Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA)

 - Class of 1912

Page 1 of 80

 

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collectionPage 7, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection
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Page 10, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collectionPage 11, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection
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Page 8, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collectionPage 9, 1912 Edition, Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 80 of the 1912 volume:

--Young Man- Young oman 5haII we ill YOUR posztzon wzth you or wzth somebody else? THE has a posztzon for YOU young man young woman as soon as you have completed a course zn Shorthand Bookkeepzng etc Enroll NOWz111d be Ready when your Chance comes F YOU can KEEP BOOKS WRITE SHORTHAND OPERATE A TYPEWRITER DO GENERAL OFFICE WORK 1n other words 1f you have been TRAINED FOR BUSINESS you W1Il find your servlces 1n demand at a good salary ln not one but many If you can do yust ANYTHING you w1l1 find the door of opportumty closed agamst you Nobody wants the un framed mexpemenced boy or g1rl PRINCIPAL F1 t dM di SPOKANE WASH Telephones Bell Mazn 405 Home A 2405 ii .1 , . .v X 7 ! A , I 7 I . ' . . 1 lines of business. 95' 96' 95' 96' , . G fs all U SDH , . LEWIS and Clark ournal Iune 1 I2 The VOLUME I NUMBER 1 I H H rv 479 v H sd V ff' ax 1 V xl' MQ 4 ,wx ,fyimrawfmfawxifff 1.853593 A529 fbias mfg' fklfbuk 1 W Hum, xx. D .JN ff N, A '4',,,f3q b ' ex 4 q .Nui ll! 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Frontlsprece Dedncatlon C ass Hxstory C ass Poem C ass Play PICIUYC C ass P ay C ass Prophecy C ass Officers Plcture of Class Orators Characterlstlcs of Class Llass Wlll Literary Department All for C-ratltude Sacagawea The Hlclden Revolver The Silver Legend Editorials Current Events Athletics Coach Rodman Coach Maclcmlller Confldentlally Spealclng Alumni Exchanges E:ee:de:cee:-:4ewe:+-:e:sq4e:fEc4sssc4e:-:4e:cessc4e:cssawe: The Craduatmg Class qacescesceesceefceeyceecesqezciesqeeqsesces CLASS HISTORY N the morning of September 8 I908 we the members of th class of une l9l2 fwho would of today the pea green Freshres of four years ago trod for the the weather beaten srdewalk lead mg to the entrance of the old South Central Hrgh School We approached the bulldmg m twos or threes and gazed hrst ln one drrectron and then another expectmg each mmute to be grabbed by a towermg unlor or Senror and compelled to submrt to numer ous tortures of which we had heard so much We were sent to the room of Mr Staley our Class Director who met us at the door wrth a smlle thus destroylng our belref rn the awfulness of hugh school teachers a fear whrch makes each prospectrve Freshre quake m hrs boots We were assrgned our re respective class teachers to whom we went the next day wrth hugh hopes that they would prove as agreeable as we had found Mr Staley ln some cases our hopes were not dashed to the ground but most of us were extremely dlsappomted We were the frrst class to escape hazmg and the boys all thanked their lucky stars that they had been permitted to enter with out that drsgrace rn the presence of their new made frrends especrally of the grrls some of whom were exceedmgly pretty but now we have some doubts whether that was the wisest course by which to usher us rn upon our high school llfe For many days we wondered at the enormous slze of Enrzlehom and De Wrtt wonderrng lf we would ever attam the place whrch thev then enjoyed that of berng Seniors rn the South Central Hugh School We never drd, but we found a much greater honor that of berng Senrors of The Lewis and Clark Hwh School frrst time At the end of the second week of our resr dence rn the burldmg we were assembled after school for our frrst class meetrng whrch was an entlrely new experrence for most of enthroned a grrl rn the ofhce of the flrst and only glrl we ever We Presldent elected to that sacred olhce whrch we soon found out was only for boys Lower Class men take notlcel Never elect a grrl to the ofhce of Presrdent no matter how pretty she may be ln February we elected boy to the office of Presrdent thus rectrfymg the mls take we made ln our first semester We struggled hard wrth the mysteries of algebra that year some of us the next also for we had not yet leamed the method of blufhng the teachers whrch has been the mamstay of many rn the class ln our Sophomore year we were helped along by the kmd and lovrng advrce of our Class Drrector Mlss Fisher Some reason r other the boys always got along well with her but the gurls were not crazy about her probably because she proved too attractive to the fellows We elected Ted Richardson President and we regret to say that none of the hrst three Presidents are with us at present to share the honors to whrch we have come of being the hrst class to graduate from The Lewls and Clark Hugh School School closed on the second Friday of June that year and the second Monday thereafter about seven o clock we were nearly all assembled to see the destructron of the old South Central Hugh School by the demon frre the burldrng we had leamed to love and honor as a home We felt as lf our hopes were blasted when the bell tower fell from rts high perch and the thought came over us that no more could we look up to that clock to see what tlme lt was, and that we would never agarn hear the nng of I I . f 1 1 ........ ...,s:..., . . I I ' I l I l I I I I S s S , ..es..s.. , ...e....... . I I - J us. . V 1 recognize in us, the sedate Seniors ' , G . . ' . ' 1 g . g A a . . . ' . J - 1 ' I . , ' , K P- THE Lawns AND the bell which had celebrated many vrctorres on the athletic held and which had a hablt of tellmg the people of the nerghborhood when It was time to seek the land of dreams The next September our frrends across the rlver graciously permitted us to occupy therr bulldmg wlth them XVe shall always be thankful to them for the shelter which they gave us when we were wlthout a home and for the kind treatment accorded us whlle We gradually saw the magmhcent palace rlse whlch rs now called the Lewrs and Clark Hugh School At last after a year and a half ln the North Central I-llgh School under the Blue and White we returned to the Orange and Black and took up our resldence ln the new Lewis and Clark I-lrgh School the hnest rn the Northwest The hrst week of resrdence m our new home was extremely eventful The second day we placed a pennant on the roof whrch caused a scrap at noon but our colors were CLARK JOURNAL defended and were surrendered only to the faculty and that at the pomt of suspensron On another day of the same week all the boys of the class appeared at school with necktres of our colors and only a very small percentage of them was obtained by the under classmen although they worked ex tremely hard We can never express our thanks to Mr Lollar our Senxor Director for the ard which he has glven us this last year We also wlsh to thank Mr I-Iat for the help which he has grven us durrng our four years of hlgh school hfe In our last year we have elected to the ofhce of Presldent the best known and cer talnly the most famous boy ln the class n fact ln the whole school We have con ferred on hlm the highest honor whlch anv class can or has glven that of the President of the Class of June I9l2 the hrst to grad uate from the Lewrs and Clark High School TILL I GRADUATE Vacat1on5 What rs that to me Enrreshed ln work s dark seethlng sea3 You ask me why I work so late Three weeks trll I graduate' Porlng o er Vlfgll the whole night long Forever haunted by that dread song Wlth smklng heart I recall the date- Two weeks trll I graduate' One week to cram exams to take A grade of 76 to make Ar last ln despair I reswn to fate- One week trll I graduate' One meek of agony hope despair One week of study wrth worrred alr One dreary week to watch and walt And then will I graduate3 Margaret L Sanford , v ' . I - 1 , . Q 1 Z' , . , - ,I v ' ' ' u V - , . 1 ' D . , . A . ,. . , .. . a I ,. 7 D - ,. n 1 I ' o v THE Lewis AND CLARK JOURNAL THE LOVELINESS OF LIFE fClass Poem I Facrng the rrsmg sun the travelers pause On hard won helght behlnd them lles the pat Threaded by all ln sweet companlonshlp Thus height whereon they stand has wondrous power To draw the Future s curtaln and reveal Life s lovelmess to all who care to look And from this vantage pomt they see out spread The divers thoroughfares whlch call to work And Destiny ln the mommg s prrmal freshness o each his path seems rosy the aureole Of Hope enhanced by the golden pencllrngs Of Dawn athwart the eastern vault msplres Youth the prophet that one who more dis dams The Hood of years than drd Cumaean Slbyl Speaks age-old messages brddmg them strrve Wrth generous soul and eager hand wrth eyes Uptumed wrth buoyant step that knows halt But the sun mounts up the azure llverled s Wrth brave farewells the PllgfllT'S part but rs They note ln LlfCS broad panoramrc vlew What roads glve srgn of crossing what lh terlaclngs Greet thelr srght and offer meetmg place To talk ln remmlscent mood of bygone days Hrgh IS their uest and bolcl they are and strong That rrde thereon but blessed too for through Gardens richer than Edens the roadways ea Anon refreshing springs leap out from banks Fragrant spread wrth flowers and festal wreaths Which make for them perpetual holiday From doubt envy and narrowness of mmd So nde they forth over therr head the sun Golden appareled rn light majestlc At mght the even s calm breath the holy rest The soft radiance of Hesperus III the sky By day by mght enshrouded strll are they With Love and all redeemmg Sacrlfrce The treasures of Humanrty and wealth Of the lnflnrte Soul surge round and through thelr frame So rrde they on where duty calls the years Are speeded rn thelr fllght And not too as Do temporal chains enthrall and hlde t etemal So rrde they on trll Llfe become a perfect round Flawless rn Him who IS the lrfe of men Xvho crowneth all with Hrs own lovelmess Owen Krlgore LOVE I you know why the Seniors are anxlous to leave3 Why juniors are hurrymg through3 H Why tales come around that are hard to bel1eve3 Why some days seem terrrbly blue3 Do you know why your mmd wanders out of the room And dwells ln arr castles above And suddenly everything turns to gloom5 Do you know? Well Ill tell you xt love Do you know why a Freshman forgets all he knows3 Why has teacher falls off of the cha1r3 Do you know why Haeseler tums cr1mso.l and rose And rrses up yards ln the BIT3 Do you know vxhy another one catches the b ues And weeps o er a ribbon or glove3 Do you know why stlll others srnk into their shoes3 Do you know3 Well l ll tell you lt s ove Gertrude Kmppel I4 7 ll ' ' ' Q . l ' I . I d.. . T . : .1 . , 'l I I '. . ' D . . . f t 4 . ' - 1 ky. 4 u n . 1 . 1. H t. . A . . . . .fn . . . I , ' , ' 1 . I ' ' l 'W' 1 . ' ' - 1 W 4 , W,, THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL THE CLASS PLAY Miss Dillon NT mumble your words' Law me' Drd words ever so 0 tantahzmgly run through my head3 la hrs was the common dw complamt after May 29th for on that night the Class of une I2 presented Sweet Genevieve well called one of the best plays staged by amateurs that Spokane audrences have ever seen lt rs now a thmg of the past but not soon to be forgotten The play ltself IS a corredy ln four acts full of humorous sxtuatlons mth just that straln of pathos running through rt that makes you feel lt IS worth w hlle and enough dra matlc actlon to keep you Interested every mlnute From the moment the Earl of Hawcastl gave the first hmt of the plot untll the cur tam went down leavmg Plke alone but happy the Interest newer lessened In the dlfhcult role of Plke a typical down east Yankee who comes over to Eng land to save hls ward Ethel from a mar rrage wxth a merely titled family who are desirous of securlng her money and who by hrs blunt ways and common frxend Doc greatly embarrasses her m this part ames Dougher was slmply splendid Vema Rogers as Ethel well deserved her place as leadrng lady To Walter Weller was entrusted the role of the brother Horace Granger Simpson he of the affected English mannerlsms who after finding out how SUPCTBCIHI his titled English friends really are suddenly returns to his natural American ways As the vlllran of the play we hardly ex pected to see Floyd McCroskey but such he was and as hrs able accessory we found Margaret Sanford the Countess de Cham PISUY Lo Almerlc ot Whetsel with hrs fopplsh Enghsh mannerrsms and Lady Creech Myrtle Levy wlth her severely haughty ways we owe much of the charac terrstlc humor of the play Of course we can not think of Pike without hrs very good frlend the Duke Carroll Starr and the latter s valet Merle Brown The play would by no means be com plete without Clarence Veasey as Mariano and Orln Wentworth as Michele while t Fabian Smith was given the traglc role of lvanoff the escaped Russian pnsoner The hrst meetmg of the cast was held on the eighth of Apnl and from that time on under the splendld drrectlon of Miss Dillon the members of the cast worked diligently puttm forth their best efforts that the play might be a success rn the broadest sense of the word And they dtd not work ln valn For wrth the one other essential a large and sympathetic audience Sweet Genevieve the hrst play given ln the Lewis and Clark auditorium was one of whlch the Class of une I2 and the school as a whole may well be proud 9 y r -. .u J ' 1 Q U U 1. ' ' ' ' c J. cc f, ' . ' . , Q 9 D . . . . . , 3 M 7 . . 3 Q L 1 - . I f P- I - 3 . . - l , H ' y . I . .l . 0 ' Q. V . ' - J ' ' I THE Lawns AND CLARK JOURNAL JUNE I9lZ CLASS IN l922 The strarns of Sweet Genevreve were wafted out over the strll waters of New York harbor The clear barrtone vorce of ames Dougher and the banjo accompanrment mmgled strangely wrth the muffled lap of the water agamst the srde of the yacht A merry group of young people was seated on the upper deck and as ames hnlshed he came towards them smllmg as ever Doesnt that brmg back memories of the Class of une I2 and the evenrng of May 29th'-I Indeed rt does Frances answered and do you know I was just thmkrng of our class It was only ten years ago that we graduated but oh' how many changes have taken place and how scattered we are Why theres Ruth Floyd a mrssronary rn Chrna Merle Brown farmrng rt rn South Amerrca and Fay Dunseth marrred to a Sergeant ln the Phrlrpprnes and Florence ones the last trme I heard was a socrety belle rn New York Crty Yes Interrupted Floyd McCroskey and I read rn the New York Herald that Walter Croar rs strll asprrrng to the Presr dency The Presidency' Of what' In hrs surprrse ames almost dropped hrs banjo Why the Presidency of Mexico Floyd answered drsgustedly a d rts a wonder to me you wouldnt asprre to some thrng Irke that Instead of bemg merely a New York broker who spends most of hrs trme takrng hrs frrends on pleasure trrps Ilke rs Well' I thrnk rts mrghty nrce sal Clara Streyffeler but that remmds m I heard Charles Rogers say that he a just recerved a letter from Mac Whrte e mg about some of our old class mates there ln Spokane Let s call hrm and ask hlm to read rt to us Now Clara you might as well leave hrm alone Margaret replied he IS study mg those old books on archrtecture and a thousand horses couldnt drag htm away Before another word could be spoken James had grven the order to Irft anchor A gentle breeze filled the sarls and those on deck watched the lrghts on shore grow drmmer and dimmer as the yacht drrfted out into the moonllt sea Oh' Are we really gomg3 called Mabel Smrth from a secluded place on the opposite srde of the deck where she and Carrol Starr were tryrng to make out some constellatrons Yes we re really gomg answered Carrol Lets jom the rest of the crowd for ther s Charles now readmg Mac s letter to them Youll have to hurry Carrol called Floyd I was just gomg to read thrs letter and Im sure you all wrll be rnterested con trnued Charles In speakrng of Owen Kilgore Mac wrrtes I 'n sure that you wrll be surprrsed to know that I recerved an mvrtatron to the wedding of Dorothy Dutton and Owen Kilgore To say that I was surprrsed rs puttmg rt mrldly They wall Irve rn I-Irllyard where he rs engaged rn clerrcal work In speaking of himself Mac wrrtes Although I am strII makrng a Irv mg sellmg tickets at the Casino Isnt as excrtrng as rt mrght be and I wrsh rt were You wrll of course vrsrt London and rf so be sure to see the Musrcal Comedy Frolrcs of I920 rn whrch Frreda Haynes Wrllram Thomas Edrth I-Iockrng and Walter Lawson wrth Elmer Englehorn and Isabel Holman rn the Ieadmg roles are mak rng the hut of the season It must be ex plarned that Elmer developed great vocal abrlrty smce he graduated Of Brrggs Srmprch all that I can say IS that he rs makrng a great success sellmg patent remedres rncludrng hs famous mustard wax and com cure Of courst you remember Mrs Srmprch fnee Dorothy Nebergallj who travels wrth htm Fabran Smrth has taken the posrtron of dancrng master rn Newland Academy of New Orleans and rn hrs last letter he wrrtes of seemg Wrllre Clark who just left there to contrnue hrs trrp around the world Wrth hrm rs Duck Brosrnskr now Mrs Clark Dick had been teachrng fencrng rn thc Unrverslty of Vrrgrnra but a trrp around the - .. - .. - ' - J .. . .. j .. . . ,. . . . , . , .. , - - . . ' ' ' . .. , . . I ., , . . ,I , . .. , .. s n u -. n , v v v ,. . . . .. . . . , . . ,. 1 . - ' ' . I . , s 1 al ' I s . . , . . . , ' 1 1 . 1 . . . . , . V 0 7 . 1 1 . v 1 . v . . . f . .I v v . , ' . . - . ,. U ' . , . , . . .. .. . , U v l I . , ' . . . . , . i so I could have joined you on your trip. ll , I! ' I U I . . . - K Q . J . . . V as - - n H ' ' ' 9 Y ' ' ' ll ' I I I I . , n D ! v - ' - . 1 1 . s ' I ' ' th' .H ' .. . - . - . .. .d .. . - . . q . . . v eu h d . 