a very good party and the time was spent in dancing, playing games and eating. The two ships set sail immediately after the party and were well on their way by dawn. “In the shipyard band, our crew was well represented by Max Thompson, Berkely Dyvig, Cornelius Roush, George Sullivan, Tom Ferguson, Bill Johnson and Laurence Labbitt. “The members of the crew in the Harbor Boys’ Glee Club were Carl Moore, Bill Johnson, Tom Ferguson and Laurence Labbitt; and in the Girls’ Glee Club were Ruth Miller, Edna Komrs, Helen Corkins, Dorothy Connor, Helen Lewis, Lena Clark, Mildred Trussell, Blanche Smith, Sadie Ping, Harriette McAllister, Hazel Turner and Treva Rhinehart. “In shipyard athletics, our people were also well represented. Jack Riggs made the first basketball team, and Carl Moore, Kendall Wolcott, Herbert Dunham and Laurence Labbitt were on the second team. Three girls of our crew made the first twelve in basketball, Ruth Miller, Ruby Graf and Grace Burton. Many of our crew took part in the Sailor’s Annual Outdoor Meet, where they showed up well in the track and field athletics. “Before we knew it, June was here, and the ship was anchored. When the seamen’s examinations were over, everyone left the ship until next September, when they will again set sail.” [40] .......................................................................... Hill.................... .............. nil................ What would happen IF___ Cecil Gray lost his voice? Hud Brotherson couldn’t dance? Jack Riggs had a pointed nose? Virginia Kelley was a timid country girl? Lenora Reno couldn’t suck her thumb? Thompson should sprain his ankle? June McAllister lost her lipstick? Vanderburgh was yell leader? Garold Fish was exempt? Herbert Dunham lost his gum? Thora Nelson got tall? Josephine Olenik got Marian Brekke’s giggles? Margaret Ping flunked? The faculty resigned ? Eunice Campbell lost her temper? Joyce Daniels quit dancing? David Hannant agreed with the Annual Staff? Juell and Hazel broke up? Nellie Benson used black ink? Frank Ewing and Wayne Linthacum grew up? Lorraine Reyburn got short ? Marion Franklin stopped rushing the girls? Odessa Redding didn’t have dimples? Cecelia Fischbach stopped studying? Frances Ewing couldn’t sing? Maurice Colberg couldn’t grin? Ray Buzzetti got excited ? Jack Clifford didn’t blush ? Eighth grade girls didn’t flirt with senior boys? Ruby Barnes got downhearted ? All the seniors agreed ? Hardin High wasn’t the best in the state? [42] iltllllllllt11111111111111111111111111II1111111111111 m mm ' , dOMS -uc'f’U 3S MV ,V. iflf U r, iyjoiN« j kik$Jt KinACd A Freshman’s Experience on the Crow Bus “I wish he’d hurry up and come, if he’s coming.” “If he doesn’t come pretty soon, I’m going home and go to bed again.” “Boy! I wish he’d decide it was too cold to come. I’m sleepy.” A noise of someone running down stairs is heard. “Is it coming?” “Oh, where’s my lunch can?” “What did I do with my books?” The bus is in and we are all running out to the road. The boys always get there first. “Save me a seat, Rudy 1” “Save me one, too!” “Hey, Bill! Save me a seat by the heater!” “I’ll be doing good if I save myself one.” “Oh, hurry up. Get out the back door.” A great noise as the little kids start to get out and we pile in. “Oh, Lois! Why didn’t you save me a seat ?” “Well, 1 tried to, but you wouldn’t hurry.” “Grove, move over. You’re sure stubborn.” “I’ll freeze back here.” And so after much ado we get started. As we go up the street past the Carter home, the driver toots the horn. Adrian comes running out, his overcoat over one arm, his cap and necktie in his other hand, and a portion of his breakfast smeared over his face. As he gets up and finds no seat, he flops down on Evelyn’s lap. “Oh, be your age!” “Hey, Pinky! Here’s a seat.” “Edna, lemme use your comb.” Adrian finally gets settled and all goes well for a while. The conversation then runs something like this: “Oh, William, stop that!” “Say, Jennie, have you got your French?” “No, have you?’ ’ “Nope.” “I have. You can copy it but be sure to give it back before class.” “Evelyn!” “Oh, keep still!” “Can 1 use your compact?” “Oh, close your mouth, Bill. It’s always open.” “Say, dingleberries, your’s is open as much as anyone elsess.” “Old “Calamity Jane” over there, is getting pretty hot.” When the “old woman” gets in, there is another hubbub. “Well, I guess you’ll have to stand up this morning, Alex.” “Move up there, sawed-off.” “I can’t move any farther.” “Move up, Grove.” “Oh, he can’t. He’s saving a seat for Sarah.” This is just a sample. The closer we get to Hardin, the worse it becomes. And such is life—on the Crow bus. MIHHIHHHmiMIIMMHHMItMHHHHHHHHMMHIItim I IIIMIMMIMMIIMMIIIIMIIIfttMMIMIIMMMMMMMMHnmMMMMMIMMIIimMIIMMMIMmmifllMIIMIlMIMMMMMMMMMMmiMMimtIIIII MMIMIIIMMfIMIIfrtflll • MHHMHHHMtHimHHHMHmitMMHHlMHIH I ij ! 11 Mi m ■ ! : I CLASS OF 1931 Robert Strand, President Lucille Colberg, Secretary Ruth Robertson, Vice-President Virginia Kelley, Treasurer Mrs. Harris, Sponsor Mr. Thompson, Sponsor Class Motto: Good Quality Needs No Advertising Class Colors: Old Rose and Silver Class Flower: Rose ROLL Mary Elizabeth Asbury Eva Grove Frances Olenik Schirm Beall Sarah Hardt Clem Owen Alberta Brotherson Helen Hardy Edmond Powers Bertha Brown William Hardy Ethel Quilling Helen Bullis Marie Hennessey Amelia Reichel Arlington Bunston Howard Hussey Mildred Riggs Kenneth Campbell Pauline Kanzler Mildred Robertson Hazel Carper Virginia Kelley Ruth Robertson Adrian Carter Clifford Kerrick Cornelius Roush Nelson Cline Ivan King Victor Schafer Lucille Colberg Henry Kray Ethel Shandy Jennie Connor Rosalind Landon Kenneth Skrukrud Arnold Corkins Henry Michael Alexander Spencer Armstrong Corwin John Mielke Grover Stewart Herbert Crosby Severo Montez Robert Strand Alex Deines Lois Naylor Harriet Taylor Louise Ferguson Frances Nelson Lydia Yerger Olive Gossett Amber Newell Marjorie Ellen Graham Jack Newell IIIttlllllMtUIIItttM ....USL 1 ill III i 11 Freshman Class History September sixth, 1927, fifty-six freshmen began a journey to Wisdom in the “Spirit of H. H. S.” They had recently completed a trial flight and so, determined to make a brilliant “take off.” Accordingly Robert Strand was elected chief pilot; Kenneth Skrukrud, assistant pilot; Lucille Colberg, keeper of the log; and Virginia Kelley, chancellor of the exchequer. Miss Mary Olive Crum and Mr. Murche A. Thompson backed the project. The flying was slow, due to low visibility, and the first landing was made in October on Mixer Field. Upon landing their fingers were so numb from cold and their tongues so swollen from thirst that they carried out a deaf and dumb debate for the spectators’ benefit. The flight was resumed but a severe storm called “six weeks exams,” forced them to land. The keeper of the field informed them that these storms were periodical and that the best way to combat them would be to keep the ice scraped from the wings of the plane—thus enabling them to rise above the disturbance. December 22 they landed at the “Christmas Party” fieid. Four other planes landed there that day. Santa distributed gifts to all the flyers, after which they did setting-up exercises about the Christmas tree. The worst storm of the year, semester exams, was encountered in January and lasted three days. Most of them tied parachutes to their backs and jumped for their lives. This enabled the few who stuck with the ship to survive. When the ship landed, Ruth Robertson, Susie Thompson, Frances Nelson, Harriette Taylor, Virginia Kelley and Mildred Robertson crawled out without a scratch. Of the number who used parachutes, Marjorie Ellen Graham and Lois Naylor escaped with slight bruises. The remainder were more or less injured, several quite severely. Most of the boys took turns at the controls, and Kenneth Campbell, Arnold Corkins and Grover Stewart guided the plane to the basketball tournament. Clem Owen tried the same stunt but was forced to jump. Upon sighting the plane, Sophomore, they nose-dived into a party with them. They frolicked upon the landing field until their fuel supply was replenished. At this stage of the journey, the assistant pilot took off in another plane named Polytechnic, and Ruth Robertson was assigned to the assistant pilotship. A landing was made June 1 on the field known as “Summer Vacation.” They plan to stay three months, spending the time overhauling the plane for the resumption of the flight in September. [47] ......Ill.mill.......................... mil........................................................................... I Hi (getting Your Slip Signed i When this strict new law was made, Many boys had to raise their grade. When the slips came to Miss Crum, She would say, “You’re doing bum.” Mr. Vanderburgh would say, “I cannot sign your slip today.” Mr. Baldwin would always say, “You’ve got to work hard if you’re going to play.’ Mr. Thompson would do what he could, That’s what all the teachers should. Mr. Gerber’s name, is found On every slip that is passed around. And when each one is signed just right, Every boy’s face grows gay and bright. The moral is this: if your slip is signed, Your work must be of the very best kind. Mr. Thompson is my teacher, I shall not pass; He maketh me read long references; He tormenteth me with questions: In the presence of my classmates, He bawleth me out completely; He maketh me to tear my hair in agony; My mind coveteth murder; My notebook runneth over; Surely misery and horror shall follow Me all the days of my life, And I shall dwell in the history room Of the High School forever. [48] — :Cx vt • -Ml ftfdgjrj? shne v « • p. W ' ill II f Ml III M| ) 1 i 1 11 11 11 $ j jj if = § I 11 = ■ § i= i E S I! 11 i ■ | I I I . i i if CX4SS OF 1932 Lloyd Huss, President Mary Jake Buzzetti, Vice-President Melvin Harris, Secretary LaVerna Tanner, Treasurer Miss O’Hara, Sponsor Class Motto: “Be Sharp, Be Natural, But Never Be Flat” Class Colors: Purple and Old Gold Class Flower: Forget-me-not ! 11 Mi Ml II i III fif z z ) i III ill ! I! ill i'i IN i'i in III i: i i = : II Gail Baker Maxine Baker Gerald Benson Flora Bishop Mike Blackhair Horace Bunston Nina Burton Ivan Butler Mary Jane Buzzetti Wilfrid Cole Keith Cook Mary Cooley Kathryn Corwin Ella Mae Davis Frank Dornberger Dorothea Eder Antony Ferguson ROLL Ralph Ferguson Clifford Fontaine Helen Franklin Eleanor Graf Melvin Harris Henry Heagel Daisy Humphrey Lloyd Hubs Frances James Marie Jensen Claribel Johnson John Kifer Bernard Kray Marjorie Krone LaVaune Larsen Ellsworth Littlelight Maxine McDowell Ardelia Melville Richard Mielke Harry Miller Victor Miller Marcella Mitchell Reinholt Mohland Isabell Newell George Newman Fern Owen Elizabeth Reichert Genevieve Richard Hilda Schafer John Schilreff Russell Swaby LaVerna Tanner James Torske M 'I - = ill = I ll'll l l' l''l l 'l MIIIIMHniinillMIIIIIHIMInlllllUIIIIII||inill|IMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMMMIIIMIiniMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII|lllllllnil'lllllinilllllllll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIinilllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIUI g lllll ll l IIIMIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIHIIIMI|||||||l||l|l|ll|||llll||||llll|||||lll|||||MI||||||l|||||||l|||M|tt|||||||lf||||lll||||||||||||||||||||||l||||||ll|||||||l||||||l||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l|||||M|||||IMlMIHIMni EIGHTH GRADE CLASS HISTORY The Prospectors” Word was received that all who desired the wealth of a higher learning could find it at the Mine of Knowledge. Plans were made in preparation for the journey to this mine by forty-seven very enthusiastic young prospectors. Tools were gathered together, and carefully put away until September sixth, for that was the day that all would go in quest of something richer than gold, something which, once acquired, could not be taken away. They had spent seven years in training for just such an adventure and most of them were well prepared for the expedition. September sixth found the prospectors journeying toward the mine, and, as they made their way into its interior, they were filled with awe, upon seeing what hard digging would have to be done. Miss O’Hara was the geologist who was to help the prospectors find the choicest bits of wealth, and Lloyd Huss was to be the mining engineer. Sometimes the miners became tired and worn from the steady work, for it was a hard task to dig through the first layer of stone, called “six weeks tests,” but most of them went through triumphantly. They knew, though, that before they reached the wealth which they sought there would be harder work than this. Tools would need repairing, many times. However, they found some places where digging wasn’t so hard, especially at the mixer and at the prospectors’ party, where work was forgotten, and all joined in the good time. Lloyd Huss, Mike Black Hair, Ralph Ferguson and Gerald Benson found something called “good sportmanship” in the gymnasium when they were filling baskets, and this promises to be something of great value to them during the rest of the prospecting, as well as all through life. The rocky route that led to semester exams, was most tedious and some were slightly bruised, but ahead they could see a greater wealth if the instruments of learning were made a little sharper. Several of the prospectors, by their diligence, received a well earned rest at this time and determined to begin the second semester with a keener zest than ever. June found these young knowledge seekers happy in the wealth they had found, and after a vacation of fun they will return to the mine to search for truth, confident that they will find in the mine, that which makes life happy and worthwhile. [52] Iw 1 C «ou - © IN Ttf t ti9tN E5 '‘-j Wv 'W , £ yooc cq« oo o cP.