John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN)

 - Class of 1915

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1915 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 106 of the 1915 volume:

p 1-1 .ppp-qv. 4 E 5 a E L C ': E v 4 I 5 f 5 , ! 1 n ! I warming! With charity to all and malice toward none we have published this book. If you don't believe it think what we could have said about you. The allusions to Miss Andrews are rather numerous, but if you had her strength of mind in the face of all opposition we could have talked about you instead. We had to boycott jokes on Korn, Palmer, Spellacy, and the printshop because of over- specialization in the Gleam . All things we have said about teachers are true. The note to Willis McCoy and the other from M. K. are absolutely bonafideg they are still in our possession and may be viewed for a consideration. Don't you dare to think that Green, La Motte, and Marque didn't have money enough to have photographs taken. The camera quailed before them-that's all. n va The Eearhnnk uf the Enbn Q. Johnson Iaigb Sanbunl Saint Raul, Minnesota Buhlisbeh lap the Glass of jaineteen Jfiftcen We, The Glass uf 1915, Estimate this Bunk tn the Memory of Qnhernur Einhn Qlhsrt iinhnsun Barron of our School Tma I.A'l'1f GOVERNOR JOHN ALBERT JOHNSON fi .li I . f -A . K. amy I 'I A. ' aiu- -. - -. J, ,. IL I W , .1 yls1?ifi .f 1 1: '- -4. Tf A 4 s. I. - a 1 x v. , O WE, students of the johnson High School, know just why our High School is the John A. Johnson school and no other? Do we know how appropriate the name is and how we can help to make it more so? We cer- tainly should become acquainted with these facts, for in order to comprehend the why and wherefore of the name of our school it is necessary to know Governor Johnson, the man, his life, his works, and his career. He was born of Norwegian parentage on a farm near St. Peter in 1861, reared in what was at that time a wilderness of Minnesota. He went to the little backwoods school house until the time of his father's disappearance. The family's poverty became too hard to bear and he shared the burden of its support with his mother. She began to do washing. He, at the age of thirteen, began to work for the first person who would employ him. He went to St. Peter, got job after job, drug clerk, supply clerk, and did an odd job here and there, worked for a railway contracting firm, and finally became editor and part owner of the St. Peter Herald. In each posi- tion he worked faithfully and honestly, never shirking a hard task, and always rising. His entrance into politics began with his work on the St. Peter Herald. As state senator he was always identified with measures that were an improvement or of benefit to the state. While governor he accomplished much for lVIinnesota's political advancement. He took Minnesota's affairs in hand while she was yet a stand pattern and shone very dimly among her sister states. He introduced modern legislative methods. He originated the two-cent railroad fare law and the primary election laws. This little sketch of his early life is important only in that it shows what a man with an environment such as his can achieve by faithful work and honest effort. It is not necessary to name all the many reforms he brought about for us to see what a worthy man he was, but it is well for us to know the faithful way in which he per- formed his public offlces. A man without pecuniary means does not become governor three times in succession unless he be a worker and a loyal one at that-and johnson was governor three times! At the time of his death he was regarded as one of Minnesota's big triumvirate-Archbishop Ireland, James J. Hill, and Governor johnson. Throughout the country people who knew him were im- pressed immediately by three things-his straightforwardness and sincerity, his charm of manner, and his broad culture. So, where could a name more fitting for our school be found? No Minnesota man ever stood for higher ideals, no man could offer greater inspira- tion to our student body. May he long be honored and loved by the school! Qian: SCUDGOH lull N1 C I I OHN English Miss Miss Mxss rss Axmilmws Bom Moon: Muusn Biology Miss Pan! Science Mn H1umnLL History Miss ICKLER Mn KonN Mathematics Miss SLINEY Miss BURNS Miss MINOR Mechanical Drawing Mn. I-IALLOWAY Gymnasium Mn. Excnnumua Cooking 'Miss CHAMBERLIN Sewing Miss Bunuxnn wcultg M GUISE Principal Latin MR BEGCS French Miss N1c1-1oLs German Miss FREEMAN Mn Tnvcsun Miss BELL Swedish Miss H.u.s'rnNcAn.D Commercial Mn DIEHL Mn. PAULUS Mn. MYERS Miss LEWIS Woodwork Mn. CHURCHILL Machine Shop - Mx. MA1'rEsoN Expression and Music Miss MORTON Drawing ,n . ' Miss AXTELL Librarian Miss BLOOMQUIST 1 ,L .1 '. ' H 'Erfhtite Miss Jennie Ickler died at her home in this city April 17, 1915, after a linger- ing illness. She was the first teacher appointed to the Johnson-Cleveland High School when the work began under Principal S. A. Farnsworth in 1893. Miss Ickler was a graduate of Vassar College and later did graduate work in Latin at the University of Michigan. She taught one year at the Faribault High School, but her life work was here. She was a great teacher. When she began her work here the High School was small and almost unknown. But little by little she searched out and gathered up the scattered and half formed desires of parents and children for more school- ing, fostering and helping them until the school was a growing and successful institution. It was my privilege to go with her on several occasions as she tried to help parents plan to give some ambitious boy or girl a chance at high school. I shall never forget the tactful, yet steady insistence upon the future good of the child, her broad outlook, nor the earnest pleading which generally won the day. Under the leadership of Mr. Farnsworth she laid the foundations of the school broad and deep, with a high standard of scholarship and an emphasis upon the development of the individual student which at once stamped the school with what has always been its most marked characteristic-the personal relation of teacher and student. Miss Ickler always inspired a love of learning in her pupils. Hundreds speak of the pleasures of her class-room work, of the vivid interpretations of her lessons, of her thoughtful comments. Some remember with joy the afternoons when she read to them from Homer or the Greek Testament. Indeed, it was the call of her classes that kept ,Greek in our curriculum long after every other high school in the state had given it up. Her whole aim was to help young people to develop themselves, and she brought to the task a sympathy that won the most difiicult natures and unlocked the most reserved heart, a clear sightedness that saw every phase of the problem, a sincerity that banished sham and pretence, and a faith that made one long to live up to her expectations. Thousands today bear witness that her scholarly accuracy, her thoroughness and fidelity to truth, and the sight of her daily devotion to duty have helped them to be better men and women. Her nature was unselfish, modest and retiring. Few people outside of the school knew what a marvel of strength, of foresight, of decision, of executive ability she was. That infinite capacity for taking pains showed when she taught her own classes, was acting principal, and carried the school quietly through all thejmmense detail of examinations, changing programs, and entering classes during the six weeks in which we were without a principal. But that terrible strain of work laid the foundation of the weakness which culminated in her untimely death. Of her relations with her fellow teachers it is difficult to speak. Our love for her was too great to talk about. How sincerely and graciously she welcomed a newcomer, how loyal to her colleagues, how gentle and considerate to every- one, how enduring her friendship, how often she spared others-herself, never. She is not dead. She lives forever in our hearts. FLORENCE M. PERRY. Parz' 005 0 6D X A' 7 N Qi Q LUifVt7fKZ 14'- if ,H X W X X ,A f if U 0, O O9 QQQQCQOQWL 'glfj X A S' 1 xv f ff mi Q 0 ? ' l., QUE? miss tillimotfe A elass adviser or a friend Has never lmeen, we're very sure, More kind her willing aid to lend, XN'ith hardest tasks, than our Miss Moon So glad to do a helpful deed- The love of any Class she'd win. For if 'tis true of friends in need A friend indeed to us she's been. XYhat time and eare the elass well knows You spent for us these four years thru, And now, as quickly comes the elose, VYe realize our delmt to you. And when these elass days soon shall end. And we shall, scattered, Climb life's hill. XYe want you then to he our friend, Be our kind adviser still! 5, -uf - - f rl ,-. 111:25 -' 45421 . ,. -n-V 5 , E . I pk E Senior Hmmm! :Bomb THOMAS L20 MORAN Editor-in-Chief Associate Editors Hnnwlc ALLEN . ' Lucius KRANZ Lnormnn HOLMGREN HAROLD Lmnzxn I Business Stajf Ammon Gn.s'r.m EDNA Om.ssoN Mm.vxu.E MEYER BERTHA PIERCE Auv Wassm. ' ,Art Editors REUBEN HOLMGILEN MILDRED Bnocxun' P 'x...md... SQIHIHOIL' Hllbuilm ELMER NYBERG: A senator I mean to be. If you have doubts, just wait and see. RUTH LILJEDAHL: A husky voice had she. MARIE FISCHER! In school she looks so very meek, But outside she is quite a freak. WILLIAM FOIISBERG: Science fails to shake his faith in study. WALTER OLSON! What will Miss Perry do without him? ADA!-I BERG: Studies, not men, have always been my aim. BERTHA PIERCE: Did you ever watch her go collecting? HELEN LARSONZ She is sensitive and shrinks l And hides her head when e'er she thinks. llffllwi 'T' ' Seniors' Hlllmnm MILDRED BROCKMAN: Mildred now, Mildred ever, Brockman now, but not forever. Rov KQRFHAGE: I know it is a sin For me to sit and grin. ANNA LINDGRENZ High marks don't seem to have ajected her at all-see how pleasant she seems! FLORENCE PETERSON: O dainty duck! 0, dear! ORRIN LEE: Handsome apples are sometimes sour. MILDRED LINDA:-n.: I love to wind my mouth up, I love to hear it go. EVELYN WALLGREN: School interferes with her social life, so she takes it as easy as possible. FREDERICK THIERS: A scientist he tries to be, As every one with eyes can see. Senior Ellllmnm HELEN KRANZ: Let Fido chase his tail all day, Let kitty play at tag, I have no time to throw away, Why! all the school would lag. ALOYSIUS SPELLACY: Silence, people say, is golden: Speech is just a golden brick. ADELLA WARDRUM: Did you ever hear her say a thing out- side of class? DALE ANDERSON: He was as naughty as ever a boy could hope to be. HAROLD LINDERE: Ohl why should life all labor be? MYRTLE CARLSON! No matter what they say, We all know she can play. MARC-UERITE VAN ALLEN: A psyche knot she always wears, And sometimes has the worst daymares. HARRY ANDREASON: An early breakfast he must munrh, To get it down inntime for lunch. SSIMOIE' Hlllbidlm VERA NORBERG: It's the little things that tell. LESTER PALMER: Halfback on the football team And all the way back in his studies. ADOLPH HOFFMANN: Sixteen years old and loves a Senior! EuzABE1'H Arlcms: She is so tall, That if she'd Llall, While in the ll, She'd hit us all. Paonna ERICKSON2 She reminds one of iron oxide. Cuu. Ns1.soN: They told us he was kind of funny, So that is why 'tis written here, see? MYRTLE NELsoN: gf she has a little shadow, t's the shadow of a shadow. Benton: Elllbunm IDA NELSON: Good night and pleasant dreams. MELVIN GUNDLACH: Even though vanquished he could argue still. ANNA SHERLOCK: A light shining in our midst. FRED HowE: A plague on maids and him who jirst invented them. They're all the same. CLARA WATSON: I love to sit and write and write, Clickety click, click click click, ding! But I 'd enjoy it far, far more I f I could run this dog-gone thing. CLARA OLSON: Men and mice are her main aversions? ALGOT LINDAHL: He is a seU'made man and he worships his maker. Senior Hlllbmlm I ESTHER PETERSON: She's the girl with the heavy auburn hair. ALVIN ALMER: There a man so very meek, That e'en his shoes refused to squeak. ARTHUR LOFROTHZ He looks as frisky as a spring lamb. LAURA OLSON: Short and thick, Is never quick. HARRY OBERG: GeeI What a queen. HAZEL CLARK: Only poets know how hard it is to make the right word come. PAULA DOERMANN: Her hair is crisp and black and long. Senior Hlllbmuxnml HULDA LUXIENI Hully is a noisy girl, Did she ever wear a curl? ARTHUR JOHNSON! You'd never know he was a Senior. Lucius KRANZ: And even I make no pretense Of having more than common sense, Avoiding tho' the frequent blunders Of those who study N ature's wonders.' GRACE KINSTLER: She entuned in hire nose ful swetely. WALTER STAUFFACHER: Came from Mechanics. ROY JOHNSON! He has a brush upon his crown, And on his brow he wears a frown CPD. CONSTANCE OLSON: The littlest Senior of them all. AMY WEssEL: Wouldn't the girls have a swell basket ball team if she played center? Seaton? Hllbluznm MELVILLE MEYER: I have a great respect for brains. I often wish I had some myself. I MARIE OLSEN2 She'd better take lessons in blujing from sxpiehvr JENNIE BLOOM: How it talks. Ye Gods! how it talks! LEONARD PALMQUIST: He certainly left an impression in the chemistry laboratory. For details, please note the ceiling. KATHERINE BROWN: Unconsciously she uses slang, And causes her teachers many a pang. HEDWIG ALLEN: When Hedwig is on a committee, She's quiet as quiet as can be. OSCAR TENGQUIST: He grew up like a weed in a summer night. Senior Elllbmm HELEN ELLIS: She plays in the orchestra for special reasons-ask her. ARTHUR KEENAN: I confess I am no fighter. ETHYL YosT: All she does is laugh Hi! Hi! CAROLYN WAHLQUIST: She may be slow, but she manages to cover ground. ERNEST OUELLET1-E: If sandwiches are not plenty where he came from, it is not for the want of tongue. VIOLET ANDERSON: Bleaching powders, mirrors, too, Violet has lots to do. ELSIE HOFFMAN: Of again, on again, Now she's a blonde again. REUBEN HOLMGREN: It is not strength but art obtains the price. Senior Elllllbllilm THORA DAHLQUIST: T hilke some Kidde Cas I can well de- visej Was too very foolish and unwise. LESTER JOHNSON! We suspect he will have a hard time liv- ing down his extreme youth. GERTRUDE GALLAGHER: The jingles she writes in her sleep Are not what you'd call very deep. CARME WIMAN: You'll know her by her shrug. AMBROSE LEWIS! The sun shall not smite thee by day nor the moon by night. GLADYS SwENsoN: She spends the most part of her earnings In buying some freak kind of ezrrings. DALTON SALISBURY: I am a man of much importance. Look at me. Seniors Elllbiumm HENRIETTA HOFFMANN: What's the matter with Heinie's feet? LEIF GILSTADZ How long that boy is getting. CAROLUS WAHLQUIST: Behold, the child, by Nature's kindly law, Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw. LILLIAN OLSON: You have more dignity than you need- Try having a good time for a while. HELEN MAHONEY: Vanity is still on deck, and humble virtue gets it in the neck. ARTHUR GILSTAD: My only books were women's looks, and folly's all they taught me. VIVIAN WOOLEN: When she at last began to study Her thoughts were very, very muddy. t Senior Hllbimm MARIE HOGE: Oh, those pie plates! HAROLD voN LORENZ: What will the Sophomore girls do with- out him? ALICE MONTGOMERY: Short and--ahem, and happy. ILA SAUL: Malted milk made her andgwe chn prove it. MILTON Sci-IAEFFER: He took cooking. LEONARD HOLMGRENS Oh! that smile. EDNA ANDERSON! History and stenography Keep her busy as a bee. SQHRHOIC Hllbililm EDNA OHr.ssoN: Oh! girls, isn't he a dear? KIEFFER VAUx: Don't condemn a man 'who has curly hair unless he likes it. Lucius LINDGREN: I am collecting class dues from you. URSULA SHExu.ocK: She's Anna's sister. THOMAS MORAN: Jilted twice. RAGNA WIKSTRAND: The rarest thing in the world is common sense. FLORENCE STONHOLM: She always carries the same books that Adella does. ALLEN HUNGERFORD! Trouble's own companion. 