1 . . . t ll' . . . .. X . , . - . ' . . . , ' ,, . . . I . u l ' ' ' ! I S , ,, . .. . . . . I 1 T , . ,, . . . I . . u 1 I 1 ' Q 1 l . .. . .. . . . - - - r if-v THE LEWIS AND world looked good to her and thus rt hap pened Do you remember Wrllram PearI3 Poor Old Brll' I always thought hed marry Amta and be happy but they had some sort of a quarrel shortly after he left college and he rs now tryrng to drown hrs sorrow and rncrdentally hrmself rn av atron He and Alva Sawrns are scheduled to leave Boston for a Hrght across the At lantrc a week from today whrle poor Anrta rs draggrng out her lonely exrstence at home I thrnk I have told you all I know about our class mates except for one or two Orrn Wentworth rs now the leadrng Race Track Manager rn Texas and last Saturday when Sells Floto Shows were rn Spokane one of the brggest features was Grace Dean as a bareback rrder Roy Edwards who rs strll wrth the show has arrsen to the posr tron of trcket seller at the marn entrance Goodness exclarmed Frances who would ever have thought that Grace would be a crrcus lady' That letter was certarnly full of sur prrses Clara answered laughrngly u I thrnk I can add to rt Whrle I was rn London thrs summer one mornrng whrle out srght seerng I saw a dapper young Eng Irshman comrng toward me Ieadrng a perfect brute of a bulldog I-Ie was wavrng hrs cane frantically and I thought he was try mg to flrrt wrth me Imagrne my horror when I recognrzed my old frrend t Whrtsel' That was not all' I had no more than left hrm when I met ulra D Wrtt now Duchess of Marlborough Eu nrce Hennrger was also there actrng as un derstudy to Brllre Burke She told me she had just recerved a letter from George Axtell and that George was clorng unusually well rn polrtrcs havrng grven up the ad vertrsrng busmess rn Phrladelphra several years ago Now thats about enough for one evenrng hnrshed Clara there s Floyd asleep already Well Im ot called that worthy gentleman suddenly Stop your fightrng chrldren demanded Mabel and let s flnrsh thrs story tellrng by srngrng the Orange and Black So the ocean trrp contrnued and after CLARK JOURNAL many days of pleasant sarlrng the party found themselves at last upon the Medrterranean Sea and Rome but a few hours away When the crty became drstrnct rn vrew all were anxrous to land and as soon as they reached shore a taxrcab was called Hello people' came from a famrlrar vorce Why theres eanette drrvrng a taxr exclarmed Margaret Where do you wrsh to go? asked eanette after frrendly greetrngs We are only here for a few hours ames answered so please take us around the crty wrth all speed possrble Whrle hurryrng through the ancrent crty they stopped at a Roman art gallery They had been rn the gallery but a short trme when Mabel exclarmed Drd you see thrs beau trful landscape parntrngl' And rt was parnted by Vrvran Walker as sure as you lrve Carrol answered Surprrses were not unusual now Come here' Come here qurck' called Clara from another corner of the gallery Doesnt he look beautrful rn gold frame3 But why on earth has hrs prcture been placed here'-' The answers to these questrons were found on the rnscrrptron of the prcture IN HONOR OF LESTER MALLETTE Who fought so gallarrlly against the Tur s ust at thrs trme a great norse was heard from the outsrde and wrth characterrstr Yankee currosrty all rushed out of the burld mg to learn the cause of the excrtement I was the Krng of Italy wrth hrs long trarn of followers on hrs way to the royal palace Could rt be3 Yes rt was Raymond Enloe and seated besrde hrm was Verna Rogers ueen of Italy As hrs Court he had gathered about hrm a number of hrs old class mates among whom were Harold Wade Nellre Whrte Albert Karlson Elsa Wolcott and I..ors Johnson The remarnrng trrp rn Rome was unevent ful and the next crty vrsrted was Venrce I2 - C ' I - I , - in In ' n - - - an - . . - J - ' ' ' , Hb Q Well, if it isn't Lester MaIIette. I I Q I Q g .. . . . - a . . ' Jo . I ' 'f - 'vu H - D ns v , 'Q . l .. ' . n '.. . - , THE Lawrs AND One evemng whlle out ln thelr gondolas the party was attracted by what they supposed to be a young Venetlan serenadlng hrs lady love But as they drew nearer they rec ogmzed Clarence Veaseys melodrous vorce smgmg the Houn Song The musrc sud denly stopped when Frances called out For plty sake put on a new record' After a few mmutes of conversation ln memory of old tlmes Clarence was led to tell all he knew of his old class mates Nothing new was added untrl Charles asked If he had heard anything of Ed Tyra Gee Whiz yes Clarence answered Tyra and Nelson Wolcott are leadmg camels across the Sahara Desert Makrng a pretty good thmg of rt l guess By the way have you been to France yet? Emmett Durkrn has started a place there rn opposrtron to Monte Carlo You remem ber Fred Muller dont you3 Hes wm army He has qulte a number of our friends rn hrs reglment Ross Grllette Harry Holt Fred La Fond Ralph Davles and a lot of others The rest of the tnp was qulte uneventful except when they vrsrted Greece where they found Myron Moreland busrly engaged m declphermg anclent hleroglyphrcs While on one of the street comers of Athens they found Myrtle Levy trymg to expound to a group of wondermg Greclans the theorles of Emma Goldman AUTHORS COMMENT We have done our best to wnte the prophecy for the Class of une I2 but even the best of rmagmatrons will some trmes fall What wonder then that we possessxng only a very small amount of that most necessary artlcle should at this pomt have found ourselves completely at a loss as to what to say We have therefore con sulted a noted clalrvoyant concemmg the future careers of the rest of our class mates and she has revealed the followmg to us Sam Grafton will found a muddy blouse factory ln Chrcago where Kate Aaron wlll CLARK JOURNAL act as head lawyer Edwm Collms as adver trsmg manager and Helen Kenyon as gen eral superrntendent of styles whlle Edward Aughney Nelle Rogers Ina Swartz and Ruby Wolcott wxll fill other important posl tlons You know the boys of u e I2 always drd favor mlddy walsts In l92O Gertrude Schnasse will success fully compete wrth Florence Hedlund for the tennls champlonshlp of the United States Alfred Krenholz wlll succeed Mr Bedall ln the History Department whlle Harold Scantlebury will 611 the vacancy caused by the withdrawal of Mr Buchanan from the Sclence Department Robert Hrllard after much practice wlll fmally dlstmgulsh hlmself as an expert barber Much to our surprlse we learned that Alma Prichard IS destmed to marry Richard Munter We never thought of such a thmg' become head Janitor of the Lewis and Clark Hugh School We leamed with much sorrow that Elmer Watson wrll not be able to complete hrs splendid football career The fates have wrlled that he shall soon fall a vrctrm to Cuprd s snares We were not surprlsed to learn that Walter Weller will secure the posltlon of head carpenter m Deeds Scenic Studio We have heard of his ablllty rn that lme Florence Landxn and Edrth Burke to gether wlth Bessie Buss Gertrude Davies essre Ewing Marjone Hodge Muna Camp- bell Alberta Rrce and Dale Stoner will graduate wrth honor from the Grave s Tram mg School for Nurses As a Grand Opera Star Floy Le Page rs destined to become famous The fmal blow to our humrllatlon came when we learned that Dorothy Dutton after secunng a drvorce from her husband Owen Kilgore will travel all over the Umted States lectunng for Woman s Suffrage leaving poor Owen at home to cook hrs own meal and mlmster unto hrs flock ,J -o-Q1 ifyar- I 3 . . .. . . - . ' J n , . . ning great fame as a general in the Turkish Lewis McClain will in the near future ,J W'iK?2' + ..f. , ,, .. . CLASS CHARACTERISTICS oug CY 1 gee f In CI a f W D F CHC H0 THC OUS bJ C .J ery TCW 0 ege C1 'U'-a CCOIHC 8 T T T T T T C0 U - 1 E2 oppor un y On O OVCS an f Cl' VQCB I1 e m VC C 5 .- N 1+- ver I1 G O N 'U Pu E3 cn-.Q y ew rfec I pe cu .I 1..- her name O P--U v.: 420 your d Forwar W I alla I1 S OP 5. .Q Px Lu CEIYC Oh I rry me H18 W U WOO EC f VC 8 C5 M .I Sllfpl' SC yOU IIOW 'EY ni. eorge .- -+- 'U bw I2 OPI- B near y over? Se Is he per o Un 5C0vered To I1 T 3 0 CSCB ES COIDC hsory her o f 7 U VCI' T C3 LIS am T woo I-' Ll DCI T s O 'U C ESDCI' HSYCE .C U -0 .Q 0 o o I-'I-I-' Pr CL I1 mney sweep -0.0 OO I-I-1 I- I' aI'Va h H e spee T I-I-- -. .C I-1 co ege I-1 O .C D. DD -+- U N .D I-'I-'I-' O Sm0 Carl! 0 ch Ca CCOIII To 0 craps ng 00 S ed UCOVCI' C Q. OO SC H0 l'l0 ng M woo C: A.: -U: :.:: U7 U: U7 gon woo -QUICIC rg pro A fl' 'Non c Q. xu'U D0 51: ca.: on 22:13 5.2 0501 Q. Mm 530 G DO G am ng e quar er -+- unn ng O Wh S0 I S coque '18 n hn as cn31Ecn U .C D DD 1: 30 5 -of UO CDEZU urgcss G 'U n o pre- scr p ... D8 Ia was Q-AQ. cncncncni- eo ogy O U8 yl I .. -1 V a nous O I-4. UXOm F B Q. I 5,0 P n as 01 U0 px 'Suu EE fu ch nge 5 - 0 0 u.ZQcr: u- 5, 1 5 U 4!fDcn5 .1 LL 09.0 QU ..I U ,- U-E C.: on mmm uoyan P B Q. O. 'U D. -. m dl 6 p,'U I' IL pan vi -+- .C 3311. Q- fh upon PY F See 'U VIC TC P NSKE ROS B uwA xx AUQHNEY XTELL A CE C-non BROWN URKE 1 B M L M .. NS OLL l1DwN C PBEI AM BLss E C Buss NA M B URK N D PTT EMM AV D GERTRUDE S AV D RALPH SET UN FYD O-I UTTON D OROTHY D OUGHER D ES J DS R AR IQNLOE AYMOND R LI E juss E ETTE oswzL G1 HAYNE RAPTON G SAM FR LDA 9 EDLUND H FLORENCE UN cs HENN Noun ARD HLL OBIRT R -v- .- ... 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O ww U00-5-5 woo-5-ww 'C I-L. .-,:--U' aw 'Iwi FEQQ ME W.- QE ----3w .- VE... :Q-no' -- --55 ,..: '- ,--U--:O L' .--pg-no -UwN.-.-c :-'vi D- G-Unch- ' Owgke E 'Z '5 C-- IIE., azz'-fi 'U '-'I-'Ima 53 '9-- 075. N273 of E 001- U : '1-'ii 'wmv 'C L I L3Q rc I-o cr' w I II?:3f f?E1Z2i?EEiiiiEQQQ -gg. 11225 51123 Q5 u : I' 131if1fif1E132111: Z1 Iii 1 1: U I 'If :III .1,1.I -111:11 If: 1 II :I 1 1 : . : 1 I : 1 1 1 1 : I 1 1 1 1 I I V I , 3 , 1 - -' : I I I 1 I UI 1:-2:11 1.:1::11::g:In:II5 31:1 :U II: I -g L -- -11 1':1:11::1,.1,g- -- 1: - 11: - I u' : 1 ' - I III- -1-1 1 : 1 1 ' 0 1 1 : . I - g-! : : 1-g 1 'U an . 1 1 .I.I III -- -1 1' -: -Q :z 1 1 Q. 1 1 1 Ill DD: 1 1 I 3 : Og ' Q. 'QE1 :11:5'o-,E Q 2-5012 -, xogg' E : -3'-' .-.. YQ 22 0 I2 on'v:g.A-.Q--5.1550 :1:..o 2 1 Q --lg -U 3-0.13 I UE lg 5Q m,, -E gina' .- 1 W.: -.-- ',, 5--D'-1 I-u:2' :lg P E- o-2.2 Q QSO.: -D2 E:-n -U on .-: w v .Q I.-oo -':: So 3 .Zim 5 oh u Q2-'22 aim- 49 ,.....1 ... ua Q 1 Ld n I D .. . 1. I I 1E1Efelm2z1f I . 1'1 I 1 -g . 1 ' Q 1 1 1- 1 1 I.: 1 1- E ' 1 -1 214. 11 21 .vl - z I Q w - I M- I :I H Q.+ 5 Q S z 11 -23 o zy- o u fn - o 'Q T z'-o Q- 'O z .. 5 5 am Sc, 1 : Q - z o 41 L-11-1 2 Q I mi 1 5 Q-: Ll fir' ' -I-' :S P2 -',.., -JI 9- V1 E- DMC :.' -1 E -1A3'4 5 5.: ' 4 Q I- B5 4 O-' '. ,'. m 1 111 C211 1 D1 1- ma: L. - -- 0 CLASS CHARACTERISTICS---Continue y wp I d .D C .C OI1 mum ...I .- 0 5 -DI- oud Im C: mt go In T Ac I m haven -4 CBVCU h ..l U I O -. I. U u.: IO 'U .D .3 au.: UU 5 mah OU eep n S ,:..I: Iso OP- ha go den 0 h U C sa- 'UZ CU -.4- OZSBI- few S lm U fi es nex 5 C0m h I Bo S Ch m SCD mY Them s DOHC go hl A says rgare Ma O O ... CGSC On a peac 'Un 5 c 'W O CI' pos ab dd ue .D 'U .-. ,Q-D OO l-'DI-'-l- ang gt To a pomp vate CU To COIIQTCSS to 80 To I-' I- '10 l- W OO .D I--I-' I- awyer A o marry O u- D 8.1: -A- a. oo I-' CGC h E '..z..c -1-I -D OOC l-l-'I- a.. .D O I-I-' .D IIIOUS fa become To LJCCOITIC 8 S il' To agree w cl h 0 Z 'U -D OO -Q OVCI' SC C I-I-'Z mdfl' C gt To age mall To SC pea To I- pcd Cl' u-. .- O F- -D o F- -C Y oug be U To T .Ct WC C. B Very ..I: I-' SU I'C 5,0 Q 0 1 lc -1 -C O I- O Ia DOW To I Oh D -4- .D I-l- 'IS Worry ED CIC PHS OSS S G B CX85 C Q.-C gg!! gl 00 Q WU any I ISD I! M -4- I! .- ww penn es '18 enad m T0 S H B S D B P O 888 U8 R -I .- row ng ..- IL' 0 cnIru.fnO onorab IIC Serpen ll'- y go- uc P-.ws 'u i-:' 23 , O OOEI-UI..Im P M'U C E Short bu swee B Q. .D .3 sa- 5-B wa- 5.-D E v5 afm CSS IrI'1wOD' H C DCS QU U8 ka. ES' .IO E S C S arr gaz n W fo B por ant m abe rM oc LI. I: S ...QLD I--! OS I: H: not-E ..l U5 IICSS hs own 4+- ..it'U .s D .D .- no C0 ua.: ao.,- '3 5 n.q3Eofo urry ng un sh 0Ugl'l Be ng I -C 3 U5 'U 'Ne .De .IIL dlVCl'0llS C QU IIS eep K C DCDCDUU' A ndustr ous I s eep CI' Ca I9 :Inn 'W 5. Q.: U 2 Q L TER AL L YRTL LEPAG LOY ALLETTE TER ES cCRosKI:Y ELKE o 2 ELABD F W M F L L F F H M ORRSON M IEANNETTI-: oRo'rHY NIQRILRGALL EARL P AM LL D W A D. PR CHAR fi CE R ERTA LB A HARLES C Roos ERNA V SCANTLEBURY AROLD N M A H G ARGARET SANFORD vA SAW Ns U ELL I: Ro D s Svlrc GG BR T SM FAB AN T SM ABEL M TREYFFELER NER C C D 'ro STAR .- EASEY LL AM THoMAs RANcEs TATE R T LARENCI: F W E C DMUND ADE W AROLD H ATSON W LMER E v AN WALKER ENTWORTH HETSEL W O joW E TE WH ELLE N OLCOTT ELsA W TT OLCO R C0 OL el ame Appearance Favorite Occupation Ambition Favorite Expression RED LAFON II ,..,.e, II ,.,, Unapproachable ............ Doing experiments ........,...,..,.,.... 0 e ill I ..ee,..........,.... Brethren and hol ulehrel A AWSON. e.......... ..... H Ie ...................... i ......... ....,..,..,e..,,...... I ncleci e ..,e........,........,,......e, . oly cats! E EVY. . . II II ti e,...,.............., eing sarcastic ......,,,,,.A.....,,,..., o recl c her weight ....A..e,...... D 'I ble your wer sl' E ,......., .I ,,,,, ,,,,, I ....,..,............,.A....e... e ching ............,.....,,............., ' e a prima onna ...e......... I isten Io I e moelri g irdl M e...... ev.....e,. i .,..................,......... i i .............,.................,.. . e an . W. W. .......,,...e. Have you heard he latest? EWIS MCCLAINMI .....,..,,..,e,, ............................., i g od ,...........................,e,... t ry .........................., audi I . LOYD M ,,,,,, ,.,,, ,,,, h e I brealting liind- i I T Tommy .... I Ili .,,,.......,.... H utl tl I' RED MI ............ ....,,,,.,., I erical ......,.,.,............... Iinging mu .....e.....,............, I .,.......rrr,...r I hl Mei Got! IaI.I:N Rr: ,.,.., ,,... ,,.,, .r..,, p l lr y ....,....... I ' ....,..,..ee,,.................... o grow tall .......,.................. linle, b I ' I I YRoN Mon I rr,,,,..A I .........,.,............... .. ein dig ifiecl ..,.......,.,...,,r.,.,,., o wear a middy ....,,,,.....o... 'I I Ii I I ,r,, ,,,., I e er ,,..,.............,,...... leepin ......,.......,,....,,.,.....,.,.... o go abroa .,e,,.....,ee,e......,,,,,, O ! h , I odgin Nu n o to M nte Cazlo isten here, kid! I I ...., I I ,e,,,. . iIIy Wise ....,............... Owling a P isIer's. .....,......., e a son-in-law .....,,,.....ee hl sh Its. NITA HISTER .....ee,......,,,,,,,,,.,, uri y personhed ....,..... . M tcI'Ii i ,.......,........., 0 be a pearl ......e,,,.., .eee......... ' ' ads win, tails you lose. LMA I DI. ee,, I I ee,,,, va Ie ............e...Y........ ing ..e,........,..........,.... I T I ,e.e, ......e,ee,.. . N I where, oh! wh e, has my dic ey ir gone? I I. .I Peace ul ....e,.e,,..,,.w.......... Lugging hooks ......,,.....,,,,....,,,,,, To be a sulfragette .... ,e,... . I! ROGERS. I ,,., II aught ,.........,,..,........... I ctling the dough .,....,..e,,,,,r,,,, To live in Ore n ,.,.,..,....,,.,,.... eese it! Rs ....,.,.... ....,,,,, ti I ,..,...,...,..,.,...,. .I i ....,.......,....,r,......,.,....,,, I o e be ore I oollights. ..... Casey, Ielre Ihi I! I ERS ...... ........,. I. re .A..,.............,......... I I ging ..............e..............,e....... . e a chorus girl ....e...,.........,. hl my. impled hearsing Ac lic A 'm I y! L I ,,......ee,,, ...,,, I . ummy ......,.,..,............,, I Iirting .....I,...... ee....ee.,..... ......,.,, I oo Ii e a man ee...e.............. ou're tooli 'In I hoo ing fish o a tain ei hts NW do 'I lr w! ERTRU E SCHNASSE ..,,....,,... I Extenuated ..........,...... ..l i .....,e......e......,,.......e,,.... e a sc ool t her ......,,.,.,.. ow, e il re I I I. I H ...., ....,e ...le,,.,, .............,...,....,.,..,.. I e I ling patent medi i .....,,,l,. To e D. Nfs steady .,....e,,....... I Izzea ti I I irl I I H... ..........,............, .....I............,,,..,.,.... I hewi m ....I........,....,I...... ...... ............. ' ' ell, gosh! I H .,,,,,.,l II , ,l,, t l,.... ,.,,,,.,,......,.' I i .........,.,......, ....,,,,, I I ,,.,,.......,,.,.,.... winlcle, twinkle, little star. ARROL R I. ,,,. I II i ihed ........,.......,,...... ailing I ,,,..... ,,,.... I T ith Mabel ......,........ in'I it aw ul, Mabel! LARA S I l,,,,,e ,,ll, a sy-going ,,,,..,l....,,.....,,, Iushing .,.......,,....e.,,,....,.,,,.,....I, e a goo ouselceeper ..,,.. Ce I but ' I ALE S II II ............, Pretty good ..............,.,... ussin .,,.......,,.....,,,,...,,,,....,,,,,, e a goo irt ,,..........,,,,,,,... I-lellol lriddof' NA SwARTz .,.. .,... I ,,,,, e.,,,, a C king ...,,.el...., ............ I u i g in hst y .,......,.,.....,,,. on di ed ..,...,...,,....,..... a I. . I ,... I ,,.,l.,.,iie elite ,,,.........,,.,,...........,, 0 iss and m e up .,,,......,,,, I I i cl ..,I.......I......I..... zlness, girls! I I II ,,I, IIII,I o et 'em ...............I ,II... i n ing i b i IIIIII, I ......,......I..I.............,.I... ' ti t I Y A ..I,. ..II.....I..I,I . I i he etter ...,I....... Loo ing wise ..II....,...I...,..,.... . the N. Y. Giants... ' i ' I I V ...,.,...... h-neck ..,....,,......... sing San orcl inlc .............,.... 0 get into Yale ......II.III......I,... I - ee Iuffin Wallace Demonstrating Newbro's H i i e ,,.......I..I,II,I..... I am siclcll' VI 'I IIIII I I IIIIIIII Yo g IIII,,..,.IIIII,II........, 'H i .I......,II.....III,IIII..,.IIIII e somewhere II.III......IIIIIII I D 'I I the animals! I Mu y ,Visiting Dreamland ecome a popular avorite I wit the girls ......II.III........ Kiss me. Ici I ALTER WILIIIIER ,I.. I II.. I ol -Poly ........,.,......... .Q olcling hands .,.I......,.........,,,,. nknown I....I....II.,I.......,,....I....... h! ddle ticks. RIN W I .....,II....I.... I II.....II.......I.......II. I i I ..I................II.I........ I her II....IIIII.I .I..III...... ' ' eel she' h. T III.I.....II. I ....I ...I o use ,I.I.I..I...II...... I I ea ing a bull dog ........III....IIII o e sport IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ,I,I.,I..I I ah, oveln AC WHITE II.I. ...I............I....... a .I.II........II..... a Ci g ..IIIII.....I...I.......I.II......I..... 0 reac the tape IIII...I.III.III...... In II. lllth-I' I I .II... ..II.............. I w ..... .......II..I....II.....III I i i t .III........I..........I.... o apply remedies ......I..I...........I I III .H .I....... IIIII... i I...I....I,...I....I ' cting as a pony .......I.......... I In i Il I.....II.I..III...III,..III, I I sugar. NELSON W TT ...................... r nl: ......I................... m ling .....I..I.......I.......I.I.......I. o get away rom the girls ....... l CeeI 'm n ht UBY W .......................... W ite hed .............I. T I i g in h I ................. o own a rewery .......I...I....I.. I ' ta e m h me- THE Lx-:wus AND CLARK JOURNAL LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT JUNE CLASS l9l 2 County of Spokane Cnty the Same May the Fifteenth Anno Dommr I9l2 We the world famous and renowned Class of une l9I2 of the Lewls and Clark Hugh School bemg of sound minds and yet always mmdful of the uncertamtv of graduation do herem solemnly swear this document to be our last will and testament thereby revokmg absolutely all prevxous former and aforesard wrlls and testaments hitherto by us made Ftrs! We wrll and bequeath to Mr Henry M Hart the highly drstrngurshed honor of seemg and attendmg to m person the presentation to each and every member of thus mighty Class upon due consldera tlon the long sought for dlploma Item We will sell and bequeath unto our trmrd little fnends the Freshres all the rend mg hours of study whlch we have so gal lantly sacnflced m our upward march t glory and achievement Item We believe ln tradltlon and custom and so we hereby will and bequeath unto the anuary Class of 1913 the reverentral vrsage and glowmg mtellect of our Class Drrector together wlth all hrs sudden and soul stlrrmg commands Item We will and bequeath and devise coupled with our good wrshes unto Clar ence A Veasey r the guardianship of Margaret Sanford to have and to hold throughout the remainder of his days Item We wlll and bequeath unto our servants the Janitors all the rubbish d cayed lunches fermentmg quotations and all other artrcles which may have from trme to tlme aggregated ln the halls of our stately mansion and eventually sllpped mto the vacuum cleaner tubes mto the oblrvron of the furnace room Item We will and bequeath unto Briggs Slmprch the hand and heart of Dorothy Nebergall to take unto hrmself upon the first Monday after the first Sunday after the sald Dorothy has nghtfully attamed unto the greatest glory of her fortleth year and during thls extensive and mtervenxng period we bequeath unto the aforesaid Bnggs one of her most wmsome smlles Item We wrll to Mr P S Fller all the autobrographles and prose and poems which he has from trme to trme most gnevously extracted from our trembling and fraxl llttle mmds I lem We grve and devise unto the C-rand Opera at Cheney the dancmg abrlxty of Owen Krlgore and Kate Aaron Item We will and bequeath lmto M L Dunn all of the wool or so-called tlm othy whrch grows so profusely on the head of Robert Hlllard and also the sacred pnvr lege of mowmg the same at least once a year Item We will and bequeath unto the unlors the hugh and esteemed honor of hear mg Mr M M Beddall speak softly to them at the top of hrs vorce when they are dreammg Item We will and bequeath unto thc schools of higher baseball the persons of Elmer Watson and Roy Edwards Item We will and devrse to the person of ames Dougher the Class Play dress of our Item We will and bequeath to Richard Mlmter the precrous and ever present per son of Alma Prltchard and smcerely hope and pray that these two wlll llve happy ever afterward Item We will and bequeath to Wrllram Pearl the person and belongmgs of Anita Phlster but m order that he may carefully guard her from the wrles of Hunkmg w hereby request their seats to be changed Item We unanimously confer upon Fa bran Smith the tltle of offlcral class rough ragger Item We offer at auctlon to the highest bldder the persons of Onn Wentworth Vlvlan Walker Floyd McCroskey and Alva Sawms with the understanclmg that fave per cent of the proceeds ansmg from sand sale shall go to the school art fund Item We wlll and bequeath unto our fnend Jack Corbett all the sore throats and headaches obtamed under hrs strenuous yell leading ln the audltonum and ln the grand stand at Natatorlum Park and solemnly re quest that he share these presents alrke with I7 . ' . - J. 