-) f tNv°NT7 v w17r M5.es po«t«v - ' (noO Cwt CRNT«fF f C 'T' -V .TTXf t° iVw q on ct r •'v J iT f PH£. nC.VTiN(, vv.cu _tOMC. TO oqot, v A S Conneac fli Ctoe jvfc Tx£.Rf?l _ Student Council The following officers were elected at the beginning of the school year to direct the activities of the Student Council: Maurice Colberg, President; Evelyn Lewis, Vice-President; Marian Brekke, Secretary; Lorraine Reyburn, Treasurer. 'Hie other members of the Council are as follows: Cecil Gray, Donald As-bury, Laurence Labbitt, Robert Strand, Lloyd Huss, David Hannant, Nellie Benson, Evan Gustafson, Carl Moore, Frances Ewing, Jack Clifford, Ray Buzzetti, Odessa Redding, lola Moore and Mr. Gerber. Plans were begun early to revise our constitution, and this was done. VVe now have the new one adopted. Revision had been started for some years but was never finished until this year. The Student Council promotes the general welfare of the school, acts as a medium between the faculty and the students, and promotes general self-government in the school. The other students who have had the honor of the president’s position in former years are: Verne Robinson, Arthur Gladden, Neil Janney, John Rankin, Dwight Ferguson and Earl Watts. Ill H £m 1X Big Horn Annual Staff Editor-in-Chief -....................... .. Nellie Benson Associate Editor Evan Gustafson Business Manager ....... Jack Clifford Assistant Business Manager .... Odessa Redding Literary Editor...............................Joyce Daniels Assistant Literary Editor......Marian Brekke Art Editor - - Lorraine Reyburn Assistant Art Editor.........................Frances Ewing Sponsor...................................Raymond A. Gerber Commercial Club Jack Clifford, President Louis Funston, Pice-President David Hannant, Treasurer Odessa Redding, Secretary Directors: Eunice Campbell, Ada Naylor, Evelyn Lewis, Margaret Sullivan, Ray Buzzetti, Jack Riggs, Frank Ewing, Donald Asbury Maude O’Hara, Sponsor All students taking courses in typewriting, commercial arithmetic, bookkeeping and shorthand are members of the Commercial Club. The Students’ Store is managed by the officers of the club. School supplies were sold at regular prices and profits went to the Students’ Association. A branch store is maintained at the grade school building. The grade school store is managed by grade students. Profits made go into the students’ activity fund. riBig Horn Paper Staff Editor-in-Chief -Associate Editor News Editor -Humor and Feature Editor Secretary .... Sports Editor -Business Manager David Hannant Evan Gustafson Dorothy Fischbach Nellie Benson Lorraine Reyburn Ray Buzzetti Jack Clifford Rudolph Komrs Richard Walker Evelyn Dyvig George Miller Printers Sponsors Mary Olive Crum, Faye Taber Harris Home Economics Hardin High School offers a two-year course of instruction in cooking, sewing and household management with a view to better prepare girls in taking their places in a community as successful home makers. Realizing that home making is the most important feature of the world’s business, because of the relation of the home to civic problems, every effort is exerted to make this department actively function in the lives of our girls. Miss Marie Comstock, Supervisor Burton, Grace Carper, Hazel Clark, Lena Ford, Helen Graf, Ruby Hanes, Merle Hardt, Sarah Hennessy, Marie Jorge, Edna Kanzler, Pauline Mehling. Lydia Miller, Lois Newell, Amber Quiling, Ethel Reno, Lenora Riggs Edell Riggs, Mildred Shandy, Ethel Smith, Blanche Yerger, Lydia Helwich, Grace Allen. Dolah Allen, Dorothy Beck, Frieda Brotherson, Marjorie Corkins, Helen Dyvig, Evelyn Grove, Ruth Fischbach, Cecelia Grove, Wanda Larkin, Cecelia Miller, Helen Miller, Lillian Newhauser, Mildred Olenik, Mary Ping, Sadie Turner, Hazel Scott, Julia Bailey, Minnie SCHOLARSHIP CONTEST The Third Interscholastic District Scholarship Contest was held at Hardin April 14. Lodge Grass, Custer, Huntley Project and Hardin high schools participated and there were approximately ninety contestants. The purpose of the scholarship contest is to focus attention toward and stimulate interest in the primary function of our school system-scholarship. The following students from Hardin participated in the contest: Iola Moore, Ada Naylor, Marian Brekke, Evan Gustafson, Carl Moore, Margaret Ping, Maurice Colberg, Max Thompson, Mildred Trussed, Ruth Robertson, Susie Thompson, Arlington Bunston, Harriet Taylor, Virginia Kelley, Francis Crosby, Donald Asbury, Nellie Benson, Galen Naylor, Berkely Dyvig, Dorothy Fischbach, Josephine Olenik, Lois Naylor, Armstrong Corwin, Odessa Redding, Cecil Gray, Margaret Sullivan, Lu Verne Ford, Lorraine Reyburn, Josephine Ebeling, Alexander Spencer and Robert Strand. Helen Dill of Lodge Grass won high individual point honors and Evan Gustafson of Hardin won second individual honors. Hardin took first place in total points, Lodge Grass, second; Huntley Project, third, and, Custer, fourth. Students who won first place in the district events are eligible to compete in the state contest at Bozeman. STATE INTERSCHOLASTIC ESSAY Ada Naylor’s essay, “One Significant Activity of My Community,” was selected as the best paper submitted and was sent to the State Interscholastic Essay Contest at Montana State University. STATE EXTEMPORANEOUS WRITING The students of H. H. S. were very enthusiastic about extemporaneous writing, over thirty trying out. Essays written by Lela Johnson, Frances Ewing, Audrey Schissler, Frank Ewing and Joyce Daniels, were selected and sent to the state contest at Bozeman. Joyce’s essay ranked tenth from a field of several hundred. LINCOLN ESSAY Each year the Illinois Watch Company offers a bronze medal to the writer of the best essay concerning the life and lasting greatness of Abraham Lincoln. The medal was won this year by Marian Brekke. Margaret Ping won second place. EXTEMPORANEOUS SPEAKING Cecil Gray won the school contest and in the district meet at Billings, won third place. Cecil spoke upon the proposed amendment for the creation of a Secretary of Education in the President’s Cabinet. EXTEMPORANEOUS READING Extemporaneous reading made its appearance this year as a state contest replacing the declamatory contest of former years. Over thirty students have signed for the preliminary tryouts and much outside interest is being shown in the project. ORATORICAL CONTEST Hardin High School entered the National Oratorical Contest held this year under the auspices of the Associated Press of America. The subject concerned the formation and present significance of the U. S. Constitution. Three students competed in the preliminary. Evelyn Dyvig was chosen to represent us at the district contest at Billings where she -was awarded third place. Junior-Senior Banquet and Prom The guests at the banquet, when they stepped into the gymnasium at the appointed hour on May seventeenth, found themselves suddenly transported across the sea. They were in the land of tea and roses—old Japan. Twining in and out of the lattice, of which the pagoda was made, were twisteria vines, their large purple blossoms hanging low over the heads of the assembled guests. The mellow glow of the lanterns and the scent of burning incense cast a charm over the scene. The banquet tables were set in a hollow square, surrounding a tiny Japanese garden. The little bridge over the pond, the gravel paths, and the cherry trees created a setting for the dance of eight tiny Japanese maidens, which was given between courses. The banquet was served by Japanese girls dressed in kimonas of purple and gold. After a four-course dinner, the guests lingered over their teacups, listening to some of the members of the group, who talked in true Oriental style. Happy that they were to come the following evening, the guests left the banquet. “East” met “West” the next evening when the Juniors and their guests invaded the pagoda a second time, in decidedly American costumes. The banquet tables had been removed and the pagoda was transformed into a ball room and tea room. In the latter, card tables suplied the entertainment for those who did not care to dance. During the evening, the May Queen, who had been chosen by the High School, was led to the beautifully decorated throne were she was crowned the Junior class president. She was escorted by four maids of honor. Ice was served during the evening from the tables in the tea room. After three hours of dancing the gay assemblage was forced to leave this romantic land of Old Japan, and enter into the everyday life of America. TUG-O-WAR Come on, Seniors, one and all! Go get weighed, both big and small! O’er the brooklet, cold and muddy, Let us pull the opposing buddy. Come help choose sides and be a fellow, With a back not marred with yellow; The rope is slick and very taut, But don’t say the boys never fought! Get your footing and your grip, Stick right to it, do not slip; Stretch your muscles to the fray, Yea! Comrades, let’s away! Their feet are slipping. “Hold your own!” “You do the pulling, the girls will groan; Let’s have victory for the best, And dry, dry breeches when we rest.” To their homes with heads hung low, Cold and shivering the losers go; While girls feed us and praise us more, For winning the famous Tug-O’-War. Hiqt-I SCHOOL PtflV FS 5 ’«« Vm' '- 11 ’U (Ihi! niif r-r % .1 • MY HERO HRTTH mfil Miss Helen K. Baum, Director of Dramatics Dramatics The Dramatics Department under the efficient supervision of Miss Helen K. Baum, presented to the play lovers of the community, three three-act plays and a number of one-act plays during the year. In addition to the Junior Class, Senior Class and the All High School productions which are described on the following pages, the State Contest Little Theatre Play, “The Finger of God,” was presented May 4. The cast, Thora Nelson, Cecil Gray and Louis Funston, presented this drama at the State Interscholastic Meet at Missoula. To complete the evenings program on May 4, two one-act comedies, “Not Quite Such A Goose,” and “The Teeth of the Gift Horse,” were presented. The Dramatics Department is one of the several which contribute worthwhile entertainment to the community at a very moderate cost. JUNIOR CLASS PLAY The Charm School” November 18, 1927. Cast of Characters Austin Bevan, Auto Salesman ... Garold Fish David McKenzie, Law Student - Francis Crosby George Boyd, Accountant - George Miller Jim Simpkins....................Russell Atkins Twins Tim Simpkins ------ Henry Jensen Homer Johns, Guardian of Elsie - Stanley Herman Elise Benedotti.............Clara Hershberger Miss Hays.......................Margaret Ping Miss Curtis....................Dorothy Fischbach Sally Boyd ----- Margaret Sullivan Muriel Doughty..................Helen Krone Ethel Spelvin...................Evelyn Dyvig Alix Mercier ------ LuVerne Ford Lillian Stafford............Natalie Turner Madge Kent......................Lenora Reno Production Staff Stage Manager - - - Assistant Stage Manager Advertising Manager Property Manager Assistant Property Manager Donald Asbury Wayne Linthacum Frank Ewing William Watt Wallace Quest HIGH SCHOOL PLAY So This Is Tondon” March 16, 1928 Cast of Characters Hiram Draper, Jr. Elinor Beauchamp - ... Lady Amy Ducksworth Hiram Draper, Sr. Mrs. Hiram Draper -A Flunky at the Ritz ... Sir Percy Beauchamp ... Alfred Honeycutt .... Lady Beauchamp .... Thomas, a Butler -Jennings, Lady Duckworth’s Butler Maurice Colberg Virginia Kelley Odessa Redding Stanley Herman - Frances Ewing Robert Strand Cecil Gray Tom Ferguson Lois Miller Kenneth Campbell - Louis Funston Production Staff Business Manager Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager Property Manager Advertising Manager Stage Decorations David Hannant Donald Asbury Galen Naylor Arnold Corkins Louis Funston Lela Johnson Harriet McAllister SENIOR CLASS PLAY The Boomerang” April 20, 1928 Cast of Characters Dr. Gerald Summer - David Hannant Budd Woodbridge ... - Evan Gustafson Preston DeWitt.....................Bud Brotherson Emile............................Marion Franklin Hartley - Ray Buzzetti Virginia Xelva....................Thora Nelson Grace Tyler......................Eunice Campbell Marion Summer........................Ada Naylor Gertrude Ludlow .... Lorraine Reyburn Mrs. Creighton Woodbridge - - Nellie Benson Production Staff Business Manager ----- Ray Buzzetti Stage Manager....................Marion Franklin Assistant Stage Manager - - - Richard Walker Property Manager ----- Rudolph Komrs Stage Decoration..................June McAllister Audrey Schissler F F is for Foolishness, on which time is spent That far more profitably could have been lent To the gaining of knowledge from their books Instead of comments on schoolmates’ looks. L L is for luck on which many pass Till the end of the school when they say Alas! Luck is not always, it’s just the bunk! I’ve gone to class all year, only to flunk. U U is for union, from seat to seat; It makes it easy in exams to cheat, And just pass it on to the one at your side, He has never studied; couldn’t write if he tried. N N is for nothing, shown by a naught, Expressing plainly what has been taught; But if you get zero, you are still slightly warm, The thermometer goes below that in a storm. K K is for kick, the Missing Link”; They shouldn’t overwork their brains, so they think; But dumb-bells are plenty to ring the world’s knell, And the least over-worked is the flunker’s brain cell. .......................