1 rf +V, Glass ilhlfstorn A I N the spring of 1911 the new John A. johnson High School was -IT: V completed and dedicated and Mr. J. M. Guise chosen for VW principal. The following September there were enrolled in this Q. 1 1 -b new school a hundred and some odd shy freshmen composing I-'-:if 'ii 5 the class of 1915. Pride forbids describing minutely our appear- Pf-'1' T- ance and behavior on this occasion. of , ' During that first semester we unintentionally came into contact with certain austere and haughty persons designated by one word, Seniors . These superior beings caused us great chagrin on various occasions by making such remarks as Look at the new crop of greens when speaking of us and by advising us to take the elevator to fourth Hoor when we had asked them the way to the library. For this treatment we took revenge by speaking only when a plus was badly needed, and on those rare occasions when addressed by a Senior. Whenever this occurred our hearts would jump into our throat and nearly strangle us so that we were only able to articulate Yeh when we had intended saying 'fYes, sir . There was little social life during the first year. Our talk was confined to Yeh and HI haven't studied that . We passed safely our first term examinations and became acquainted with Shakespeare, Wells, Julius Caesar, Mr. Haeberle, Mr. Guise, and others. Some few of us ventured to attend the games, were unhurt when it was over, and boasted of our courage for months. The boys began to pay more attention to their appearance, combing their hair, pressing their trousers, keeping the mud off their shoes, and discarding their grade school graduation pins. Easter vacation came and went. Then spring came and found us hauling ashes to make enough money to attend the baseball games. Here we lost enough of our shyness to be able to yell when Buck or Curly made a hit. We began to wish we were athletes, and when a heretofore haughty Senior approached a few members of our class and surprised us by asking us to try out for the football team in the fall we had visions of a place on the all-star team. Accordingly we started taking exercise so as to be able to show those Seniors they had made no mistake by asking us to try out. So we and the second team passed. Then came relief when our long-looked- forward-to vacation came. One hundred and twenty-two students were enrolled at Johnson High School in September as members of the Sophomore class. But what a change had taken place in the persons of the students. The boys were wearing neatly pressed long trousers, stiff collars and respectable appearing neckties. The girls were trying their best to look sophisticated in their long skirts, and to appear as if wearing their hair done up in the latest style was not unusual, although they did occasionally forget they had discarded hair ribbons, and their hands from habit would steal up to their head as if to straighten them out. Everybody was soon settling down again to the routine of school life, with as little trouble as possible. At the first call for candidates for the team the boys hunted up their old football togs and sprinted to Post Siding, where we tackled and were tackled, jumped on and were jumped on all afternoon, and we hobbled home minus half a jersey, a sock, half a liter of blood, a hundred square inches of skin, and an idea that we wanted to play football. The next few days we spent in discussing the merits of various liniments, crutches, nerve and vigor restorers, and the number of bones and muscles in our bodies, one boy exclaiming he had five hundred muscles at least, for he had felt every one of them ache. This First practice was the last for most of us,and we soon became interested in other things. October twenty-fourth a meeting of sophomores was held and the class of 1915 organized. At this meeting Lester Palmer was elected President, Kieffer Vaus vice-president, Marie Fischer secretary, and Mildred Lindahl treasurer. X In a special meeting November seventh the constitution of the class was adopted and David Hendrickson elected marshall. Thereafter meetings were held once a month at which the president and vice-president made fiery speeches in an attempt to make the students do something for the honor of the class. The difii- dence of the class could hardly be eradicated, but the agitation was successful in having the class start something novel at Johnson, the wearing of class buttons. When these had been sold it seemed as if everyone in school was a Sophomore. About basketball time the boys had sufficiently recovered from the effects of the first football scrimmage to organize a class basketball team. Those who played on this team were Fred Howe, captain, Algot Lindahl, Floyd Morgan, Dale Anderson, Adolph Hoffmann, and Herbert Schutte. This team played one game, that with Central High Sophomores. An attempt was made by Jennie Bloom to organize a Sophomore girls' team, but they never secured enough confidence to challenge other girl teams. This attempt by the girls to have the class support a girls' team was perhaps caused by the seniors of that year, who had had the experience of having the girls pack a regular meeting of the class, and elect a girl to every ofiice. The sophomore girls of course could not stand being outwitted, so they organized the shortlived quintette. Incidentally this marked the entrance of militancy into our class affairs. During the fall the first issue of the school paper, the Gleam, was issued, and we were being exhorted to scribble and subscribe for it. january came and we were stale Sophs. We grew better acquainted with Mr. Shakespeare, New- comer, Peabody, More, and others. No more were we compelled to write themes to be handed in Monday mornings. We became a little more communicative, for we wished to know what flowers our friends had found for their herberiums. No Easter vacation this year. Baseball season saw us trying out for the team with little success. Our president was sub on this team, which lost not a single game all season, winning the baseball trophy. At the May class meeting it was decided that we have a picnic at Wildwood, and Mr. and Mrs. Churchill were invited to come with us. At the meeting tan and purple were chosen class colors after six months of debate. The picnic was held the last day of school and everyone except the committee on refreshments had a good time. Those on this committee had the time of their lives keeping the ice cream from being consumed before lunch time. At this picnic class numerals were presented to the players on the two class basket- ball teams. The Class of 1915 started its junior year by holding its annual election of officers Monday, September 15, 1913, in room 29, reads the secretary's report. At this meeting Kieffer Vaux was elected president, Lester Palmer vice-president, Marie Palmer treasurer, and Adolph Hoffmann secretary. There were one hun- dred and nine juniors enrolled. About this time we again tried our heads at football. Three seniors, Lester Palmer, Leon La Mottte, and Leonard Holmgren, became members of the 1913 team which had the honor of being the fastest in the city. During October a class basketball team was organized by Tom Moran and a girls' team by Jennie Bloom. Tom Moran subsequently resigned this position to become manager of the High School basketball team. A tournament was announced by Coach Churchill for class teams, the winner to be awarded a trophy offered by the alumni. The junior team was composed of Fred Howe, captain, Aloysius Spellacy, Axel johnson, Herbert Schutte, Arthur Gilstad, and Algot Lindahl. This team beat out the Senior team in the race for the championship by winning the play-off of the tie and getting the custody of the cup for one year. Helen and Lucile Kranz were selected as members of the Gleam staff for the school year and by their faithful work aided greatly in making the school paper a success. A play was to have been given at Thanksgiving time, but the timidity of some of those requested to take part caused practice to be discontinued. WW At the january class hneeting we did someiliin lly novel. We decided to get our class pins while we were yet Juniors, so while e Seniors were display- ing their pins we came forth with our own and the laugh was on them. When baseball time came again Lester Palmer and Leon La Motte were made regulars on the High School team and helped to bring to Johnson the second consecutive baseball championship, and another silver trophy was added to the collection in the office. In April the junior-Senior play, The Winning Chance, was given in the High School auditorium. Lester Palmer, Edna Ohlsson, Fred Howe, Algot Lindahl, Tom Moran, Hedwig Allen, Ambrose Lewis, and Aloysius Spellacy were the Juniors who took part in this very successful production. Lester as Junius, the fat and jolly music teacher, was irresistably mirth provoking, and his vain attempts to produce musical harmony from Sidell's budding operatic stars drew thundrous applause from the appreciative audience. The Juniors' party for the Seniors was held May 1st, in the school gym- nasium. The chairman of the various committees who had charge of arrange- ments were Fred Howe, Hedvig Allen, Ila Saul, Marie Fischer. Those Seniors who did not attend regretted it, for the party became the chief topic in school and remained so for a month. Those who attended will recall with little effort those impersonations, those novel races, and the deceitful quick-change artist. The attempts by people who came in costume to live up to said costumes added greatly to the hilarity of the occasion. Especially good was the portrayal of Inga by Marque Nelson, of Inga's Feller by Elmer Nyberg, of the Mexican by Dalton Salisbury, 'fUncle Sam by Harry Andreason, of Tootsy by Melville Neyer, of a brunette Chinee by Elsie Hoffman, of a Sultan's Favorite by Florence Peterson, Weary Willie by Roy Korfhage, and Master of Cere- monies by Lester Palmer. What time the juniors had to spare was spent in attending the meetings of the jefferson Literary Society and playing tennis on the grounds laid out by the faculty during the Easter vacation. Some of the class went in for extem- poraneous speaking, and a team selected by Miss Moore, class advisor, won for the class a silver trophy offered by the jefferson Literary Society. Lester Palmer and Tom Moran represented the Juniors. This unusually busy and interesting year was completed by the Juniors with their annual dissipation, a picnic at Wildwood on the last day of school. Of course it rained, but that did not interfere with the good time, for the rain, unable to dampen our spirits, soon let up, and we stopped bowling long enough to consume ice cream, lemonade, and sandwiches. The rest of the afternoon we spent recklessly and hilariously, glad that we had passed in our studies, and that we would now face new scenes for the three months best liked by the student, the summer vacation. The last long school vacation for many of us passed all too quickly and Fair Week, and we sprang blithly up at seven, then five, then thirteen steps, turned into a little corridor and into the ofhce to watch the Freshmen being enrolled. We had now arrived at the state we had envied some four years before, and the feeling was a little disappointing. It was not as we had then pictured it. We soon settled down to our routine again and the second week held our Senior meet- ing. Here on September 7, 1914, in room 29, the usual place, the officers for the year were elected-Leif Gilstad as president, Leonard Palmquist as vice- president, Lester Palmer as treasurer, and Paula Doerman, secretary, to relieve Adolph Hoffmann of the arduous work of keeping the class records. The result of the election met with a popular approval of the class, for it realized that it must have in this, its Senior year, officials both stately and wise who could com- mand admiration from the Freshmen and yet write legibly. We are proud of them, even of Lester, whom we cannot imagine as filling any specified require- ment. But console thyself, Lester, for none of them was on the football team, the debating team, the Senior basketball team, nor was captain of the High School baseball team, editor-in-chief of The Gleam, printer or type setter all in the same year, while indulging on the side in platform speeches, photography, literary societies, tennis tournaments, football dances, relay races, tenor solos, acting, bowling, selling shoes, English Literature, and some few minor activities too numerous for our cramped hand. The thing that confuses us, Lester, is how you've kept your taste for pie. That defies us. According to our way of thinking you should give up something, at least English Literature and United States History. Football consumed some of the Seniors' time and energy for two months, and when we returned from St. james of happy memory, after Elmer Nyberg's unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign, the Senior girls gave a banquet at which speeches were made by A. W. Spellacy, Mr. Nyberg, Coach B. C. Korn, and also chief banquet planner, Miss Lucile Lindgren. Debating next held the attention of four Seniors-Lester Palmer, Mildred Lindahl, Alloysius Spellacy, and Ernest Oullette. Though they won no debates we have no regrets that we attended the contests. It was certainly worth while to hear Alloysius William thrill the audience with his A profit of twenty million dollars annually . We shouldn't have dared to say it so loud. As the winter came on basketball began to be discussed. Mr. Churchill again organized a class tournament which the Senior team entered. The players were composed of Arthur Gilstad, captain, Leif Gilstad, Axel johnson, Aloysius Spellacy, Lester Palmer, Caroous Wahlquist, Roy Korfhage, and Algot Lin- dahl. This quintet went through the tournament without losing a single game, besides winning two outside games with the Y. M. C. A. Employed Boys. In a practice game with the High School team the Class 1915 team, with a small handicap, lost out by only a few points. These games were nearly all closely contested, and the boys showed their mettle when they time and again overcame their opponents' advantage and scored the winning points in the last few minutes of play. This was true in the first game with the juniors and the last game with the Sophomores. The cup has now been won by Class '15 team the first two years that it has been offered, setting a mark for the future class teams to strive for. Good luck to you, juniorsg hope you win it next year. Theatricals have not been neglected in our Senior year. The day before vacation two little skits were given by the members of Class '15. One was the Bird's Christmas Carol and the other was Christmas at Johnson, written by Edna Ohlsson, Ernest Oeullette, Alice Montgomery, Mildred Lindahl, and Ida Nelson in collaboration with Miss Moore, class advisor, and Miss Morton, producer. Those taking part in this were Dalton Salisbury, Paula Doermann, Dale Anderson, Phoebe Erickson, Orrin Lee, Amy Wessel, Ethel Yost, Harry Andreason, Arthur Gilstad, Elmer Nyberg, and Vera Norberg. The parts in the Bird's Christmas Carol were taken by Elsie Hoffman, Edna Ohlsson, Anna Lindgren, Leif Gilstad, Aloysius Spellacy, Henrietta Hoffmann, Mildred Lin- dahl, Melville Meyer, Alice Montgomery, Vivian Woollen, Lucile Kranz, Cleary Fredell, and Ernest Ouellette. Both skits were well received by the students and the many alumni who were present. The Senior-junior play, The Butter- flies, was given April 30th and May lst, and the production certainly outdid the Senior-junior play of last year. With the passing of Easter vacation came baseball, and four Seniors have so far been successful in becoming members of the team representing Johnson High School in the game at which this school's team has heretofore been so success- ful, and we hope that Captain Palmer, Leon La Motte, Dale Anderson, and Bud Van Lorenz will earn their HJ . We also hope that these men will help bring to this square red schoolhouse on the hill the trophy, emblematic of the third successive baseball championship. Fllfiii 1 ll' .ag Qllalenhar fur 1914-15 September Sept. 21.