'l 1 ' 8 . . . ' . J . Q ' ' ' distinguished friend, Myrtle Levy. 1 . . ' . ' 1 1 , - . ' -I., ' 1 1 1 1 . ' ,1 a a , e .' 1 1 ' 1 ' 1 .1 ' 1 1 - the faculty Item We will of the Lexus and therr artlstlc beauty clded upon as our named school and THE LEWIS AND and bequeath to the walls Clark l-llgh to add to the memorial already de parting glft to the fore we thereby gladly swell the already large and beautrful art fund of the school Hem We will and bequeath to Merle Brown all those snappmg llttle rubbers whrch we have ever and anon been shootmg mto the near proxlmrty of some skullung young Freshre Item We will and bequeath to the Parlslan School of Voice Culture all the splendid slngmg talents of Floy Le Page Hem We will and devrse unto the tres of every rallroad entermg the North Amer rcan Contment the trampmg abllrty of our radrant topped frrend Wlllls Clark Item We will and bequeath unto Mr Wallace and hrs all absorbing hlstory the person of Samuel Alexander Grafton who halls from the Know nothmg Party and demand further that he be privately tutored ln the aforenamed sublect untll such time as he can be glven has diploma upon a slxty per cent grade Item We devrse unto Mlss Dlllon all th talents of the Class Play actors and request her to spread them among all the actors which wlll be produced from succeedlng graduating classes Item We will and bequeath unto Myron CLARK JOURNAL H Moreland the edltorshlp of the Dlshmam Sunday Exammer wlth all appllances and edrtorlal staff as he shall deem necessary for the proper management of sand paper Item We will and bequeath unto the North Central girls our friend Walter C-oar who especially at ball games seems greatly impressed with thelr company He being very dellcate of mlnd and heart we prayer fully ask that the above named Coar be gently treated Hem We will and bequeath and devise unto Vfalter Weller the tltle of Actor Laureate of Amerlca thereby grantmg unto hlm the irrevocable rlght to appear upon any stage between Spokane and Cheney the same rlghts and privileges to be granted his aide cle camp eannette Mornson world all other members of this noteworthy assemblage of graduates as brlght and shln mg lntellects which will ever reflect the lm mortal truth that they were graduates of the Lewrs and Clark Hrgh In wrtness whereof We have hereunto afhxed our name and suznature this day and year as frrst above named By us CLASS OF JUNE l9l2 C H Wrmess to the above named document CARROL THEODORE STARR PAUL S FILER He s Teddy R from Oyster Bay Whose praises many smg He may be Presrdent some day His hat IS ln the rmg Now Wrllram T has cause to re For he can t do a thlng And Teddy R wlll get there yet Hrs hat IS ln the rlng Bemadme lnksier I8 - - ' - - - . Hem. We will and bequeath unto the I H' 1 y L. . f sf . ' ' . I f t, L 1 like-rv Surely xt barred cell erable man have been were surely u It must be a myself That who lay dying Roger De F oe the .NIJ- THE. CONFESSION By Myrtle Levy was a dream' The cold :ron the low wretched cot the mls lymg there the man who might ghost of my frlend these vlslons of a fantastic dream dream I kept repeatmg to man that wreck of a man there was not could not be That Roger De Foe' l almost laughed at the thought Roger De Foe the handsome the magnlflcent the won derful the prlde of our college the pet of society that he should lle dylng wlthm the walls of a crude westem prxson was utterly lmpossrble But as l gazed half stupefxed at the care worn face before me I was forced to admxt to myself that rt was the face of Roger De Foe the fme Intellectual face wlth the hugh full forelread the wonderously lustrous eyes the full sensuous llps and the delicate hes: tatmg chm l gazed at hum and wondered Yes the features were there but thls was not he whom l had known so long that fore head once so smooth and beautiful was marred by a mllllon fine lmes the ewes we e stlll lustrous but the lustre was feverish the glance once firm and true was now shlftmg and haunted the lps had lost their hner curves and were drawn m lmes of suffering and the chm ever dellcate whlle lt had once been held m a semblance of strength now drooped betrayxng wrth startlmv vrvrdness the utter weakness of the man For a long trme I looked down at hlm A Qulll unable to speak and he who had once been my dearest truest frxend retumed my gaze wrth that shrftmg haunted glance that was not hrs own At length he stlrred uneaslly and coughed the short raspmg cough of the dymg Then he spoke m a voice that had somehow lost rts richness ack old man you dont seem to re member me Roger lcrled Roger IS lt you? ln God s name how drd you come to such A pass3 It s a long story ack old man and vt may tlre you to hear lt But you are all l have left Thats why l sent for you I must tell someone l d rather tell you Wrll you lrsten old man3 Of course l will How strangely you speak Do you need me3 Can l help you3 lasked quickly He smiled gently whlmslcally that quamt smlle of his that had once so dlstmgulshed hlm And I remembered with a pang those other days Somehow hls srmle drd not modlfv the bitterness of hrs reply No ,lack you cant help me There rs nothlng on earth nor ln heaven that can help me now lm lost lost beyond all re dernptlon No dont so ak old man Lrsten for I must sp ak Oh God will tht torture never cease3 Onlv llsten only listen lack Assam he coughed that ternble rasp mg cough I would have spoken but he sllenced me wlth a nervous rfoverrent of his hand and f ,, , .. '..l ,......- ' J A X -.ir , 7 X - . - pu., gL,rN - l 0 ' - ' I 1 . ' y 1 y s r b t . . . u n . . . . , . 4 . , , . ' -4 v , . J . . - an . , . . as n - .1 - - ' a n v . , . 1 , n ' - n f , . . ' . . . . U , , - . J . . . . , , . . ' , ' . . - - yn , . . U . w s . - H - x , , . , . - 1 ' , - a . . Y . . x . . f s I . n ' - - - - . I rx H 1 , - A v f ' ' I . . , v - u . s . Q ' ' ' . , A . . , -, . . , , S . , o y a . 1 v . ,, , . , . . U n ' n 3 x . a .. . THE Lawns AND began to speak agaln m a qulck nervous voxce Ten years ago I left New York and after travelmg about the country for a few years I hnally came to Elmana Thats about a hundred mlles south of here near the Mexlcan llne It s not much of a place merely a general store and a few houses are there Why I came to Elmana I know not but once there I remamed For aumta was there and aumta was an angel from Heaven She was beautiful ack and as good as sh was beautiful Her eyes were as black as the mldnlght skres and as bnllrant as the stars yet as wxde and mnocent as those of a child But I cannot descnbe her She was the most beautiful creature Cod ever created and I loved her Oh how I loved her And she she sand she loved me ack It was such a wonderful thmg our love far too wild to end happily Her father was the proud descendant of some Spanlsh house and he would have none of m Finally there came a terrible struggle between hxm and me And he forced her to marry a worthless young Mex rcan Mantella aumta was young too happlness such a Lmlon must cause And her father was strong too strong for her and for me So she marrled hrm a mercenary rascal who cared more for her father s rancho than he drd for my lovely aumta After the marnage I left Elmana for I love almlta far too dearly to be near her when she was the wlfe of another I went away I say I went to far countries and trled to forget But I could not aumta was everythmg aumta was llfe itself Any man would struggle for lxfe At last when the pam became unbearable I returned to Elmana and to aumta For she was llfe to me When I returned how I found my lovely aumta I-low frail how pale she was how her proud head was bent how her lnttle hands trembled For her father had died and Man tella was master now And such a master to guard my gentle aumta' She sadly told me of the little chrld that had come and had been burled ln the church yard yonder of the neglect of the cruelty of the faithless ness of that monster Mantella CLARK JOURNAL And I3 I loved her and she was lxfe to me So I begged her to come away to leave It all to forget the man who treated her thus to come with me who loved her who adored her But my aumta was far too good far too noble How proudly she lifted her won derful head and bade me go But I knew she loved me And she had sand that which had set my poor bram m a whirl As long as my husband llves I am hrs wlfe I can not desert the father of my dead chlld No not even for you As long as my husband lxves she had sard and the words kept rmgmg ln my mmd If he were dead' If he were dead' A mad plan was forming rn my poor shattered brain I was mad mad' I know lt now But twas for more than llfe I fought for love and for aunlta That nlght was starless The road by whxch Mantella must come home was guarded on both sides by hugh thxck brushes Behmd these my body was hidden My soul had been lost m a passionate struggle wrth self I awaxted the comlng of Mantella dagger rn hand After long dreary hours lmg a quamt old Spamsh alr In a moment lt was all over Mantella lay dead at my feet I dragged hlm to a lake nearby and dropped hrm mto Its bottomless depths Ah rt was hornble' AndI Roger De Foe dud lt I was mad to thmk that she would even touch me after such a deed But I went to her For I loved her Oh how I loved her' I found her Sllfllllg rn the lirellght gaz mg mto the flames with a strange terrlhed expression on her pale beautiful face uamta I crled and that was all M God she moaned you have done lt You have done rt She looked full at me hex eyes those mnocent mldnlght eyes filled wlth reproach and horror And that that was the last glance that I beheld m those dear beloved eyes For before I could utter a sound before I moved from my positron by the door her frail body swayed gently and fell to the floor I ran to her and looked mto her beautiful face There strll lingered m her eves that look of horror and reproach But her hands were cold and her heart was 20 ' . I . c ' . . . . D - 1 - e. ' ' ' ' I , ' young to realrze the great, the terrible un- of waiting, he came, staggering along whist- . . D . . . .D A, ,A 4 J ' I - . .I . . I . , . ' , a I - , , . . 1 ,I . ' , I THE LEWIS AND srll aunrta my beloved had dred wrth that horrrble accusatron rn her eyes And that rs why I am here I escaped that nrght It was srmple for the servants were m therr quarters asleep I ran to the church and sent the pnest to her He could do no good I knew but she would have wrshed rt so After that I hrd myself from the authorrtres For many months I hrd rn the musty towns of old Mexrco I mr t have hrdden longer but those eyes those ever reproachful eyes haunted me rn all my hours I slept only to dream of them m my wakrng hours they appread before me as I gazed mto vacant space always always they were before me It was the judgment of God So at last thmkrng that rn allowrng man to mete out hrs Judgment I mrght be spared that of God I came here to confess Why they drd not klll me I know not I only CLARK JOURNAL know that every hour of my lrfe rs torture Yet I fear oh I fear to dre No power on earth can stay thrs pam Forever forever must I look mto those eyes shnnkrng and reproachful Ever must I dread those eyes I love so well uanrtal aunrta' forgrve me' The tale was done My companron lay back coughrng spasmodrcally Suddenly he rarsed hrs hands to Heaven and crred Those eyes those eyes I can see them now The eyes of aunrta' Mercrful God' They are the eyes of aunrta and they have relented aunrta aunrta my beloved Im comtng I m comrng So the end came The face that lay there so cold and strll was now as calm and beau trful as rt had been so long ago The lrnea of suffermg were gone and he was rn death as he once had been m lrfe Roger De Foe the handsome the magnrfrcent the won derful ALL FOR GRATITUDE By Mrldred Porter HE rntcnse heat of the noonday sun had crushed everythrng trees drooped leaves wrthered and the r grass rustled and tossed rn th hot currents of wmd rrsrng from the baked earth An Indran boy hrdden rn the grass watched furtrvely the far drstant camp No srgn of agrtatron or un rest rn rt assured hrm that hrs absence had not been drscovered He crept on through the grass movmg raprdly easrly and wrth out a sound At a drstance when hrs camp seemed only a speck he rose and walked on swrftly He apparently experrenced no rr convenrence from the heat but kept unwearr edly on hrs way A rrse on a hrll brought mto vrew a few scattered log houses of a border settlement The Indran stopped and gazed back over the rollmg country He left behmd hrm race fnends and tradrtrons and before hrm what3 He was an alren mhuman and even cruel and always would be Yet under all was a gratrtude whrch never farls to repay a krndness the typrcal gratrtude of an In dran Hrs face showed no change no sentr ment as he turned and strode across the plam Hrs advent rn the sleepy town was un notrced and drsregarded by anyone The men lolled rn the shade chrldren played m the doorways and shrrllvorced women drs cussed the troubles of the day Straight through the town he walked to a larger cleaner and more habrtable cabrn than the rest He stopped before the door and looked ln A whrte harred kmd faced prrest sat wrrtrng but as the shadow of the Indran fell across the doorway he looked up The prrest showed no srszn of recognrtron but greeted the Indran krndly The Indian spoke wrthout preface m hrs own natrve tongue The Indrans attack you tonrght The prrest paled but mqurred for more partrculars The only answer was a repetr tron of hrs former speech As to what trrbe of Indrans they were and where they were srtuated he would tell nothrng In thrs much the mherent tacrtumrty of the Inclran was uppermost The prrest seerng the travel worn condrtron of hrs strange vrsrtor mo Zl t..J ., .r . . - , ., J .. . 2. : J, . . l t ': I I l l : ' :U .A - l . .. ' . . - . THF Lawns AND tloned hrm to rest and leavrng hrm water and food departed to rouse the town All was soon bustle and actrvrty The men moved expedrtrously and effectrvely under the leadershrp of the venerable prrest The settrng sun found all the houses vacant and every one safely ensconsed rn the block house of the town All preparatrons havrng been made the prrest returned to hrs cabrn Across the door way the lndran boy lay one amr thrown above hrs head rn the utter relaxation of rest The prrest started then looked rntently at the arm Long ragged scars traced therr course down rt The prrest s eyes grew mrsty H understood a trapprng party returnrng from the moun tams brought ln lacerated N the boy so no was ever made boy rn cared for hrm and kept hrm untrl the arm had healed an Indran boy arm horrrbly one knew the language of explanatron of the accrdent The prrest had taken the The Indran s eyes opened and he jumped up qurckly The prrest recorled no tender ness no mrst rn hrs eyes only unconquered savagery glrttered there The prrest spoke to hrm and told hrm of hrs recognrtron but re cerved only a grunt m response The In drans mrnd had worked raprdly He had a darrng scheme wherern he would not suffer CLARK JOLJRNAL yet would have payed off hrs debt H moved away from the prrest and wrth a word of farewell started off raprdly The startlei prrest called after hrm but the lndran drd not stop Although he drd not understand the actron of the lndran he made no attempt to stop hrm but enterrng the cabrn gathered hrs few belongrngs to carry to the fort Strrdrng along towards hrs camp the In dran moved srlently The orange glow of the rrsrng moon softened and glrdrng out rnto the heavens cast a srlvery lrght on the dusky frgure on the prarrre Suddenly a twrg cracked the Indran paused He had hoped to make camp and wrth a story hrs cunnrng bram had rnvented tell of a frurtless chase after a deer rn the mountarns He lrstened Yes there were steps comrng from the canyon rn front of hrm He threw hrmself flat or hrs face and glrded away rn the grass Ar a safe drstance he watched Comrng rnto vrew were the foremost war rrors of hrs trrbe the cruelest warrest and most darrng One a lrthe tall specrman ot brute strength knelt rn the grass a moment He spoke rn gutteral tones They all looked on the ground Hrs tracks had been found They have been made recently Yes he must be nearby Frncl hrm ff- -rs vs rr- is vt- as Years after the tale was told how ln Indian boy rrsked and lost hrs lrfe all for gratrtude 22 , ' ' . It had not been many years before, that . ' ' . o . ' THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL SACAJAWEA ACAJAWEA dusky malden ust a Shoshone Indlan prmcess Stands before us loyal patrent For the ard she gave the whrte man In her early chlldhood freedom Torn from home and friends lovmg Made to marry one she dreaded Bore rt all and murmured nothmg Even m the mndst of home tres Stull she pmed for those dear loved ones Trll she met the paleface wand rers Huntmg unknown fertrle valleys These were roamed by savage red men Steep and rough the trarl they wandered Needing one to show them pathways Her they chose to lead them onward Anxious for a sr t of loved ones Whom she had not seen for ages Wrth her babe of scarce a summer On she toiled but not complarnmg Weak from pmmg and from gnevmg Soon fell all upon the journey Many trmes ln untold danger Soon they came to bands of Indrans I..rvmg on the Great Dwrsron Here she met her long lost sister Who wrth her was sold ln childhood To be slaves of some great natron Here she also found her brother Chief of Rocky Mountam Indians Here they found the far off country Which they all so long had sought for Still she led them to the westward Tore herself from those dear loved ones Left them gazlng sadly after Strll she proved herself more farthful Tummg back upon the Journey Leading them to old St Louis Here she left her babe Baptrste Whrle she Journeyed for Dakota With such sad and lonely feelings Mong Dakotas longed and wanted For retum of her Baptrste Here she sank to rest while waltlng Waltrng for her son Baptrste 'I'l'lIS the story of the prlncess Dusky yet with heart so loyal Whlle the Northwest tells rts story Tells of thrs true Indran maiden Ne er will xt forget her service Which she gave to our great nation Laura Lmdstrum IN OLD SPOKANE Old Spokane the farrest roses blow That eer climbed over balconres and porches In the blue twllrght how they gleam and gow A thousands merry Dryads crimson torches And all the wlnds are reeling with delight And every sound makes musrc ln its going Whrle through the pulsing of the matchleu mght Hear the great rlver heedless onward flowmg In Old Spokane the fairest roses blow Therr fragrance comes to me three thou sand mrles And many a fond and dotmg youth I know smiles Ah could I see agam that lovely land Beyond the mountain dnfted summer snows I wonder lf some pensrve ulret s hand Would drop to me one splendid Westem rose M C Wrer April 9 I9I2 What are you plungmg back ln the water for? You Just swam ashore Shure O1 had to save meself first now Or m gomg to fetch Morke Mr Filer to Senior Who was Tom Moore 3 Senior Bum cigar In Latm Pasco to eat to feed Student Me for Pasco . 