[65.1........................ Boyd F. Baldwin John W. Seuser JMusic Department The Hardin schools are maintaining an exceptionally fine music department. During the past year, instrumental class instruction, direction of the band and orchestra, and instruction in public grade school music was under the direction of Mr. J. VV. Seuser. In the lower grades encouragement is given instrumentation work as a means of preparing boys and girls for advanced individual and group work. The classes in instrumentation are particularly valuable since they serve to replenish the band and orchestra membership. Opportunities in instrumentation are open to all students. There is no expense beyond the purchase or rental of an instrument. Vocal music in Hardin High School is under the competent direction of Mr. Boyd F. Baldwin. Classes in group singing for girls and for boys are conducted on the regular schedule and these two groups form the nucleus around which all vocal activities operate. The Girls’ and Boys’ Glee Clubs, during the past year, rendered many numbers in excellent fashion. Only the enormous expense involved prevented their entering the State Music Meet at Helena. “The Gypsy Rover” was presented April 27 before an appreciative audience. Participants were recruited from the two glee clubs and from the eighth grade music classes. Music at Hardin is truly fulfilling its purpose in developing the social and mental qualities of our students. It is contributing in a vital manner toward the realization of our educational policy—learning by means of worthwhile projects. 'Boys’ Glee Club First Tenors'. Herbert Crosby, Bill Johnson, Frank Ewing, Francis Crosby. Second Tenors'. Jack Clifford, Evan Gustafson, Laurence Labbitt, Carl Moore {President), Robert Scanlon. Baritones: Bud Brotherson, Juell Ottun, Grover Stewart, Russell Atkins, Kenneth Campbell. Basses'. Maurice Colberg, Ray Buzzetti {secretary), Tom Ferguson, Arnold Gorkins, Wallace Quest. B. F. Baldwin, Director Miss Marian Brekke, Accompanist School Orchestra Cecil Gray, Ralph Ferguson, Harry Pattison, Wallace Quest, Mildred Trus-sell, Charles Egnew, Horace McGibbony, George Marquisee, Maxine Baker, Evan Gustafson, Max Thompson, Bill Johnson, Orval Ross, Gordon Brekke, Arnold Corkins, George Sullivan, Keith Linthacum, Edward Kelley, Marian Brekke, Rcx-ine Bryan, Gilbert Thompson. Hardin School Band Cornets: Gordon Brckke, David Hannant, Arnold Corkins, Earl Harris and Huston Johnson. French Harp: Ralph Ferguson. Trombone: Charles Buzzetti. Basses: Cecil Gray, Tom Ferguson. Baritone: Laurence Labbitt. Drums: Wallace Quest, Juell Ottun, Harry Pattison. Saxophones: Max Thompson, Bill Johnson, Orval Ross, John Buzzetti, Wallace Larkey. Clarinets: George Sullivan, Kenneth Campbell, Cornelius Roush, Berkeley Dyvig, Kenneth Ford, Keith Linthacum, Gilbert Thompson, Edward Kelley. Flute: Evan Gustafson. Cjiris’ Glee Club First Sopranos: Rubie Barnes, Alberta Brotherson, Joyce Daniels, Josephine Ebe-ling, Beulah Gilbert, Lela Johnson, Alpha Jones, lola Moore, Sadie Ping, Marian Plummer, Audrey Schissler, Blanche Smith, Rubie Graf. Second Sopranos: Cecelia Larkin, Ruth Miller, Frances Nelson, Margaret Ping, secretary, Treva Rhinehart, Mildred Trussell, Hazel Turner, Natalie Turner, president, Helen Hardy, Lavona Waldsmith, Marie Rcichel, Helen Bullis, Helen Corkins, Mabel Graf. Altos: Nellie Benson, Lena Clark, Dorothy Conner, Evelyn Dyvig, Frances Ewing, Virginia Kelley, Edna Komrs, Helen Krone, Evelyn Lewis, Helen Lewis, Harriette McAllister, Lydia Mehling, Lois Miller, Sarah Schilreff. B. F. Baldwin, Director Marian Brekke, Accompanist [69] June McAllister, Max Thompson, George Sullivan, Mildred Trussell, Arlington Bunston, Arnold Corkins, Bill Johnson, Kenneth Campbell. State Music Meet Contestants Marian Brekke, Iola Moore, Frances Ewing, Margaret Ping, Lucille Colberg, Carl Moore, Maurice Colberg, Francis Crosby and Arnold Corkins, represented us at the State Music Meet. The Boys’ quartette composed of Francis Crosby, Carl Moore, Maurice Colberg and Arnold Corkins won third place in the state in their event. High School OrcheSira ■ ‘Physical Education Hardin High School is now constructing the foundations for a comprehensive physical education program. Every girl and boy should have an opportunity to take the type of exercise for which he or she is best fitted. People are today realizing more than ever the importance of spending money for the physical betterment of the boy or girl who is defective or undeveloped rather than concentrating so much effort and expense in the production of a few physically perfected team players. Athletic teams are indispensible to the school but they should fit into the larger physical training program instead of dominating that program. The physical education classes this year enrolled over half of the student body. This was accomplished merely thru encouraging students to take the course, and the enrollment would have been much greater were conflicts eliminated from the program of studies. BOYS’ BASKETBALL First Tearn This year’s newly christened Bulldogs were recruited largely from the previous year’s second team. Only two players were left from the squad of 1926-’27. In addition to winning fourth place in the district tournament, the Bulldogs lost but one game played on the home court—Hardin versus Billings. Players who received letters were Raymond Buzzetti, Maurice Colberg, Garold Fish, Jack Riggs, Herbert Dunham, Arnold Corkins and Kenneth Campbell. Result of Season’s Games: Hardin ............. 27—Hysham .............. 17 Hardin ............. 13—Independents.........25 Hardin ............. 20—Hysham ..............21 Hardin 28—Bearcreek 12 Hardin 18—Independents 21 Hardin 45—Keils Koffee Kubs 19 Hardin 26—Belfry 14 Hardin 26—Bearcreek 21 Hardin 21—Red Lodge 27 . 23—Sheridan 28 Hardin 61—Custer 9 Hardin 16—Billings 28 Hardin 29—Red Lodge 13 Hardin 38—Crow Indians 22 Hardin 15—Billings 22 35—Sheridan 27 District Tournament Hardin 28—Big Timber 22 Hardin 22—Bearcreek 28 Hardin 46—Rapelje 16 Hardin 19—Big Timber 32 GIRLS’ BASKETBALL There was a large turn-out for the girls’ team this year, and lots of good material. The team was captained by Odessa Redding. Under the capable coaching of Miss Comstock, has been a banner year. There were no games lost—an excellent record. It is the first girls’ team in the history of Hardin High School which won all its games. The teams played were Custer, Lodge Grass, and Crow Agency. The last game of the season with Lodge Grass was cancelled, much to the girls’ disappointment. We hope that in future years the girls’ team may have as much success as was ours in 1927-1928. Result of Games: 9—Custer ... 6 Hardin.... ....18—Custer ...10 Hardin.... ....26—Crow Agency . ...16 Hardin... ....16—Lodge Grass ...12 Hardin.... ....13—Crow Agency . ... 9 'Boys’ Basketball Second Team • Hardin High School’s Bullpups learned lots of basketball during the past 1 season and before the year was half gone they were tearing into their Bulldog idols without mercy. Most of them will be full-fledged Bulldogs in another year and 1 one of the best ways to stop them will be for the opposing guards to crawl up the • backboard and sit in the basket. I Interclass Basketball The Interclass Tournament brings out many who have never played a great 1 deal of basketball. Nevertheless, it is a very effective means of discovering promis- 1 ing material besides serving as a healthy stimulus to good sportsmanship and class I rivalry. ' In the boys’ tournament the Seniors romped away with first honors. They were • closely pursued by the Freshmen. Third place went to the scrappy Eighth Grade I team and the Juniors and Sophomores crowded the lower end of the percentage I column. I The Juniors played hard to beat the Sophomores for the first place in the girls' interclass tournament. Eighth Grade won third. Seniors, fourth, and the Freshmen, fifth. Tracks Track call was issued April 2. Over forty boys answered the call and began the serious work of training. Due to weather uncertainity, the schedule had numerous interruptions which impeded the development of a “crack team. Because of conflict in dates our school will not be represented at the Tri-County Track Meet at Hysham. Attempts are being made to bring the Hysham , squad here for a dual meet. A representation of our best track athletes will be sent to the State Interschol-asric Track Meet at Missuola, May 9, 10 and 11. Mr. Baldwin has charge of track work done off schedule and Mr. Vanderburgh has charge of the track classes held during the regular schedule. ‘Traditions For the past several years, various customs have been established in Hardin High School, which have become traditions. They are very dear to us, and as years go by, will live in our memories as the happiest events of our high school days. After school has been organized in the fall, each class enters the Big Horn subscription contest. The result of this contest is the “Mixer,” given at Hallowe’en time by the other classes, in honor of the class which wins this contest. Following the “Mixer,” during the fall and winter months, each class becomes better acquainted with its membership by class parties. Memories of childhood are again brought to us by the jingle of sleigh bells when Santa Claus pays his annual visit to the “Christmas Mixer.” Gifts for everyone, Christmas candy, popcorn, apples, a Christmas program, a brilliant Christmas tree, with music and dancing, carry us back to the “Land of Make-Believe.” Hardin High School at this time welcomes back her alumni, who are home for Christmas vacation. Beginning with the year ’25, each successive senior class has edited an Annual. In order to get material for the Annual, the Big Horn Annual Contest is held. The class winning this contest is the guest of the Annual Staff at the first picnic each spring. The individual winning first is presented with an Annual. When warm days arrive, and spring fever is prevalent, it is a custom among the senior class, together with their sponsors, to forget the wear and tear of student life, and run away to the hills to commemorate the annual “Senior Sneak Day.” During this glorious day, the great out-of-doors furnishes the seniors with a bit of nature on which to write their numerals. Rocks, and vines planted by seniors, and a buffalo skull, are treasured by the high school in memory of the alumni. Near the last of May, the junior class honors the departing seniors with a banquet and prom. At the banquet, seniors, juniors and faculty members join in a feast of good fellowship. The class history, prophecy and will are given as part of the banquet program, and “Sparkplug,” the seniors’ mascot for years, is presented to the junior president by the senior president. The night following the banquet, the juniors have “open house” to the seniors, parents of juniors and seniors, faculty, alumni, and friends. The Junior-Senior Prom is the prettiest and happiest event of the year. Near the end of the year, Hardin High School is host to all the schools of District 17-H. The outstanding event of this district meet is the parade in which all classes of the high school and grade school, various organization, and all schools of the district join. The senior class, distinguished by the most beautiful float, leads the parade. The sophomores honor the seniors by the Sophomore-Senior Picnic. At four A. M. on Class Day, the high school faculty entertain the seniors at a breakfast on Custer Bench. The odor of coffee and bacon, the shouts of all at play, the beauty of the sunrise, bring a feeling of