-The past two weeks are the longest we ever spent. Football has begun. Sept. 22.-Orchestra practice began. Senior class well repre- sented. Lots of discord. Sept. 23.-Several Seniors had a relapse of spring fever. Sept. 24.-Miss Andrews is ver ha because she discovers Y PPY that Lincoln's birthday comes on Friday and Washing- ington's on Monday. Sept. 25.-We had first assembly of year. Mr. Korn cracks jokes on himself. Sept. 28.-Mr. Paulus gave short lesson in shorthand! Sept. 29.-The Philornithist Society organized and planned general program for year. Sept. 30.-Roy Korfhage only grinned once. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct . Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. October 1.-Two Seniors were added to the Senior list. Miss Andrews very happy because they are big boys. 2.-Last year's debaters present J's to themselves in assembly. 3.-Nineteen-fourteen picture made appearance in office. Many striking poses and grins. 6.-Mr. Guise went around the school with his hat in his hand. We thought he had it handy so he could put it on if his head got cold, but we learned that the teachers were drawing lots out of it for a new desk. 7.-Miss Sliney and Miss Ickler greeted us proudly from behind their new desks. 9.-Few girls Cdishwashersj have mysterious spread in cooking room. 12.-Marie Hoge is introduced to paper pie plates. 13.-VVith help of ice cream freezer Chemistry shelves are straightened up. 14.-Seniors decide that each Senior shall buy five Senior Annuals. Hope they do. 15.-Pie day. 16.-Several boys try to see which can yell loudest in assembly. On account of their excellent voices Al. Spel- lacy and Tom Moran were chosen cheer leaders. 19.-Girls spent free periods tying ribbons on Beat Mechanics tags. 20.-Lester Palmer, hard pressed for an excuse, came to class on time. 21.-Gleams came out. According to prophesy we beat Mechanics . 22 and 23.-M. E. A. Convention. Most of the teachers spent their time at the meeting OD. 26.-Extraordinarily blue Monday. 27.-Anna Lindgren gets acquainted with Willard Cogin. 28.-Assembly to arouse interest in Ninth Amendment. Several Seniors sneezed and made a much needed draught. 29.-Somebody watered steps with ink and splashed some on Hedvig's new white stockings. 30.-Tom gracefully waved the beautiful silk Hag before an admiring group of spectators. November Nov. 2.-Floyd Morgan informed Henrietta that he was not married. SNELLED LIKE RSEIRTDW' a pu, X , Der ffit 'T as 'saw , 6 68.35-G35 5-eeiaf I gIk ' f - ' 'me oncggzrgmn -, '..,cor1DErmon THIS FIRST SER .Q5.5lS3Fu5 wi: rmo W no l Piibiiginou' Jill' -if cJr'fefsixsQ ' '32, I 1 ..-Q I jj! , , x ' 'V sf ir -ix ll .,. f'iiEQ1T A5 S- vnu. me UP- U assesses.. ill Za... mn r-Names Y SHRVE 1 4 X 4 -GIQEETTED U5 FROM DEHI HD THEN? TSEFW DESKO NX xx llnpy - ' -l'1 'I 1 Ilumg y ', Q - LWGREH THE GllQl..5 CLUB SEIFIJEIIJ gfwf 50 NE R tbf ifiiiizisin Qi Qld asm A P., I if ,wir fm! E-nnnwo nonrin ann E :SDELLACY in QURLIFY ,E A5 cnEE12 ' LEADERS wi . BLUE DUN EXTQR' -J . :mum ORDINADILY 'fx EYE5 BLUE o MONDAY Wl 3'fi:'E Kg S ULUEB F5-Q SOHE 'i ?7 f rissiiiic S ld- la was ny 1 4 My 3. im 'ron 1 ' -J Mix lil-2Qgw?rY5D ,ll lph fiilxl FLAG 9 , . c.mi.a 1- naw: mar DI-IJKETDRLL if jg - mc cr: is ' VY vi ir 1 , L EA LJ f N' fa 3 - DIE is Q5 mrom-1ED Gs THAT HE H115 ' i DEEN Y g TREAT s wmnc -. Foo'mm.L ' mason 'WK Nov. 3.-Len. Holmgren made remarkable discovery that 2 plus 1 equals one-half. Nov. 4.-Miss Andrews gives girls sermon on being hostesses. Nov. 5.-Girls' Club entertains some prominent women of St. Paul. Were very good hostesses. Nov. 6.-Miss Andrews smiles during entire assembly. Nov Nov Nov Nov . 7.-Helen Kranz giggles during Economics. . 10.-Mildred burned her hand in Chemical Laboratory. . 11.-Senior girls decided to give football spread. . 12.-Due to Miss Andrews' advice Seniors treat Miss Bell gently. Nov. 13.-Is Friday the thirteenth for Johnson. Nov. 16.-Monday followed Sunday as usual. Nov. 17.-Girls' basketball practice began. Nov. 18.-Literary Society makes attempt to organize, but Nov. 19.- fails. Philornithist Society holds robin meeting. Nov. 20.-Senior Annual staFf meets for first time. Nov. 23.- Pie is gently informed that unless he does better in English he will fail. Is told that he has been treated leniently during football season. Nov. 24.-School gets new scholar-negress-red hair-very tiny-no arms-name Mehitable Arabella Green. Ses- sion room 22. Nov. 25.-Juniors give Thanksgiving play. Several session rooms give dinners to poor families as usual. Nov. 30.-Senior boy is escorted home by ten Senior girls and several juniors. December Dec. 1.-Bright Senior notices that there are only twenty-one shopping days left before Christmas. Dec. 2.-After Dr. Earl's speech everyone was afraid to touch anything for fear of germs. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 3.-Miss Bloomquist has new dress on. Girls give foot- ball spread. Mr. Korn says a few moist words. 4.-Stacks and stacks of dishes to wash. 7.-Miss Bloomquist absent. Probably from effects of Eiread. Al. Spellacy hears that we are going to have nglish test, so he got some pointers before going to class. 8.--Ila Saul sleeps with her Chemistry book. 9.-Senior meeting. Melville Meyers proposes that if there is any money left in the treasury at end of term it be turned over to Annual Board. The Board is disap- pointed that, due to Miss Moore, his suggestion was not carried out. 10.-We CI mean the girls? had the mostest fun. We initiated the teachers into the Girls' Club. For full par- ticulars see Andrew. Dec. 11.-Henrietta fell down a flight of stairs. Dec. 14.-Crepe on john Zollman's seat. Kieffer Vaux starts Dec. Dec. to study. 15.-Henrietta remained on her feet all day. ' 16.-Everybody expects Chemistry test, but are disap- new Eointed. Adolph gets in wrong with first period Senior l' h. ng is Dec. 17.-Miss Andrews wishes her first two classes a Merry Christmas, because she wouldn't see them Friday. She told her other classes that they didn't have the politeness to wish her the same. Dec. 18.-Several session rooms have Christmas trees. People all over school playing with five-cent toys. Se- niors give entertainment. Elmer Nyberg is willing to teach anyone to talk with a Norwegian accent. Dec. 18-jan. 4.-Vacation Chappy daysl. January jan. 4.-Violet wore new lavalier. Grace K. fished a piece of clay out of Hedvig's dress. Many New Year's resolu- tions broken. jan. 5.-Miss Andrews politely informs Leif Gilstad and Harold Von Lorenz that they can finish the fifth period in the library. Jan. Jan Jan. jan Jan. Jan. jan Jan jan. Jan Jan Jan jan jan. jan Jan. jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. 6.-Miss Andrews looks at Algot and says that the men in the Castle of Pride were all fixing their hair. 7.-Miss Bell spent fifteen precious minutes looking for her keys and finally found them in her belt. 8.-jenny went around with a bell. She couldn't make enough noise without it. 11.-We were introduced to a Chinese bride. 12.-The Girls' Club decided to send some money to China. 13.-Helen Mahoney and Dalton Salisbury were at class meeting. 14.-After a close fight the Seniors were victorious over the juniors in basketball. 18.-Great curiosity! Why were boys called into as- sembly? 19.jAnother glass door broken just because Lester looked at it. 20.-Term coming to an end. Several Seniors begin to study. 21.-lla Saul hada daymare during fifth and sixth periods. 22.-We initiated the singing cards. 25.-Seniors got beautiful marks in an English test. 26.-Too cold for Bull Durham Club to meet. 27.-At last, term is'ended. Three Seniors leave us. 28.-Coaches scrapped about girls' rules in basketball game with Central. Very intermittent game. 29.-New system of marking. Had to walt until Monday 3' 1.-We welcome Miss Muller. Sans room, sans key, sans desk, also several other peripatetic teachers. 2.-Mr. Guise took a shower bath. Couldn't comb his hair for about a week. 3.-Boys were greeted with something like this in the morning's Pioneer Press: Boys 'want to see girls play. They were very glad to be introduced to that petition they had been signing. 4.-Miss Bloomquist was awfully peeved today. 5.EFreshman mistook Miss Sliney's floor for a diving pon . 8.-Freshmen began to look as though they owned the school because they had been there a week. 9.-Fred Howe had first choice of Freshmen girls. Now, who says he isn't smart? 10.-Miss Moore tried to take a short cut across her room, but tore a rip across the front of her only one-piece dress instead. 11.-Nothing important happened. The entertainment for our weekly assembly was furnished by Mr. Guise. He dwelt at length upon our corrupt manners and in- formed us that we must make a radical change in our de- portment or something would happen. In consequence a young lady of the Senior class was requested to leave. 12.--Thanks to the memory of Abraham Lincoln we were permitted to sleep as long as we wished. 15.-Extra! Extra! Miss Ickler indulged in unusually violent exercise. She left her chair three times during one period. 16.-Mr. Eichenlaub sat down on the gym floor with much force. 17.-Mr. Korn threatened to keep his Economics class after school. My! but he made a forceful speech. 18.-When we saw that Miss Andrews was absent we werej very happy, but as class proceeded we changed our mm s. 19.-Mr. Guise went sliding down the race track. 22.-Another off day. Lots of Seniors visited Lee Brothers. 23.-One thousand girls did not appear in the print shop. 24.-Found. A doll card behind the stage. Freshie must have put it there so she could kiss her dolly between periods. for re rts. po Februar 1 HA THE TRTE mm tzofaeseite lI'l5PEC'l'ED sm-3.1-:tri M TT B ?j is . 9-jf -+ X ALWAYS Q Two slots ' Egniiir-iD 1 fwngggv - ' :F - 11 3 ff l ' :1-FN ILR JAUL H135 Lnvrwnnnsn fpi Enrsm ooxt M . i 1 ,itll mn ix? fill!! 1 - I I, 1. nvome LECTURES , on Tm: 'f ,, niencosr yr-ny OV , x t -it'f LOVIH 7' A A Q - Q. ,. i f li.. -i ' L1-:1rAnDvon G-QlG,',gP., wmznz Am: , f . Amo 10 W 6411 LIBRARY x mf V .fi 3 .f X , Y -6631717 H0 ' ll 1 ill fb fl 7 ff' ' - WEDE fi ALWI-lY5 j' ' PlXll'lG THEIR Till Q ai. Xlj IR L. My 5 ,Q 35. 1l. THE FACULT gg? into g A, ' fi SHOWER ,ya - Q -, ,S . ,X DFSIl'l5!Zf is IQ, .1.. i. 7 T nov TIE ' DAY I5 1, f, X7 K CELEDRBTED , ff, 5 if , 1 1, ff , ff If f f 1 .1 W WONDER WHY THE GIRLS TOOK 50 LONG FUR THOSE , ,. 4 3 f' ,:A,. 5l lO'I'5 if-O 2, rf t Z Q 41 f , i ,Ze A kg, ' J fi, ,x,L n ...rmff..,.. li X' JM eg vm f IH FIRST GRNE5 sfki OF f , at 1 simon ' J ' Q :nf :pi li? ogigriiififis 5 - an 5I1Hl:iDE zn bnfrns ' N cmzsrs X, . X S fx X Q bg f -.l vi V i vw' SEHIORS BEGIN TO DTUDY R5 EQEID OFT' RN. -may 'D RWD HEMI axil X G' N . Q uf T :X Ss - Pia' SL ,lf ,Aw --, Fd - -rrnay tv' X ' ill--.1-11-1-1 Feb. 25.-How did that ice cream freezer get in the cooking room? Feb. 26.-Bow tie day. Enough said. Nui? sed. March Mar. 1.-Ditto. Mar. 2.-Green hair ribbon day. Mar. 3.-Two weeks from St. Patrick's birthday. Mar. 4.-Girls lost first basketball game. Mar. 5.-Pie got lots of slams from Rev. Malcolm. Mar. 9.-Andrew found some acid on the ceiling in the Chem- istry room. Mar. 8.-Girls' basketball team spend whole hour in taking three snapshots. Mar. 10.-Very lengthy Senior meeting took place. Mar. 11.-Mabel Anderson went home with a very beautiful hair comb. Mar. 12.-Dale Anderson presented a yellow readmission slip to Miss Andrews. She asked him, Why is it yellow? Is it because you had diphtheria or something? E's filled the air. Mar. 15.-Roy Korfhage and Fred Thiers played ostrich. Mar. 16.-One day more until St. Patrick's day. Mar. 17.-St. Patrick's birthday. Very quiet. Green very predominant during fire drill. Wrestling match in upper all between two young ladies. Literary societies had Irish programs. Section B had larger attendance and better program. Sang Tipperary under the directions of Henry George Patrick Willard Sylvester Stephen O'Co in. Mar. 18.-Only nice person at Humboldt was thejanitor. QNe beat them anyway. The girls. Mar. 19.-Walter Staulfacher was not as slippery as usual. Mar. 22.-Those cookies didn't last long, did they, Tom? Mar. 23.-Only four days until Easter vacation. Mar. 24.-Twenty people went to see the faculty game. Ad- mission fifteen cents. Mar. 25.-Another thing to spend money for. Boys' and girls' basketball spread given by the Girls' Club. Mar. ?6.--Lester Meck looked very natural in that morality p ay. Mar. 27.-April 4. Easter vacation. Happy days! April Apr. 5.-A lot of students were a dime short today. Alas! that chemistry! Apr. 6.-Harry Oberg got two scoldings today. Poor Harry! There won't be much left to him by the end of the term. Apr. 7.-Harold Lindeke was two people today in Literary Society meeting. Think it out. Miss Edgar lost her class book. Apr. 8.-Miss Andrews started a new English class. Be sure and be there promptly at 8:05. The Glcam had its pic- ture took. Apr. 9.-A piece of pie was left without a guard in the office nearly all recess and nobody attacked it. Must have been known to contain-? Apr. 12.-The main occupation of a certain Senior girl was to get people to please try to make paper roses. Apr. 13.-The girls didn't get the basketbal championship of the cit . Apr. 14.-Slome Seniors had their pictures taken with the juniors. My! wasn't that cute? Apr. 15.-Nearly everybody had spring fever. Sixth period Senior English class especially. Apr. 16.-We started out right for the baseball champion- ship with a score of 7 to 5 in our favor. Apr. 19.-Sixty-one more days until school is out. Seniors, if you have tears prepare to shed them then. Aprl. 20.-joe Saul is worrying about his position on the basketball team. Apr. 21.-Section A entertained Section B of the Literary Society. Al. Spellacy presided very nicely. Apr. 22.