23 I . - ' ', '14 J I I I l --ii I I I y Q l o . . F . ' 5 1 '- i l . . ' - ' 'foiled they on to reach the valleys: Matches their splendor with hlis lady'l THE Lawns AND CLARK JOURNAL THE HIDDEN REVOLVER By Paul Blrclfensdoerfer S a llttle prece ofa story slr The speaker was a pallrd man of about thlrty years wearrng the con ventronal stnpes of the pemtents found m the state penltentranes of thrs country Hrs face was not the face of a hardened cnmmal for hrs small mouth weak upper llp and kmdly eyes gave hum the most rnoffensrve appearance To look upon hrm one would hnd rt hard to rmaglnc hlm gullty of any cnme You certainly do not look dangerous I ventured Nor I amt either Ive been sent up here on the charge of hrghway robbery but rdnt do If no amt gurt added fiercely as he clutched the bars of hu cell door Thats really too bad I sympathrzed Its a kmd of a joke me gettin m here he went on There was a famt sug gestlon of a smrle playmg about hrs llps Then he added quickly B I amt a-gorn to laugh not untrl I get out agam And how dad rt happen may I ask3 We I amt guilty I was a ard workm man I was fore I got rn here I worked from three oclock rn th afternoon until mrdmght I boarded with a prrvate famrly about a mrle out from th center of town Of course I had to walk nome ever mght but I never earned much money wrth m Besides th nerghborhood through which I walked was a qulet an easy gom one an so I wasn t very much scarrt of bern held up an robbed About three weeks fore my arrest lone hrghwavman began operatrons m th neighborhood of my boardm place Oh he was a slrck an darem feller all rrght One night he held up slx dllferent men wrthln ten blocks of each other an th last one was th policeman who had that beat Th police they couldnt do a thm they couldnt After a week of this I began carrym a gun a small 32 calibre I must have earned It for two weeks An then one mght A Qulll a fnend of mme who was workm beside me rn th shops saw It ln my hrp pocket What are you dom wrth that cannoi there? he asked me Im akeeprn rt for hold ups I n swered Pshaw he laughed You remmd me of an old woman If a man holds you up you wont get a chance to shoot Them fellers rn that kmd of business are on th lookout for people like you-chumps who carry a gun Why you wont even get a chance to draw If you do draw well rtll be all off with that han some fonn of yours No there s no earthly use rn carry mg a gun They got you covered first They ll take ever blessed thm you got on your person and-th gun too Carry a gun' You make me smrle Pshaw' That got me to thmkm an I decided that I wouldnt carry that gun no more There was a little wrsdom rn my frlends words To be sure the hold up would have th advantage over one less one always car ned a gun m ones hand Besldes what was th use of packm a gun round to pro- tect a few dlmes3 I declded that luggln a shootm Iron round town was jest a trifle out of my lrne An so that nrght fore I left th shops I took th gum out of my pocket an put It up under th derby hat I was wearm Th hat concealed th gun a I knew that nobody would ever thrnk of lookm under my hat for anythm Then I started for home When I got wlthm four blocks of my boardm place a feller jest bout my SIZL an bulld wearm a derby hat also- stepped out from behmd a telephone pole an stuck a bug black gun rn my face I was all so sudden jest lrke a surpnse party Hans up' says he An demned qurck too' Well Im strckm em up as fast as I can says I To tell th truth srr th srght of that gun an th chap with a mask on took all th sand out of me I got so anxious to strck up them han s an so scarrt that they gc . . . . .. , ' . , . . . , . , - A . . . , ' . . . it I I ' I ' ' . . - - ' a - . . I il I ' U I ' 1 . . , I ' . , , . . - . . . . . i I ' I ' , Y ll ' . ll ' . - . 4, . , . , - n . f 1 , ' . V ' I l ' ' - . , . ., . ,, - I d - , I ly, he - - . . . - . . u F ' ll Y I! ' s n u' , . .. . . . . . .. . . . . , - , ll ' ' s , , - . . . . , ' : U ut ' ' . ' ' . - . , . . - - ' UI . I I ' n - No, slr. , . , . .. . . .. , , , , u ' v I- . h . , . , I . . - v I 1 - , , ' , ' . -- - . ' ' ' 1 v s . . . - ' . . . I ' , ' I 1 U I ' I . , l'l ' ' . . . , . , . . . ,- e. ' , ' ' , . . , . , U , j w I o - - v , , , , , I ' 5 ' n - - n .. . A - . . . I , s - - j . . t . , . , . I u 4 1 an s 9 . . . . . . . . Q Q If C. . Y ' ' ' Y . . . - . - , , - , I , u I .o - v - an - I i- u 9 1 -' ' . . s 1 D .Q u 1 1 ' U ' THE Lawns AND wasnt up hugh nough to sunt th gent that I stood up on tnp toes I forgot all bout th gun m th hat on my head Says he to me Now you jest stan rn t stnll an keep em hans way way wayy up nn th anr If you dont blow them branns of yours out Under stan 9 Well I squnnted down th hole of that gun whnch looked lnke th mouth of a ranl way ttmnel to me an sand that I guessed that I comprehended th full meannn of th ponnted lnttle phrases that he had jest gave utterance to Thats good he sand An then he began to search me What re you trym to do3 I asks of hnm jest as Innocent as I knew how Why says he I ve got a search war rant out for you Then he laughed Let s see th warrant Rnght here nt ns says he an he wnggled th gun m my face Is nt all all rnghtl Is nt all all rnght? An then he laughed some more Oh th warrants all all rnght says I as cool as an ncebox on a back porch nn anuary But what nn thunder are you lookm for3 Th G N Ranlway has been mnssnn some Hat cars lately an I thought perhaps that you mnght have a few of them con cealed about your person Then we both laughed I annt got any of thenr old junk piles on me I told hnm Why my pockets annt even bulged Im sorry that they annt says he It dndnt take that feller long to go through ever pocket an he took ever thnn I had on me Why snr he even took th matches an tooth pncks I had nn my vest pocket I asked hnm why nn thunder he took em an he sand that nf he took care of th lnttle thnns th bng thnn s would take care of themselves That made me thnnk of th gun under my hat I wondered nf nt would take care of ntself but he never even touched my hat Hows busnness5 I asks after he had finnshed looknn for th flat cars Bad says he very bad They re all CLARK JOURNAL broke when you go through em Th sporty an well dressed ones are usually busted th flatest If you re thnnknn of enternn th pro- fessnon take nt from me nt s overcrowded now Why I haven t done nough busmess tonnght to pay th first nnstallment on a collar button 'I hat s a fact Well says I Im gosh demned sorry that I havent got my check book here-I d wrnte you out a lnttle check I would He looks at me knnd of funny thro hns mask I guess that he thought I meant nt Then he says I m really sorry to leave such good company but I must I really must I have other busnness to see to a lnttle deal to close In fact I rather expect th gen tlemen here nn a few mnnutes They would not want I know Besndes nt would queer th deal nf they saw us here together S you must go Now you jest stroll up that street there jest as nf you was thnnknn f your sweetheart You know how that goes says he Now please dont keep lookm round as nf a band of Apache Indnans were doggnn your tracks Understan ? I thnnk I catch on says I Well so long old feller an he stuck th gun nn hns coat kmd of careless lnke an then he tnpped hns hat to me an backed off towards th telephone pole I started up th street After I got enght or ten paces away I turns round an walks back Now what do you want3 he snaps You know that watch you took5 Yes what about nt3 Well I got my mother s pncture nn th of nt She s dead An you want th pncture? Yes He then fnnshes th watch out of hrs snde pocket an began opennn nt Whnle he was thusly engaged I took th gun out from under my hat Before he knew whnch way th wnnd was a blownn I had th snoot of that gun shoved between th fourth an hfth nb: on hns left snde Han s up' says I An gosh demned qunck too' He stuck em up real qunck an pert lnke too He sand not a word Now says I you jest stan rnght stnll an keep them han s way way way y up back . . . , ' ' ' I I I ' ' ' gh . . ,- - ' ' ' ' I'll I IO ' I ' - ' . . . , . ' ' u . .. . . ugh Ill I I ' I . . l I ' I . a ' 7 - Ill I 'I I . A Ill I ll ' . 0 I I - ' . . j , o Ill I I I . Q ' I up - --v u - ' ' I I ' 1 ' , . , . . , ' ' . J , . . . , . - . , . . . ,an , . . . I - I . . . Ill I ' I ' 9 I Q I I -- THE Lawns AND rn th alr If yuh dont Ill blow tem brams of yours out Understan 3 He replled thet he thought he caught th meanln Then he asked me what m thunder I was trym to celebrate bays I Well you know D Rock feller dont yuh3 Poor chaps suck Got th measles Im gom round takm httle donatlons fer hlm wont yuh kmdly gnve a mxte Ill turn lt all ln n ever llttle but ll help Sure says he Go as far as you like Help yourself but where dld yuh grt thet gun? Bought lt ln a mlllmery shop Where do yuh suppose3 I s just wantln to know thet s all I then took his gun out of hrs pocket an put lt ln one of my own It certamly felt comfortable there After takm my watch out of hls hands I begms huntm fer th three dimes an th mckle I had had I finally found them mongst a 'ot of purses Colly' says I I havent been th first Hat cars round have I3 Fer th love of Mike an hrs mother dont rub It m Well anyway looks as lf business had been pretty good You have enough pocket books anyway Mere trxfles I put em back an began sortm my tooth plcks an matches from th shmgle nalls which he had rn hrs vest pocket Here I found some rmgs Says I to myself Now look here Archibald yuh old chump this mans got a pawn shop III hrs pockets thet he don t have any deed fer Then I says aloud ay Im gonna take all thus junk thet you ve got laym around yuh an turn nt over to th pollce I hate to see anybody lose anythln through you Nor I amt got any personal grudge galnst yuh or Id tum you over to th police with all thet junk on yuh Well says he youve got me Go ahead I began a very careful search an col lected a few watches several pocket books an a couple of rmgs Besrdes this there was a lot of small change an other artxcles I took ever thm thet I could lay hands on CLARK JOURNAL says he some of thet stuff really m You cant take thet ay belongs to We l present to round at belongs to I alnt zactly got th time at sort out your junk but jest call h station tomorrer an clalm what you He sald thet he guessed thet he wouldnt bother bout lt at all dear under rn It under ust as I was gom to leave th chap I thought I would take a peep hrs hat an see lf there was anythln I suppose th fact thet I carried a gun mme made me susplclous of hrs hat way I looked There was nothm It but I felt somethm thet reminded under me of rlngs ln th sweat band I couldnt very well take em out then an there because I had to keep hum covered with th gun an so I decrded thet th best way was to trade hats wlth hlm This I dnd Gosh he sand you re takm some hbertles am t yuh? A hat for a hat says I An they re both derbys at thet to leave such entertamln company but I must I really must I have some very very Important business to tend to I ve got some very valuable jewelry thet I must place m th safe at th statlon house If I oter round here very much I mlght be held up an robbed Thet would be really awful wouldnt lt3 Now yuh jest stroll up thet street there jest as lf you were thmkm bout somethm very xmportant You know how to do thet dont yuh'-W Now please dont keep loolun round as lf a band of cops were doggm your tracks Understan 3 He looked kmd of funny sand Damn yuh' stuck his hans rn hrs pockets started up th street looking as cheap as a free lunch sandwich After goln a few feet he turned round an come back agam What do you want3 I asks of hlm jest as grouchy as I could Says he You cleaned me up pretty good but you ve forgotten somethm Whats thet3 Well I s jest a thmkm thet you might as well complete your llttle collection by addm thls lrttle peek a boo mask Im jest suggesting this understan By golly' says I I never thought of , . . . . h ...S , . ' T1 9 U . . e. . n l : , . '- - . up . ' an- . . . . a v - - a v , ' , . . I . I I ll O 1 ' I 1 . . . . . . . Any- . . . . . , ' . .. . , . . . , . . . . - I - - n n u n n A - 4 s 1 - Q - . feller you've suspected of carryin' G. N. Then says I: 'I am sorry-very sorry ll I I ' . ' V ' ' .4 , I . . . . . . ' ' ' - . l i - . ' . , . , ' ' I n l QS 1 - 1 - -' . , . . , . , an 1 ' . , ' ' I ll I g 1 1 v -I a - s I u 1 1 ll . I I u s n 1 1 . 1 1 . , , ll . I ll I y I D 1 1 , 1 ' - ' . 1 . I . y ' 1 1 . ' ' l I ' I ' ll I l I I- THE Laws AND thet Ill Jest take thrs mask for a souvenrr When I go out west agarn I ll show rt to th boys an tell em all about one of those grass hopper brarned gentleman burglars who held me up Ill also tell em thet th foresard grasshopper brarned gentleman burglar thought thet he was dealrn wrth someone fresh from th green frelds of th country an he got careless wrth a gun Then Ill te'l em th rest of th lrttle tale It ll be son' Joke rtwrll Thet got hrm sore an he began cussrn m Now I always thought thet I had a pretty large strrng of cuss words but I must admrt thet thrs feller had me beat I guess he was an authorrty on th subject When he frnrshed there was nothrng more to be sard an so I took th mask from hrs face an made an unnecessary rerrark abo.rt hrs pretty baby blue eyes He looked at me as rf he felt sorry for me an then he walked away wrthout sayrn a word I started out rn th other drrectron fer th polrce statron After I had went bout three blocks I heard someone runnrn be hrnd me about a block away I began thrnk III thet perhaps th hold up had a pal rn th nerghborhood an thet they were chasern m I started to run too Somehow I slrpped an before I knew rt I went down rn a lrttle puddle of muddy water lrke a roped steer I lard there a few mmutes an ab sorbed a couple of quarts of water fore I got ready to get up When I drd get up I found a polrceman standrn over me wrth a gun rn hrs han s You re under arrest says he I dont see what for says I I guess I can lay down rn a lrttle puddle of water lf I want to cant I3 No objectron at all says he Now you d better strck up em han s whrle I search you fer th artrllery As he began searchrn me a man came up on th run Thet s hrm' says he thet s th man thet held me up an took ever thm I had When he hrst began talkrn I saw thet rt was th gent wrth th pretty baby blue eyes I also saw thet I rs as rn a pretty mess an thet there was no use of chewrn th rag jest then Th cop passed some remark about my CLARK JOURNAL bem pretty well stocked up wrth other peo ples property an then he rang rn fer th bus When rt came we prled rn an th blue eyed gent went along wrth us All th way down he kept nudgem me rn th srde At th statron I told th whole story but they all laughed an sard thet I mrssed my callrn thet I ought to be wrrtm farry tales fer th lrttle tots They took all th stuff otfn me whrle th gent wrth th blue eyes told them a pack of lres about my holdrn hrm up I was so excrted thet I forgot to tell them about th rrngs rn th hat est as they were leadrn me to a cell th gent wrth th blue eyes told them thet they had better look rn my hat Then they found th rrngs I trred to explarn but they jest laughed At th trral rt was th same The Judge svnrled at my lrttle tale an then he polrtely remmded me thet I had ben rdentrfred by sev eral of my vrctums thet I ran from the polrce man thet I had a mask wrth me an thet rmgs rn th hat He also sard thet rf Mr Bums had held me up an I had succeeded rn turnrn th tables on hrm I should have held hrm there for th polrce No man rn hrs rrght senses he sard would do such a foolish thrn as I clarmed I had done I got five years BECAUSE TIS NIGHT Because trs nrght the brrds have gone to rest And oer the earth the evenrng shadows Of gray and srlver where the moon shows est And rn the sky the heavenly lamps are lrt Because trs nrght Because trs nrght all nature s fount o erflows And sprlls her dewy crest on hrlls and flowers And brrghtens all the world and trnts the rose And frlls the shadowy nooks and leafy bowers Because trs nrght Fem Angell I4 I V ' ' ' ' I U - , - - , , .- . 