good fellowship, and the warmth of friendship is nearer. To determine which class shall have its banner floating from the flagpole of the high school on Class Day, the tug-o’-war has become a custom. The junior and senior boys, coached by some faculty member, and cheered on by the girls of their class, participate. The class which is able to pull its opponents through the ice cold stream is proclaimed the victor. Thus as the years go on, the old traditions are kept alive and new customs are added. The Hardin Grade Schools School District 17-H is an educational unit maintaining a twelve-year school system. All of the schools are in session nine and one-half months. The teachers receive their pay on the twelve-months basis. Equalization of school opportunity is promoted by centralization and transportation. More than half of the children attending the Hardin and Crow Agency schools live in the country. A fine spirit of co-operation among children, teachers, patrons, schools and communities, is promoted by means of a district educational I and athletics achievement days, visiting days for teachers, and many joint projects ) in which the schools engage. j Programs of physical and moral education are conducted in all the schools { of the district. The county health officer, his assistant and two county and Indian j department nurses render a real service to the children in the schools. Malnutrition classes have been conducted in both the grade schools and high school with remarkable results. Classes in personal hygiene for girls from the sixth to the twelfth grades have been a real success. The department of instrumental music continues to be very popular. Work along this line is being carried on in both the Hardin and Crow Agency schools. About one hundred pupils are receiving instruction on the different instruments. Credit is given for band and orchestra work. The music lessons given by the school are without charge. A newspaper is maintained in both the high school and grade school. These papers are sponsored by the English department. The material is prepared by regular assignments under the direction of the English teachers. Both the boy and girl scout organizations in Hardin and Crow Agency’ are sponsored by the school. These organizations started several years ago and have continued to grow in strength. The fact that many of the boys and girls are staying with their organizations well on toward the age limit shows a decided interest in the program of scouting. Methods of adjustment to individual differences in pupils are being continued and extended. These methods involve directed study with problem—project motivation. Each grade is divided into four or five groups. Pupils are grouped according to their demonstrated ability, with no upper limit on any pupil. There is continuous promotion and demotion throughout the year. Emphasis is placed upon freedom, loyalty, and co-operation. The popularity of the plan is evidenced by the enthusiasm that pupils, patrons and teachers show for it. The outcome, so far, has been a steady growth in initiative and in membership responsibility and capacity. HARDIN GRADE SCHOOL FACULTY West ley Magnuson, Eleanor Sullivan, Camille Kopriva, Ida Mae Meyer, Rosalind Schmclzer, Edna Tobias, Lucy Batty, Thores Johnson, Ramona McClelland, Marian Huelster, Edith Wortman, lone Darkenwald, Alma Dygert, Helen Lebus. Grade School Student Council Hot Lunch Girl Scouts Girl Scout Council: Commissioner—Mr. L. F. Colberg; Deputy Commissioner—Mrs. L. H. Labbitt; Director of Scouting—Mrs. J. J. Ping; Secretary—Mrs. B. F. Baldwin; Treasurer—Mrs. L. F. Colberg. Council Members: Mr. R. A. Gerber, Mr. B. F. Baldwin, Rev. N. E. Hannant, Mr. W. J. Brekke, Mr. George M. Harris, Mrs. George M. Harris, Mr. Fred Mitchell, Mr. Lloyd Snyder, Mrs. F. J. Buzzctti, Rev. Wm. Dawson, Mrs. L. S. McAllister, Hazel Rennie, Mr. Thomas Hanes, Mr. Jake Conver. TROOPS Vagabond Troop—Captain—Edna Mae Tobias; Lieutenant—Mrs. R. A. Gerber. Scouts—Marian Brekke, Mary Jane Buzzetti, Lucille Colberg, Helen Corkins, Kathryn Corwin, Dorothy Fischbach, Dorothea Eder, LuVerne Ford, Eleanor Graf, Merle Hanes, Daisy Humphrey, Claribel Johnson, Jennie Kifer, Marjorie Krone, Maxine McDowell, Marcella Mitchell, Margaret Ping, Sadie Ping, Genevieve Richards, Helen Franklin. Firefly Troop—Captain—Rosalind Schmelzer; Lieutenant—Marie Comstock. Scouts—Pauline Kleinhesselink, Madderine Ebeling, Avys Mielke, Fern Grace, Anna Quarnburg, Marguerite Pattison, Billie Marie Flickinger, Alice Knowles, Virginia Wolcott, Vivian Owen. Nightingale Troop—Captain—Alma Edna Dygert; Lieutenant—Ida Marie Meyer. Scouts—Elizabeth Graham, Hazel Waidman, Helen Lammers, Loretta Dorn-berger, Gene Rhinehart, Julia Graf, Bessie Cole, Dorothy Cole, Helen Conver, Helen Sullivan, Wilma Waidman, Laurene Ewing, Rexine Bryan, Maxine Kifer, Sylvia Fish, Virginia Wessman, Margaret Clawson. Pine Tree Troop—Captain—Edna Mae Tobias. Scouts—Edith Randall, Margaret Sweeney, Nina Ruth Egnew, Maxine Prine, Edna Carper, Hazel Pope, Mildred Rowland, Virginia Bailey, Charlene Sullivan. I I II II I • I I M I I I I I I I I II 'Boy Scouts The Boy Scout Troop No. 4 is permanently organized as part of the school system. The troop is composed of thirty-two boys, representing all classes except the first. Outdoor work consists not only of athletics, but establishing and equipping a local camp. Improvements being completed include the building of a dam to provide safe swimming facilities. Last summer two camps were held—one in June at the local camp, and one in August in the Soap Creek foothills. Tentative plans include a similar opportunity for camping this year. Alexander Spencer John Buzzetti Lewis Brandt Berkely Dyvig Kenneth Ford Wayne Grove Horace McGibboney George Marqulsee Harry Pattison Cecil Ross Orville Ross Troop Committee: J. J. Ping L. H. Labbitt D. L. Egnew Scouts Roderick Spencer Sterling Torske Marshall Whitledge James Anderson Laverne Bullis Gordon Brekke Charles Buzzetti Alfred Bowman James Clauson Harry Carper Charles Egnew Robert Kopriva Edmund Kelly Keith Linthacum Donald Newhauser Verle Prine Charles Sweeney Gilbert Thompson Derril Warren Robert Wolcott Stewart Wolcott Scoutmaster: Westly W. Magnuson Patrol Leaders: Alexander Spencer John Buzzetti MfMtMtMIttlllMttlttltlltlltMtllllltlllllltllltMtttltltltlltlllllllllllttllttltllftttttlt Crow Agency Schools The Crow Agency Public Schools have had a rapid growth. In 1920 the school building had but two rooms and two teachers. The school is now housed in a thoroughly modern building containing eight classrooms, a library, an office for the principal, and a gymnasium. The enrollment this year is nearly two hundred pupils. There are eight teachers employed in the Agency schools. Departmental work is done in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Emphasis is placed at all times on a program of physical and citizenship training. Music and art are included in the daily program. Instrumental music is taught by a teacher specially selected for that purpose. The County Club Leader, assisted by volunteer local leaders, has organized several sewing clubs among the larger girls of the school. They meet on Friday afternoons. The enrollment in the Crow Agency schools depends largely on centralization and transportation. More than half of the pupils are brought to the school house door in large auto busses. Most of the children are on the road only a few minutes. About thirty high school pupils arc brought from Crow Agency to Hardin to avoid the expense of maintaining a high school at that point. Since the Indians were placed in the public schools, encouraging progress has been made in bringing them to a realization of the position which they are capable of holding in the community. The parents of the Indian children have been quick to catch the spirit of the program and have contributed largely to its success. They are proud of the progress their children have made. It is gratifying to note the results of the efforts of the Indian health department and the county health officers. Great things are being accomplished in general health improvement. Hot lunch is served to about seventy pupils each day. The teachers in the Crow Agency schools have been splendidly devoted to their work. At no time have they allowed their interest to lag. They have always been alert to new schemes and methods whereby a system of education, which has existed for generations, could be superimposed upon a generation entirely unacquainted with any system of education and at the same time have the white children make normal progress. They have never given up. The community, the Agency officials, the parents of both Indian and white children, have been a great factor in the success of the schools, and have helped largely in the writing of an inspiring chapter in the history of the schools of Big Horn County. CROW AGENCY SCHOOL FACULTY Florence Ronan, Lily A. McLeod, Minnie Clark, Cyril Solace, Lulu Ann Taul, Glenn Kimball, Marion Billbrough, Mary Gelhaus. Crow Agency Basketball Team Crow Agency Student Council Westward creeps The jolting prairie schooner, and its wheels Talk on the axle while the faithful oxen Draw sturdily, nodding their patient heads. Walking beside his trail-worn team The bearded, weather-beaten driver guides With a firm hand. From the schooner’s depths Comes the low crooning of a lullaby. The meadow larks rejoice, the wild flowers blow— The driver eyes the dusty margin of the trail, Communing with his vision of a home.” m: JBL .......................................................................................... •Mini ................IIIIIIIIIIMIIII.....MU.......Hlllllllltlllllllll....mini.......I........I................................ Mil.....II.....HIM Sarpy School Dorothy Herman, Teacher Florence Barnard, Frank Barnard, Mark Barnard, Nora Barnard, Francis Cain, Helen Culp, Cecil Dyckman. Wolf School Iris L. Nutter, Teacher Shirley Carnagey, Temple Carnagey, Clarence Gilles, Wayne Janney, Lloyd Knight, Clifford Longacre, Sam Redding, Jewell Shook, Harry Shook, Vaughn Shepard, Inna Carnagey, Flora Landon, Lois Landon, Marcella Landon, Evelyn Shook. Maschetah School Jean White, Teacher Charles Betts, Roland Betts, Kenneth Betts, Roy Davis, Arnold Dinsdale, Alfred Dinsdale, Edwin Miller, Joe Turner, Waldo Herman, Harold Betts, James O’Leary, Dorothy Betts, Harriet Criswell, Louise Dinsdale, Maxine Davis, Frances Turner, Louise Weaver, Catherine Weble, Mary O’Leary. . Halfway School Cora Perry, Teacher Donald Easling, Lloyd Faw, Junior Mabe, Gaylord Nelson, George Shandy, Leslie Stevens, Bill Quilling, Howard Stimpson, Mabel Davis, Orvilla Faw, Mary Faw, Pauline Mabe, Myrtle Stimpson, Evelyn John. Muddy Creek School Bertha I. Brown, Teacher James Brady, Wilson Brady, Pierre Ewing, Eugene Fisher, Raymond Harris, Charles Long Jaw, Cornelia Robinson, David Robinson, Henry Tall Bull, Joseph Tall Bull, William Tall Bull, Alfred Whistling Elk, William Wild Hog, Howard Powell, Kash Spang, Joyce I. Brown, Josephine Burns, Agnes Harris, Julia Harris, Mary Harris, Alice Whistling Elk, Julia Wild Hog, Grace Wolf Name. Hart School Eva Romine, Teacher Carroll McKittrick, Gwen McKittrick, Melvin Winn, Barbara McDowell, Ora Jean McDowell, Virginia McKittrick, Fay Winn. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . I I I I I I I I I I . I I I I [85] Spring Creek School Mary Juell Pope, Teacher Leslie Allen, Daisy Allen, Earl Blakeley, Goldie Blakeley, Richard Blakeley, George Fly, Marion Fly, Roy Fly, Thelma Fly, Colen MacLeod, Veda Perry, Jimmie Romine. Ogborn School Mary fVellis, Teacher Oliver Con, Kenneth Denny, Richard Heller, Hugh Holds the Enemy, John Holds the Enemy, Josephine Cloud, Mary Denny, Louise Dusenbcrry, Dorothy Holds the Enemy, Bessie Smith. Mountain Pocket School Marjorie Stark, Teacher Mary Ahern, Mickey Ahern, Maxine Martin, Arline Martin, Ardith Martin, Joseph O’Brien, Elmer O’Brien, Joe Morrison, Mable Krone, Della Krone. North Bench School Violet Tale, Teacher Alta Moore, Lois Moore, Molly Peterson, Henry Peterson, John Feller, Henry Feller, Leo Feller, Glen Goodell, Harold Morrison, Franklin West, George Ziler, Laurence Ziler, Anton Feller. St. Xavier School Amber V. Daniels, Teacher Isabella Hill, Lucy Hill, Fernellen Hynes, Annie Klotz, Eva Klotz, Tillie Klotz, Dorothy Lapointe, Nancy McGarity, Margaret O’Brien, Patricia O’Brien, Selina O’Brien, Susanna Old Coyote, Marie Bull Chief, Fred Klotz, Joe Klotz, Sammie Lapointe, Albert Lobdell, Edward Lobdell, Carr McGarity, Troy McGarity, James O’Brien, Stafford O’Brien, Henry Old Coyote, Albert Nor-dyke Thomas. Toluca School Eveline Makee, Teacher Elmer Anderson, Marion Anderson, Margaret Anderson, Evelyn Crosby, Martha Faught, James Faught, Jesse Faught, Sylvester Gonzales, Perry Makee, Joe Mikami, Jun Mikami, Lucia Olinos, Manuel Olmos. The Rural Schools Big Horn County was settled largely by pioneers, in the field of Agriculture. Scarcely had the war whoop of the Indian died away when the farmer made his appearance. In a short time every fertile valley had a group of settlers. Whenever there were enough children in these settlements to warrant it, schools were established. School District 17-H has, at the present time, twelve rural schools. They are located in sections of the District where centralization by transportation is impossible. The distances of these schools from Hardin range from six to sixty-seven miles. The enrollment varies from ten to twenty-five pupils. The rural teachers are, in most instances, Normal school graduates, and are paid on the twelve months basis. All schools in the district have a nine and one-half months’ term. This enables the children of the rural sections of the district to enjoy the same educational advantages as the pupils in the town schools. The rural schools have been especially interested in nature study during the term of school just closed. The plan has been to use the natural environment of the children in such a way as to form the basis of their education in geography, English composition, and mathematics. Also, looking forward to their future education, the children in the rural schools have learned many simple things relative to the study of geology, astronomy, botany, chemistry, physics and zoology. Hot lunches have been served in practically all of the rural schools this year. The teacher and pupils in each case co-operating with the parents have made the hot lunch proposition a very popular institution. The patrons of the schools have taken special pride in helping the teachers and pupils in their efforts for superior rating. Some of the projects for which the patrons have been responsible and which deserve special mention are: the securing and setting of flagpoles, fencing school grounds, building walks on school grounds, co-operation in securing musical instruments for the schools. Many other projects showing splendid community spirit could be mentioned. Special days were observed in all of the schools by programs appropriate for the ocassion. A Christmas entertainment given by the pupils of the Muddy Creek school was especially good. [89] IIIIMIMIMMMMIIIIIinim IIIIIIM IMHMMt III............................................................................................................................. IIMIHHimMirtllllllMIII..... Logan, Linia ____ Rowland. Thomas Snow, Lula ..«... lAlumni l oll Class of 1916 ...... Deceased ...... Missoula, Montana . Casper, Wyoming . ........ Forest Ranger .....Mrs. John Pickard Hamilton. Rose ....... Kent, Anna ........... Lewis. Donald ........ Loaney, Sterling ..... McClure, Juanita ..... Ottun, Alice .... Van Houfbn. La Veta Wise, Howard ......... Class of 1917 . Lodge Grass, Montana .............Mrs. Clifford Smith ..« Chicago, Illinois .......... Mrs. H. T. Winsemius Los Angeles, California...................... Architect ......... Hardin Hardin Auto Co. .... Eureka, Montana ..... . New York City, N. Y..................... Stenographer . New York City, N. Y.......................... Working ... Corvallis, Oregon ........................ Teaching Cleland. Vera ...... Hardie, Willia ..... Russell. Marian «... Scott. Willard ..... Van Houten, Elton Asbury, Ralph ... Bartlett, Mildred ... Buckingham, Earl Clark, Delphia .. Wise, Homer ..... Class of 1918 Omaha, Nebraska .... Unknown ... Winnetka, Illinois ..... Hardin ... ............... Mrs. Hugh Wells ...................... Teaching -...............«.... At Home Los Angeles, California ...............Radio Specialist Class of 1919 .. Detroit, Michigan ....................Ford Motor Co. Santa Rosa, California ................... Mrs. Gordon .... Washington, D. C.............. U. S. Naval Reserve Pasco, Washington .................... Stenographer ..... California ............................. At School Class of 1920 Brennan, Viola ..............-...... Billings. Montana Mrs. L. F. Hanlon Campbell, Margaret ................... Bozeman, Montana Mrs. Arthur Post Hoerr, Carl ........................ Billings, Montana «_________________ Clerking Larkin. William «... Lindstrom, Harold Ottun, Lillian ... McCarthy, Helen . Snow, Nellie ...... ... Hardin, Montana Billings, Montana ... . New York City. N. Y. Denver, Colorado ..... Casper, Wyoming ... Stearnes, Ellen ...............«..... Casper, Wyoming .... Weller, Mary _____________________ Los Angeles, California Wort, Helen ........................ Hardin, Montana ____ Barber ......................_ Working .......«.......«. Stenographer ......... Mrs. D. W. Dick man .............. Mrs. L. Shelqulst ........... Mrs. D. R. Carnes .........«......Mrs. D. Baker ..........«. Mrs. Lloyd Carper Carper, Bernice ....... Lockwood, Clara ....... Meeke, John ........... Class of 1921 Hardin, Montana ....... San Francisco, California.. .... Helena, Montana........ Mrs. Merle Bowers ..... Stenographer ....... Re F Estate Atkins. LeRoy .......... Gladden, Arthur ........ King, Uriel «....«.....-._ Lawson, Edith ......... McCarthy, Mary ........... McCarthy, Ruth ........... Ottun, Rachel __I....... Peck. Effie ________ Peterson, Myrtle ..... Reeder, Edgar «..... Robinson. Verne «...... Sibley, Mercedes ..... Slmonyi, Terisa .......«........ Satterthwaite, Freda ........... Torske, Joseph ................. Vedder, Esther ................. Weller, Maurice .............«.. Class of 1922 Los Angeles, California ........................ Working .... Missoula, Montana ........................ «. Farming ----- Hardin, Montana .......................... Farming .....Gebo, Wyoming .......«....«..........«......... Nurse ---- Lincoln, Nebraska ................ Mrs. R. S. Thomas ------- Ray, Colorado Mrs. George Abrogast ..... Hardin, Montana ...,............... Mrs. Lyle Tytler Hardin, Montana ................ Mrs. Arthur Koebbe Minneapolis, Minnesota ........«.......«..«.. University Missoula, Montana «..«..............««...... University Omaha, Nebraska .........................«... Merchant Hardin, Montana .....................Mrs. Ed. Kuehn .... Deceased ........ Dillon, Montana ..................« Mrs. E. E. Verley Hardin, Montana .......«....«......... ....... Farming Chicago, Illinois...........«.........««.. At School .... Hardin, Montana .............. Truck Gardening lllllll......Illl J22L II IIMIIIMIIIIMIIIII Hitnmmummiimtiit | .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................lltlllllllMHl i .......mill........lull....mull......II....... Class of 1923 Afitle. Pauline ................. Missoula, Montana....................... University Cooke. Thomas .................... Hardin, Montana........................ Clerking Dygert, Alma ..................... Hardin. Montana ............................. Teaching Ekelberry, Louise ............... Los Angeles, California ...................... Secretary Fischbach, Leslie ................. Billings, Montana ................................... Clerk Fi8chbach, Vincent ................. Hardin, Montana ............................. Tailor Graf, Esther ....................... Hardin, Montana ...................... Stenographer Janney, Baird ..................... Billings, Montana ....................... Polytechnic Kelley, Kathryn .................... Hardin. Montana ....................... Stenographer King, Helen ....................... Hardin. Montana ............................ — Nurse Lewis, Oleta ................. ...... Osage, Wyoming ................. Mrs. L. L. Thomas Luckett, Mabel ..................... Hardin, Montana .................... Mrs. A. R. Cook Miller, Hulda ..................... Libby, Montana .................... Mrs. Ralph Fields Olson. Elling ..................... Billings. Montana ......................... Bookkeeper Putnam. Charlotte ................... Chicago, Illinois ........................ Secretary Queen, Jacob .................... Los Angeles, California ..................... University Rober, Lillian ..................... Hardin, Montana ....................... Mrs. O. Clark Steele, William ................... Hardin, Montana .......................... Ranching Sterena, Gertrude ................. Hardin, Montana .................... Mrs. Rube Elarth Torske, Martha ..................... Hardin, Montana .......................... Clerking Watson, Allen ................... New York City, N. Y................... Pace Pace Inst. Weller, Elizabeth ............... Los Angeles, California ....................... Working Weir, Orrin ........................ Hardin, Montana ....... ................... Merchant Weir, Webb ....................... Custer, So. Dakota ........................... Clerking L, Class of 1924 . Hardin, Montana ................ Mrs. Lynn Fiester .. Hardin, Montana ........................ Clerking Chadborn, Montana ......................... At Home ... Casper, Wyoming ......................... At School ... Hardin, Montana Farming . Cheyenne, Wyoming ..................... Railroad Shop . Anaconda, Wyoming ..................... Mrs. Furbush ... Hardin, Montana .............................. Baker Brennan, Agnes ... Calhoun, Cyrus ... Clark, Lulu ...... Cormier, Madeline Cresap, Mercer ... Danielson. Russell Dendinger, Bobbie Emmons, Nellie ... Equall, Raymond . Gustafson. Glen ..................... Hardin, Montana Farming Howell, Helen ..................... Hardin, Montana —..................... Stenographer Janney. Neil ...................... Billings, Montana Working Kephart, Blanche ................ Lodge Grass, Montana ........................ Teaching Kurzhals, Frieda ................... Hardin, Montana Stenographer Larkin. Harold ..................... Hardin, Montana Working Lewis. Vivian ................—..Crow Agency, Montana................—------------- Clerk McDowell, Glen ...................— Portland, Oregon .........................-... College Meeke, Mamie ...................... Billings, Montana Normal Meeke, William .................. Great Falls. Montana ......................... Working Melville. Mildred .................. Hardin, Montana ............. Mrs. Sam Ragland Perry, D. L..................-....... Sarpy, Montana — Farming Suzda, John ........................ Chicago, Illinois .................................- Working Wham, Harold ....................... Hardin, Montana ......................... - Working Williams, Mary .................. Crow Agency, Montana ........................ Teaching Youst, Gordon ................ New York City, N. Y. .................Pace Pace Inst. Class of 1925 Astle, Edwin ....................... Hardin, Montana Working Buzzetti. Irene .................... Hardin, Montana stenographer Crosby, Lois ...................... Billings, Montana Normal Funston, Leslie .................... Hardin, Montana C. B. Q. R. R. Fish, Juanita ...................... Bozeman, Montana College Jordan, John ...................... Berkeley, California College Greber, Mary .................. Greber, Ruth .......................... California ................... Mrs. Paul Anderson Johnson, Annabelle ............... Big Horn, Wyoming ................... Mrs. J. D. Moody Meeke, Samuel ...................... Hardin, Montana Working Kelley, Dorothy ...................... Jerome, Idaho Teaching Rankin, John ...................... Missoula, Montana University Lawson, Lavon ...................... Hardin, Montana Mrs. Bert Ferguson Luckett, Katherine ................. Denver. Colorado Nurse . Working .. Normal University . Farming Ross, Robert ........................ Hardin, Montana McGiboney, Geneva ..............-... Billings, Montana Nelson, Dorothy .................... Missoula, Montana Smith, Claude ....................... Hardin. Montana Scanlon, Dorothy .................... Bozeman, Montana Strand, Arthur ..................... Hardin, Montana Working Spoolstra, Grace .................... Bozeman. Montana Nurse’s Training J21L MlMItltilMIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIII ■! HI !11 111 iii !ii : i Hi ' HI ill : I Hi M Ilf If HIM lllllttlllllllll l••l••lllll•l•llll•f•l•l•M••••llllll•l; 0® .. cSS I i! -I • i i! 11 ji I! 11 il •! '! i! z ! ii i! II '! • I l! i ■ i :| I! = Wolfe. Jessie ....................... Butte. Montana ... Wilson, Thomas ................... Portland. Oregon Wort, Ada .......................... Bozeman, Montana ... Class of 1926 Asbury, Ruth ....................... Bozeman, Montana .... Buzzetti, Edward J.................. Bozeman, Montana ... Bailey, Margaret ..................... Lee. Montana ...... Cook, Melvin ....................... Hardin. Montana .. Campbell, Winifred ................. Hardin. Montana ..... Cork ins, William .................. Bozeman, Montana .... Cline, Maudee ..................... Billings, Montana .... Dunham. Everett .................... Hardin. Montana ..... Gustafson. Mildred ................ Billings. Montana .... Ferguson, Dwight ................. Kirby. Montana ...... Howell, Eloise .................. Minneapolis, Minnesota Gillileand, Paul ................... Omaha, Nebraska _ Gay, Melvin .................... Fort Benton, Montana Janney, Charlotte ................. Billings, Montana .... Graf, Arnold ....................... Hardin, Montana .. Johnson, Clare .................... Billings, Montana .... Kurzhals, Harvey ................... Hardin. Montana .... Linthacum. Voris .................. Billings, Montana .... McDowell. Inez ..................... Hardin. Montana ..... Miller, Herman .................. Buffalo, Wyoming .... Meeke, Jennie .................. Great Falls, Montana Owen, Kathleen .................... Norman, Oklahoma .... Reno, Harold ....................... Bozeman, Montana .... Perry, Florence .................... Hardin. Montana ..... Roush, Fred ....................... Missoula, Montana .... Ransler, Eleanor ................. Clarence, New York .... Spear, Joseph ....................... Wyola, Montana .... Scanlon, Francis ................... Hardin. Montana .... Sullivan, Edward ................... Eugene, Oregon ..... Spear, Jessie ....................... Wyola, Montana ..... Watson. William .................... Hardin, Montana .. Youst, Velda ...................... Hardin. Montana .... Wham, Howard ........................... Idaho .......... ........ At Home ......... Working .......... College .......... College ........... College ......... At Home .......... Clerking ......... At School ........—,. College ............ Normal ........... Working ............ Normal .......... Ranching ........... College .............. Band .......... Clerking ............ Normal ........ Bricklayer ........... Working ........... Working Interior Decorator ...... Stenographer .........- Working ........... Clerking Aviator's Course ........... College ......... At Home ........... College .......... Teaching ........... Farming ...... Stenographer ........ University ......... At Home ........... Farming ....... Bookkeeping .......... Clerking Benson, George ................ Beall, Florence ............... Cline, Ella Mae .............. Bullis, Edwin ................. Ferguson, Erlise .............. Ferguson, Helen .............. Huffman, Harry ................ Gilbert, Edna ................ Herman, Dorothy ............... Kephart. Kenneth .............. Keeler, Berenice ............. Knowles, Gaynor Patricia ...... Larkin, Edward ................ Lobdell, Harriet .............. Luckett. Naomi ................ Lewis, Vilo __________________„ Luckett. Ruth ................. McQueen. Elizabeth ........... Maus, Eugene .................. Mehling, Marie ................ Mielke, Lucille .............. Medicine Tail, James ......... Owen. Marie ................... Ping, Gladys ............... Miller, Robert ............. Reno. Viola ................ Romine, Eva ................ Roush, Robert .............. Sawyer, Eleanor ............ Schneider, Dorothy ......... Thompson, Alberta .......... Watts, Earl ................ Weir, Harriette ............ Class of 1927 ...... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Hardin, Montana .... ..... Billings, Montana . . ..... Missoula, Montana .... ..... Billings, Montana .... ...... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Eugene, Oregon ..... ...... Wyola, Montana .... ....... Sarpy, Montana ...... ... Lodge Grass, Montana ...... Billings, Montana .... ..... Bozeman, Montana .... ...... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Dillon, Montana .... ...... Dillon, Montana .... ...... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Dietz, Wyoming ....... .......Wyola, Montana...... ...... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Decker, Montana .... ..... Aberdeen, Montana .. Billings, Montana .. ... Lodge Grass. Montana ..... Missoula, Montana ... Hardin. Montana .... .... Iron Springs, Montana Hardin, Montana .... ..... Bozeman, Montana .... ..... Bozeman, Montana .... Hardin, Montana .... ...... Peru, Nebraska ...... ....... Dillon, Montana ... ..... Bozeman, Montana .... ........... Working ........... At Home ............. Normal ......... University ............. Normal ...... Stenographer ........... College .......... At Home .......... Teaching ........... At Home ............. Normal ......-.... College ........... Working ............. Normal ............. Normal .......... Clerking .......... Teaching Mrs. William Brown ............ Working .......... Teaching ........... Teaching ........ Polytechnic ........... At Home ......... University ........... At Home .......... Teaching .......... Teaching ........... College ........... College ...... Stenographer ........... College ............. Normal ........... College IIMIMHMMIIiaiMIHI d . ............................................... I..............................................Illllll 11 Hill ■■HIM mill Mlllll..... III 1111 11111 .............................Mllll ■■ till III Ill I IIMIHII IIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII ■ ■ imilllMMalllllllllMMIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIMUIMIMimiMIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIHIIMIIIIHIIIIIIIinM - 1 I I r I! : Bit SENIOR HOROSCOPE Class o 1928 IN THE FAMILY ALBUM CHARACTERISTIC EXPRESSION WEAKNESS OUTCOME 1. Dolah Allen.............Staying at home 2. Ruble Barnes ...........A smile ......... 3. Nellie Benson ..........Determination 4. Marian Brekke ..........Playing ......... 5. Herbert Brotherson .....Heels ........... 6. Ray Buzzetti ...........Swagger ......... 7. Eunice Campbell ........Sweetness ....... 8. Jack Clifford ....-...-..Business ....... 9. Maurice Colberg —.......Grin ............ Schoolma’m 10. Joyce Daniels ... .Childishness ..... 11. Madonna Elder ........Big feet ..... 12. Frances Ewing ........Pessimism ..... 13. Cecelia Fischbach ....Holiness ..... 14. Marion Franklin ......Spit curls ... 15. Cecil Gray ...........Silence ...... 16. Evan Gustafson _______Blushing ... 17. David Hannant ________Bossing 18. Lela Johnson -________Red hair ..... 19. Rudolph Komrs ........Working ...... 20. Helen Lawson —________Friendliness .. 21. June McAllister ......Lipstick ..... 22. Iola Moore ...........Grown up air 23. Ada Naylor ..-........Acting ..... 24. Thora Nelson .........Size ......... 25. Josephine Olenlk .....Dreaming ..... 26. Odessa Redding .......Dimples ...... 27. Lorraine Reyburn _____Length .....—. 28. Audrey Schissler .......— Specs 29. Richard Walker ..........Size _________ Gosh” .....................Hasn't any .............. ......... Aw, cheer up!” ............Doctors ....................A nurse ......... I don’t agree ...........Arbitration ................Author ......... Yes, I know, but” .......— Nice stockings ............Mrs .Colberg ......... Here I is, girls” ........Shleking ...................Founder of Bachelor’s Home ......... Get the idea?” ...........—.Blondes Harness-maker. ......... M-m-m! Boy!” ...............Leonard ..................Married lady ..—A.... You would!” ..............-More Blondes ................Farmer ......... Forevermore!” .........-..Marian ......„..............Model husband ........- Don’t get excited, Prize-fighters ............Reformer the fire’s out!” ........ I’m from Missouri” -......Gadding ....................Adventurer ___________ Well, Crazy!” Reducing ................—..Songbird ........... 98!” .......................Studying ..................Designer ........... Come on, girls” ...........Dating girls ...............An old crank ........... Oh, my gosh!” .............Voice ......................Deaf and dumb teacher ......-.... Golly!” —..................Stock Judging .............-Mechanic This is my desk!”.........Heart ......................Boxer ___________ Oh, kid!” -...............-Boys ........................Beauty operator ........... Boy, I’m hot!” ............Avoirdupois .............-..Author ___________ Go lay down!” ......-...—..Car rides ..............-...We’d all be surprised ........... Oh, Heavens!” .............Late hours .................Concert pianist ___________ Oh. yes!” ...........-....-Ear rings Lawyer’s wife ......... Now, girls! .............-Blushing ....................Dramatics coach __—________ Isn’t it marvelous ” Don ........................Old maid ___________ Huh!” ....................— Weak ankles ...............Vaudeville queen ..........— Don’t ask me!” ...........Bashfulness ................Lady minister ___________ Let’s be on our little Eyes ............-..............Music director’s wife bicycles!” .........— Lordy, no!” .........-.....Hair .......................Owner of young ladies' finishing school ............ Watch out!” ...............Writing notes .............Salesman IIIIIIMIIIMMII • MIIIIIMMIIMIMMIIMMMMMIIIIIIIIIIiail tMIMttMMMIIMIIII lltlillllHIlHIMMHIiHHIlHIHHHMHIlHHMIlMIHIHHIIMIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIHIHHIIIIIIHIIHHHIIIHHIIIH m mm mm mm mm mm mt mm a IIIIMmillllllMIIMMMMMIIMMIMIIIMIMIIIIMIIIIIIIiailllllllllllMIII I . hi hi == = HI Z - ill ill hi III Ml r Hi hi I i i • ? — ill iii = = III iii hi i.i !'! Ill 111 ill ill hi e••l••a••lll••ll••a•aa• hiiimmiiiiimihSS :i : li ; : A n'WMIlMMmilllMMIIUIMtMIIIIMIIHMIllllMIIIIMIIIIIIIIMMHimMimitMtllinMHIIMIIHtlHItnilllllMIUMmil m li Senior (graduation If 11 i jj 11 i The sun is setting in the west, On growing buds and growing grass; And now from dear old Hardin High, The Class of ’28 must pass. Oh, hark! Oh, hear! how loud and clear The baccalaureate sermon’s sounding To all those whose souls in caps and gowns; Whose hearts are loudly pounding. Oh, Seniors, brave and strong and good, Oh, Seniors, meek and mild; You’ve done your duty to Hardin High, And on its books your names are filed. Your carefree school days now have passed; Your own work you commence; Some will to college, and some to work, To earn your shillings and your pence. -4 - 1 Mr. Baldwin: All basketball men must refrain from eating sweets between meals. Jack Riggs: There goes my lolly-pops. Minnie Bailey (to Jack) : You’re pretty good looking, Jack. Jack: I’m sorry I can’t say the same about you. Minnie: You could if you told as big a lie as I did. “Have you read Dickens?” June Me: No. “Have you read Cooper?” June Me: No. “What have you read ?” June Me: I have red hair. Miss Crews: What tense is “I do not know?” Hazel Turner: Present. Miss Crews: Yes, I notice it is always present among students. Of all the words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: “I’ve flunked again!” Little drops of water, frozen on the walk, Make the naughty adjectives, in the people’s talk. JSiL 1 MIIUUIIIIIIIItlllimilimHIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIUIMIIIHHIimHIHIIIItMIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI I MUIIimilllllllll HIM IIIHIIHMIMIIIIIIIIIIIHMIMIHII ItMllf IIMf HHIIIII IIImflllllMIHI 'M iimniiimiimtiiiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiiii-.................................... THE 1928 I laMMIIIIII •liMIIIMMVIllllllllMtllVItMMIMIIIItMlfClllllltMItllllllllllllllltMIIIMIItlllllMtlMflllllMIIIII h- I G HORN Cook with Electricity NO DIRT - NO ODOR - NO DANGER NO WALLS to REFINISH The Electric Way The Only Way 'At Your Service Woe Montana Power Co. CARROLL’S BOB’S PLACE Furniture Stoves Rugs Home of Kroehler Living Room Furniture Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets DeLuxe Springs Monarch Mattresses Highstown Rugs Monarch Malleable Ranges SHERIDAN, WYOMING ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ MEEEEEEz i«L i THE 1928 ■h 'BIG HORN A. S. BROAT Lumber and Building Material Coal, Hardware Paint, Glass, Nails, and Barbed Wire —«()3— rPhone 93 -sfjs- HARDIN, - MONTANA Billings Polytechnic Institute -A Practical University JUNIOR COLLEGE and COLLEGE PREPARATORY Fall Term Opens October 1st, 1928 --SOS- Junior College, Preparatory and Vocational Courses in Arts and Sciences, Electrical Engineering, Commerce, Journalism, Auto-Tractor Engineering, Agriculture, Farm Management, Carpentry and Cabinet Making, Fine and Applied Art, Domestic Arts and Sciences, and Bee and Poultry Culture CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Instruction in Voice, Piano, Pipe Organ, and Violin tVrite for Catalog BILLINGS POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE POLYTECHNIC, MONTANA J3 L IHHHIHHIHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllltlllllllHHIHHHHHHHHHHIIIIHHHHIHHHHHHIHHHHHHHHHIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIHIHIHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHIlHIIIIHHHHHIlIHlIHHIHIHH..........................................................................................HHHHHIHHHIHI..........I| .................................................... uni................................................................................................................................................................. hi........iiiiiih.......hi......hihhiih............ THE 1928 h. T5 I G HORN i - iiS The Largest Selection of GIFTS INVESTORS SYNDICATE 306 Fratt Bldg. BILLINGS, MONTANA FOR ALL OCCASIONS Establislied 34 Years Ago Operates in forty-four states of the Union and Canada Ji; vi:i.Kr'Cof humous Jor diamonds V 2706 First Ave. N. BILLINGS Payment of $63.00 per month for one hundred twenty months Pays you $10,000 Cash or 5compounded interest on your investment $ ♦ Richardso n -Skipto n Company General Merchandise Bullis Hardware Furniture Co. X (Sg. DRY GOODS - SHOES GROCERIES - GRAIN INDIAN BLANKETS HARDWARE FURNITURE and UNDERTAKING X CROIV AGENCY, MONTANA HARDIN, MONTANA Phone Us Your Order PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS” !11 I I I i 11 111 11! S'! 111 hi hi i ■ § i 11 |:| m h! hi 111 h! 111 ill hi hi III UK! ................................................... THE 1928 lltlllllllMItttllMMMIIIIIIMItttMlllltMtllllllltllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMMIMIIMMMIMIIIMMM % li i SAVOY CAFE SUPERB ENVIRONMENT without EXCESSIVE COST Private Parties a Specialty Fountain Service HARDIN, MONTANA HARDIN, MONTANA HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST HARDWARE, IMPLEMENTS AND FURNITURE MONEY CAN BUY HARDIN HARDWARE UToe Winchester Store Ib ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS' ............. I2«L______________ 'BIG HORN MMMMMMMMMMMMMIIMMMMMIMMMMMMMMMMMMMMIIMMIMMMMMMMMMMMIMMMMMIIMMMIMM BIG HORN Meat Market John W. Goering, Proprietor Fresh and Cured Meats Fish and Poultry i 1 : ' ■ i ■ THE 1928 11 m: 'BIG HORN ■SLvilllllllllllllMmMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIimiMIIIMMIIIMlimilllimilllMIMIMMIIMIIIMMIIMIIHIMIIIMlin | Hardin Auto Company | AUTHORIZED DEALERS ' i LINCOLN CARS TRUCKS FORDSON TRACTORS HARDIN MONTANA j1 A I ■BRADLEY SWEATERS ' have long been identified with college and prep school togs, | and with famous athletes the world over. | Shown in a big array of colors and color combinations. O. M. KELLY SON GENERAL MERCHANDISE j -A 1 j. j. PING i FRIGIDAIRE The Perfect Electrical j Refrigeration | LADIF.S’ READY-TO-WEAR DRY GOODS, NOTIONS SHOES Priced as low as $195.00 installed I l Complete line of models on display at () - | Where Reliable Merchandise Is Rowe Furniture Co. h Reasonably Priced BILLINGS, MONT. I ISl i fc. WEEEE=E=EEEE=E= LEAN coal saves work, laundry bills, interior decorating, and lengthens the life of household furnishings, curtains, drapes, rugs and delicate fabrics of all kinds. These are items of real expense which can be reduced to a minimum by using THE SOOTLESS COAL. Your Dealer Handles This Coal Sheridan-Wyoming Coal Company SHERIDAN, WYOMING cA o Cleaner Coal c idtried in Qmerica The Billings gazette In addition to publishing one of the most complete newspapers in the northwest also conducts a modern Job Department O matter what size or nature, we are prepared to handle your printing requirements promptly and at reasonable prices. - 13- Wedding Announcements, Greeting Cards, Engraved Callings Cards are Featured. Give Us a Trial and Satisfaction will Necessarily Follow. We Also Handle Tatum Loose Leaves and Binders to Meet All Needs Rubber Stamps on Fast Time Schedule Jfie GAZETTE PRINTING CO ''Billings, Montana_ ■UinlMIHIMIIIMIIMIIIMIIiailllMIMIIMMHIIItllllllllllHIMUIIIIMIMMIIIIIIIUIMMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMliailtlllMMIMIIMIMIIMIIMIIHIIIIIIMIHIIIMIIIIIHIIlUimillUMIIIMMIIMMIIIMIIIMMMIMIMMMIMMMIIIMIMMIMIIIIMI I Hill I Mil IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMI llllll MIMIII llllll 1111111111111111111111 III! 11IIMIIIIII THE 1928 5s i) Til G HORN III■IIIIIIIII■IIIIIII■IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII•IIIIIIIIIIIII•■II■IIIII■IIIIII•III•I■••■•■■■I'■•I■■•«'IH Hudson-Essex Cars J. BUZZETTI, Dealer HARDIN - MONTANA «— Sheridan Post-Enterprise Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Associated Press Leased Wire Northern Wyoming's Greatest Newspaper NEWS THAT IS BELIEVED CIRCULATION THAT IS PROVEN ADVERTISING THAT BRINGS RESULTS NO. 9215 First National Bank of Hardin CAPITAL $65,000 SURPLUS $10,000 A. S. Broat, President J. J. Ping, Pice-President O. E. Anderson, Cashier Cari. E. Bowman, Assistant Cashier Sheridan tJHusic Stores EVERYTHING MUSICAL Pianos, Player Pianos, Player Rolls, Sheet Music, Radios, Edison Disc Phonographs, Victrolas, Orthophonic Victrolas, Records Easy Terms —::— Eastern Prices Special attention to mail orders Telephone No. 6 206 North Main Street ■PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ ...............112a............. Ml III fjj | i | hi i ' I.I li! ' ■ hi !i| i i III hi ill 111 . Hi m I ■ i hi I hi I } 11 hi = = m : : m: !'! m HI THE 1928 I . I % I G HORN Billings Laundry 'Bissinger Co. Company Established 1882 Montana’s Most Modern Laundry Hides, Pelts, Wool, Furs and Tallow Consignments given special attention ODORLESS DRY CLEANERS HATTERS —one hide or a carload Prices and shipping tags on request —«►- Twenty-sixth St. and Minn. Ave. Out of Town Work Given BILLINGS, MONTANA Special Attention Phone 1541 « ♦ WE’RE NOT SATISFIED UNTIL YOUR PLEASED % % Hi ill ‘Distinctive Photographs ------------------------- 'PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS” .........m.................... J7 ACH farming community must have a dependable cultivated crop. Sugar Beets have conclusively proven to be JUST THAT. Qroiv More ‘TSeets Use only sugar made from these beets. Then watch the results in your community. -O- i i! I Holly Sugar Corporation SHERIDAN, WYOMING JMiL. THE 1928 a ‘BIG HORN WE SELL GROCERIES Our Mono—Service First, Quality Always Service is a very serious subject with us. We want to make our service policy a standard for all other grocery establishments to pattern after. We want to deliver the goods in all that delivering the goods implies. The prosperity of our business indicates that we are succeeding. THE Valley Mercantile Company OF COURSE PHONE 68 FOR SERF ICE Willys-Knight Motored Cars and Trucks WHIPPET FOURS and WHIPPET SIXES The six-cylinder car with a seven-bearing crankshaft at four-cylinder prices Big Horn Motor Co. Hardin, Montana ❖— THREE GREAT SIXES STANDARD-VICTORY-SENIOR GRAHAM BROTHERS TRUCKS -«n - J. C. Norris Hardin, Montana PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS m. ...........IMIMIII.....HIM.... Mil ......MMMMMMIMMMMI....I...MM....Mill.......«...MIMMMIMMIMM.....MMMMMMMMMMI.....I.........MMMMMIMMMMMMMMMHMMItMMMMMMMMMHMMMM.... ilMIMMMMMMMIIIMMMIIIMIIIIIIMIII.nil.I..II..II...Ill... THE 1928 ■h IMG HORN K. and F. CHEVROLET CO. Sales and Service Jbr Keonomtcai Ttantp ortatlom fMTiggffflilii HARDIN, MONTANA WEIR CO’S Qolden l{iile Stores Something New Every Day JVhere Savings Are Greatest HARDIN MONTANA BIG HORN TRADING COMPANY Ready-to-Wear Clothing Dry Goods Shoes HARDIN, MONTANA The Sibley Drug Co. The Rexall Store HARDIN, MONTANA - 4 Everything in Modern Drug Store SERVICE and you get it WITH A SMILE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS' [106] IP I ' I I II I I I. II I Ml laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiiaaiaaaaaaaaiiaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaBaaaataaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBBaaaalliaaaaailllllaiaata .....................................................................................................................................................................................................aaaaaaa aa a a jR H E 1 9 2. 8 if 'BIG H O R N aaaaaaaaaaaauaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaM TIRES gfie GREASE SPOT Across from (Library ACCESSORIES TUBES CAR WASHING ‘IVReturn Everything But the Dirt' C. A. WOLCOTT, Agent HARDIN, MONTANA —D Continental Oil Company Producers—Refiners—Marketers HIGH GRADE PETROLEUM PRODUCTS CONOCO GASOLINE - POLARINE OILS MOBILOIL B. H. McCARTY COMPANY -■ { INFEEDS AND SEEDS CUSTOM GRINDING AND CLEANING BALANCED POULTRY AND DAIRY FEEDS PHONE 136 ======3 n= H THE 1928 h 'BIG HORN ABSTRACT OF TITLE Do not buy real estate unless you have an abstract of title BECAUSE THE TITLE MAY BE DEFECTIVE IVHY TAKE THE CHANCE? We also sell all kinds of Insurance BIG HORN ABSTRACT CORPORATION Room 19, Gay Block D. L. Egnew, President Hardin, Montana Carl Rankin, Sec’y There are other things in business besides financial gain. We want your good will and patronage. Come to this BIG STORE for better values and courteous service. Trade here where prices arc always the lowest. Stevens, Fryberger Company Wyoming’s Largest Department Store and Mail Order House SHERIDAN. WYOMING I Jifa l fo NORTHERN SEED COMPANY SHERIDAN, WYO. EVERY DROP DELICIOUS? NASH COFFEE COMPANY 'PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS' ........................................... IMMIMMMMMMHIMIIMMIIMMMHIIIIIIMMMMMMMIHMMHIMIIHIIIIIMMMMMMIIIIMIHMIIIMHMIIIIMMMIMIMHIIMIIIHIIIHHMMIIMMIMIIHMMMMMMIMMMHmG NIIIIIIMIIMIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIItlllHIIIIIWIIIIIMMIIIIMIIIIMIIItIMIIIIINI..................................................................................................................................................... Iltltll THE 1928 IIIIII9IIIIIMIIII % 'BIG HORN 111 HARRIET THEATRE Motion Pictures ROAD SHOWS and VAUDEVILLE Hi I i! SAN-I-DAIRY 'Butter Ice Cream Hardin San-I-Dairy Creamery We Are Headquarters for the best of CLASS PINS, RINGS and EMBLEMS FOUNTAIN PENS in all grades Gin'S SUITABLE for all occasions Strand’s Jewelry Store “GIFTS THAT LAST” £Jfoe Hardin Tribune-Herald OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF BIG HORN COUNTY - (► - The Pioneer Publication Which Has Helped in the Making of BIG HORN COUNTY - - “Make Montana Money Make Montana” ■PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ ..........................................................Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.....II........Illlllll.............11111111111 THE 1928 h mIG HORN Eder Hardware Company He Sell the Very Best Maytag Washing Machines De Laval Separators John Deere Implements Majestic Ranges Furniture Kelvinators Paints PHONE 20 HARDIN, MONTANA Hardin Grain Fuel Co. (jrain and Fuel HARDIN, - MONTANA Sheridan Flouring Mills, Inc. Millers and Grain Dealers Flour Mills at SHERIDAN, WYO. -o- Elevators in WYOMING—MONTANA HARDIN MEAT MARKET 3 QUALITY AND SERVICE PLUS JOHN L. SWINDLE .Proprietor ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ --------------5.1.I5.L............... ........................ IIIIBIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMMIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIMIIHIMIMIIMIMIMMMIIIimilMIIIMIIIHIMMIMMIIHIIMIII THE 1928 l«IUB999l9(99imi 'B G HORN MMIimMllimilllllMMMII9ililll99ll9IMM9MIMIIMH9alHlliMHHHIIMIMHIMMM(illlMMMMIHIII9IM9MM ! Snook Art Company AUTO GLASS WINDOW GLASS PLATE GLASS All Novelties in Wall Coverings, Art Goods, Parchment Shades, Woven Tapestries, Wall Paper, Paints, Artists’ Materials, Polychrome Materials, Plaques Home of Yellowstone Modeling Clay BILLINGS - MONTANA GAMBLE- ROBINSON CO. RECEIVERS AND SHIPPERS ERUITS AND VEGETABLES BILLINGS MONTANA Alational Bond Corporation First Mortgage Bonds -«►- Officers and Directors: J. J. Ping G. M. Harris R. M. Tone G. E. Minty R. C. Dillavou -4 - Electric Bldg. BILLINGS, MONT. to thela drop s I PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS I111! 199911999l9t9V999H9IMIIII99ltll9llltl9llll9lllllllfll9999lll9llll99IIM99llllll9l9lllll99lll99l9IMIIIIIII99llllll9l9lll99l9l9IIIIIHIIIIIHMI99t9H9ltlttll99lt9l9ltltl9lll9l9llllllll9999l9H9llll99ltlllll9llllllllllllt9l999lllltfll999IHI9ltllllll9HIIIIII9l9MMII9ll m nillMIIIIIIIIMIMItllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIMIIMlnillHHMMHIHIIItlllHMMIMIIIIIMIMIMIMIIIIMIMMIIMIMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIMIIIINIIIIIMIIIIIIIIinillllllHIIMIMIIIIMIIMMIIIIMMMIMMHMIlllllllllMIIIIIMmilimiMIMmMIIIlm H ........................................ 1....11 ■ I • 111111II111111111.111 ■ II11111 ■ 111.111 III 111111 ■ 1111 ■■■■ 11 III 1111 ■■■■ 11 III I ■ 1111111III III III 11M ■ 111 Ml I ■ 1111M M11111111111111 III 111111111111111 ■ 111..1111111 III III III 11 • 1111 M M 1111111 III III I THE 1928 % 'BIG HORN IHIIIIMIIIIMIIMIHItMIHIHIHIIimMHIIIIHMHIMIIIMIIMIMMIIIIIIMIIIMHIIIIIIIMIHMimimilMIIMtM _ ‘‘Something New Every Day” This Store Solicits Your Mail Orders On the Basis of CORRECT FASHIONS QUALITY MERCHANDISE PROMPT SERVICE ‘Smartness Without Extravagance' BEAUTIFUL HATS for All Seasons and Occasions Hats of youthful line and color, the very newest in novelty straws. Our large collection of the latest original creations in young ladies’ and young women’s millinery on display at all times. Starke Millinery 2824 Second Avenue North BILLINGS - MONTANA Authorized Capital $50,000.00 Montana Hide Fur Company Largest Dealers in Montana in Hides, Pelts, Wool, Fur and All Kinds of Junk Country Shipments Solicited Proper Attention Guaranteed Reference Security Trust Savings Bank 2513 Minnesota Avenue Near North. Pac. Passenger Depot P. O. Box 617 Warehouse Phone 6432 ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS' IHIIIIMIItMMMIIIIIIMIIIIIMHMIlMIIIIIIMI U1L M THE 1928 3s i) “BIGHORN LABBITT HOSPITAL- A Place of Safety in Time of Need Always Open L. H. Labbitt, M. D., Physician and Surgeon Eyes Tested t := ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS' ............ m........... s T. H. BURKE When All Else Fails Lawyer Chiropractic will get you well Hardin, Montana DR. HARLIN R. LARSON FRANKLIN D. TANNER L. E. HAVERFIELD, M. D. Lawyer Physician and Surgeon w X Hardin, Montana Office in Sullivan Building GUINN MADDOX DR. W. A. RANSIER C. C. Guinn Dan W. Maddox Dentist Lawyers Hardin, Montana Hardin, Montana ♦ GEORGE A. BAKER D. L. EGNEW Physician and Surgeon Lawyer Gay Block Hardin, Montana Hardin, Montana VERNON W. WOLF H. W. BUNSTON Osteopathic Physician Lawyer Office west of Court House Hardin, Montana Hardin, Montana THE 1928 Big Horn County Bank HARDIN, MONTANA Capital $35,000.00 Guaranty Fund $315.00.00 -• Wf Welcome the Accounts of Pupils, Teachers and School Organizations 'BIG HORN When in need of— DRY GOODS, WEARING APPAREL or GROCERIES GIVE US A CALL Phone 158 -O- Hardin Mercantile Company HARDIN, MONTANA E. L. JACOBSON McCormick-Detring Farm Machines T rucks - T ractors HARDIN. MONTANA PATROSIZE OUR ADVERTISERS THE 1928 cfe 'BIG HORN Your Patronaae 14 111 Please Us—Our Service IVill Please You Trading With Us Will Help Your Savings Account Come In—Look Us Over Snow White Cleanliness Rex Laundry Billings, Mont. J. R. Vickers, Agent HARDIN, MONTANA Laundry Called For and Delivered IV’e Specialize in High School and College Annual Engraving Designers and Engravers of School Annuals BUCKBEE-MEARS CO. Saint Paul - Minnesota ----------- $ ---- PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS k THE 1928 h DORNEY’S FILLING STATION Hardin, Montana FISCHBACH’S TAILOR SHOP Cleaning - Pressing Repairing Phone 79 HARDIN SHOE SHOP IVe Use Only the Best” Frank H. Cryder, Prop. HARDIN, MONT. CLUB CAFE Clean Food—Well Cooked Sam Poullous, Prop. HARDIN, MONT. M. M. BROOKS CO. Real Estate and Insurance HARDIN, MONT. Phone 187 HI G HORN HARDIN BAKERY Patronize Home Industry —Phone 46— Bread and Pastries for discriminating people FRANK G. HATCH Plumbing and Heating Phone 115W HARDIN, MONT. PANTORIUM Tailoring Cleaners and Dyers Robert Harris, Proprietor Phone 159 Hardin, Mont. CONOCO SERVICE STATION Ethyl Gas Prompt Service Dave Robertson, Prop. HARDIN, MONT. GEM CAFE Home-Cooked Food—Good Coffee Strictly American E. W. Eastabrook, Prop. HARDIN, MONT -------------------« ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ JliSL m te THE 1928 H. E. CLIFFORD Meat Market Crow Agency, Montana h 'BIG HORN BLUE FRONT GARAGE E. A. Steen, Prop. Crow Agency, Montana Patronize JOE’S BARBER SHOP Standard Haircutting Courteous Service Crow Agency, Montana Authorized Dealer for RCA and CROSLEY RADIOS ICELESS REFRIGERATORS PAT’S RADIOLA SHOP Hardin, Montana KENDRICK HOUSE Modern Reasonable Rates Hardin, Montana CROW BAKERY Bread Pastries Meals and Lunches Crow Agency, Montana MCDONALD’S GROCERY The Shop and Save IPay Our 60c Coffee for 45c per pound Hardin, Montana MODEL CLOTHES SHOP Mens’ Outfiters from Head to Foot S. J. Marquisee, Prop. Phone 12 Hardin, Montana S C H N E I D E R’S CONFECTIONERY PHONE 155J Hardin, Montana ‘PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS’ J2SL fi = |({ li SCALLY and KEELER GENERAL MERCHANDISE Crow Agency, Montana 11 i = HE=E - -Eli Sadie Ping: Who was Shylock, Mr. Thompson? Mr. Thompson: My dear, you go to Sunday school and don’t know that? Mrs. Fish (to teacher): And is my little boy really trying? Miss Crum: Yes, very. Lucille: What happened when your father told Kenneth he ought to put something aside for a rainy day? Virginia: A little later, Dad missed his raincoat. Mr. Gerber: Who can tell me one important thing we have today that we didn’t have one hundred years ago? Garold: Me. Maurice: I hear Jack Riggs was kicked off the squad. Ray: How so ? Maurice: He was told to tackle the dummy and he tackled the coach. Miss O’Hara: Half a dozen doctors have given Mr. Vanderburgh up. Mr. Baldwin: Really. What is wrong with him? Miss O’Hara: He simply won’t pay his bills. Mr. Brekke: Time he was going, Marian. Maurice: Gee, your dad’s an old crank. Mr. Brekke (overhearing): You have to have a crank when the self-starter won’t work. Girls’ faults are many, Boys have only two; Everything they say, And everything they do. English— Am her went ? Are she gone? Will her ne’er come back to I ? Nor me see she again? O’Cruel fate! It cannot am. Mr. Thompson: During the siege of Vicksburg, the food ran out and as there was an abundance of rats, the people killed and ate them. Lenora Reno: Is that what the Pied Piper of Hamlin was written about? The days of putting the cart before the horse are past. The best we can do now is to hang the spare tire on the radiator. All hard boiled eggs have yellow centers. Miss O’Hara, in Commercial Arithmetic: Why don’t you answer me, Jack? Jack: I did, I shook my head. Miss O’Hara: You don’t expect me to hear it rattle way up here, do you? Marion Brekke: Is your mother doing anything for her deafness, Lorraine? Lorraine: No, she has decided to postpone it until I have learned to play the saxophone. A bachelor is a man who looks before he leaps—and then stands still. Why Some Students Go to Assembly— For the walk—Juell Ottun To read “Life”—Robert Scanlon To write notes—Evelyn Lewis To make “clever remarks”—Cecil Gray To “study!”—Margaret Ping To make fools of themselves—Eighth Graders To giggle—Marian Brekke To talk to LuVerne—Bud Brotherson For his daily dozen—Mr. Thompson To sleep—Bill Johnson To attract the girls—Herbert Crosby To tease Evelyn Lewis—Garold Fish To hold Ladies’ Aid—Virginia Kelley, Lucille Colberg, Marjorie Ellen Graham, Helen Bullis. Miss Crum went and rubbered, In the Home Ec. cupboard, For sweetmeats with which she could dope; And she made a wry face, And ran from the place, For the choc’late she bit was tar soap. Miss Comstock (in Agriculture): No doubt, some of the fish you have right here in your own streams came from Missouri. Wilfred Cole: They are not all in the streams. Mrs. Ewing: Frank, what does this “60” mean, on your report card? Frank: Oh, it’s the temperature of the English room, I guess. Teacher (in Ancient History): Where was Nero during the fall of Rome? Nellie: On a high hill playing his fiddle. Teacher: Lyre. Nellie: I’m not either; he was too! Guess who: He swings along with mighty stride, He passes all he can, He’s active as the ocean tide, And can outwalk any man. Teacher: Give the names of your parents. Frank Ewing: Papa and mama. Bo5’s: Why the heavy thinking, girls? Girls: We are trying to make up our mi ds whether to ladies. Ray Buzzetti: I’m a perfect fool. Natalie Turner: Oh, no! No one is perfect. Herbert Dunham: I’m a little stiff from basketball. Bill Johnson: Where did you say you were from? George Sullivan (in Geometry class): There is just one part that puzzles me, and that’s the proof. “Many a man spends a lot of time over a miss in his motor.” Miss Baum: What did Lincoln do when he fell in the river? Henry Jensen: Got all wet, I guess. M iss O’Hara (to Herbert Dunham, who kept sniffling to annoy, in study hall): Have you a handkerchief? Herbert: Yes, but I don’t make a practice of loaning it to teachers. Teacher: What is wind, Jack? Jack: Wind, teacher, is air in a hurry. Mr. Thompson (taking class roll): Now, let’s see. Is there anyone here who is .absent? Miss O’Hara (very emphatically): I want this stopping talked! Miss Baum: Why didn’t you bring your book to class, Juell? Juell: Couldn’t find it. Miss Baum: Well, where is iv? Juell: In my desk, somewhere. Teacher: The law of gravitation dhiws things to the earth and holds them there, by gravity. Frosh: What did they do before the law was passed? Miss Crum, in English II: What other tragedies occurred in this writer’s life? Max Thompson: He got married. “This is certainly food for reflection,” said the goat, as he swallowed a mirror. Mr. Gerber: Sadie, what is meant by the Rennaissance? Sadie: A revival of learning. Mr. Gerber: When did it occur? Sadie: Just before exams. Mr. Baldwin: What is the principle use of cocoanut oil? Frosh: Hair tonic. Faculty: What is life? Freshman: Just one darned thing after another. Mr. Vanderburgh: And so we find that X equals zero. Marjorie Ellen: What! All that work for nothing? In Physical Education, Miss Comstock arranged the line, and said: “Raise your left legs forward.” One girl raised her right leg, by mistake, and Miss Comstock, glancing down the line, demanded: “Who’s the bloomin’ gazook standing there with both legs raised ?” Miss Crum: What is the climax of this story'? Jack Riggs: The proposal. Miss Crum: The catastrophe? Jack Riggs:.The acceptance. Each successive moment is a monjent in whj£h to succeed. Miss Comstock, to Vanderburgh and Baldwin: I pwant you two to come down to my girls’ gym class. Mr. Baldwin: What for? Miss Comstock: I told the girls I would give them a workout with dumb-bells. Who is the tighest fellow in high school?” “The fellow who won’t take a shower bath because they soak him too much.” Clem: What time are you expecting me ? Lucille: I’m not expecting you at all. Clem: Then I’ll surprise you. Irate Parent, to Cecil Gray: I’ll teach you to make love to my daughter, sir! Cecil: I wish you would, old boy, I’m not making much headway. Miss Crum: Do you believe in divorces? Mr. Thompson: No, I favor a fight to the finish. Miss Baum: I am tempted to give you a test. Garold Fish: Yield not to temptation.” -jorie Ellen Gra- Jack Riggs: Lend me an eraser. Ray Buzzetti: Aw, use your neck. Jack Newell: Are you going home now? Mary Asbury: Er—why—er—uh—yes. Jack: Well—uh—goodbye. “What’s your average income ? Russell Atkins: Oh, about midnight. Sophomore: Diseases always strike one in his weakest spot. Bright Frosh: Yes, I notice you have a cold in your head. Jack Riggs: There is something very dove-like about you. Marjorie Ellen: What is it, Jack? Jack: You are so pigeon-toed. Tom: Why do they have knots on the ocean, instead of miles ? Evelyn L.: Well, you see, they couldn’t have the ocean tide if they didn’t have knots. When the teacher’s in the classroom, And the rhalk is in the tray; Ajrnen Prof. Gerber’s in the office, Where he’s found most every day; When Hank Ford is in the basement. And the coal is in the bin, When the boys in manual training Make our heads ache with their din; When the English class reads Shakespeare, And the Home Ec. girls make cheese, Then, I always feel inspired, To make lots of rhymes like these! •IIIMMIIIIIIIIIIiailllMMIIMIIIMMMIIMmMMimMIMIMIIMIIIIIIIIMIItlllHMIMIIMIIIIIMIIIMIIItMMIMIIMIIIIIMlMlIMIIIIIIIMMMIIIIMMMI HIM III MM M 111111111 • 1111'HIH I lanail I III! II111 HI 111 la | IIII i 111 • I • IIII111II1111III1111 III 1111 lllll 1111II11111H11111111111 Ilia 111 III 111 • IHI11 lllll 11 III! 11111II1111 III • I llllll 111IIII111111IIIMI11 III 1111 Ml III III IIII1111111111 • Hill IIIHHII ttlll t III ' B B iM m mm B m mb bb b bb mb b mm m m mm bb mm bb b b bb bb bb bb bb bb bb b bb h b bb m. Mi B «b Mi bb bb bb “““ “ '1 ' ■ jiaiiiiiaiaaiiiiaiiiiaiaiaiiiaiiiiiiiiiaaaiiiiaaiiaaiaiiiiiiaiaaaiaiiiiiaiaiiaiiaiiaiiiiaiiiiiaaiaiiiiiiaiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifaailMaiiiiaaiiiiiiaiiiiaiiiiiiaaiiiiiiaiiiiaiiaiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiaiaiiiiaaiiiaiiaaiaaiiai'aiiaaiaiiaaiiiiaaaaiiiaMiiiiiiiiiaiiaaaaaiaiaiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaaaaiiaaaiiiaaaaiaiaaiiiiaiiiaaaiaiaMaaa iaiMiiiiiiaiiiiiaaaMaaaiiiMiiaiiiiiiaiiiiiMiiiaiMaiaaaaiiiiaaaaiiaaaiiMiiiiaaaiaiaaaaaiaiiaiaiaaiiiimiiiiiiiaiiaaaiiiiiiiiuiiiiaiiaiiaaaiaiaaiaiaaaaiaaaaiiaiiiiiaai z x © X 03 20 N CS a: {■s X a S-’ O I 3 i .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. • aiiiiiaaii •iiiii lll•lallllla••llll•••ac••al• a if U44«CT«aicaiMii««iiiaaf •l•laal••l•lMll••ll••lll•llllllllllllllllll•llllllll•llll•llflll0llllllllllllll•lllall••llllllal«lll•l•lMl•lf ....................... aaaaia ticaiMa •laatManaitMiiiMiaaiaiMa iiaaaii n c • i« f m !«••!• •• tm itiiicSzJ .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... IIIIIIIIIMII z os o S o CQ 00 N CN I4J a: to X CL 0 S3 •••••••••••(•••• IM tllttlll ••lliS9lti0§lttl«99«l«§l««l0«lt««00ll«l««IVII««0« «9l099ltl9a««lll|«lttll0llllll000«lltl«a9lf9lllllll0l|l||l|||l|9ll99|l|ia9ffl«l|««llll,«9l«l«l999tl««l999l«Vtlt«9iatll«lll0VfllllVCVI«ll««lll0««««««ll«9tllSC9l9aCI«ffV«aCltlV9lll9«««l««09lt0ll0«99lltftl9«t«9l9 tt«att9«t«tat90«t«tt§fl009t99lt§§9t9littVt99l999t99t9l99 9(9t99fl99V999CI99 ••• ••9 • • •••ttV9tt990ta «9t9«l9a ■■■ BB MB B i B B MB i B BB BB BB B BB BB BB B BB BB flB B B B B BB MB BB BB BB i B BB BB B B B BB ABB BB BB BB B BB BB BB MB' BB Bi I B -■VT 7.
”
1925
1926
1927
1929
1930
1931
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