-Harold Von Lorenz was on time forSolid Geometry. A ar Christmas mbrogram PROGRAM, given by Seniors at Christmas, was divided into two parts, one of which was coached by Miss Moore, the other by Miss Morton. Of these the first to take place was The Johnson Family . The mem- bers of this family were: DALTON SALISBURY . . Mr. Guise johnson PAULA DOERMANN . . Faculty johnson DALE ANDERSON . . Debate johnson ARTHUR GILSTAD . . Football johnson HARRY ANDREASON . . Basketball johnson AMY WESSEL . . . . Girls' Club johnson PHOEBE ERICKSON . . . Gleam johnson ORRIN LEE . . . . . Orchestra johnson ETHEL YOST . . Philornithist johnson VERA NORBERG . . Lunchroom johnson ELMER NYBERG . . Uncle Andrew johnson LESTER PALMER ........,,... Santa Claus johnson These people were not selected according to their ability, but according to their looks and size. The Seniors had a hard time finding some one small enough for jefferson Lit, but the doll played the part to a UT . If the play were held now instead of then they would have had a hard time finding some one large enough. The last of the program was taken up by a few scenes from The Bird's Christmas Carol . The members of this were also chosen according to looks. Those that had freckles, and were of all sizes, were put in the Ruggles family. The Ruggles certainly made a fine stairs, graduating from Leif Gilstad to Cleary Fredell. Cleary is not really a Senior, but we needed some one small, so we took him. When the Ruggles were arrayed across the front of the stage they certainly displayed a remarkable variety of surprising and striking colors. We hope the Ruggles family profited by that lecture on manners, because many of them needed it sadly. The Bird family consisted of Edna Ohlsson, as Carolg Elsie Hoffman, her motherg Ernest Ouellette, Uncle jack, and Anna Lindgren, their maid. When the Ruggles had all gotten their Christmas presents, and Carol had fallen asleep in the chair, while the snow was falling in beautiful handfuls inside the windows, and the supposed church choir was softly singing, the curtain went down. Then, after nearly everyone had turned to leave the hall, Miss Morton and Miss Moore were presented with bouquets of roses. That was all the students saw of the players, but with some difficulty they had their pictures taken in their costumes, and then had a spread in the cooking room. The Ruggles were very careful to mind their mannerses during the spread. Z? Q Q Xzsfgi D 7 'ge , V A, X 4 f, f QV , Zf' , at Q-Q1 A g QD f Name and Alias ALVIN ALMER, Al HEDWIG ALLEN, Helly EDNA ANDERsON, Andy DALE ANDERsON, Blondy VIOLET ANDERsON, Violent HARRY ANDREASEN, Sam ELIZABETH ATKINS, Beth ADAH BERG, Jack JENNIE BLOOM, Tee Hee lWlLURED BROCKMAN, Mil' CATHERINE BROWN, Katie' NIYRTLE CARLSON, Sunny HAZEL CLARK, Haze THORA DAHLQUIST, Stenog PAULA DOERMANN, Paul HELEN ELLIS, Nellie PHOEBE ERICKSON, Phoeb MARIE FIscHER, Wee-wee WILLIAM FORSBERG, Bill ARTHUR GILSTAD, Art l.EIF GILSTAD, Branch MELVIN GUNDLACH, Mel RAYMOND GREEN, Ray v 1 in GERTRUDE GALLAGHER, Gert ADOLPH HOFFMANN, Butch ELSIE HOFFMAN, Ellie HENRIETTA HOFFMANN, Heiny MARIE HUGE, Shorty LEONARD HOLMGREN, Len REUBEN HOLMGREN, Sketch FRED HOWE, Fritz ALLEN HUNGERFORD, At LESTER JOHNSON, Les ROY JOHNSON, Lefty ARTHUR JOHNSON, Art ARTHUR KEENAN, Crab CvRACE KINSTLER, Silent Knight HELEN KRANZ, H, K. LUCILE KRANZ, Ceil ROY KORFHAGE, Rats HELEN LARSON, Lars ORRIN LEE, 0rrie RUTH LILJEDAHL, Dearie ALGOT LINDAHL, Alice Occupation Concealing his wisdom VVorking Miss Moore Deep thinking Printer Chemist Appearing small Growing Student Asking Miss Andrews Her earings Argumentator Looking concerned Curling her hair Objecting Actress Getting her credits Loafer Secretary Polishing brain Captain President Arguing Holding hands She prattles on German spy Being fussed Explaining excuses Accompanist Doing things late Looking like an artist Pleasing people Being on hand Plumber Reciting English Discovering people to tickle Fussing Debater Telling people to try Running classes Playing basketball Avoiding notice Fiddling Smiling Looking smart I dentijication Disdainful looks Quaker dress Pink hair Shine on his nose Perfectly neutral Short legs Blue eyes Chamois A big heart Titian haired Tall and fat Carries no books Frivolity VVhisper Bible Fiddle Short and dark She's French Polished shoes Young voice Very narrow Blonde German book Tennis shoes Sing-song voice Long Various impressions Small shoes Sweet disposition Sharpened pencils Girls Left in Iowa Sweet face Pedagogical A squint and a smile Predatory nose Soloist Armful of papers Disordered mind Enlongated smile Rarity of her smile Spotless Helping the downtrodden White collar FWF rl I -1-Ire ' rr Name and Alias MILDRED LINDAHL, Little One HAROLD LINDEKE, Shorty ANNA LINDGREN, Gracious LUCILE LINDGREN, Silly LEON LA MOTTE, Lee HULDA LUXIEN, Hallie HELEN MAIIONEY, Irish AMBROSE LEWIS, Eyebrow ARTHUR LOFROTI-I, Baby MELVILLE MEYER, Mal TOM MORAN, Tommy ALICE MONTGOMERY, Al IDA NELSON, Nei MARQUE NELSON, Inga CARL NELSON, Cal MYRTLE NELSON, Myrt VERA NORBERG, Vivi ELMER NYBERG, 0lla HARRY OBERG, EDNA OIILSSON, Eddie CLARA OLSON, Claude MARIE OLSEN, CONSTANCE OLSON, Conny LAURA OLSON, Lola LILLIAN OLSON, Lily WALTER OLSON, Wallie ERNEST OUELLETTE, Windy LESTER PALMER, Pie LEONARD PALMQUIST, Len ESTIIER PETERSON, Pete FLORENCE PETERSON, Fla BERTIIA PIERCE, Moses DALTON SALISBURY, Jumbo ILA SAUL, Chemical Ile ANNA SIIERLOCK, Sister Ann URSULA SHERLOCK, Urs ALOYSIUS SPELLACY, Spell FLORENCE STONHOLM, Flo usilv uolien WALTER STAUFFACHER, Wallis MILTON SCHAEFER, Milk GLADYS SWENSON, Swanie OSCAR TENGQUIST, Tank FREDERICK TI-IIERS, Frederickus MARGUERITE VAN ALLEN, t'Van HAROLD VON LORENZ, Bud KIEFFER VAux, Kief CAROLYN WAI-ILQUIST, Carrie EVELYN WAI-ILGREN, Evy CLARA WATSON, Watty ADELLA WARDRUM, Adel AMY WESSEL, Hinky Dink RAGNA WIKSTRAND, Raggie CARME WIMAN, Com VIVIAN WOOLLEN, Viv CAROLUS WAELQUIST, Cal ETHYL YOST, Essie A 'PP' Occupation Girls' Club Composer Willard Taking care of her heart Dancer Explaining Riding Banker Coming back Baiting teachers Speeching Obtruding herself Comparing notes Study Takes six solids Making herself heard Looking satisfied An also satisfied Wearing Out library book Chatting Looking pleasant Blufiing ' Keeping out of way Rooting Graduating Miss Perry knows Being important Has none Sucking pencils Making baskets Being sympathetic Earning real money Adviser to Coach Talking in her sleep Playing basketball Dancing Depending on others Singing in assembly Being good Fullback Taking pictures Eating Avoiding Carling'S Reciting Holding up wall Grown person Being cautious Getting class dues Being orderly Decorating card Booster Carrying a shelf of books Waitress Keeping her spirits Trying to play basketball Trying to talk S '1 Identijication Elevated nose Moon-faced German hair Petite and demure Brilliant sox Mole on left hand 40 below to all but one Cash? Scholarly mien Daisy??P? Red ink Lost Boys Latin pony See Oberg Very sociable Weight Ay ban nodder Swede Blushes! Baby stare Very quiet Sober face Bright sash Olson A's Carries dime novels F alsetto Punctuality Baby face Albino . At least 180 Cold and austere Chunkie Eyes close when she laughs Boudoir cap - Tan shoes Mick with German accent Typewriting book Bay rum So masterful Kiddish Hasn't any Durham tags F uzzie hair Hands pocketed Opener CSee Carolusl Lithps Gleam debts Very noticeable Good natured Studious Margaret Thomson Tall and fair CSee Carolynj Tall and repulsive last will ant: Uliestament nt Mass nf 1915 We, the members of the Class of 1915, of the john A. johnson High School, of the City of Saint Paul, County of Ramsey, and State of Minnesota, being of sound mind and in good health this springtime in the year of our Lord, Anno Domini 1915, and in the one hundred and thirty-ninth year of the Inde- pendence of the United States of America, and the fourth year since the founda- tion and opening of the johnson High School, being as a class of full age and about to be graduated from the said institution of learning, and realizing the transitory and fleeting character of our life, and desiring to perpetuate our memory and to fix the attention of succeeding classes upon matters of moment to them, in order that they may benefit by our experience and pattern their conduct thereby to the greater well being of such succeeding classes, and having divers and sundry things, both tangible and intangible, to dispose of to said succeeding classes and to Doctor Guise, the principal of said institution, and to his able corps of wise ones in the various branches of learning, do hereby and by this instrument make, publish and declare this to be our last collective will on earth, as follows: ONE It being eminently proper and altogether fitting that in an Instrument of this kind that the said class should first arrange for the payment and settlement of its debts and obliga- tions to those to whom it is indebted, we will as follows: tab To UNDER C1.AssMEN-- To the Class of 1916 we bequeath the exalted position and high opinion of themselves which the Class of 1914 had, and which we, for obvious reasons, declined to inherit, to-wit: That we have found it unnecessary to toot our own horn, and we wish to make our annual interesting to everyone. To the Sophomores, our sister class, we leave our good will, together with our basketball cup and the forensic trophy we won last year. To the Freshmen we leave as much information as they can obtain from us. tbj To Andrew we will a little of Dalton Salisbury's cheeks. Cab To Mr. Guise and the teachers we leave the comforting thought that they are now four years older than when we found them. TWO Having in our possession numerous other small articles of trifling importance to us, but of unquestionable value to under graduates and teachers, we will the following: Cal Having three student members of this class who refuse to graduate with us, to-wit: Marie Tobin, Dorothy Mahoney, and Richards Aurelius, we leave them to their own foolish designs. fbi To the future Physiology classes Lester leaves a well preserved relic, viz., his two front teeth which were found on the bloody field of battle. ll in fl lr fel We leave the juniors the assurance that our record at the University will make a double mark in English Literature unnecessary. Cdl Mildred Lindahl wills her many hair ribbons to Luther Cadow. Cel Violet Anderson wills her place on the General Attraction Club to Muriel MacIntosh. ffl Algot Lindahl leaves his beautiful blonde tresses to Mr. Beggs in loving hope and patient expectation. Cgl grecl Howe leaves his enviable task of filling Mabel Anderson's idle moments to VVillard ogm. LASTL Y-To every Year Book published hereafter by classes of the johnson High School we leave the name THE MARooN . In testimony whereof, We, the undersigned, have hereunto, and on behalf of the said Class of 1915, under and by virtue of a resolution duly adopted and passed by said Class at a meeting hereof held on the Fourteenth day of May, 1915, set the hand and seal of the said Class of 1915. 51806 - p!fC Wgnessess . Janitor 5 W- ' Principal f Q5 Co T' ,ga ES f 41 L19 f X env-' f ,SY oJfb f 'uf i' gl Hills 152 f J Jw ' , ,ff I' I - Suntetaientet mpllay The Hsuttettttesw HE junior-Senior play, The Butterflies, one of the best plays given at johnson for a long time, was a success financially as well as dramatically. The heroines, Jennie Bloom and Edna Ohlsson, seemed to fit exactly in their places as Miriam and Susanne . Henrietta Hoffmann as Mrs. Stuart- Dodge made a stately and high toned Mamma . Kieffer Vaux acted very naturally in his character of Frederick Ossian and made the audience laugh with his subtle sarcasms. If you had seen Leif Gilstad in the play you would surely have thought he was the born Englishman he was supposed to be, that monocle seemed to be made for him. Much of the humor of the play was caused by Hiram Green, a self-made man, who was well characterized by Oscar Dahlin. Elsie Hoffman was Mrs. Ossianf' the very indulgent mother of Frederick Ossian . Melville Meyers as Barrington Green made a very obedient son and dude. Lester johnson, the tailor, was a typical tradesman, and Dalton Salisbury certainly made a beautiful butler. His walk was enough to send the audience into gales of laughter every time he appeared. As a whole the cast acted as Miss Morton, the directress, had scarcely hoped for. The scenery and stage fittings were artistically selected and arranged. Between acts some of the cast received flowers from their friends. Miss Morton was presented with flowers by both the junior and Senior classes, together with the members of the cast. MARGVERITE W. MoR'roN Dramatic Coach J yt? X Elly tx e 1 f va f it glh t Z6 itll 99 Twas the middle watch of a johnson year, The air was cold, the sky was clear, A Senior, shy on his way to school, Paused too long, on a day too cool, And learned a lot, as asleep he went, Of fateful secrets for us not meant. The frosty air, with its sharp, cool sting, Sent thoughts through his head just scamperingg The darkest designs of a Senior heart VVere plain to him at the very start. A being small, in a robe of white, Told him how, with a spell quite slight, He could find out all that his neighbor thought By looking wise and saying naught But ''Hynch-rupb-gesqf-dwr-jym, And then, in manner magical with clamor, clash, and din He said the words and soon could see VVhat each little Senior would Colne to be. Look at the fate of Salisbury, Raised in the lap of luxury, In pullman car he now makes trips And looks in vain for the man who tips. And so does our Marshall Melvin Meyer VVish to become a hosiery buyer? Our Tom would think it paradise To be able to stop the playing of diceg And Frederick Montreville Mabel Howe Is a farmer now who follows the plow: VVhile Leonard Gerald William Holmgren Becomes the cleverest dancer of all men: And down among the sheltering palms we can see The conversions made by Orrin Lee, VVhere Mr. Ouellette is collecting lizards, VVhile lla Saul prepares nice edible gizzards. 'Tis true Harry Oberg manufactures gum Vlfhosc chewability has boosted it some. Then we see shy Frederick Thiers, Teacher severe, filling children with fearsg VVhile principal in the very same school Is Melvin Gundlach, who sticks to the rule, And Hulda, so prim, is a maker of switches, With Hedvig, a seamstress, with knowledge of stitches And what do you think of Miss Hazel Clark? This philanthropist gives to the city a park. Aloishus Will-i-am Spellacy A soldier in Ireland wishes to beg And little Mr. Leonard Palmquist Is a grower of oranges Sundkist g While his sweet little neighbor, Miss Wahlquist, Teaches ladies the latest hair twist. An ambassador, Mr. Leon La Motte, Wishes for naught that he has not got. Congratulations to Miss Van Allen, She married Mr.