1 I s . A3 Ol' ' V ' l I . I ' g . . , e. , - I . . - I ' ' I i . . . , . ' n ll ' U ' ' l ' . . ' ' ' u ' at th statron I drd not say anythrn about th . , 1 - u ' ' ' ' ' - . . ' ' ' . u no . . ll I I . U I 1 , , ' ' Hn: 1 ' ' O 1 I U ' ' I Ol . ' 1 - , 1 o - s ' A 0 ll I ' ' u - v - s ' ' , - . . . . n ol , 1- ' . THE L1-zwrs AND CLARK JOURNAL THE SILVER LEGEND D the hulls of wlld Nevada Mud the mountalns of Nevada Lxved a mmer xn hrs cabln Lxved with hrs wlfe and baby With no thought of fear or danger Naught but Indrans for companxona INot a paleface ln the regxon Lived there for a year rn safety Late one night there came a summons Breaking m upon his slumbers And beside his doorway standing Five among the hlghest warnors Straight they stood wlthm the moonlrght Stlll as statutes nn the moonlight And they spoke unto the paleface We have come to take you wlth us On a Joumey through the mountams There to see the Redskms treasure But our fathers oft have told us No paleface shall know the pathway Leading to the Redskins treasure So your eyes must be blindfolded Ere you start upon your way I7 or before the sun has nsen Youll return back to your cabm Redskins he not so believe us Forth 0 er rocks and crags they led htm Over hills and breaks they led hlm Tull at last the blmd was loosened In a cave the paleface standing Saw the Indians sllver treasure All about was masswe sxlver Showing as the torchllghts fhckered All the walls were gllstemng silver And the floor Inland with sllver Long he gazed ln speechless wonder At this mme of nchest treasure Tull they led hum back blindfolded O er the way that he had come As the mommg light was breaklng Ere the sun agam had nsen At hrs cabm door they left hum Wnth his wlfe ln anguish wantmg Wxth her there to tell the story Many months he searched the mountams Looking for the Redskins treasure Then to ard his search he called for Men with compass men of leammg Many years have come ana vamsned And the Indian Race IS shattered INone are lett to tell the pathway And the sllver still IS hidden Stlll lt hes a silver casket Mld the hllls of wild Nevada Alice Wilcox I4 TO THE OLD HIGH SCHOOL To you old school our thoughts tum back As through a vlslon clear We see you as we dnd of old Wnth mem nes ever dear We see your noble arches Your stately tower so tall The wammg of your old tower clock Full many a one dad call Around your picture ever clings The hlstory of its past It tells of joy and gladness For sorrows could not last Ah time has come and gone old school There stands wxthln your plac The heir to your past glory Tis framed by later grace When High School days are over We ln vam suppress a sigh Our thoughts tum to The Lewis and Clark And you old South Side Hugh frma Rice func I4 LIMERICK There was a young fellow named Paul Who was so exceedmgly tall That when has wife kissed htm She found she had mxssed hlm In fact hadn t reached hxm at all Laura Lmdstrum Samba Hello Rastus where IS you gwme? Rastus I amt a gwme nowhar Ise yes been whar I s gwme 28 , . . C , I ' T I . T 1 . . . . ' ' ' ' . . . I . s 4 Q , ' . ' ' . u -nl ' ' I T . . . I . I I Z . u . T . . g . . - . ' v I I ' I I Have no fear that we will harm you . 5 ' v . . : , , . . . ' ' ' - o r ' 2 . v . . . . : ' ' , . . ' I ' , i n . ' l . .. 1 ' 1 U - . . - .. I ' ' . u - n - . o ' ' 0 ' I ' ' I ' fl THE LEWIS AND CLARK IOURNAL Published Nionthly durmg the School tear by the Students of 'lhe Iewrs and Clark Hxgh School Spokane NY1sh1ngton Office Room 176 Appltcatmn for Entry as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Spokane Pending Volume I June 1'tl Number 2 EDITORIAL STAFF Ed1torlnCh1ef Emmet I-I Shaw Senior Editor Margaret Sanford tthletrc Pdrtor Frrc Johnson Current Events Maud Wooster Ilterarx Pdrtor Ruby Metler Joke Edntor Robert Clemfnt BUSINE S S STAFF Business Nlanager Chas l' Rogers -Xsslstunt Husrness Nlanager bred Borden 'tdwertlsxng Nlnnagcrs leur 1 txtell George Stesrs trthur tloodnuugh Prrcc S1 per Hear Twenty Cents n Copy Over a century has now elapsed s 1 n c e those famous explorers honor of whom our THE Lrawrs AND CLARK JOURNAL school has been named made therr perilous expedrtxon mto thrs great Northwest country It was then an unknown land a land of sav age beasts and no less savage men a land mto whrch no whrte man had ever before ventured lnto thrs wrld region those dauntless moun tameers came accompanied only by a trny band of twenty seven followers They dad not realrze at that time what a truly wonder ful thmg for the country they were doing When on scaling the mighty peaks of the Rockies they descended mto the fertlle val leys of what rs today knovsm as the Inland Empire they drd not realize what a great future thrs Northwest had before rt ln openmg these vast regrons to our coun try Lewrs and Clark undertook and earned out a task the value of whrch can never be overestimated It rs mdeed most applicable that our school the hnest school rn this great Inland Emprre which they explored should be named ln honor of them And lrkewlse rt seems none the less applicable that our Hugh School Paper should be named m honor of the famous Lewis and Clark ournals ln whrch was wntten by some member of the expedxtron, the vanous events just as they happened So rt IS that our paper, ln whrch I5 wntten and happenmgs of the The Lewrs and Clark the vanous events school rs called oumal Of all the great east ern colleges there are perhaps no two which have a keener football nvalry than Pennsylvama and Comell Cer tamly there rs no game of any kmd rn any llne of sport that creates half as much ex crtement as rs caused by the annual Thanks grvmg game between these two great rlvals And strange to say In all the years that they have been struggling with each other on the grrdlron only once has Cornell been vrctonous ln fact It has come to be almost a forgone conclusron rn the world of foot ball that no matter how poor a team Penn sylvama may have or how fme a team Cor nell may have the great Thanksgiving game always manages to end with the uakers boasting the long end of the score However ln the year l906 lt looked as lf the old rule would most surely be broken Pennsylvania had a very ordinary team whlle Comells was a wonder She had won almost every game on her schedule whxle Pennsylvania s record showed nothing but a serres of drsmal farlures Thanksglv mg Day finally arrived and thmgs stmll bore the same aspect The lthlcans were every where jubilant Fortune was surely with them thus time and at last they were going to have sweet revenge on therr Quakeu SCHOOL SPIRIT , . . . v v 1 4 , - . . , . ., . . , . - . - - , . . 3 , . I - ' 1 1 . , . . . - . A ' 1 3 1 ' .' - V - 3 , , 2 1' . -, , I. -.3 . . l' - , 3 4 ' . l., i ge: ,, Y' -.' ,3.',l ' ' . .25 ' , . . ,. . n . J H , In . v ' - v . . . , . - ' I O ' I , . ' - - . .- I l - . ,, . . . . - - v v v - v n v - . . v - . f U - n - - . , . - n . . . . . . , . - . .. . . . . . ,, . . . . I I ' . THE Lewis AND frlends from Pennsylvania The game rs always played on Prankhn Freld at Pnlla delphla And on this day as early as ten o clock people began to arrlve and by three m the aftemoon that entlre held was one howlmg surging mass f humanlty Promptly at 5 IJ the referee gave the slg nal for the game to start and lmmedrately the two teams ran out onto the held and prepared for actron In less trme than rt takes to tell rt they were lmed up the referee blew hrs whrstle the ball was kicked off and the battle began Both teams fought doggedly Cornell fought with an exultant determination while Pennsylvania fought wlth a determmatxon born of despalr They appeared to be per feclty matched All through the fnrst half they fought desperately but neither was able to score The second half started rn the same manner and rt was not tlll late ln the last half that the terrlflc pace began to tell Gradually Pennsylvania began to weaken Slowly but surely Cornell worked the ball toward her goal and at last wrth only sux more mlnutes to play she succeeded ln land mg the ball on Pennsylvamas seven yard me Seven yards to gam ln sux minutes' Surely a Cornell victory was assured A straight forward plunge was attempted But the quarter a little too hasty rn hrs eager ness to make the play go fumbled the ball and quick as a flash a Pennsylvania man recovered rt Of course there was nothmg to do but to krck rt back mto safe terrltory 24 Lewrs 81 Clark Qutck Prmt and so close was the goal llne to the scrum mage that Pennsylvamas halfback was forced to stand behmd In order that he mlght properly place hrs krck He recerved the ball perfectly and then klcked with all hrs mrght But as ull luck would have rt lust as rt began to descend a sharp gust of wind caught and carried It back almost to the startmg polnt Right down wlthm twenty feet of the Pennsylvania cheering section on the hve yard llne Comell agam recovered the ball There were just three more mmutes to play The Pennsylvania rooters were falrly frantrc Comell dared not try anythmg but a straight rush and by two almost superhuman efforts she managed CLARIX JOURNAL to advance the ball to the one yard llne Here wlth one more yard to gam she paused for breath The captam took time out and went around among hrs men pattmg them on the back and urgmg them to get that ball across the hne at any prlce In the meantime the Pennsylvama rooters were car rymg on such cheering as had never been heard before on Franklyn Fleld But the suspense was too awful to last Agam and for the last trme the teams hned up A hush fell upon the held for this was the hnal play of the game rn fact for the whole season The srgnal was grven the two hnes of men sprang together and formed one strugglmg pltmgmg mass which swayed back and forth across the llne gradually trghtenlng and finally coming to a standstill After the game the men who were down on the slde llne and were able to see the ball sand that for fully a mmute rt hovered directly over the llne However after tlmc had been called and when the scrum was finally cleared away the ball was found to be just slx mches mslde of the goal hne' Pennsylvania had held her strong rrvals to a 00 score and her long standmg record had not been broken Nevertheless It was generally acknowledged by every one who saw the game that lf that final play had been made at any other part of the fxeld the re sult would have been different As It was however rlght down ln front of the Penn sylvanla cheering sectlon her team was srmply forced to hold them from maklng touchdown After seeing a few such Instances as ths who wlll deny the fact that the rooters do not help ln wmmng games3 -I-HAT EVER Most of us are prob ably lookmg forward wrth a great deal of doubt and uncertalnty to the time when we followrng rn the foot steps of our rllustnous senror brothers wrll be handed our diplomas and set out mto the cruel cold world to shrft for ourselves Of course the questlon that always comes up at thls time rs concernmg our future plans No doubt most of us are wondering whether we want to go to college or not whether we will b able to go to college . . , o . u . . . I ' , ' I - . ' v . - 3 . ' I ' I . . . g , - . . , . , - l I I ' 1 u ' ' , . - . is , . . . - . . , - ' Q o ' v n , ' O ' I .- . ' n THE LEWIS AND and whether It pays to go to college When we look about us and see the hundreds of successful business men that have never had even a hlgh school educatlon we wonder f a college education really does pay The self made nerchant IH the Letters from a Self Made Merchant to Hrs Son glves his son the following advice concern mg that questron Does a college education pay5 You be lt ays Anything that trams boy to thmk and to thmk quick pays anything that teaches a boy to get the answer before the other fellow gets through bltlng the pencll pays A college doesnt make fools rt develops lhem It doesnt make brrght men nt develops them A fool wrll turn out a fool whether he goes to college or not though hell probably turn out different sort of a fool And a good strong boy will turn out a bright strong man whether hes wom smooth m the schools of the streets and stores or whether hes polished up and sllcked down m the um verslty But whlle the lack of a college educatron wont keep number one down havmg lt boosts number two up REMEMBER JONAH If your English teacher tells you You must wnte a poem or dre If the prmclpal mforms you You are just one credrt shy Do not look so sad and sorrowfu Be your gayest and look bright Cheer up and remember onah He came out all right If when waltmg for your lunch Some teacher steps ahead If the ple you ve paid for Proved to be like lead Do not growl or grumble But chew wlth all your might I C' fx CLARK JOURNAL Cheer up and remember onah He came out all rrght frene amleson I4 A TOAST Fill up the glass to the brim boys Long may she stand as the best school Drunk with a cheer and a song Drunk to her hearty and strong Here s to the School that we love Orange and Black trll we dre Wave rt on banners above boys Shout lt aloft to the sky boys Flrst grve a toast to her health boys Ever and aye may she stand Then grve a toast for her strength The greatest Hugh School ln the land Orange and Black trll we due Wave It on banners above boys Shout It aloft to the sky Shout for the Lewis and Clark boys Take off vour hats to her name Well work and we ll llve for our Hugh School Lrve for her glory and fame Here s to the School that we love boys Orange and Black tlll we due Wave rt on banners above boys Shout rt aloft to the sky Alrce Wilcox I4 CUTE SAYINGS I do this from msrde promptmgs sand the sea slck man Beaten out of hve dollars said the gold leaf A lrttle thmg often goes a long ways sand the avrator Hlckmg the ashes from hrs cigarette Z5 . 3l . r . , i il?- . . ' . . ' Q I In I t ' p. . ' 'l h A ' a ' -. 1 , ' 11. . ' , a ' I - - ' 1 Here's to the School that we love, boys, ' ii- Ill. j 11 ' , . - . .I 7 it . A ' y I ll. - 5.1 iiia ? ri k X' I f :ai 5 'Q AISI: L NJ Q XM Z f MK ff we If K fmrm L mv It us not only a credut to the person concerned but also to the whole school that Owen Kul gore of the Class of une IZ has been awarded the Pnce Greenleaf Aud Scholar shup by the authorutue of Harvard Unuversuty after very careful consuderatuon of the ments of many applucants The scholarshup us for the sum of S200 and us especually deserved by the recupuent as he has completed three years the hugh school course whuch ut us hard enough for most of us to lunush un our A HARVARD SCHOLARSHIP On the same day as the candy sale we were also laud suege to un another perhaps not quute so pleasant a way when the boys standung at the dufferent doors of the school compelled everybody to buy an Orange and Black but ton By purchasung thus button we became members of the socuety for boostung every thung un connectuon wuth the Hugh School especually wuth reference to athletucs Thus us known as the Orange and Black Club as the pun sugnufues Any one may become a member by purchasung a pun The move ment was started by the boys of the lower study hall, and under the able leadershup of Floyd Kyte thus Booster Club us expect ung to do great thungs It us theur unten tuon to boost everythung that comes along. wuth the vum and determunatuon of the old Spokane Hugh School spurut THE BOOSTER CLUB durung the chapel was both M Mr Cook spoke to the school on the subuect of School Spurut whuch was very applucable at that tume sunce we had Just lost a baseball gam to the North Central wuth the dusgraceful score of I3 to 4 and the crowd of North Sude rooters had outnumbered the Lewus and Clark about I0 to l ack Corbett was chosen yell leader Walter Cuoar havung re sugned F uve gurls and five boys were chosen to boost for the baseball game Saturday May 4 Fay Dunseth Louuse Brousunske Florence ones Eunuce Hennuger and Maude Wooster for the gurls Carroll Starr Nave l..eun Earl McCarthy Charles Adams and Raymond Rudberg for the boys As a result of thus enthusuastuc chapel meet ung the boosters for the game spoke un all the sessuon rooms on Fruday and urged everyone to go to the game ln turn there was a great and gloruous result whuch was as you all know 6 to 4 un our favor At thus same meetung tuckets were dustrub uted among the students for the baseball game for the Rothrock Memorual Beneht May 3 Much unterest was taken un thus on account of the traguc death of one of the Hugh School alumnu On May I suxth peruod called and Troth and AN ASSEMBLY Fon SCHOOL SPuRuT The enterprusung Senuor B's agaun besueged us vsuth a sale on May 24, but thus tume ut was candy unsteacl of uce cream, and good home REAL HOME MADE CANDY u I -I u in Y ' fl . , xx X -1. f K V ff' X O vm ' 14' X K ,e I - - f g-L, f NE., 1 1 My i Q' 'L :f r ,Amr Y -5, N., L,.,A.,, L, , ' ,Kea .L.-N1 O e - ' I L: . f L Q f - to if M5 X y,,' X n,Txf-.V I r. J , ' ' . ' . I. ' ' . fr' - J . f . ' U . A . .I . .. . . ' THE LEWIS AND made 3 candy too We smcerely hope everyone survIved It would take a page or two to gIve In detaIl the declamatory and debat IDS contests out of the teachers have acted as TEACHERS AS JUDGES cIty at whlch our judges ThIs I5 a great Cfedll to our school as they have acted In about elghteen con tests some of them very promment ones too as for Instance the WhItman vs Washmg ton State College debate at Pullman Smce retummg to our own school the Grrls l..Iterary Soclety whlch was actlve before the bummg of the old South Central has been revIved wIth much enthusnasm both on the part of IIS old and new members The oth cers who were chosen at the ETSI meetmg are Mabel Smlth PresIdent Grace Dean Treasurer Floy Lepage Secretary Isa belle Holman Sergeant at Arms and ea TI-IE OWL LITERARY SOCIETY nette Mornson VICC Presrdent BesIdes the regular entertamments SIVCD every Frlday the soclety IS plannlng two entertamments one a szvpsy festwal to take place In the woods at the end of the Mamto Park car lIne tne dher a vaudevrlle performance to be QIVCU une I3 durmg school hours under the dl rectlon of Mlss Dlllon A pleasant and success ful way to rarse money for the Semor A recep tIon was the recent ICC cream sale conducted bv the Semor B s As the day was warm and the Ice cream good ItS consumptron was actIve and the SenIor B s have S25 to be used In glVll'Ig the Sen or A s a good tIme THE SENIOR B IcE CREAM SALE Our school whlch has at tlmCS been honored by VlSltS and addresses from the faculty of the State glad to hear PresId nt PRESIDENT KANE UnIversIty was CLARK JOURNAL Thorras F Kane of thIs unIversIty on May I4 Mr Kane gave a very Interestmg talk gwmg as a prIncIple Dont be satlsfled wIth nearly but go for quIte whrch we can all see In ImagInatIon on Mr Paulsen s new curtaln where the speaker sard he wlshed lt could be wrItten At chapel on May I7 the track team was In troduced to us and we were all urged to show our school spIrIt by boostmg the school track team when they were to meet the North Central team on May I8 At thIs same meetmg MISS Allda W Brooks of New York at one tIme a fellow cItIzen of Mr Hart s gave us a very pleaslng presentatlon of the bobolInk s ong and after an enthu sIastIc encore gave a humorous recltatlon whlch so pleased her audIence that It was wIth dIfhculty they were quretecl down MRS ALIDA W BROOKS On May 22 at 6 ALUMNI o clock ID the aftemoon DINED the Alumm Reumon C0mIHlttCC was enter tamed at dmner by MISS Bond and the Domeshc SCICDCC glrls Those present were PrIncIpal Hart Alonzo P Troth Earl G Constantme Stewart Waters uary 08 Lawrence Weber anuary 09 Oscar Rasmus une ll Herbert Krppen une 08 Clarence Smrth anuary IO Reuben Wood June II and Harry Goetz une I0 The dmner was a great success as the Domestlc ScIence gIrls of our hIgh school certaInly know how to cook Several weeks ago the gIrls were addressed In chapel durIng the srxth perrod by Dr Frances E. Rose and Captam Anderson of the Sal vatlon Army Dr Rose pomted out the need of a rescue home here and urszed all the glrls to help on Taq Day May 25 for the Salvatron Army Rescue Home Shps were then handed out to be srgned by those who wrshed to help DR FRANCES E ROSE AND CAPT ANDERSON . 35 1 . . . ful 1 p I I ' - ,' . . .. v ' ' - - - O ' ' . . 5 ' , ..- . , , . 1 ' . : . : - . . . , - . . , g .. . '.. . . ' . . . . . .Jan- J. .. 1 . - .': .J .' : - .J .': . . . .lull ' 'J - f A I n . . .. ,D . THE LEWIS AND A partIcularly Interest Ing chapel was that of the second perIod May 24 whIch was for the the baseball game Sat urday SIHCC If we wIn thIs game we Wlll have the champIonshIp whIle If we lose we Wlll have to play another game to declde Mr McMacken as chaIrman gave an Intro ductory speech concemmg the need of sup port by the whole school Others who spok concernlng school athletIcs were Mr West more and Carlos Close of Stanford Um versIty Mr Close who IS an alumnI of our school of the class of anuary I0 gave us a very Interestlng talk concernlng the need of a clean honorable athletIc repu tatIon and gave us as an example Stanford UDIVCFSIIY The last few mmutes jack Cor bett led us In a cheerIng In whIch even the glrls vallantly partook In fact our only regret was that not havlng studled our les sons for that perlod we had to pass to th second perIod class IN INTEREST OF ATHLETICS purpose of boostIng PARADE IN IN The dowmtown sectlon TEREST OF SWEET-of the clty was rudely CENEVIEVE awakened Frlday after noon May 24 when after school some 200 boys and a very moblles paraded through the busxness streets bearIng placards announclng the class play Sweet GCHIVICVC and led bv ack Corbett emIttIng the HIgh School yells wIth great Vlm to show people who thInk we have no school Splflt CLARK JOURNAL Our cookmg school gIrls THE SUCCESS OF OUR COOKING GIRLS are certaInly up to the mark for not only are they gIvIng luncheons to therr mothers but even the faculty are enter tamed whlch would be rather dangerous If the dmners dId not turn out well Durlng th fourtl' perIod on Thursday May l6lh all the boys of the school assembled In the 3Udlt0flUm for the purpose of lIstenIng to an address by Mr Arthur B Lee The subject on whIch Mr Lee spoke was a delI cate one and there are very few people who are able to make such a talk of any Interest to the llsteners Mr Lee 15 certamly one of the few He dId not put hIs talk In the form of a sermon He slmply told the boys In a plaln matter of fact way what he thought should be done and what was the rIght thmg to do and every boy In the audIence was led over to hIs way of thInkIng Mr Lee IS a well known attorney of thls cIty and an enthusIastIc booster for our Hrgh School He IS the kmd of a man that every one IS glad to known a true cItIzen an all MR ARTHUR B LEE day he dellberately left hIs pressmg busmess engagements and at the speclal request of Mr Hart he came up here to talk to th boys He spoke to them from the depths of hIs heart and everv one was carrled away by hIs kmd easy and earnest manner iggggmmwa easy 3? rxiiiflil !!x6x!?!X, N K aaafkxx IIIIIKXX 36 , 2 . C I ' l ' - ' . . . v C ' , , few girls, on foot, on bicycles and in auto- round good sport, and a gentleman. On this , Ii T57 5 . , Q K 9 4 , X I ' 9 Q, W , ,,S xx X '.T,.X liz: 'l f 'Q Ill: -. K It BS. .N 4. THE Lrzwrs AND CLARK JOURNAL THE LEWIS AND CLARK SENATE The Lewrs and Clark Senate rs one of the Hrgh School organrzatrons that should re cerve the attentron of the majorrty of stu dents It rs a socrety that serves rts mem bers rn two ways rt provrdes practrce along debatmg and publrc speakrng lrnes and t grves trarnrng rn the polrtrcal lrfe and polr trcs of the present day We are organrzed Just lrke the Unrted States Senate we have the same rules and carry on the same work and we arm to keep our legrslatron and drscussrons abreast of those at the Natronal Caprtol The follow rng paragraphs should grve an rdea of what we are dorng On May 6 a brll was rntroduced by Herbert Scherer the Senator from Wrscon sm to lrmrt the presrdency to two terms A earnest drscussron followed whrch Senators from varrous states mdulged rn and after many speeches for and agarnst the brll was frnally passed On the followrng Monday another brll was introduced provrdrng for the drrect elec tron of Senators Durrng the drscussron Rrchard Munter of Pennsylvanra brought charges of brrbery rn connectron wrth thrs brll agarnst Raymond Metz from South Da kota An rnvestrgatron followed at the two succeedrng meetrngs that was not eclrpsed by the recent Lorrmer brrbery rnvestrgatron The final verdrct of the Senate resulted rn Mr Metzs acqurttal The latter however rmmedrately brought counter charges of perjury and rnterferrng wrth the processes of the Senate agarnst Walter Secord the Sen ator from Calrfomra Mr Secord s trral rs now gorng on rn the Senate At our next meetmg we are gorng to havrng nommatrng speeches for the varrous presrdentral candrdates To those students who are strll somewhat skeptrcal come down to Room 107 some Monday afternoon and be a guest of the Senate your membershrp wrll be assured Grrls as well as boys are elrgrble See us before the term closes so that you may be a member by next semester Any student rs elrgrble and there are no dues We want your support' Our complete lrst of members and the states they represent follows Aaron Sadre Bateman Rachel Bergman Francrs Bohannon Harold Blacknaon Constance Brown Lors Clement Robert Collrns Kenneth Craven Leonard Davrs Earl Downrng Mont Dyer Alvrn Elder Ivan Evans Iorwerth Gore Walter Gamble ohn Caude Henry Groschuff Herne Happy john ohnson Errc Kelly Thomas C Kobelt Ernest Lawrence Anna Lawrence Eva Lemaster Eustac Lrllequrst Florence Metz Raymond Moreland Myron Munter Rrchard Roberts Sam Rrchards Wrllram Scherer Herbert Secord Walter Shaw Emmett Stallard Ben Tefft Ansel Trggelbeck Marre Watson Robert Whrte Orvrlle New York Indrana Oregon Montana Florrda New Mexrco Alabama Loursrana South Carolrna Mrnnesota Ceorgra Idaho Mrchrgan Rhode Island Oklahoma Utah North Carolrna Mrssrssrppr Illrnors Vrrgrma Nebraska Arrzonx New ersey New Hampshrre Ohro Mame South Dakota Washrngton Pennsylvanra Texas Nevada Wrsconsrn Calrfornra Delaware Kentucky Colorado Tennesee Massachusetts Montana . 37 . ' . . ' . h '4 - - ' - . J -.-4--faee------------'-f--4--4--4-- . . . . . ' . J , ' .....,.......e................. . ' ' ' ' ' ' . L . , 1 r seaasaseaasaesssses 1 H 2 sz , fwgaigltltbtisv X QW BASEBALL FIRST GAME Before an enthusrastrc crowd of 600 stu dents 500 of whom were North Central people the Orange and Black went down to defeat rn the openmg game of the base ball season The game was played on Sat urday Aprll Z7 at Natatorlum Park The prrnclpal cause of our defeat was a lack of support from our student body The score by no means represents the difference between the two teams as IS the later games The game closed wlth a score of I3 to 4 ln favor of Black Great was the re North Srders They already had vlslons of a walkaway wlth the sea son s series but alas' alack' dlfference of borne out by the Red and j0lCll lg of the SECOND GAME Never was an mltlal defeat a better tome than was that swallowed by the Lewls and Clark team and admmlstered by the North Centrals rn the first game of baseball l a drwrng ram on a muddy field the wldc awake Lewxs and Clark squad tumed th tide and defeated North Central ln the sec ond game of the serles to the tune of 6 to 4 This was no doubt the closest and hard est fought game of the serres Vlctorv and defeat see sawed back and forth and vrc tory was not evident even tlll the last half of the nlnth lnnmg For a whrle rt looked as lf rt would be an extra mnrng game The North Centrals were last to bat and by a battmg rally wrth two out thev succeeded tn getting men on first and second bases The last man up had been grven two balls and two strikes He made a swtpe at the last ball and sent It rnto deep center held The excite ent of an Instant while the ball was rn the axr was pamful truly awful for everyone but McCrea center Helder with both vlctory and defeat commg to htm out of the alr could see only the former chose rt and made a beautiful catch and vlctory was ours Then 1oy oh Joy nothmg but joy' A great feature of this game was the fine work done by the rooters They were out U1 force and arded greatly ln making the score what rt was 6 to 4 THE THIRD GAME Perhaps the best baseball game of the serles was the third between the Lewls and Clark and the North Central teams which was played Saturday May ll at Nata torlum Park Walter Crowley our sensa tronal twlrler pitched a shut out game and allowed the opponents only two hrts strrk lng out fourteen men Batchelder was another star for the Lewts and Clark He got three huts and made three spectacular catches rn the back field Watson and McCrea pulled off some clever base stealing while Lafayette drd some fme work with the stlck by rendlng bug holes m the arr of rrght freld A notrceabl part of the game was the large number of Lewis and Clark excellent cheermg by our bovs and gurls under the able lead ershlp of Jack Corbett proves that thls does as much to wln vrctory as the plavers them selves Both teams were In excellent form the Lewrs and Clark showmv better team work and for the first three lnnrngs neither slde scored a hut Two teams were never more evenlv matched In the fourth mnmv wrth two down and men on first and second Lafayette our shortstop came to the plate students present and the smgmg and rooting done ' 2 .' ' 1' X t' ,g Q v .1 1 D, 6' ff pi . L . . . ' 2 v u , 9 1 7 ' 1 . - . , l - . . - , LL. . . . . l , - Q ! - , . . , . . - u ' , - ' - ' . n - V O , ' . e , , . . . . D - V , - . V . . K . x ' - . . V ' ' D Y N . . . , . -. ' rr' ' . ' . . THE Lewis AND and hlt the ball hugh over rlght held bounded to the fence and both men scored Wrth these two scores to the good our men played arrtxght ball and our fnends the enemy never had a look m Lewis and Clark A B R H P O Batchelor f Lafayette c lVlcConv1lle ss Bakke 3b Watson I b McCrea f Wilson If Huntley 2b Crowley p Totals A HPO North Central Robrnson Torrence 2b Abrams If Despam p Smith cf MCKIHHCY Van Drssel rf Hammer Totals LCWIS and Clerk 0 0 2 0 0 0 I North Central 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Two base huts Lafayette Stolen base Watson McCrea Struck ou By Crowley I4 by Despaln 9 Bases on balls Off Despaln 5 Hrt by pitcher By Despam 3 by Crowley I FOURTH GAME On Saturday May 25 at Natatorlum Park rn the champronshrp game of the senes the Lewis and Clark baseball team decrsxvely defeated the North Central team and thereby cmched the season s series The Hnal score was 7 to 4 The game was far more excrtrng than one would rmagme by lookmg at the score At the begmnmg of the eighth mnmg the score stood 4 to 2 ln favor of the North Centrals The game seemed hopelessly lost However our boys took a stand and determined to do or dle CLARK JOURNAL They were greatly supported and encour aged by the fine and systematrc rootmg Finally with two down and two men on bases Platt Huntley our star second base man came to the plate and drove the ball to the left center field fence Thrs brought both basemen home and the score was tled Huntley s hut created tremendous excitement and the North Centrals seemed to lose track of the outs The next man up walked and the next hut to Brrley who thmkmg there were two out threw to hrst Robmsoz tossed the ball back into the dlamond the North Centrals started to leave the held and the men on bases scored before the North Srders discovered that there had been only one out The nmth xnnlng closed with nerther slde scormg agam and the game closed wrth the score 7 to 4 The Hugh School baseball champronshrp had been won by thc Lewls and Clark Although the playlng ln this last game from a cntrcal pomt of vlew may not have been quite as good as ln some of the pre much greater Both teams were rn fine form showed good team work and nearly every man got away wlth some mdrvldual starrmg Watson our flrst baseman accepted fifteen chances and some of them very dlfhcult wrthout a single error McConv1lle next to Huntley was the star batter and Lafayette and Wllson drd some clever base stealing After the game Coach Rodman was called upon to make a speech He said Boys there IS nothing to be sand The score speaks for itself But l want to say rrght here that It was the splendid rootmg more than the players that won the game Much credit rs g1ven to Coach Rodman for taking a green team and turnmg out :- wrnnmg aggregation The tabulated score rs as follows Lewis and Clark A B R H P O Batchelor f Lafayette IVlcConvrlle ss Watson I Huntley 2 Wrlson IVlcCrea Crowley p 4 40 ' ' ' . It ' 1 - ' . . .... .A.E. ' ' . Q , f ,...,,,,,,,, 4 1 3 2 0 0 a - - , , .............. 5 0 2 I3 2 0 ' . ....,..... 4 0 0 I 2 S , , ................ 2 0 o I 0 0 - - i , - - , .............. 4 I I 6 0 0 , , - ,C ........a...., 3 1 1 2 0 o - - , ' , .......,........ 3 0 I 0 0 0 , ............ 4 0 I 3 2 0 . .....,........ I I I 0 0 0 - - T1 E Zi Z I - 1 - - . .B.R. . ..A.E. ' . .- ' ' , Ib .......... 4 0 0 7 0 I . , ..,....,,... 4 0 I 2 3 0 ' , , , , ...,......,... 3 0 0 0 0 0 ., , , ' 4, ....,......... 3 0 0 0 2 0 , , ' ' . ................,. 3 0 0 I 0 0 , , . ' Girard' 3b -..'-V- -.--- 3 0 0 3 0 I vlous games, excitement and rootmg was ' ,c ............ 3 0 0 9 3 0 ' ' ' , .,......,. 3 0 I I I 0 , ', ., , .ss ........... 3 0 0 I 0 0 ' .,cc.LaccccEHEZ33 , - , . ' - ' e,a..... I'-4 , ' i ' nv--UNH io . . . s - . . Q r- 3 - ' 2 ' . . .... .A.E. ' ' ' . , r ............ 5 0 2 0 0 0 M . ,C ............ 5 0 1 4 6 1 H ' ' ' , .......,.. 5 I I I 1 I I . ' ' , b .,.........a.. 3 2 0 I5 o o ' ' ' . b ............ 4 I 4 3 3 0 . ' , cf ae,..,........ 3 I 0 2 0 0 . . .ef .............. 2 2 0 I 0 I ' '. . .,,e.,a..ee.e. 0 0 I 3 0 THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL Bakke 3b Totals 2 H P O North Central Robmson Torrence 2b C Smrth cf Abrams f Crrard 3b McKInney Ha f Hammer Brrley p Skefhngton Totals Lewrs and Clark 0 I 0 0 I 0 North Central 2 0 0 I 0 0 Two base hlts McConvIlle R0blnSOH Three base hlts Huntley C Smlth Stolen bases Lafayette Bakke 2 Wllson 3 McCrea 2, Robrnson C2 Torrence 2 Batchelor Double play Huntley to Wat son Struck out By Robmson 5 by Skefhngton 2 by Crowley 7 Bases on balls Off Brrley 3 off Skefhngton I If Crowley 3 Passed balls MCKIHDCY I Lafayette 3 Umprre Cecxl Thompson Trme of game two hours GIRLS ENTERTAIN BASEBALL SQUAD Showlng therr appreclatlon of the base ball team the glrls of the IIA domestlc scrence class entertamed the squad at a de Irghtful dInner on Wednesday May 8 at 6 P M In the school cafeterra Mlss Clara Bond head of the domestrc scrence department had charge of the affaIr Those present were Hugh McConvIlle Raymond Lafayette Elmer Watson Wrll Iam Harshman Wrllram Bakke ames WII son George lVlcCrea Wade Hargraves Walter Crowley Ted Permarne Roy Ed wards Dean Saylor Platt Huntley Ches ter Batchelor Mr C A Rodman Coach Edmond Tyra Manager Mr T Cook Athletrc Drrector Mr H M Hart Prrn crpal Coach C A Rodman THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL In thank work behalf of the student body wrshes t Coach C A Rodman for the good and valuable tIme he has grven to the base ball team Coach Rodman had the ar u ous task of prckmg from some 20 green and raw recrurts a team that would do honor to the new Lewrs and Clark and old South Central Hrgh Schools Prevlous to the entrance of Coach Rodman upon hrs dutles the school baseball Splflt was absolutely dead He not only resurrected thrs decayed spIrIt but he even gave It a new lrfe larger and stronger than It has ever known before To thIs new unusual enthusrasm whrch he created IS due our uccess The student body therefore feel deeply Indebted to hrm for thrs work and for hrs large share In the wInnIng of the pennant 42 , .,,L........t... 4 0 I 0 I 0 7 9 7 I4 3 . A.B. R. . . .A. E. ' , Ib ...s. L.UL 5 2 2 8 0 0 , ...., or 3 I I 2 4 0 . ' , ....sLo,ooo, 4 0 2 I I 0 1 , c ..r.LLU,.U,UUU 4 0 I I 0 0 - I ' , ..UU......,.UU 4 0 I 3 3 0 'H ' ,c t,,V,UUU..U, 4 0 I 9 4 O ' Il, r .,UL,o,L...,.,ULr. 5 I 0 0 0 O ,ss ,,..,...,,,,., 2 0 0 3 0 I ' , .,,.........,,.UUU Z 0 0 0 2 I , p ....oU,,.. I 0 0 0 0 O I Q 2? E di ' ' ,.UUUUUU 00 5 -7 I 00-4 - .I 'cI'. cI. I c . I. cn. 1 , F . I T l .. 30 . , D ' . O 7 THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAI THE DUAL TRACK MEET In the hrst dual track meet between the Lewls and Clark and North Central Hrgh Schools the Lewis and Clark managed to get the small end of the score of 83 to 48 Borden was the highest pomt wmner on our team gettmg first ln one event and tlelng for first ln another Hall was the lndlvldual star of the other team ma mg I7 l 4 pomts Abrams of the North Central team broke the Northwestern Hugh School lnter scholastic record for the Javelln throw heav mg the Javelin I49 feet I0 l 2 Inches al though the wlnd was blowing which prob ably helped hlm out Both teams were ln fine condltlon and drd fine work all through the meet This tlme the Lewls and Clark squad lost not because they were an mferlor team but because they didnt recelve the help from the bleachers The North Central fellows were out ln force outnumbermg ours 4 to l The few Lewls and Clark veterans present drd flne work under the able leadership of ack Corbett but were easily overpowered by the superlor numbers of the North Cen tra Several times our fellows were but a few mches behmcl the North Central lads and would have pulled ln ahead If they had had any klnd of support from the bleachers The summary of events 50 Yard Dash Won by Hall N C Durham N C second Orion L and C thlrd Tlme 06 880 Yard Run Won by Papst L and C Davies N C second Owen N C thlr Tlme 2 I2 Pole Vault Won by Martin N C Smith N C second Andrews L and C thlr H rght I0 ft l mch IOO Yard Dash Won by Pierce L and C Hall N C second Durham C third Tlme 2845 Shot Put Won by Dougher L and C Truesdale N C second Brlley N C third Dlstance 39 ft I0 l 2 Inches 220 Yard Hurdles Won by Borden L and C Clark N C second Wllhelm N C thrd Time 25 Hat avelm Throw Won by Abrams N C Drrks L and C second Hosmgton L Inches Hugh Jump-Hall Glaze Truesdale of N C all tled for first at 5 ft l meh 440 Yard Run Won by Mathers N C Torrence N C second Gillette and C third Time 25 seconds 42 ' f E ' cl. ' , 1 . l A A Q . 'df 'e' T, ' .' U' . ' ' ' T .Q , . p l, Nl rj ' - t , . .: and C., third. Distance,,I49 ft., lb I-2 .3 , 3 ' ,, L-. . , kg - J I . 