-Oh! that would be tellin'g And Alvin Almer, to be sure, As an M. D. all diseases can cure. Elizabeth Atkins, so quiet and shy, To succeed Miss Page has begun to try. A speaker down South is Miss Mildred Brockman Whom you wouldn't know in her coat of tan. A grade schoolteacher is Catherine Brown, Who dwells on the meanings of verb and noun. A secret rare I'll tell if you list, Our dear Henrietta is a chiropodist. A curious thing our Senior, then, Found in the minds of some maids and men. Each of these showed, by a curious sign, That a circus life was to be his line. Never was seen such a sight before, For all the little Andersons with Olsons galore, And Johnsons, and Nelsons, and Petersons, too, Had chosen to live with the kangaroo. A trapeze troup were the Nelsons brave, By the toes Ida and Myrtle, Marque would save. The Andersons three did a turn in a ring, With Dale as a lady in a bareback fiing. The Olsons clever supplied the ballet, With Walter leading the gallant array. The Petersons came, with weights by the pound, And lifted them carefully up from the ground. The Johnsons then finished up the bill, With a chariot race with many a thrill. The Senior said, and paused to sigh, Look at the girls Leif has on the sly, The red headed one is the one he will marry, Though just at present he is inclined to tarry g And Forsberg, just fancy, wants to know a Submarine life like his brother Noah. Amy Wessel, from time immemorial, Has wanted to preach in a way dictatorial. Raymond Green, in a flying machine, Would like to elope with his lady queen. Kieffer Vaux wants a Quaker bonnet, To save his hair when the sun shines on it. Algot Lindahl says he'd gladly dwell in,-well, A cell, or any old place, to avoid Miss Bell. Adah Berg would go through life As a motorcyclist's bouncing wife. Helen Mahoney gives no trouble Riding along in Art's benzine bubble, And do you about Elmer N yberg know? On an ostrich farm he's earning dough. Sweet Ursula, his wife, sees to the feeding, While he does naught but tend to weeding, And being so easy for Vera to creep, She has become a chimney sweep. Alice Montgomery has a queer desire To wait near the depot with Autos to hire , And Mr. Lewis will live on lemon and pickle, Since his girl friends have been so fickle. Walter Stauffacher is making laws, While Oscar Tengquist medicates gauze. We always used to wonder why Miss Helen Kranz would nearly dieg Each time she tried to walk on a log She'd giggle and shake till she looked like a frog, And we thought any minute she'd fall on her back But now that she's married a lumber jack Tis plain to see what she thought of then, Twas Simon, Simon, the man of all men. Harry Andreason has an office so chic, Where he studies heads that are brachicephalicg And little Anna S., as teacher of Gym, Opens the hour with a cute little hymn. Carrolus, so our Senior wise foretells, Twice will he ring his wedding bells! Ragna is busy collecting white geese For a poultry show way outin Greece, And Carme intends to make her debut At the Firemen's Ball in a gown of blue, While Mr. Lafroth does a stunt not new, With Lucile Kranz, called Taming the Shrew . For breach of promise Vivian will sue Harold Lindeke-Oh, why e'er did he woo? For now there are two that are bound to feel blue, Unless either gets what's truly his due, And Florence Stonholm, beautifier, As collector of dew will never tire. The way Ruth L. will find a clue Is wonderful in a detective so new. Miss Hoge designs the tips of a shoe, Especially the ones that come from Peru. Phonograph records Grace Kinstler is making, And they are so funny they keep us shakingg Her success is made, the world is waking, And surely now her ways are taking. Gertrude .Gallagher, way out in the ocean, To dive and swim with sharks ,takes a notion. While Elsie Hoffman, down in Australia, Is advertising a corn cure known as Madalia . Evelyn Wallgren, I clearly see, Wants to startle mankind by her poetry. Roy Korphage, in a vain endeavor, C Wants to be thin, and tall, and clever. That soleful maiden, Helen Ellis, Climbs heavenward nightly on a golden trellis. Ethel Yost, when fate's propitious, Foretells folks' futures in terms auspicious. Arthur Gilstad's a religious fanatic, Writing sermons in his father's attic, While Paula's delight is to fioat along With Lester to furnish her glad, sweet song. Since Violet's away with the circus troupe Paula cheers him up when his spirits droop. Some of ye here would scarce believe it, No ambition has Reuben, so he'll achieve it. Anna Lindgren, in a lion's cage, Would quell all riots of beastly rage. Allan Hungerford's a soldier brave, Helen Larson's a lady making children behave. Our intrepreter then went on to relate, Mildred Lindahl would be Secretary of State, While Gladys Swenson is a dancer of late, In manner quite Spanish. Art Keenan's her mate Von Lorenz, alas, has a tragic fate, For his supper nightly he is compelled to wait, While his wife, Jennie Bloom, holds a tete a tete With a handsome man near a ne'ighbor's gate . The Senior stopped, No more? we cried, He paused awhile and slowly cried, One of your number recently died, Adolph Hoffmann put a hole in his side When his lady became another's bride, But Adella Wardrum's blissfully happy, Writing up war news in words quite snappy. Bertha Pierce wants, in manner haughty, To punish her children when they are naughty. I see, too, a girl called Thora, In Fields of snow gathering Arctic Flora. In New York town is a potato disher In a large cafe, she's Marie Fischer, While right near by, imitating Hebe, And pouring coffee, is our bright haired Phoebe. Myrtle Carlson, for want of an occupation, Leads a German band in a subway station. A tonsorial parlor has Clara tall, And hirsute adornments she removes from all. Lucile Lindgren has, strange to say, A canary shop on the Milky Way, And Milton Schaefer, in a far-away town, In making biscuits has gained renown. The Senior finished and shook his head, Alas! if it all comes true, he said. Dart CTU10 , ,v.f y4WbU5? , 0 f 9 , A3 Q N? 07' ZZ! OZ! O IVOLQZ-'25 4 W , X N 'fs' gx fv fx , Q ,F 1.. 53 f fi' Q: , ' 5 ,f QW - fffa, X , , , I ,..- , 4 1, : df 4 Z! V V M 7 f f xg. Q 1 ff' 7 7, - X I '?- H 7 J.. f, fi ,Q 1 .ff f97 A 2 ' fif ' , X ff ' .f ff ., ff Senlers 1913 1914 LESTER PALMER, President KIEFFER VAUX, President KIEFFER VAUX, Vice-President LESTER PALMER, Vice-President MARIE FISCHER, Secretary MARIE PALMER, Treasurer MILDRED LINDAHL, Treasurer ADOLPH HOFFMANN, Secretary 1915 LEIF GILSTAD, President LEONARD PALMQUIST, Vice-President PAULA DOERMANN, Secretary LESTER PALMER, Treasurer F LOWER- Apple Blossom MoTTo- Eventually, why not now? COLORS-'Sky blue and emerald green Class Yell Seniors Rah! Seniors Rah! Yah! Yah! Yah! .1 -Y SNAP-SHOTS D F -THREE FAMOUS SOPHOMOTYES' 34 XY Q x X 1-4 ED EHAUGNugY M' WW, UoE vALET THE 'W 'Q'f w H' 'WMA THE ATHLETE , I 'W' vwv.. H fm FAT-MAN Wf'f 'fI1Mfff ww , N Zh We w W K I I Wynn 'W k W X W X X f nyfmllff hi 17. Jw W1 is f LJM M nn Hllffqswlf M ,,' i . ' Mg Q fam W + mf A1,, 1 'ff ,W w1LLA1q1uEcoe uN 'V X LAD: ES-MAN X0 - ng Mxgx Zwnwgm, ,-'.g.'.g1fgff,gM f5NfN-K 01 fx 35,67 'X,.,fy.Q5 lla 'bk r. rnf-gnpwwk K EXANQJAQIQIOP? K ggxq 1 5 Na Dbj wqf Q -1 1 K- N M' KW-iff! K-JJAA 'N LVILLI-IESAPELY PASSTHE. RQEF? M Heed UIC Y Name , 5 gf ? iNf Ls, - 5. 9-,Q 619115 D555 avg f 4 rp , if Q X f, I K . H X I X0 Nw AU! xi Q9 ff -, W Lf ,iff . 41 'gr' xtgfluqtiia ' 4, 'mc - f M2 4? Y MMNJ 2 MW' mu J X H ' ff mxiu '- I 3 9' I x ' N 'Z . fl - f Q ' f HEQ- QW 1, , fi if-Ti 1 5 if ,. :W Xgmf-TL QM Wifi 2,5 fxxNX7+-5 fmld ' -fx is if - W 10 A ' :gf 3-i '71, ' 53 gif l . . . f .sw i it l 1 1 .mei-:Nona KlMn.u.i.. 11114 TXTARTIN WICHMAN, 1913 I.EsrER P.xl.xlER, 191.3 Stu? Btliottoraetnetihtetf They dreamed a brilliant dream, And 'twas realized in The Gleam. ENIURS, your high school days will soon be over, and The Glmm takes this opportunity to wish you well as you go on your way. The Gleam has an interest in every one of you, and after you are gone that interest will not diminish, but will continue on through the years. VVe hope that as you go your way you will not forget us, that you will ever keep us in mind and very often drop us a line telling us how you are getting along. These letters we shall be glad to print in our paper. VVe want The Gleam to be the means of keeping you in touch with your Alma Mater, for your Alma Mater needs you. No school can be great or become great without the aid of its Alumni, and the Johnson High School believes that with the aid of its alumni its sphere of usefulness will be greatly enlarged. The best way to keep in close touch with us is to subscribe for The Gleam. Do it now, and when it begins to come to you next year you can think over old times while reading it. Step into room 14 and leave your name and address with a fifteen-cent de- posit and you will get the first issue of next year. You may then pay the balance of the year's subscription. Subscription price by mail, fiiil in U. S. and fanada. QM? fflllmalllimlgtfllftiii The foundation of The Gleamhv success. They worked silently but effectively, V A . MICIIAICI. Conmsk. 1913 1I,xRo1.n BINDER, 1914 EUGENE Want., 191.3 ri it 1. E P 'Q , . : fa Q ig,-awe r .f .tzsffit if Q Xin? W, va. -.fy .iv- . t J 'Wi' K v -Qu 7' x v S L x E if I J , 3 f V S Z W . I , . 'ff ' 'z i K I V ig., I, A .. . , L- fx. L--. m 11 3 E f 5 Q 5 i 35 7 N 6 I 1 -79 v h 5' A 1 ' 4 lf l. , ' L, Z. Ecbme :X 5 A - 1 V 5, :- ,, ' 155: . A K 2 WM ,Q LV, :ll V -n b A f' ' HQQNQ ga: A 'if ij ' S 7.1 . 8 ' 1 J s . ez N, 1 ' . -' , 1 'N' ' . I! X 4? ' 5 A Q 1' Q f 'V 15255- -: I 514 N.. , V ,T I J' B- F I 1- ' . 2 ' x K I X 41 7 IN uxllw, Tl-:.xx1 lixm-sl Hull:-lu-, .Xluy-fins Sp:-Ilm-v, l.--flu-1 Pulllu--1, B. li. Knln.4'nm'l1 I. 1 ' w .lf f WSL' X, Z 4 I. Z W. N 1 w N N W QUBHHSHUHQTSS Glam 3 f Q, Qjfi ,-J, A,?.L 5:5 fw:Q 2,37 flhi 42933-3 ' C'I-:S 'E7i4 mzhy 3325 QLEE . EZZFL' .UZ Jxm- ' T3-3 F 4275 .-.- if ..,..h L-:Jn SQ1 Q fzii - 'ATE ' :5E:, . ZEGE5 C .L1f7?2 .mgfm X main! TEH-?e 51-55 E'4?.Qi Las :v1:- Enif: zwfgw E-4:55 fnzz, A-Ta? 95125 K- :cw-: . -7 .r 1? 3 ,fl- L -vgtz Q iiizg 1, ,fL7: L,w4H I 253,- 3 EQHWM , 1:375- 'vvgi E ' 1: ' Tri? m1d-L -1,-Fgnf -1, . 7 :7: .HL 'gif :: J .L M3 ei :-E7T I- C11 ' PEJ-L u.v:: ..lhQ.:EE :EEE4 Ex-Ai -L,.u:Q :Z47Q 5255? :-pda. . - Hgqfu V ZLl.'u 'Tl-3 -,l-, fi 'H we 2555: -7 v,-5. : I I P--an 1ALd,.1m Tlw .lulmson Shortlmalncl limcicllvy Vlulm is vmmlprisccl of pupils and gI'ilillllllCS ofIlu'Slwl'll11llul l,0lJill'lll1L'lll of johnson High School cluring the past thron- yvzlrs. lmllfillg thc your past lllvy hzlvc lu-Icl livc ll'lCL'lillgS, with cxvcllclll pzlpws gin-n by vlulm ll1l'llllK'l'S, amd music' zmcl UIIIUI' vnlcrlzlinlm-nl by Imlh l11Cl1lIJK'l'S um! frivmls. Tho lczuling fculurc uf 111011 meeting was il talk by ll rcp1'csc-11l41- livv lvusincss mam, aiming to bring into closer l'ClLlIiUllSl1il5 thc svlmol worlcl mul thv rvnlm of lvusincss, zmfl to cxvmplify thc nzlmc amd purposc' of thc Club. Else Girls' Stub The Executive Board, 1914-I5 President . . . ........... MILDRED LINDAHL, '15 Vice-President . . . MARIE PALMER, '16 Treasurer . . . . ROSELLA NORDQUIST, '17 Secretary . . . ELEANOR ALM, '18 Chairman of Committees Music . . .......... MYRTLE HARTMAN, '16 Program . . . . IRMA LINDEKE, 16 Dramatic ...... . . MARIE FISCHER, '15 The Girls' Club of the johnson High School was organized at the suggestion of our principal, Mr. Guise, who had heard of such organizations in other schools and had noticed how the girls and even the entire school had been benefited. It was started in january 1914 with the aim of bringing the lower classmen into touch with the Juniors and Seniors and of furnishing means of providing more social life for the girls. The girls try to welcome the Freshmen girls and to help in every way to start them along the right path. Every girl in school, by right of coming to johnson High, is a member of the club, and all the women teachers have been invited to be honorary members. One of the good things about the organization is that there are no dues, all funds having thus far been raised by the selling of the home-made pies at recess. Under Katherine Brockman, its first president, the club grew in popularity. In the spring of 1914 little folders of helpful suggestions were issued to the Fresh- men girls, and later a reception was given to the mothers of the Freshmen girls, the orchestra furnishing the music. The Proctor system was also inaugurated at that time. Each Freshman girl is supposed to be alloted a Senior or junior girl as proctor. This proctor is expected to do all she can to make school life helpful and pleasant to her Freshman. The first entertainment by the Girls' Club during the present school year took place on October 8th, in honor of the Freshmen girls and their mothers. A little morality play, Every Student, was presented under the direction of Miss Moore. Mrs. Francis B. Tiffany and a few other St. Paul women were entertained on November 15th. Mrs. Tiffany gave us an inspiring talk on Shakespeare's Hamlet, after which a cantata, The Flower Garden, was beautifully rendered by a group of girls. Tea and wafers were served after the program. A banquet was given last spring for the baseball team and one this last winter for the boys' and girls' basketball teams. Witty speeches and appe- tizing dishes were the main parts of the program. At the initiation of the women teachers into the Girls' Club everybody had an amusing time. Peals of laughter could be heard at any time that afternoon issuing from the assembly. The familiar songs that the Girls' Club have had printed on cards have been enthusiastically sung by the whole student body during the last year. We hope that the cards will last a long time and that the students will always enjoy sing- ing the songs as much as they already have. As a whole, the Girls' Club is quite prosperous, and we hope that it will con- tinue to do all that it is doing, and even more. fe 'is Qrcliesfra Concert 1 i4 ' Tom NYSA Nc' ' 2 WIFE 2 iii! 1 0 -ni ' momrin ' , Q Sflmlli.. 2 mm n ft -4 4 'z: Q rnrzsmmnrs fs , E f Fmzncnnnn X im 'xx W' i I QQ' 22 f ALM Ev? . 2 ovmmzmn 9 , , g X was QUITE A X I f , CDlTlC A 1 sf tl , 1 V -ei' gb n IT nm. 2215 OEFQE,g5mn 5 ENDED 4 11 113132 , N f'f A1 HADDILY- . AHIT Sys f lf :X in X H 5 u Q COGIH ff 5 Mir 'Tab 'jvf Lmeo HOST 554- ' , +m'Igg,. , 7 'li If Q3 To DEHEIXRSE ssl Lp 41 , iff- 71 VX , 'rms 1114121 3 , x f n rg. ilggpi , ' Qi. ' , l ' f' -j j Q 14- Q19 A great dramatic masterpiece' was enacted on the johnson stage February 26th, portraying characters of every-da life with whom we are well acquainted. There was that irresistible Tommy CWillard Coginj with his sweet and charming sister Rose Clla Saulj. Surely they were marvels of compatibility. No strain marred the harmony of their daily life, no ripple disturbed the quiet of their friendship. Then there was Dick Grannis CI-Ioward Overmannj. Why was he such a frequent visitor at the house of his firi-end Tommy? Was it merely to pass the time with Tommy? Oh, no! for he stole the heart of sweet Rose. Brothers, are you mayhap encouraging such a one in your house? Patty Campbell QEdna Bowesb showed righteous indignation at the actions of Tommy, but all's well that ends well, and the road of true love was tact- fully smoothed by Edith Bronson CPaula Doermannb. The world harbors many a Mrs. De Yorbrugh Smith CAmy Wesselj and daughter Sylvia CLucile Kranzj. Women who cannot distinguish between a family tree and a gooseberry bush, and daughters whose noblest tasks consist in sitting for portraits, though very sweet and charming pictures they do make. For the personification of Pierre De Douten CThomas Moranj go to France. In that land, where the emotions are encouraged and affections not trampled upon, we find just such people, and long may they live to provide amusement for us. The orchestra furnished a large part of the entertainment and gave us a number of selections. Strange to say, the audience seemed to favor Tipperary more than any other of the pieces. Alma Neely sang a few songs, and Mr. Lis- owsky, the well known violinist, was acgompanied by Alice Olson. We are proud to say that the Misses Olson and Neely were formerly pupils at the johnson. M Htbletlc Hssocliairlou Students! Have you joined the Athletic Association? Well then, make it a point to do so at once. We have been organized ever since our youth, and it is only logical to assume that we should grow. We want you as a member, and if you are an energetic, patriotic Johnson student you will feel it your duty to join. Students, you owe a part of the high standing of this school to athletics, and even if you can't help directly in the Field of sport you can help indirectly by joining the Athletic Association. Athletics is the predominating feature in true school spirit, and what can be accomplished without true school spirit? You join. Officers President . . . .... . . LESTER PALMER Vice-President . , . HOWARD OVERMAN Treasurer . . . TODD E. PAULUS Secretary . . . EDNA OHLSSON sJQl5l?2w:32iWlW2l Easiiyw 1 9 ul- if I t 3 Ddff CAff?I'6'C' u w, an , 1 s. 