1. A THE LEWIS AND Broad ump-Won by Durham N C Andrews L and C second Hall N C thIrd DIstance I8 ft 8 l 2 Inch s lZ0 Yard Hurdles-Dead heat between Borden l.. and C and Truesdale N C Glbson and C thIrd TIme l seconds MI e Run Won by Davles N C Dur rant L and C second Buell L and C thIrd TIme 5 04 7 5 Drscus Throw Won by Adams l.. ana C Hall N C second HOSlngt0D L and C thlrd Drstance 99 ft I0 l 2 Inches Mlle Relay 440 yards each Won by N C team Mathers Torrence DavIe and Hall, Tlme 3 52 The Northwestern Unrversrty Club f Spokane IS donor of the srlver trophy cup and pIcture of the UHIVCTSIIY Cymnaslum at Evanston Ill whlch Wlll be the property of the Hrgh School hrst wInnIng three meets possesslon of the North Central track team but the next three tImes we are confid nt the Lewls and Clark squad Wlll possess It ELECTS CAPTAIN At a meetlng of the track squad after school on May 22 In Room I07 the can drdates for captamcy for next years track team wer put up Charles Adarrs Fred CLARK JOURNAL Borden Harold Orron and Harold Cnbson were named Adams however wIthdrew s he had already been captam of the squad for the season just hnlshed Thls left only three candIdates and after a vote by the team Fred Borden was elected next year captam He wrll have charge of the bunch from now on and expects to turn out a wmmng aggregatlon that Wlll make th North Central fellows ashamed of them selves COACH MACKMILLER The puprls of our school wrll read Wlth Interest the followmg bnef artIcle concermng Mr WIllIamF Mack mIller who wIll coach the Lewrs and Clark Mr Mackmrller IS at present astudent In the UnIversIty of Wwcon sIn and wlll graduate at the close of the school year In une wrth Brology as hrs mayor sub1ect Hrs ath letlc record consxsts of four years experience In unIversIty football three of whrch wer on the Varslty team two years as left guard and one as left tackle The Wlscon Sln team was defeated but once last year and that game was lost to the UDIVCYSIIY of Chlcago Mr Mackmlller has played every game and the full lImIt of trme dur Ing the three years and agamst such men as Steffens Page and Radamacher of Chrcago and Plckerlng Powers McGovern and ohnson of MIDDCSOIB He was very hrghly recommended by Coach Rlchards of Wlscon sIn and Prmclpal Hart feels sure a strong man has been secured He IS a member of the WISCONSIN crew and xsrll go wIth the team to Poughkeepsm N Y In lune where the Interscholastlc race wslll b held The grldlron contests on the local held next fall are sure to be of greater Interest than ever before and the constant thou ht of us all null be that Mr Mackmlllers ex perIence and ablllty as a coach wlll mean suc cess to our team and contlnued honor and glory to the Orange and Black 45 J . ' . .s . ' ' I n - -Q I . s - -I - , I Q n . , ., - e . a . , l... ., . , 6 4-5 's 'l - ' , . .3 - 4 , , . ., 3 , . ., 3 .3 , . ., 3 ' , . --H u, a ' 1' ' . . . , , ' s ' . . 0 I I U not successively. The cup is now In the Foogballteamnextfall, 4' l , . . 5 , ' . . . , . C .. - .. . ' . . ' lll v Juan- K. J .' ' ' . . 'r I' . l ' . V. e ' ' 4, . . ' ' I V D . . ,, . , r .. .. THE Lzwm AND CLARK JOURNAL THE LEWIS AND WHICH DREAM? Dear I have dreams to sell What wlll you buy3 A dream of the oncommg Years as they fly3 A dream of some love Or some fear3 I ll deny Thee none of my play dreams So what wlll you buy? If you have dreams to sell This wrll I buy A dream of your face Of your smrle of your srgh You are my dream And you cannot deny Dream Lady you knew just what dream I would buy Ruth Ihler I4 PUZZLERS Or a key for a lock of hrs ha1r3 Can his eyes be called an academy Because there are puprls there9 In the crown of hrs head what gems are set? Who travels the brldge of hrs nose3 Can he use when shlnglmg the roof of his mouth The nalls on the ends of hrs toes? What does he raise from a sllp of hrs tongue? Who plays on the drums of hrs ears? And who can tell the cut and style Of the coat hrs stomach wears5 Can the crook of hrs elbow be sent to Jail? If so what drd rt do? CLARK JOURNAL THE SEA The stars look less brightly through the long nrght But as the golden waves fast flee Fxlled with remembrance and wlld with delight Sings the great cry of the sea See' as the frerce wlnd arrses and hlls Full of drenched foam a shelter qulte ree Here whrle rn darkness now under the hrlls Smgs the great cry of the sea Marie Malmgren I4 CALENDAR FOR MAY May s the month for sun and shine Mats and rugs hung on the llne Hucksters wrth their vorces sweet Peddllng strawberrres on the street Time for love and tlme for sighs When the Lephyrs woo the trees And the measles gm to meeze Tlme for tulips lxllles roses And May Queens with snuffllng noses BUTTE There tw as a young lady from Butte Who was so exceedingly cute She blushed very red When a gentleman sand Oh' 'I' say krd look at the beaut There was a young gurl from Eau Claire Who w ore a whole lot of false harr How does he sharpen hrs shoulder blades5 One day at the beach I ll be hanged lf I know do you3 She gave a loud screech Boston Evcmng Transcript The x md left her halr nearlv bare 45 I I-T ' - . . ' v . f I ' I I I I I . 4 . . . . - - i . ' i - , l - Where can a man buy a cap for his knee. Time for dreams and making eyes, ' I Y D ' AA 4 OI ' . . . , . I ' ' xv v - THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL Ecefcefcefcesqescescesgcescezqesqsqescesca Conf1dcnt1ally Spcakmg 516265216-zefcesctacagcecewaczesqacesces How s everythrng at your house? asked Smrth Oh replied Brown she s all nght An extremely tall Inshman travelrng m the West put up at a hotel ln a small town and was shown to h1s room for the nrght In a short txme he appeared downstarrs and asked for sclssors needle and thread A hour later he returned them and saxd sadly Falth xt s no use When asked what he meant he replied Why the blanket wasnt long enough to cover me feet so Or cut a plece off the top and sewed xt on the bottom but tus no better now No Maud dear xt Isnt only the mxlk trams that have cow catchers SOPHOMORE SOPHISM Mr Peterson to Brlght Sophomore If a hne IS neither greater than nor less than another llne what must lt be3 Bright Soph Parallel Ben Lee had a caller from the country the other day Be you the man who makes pxcturs3 she asked Mr Lee admltted that he was Can you make pxcturs of httle chll dren3 Certamly And what do you charsze for them'-' Three dollars a dozen Oh shucksl saxd the woman wxth dxsappomted tone I ll have to walt tlll next year for Ive only got lexen errlne R scanning ln l:.ng T IS llne rs dactylllc pentameter Miss Hall Put your other foot Ill there How would you find the ratio between hve boys and slx poundsl' Shaw Reduce the boys to pounds 'MA ff fit 4 5 if env SCENES Teacher What rs a s1eveP S Easson A lot of holes surrounded by wlre Caesar src ducat ands cur egessrt hctum Freshre ftrans Caeser slcked the cat on the cur I guessed rt lrcked hlm E. lkey' Ikey' 'co'me here quick de paby has swallowed de lnk' Never mlnd Rachael dat IS noddmg It was only a sample bottle Wrllre Mama dont you beat eggs when they re bad'-5 Mamma No Wlllle Wrllxe Then I wlsh I were an egg Ex I I . . . I I . . .. . - ,, J . K , , , , H 1 U U h H . . me vu - u 1 . ,, . H ' l u Q - I .. . ' ll - , . . A U l I . ll 1 !l v - fl Yrtrrw in YYY Y YW Y Y I V y ll 1. . . . u l X X 1 ' . ' h U l f fl - - ' ll , 1 . . w ,Z 11 , f ,. u l K -w g f 1 . . x,..f,,,, X , it I ,.,.. s - 'v ' To i7 A -i F ' ' fr W J .. I - in 9 Mg 55-'T gd --i I 1-' , 1 X -..,. ' , . , . . . . I .. . - ,. . ll . ,- . .. , 2 , - . . ' ' fr u . . ,. , . ' .. ,, - .l X. II. .. . .. . . . . , , . - .. - H . . . .. . . . ' n 1 L . . . U .. . . . . -Ex. ., ll A ' I9 sn I ou ' ' ' U ' . - , u an , ' H H ,, . D . . u - - ul , . a - . - . . h ,, , . . . - u .. - ' 4 'T' . . H , , . . THE LEWIS AND Boy I wrsh a llon would eat me up Mother Why johnny? Boy Oh rt would be srch a Joke on the llon When he was thmkmg I was ln hrs stomach I would be m heaven English Teacher Use defeat and debase ment ln a sentence Colored Pupll As de boy went down de starrs de feet slipped and he fell mto de base ment Sophie trans Dutch What eats the dog? Volce m Rear Fleas Seen on board In R IO7 Get your txcket for the baseball game to be played Saturday at my desk Found on an Englrsh test paper Shake speare s father was a pheasant peasant Send that blg brother of yours a copy of the Hugh School paper THE FEMININE BOND What I5 lt ch1ldren3 asked the super mtendent that blnds us together and makes us better than we are by nature3 Who can te 3 Llttle Ellen Smith s hand shot p Yes Ellen can you tell? Yes slr corsets NOBLESSE OBLIGE Here Alfred rs an apple Drvnde rt politely with your llttle slster How shall I dlvnde rt polltely Mam ma? Why always grve the larger part to the other person my chxld Alfred thought a moment then handed the apple to his Ilttle slster saying Here Goldle you dlvxde lt CLARK JOURNAL TO SUIT THE. SEASON Alma I wonder why hobble sklrtl have gone out of style thls season'-I Rxchard Probably so the women could get down on thexr knees durmg LEAP YEAR Dyer What rs the helght of your am b1t1on3 Munter I dont know exactly but she comes just up to my shoulder Burns shyly You should Jom the army Happy bashfullyl Why my dear3 essne To learn to use your anns Vernon I have an rdea ln my head Mr Dunn Treat It extremely good rt rs rn a strange place Platt H A philosopher rs one who rxdes a phxlosopede I never could see why In spxte of all the rergns weve ha It strll should be so dry Mother may I go out to swim? Yes my darlmg daughter Spend your tlme lh the lrmousme And dont go near the chauffeur We laugh at our teacher s Jokes No matter what they be Not because they re funny But because rt s pollcy Miss Long I m tempted to grve you a es J Rogers Yxeld not to temptations o n Gamble weetheart I I dndnt lntend to tell you thrs when we came here but somethmg spurs me on to tell you that I love you Ina Swartz Heavens' Maybe you re sxttmg on the cactus 47 ' f - I- I- H I lr ' ' ' ' - . J. H ' c 1 . l A Ancient history puzzles meg l-l- 4 . . ' Q d. u. ' ' ' ' ' ' u . , . ll . , - I . 4 - t t-'V . U - ' 5 Jh. Z Us , --1 THE LEWIS AND Dorothy D Do you remember Rule 23 on Table Etiquette? Mallette Neun mem hebe Frau Dor D When eatlng spaghetti the head should hang well over the plate A Boston sprnster had a dog One of those hlgh toned towse Who s so well bred and mce hs sand He never pouts he trousers Mass Frye Englrsh III What rs lme called that has four feet m 1t3 Ralph Morris A quadreped Fred Borden What drd she say when you asked her to marry you3 E Johnson She sand she couldnt be cause she wasn t a mmlster DECLINE WITH THANKS Reports had come to the presldent of a famous Eastern College that one of the stud ents was drmkmg more than was good for hrm Meetmg the offender on the campus one morning the head of the Unrversrty stop ped hrm and said severely Young man do you dr1nk3 Well why the student hesitated not so early ln the mornxng thank you Doc or PROPOSAL TO DATE Hiram Mandy will you be mm Mandy I-Irram Im yourn SYMPATHY Beggar Pray slr take prty on a mls erable wretch I have a wrfe and slx chrlcl ren Gentleman My poor fellow accept my heartfelt sympathy so haxe I CLARK JOURNAL IN THE LEWIS AND CLARK SENATE Munter I want housmg refonn I want educational reform I want Happy Qboredl Chloroform A blush creeps over a grrl s face because It ran It would klck up too much dust Gladys rs a decided blonde When drd she decrde3 Shler I came near sellmg my shoes the other day Dyer How was that? Shler Well I had them half soled HE KNEW BY EXPERIENCE Among the members of a workrng gang on a certam rarlroad was an Irishman who clarmed to be very good at flgures T e boss thlnklng that he would get ahead of Pat sand Say Pat how many shrrts can That depends sand Pat who e yard you get mto AT THE SEANCE There were three raps on the table There you are Mrs Moriarty said the MCdlUm The splrlt of your husband sushes to communicate with you Aw go along wxth yez retorted Mrs Morlarty Ye cant fool me Dem soft little knocks nlvver was Dmney s Whm he whacks the table yell know ut by the shake of the house' VERY MUCH SO Is Mrs Dr Brlck 1n3 asked the vlsrtor calling at the home of the suffragette leader YISS mum saxd Norah She s ln for slx monts mum U .. H n .. . . .. . ll ' w 1. T-t.1Qi . .: , , -- - ll ' U l - .. ' . ll if . . . , n ri, ' ' , ' ' , lf . ll ' ' ll ' . C . 5: .. . I . . . . ,, ' ll . YI : . ' . ' . ll . ll l Il . U . , . . ll ' ' I ' , . . . n ., . 1 . - . ,. - - , you get out of a yard? .. ,. . .. - - , , on s ll . ' VY , . .. .. . , I I T ,. t . ll ' ii ' . H I . .I ' Y, D . . ,, .. . .. ' ' ll V ' . ' . Y' ' . I . . ,I . ' I 9 ' - -. I , .. .. . . . 1 . . - --- . Y. . . - ., . . ,, . . I7 , ' . I .N . ll ll ' Il ' ll Q ' I - . . . - V ., . .. THE Lswrs A SPRING SONG It rs not rarnrng ram today Its rarnrng daffodrlsI Yet rt were better rn a way These days of sudden chrlls rt gave up the daffies gay And showered qurnrne pulls A PERMANENT PGSSESSION You cant eat your cake and have rt too sard Dobbs Oh cant you? retorted Hrcks s very evrdent you never ate any of my wrfe ca e 7547+ Same Rubber' fi -4 C DW -r ITS- j Do you know that you talk rn your sleep I-Ienry3 asked Mrs Peck Well do you begrudge me those few words also3 he snapped back THIS IS A JOKE Many a grrl thrnks she has spoken her heart when she has only sprarned her rmag matron One evenrng Drck H havrng left hr hat the day before went to Sophra Ds house and was greeted by Sude wrth Drd you come over for your hat3 No I came over for a mrnute he re plred AND CLARK JOURNAL A GALLANT YOUNG DUFFER A handsome young duffer has come to the west In all the wrde country hrs auto was best And save hrs good honk horn weapons he had none He rode lrke a streak and he rode all alone So crazy for speed and so darrng a chuifer There never was one lrke the gallant young duffer He stayed not for brake and he stopped not for stone He cleared the Puyallup where ford there was none But ere he had covered much more than a league The wrly polrceman had fonned an rntngue And a rope across the road caused hrs auto to suffer Whrle a cop up and prnched the defeated young duffer So boldly he entered to Chref Dooley s Hall And stood among sergeants and people and a And spoke to the Chref wrth hrs hand on But the offrcer sard through hrs teeth wrth a curse Take back your base shekels too small rs your offer days for yourself srr my gallant young duffer Thrrty lesion Foss ID LIKE TO Id lrke to be an athlete And do some wondrous thrngs I d lrke to be an angel And have some gauzy wrngs I d lrke to be a speaker A yellrng at the crowd But how I d luke to be a tarlor And make my teacher s shroud Don t forget the JOKE EDITOR' I I I I I 49 If ' , ' ' I ' 's 3 lc 1 - ' ' x 1 ' ' , Il, . his purse, . 1 Q - A 1 . ns - , - 3 . 9 ll U7 ' 1 THE L1-:WIS AND CLARK JOURNAL THE ORANGE AND THE BLACK Arr Scots wha hae Of other Hags our frrends may sm To other colors praises brmg But wxth our song the arr wrll rlng The Orange and the Black Wrth hrgh Ideals to spur us on Even tho the way IS long We ll fight untll our end IS won Wrth Orange and the Black No shrrkmg let our promise be No coward ln our ranks you ll see We know the end IS vrctory By Orange and the Black Much more than colors these two r To us they represent the star The goal of highest alms afar The Orange and the Black Well leam to do-then do rt well The secret of our fame we ll tell We lrve up to our great ldeal The Orange and the Black RoyE B Bower II A merchant of Lrverpool who dxed sud denly left rn hrs desk a letter wrrtten to one of hrs correspondents Hrs sagacrous clerk seemg the necessity of sendmg the letter wrote at the bottom Smce wrrtmg the above I have died Cnm sorrow hath tumed many a man Qurte prematurely gray An ash cart too the truck wlll do Upon a wmdy day ADVICE TO THE CLASSES Freshles Bear all troubles patiently Freshmen Be brave m the struggle of I e Sophomores Never appear somethmv more than you are unlors Employ your tlme well Seniors Pay your debts promptly They say remarked the maxd that wldows who cry the most are the first to remarry 'Well reJo1ned the old bachelor theres nothmg lxke wet weather for trans plantmg FACULTY JINGLE IS for Archer so rosy and round B rs for Becldall near gurls always found C IS for Clukey who sports black eye D IS for Dean teaching Latm so dry E rs or Endslow so sllm and so tall F IS or Filer the best of them all C IS o Gullbert Instructor ln art H IS or our loved prrnclpal Hart I the poor poet who s wrltmg thls lay IS for ewell cheering all on hrs way K rs for Kennedy who left us all sad L IS for Lrbby wlth pencil and pad for lVlclVlacken rn physrcs he Joys N IS for Nunn who favors the boys for Ostness whos leamed and wise P rs for Peterson strll flunklng guys the questxons the teachers apply R rs for Robmson small but Oh my' S rs for Slegler so trrm and so neat T IS for Troth whom the gurls all thunk sweet U the unfortunates lrstemng to thrs V for vacation of mhnlte bllss W for Wallace crammlng the dumb X Y for unknown teachers to come Z IS for zeros whxch make us all sigh And wrsh that the ones named above were not mgh MIS O15 Laura Llndslrum 50 1- l'f ' ' .I . ' 8' : 7' J ' ' ' - J I I II A .. II. '--- III. ' T I D 9' 'U . : . X1 fo F - - IV. 9 il . ' ef ir' ' 3 aeg L TJ ' l, ' -H V I ' . f l ' . 2 . ' f A , . . f . ,. . i V. - . - v-, .- , , U -vi : 'I'.. .I , f . -' h A . ' . - Q is .. ' THE LEWIS AND CLARK JOURNAL Orin Is your frlend a good p1lot3 Smith No not on land for he always steers straight for the bar CHEMISTRY EXPERIMENT IN A CLASS OF BOYS Put them ln the laboratory and let a pret ty gurl come m Result They all turn to rubber She dyed her raven halr Posslbly to go with her crows feet M Sanford Mr Filer rs It rlght to sa I1s5 Mr Filer Certamly not you know better than that I IS a personal pronoun an Margaret There you just sard lt On board a shlp the wlfe was trymg to comfort her sea slck husband and change the current of hrs thoughts Darling has the moon come up yet'-I It has lf I swallowed It was the weak rep y The nlght was dark and dreary was rammg you can bet The tram pulled mto the station And the bell was rlnglng wet A school teacher asked one of the blg gurls to declme love The bug gurl sxmpermgly replred Decline love Miss ones3 Not me Id as soo thunk of declmlng marrlage Now remmeber Ikey that vas a goot glass eye you got Always when you are looking at noddmgs take It out and put It rn your pocket What would you call the children of the Czar3 Czardlnes I suppose Mayor I see two cocktails carried to your room eevry mormng as rf you had some one to dnnk wlth Yes slr one cocktail makes me feel like another man and of course Im bound to treat the other man ames Rogers Drd you ever know a bar ber to own up that he had cut you3 never do lt they srmply go for a chunk of alum and casually remark Well I guess I shaved that spot a trrfle close Arthur House They Miss Slegler I-list III Lookng ln the HISIOTY of Florence you wrll fund something of Dante Ed Lee Florence who3 Dont forget to mention the Lewis and Clark Journal ri. ,APO OM 107 Some fellows chew the rag because they cant dance rt A play IS like a clgar If lt IS bad puff mg will not make lt draw lf It IS good every body wants a box Ho' sreered Tommie you amt any body Your papa amt got an ortymobxle luke my pape has Maybe he amt retorted Brllre bu we ve got a camphorchest upstalrs m our at tlc that smells like one C Adams drew a right angled tnangle of 400 degrees 5! .... . . . .. ' - : .. ,, . . . . ' ' Q ' D - - . . . , I ' D ' U! . y - - 1 n y ' d ., ls 1 . 