'Q J X 1: ' -.' g X461 K Wim ' VN Xx lg. Km-' 'tk I NN W . 1 . - H fz 1 u, 1 fl Nun, - 5 . - E ut . fax i .. V E' Q Q -- A 'N f N ' 1 ' f ' f '51731Y!L.f,?A ' Q W - x fi- -- R6-f 1. 'Y 1 E-' jllfootlballl URING November The Gleam published in its columns a pointed and well-worded argument in regard to critics. It bemoans the habit so many people have of going around and telling what should and what should not have been done in the last game . We agree with the editor. This is undoubtedly one of the worst habits any youth can cultivate, but this would-be scribe believes that a well intended criticism brought forth in the right place is valuable if the intended beneficiary realizes the value of just criticism. September 1914 saw the brightest prospects for a winning football team that johnson ever had. Ten veterans returned to school and several of these were above average caliber. The first few days of practice revealed the largest turnout in the history of the school, which demonstrated there would be an active scramble for places on the first team. The early part of the schedule showed two defeats not unexpected, because heavier and more experienced teams were met, but the overwhelming scores by which we were defeated were rather disappointing and johnson's hopes of downing her over town opponents once more went glimmering for some reason unknown to us. One thing that this season, as well as past seasons, revealed, is that Johnson will never have a truly representative team until the hard-working, faithful player is given his chance. Keen competition stimulates a team to unity of play and purpose. The man who gives way to another does so cheerfully if that player has proved his worth over him in active struggle, but the man who feels that a position on a team is his as soon as he deigns to want it, who declines to come out to practice till a game is on hand, is a detriment to that team, its Fighting spirit is gone, the individual players are striving for their own chances to shine, team play is lost sight of, and honor for the school entirely forgotten. For the past two or three seasons our coaches have promised positions on the team to those individuals who seemed deserving by their untiring efforts and daily workouts. All we ask is that these promises be kept. The work of Saul, Palmer, and Howe demands the respect and admiration of every student and follower of local football. Captain Saul proved to be one of the best leaders, both on and off the field, that Johnson ever had. He was master of himself and able to rise to I all occasions while in the game. He also displayed a great deal of tact in getting the men out to daily practice. Palmer's greatest asset to the team was his inexhaustible supply of pep which, com- bined with his wit and humor, acted as a lubricant upon a well bal- anced machine. Fred Howe is deserving of much praise for the part he has taken in football during the .last four years. As a Freshman he went out for the team, but failed to make it, which must be ex- pected. Each of the succeeding three years found him working his hardest to give Johnson the best team possible, and he did his part cheerfully. What a fine thing it would be if we could have a few more in school like him! It takes men who are built of the material of which these three are made to make a team that will be worth while. They have worked on the gridiron four years, never thinking of personal glory, never displaying more knowledge than their coach, never finding fault, always keeping in mind the school's honor and reputation and always playing the game for the game's sake. We have many of this kind left for next year's team and we hope they will continue as they have begun. We compliment Coach Korn on his ability to devise tricky, clever plays, the like of which have never been seen at Johnson at least. BASKETISALL TEAB Basketball F Coach Churchill's '15 machine it may be said that it I was one of the finest constructed cars in this part of the X l country. It was built with the utmost care and pa- ll I tience, making it a very smooth, easy running car. li g The six cylinders that it carried, Pete, Nyb, Joe, I I Lee, Blonde, and Stromy, were made of good, reliable material, and cylinder trouble was seldom experienced. The first meet of the season was held on our course with Cen- tral in the opposing car. It was a very thrilling race with both machines running neck and neck most of the way, but coming down the home stretch Central's gas gave out and Johnson sailed in ahead. Mechanics produced the Wonder Car of 1915, and we wish to compliment them on their grand success, and at the same time thank them for the extra heat they ran for our special benefit. Humboldt appeared in a brand new Ford this season, and in a very cheerful, sportsmanlike manner donated two victories for which we are truly grateful. The most serious blowout of the season occured at Menom- onie, Wisconsin, and it is a known fact that this was Manager Moran's fault. He loaded down the machine with divers species of the fair sex until the cylinders became overheated and missed fire repeatedly. But Tom was a good manager for a' that, and he surely enjoyed himself sitting up there in the front seat tooting the horn for all he was worth. There you are, Tommy, we are sure you will gain ten pounds on that. Crack The track team has participated in two meets so far this year, and its success has been all that could be expected. Without an experienced track man in school Coach Eichenlaub set about building up a team out of the crude material that answered his call for candi- dates. Prospects were not very bright, and despite the fact that very little interest in his work was displayed by the students he has kept right at it and turned out a team that is a credit to the school, and is somewhat unique in that nearly every member of the squad is a lower classman. Manager Howe has succeeded in stirring up a lively interest in the team and the school, and been fairly well represented at the meets. Herbert Schutte was elected captain, and it is expected that he and his little band of cinder packers, after a season's experience and training, will shine forth in great style next year. iElloClilQ - --- - -V -7- , 'l'liiw Yl'1ll', llu- llI'Sl liiiu- SllH'l' licwlwx' wlzirlvcl iii lliis svluml. iiilvrm-sl iii ll 5 vrla wif wlumii lay ilu- 5lllIll'lll luuly. 'liliiw was pxirlly mliu- lu llui uiiliriiug 1llulIaiml'il.lpI4liII ulgllllll You lniviix mul pzirlly iliui to llui splciuliml ulimviiig in ull- lux' llu' In-aim Xllvi' llu' wiuui wllli ilu- X- ww llu- lvmw NlNlWl'llil1'4lHtl1ll'4ll 1 , 'A s. -sr-- 5 ul spirit, llllkl il if plgiiii llizil llu-5' muilcl li.1x'v gin-ii livlllfill 21 gcunl Vim lim' llu- iligiiiipiuiifliip luul lull wzirni xx'n-:iIlu'r iiilc-i'x'm'iu1l. XYilli wily lun IIIVII lnu'lc fzipliiin Yun l.lDI'i'lIZ llllill up illl 1-iilirv iuwx' Im im. SlAllIlil,.lt'lN'l.1lllt'WllCltllIlUI1 lrmii lXlk'l'll1llllUS. 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Rm' lium-'llmali 611159 E11111111i11Qs1 11 19 1 G'11T11:.:-2? 111511111511111i'111.11S1.T-111111 1C-11f11.1111.. 119111. 17111'111g 1111- 1111s1 1111s1c1'1111111 s1'11s1111 11111 girls 1111111 11111111 vvry s 1'1'1-181-111, 1'11111i11g S1-1111111 111 11111 r111'1' 1-111' 11111 1'i1y 11111111111i1111s11i11. 71111 1' 1 1 4 l111l11, 11111111 1111 111 1 1.11111-s 1':ggl,11'Sl1l11 111111 N151111- S1'111'11'l1 11s g1111111w .'X1l112l .'XIl111'l'S1711 111111 131-1'11111 1i2l51J1-Sky 1f11111111's. H1-111'i1-1111 H111111111 111111 1,l11'111' 1Xl'2l11Z 215 1111'w111'11s, 1111s 111111 11x'1' 11111 111 11111 s1'v1111 1 gll11l1'S 11 1111s 1J12lX1'11. 11 1111s 111s11 111'111'i11011 1111- 51111111 51. 1121111 H1 501111111 111111 11111 .'X1ll11 1111. '11111' -1111111s1111 girls 1111v11 11111111 11O1'l1lI'1211C 111 1111x'111g Sll1'11 21 go 12111121111 111111 l11ZlI1ilQ1'l'1l1 H1-11ri1-1111 1111121-l112lI1I1, 111111 N1i111r1'11 1,i111111111 1f111r1-111'1' 51'111'11111, 12111111 1311111-s, R11s1- 1.11 F1'1111i1'1' 111111 11r111'1- 1q1l1S111l w1-1'1' s1111s1i11111's 211 111111-1'11111 111111-s 11111'i11g 1111' s1-11s1111. .'X1llll1111 1 . . . . 51111111 51. 1121111 111 111111111111111 -1 . . . N11-1'111111i11s 31. , . 1'1'1111'z11 S .... 51111111 51. 11211118 . j111111s1111 ,I111111s1111 ,I111111s1111 j111111s1111 ,1111111s1111 111111151111 11 1.1111111111 111 H1111111111111 1 115 1X11'1'112lIl11'S 11 1.3 11'c111r111 12 S1 1,'11111r111 SJ 5117111151111 j111111s1111 8111111151111 5l111111s1111 .I111111s1111 BASEBALL 1915 Dart Fbczr Q GY: Q7 6 :F 1 CEC? 146-1. QQ fl Vu 0 , 9 4 Q - 4K ' 1 'K' - 5 C!U7?.l54 15645 65 C ' J ,uw A 453, MMM 2, ffgllfv 4 X 2-4919 , 5-1,15 .LZ -5 fe it M Jul - 1113: kwa f 1 1. - ' C f . j 1? .5 ' xl aw? , C Lv' 'L Behicateh tn all the jauts at Elubnsnn, imlubing those me iJahen't mentinneh Qhaucetts mptologue Qwith complimentsj When that APRIL with the CERESOTA The draught of MARCH has perched on the root And bothered everyone with sweet liquor Of which virtue endangered is the flour When ZYPHIRUS ate his SWEEDE bread The slender cops, and the young son Had in the rum, his half course run And small fouls mock the melody That sleeps all night with an eye opener So pricketh hem nature in hir corages Then long folks go on pilgrimages And PALMERS seek strange blondes To distant hollows in uncouth Sunday laundries Especially from every spires end Of Engelond toe Counterbory they went The holy blissful martyr for to seek That them has helped when that they were sick. Aloysius William Penelope Spell, .Carries with him a strange sweet smell. fThe rest is deletedj There was a young man named Dale, Who always had plenty of kale. 'Our deal little Mur- Is now dead gone sure, For with the girls Dale is no snail. We must stop this awful chatter When of dear Lucille we talk, For I hear the pitter patter Of her queer and stately walk. She is young and she is learned, Some teachers even call her smart, And I think this poem she's earned, So I will begin to start. 'lllqltilw For three straight days I skipped my class, So now I have no right to pass: But I think myself exceeding wise For slipping it over on M r. Guise. Dear little Edna, sweet and petite, Tried to cross a slippery street. She stepped on a peel, And let out a squeal, And hastily beat a retreat. IIEADMIEIQDIDS Stop, my friends, and give a sigh, For this mound is our dear friend Pie He used to be the coming kid, Till some things he overdid. With a tear in each eye We will cry for dear Vy, Who used to be as good as dead Till she met the fascinating Fred. Clever and funny Since the day he was born, Handsome and witty Was our Bernard C. Korn. lie, ilnbnsnn ailp Bark THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1915 WANTS T0 RESUME BETTER AUIIUAINTEII johnson, March 3.-It seems as though the male portion of the johnson High School has nearly forgotten about social ob- ligations which are placed upon them. This is due to the fact that their minds have been con- centrated upon their studies so continuously. One girl has decided to become acquainted at any cost and her gentle jolt is as follows: Dear Ernest:-A number of girls are giving a hike next Saturday evening and each girl must ask a boy friend which she has never asked before for any doings and so I would like the honor of your presence on this occasion. Don't think me nervy because I think I ought to know my own class- mates better by this time. The only way I could - Mail to the Editor WHO WILL EXPLAIN: Wants to KnowWhySoManyAnimate0b- jects Are in the Drinking Water. To the Editor of the Pioneer Press: I would like very much to have some one explain why there should be so many small, fish- like, live, swimming bugs in the water served in the cafes and restaurants in this city. Are these things harmful? Lately I have counted and found that there are two at an average in each glass of water served to me.-T. C. MYERS. 139 West Summit Avenue. january 2.-It is plainly seen that the habit is not of long standing, but we advise you to cease immediately. In all prob- ability these animate objects will develop on each succeeding occasion until they resemble ter- rible serpents and reptiles, and the consequences may prove fatal. I? 325' .fi f-IIA -' .v Nb -Ji ,Yi MGBUY IS A HEART- BREAKER johnson, December 21. - VVillis McCoy has, for the last few months, been trifling with the aliections of a prominent young lady of the Sophomore class. It seems that feelings stronger than friendship had sprung up between the two, be- cause he had been seen lately wearing her ring. His love soon grew cold, how- ever, and he witheringly cast her from him to drift, and perhaps become a wreck in this rough, cold, merciless world. One of her heart - rending notes with its pathetic appeal for his sympathy and mercy fell into the hands of a reporter and is as follows: St. Paul, Minnesota, December 20, 1914. My Dear VVillis:-How are you getting on these cold days? I never hear nor see you any fX let you know X' S .f -, m0f9- was to write a l 4 Y QXC6 Seeing this is note, because 1 gl I 4 XXL X015 the case I would didn't know if Q x vlist R Z 5 f' LS' x like you to send hm time . xc Q as but or not, so please A X X t X' ll X22 ring, as I Woulfl excuse my scrib- X XX l liz, X like very much bling. Let me 5 X 6 X to have it. kngw as S0011 as l X X N .X i As I I12lV6l1,t you can if you XX .N s fog, any newstlo tell will go, and Ill .2 2 ll X- X X f- you I mtg t as tell you more 4 I Q V' well close. Hop- about it. You K kwin, if o X ing either to see can call me up if xg N ,, f' X if or hear from you you wish. Tri- f' gf A, I i I X soon, I remain, Stare 20035. s' 1 I! j 5 XX 85 yourfriend. , -5 PQI' X. 'QS 1 The JOHNSON DAILY BARK Thursday, Jan. 2, 191.2 FOOTBALL 1' S035 X , ji m ie U O L I OE 1. f y X33 BAUI.. EINNAHN 9 ' lm CAPTAIN -X914 LGPTIIIILELEU' fx 4 ,xx 95 Q5 - E, , A l li ,will X E' X l Q46 4 gilslgfg, 4 E ,M new-ez, ?'gg. L D :ff ' KM' X556 fff , YW' Yi ill. Q ' - 4214 ff' - X N x? ' -- I W X ig 'Sn 'J Xl 5 1 L HQ? DIE DDRINTED ounswms Awnva ' T1-IE DEST ' ll'l'TO FI-WIEIN THE THE DICGEUT AND LOUDEJT , PUHTEQ rgglelrgnnxm bunch 0F :zooms Q in 'rl-ln: cvrv -: 1:77 :: 4 : : 1 : :F gg i :Y i 1 1 1:-1 Q 1 W : 1 1 L , 1 The Ellis Theatre ll ll Latest Style jwusic-aj Manager. E. Ouellette 1: Hair Dressing Entertainment Star Actress - Neleh Sille ' ' Done in one minute D Given entirely by Classical l at THE f2REATEST ALTO Performances J 1, Lillian Saul's IN AMERxcA N0 Admittance H Tonsorial P3,I'lOI'S Grace Kinstler Heated with Hot Air ll ll 345 22nd Avenue Feb. 30 13:30 B. C. ZZ I. Z I I Z IZ I Zu ZZ 12 L I K 12- -. I 1 1 I I 1 l E : :. : : :Q : :fig :K as-: : i : : : 2 1 1 1 1 Z- 1 1 1 How fo Pour lf lf Private Qulck Lunches and Y . Served by l Dancmg Lessons , l lr Stzll Look Pretty ,l ,h G, F Hamid Omen Taught by U H Wegy ree Open all Night Arthur Gilstad l l , K5 I V V Mr. C. Wahlqulst Paymeniskindgltalments H M Bring Your Pumps Boys Eeagzylzgohzzitgzchiefs I e:gggg:eT1ee,,: ,Eeeieiie gvvm Thurlday.,Ian.2, 1915 The JOHNSON DAILY BARK FOR SALE . WEATHER FORECAST F S C 'MB , johnson Weather Bureau Bulletin OR ALE. HEART y Jumor class: one pm belonging to the Station Thermometer Rainfall Wind Es'Velocity Weather late Harriet Berry. Jennie Bloom 78 Damp Breezy Clear Edna Bowes 98 Slushy Swift Sunny FOR SALE.-one pair of danc- ogin 102 Foggy Cyclone Unsettled in Dum S-Ed Shaughnessey Miss Moore 90 Drizzling Variable Stormy g p ' ' ' Miss Boyd O Dry Calm Fair LOST 'IODAY-S ALMANAC t LOST:-SeVel'al YCHFS' growth WANTED-conf. in my rage at Miss Bell. Re- The sun will entice many to Ph . . .this morning. The moon will shine on Orrin and Sara as usual tonight. Morning stars: Hazel Clark, Marie Tobin, and Lucile Kranz. Evening stars: Edna Ohlsson, Violet Anderson, and Elsie Hoff- man. MARRIAGE LICENSES Orrin Lee and Sara Cohler Ed. Shaughnessy and Elsie Hoffman. Shorty Sundberg and Amy Wessell. Herbert Schutte and Edna Ohlsson. WANTED WANTED.-S0me one to take us to the Junior-Senior: no blondes need apply. Meta Beulke. Irma Lindeke. WANTED.-Mechanical device as an aid to high jumpingg will exchange any of my little used text books for same.-Schulte, Track Captain. WANTED.-Something to make me grow up. QEd. Note.-Long ones might help.J-Fred Kranz. WANTED. - More attention from my teachers: I can't take up more than half the time in any of my classes.--Melville Meyer. WANTED.-AHOth6f cane rush to attend.-George Johnson. Roy Nelson. A xel J ohnson. Dale A nderson. A rthur Peterson. FOUND FOUND.-Several E's on my last report card-not mine: mystery still unsolved.-Kiefer Vaux. FOUND.-Several very pretty Freshman girls that I can't take care of since February term be- gan: one is all that I can follow around. Apply for terms to Frederick Montveville Howe. FOR RENT FOR RENT.--My services as a barker for athletic contests: guarantee to attract attention anywhere.-Muriel Mackentnsh. FDR SALE ' Fon SALE.-By Annual Board: several volumes of unpublished manuscript, mostly jokes: snap- py material for Gleam: all cen- soredg terms reasonable. turn same to Ila Saul. LOST.-One chamois at our last hikeg please return it, as mama won't give me another.- Helen Kranz. Losr.-Much of my rest in Chemistry class due to the teacher's inconsiderately asking me questions. Return same in good condition to William Dalton Salisbury. Losr.-My position as Lord Mayor of the Junior Classy no questions asked about the return of my prestige.-Howard Over- mann. LOST.-My sense of humor: liberal reward for return of any part of it.-John M. Guise. DEATHS DIED.-From over-fatigue Art Peterson's scholastic career. Re- quiscat in pace. Dusn.-In the field meet with Humboldt, our track team- notice of funeral later. DIED.--With the coming of the birds and bees in spring, our Philornithist Society of Asphyxiat' on. Survived by large family. Remains to be cremated. DIED.-Edna Ohlsson's curls. Interment permanent. KQyEl67ZlMdkiwiiLUCk M Q C ONIC SE C TIOI7 1-uw I7 -19:5 H1 HM fvnmwsp ? f k TOFIHORR s YA! mums: F 'fx ' 3k wily Q., S KY z ,. is -5' W U? 'I N ' Z, If 5 4 . I 1 HUH ' I-XHD THE HOMHESQSH EBDRY ... I .3 'rox-ulcm 1 X f f SMU' gm J, az Q AH Fw IMI I K x Xi . UQ , :ffff fw w 1 N 0 D 1, N XXX' I 7 l I I' ' figs ' i J I MAYBE I CRN GET A UIDI' , OUTR THIJ U' 555151: ' , in Aff'-,v A 1 1 A 4 - . 5- 6 '- . . . -1 r I Z z ,-. I , I I r . ifkT?'?' HUH-onmpr JOHH -Cm.1. i15'r'r-Im :asm JOHN-I Am - ' mpntgaqjryompai Xlglgfubggnn 'ro uma:-nz wm-rrs crm now X QKISDSQDIILH wpy,-,Am mud A nongfm. - HET0 PEHDIT GET- Nl.. DAQAGQA ff' 2 'mm W5 ' TOTfE-E533 F A ? ' w,,Qnm5 .XN f.Q ? igw' ,Lbs IQ , 0- , 1 5 . 4 is 'f 7 41 My X k f Xf'fi',53 ' 5- u , ,. M wxwsxfxggal f - ,h , 4 ' ff . ff' 'W --ff 'A f t x f 22 ' --i f jf ,ff ' fflff- 'il f 2 ' 3 if Y VX if 1 4 Z N' rl I wmv You :nv vourzv -, NEXT I 'man Hoavnncsss w lg,-Q' N. , ' ifsii V 5 I Swat the 1065115 1 EA, ,S 'Q X r 7 no 'T' 1 '1355'i5E0Y5'i5xS'L'5 QESEQHT' SPEIIIXH 931 1: me ilqifillq gitoga 5 r - cam -nova M ' QX, TIEAHD X -f-n Ji 55? VA , A- 79-gged :ig X A?' Qu Q 1 A . Nix :J ,6 '- ' XS i AQ 4: I Sl' fl J G W ' X' S M- f ff' I 2 x f f- X- - 1- 1 ' - - A- 9' f U T Q, X -ep ' .-f 'f,, 4 Wx v igx 1 , as - 2 S x gc- : 1, on GIRLS- cooxrfs Fuasmo 351m,U9E3 Now wrurr wr-mx YA WIQEAE mn Lurxcrx 2 nv mm Q. FELLA5 ? gg-I:I1glg.IX'I QX x av V GQRDDIHG nmcni' X on-Loox wmwou! ff ' 5 i , 'mm V X A'r'rHEcU'rr: X Q A V X, XXY .E 5 V DRDY Dom. Q5 E X, n 5 i Si N ' ZQ Q,-.47 xi E bl 252 , E XXX '.1.'::.- -fi' 4 ' 73' , r f 1, I 1 5 x ' I L, fa K -A I 7, 5 ' -SWE: I W1-mn 'rwo Q MW' fi ' ' nmnoargxvhleqonwnsn f - 3 K ll 'Tlbave jllfotmo 'Chat is for Absent, Which we never are. is for Basketball, Where Seniors all star. is for Cigarettes, We girls never use. is for Damsels, As coy as you choose. is for Efforts, The teachers to please. is for Flunks, Which we draw with ease. is for Goats, We have two or three. is our Humor, A thing sad to see. is for Immense, Which refers to our class. is for johnson, We must leave it, alas! is for Kickers, We won't have around. is for Library, Where loafers are found. M is for Memories We want to forget. N is for Never, Which has not come yet. O is for Orchestra, Which helps fill up time. P is for Pickled, We can't make this rhyme. Q is for Quizzes, Our teachers' delight. R is for Recess, The time for a bite. S is for Seniors, So sapient and sly. T is for Teachers, We'll leave with a sigh OJ. U is for Ursula, Your name helped this song V is for Victories, We've had all along. W is for Wastebaskets, That stand in the hall. X Y Z is for the rest of it all. -A. Nut. Extracts tram at Stubentps Diary April 8.-Tardy today as usual. Things rather dull. Was awakened when called on in history and had to ask Earl what my opinion on results of Civil War were. Will have to come home from church earlier Sunday nights hereafter. April 9.-Forgot my excuse for yesterday's tardiness. I think I got a com- pliment from one of my teachers today. She said: You are a very unscrupulous boy. Kind of nice to get a good word once in a while. April 10.-Forgot my excuse again. I had to go home after it. Fine day. Pa had gone to work and I was up against it, as Ma can't write legible, but I fixed up something like Pa's writing. Didn't do a very good job though, as I had to stay after school and listen to a lecture on character. I got off almost two periods when I went home and the lecture was as good as an assembly as the men talk on such subjects anyway. April 11.-Harry and I exchanged papers in arithmetic today and marked each other 100. I had to explain the thirteenth problem, which no one had, so we were caught. Honesty is the best policy. April 12.-Esther borrowed my knife to trim her finger nails or something. Guess she forgot to return it, but hope I may hear from her soon. April 15.-Had a sub in geometry, liked first rate. I think different teachers broaden our view. April 16.-Couldn't go to school, as I'm not feeling well. The water isn't a bit cold now, but I didn't have any luck at all. Played ball with some grade kids for a while and felt better. April 17.-Asked Pa to write me an excuse but he said: Write your own excuse. What do I send you to school for but to learn to write. So I did the best I could. It worked, I guess. Pie day. Had three pennies and matched with Peterson, so got my nickel that way. Laugh, and the teacher laughs with youg Laugh and you laugh alone- The first, when the joke is the teacher's, The second, when the joke is your own. -Exchange. X, een -Fftccn Debarfng 1360121 QQsE1. iL 'X k , 1 if-W Sobnson weakly Show IEWW jlf M6819 Price always the same. Fifteen cents. Twenty-five cents at the door. Principal ........ I believe Tom Moran has a few remarks to make to you this morning. Loud noise for more or less long time while Mr. Moran tells us how to come out and help the team wing and not study too hard. CCheers.J Principal ........ Cto students of first ten rowsj. I have a few other announcements to make. A pair of boys' tennis shoes have been found in the . .ah .... ah .......... um ................ ah .............. . CResuming. . . audiblyj. As you know, students, it has been my custom to bring in business men from time to time to talk to you on subjects of interest, men who have been successful in their lines and who have a message for you all. We have with us this morning a man who has done much in the outside world and I am sure he has something valuable to say to you. I take great pleasure, students, in introducing to you Mr .......... of ..,...... fwe fail to get it, but hope for the bestj. Mr ...... ?? fHere the unknown arises and saysj: My dear students, it gives me great pleasure to speak to you here this morning in this magnificent temple of learning surrounded as you are by such helpful influences and aided by such competent guides as your teachers and your principal, Mr. Guise CAhemj. When I was a boy we didn't have the opportunities then that you have now .............. I remember how we had to get up on cold winter mornings and bring in the wood, carry water, and then brave the cold for miles through the snow to school. But work never hurt a boy ...... or girl either, and I'm a better man for it today. . .. . . . . . . . .Your time here is but a preparation for a larger Field, life. . . . . . . . . . ........find outthingsyou are best fitted to must have sound body ...............f......... . . . .character that counts. . . . . . ..........Liquor.......... .......cigarettes.... The loud applause by students of aforesaid ten rows rouses us, then we hear. . .... WE will go on now to... .um......hour. fQuick Curtainj T 1 Mmerciclks Very likely you all have seen Roy, Who is quite a fat little boy. He begs on his knees, For limburger cheese, Which he eats with the greatest of joy. There once was a girl named Ann, Whose hair was inclined to be tan. She played basketball, And shrieked in the hall, And was a regular football fan. The most gifted and most brilliant girl in the Johnson High School is Jennie Bloom. -Paid Advertisement. Amy-- What is the use of having speeches that interrupt the courses at a banquet? Mildred- Economy! Miss M.- Are you supposed to do that? Spellacy- As the chair, I think I am. In Mr. Harrell's Book: Honorable Mr. Harrell, to me you shall always be in my memory, as an excellent teacher, a man of winning personality, and a man with a big heart. 'HHIOWQ me CHHUR Freshman Sayings Say, do you know what my number is? Say, do I have to take English in that class? 'Everyone is taking 'B10' and I want to take 'B9'. Anxiously: Can you tell me where room 22M is this period? Large boy with many books: There's no two on my card. Do I go to my thethion room then? First Senior- Do you like our class pins? Ambrose Lewis- No, they look too much like a girl's first pancake. Little chicken on the lea, Honk! Honk!-Fricassee. -Exchange. Miss A.- How can you eat a soft lemon pie? L. P.- Suck it up with a straw. What the Editor Was Asked in Class: Who's the baby doll next to you? Her father's Hour bill must be going up. Ask her how many sacks of charcoal she has bought. Freshie B Cln gyml- What's that? Freshie A- Why, that's the horizontal bar. Freshie B- And is that guy standing next to it the bartender? A man rushed into a store and asked for a mousetrap, quick-said he wanted to catch a train!-Exchange. I stol.e a kiss the other night, My conscience hurts, alackg I think l'll go again tonight, And put the blame thing back. -Exchange. HIGH .SCHCOL TYPES H - gm p-351-han X ew M AL, I, X IXTHLETE L b 'X 'Ji 1' 5 ,RL '- N L nf- ' 'f JIBEGLISHCY ?xt:i W1 V 14' 15' fZ 1 ,f , -. J 5 7' ff '53 BILL 4 ' : ' -f L A L FGQSDEDG HHDDY so LUCKY- 4:35 f 'f ? , 1 ,f , , L , 9 Zf ff .. 15575 L N L i 6555352 'J f STUDENT OF I COGIN' FQDESTDY ll ?S233iHD I V t Y li ' ,, ,K I 55 L Q f Q ,'g7Iqf:- I xx ,'f, xXxNxxQ ,fQ , X A,,,agl'l,w lx X, ' ' B, XX XX' . 'J N'X s ,M V- .:vSimQ'J.WIk L ' Q i x .xl nj' 3 X l ml! M O C nogxfj xg - of g l' 'll Senior Cost mbsqpets Ions are energetic little being that to seek the poles. Adams fatomsl can never exist alone. A coin has a milled edge so that it cannot be shaved. Franklin was of now particular sex Csectlf' The greatest works of Franklin can be found in his outobiography written by Ed- ward Everet. Chemistry treats with the transgressions of matter and the change which they undergo. It is absorbanant and has no oder. It is inpenebuble and has a brittle yellow color. Nitrogen readily departs with oxygen. 'NIVS HL jlf8Cli Dale does study now and then. Tom got two B's in one month. Kieier and Aloysius are in love. Violet Anderson does not care much about Pie. She is just letting him show her a good time. ' The Bull Durham Club does not use Durham but Adam Standard. Alex Sherlock and Orrin Lee were rivals. CFor particulars see marriage license.J The library is too close to the office. i Elsie Hoffman does not bleach her hair. Miss Andrews has given more sermons in the last four years than any minister in town. The earth is supposed to be filled with atoms. An adam is the smallest or most minute thing can exist. Adams never exist alone but several adams unite and form a moliqle. Sulphuric acid is used as a refrigerater and in making izening glass. Some issues of The Gleam head their hum- orous section Jokes. A wise precaution, say we. We are delighted with the new print shop for our school paper. All they need now is a barbor shop and The Gleam will be a success. KW:-mit a while, you'll get it.J SIDED!- Hedwig Allen was afraid we would get too much slang in the Yearbook. Beautiful, is Miss Bell's favorite word. Leif Gilstad got an E in Geometry. Jennie Bloom lost 329 tickets during her high school course. Algot Lindahl was at a picnic without his collar on. The greatest regret that Mildred Lindahl has is that she could not take gym during the last year. Edna Ohlsson used seventy-nine dears in writing in thirty memory books. ,. That Mildred Brockman's hair is never mussed. ., 1' ,.-H-w - mp yv . . , 3.-I i B jllfacinitig Gossip Mr. Diehl is a Bachelor of Law but not a bachelor. Mr. Korn is an engaged man, in Antigo. Mr. Myers has been, twice! Miss Boyd reads cheap detective stories. Miss Freeman, though we've never found that she gets very hot, sleeps out of doors all winter. Miss Perry takes care of her own furnace. Mr. Eichenlaub wrote the article on johnson's Four Coaches. Mr. Eichenlaub was easily the feature of the article. Miss Chamberlin comes from Antigo but has almost lived it down. Miss Trygstad does not talk English. She says very little in other languages also. Mr. Guise has taken dancing lessons, The Churchills are the best fans in school. Mr. Harrell came from Kokomo, Indiana, but doesn't care to be reminded of it. Try it. Miss Moore combs her hair every morning, she says. Miss Ickler has a most unusual nephew who goes to Humboldt. Mr. Beggs allows real jokes to creep into his speeches. Watch for them. Mr. Paulus makes students buy plenty of books-why can't they use them? Eli jlf IL'8!Q1mQ1ITlTI Over his books the musing pedagogue, Beginning doubtfully and far away, First lets his thoughts form a catalogue. And builds a bridge of happiness for his prey: Then as the touch of his loved instrument Gives thought of a test, nearer draws his scheme, To punish those who have not spent The required time upon his theme. Not only around our infancy Doth teachers with all their splender lie. Daily, with souls that cringe and plot, We numb-skulls climb and know it not . Over our childhood bend their eyes: And by our young and unformed lives Their great minds utter prophecies: With our faint hearts bad habit strives Its arms outstretched, that nasty weed Waits with its deceptiveness: And to be a man we think we need The disgrace of drunkenness. And of such things our tutors warn us, For they know whereto they lead, Why is it that they think before us When they know we will not heed? But when we get away out yonder, These truths come back and we'll o'er them ponder. Qlbemlical 'Germs eine 'Sibelius Synonyms Amorphous fwithout shapej-Mr. Harrell. Alkali Qcausticl-B. C. Korn. Efervescence Crapid escape of gas or windy- Al. Spellacy. Ions QSmall migratory bodiesj-Florence Mullen, Alice Wolterstorf. Nitrous oxide flaughing gasj-Jennie Bloom. Carbon monoxide fpoisonousj--Shorty Sund-' berg. Magnetic Cattractiveb-Adolph Hoffmann. Hypothesis Cguess at a thingl-Senior recita- tions. Salt Cneutrall-Miss Burns. Anhydrous fWithout water-dryj-Leif Gil- stad. Gas Csubstance completely filling spacej-Joe Velat. Flurine fmost active elementl-Howard Overmann. Action of sodium on water fruns around- makes loud noise and acts queerb- Hattie Holden. Bromine Canother active elementj-Mildred Lindahl. Cryolite Chard and glassy looking!-Our teacher's looks. Cobalt Coften associated with nickelsj-Miss Bloomquist. Benzoic acid Cclosely related to guml-Joe Saul. Solvent Cabsorbs nearly everythingl-We hes- itate to give a name-Kieffer? Combustible Qeasily ignitedl-Fred Howe's affections. Chloral Hydrate Csleep producingl-Classes these fine days. Phosphorescent femitting a glowl-Dale An- derson's nose. Hbivlce to lower eisssmem 1. Don't try out for a team. You might make it. 2. There's a fine running track in the gym., but don't use itg the halls are better. 3. Don't let the others think you are fool- ish, let them know it. 4. Don't ever attend a game in an en- thusiastic frame of mind. Our team might win. 5. Remember, you can't get lower than an HE. 6. Ask questions in class. It delays lessons. 7. Don't throw scraps of paper in the bask- ets. Why is there a space beneath the lockers, do you suppose? 8. Don't take Physics. None but the human brain can understand it. 9. Freshmen, you need a free period. Every small child needs all the sleep it can get. 10. Never speak to a. Senior. He might think you knew him. 11. Don't get your head near the saw in shop. You'll have to pay for it if you break it. 12. Don't talk in the library. A Senior was sent out for so trifling an affair as that. 13. Don't talk above a whisper. You might disturb a Senior. 14. Don't walk on your heels in room 22. 15. Don't forget to laugh every so often in room 33. 16. Don't stay out of school or Miss Moore might call up your mother. 17. Always go to the library during your free period. Your session room teacher will be glad to get rid of you. 18. Walk as slowly as you can between classes or you'll get there too soon. I Qib 3120111 'lllltnow 'Chat johnson students are often seen at the Blue Mouse. They are seen by the teachers. Ernest Ouellette was once a good boy, student we should say. Now he's a debater. The printshop often needs fifteen girls. It needs them for its spreads and dances. The Seniors had their sleighride at the movies. Florence Simmonds has a summer home and a motor boat. Muriel considers the boys her brothers. CHow do they consider heri'D Leonard Palmquist is not so young as Adolph even if he looks it. Andrew is the janitor of the Johnson High School. His policeman's star is merely a bluff. Start something and he will prove it. Len Holmgren's other name is Gerald and Von Lorenz has Hans attached to his. We find it hard not to be witty at them, but Milton Clarence and Frederick Montre- ville seem more so. Henrietta Hoffmann chases cows, and dives. Florence Stonholm Came from Stockholm Once upon a time. Florence Stonholm Rhymes with Stockholm, So we wrote this rhyme. SOENUHIQYE jIfO1lHlITlb in H1 Ecsetifeb Qlbwltclb There was a little boy And he made a little gas But he broke his little toy With a match, alas! The pieces sailed up high With a loud report, While yonder little boy Made a prayer quite short. Then his teacher told his brother, And his brother told his mother, And now the little boy . . . . stands up in the laboratory. Quit' Best Sellllcrs Girls I have Known and Loved . Why Boys Leave Home Ceveningsj . Diary of a Model Boy .... How to Make Seniors Happy . . . Life in the Lower Regions ...., Idle Thoughts of an Idle Young Fellow . DALE ANDERSON . V1oLE'r ANDERSON . . LEO MORAN . ALICE E. ANDREWS PRINTSHOP QUARTETTE . . . EUGENE WAHI. . , 4 , 1 , . 8 Some 'illimterestling Watts Mllwont Eolmson Fastest growing school in the 'Iiwin Cities. CSee J. M. Guise.J Only printshop in Twin City high schools. QSee printers' ink on anyone's handsj Best looking girls in city. CSee Kieffer Vaux.j Most gallant young men in town. CSee Violet Andersonj Smallest Freshman in United States. CSee them and be convincedj Fifty-seven brands of literary, other, and miscellaneous societies. Best high school library Cthere is only one otherj in St. Paul. CSee Mr. Guise.j u Greatest noise factory on earth. CHear us any time when the principal is busy.j g Best view of Hamm's in the city. Smallest lunch room in existence. EIDQW565 Oli 1006 lflllllHllfO0lllI l.9l.5 p RECEIPTS Bribe from Arthur Lofroth to run his photo Qsee lamel .... ..... 5 1,003.00 Advertising iPayne Avenuej .......................... . . . 10,000.00 Sale of books .............,. .......... . .... . . .....,.......... 5.00 Sale of old clothes, etc .................. . .............................. .10 Donations for our will and other things Cfrom Miss Burns and Miss Slineyj ..... 100.00 Subscriptions ........................................................ 20.00 Blood money from Kiel' for concealing his .past .... . . . 9,000.00 Total ............................ ..... 5 20,000.02 DISBURSEMENTS Paper ..... ................ ' . ..... 5 100.00 Ink ...,.......... ............... . . . 150,005.03 Pictures ............................... . 500.00 Photograph of Aloysius William Spellacy .... .25 More paper for the ink .................. . 200.00 Private expenses .................... . . . 10,958.00 Publicity for staff, especially editor ..,.. . 2,563.00 Printing ............,............ 50.00 Internal revenue tax ........ . . . 3,004.38 Total .... . . . 20,000.02 A11 students of Johnson High should patronize the firms Whose adver- tisements appear on the following pages. Private Oiiice of Malcolm Emory Nichols IN -x-sl tVLl9f'l- W f if :J N Vigi l ,ia .Q , wxj Snon-n-eANo,TvP:wnmNc, Booxxsu-:PING AND Rl:Pon1':ns' POST-GRADUATE Couns: FOR STENOGHAPHERS Jllilalrolm Ifimoxg Nichnls COURT Ano Convswrlou REPORTER Essex BUILDING ST.PAUL., MlNNzso'rA Business from Start An Ethical School to Finish -Strictly High Grade We have successfully trained a great many J, A. johnson students i Visitors always welcome We have no solicitors I 1 I I I I ! 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 gl. .XX14-1141141111 I 11441-11.1111N1111l111y' I'u1111l:1111 Try I fflll' iviuus Sllllclzws i'I1r11'olz1I1-s 'I am' l z11111111s 111111 1111 thn- i'1111I'1-1'Ii1111 ,Ht-pAyA':AVf-'val-J :I7M'0p H.XX'l'Illll'H Hin' us lllv lm' fxI'02lll1 o1'clc1' for ytllll' llvxl pzlrlx' 111'sf1v111l l11111'l11111 . . W, 'l'i'i Inlylll' .Xx'1'11111- N. XX. 151111111111 22,111 I 15.33 ' ..jp Q 5 1 . .Q,Q21'-'52 .,.51.,,i!5, ,A i N: 111 1. .fa--. 1 ..i..1..1...1...1..1-.... K-1 Attend Summer School at Lancaster M innesotrfs Live-Wire Business School Day and Evening Sesssions throughout the year. A square deal to one and all. Ask for our Journal. It is free. 0.V.S1MoN, President 89 Eas st Fourth Street Saint Paul It's a Good School Good Prz'rz!z'ng Elway! and All W ays Randall Company Pl'llltCl'S Printers of books for those 'T.lTJ..'L'tl'L schools that want the best O. H. Arosin Jeweler 'f 414 Robert Street ff X. Ryan Building T W' ll' See Our Johnson High Ring OUR education is not complete unless you learn the art of saving. You can open an account now with one dollar or more and draw four per cent interest compounded quarterly at the Northern Savlngs Bank Corner Fifth and Cedar Streets Saint Paul, Minn. gg me- -a- -. -R ef: ,fs -. was.. -f . M . H .1 111 1p.1..1..1.,1..1..1..1.,,1.,1..1 1 ,1 1 1..1...- 1:1 1:11 1 12:1 1:1 1: 1: -.- Tri-State Phom- 20069 Charles J. Bergquist First- Class jill il off 11 g XXI P11 y ne Aven ue St. Paul, Minnesota H. F. Peterson Dry Goods Company 932-34-36 Payne Avenue Tri-State 20112 General Dry Goods and Notions .lfc'C'f1ll'.v l'f1th'r11s Kuyxer Gloves R. 6' G. Cbrszfis Menlnr lvIIdl'f'ZUL'tlf 1.-1.,1..1 ,1..1.,.1..1..1..1.,....1 1 1 1.,1,,.... l i Chas. J. Bergstrom 1..1.,.-..1..1..1,.1.,1,.1 1 1 1 1 1..1..1..1.,1..1..1..1...-..1-1'.1..-p1-u-on- l l ll Successor to ll W Bergstrom Bros. Pl'lt171IJ1i1Ig and I Ieali ng l: jolnlving promptly attended to Zi S20 Payne Avenue Tri-State 1241490 l T l F D. Reizzers H Fine Groceries ll U Tri-State 2060.1 gg N. XY. llomont G56 l if 2574-TIS Maria Avenue Corner Sixth Street li Eddie Finnerty tlformerly of the East Side Lime X Cement l'oinpnny5 is now with the Capital City Lime and Cement Company lmlizinu Ave. and Starkey St. N. NV. Rolmie 6158 TriAStnle - 1474 11 .1-1...14,.1..-1...1...1..1.,1..1...1..1..1..1..1..1..1..1..1...1.1.1.,1,1-1 ... 1u1..i..f-1-1...--.--.-...L-I gin- -1 I - -f:-a-af..fx.- fafz-:far -- 2: - 2 2. azazs ..- -- -'haf I We specialize our Tailoring to please the younger men All are inrlucled under the younger men Skooglun Sc Hagstrom Tailors and Men's Furnfishers 973 Payne Avenu Good Things to Eat SCHOCH Broadway and Seventh Streets Tri-State 20924 and 5878 N. VV. Bomont 924, Dale 5678. Cedar92-I The Mzrznehaha Dry Cleaning and Dyeing Company, Inc. 830 Payne Ave. 792 Grand Ave. 505 VValxashzi St. The House lhat Saves You Money Wallblom Furniture and Carpet Company 298-408 jackson Street Saint Paul Everything at a Lower Price This Victrola 3515 Plays any Victor record. Oak Cabinet. Metal parts nickel plated. Equip- ped with best Victor Sound Box. W. J. Dyer 8: Bro. 2l-23 XVest Fifth Street Telephone: 1 ' N.w. 176 Tri-Sinte 2:42 K Pen Df'yU'1d Nzgh' Turkish Bath House and Barber Shop i . . '- Deebach nb Bros. ztx- . :Ili ' . J' Mzfcrl Baths 'ff - ' 138 East Fourth Street St. Paul, Minn. 1 --.1..-1.-4.11.11-Q..-q.1..1 1 1 1..1n.-...-n.4.-it-1.1-111-....,.-.,..--1.-..1......L..L..1.......i. Vander Bie's Ice C ream Is the Bos! Office and Factory Cor. Partridge and Brunson Both Phones .-..n1an...u-1m1u-n.1..i..i.p1-1-1.1 .- 44: 4: Flowers for all oeeasions Our prices are always right Capital City Floral Co. 291 East Seventh Street N. XV. Cedar 17-49 iz--:45:iz:.::-.'.z1:::::.t'-' , , ....... li.. ........... ff- n 5 , ' Z S e , X ff ' rf sm 92 l 'V' me , :9 3: Z J EWELER S , 910 Payne Avenue 4f . f' g 0 !, ffm XX ff Come in and see our large and exclusive line of Commencement Gifts Y W., -Y -in--:gazli-lil...-n:fn:i..7,. -1, -zfzz, :n ::4:: Y: ::, :Q :za :Y ::f:: : -:, Go to- Anderson's Ice Cream and Confectionery Q Post Cards, Magazines, and Newspapers Stationery, School Supplies Burkhardl Quality is as good as our reputation Sweaters, jerseys, Athletic Goods, Basketball, am Indoor Baseball Supplies ' The Big Store is the place to buy all your In- and Outdoor Sporting Goods The Wm. R. Burkhard Co. 133-137 East Fifth Street, near Robert .Iuul Ingersoll Co. Amateur Finishing Engraving - Kcznzerfzs Supplies 357 Minnesota Street Globe Business College Enter any Time Both Day and Night School All Year Established in 1885. Over eight hundred students annually. The largest, oldest, and most successful business college in the Northwest. NYC occupy two entire floors, using ten thousand square feet of floor space. Large and airy rooms with plenty of good sunlight. All new and up-to-date standard typewriters. Graduates assisted to positions free of charge. Business, Shorthand,Prep'Lrafory,a11d Civil Sl'f'l'1.I't . Call, phone, or write for our beautiful forty-eight page illustrated catalog. Seventh and St. Peter Streets, Saint Paul, Minn. We carry at full line of Cameras, Supplies, Fountain Pens, Etc. Scout Cameras 352 and 353 Bodin Sundberg Drug Company 890-1110 Payne Avenue Prescription VVork Our Specialty t..-..1.,.-..1...-,.1.,.-...1.,1.,, 1 1 .- .- .. 1 .- .- .. .- .- -.. .-u......1.,.-.-.......-...iq Tri-State 2621 Martin Giesen Theatrical and Masquerade Costumes Tights, Vtligs, and Make-Ups of all kinds Grease Paints and Powders Domestic and Imported 418 North Franklin Street Saint Paul, Minn. .I ,7- .' A , . . ..,.., - ,. 7... - awafzg ., You ought to have zz KIMBA LL ll Piano or Playef'Pian0 in your home Pianos ..... 3100 to 35500 Players .... 35350 to 35800 Easy Terms Berkland Piano Company 415 Cedar Street 79 O u r B a n k Let Us Help You Save Saint Paul State Bank en Daily 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. ' ning 6 to 8 p. m. OP Also Saturday hve J. A. REAGAN. President With Compliments C. O. Erickson Photo Artist 171-173 East Seventh Street fo' Clov e r L e a f l Mlm of Bu tter f it ILDEN PRODUCE COMPANY if. .i....1,.1.,....,.-..1-1..,.i.,.-.,.-....- 1...........-.- .-...,..1..... 1..1....-..... .-...-..-...,......1v.1 l'. P. Roi.i.1aR, Ixlnmmvr G Mus. P. l'. Ro1.l.xau, Prin uess W ork Methods that produce luck of efficiency. , ' Our methods arc practical and . ii 5 thc work of our grziduatcs r proves their etiicicncy f i Wf' un' progrrsxizle enough In rlnxf' .Viglli Sflmal ' during lml wmtlzvr x ,f f Pioneer Business School Ryan Building Rohcrt and Sava-nth Stn-cts Lu-7 lm, 1 .1 .1 1 .- ..u.,nLnu1u.- -. with QUA l,lTY and SERVICE Cost no more all The Home of Flowers Holm 8: Olson 20 iNest Fifth Stn-01 .1 1151...-..... .....1...-.q.1...- .--,-.,.-..1q1q. C 0'0PERA'l' ION SERVICE AND QUALITY Combinedwith the 1G7zow1ec:E3'e gained. bfefperience in. the 'Art of' ngrax7ingg means to the 'Printev---f' D ERFECT RI NT INGJ LAT E'S,.. Specify St.Pa.u1'Eng'r'ax7in3'Co.P1a.te.S to be sure of' the 'Highest' Grade of' E'n5'r'a.x7ings in. one or more color' .fu STLPAUL ENGRAVING CU. 4I2 CEDAR ST. 5T.PAUl., MINN. BOTH PHONES -..,.- 1.n,-1.,-...-..,..1.....,.1..1g-I.-...i i ,I l it w lf ll Il ll V ll Il l i I ll li If l If IE ll I High Grade Portraii and Commercial Photography Studios Both Phones Dyer Building I 27 nu-Sf Fifth smut Sperm! Rules St. Paul, Minn. I0 Studenls tt l W ' S f S , e re a a e tore t You run no risk whatever in trading here, for your l money is never our money until you ' are perfectly satisfied l Hedm an Bros. 86 Petterson I Department Store I 967-971 Payne Avenue li II 1i2:i:2'2 ' I: Z7 llilliiiiilii 2225 T 2,2 Z Iii: 'II'I'7I ' I I I 1 1 1 ' 1 t RECREATION for the EDUCATED 1 l t SI. Puul'x Gnna' V Newest Piclures M and Gnml ll Best Music' l V enlilaled lfplznlsferfd ir Motion Sealy X, Pirlure and Good M Theatre A ir ,. l t ' e,t,.,t 1- l T ll C 21 I1 I' C D C L U X C Maria Avenue near Third St reet .X . ef D ' wiki ,Nb ,Ea X . . . f r ?iWXt The Friendship Link Bracelet 7 f N ii The best seller in the jewelry line today. You start with one ' ' ll I. link and your friends give you the rest with their , H' initial enggravetl on them. 1-,M-,1f.,,,p1f,-.1 Pow 20 vents 011611 Vile are the originators of these Bullard Brothers Company E15 East Sixth Street ,t XYe make a sin-eialty of school pins Patronize llome Industry gg....-.....-. .1,,ini....-....-...1n.1...i..i..1..i..1..i...,...1. -..,,-..,,......,..-..1..1..1...L.-L...--n


Suggestions in the John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) collection:

John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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John A Johnson High School - Maroon Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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