1 gg --. -T-i' . . I u - - uv ' ' . if I ,,, l . at I l- I l , l It 3 ..., , . v 1 V ' U ' . . . . . . . . . . . U . ' ' ' . . J , , . , n . A , - . . . . , , l THE Lrawrs AND WANTED TO OBLIGE They were grvrng a big dinner and the coachman had come rn to wart on the table Several persons had suffered from hrs lack of experience and rn servrng peas he approached a very deaf old lady and inquired Peas mum3 No answer Peas mum3 louder The old lady saw that someone was speaking to her and she lifted her ear trum pet to the questioner The coahman seemg the large end of the trumpet directed toward hrm thought It must be a new way of takin em but I spose she likes em better that way And down the trumpet went the peas ALL IN THE SPELLING A country newspaper editor once no- ticed rn an exchange the proud announce ment that Cradyvrlle has a girl that knead: bread with gloves on We need bread wrth our gloves on and our gloves off In fact rf some of our sub scrrbers dont pay up pretty soon well need bread with still less on LITTLE MOTHER KNEW At the close of hrs talk before a Sunday School the Bishop rnvrted questions A tiny boy with white eager face t once held up hrs hand Please sir said he Why was Adam never a baby'9 The bishop coughed rn doubt as to what answer to give but a little girl the eldest of several brothers and sisters came promptly to hrs ard Please srr she answered smartly there was nobody to miss hrm CLARK JOURNAL Mama said little Elsie do men ever go to heaven3 Why of course my dear What makes you ask that3 Because I never see any pictures of an gels with whiskers Well said the mother thoughtfully some men go to heaven but they get there by a close shave Teacher What do you think of the new lrbranan ames? rmmre Say dat grnk could print all he knows rn drsplay type on a postage stamp without cancelling the stamp A PARTNERSHIP My Father and I know everything rn the world said a small boy to hrs com pamon All right said the latter Wheres Asia? It was a stiff question but the Irttle fel low answered coolly That s one of the questrons my father knows My brodders said a waggrsh colored man to a crowd rn all rnflrctrous rn all ob your troubles dar rs one place you can al ways frnd sympathy Whar9 Whar3 shouted several In de dictionary he replied rolling hrs eyes skyward There s the grrl with a voice of the phono graph brand Who shouts whistles sings lrke a Teutonic band Dont you think that a life spent with her would be grand'-I fMurder l730 11 11 11 1 1 11 11 ' ' 1 1 ' 1 11 ' 1. - . . ,, 1 11 11 - ' ' . 1 1 1 ' 11 n 11 1 U ' 11 11 11 C , 1 - ilii. . . U ' I - . I - - - J 11 . , I I . U . . - 1 1 - . an - 1 1 I . 1 - 1 11 U . . 11 - - . - u - 11 - u 1 . . v v - - 11 11 - 1 ' 11 11 - ' an 1 - , 11 - 1 1 ' - - 11 11 11 - - .1ii-1 , U. . . . . 1 1 ' - 11 . 11 11 . . . . 11 - - 11 - - - . . 1 1 1 1 1 3 ' - 11 - 11 - - 1 1 u 11 il'-ll , . . . , . . . , . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 11 - 11 1 - - - 1 1 1 11 ' - 11 D wrt. ----- 1,, A . f, f 'X MD' L3 . , Not, uw: .rev Wee Q of o 95, I fo know vhpfiwn- W P'1u:WM1u reno A uf I o omf , 0 D a :AMY JU Cao Q3 Bnchela plajvd asia UV ff 'ff' VNC U00 .Ame Fa? H4 .svn loci a z Black my HP1 5a.1h,w Q Hate QR: feat ru of a Speak! X+'LM' W' J Mfgf 0 'x ,..5f..C4. Q W ' f C00 k 2 :ll No 3 er j I M ad a 6 a nd L gl: araumirwf' high! Hn nl , llll: ul Elm v WM 3- amg an v Pr Y' Speaker B Yrtshlf mf if v Future Fur! lnl I-idiom 1 pq .4 O A Q hgh xn q cl-L: mehr nfme pogo 9 133: nqcmq! 6-l:oakzjqu' NAVLL-K,,.4 Q -Tak 'INT ueedril Cl45Lcll'1yIY'fl'1 ,2?fv?f ,!,Q, Af 053 5 I , 1 . I I Ma S f , 1 xx I 1 f ' Aj, 25 ',ux.,lW, frm 5, NPLLP.. f U of ' R . ' ' ' 5 'H' 'af A11 or . ng 0 . r P l.- Sf. . f 4 fi , ' 'S a ? 6 f V X 1 . 'ff' Q. 1 pd? , X, kk ., ' I ff X XIX! Offll 1 I !f X ' twat 5 ln, C , f x, 9, f ,f f' A ' I , 5 ff S1 wr , , f ' I V7 ,T X 'N ll --a 51' Il I 'I 9 'I lu ll . fi x 1 I f Wg' ,Hy V X V nan My X ' r ' : ff 1 E IL fi-,Li N . 4. N f ' ' ' ' '1. 'IA Q- , 3' 5 A . f ,f - , . Z 9 f - ff!! 'QQ' Q ZxAi,r', I' 4 'L ll Cr ' -L Y . Wm 1-.Wa nr : 54 THE Lewis 9B'S. A Nine B had a swarm of bees, And they to save their lives, Must go wherever the 9B went, 'Cause the 9B had the hives. Axtell We Semors have got a lot on our mrnds Rlchard K Freshre Why dont you get a ha1rcut3 A good story IS told of a uaker volun teer rn the Unlon Army who was rn a Vlr glnlii skrrmrsh Lomlng lnto pretty close quarters wrt h a confederate he remarked Frrend trs verv unfortunate but thee stand just where l am gomg to shoot and blazing away down came hrs man A Pennsylvaman boasts that he makes a soap that would wash a polrtrcrans char acter whrte as snow There must be a good clea of lye about that soap. M Sanford Xvhat were you domv after the acc1dent3 Veasey Scraprne up an acquamtance AND CLARK JOURNAL. TRUE PATRIOTISM l once heard an Irishman say, Every man loves his native land, whether he was born there or not. COURTSHIP. Mother l should not be surprrsed lf our Susan got choked some day Why my son3 Because her beau twisted hrs arm around her neck the other mght and rf she had not kissed hrm he would have strangled her' A bachelor upon readmg that two lovers wrll slt up all nrszht wlth one chair rn the room sand that rt could not be done unless one of them sat on the floor Such Ignorance IS painful Where are you Qoxng to put the peas this summer3 asks the Boston Globe Same old place nerghbor rlsht next to the lamlz chops l marrred a suflrasette Mr Cholmon dely Rlppmgate of l-lyde Park and for hve sears have found unspeakable happ falfa www Lt HY S ff -riff- 2' Z4 sf aj x X. Ng. I rr - 1- . U . . - U , . H - - l .4 , , - 1 5- .. ., - H , , . ,, . . - Q , . . Y v. . . . . - V. . . ' U V - . , 1 . . . . . . .r A . - V ., u ,, Q ' ' . - H t ' . , ' - . . ' at - - v .I ' . , ' 11 l ' ' . . I E lt II . ' V . .. - .. - U . . L, V , . ' L - H - - tt - v .. A - .- ' Y . x. fl ., Q A - .7 7 A - 'X xx O li X XX W f Pl V 4 A X ,f I A 1 A f, ,f 'tx 1 f l 'I I as A f ' , -.ag V' ,, 'BX XX X as fg A eq+:-er.fAf1--X- . V-, -- 5-Y 1 l xxx :jnvyvf E- me ly Y 5: i rg - I It., I 1 'fi -+'.1fff rf ,iff-1 . was ' 'fr'fQ' J r 1 we 1 fr ,A l 1' A fi rf ' -an f s, -1 V mr 7' l I. :I ,HL lf- ff g ' xr x x 'nf-of .L.,,,', ' 7 ' , X ' 3 -' ,1 .. - , , .. X , X 1 dx 1 ,D ,- gnxul FW Jr Q J J GO I UPI Henry A Yeomans of the Class of l895 rs one of the rrost drstrngurshed of oar Alumnr He graduated from Harvard rn 1900 wrth the degree of A B The next year and whrle a student rn the Law partment he took hrs Master s Degree l904 he completed the Law Course wrth the degree of Ll., B Whrle at the Unr versrty hrs splendrd work brought hrm to the attentron of Prof Lowell of Harvard Hrs success rn tutorrng whrle a student offered an opportunrty for hrm to take a trrp around the world durrng whrch trmc he studred as well as taught makrng a spe cral study of the government of the coun trres through whrch he traveled After leavmg college he was assocrated for several years wrth the law frrm of Sul lrvan and Cromwell New York Crty Shortly after Mr Lowells apporntment as Presrdent of Harvard he called Mr Yeo mans to that rnstrtutron to lecture upon Governmental Law and krndred subjects Actrng Assrstant Dean of the Unrversrty whrch posrtron brrngs hrm rn closest contact wrth student lrfe Such a record should be an rnsprratron to everv serrous mrnded hrgh school student Wallace De Wrtt of the Class of une 09 rs now attendrng the Unrversrty of Prrnceton De Wrtt rs probably one of the greatest football players that Spokane Hrgl School ever had and on enterrng Prrnceton hrs record has been none the less marvelou In hrs Freshman vear he made the Varsrty and was consrdered one of her best players lrmagarde Rrchards of the Class of l898 has brought great honor to our school by her wonderful work along educatronal lrnes After graduatrng from Hrgh School Mrss Rrchards attended Stanford Unrver srty and also the Unrversrty of Calrfornra from whrch she graduated rn l906 wrth the Master of Arts degree Mrss Rrchard then completed a two years course of classr cal study rn Rome She rs now head of the Latrn department of Mrlls College Call fornra . , 5 0 fs o X -X X V-321,-wetq , o -. l , . . ue' H- I r X ' ..- ' O , ' ' De- ' ' , ' . , ' ' . In . ' ' '- fr' . . . ' - During the last semester he was appointed x I I ' s ld f Wlllllq ' I if llllll hlllll IW f G ypz, l fhff WWWVI'-0 V X 1 had I am W f WW 1 2 ' Q11 The Owl Fresno California We were very glad to have you VlSlt us agaln thls month for we enjoy your storles and poems very much The oax were exceedlngly good as also were the stories The Mercury Your paper 15 attractive throughout and the story Yvlnnmg Against Odds rs vsorthy of note Your debatrng teams are well represented and their drscus slons very rnterestmg Let us hear from you again The Comet Austln Texas We are always glad to hear from the Lone Star State through your paper Even though we TCCCIYC other papers from your state never theless you are always welcome and we are always glad to see you Call agaln Your paper rs good and very mterestmg what there IS of It but why not get a few more storres and poen's to help add mor pages to lt3 The Rustler Fremont Nebraska Your paper carrres with It the splrrt of llvelmess I thmk the boys had better get busy and have somethmg to say and not let the suf fragettes monopolrze the paper A few more cuts would help to make your paper more attractive Olla Podrrda Berkelev Calxfornla Your paper rs good b t ths las I su s res to run down Your other papers were excel lent and corrplete rn each department Never theless we know how hard lt rs to always flnd maternal for th paper and lnope you will do better next trme Pebbles Marshalltown Iowa Your paper rs very good and we would llke to see more pages added to lt Try to rustl a few more stories and poems The following are other exchanges re Hono lulu Hawan Stem Amsterdam H Bend S of Ore On: Fresno Cal Cascadzllzar Ithaca N Eh Kah Nam Walla Walla Koda Everett The Almanac Lake eerved to date Blaclg and Cold of New York Interlude South Ind Magpre Dewrtt Clmton H New York Spectrum Portland uzll Des Moxnes Iowa Forest Ill The Courier Boise Ida He perran Oregon Crty Ore The Comet Austin Tex The Dart Ashta bula O The Revzelv lVlcMmnv1lle Oe The Native Amerrcan U S I dlan Trammg School Phoenix Arlz Olympus Olympia High School Re wen: Wllklnsburg Pa St Helens Hall Quarterly Portland The Comosrm VlCf0fl3 The Crrlerlon Waupaca Wls The Caliper Stuyvesant H S New York City Pebbles Manhattan Iowa llzad Troy N Y Mercury Mllsnaukee Kumtux Prosser Tech Prep Chicago lll lens Portland Ore Poly Htgh Los Angeles Totem Seattle Vozce Younvstour Ohlo ' L I il 9 ' f f f if 3 4 Z 7 4- '- 4 - In ' Ia . lj, X X y -.-------- 4 'Q , . I . - I . . . . . al ., . . 0 . Z . . Q y : Q IU ' Y A ' . V . . - . ' ' li VI - . I . , - - , .. .. ,, ' , : , . S. U .. ,, 7 I 9 U , .. . ,, . . ' A, , - s u as D ' , , . -. . Q . , : 1, ' , , u . . n , -2 1. , - Y G .. .. I ' 'U O I Y The Sentinel, Los Angeles, California: ' G .. ' . .. . ' Q . . s , , ., , . U .. ,, ' 1 U '! 5 - , 3 U . U . . - , -1 1 a . .. . . N r .3 . . . n- , , -2 .. ., - D .. - . s 1 , ' . ., .. . ,, ' . s Q a . - .. . . ., - ll I , t - 4 Il ' U9 ,, A .3 , . ., n V ' lt Y! f 1 n s V Si ' I! . if Y! - I Q . - -1 , . . .. .. Q .. ' 1 s v ' -l ., . .. ,, s , -1 4 , 1 . . . .. . ., .. .. , . , : .1 , 1 . H , u 1 r Q e ee.. , . 1 -, - You Can Always A iff Catch F1sh Wlth - KODAK VACATION DAYS -fat AWAIT You The l1ttle Kodak plctures w1ll keep al1ve the pleasure of outdoor days Make a selectlon from our stock the largest 1n the northwest then let us finlsh your plctures when you return home Fllms plates and chemlcals always fresh shlpments every week Let us show you what a good camera you can buy for S5 00 Browmes Sl 00 tg? S12 00 Foldmg Pocket Kodak 1 X4' S7 00 The best goods at cheap e prlces Shaw 81, Borden Company R1vers1de Entrance 609 asm Sprague Entrance 610 12 60 the GIRLS of Lewzs and Clark Another term of school IS almost over and many of your g1rls are readmg your school journal for the last tlme as a student of the Lewzs and Clark hzgh school As a favor we would ask you to leave a good word for us behlnd you Let your successors know that we always served you wlth just what you wanted when you wanted 1t and prlces that always won for us your unquallfied approval And thls w1ll be so as long as you are near enough to trade wlth us Let those who are steppmg mto your places and whose sweetest school memory w1ll be the partlclpatxon rn the Improvement and Contlnuance of the school paper know that Kemp Sz, Hebert are the1r friends and that we want to glVC you larger space from lssue to lssue and let them know that this rests wlth them Tell the clerk you saw our name ln your school paper KEMP So., I-IEBERT ' A r l y y y o E: J 1 l c y --l,-Q J AW ffl ' X . . gs :: ALFRED CLERC FRENCH PASTRY BAKER Delzcatessen Fruzt Candy Sandwzches and Ice Cream Lunches Put Up Special Attention glven Take Gut I-Ilgh School Patrons Miss Spokane Brand Hnghest Grade Coffee .Served 31 1 South Howard Street THE MOST COMPLETE AND UP TO DATE INSTALLATION THE NORTHWEST The HQGKIIMJ E E The Ventzlatlrgi E E The Plumbznoq The Vacuum Cleanzng E E E E Of the new Lewls Sz, Clark I-Ilgh School Blllldlflg was successfully mstalled by BLAIR MEAGI-IER COMPANY . 1 . 1 I . to ' tl ' 99 ' Home Phone A-2210 Between Third and Fourth Avenue - - IN . l SPRING PATTERNS ARE HERE ALVV-XXS AT YOLR SERXICE THIS SEASON IN PARTICLL-XR E? PEASE TAILORING CO 32Sy EC F NVQ school starts next Septem X ber dont fa1l to patromze the 1 x 11ke to see your smlllng faces N5' ' about 1230 every school day for lunch Fresh p1CS cakes bread and rolls every day asa 65 asa Vzenna Bakery and Cafe Phone jflfazn 58 176 S Howard St THIS BOOK WAS NOT PRINTED BY US Cole PIJIIHIZNQ C0 vfqttractzve Przntzrgg B th Ph 223 P t St WE PRINTED THE TAMARACK Y Jinons N. . or. irst anIII1owI1i Z4 ' v 1 I ' ' N4 places that patromze you. We 0 .S ,. Q i I O O O ro urers of 0 ones os ree! The Doerr Mztclzell Electrzc C0 MAKERS 0F LIGHTING FIXTURES JOBBERS ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES We Furmshed the Fnxtures for the Lewls and Clark I-Ilgh School SPOKANE WASH Ph 4 H A CALIFORNIA GROCERY co 4 g Staple an Fancy Grocernes C Zl8SH The C M F ASSETT CO CHEMICAL METALLURGICAL AND TESTING Q LABORATORIES l I LABURA T ORY SUPPLIES 207 9 ll 13 WALL ST SPOKANE WASH - ' Bell one Main l 38 ome l454 C o ' 0 I8 and l20 Lincoln Strecl. Oppcmlv Post Ollicw Teluplmnli Main 5-I60 , . S. B. randall, Prop. . oward O . Q 7 I I X . . . . 43 1 If X , xx .X X jx I X X - - - O , I STUDENTS V V 'za 215 J? Patromze Our Advernsersl For the Graduate Our GraduotzonRequ1sztes Wlll jlfeet Your ,Hpprooal INE' You wlll say when you see the lay out Graduates have always assoc1ated thls store wlth what IS rlght and new 1n dress fabrlcs dresses hats shoes gloves hoslery muslnn underwear parasols lace collars corsets and men s furnlshlngs and our display th1s season w1ll enhance our reputatlon lt s economy to buy here 91 Q! M A! W Blakeley Dry Goods Qmpany 407 -lO9 411 413 Rlversxde 'IN ALL SPOKANE NO STORE SO GOOD . Qrnrxqwg.,-V K isis : 'Bai A jg-:VZ 5, 'Q . ga.. ' . , . ' ,xl - ' :wp 3,,',:1:.:.7.1 -7-,x.S:,xg.g.:u'g 5 . f T-V - I P-31515.-jaw L',hff,I:1Q 'gf 1 A g,5,yxg'.gu,:: 041 ., 4- 'Wle , P- 5 ' 's 'NN K' 4 an A5 ' vb- UIQ? ...V 5 e c 0 . n . 0 S c 4 ' s 1 Y 9 Y Y Y I , . . . v . . . , D ndoubtedly, You Admire the beautlful new Hlgh School BUlld1Hg and the excellent furmture mgalled A large part of this furmture was made by the PHOENIX LUMBER MANUFACTURERS OF LUMBER MILL WORK BOXES AND WOOD Located at foot of Post and Mlll Streets Yards at Buckeye and Astor Streets Phones Mam 290 Home A2900 John T Lnttle Hardware Co Sportmg Goods TENNIS ATHLETIC and BASE BALL GOODS l I0 Washington St SPOKANE REED Cor Howard and 2nd Ave I Estlmates furmshed on Class SpCCl3lll6S such as Class Pms Fob Charms Emblems Medals Class Statlon ery Etc VVe Wlll gladly serve all High School Pup1ls m any way pOSSlbl6 oo. . ' 2 , , 96 gg 'Q Cookwllhlias N0 fishes N0 Dzrt 45 Zfmy N0 Smoke WILLCOXSQ, POWER Eggngmlgal kM5 f SPOKANE FALLS SPOKANE WASH GAS LIGHT CO Intenor F1n1Sh In Pn SCHCCL OFFICE and Had Gods CHURCH FIXTURES I WASHINGTON MILL COMPANY M C MURPHY C O N T R A C T O R LEWIS AND CLARK HIGH SCHOOL SPOKANE If you desire e rin in , O in 0 ane at the ost Rea- sona le rice, try I 0' - I PROPRIETORS P' Symons Bloc , 5 S HowardS. Phone ain 1366 y - ' 0 0 0 H -IQ. . 2' - +w,' 1 e , Y t- AS Y , . QW' Flr and , I r W III SPOKANE FULTON MARKET MEATS Poultry Flsh and Oysters PHONE MAINI -1303 907 909 Sprague Ave SPOKANE WASH Prmtmg Engraxmp Embossmg Halftone md Color Speclalnft BUX YOUR If W HILL PRINTING TICKETS FOR COMMENCEMENT NOW -JAN South 213 Hou ard Street PHON ES Pacliic Vlam 5426 Home -X14-58 I 1 . ., . Ibm-ul:-rs in .XII Kinds uf' Frwlm and Curt-ml 1 ' . , . ' ' , S U U N 0' f -fo Q C w ' 'yi The Bas' f ' Educatiolrj ?s S 3 when We consider that QUICK PRINT IS and for some t1me has been the buslest s o 1n Spokane naturally We must conclude there IS a Rea n ll u T tht ut l 6'he h p ' S . so More we co ld say--of superior eq ipment, etc. --but i 's deeds a co n Nlfty Oxfords Just the Snappy Styles You Luke to Wear Young Dressy Fellows and Cha m mg MISSBS w Il be dehghted wlth our new Buttoned Tans and the Latest Styles ln Blacks nd Patents Best of ll ln Ou Bargm Base ment the prlees are do n to S2 75 and S3 00 BARGAIN BASEMENT C R A N E S POPULAR PRICES 519 RIVERSIDE The Home of Good Clothes STHN B I SMART People who compare values X QCLOTHES buy thelr Clothes here f There must be a reason no X gf better clothlng IS or can be , made than Stem Bloch or Campus Togs and the prlces Xe X are less than any other llne L l Q. ff mlw 'I X F ogelqulst Clotlung om an l l f C P Y RIN ERSIDE AT WASHINGTON . , Vs ' I' - . . i . . V l . 3 0 a , ' r ' - . W . 7 XAKES f, . I N X My E? . gf iff Jie V, - 7 -fr , uf., l l - - l f J - X , fl 2 ,Z ff F5 I Q I. Nga I N ,RXQD Q, M Ill -2 - 0 0 My l s ,X Xe ll f Posmvely the finest Photographs 1n Spokane are pro duced by the LIBDY ART ol STUDIO 9g WOLN ERTONI BLOCK Danelng Class NEOLIAN ACADEMY of DANCING A PRIX ATE SCHOOL OF DANCING b t Spokane Table Supply Co AN? Agfa FINE oRoCER1Es X ff and TABLE DELICACIES X ff U WINES AND LIQUORS Sprague and Wall SPOKANE WASH .X new vluss for I'IL'g'lIllIl'I'S in hull- I1 g, has just I -- f fl S- If 'ul:nr. Main 624891 I . U. I3 . 500. I Mr. I . .l. Z1-urlin, I'rinm'ipul Mrs. I . .I. fm-orlin, .Xssistani 'n I 'l't'lTlIJIlf Tm-1'psicI1orv, Spukam- YVash. Esfublislu-LI 19024. Tm-mple 'l'e1-pf' -I 1 1 'Il ' d - l'IlL'StI'f1D may be rf t ,I ly 'I If ' I - g' lizations gi ' LI t- I g, I' t' III-'d21l'!.'J5 tl- 'tt-d' 'I'- II: 'IV lfcllf s. .XfIiI'1 -I tl A V-: N' t' :I 26 I L -' t' J f'M':tA J flil -' g.. I -lv '-u 'H Y' A ' A 41.5 ga -- , -' , lm 17 4 -.M 4 , . -w graluwnfca fa Wrlght 8: Dltson Rackets X , We Are SpCClC1llZlflg on the Popular Przced I 912 M0dels PARK RACKET Full Ile Ind of 1 populrr shape The fr mme IS made uf selected white ash wlth a mahozwny throat 'rnd Strung with a good quality sxlnte gut XVII flmshed throughout Iffrch COLUMBIA RACKET Niade after the I rteot and most ap proud Qtyle It COIIEIIIIIN thc extra 1 enter strings and IS Strung with good quality gut XM are cert nn tlns rack vt I tln best for thc pru L ua rofferx d I ach Kountrx club rarket Hub racket Lenox racket Dans cup ruket 82 50 82 00 32 00 U8 00 I SURPRISE RAC KET Thus racIdt for the season of III' In been gre rtly Improved the fr rme nlvcly rnadm and the itl'lIlKIII,'Z of good qu rllty gut Mach III Ilzhi and Ea: Il S Campbc II or Se mrs racket Prlre ran ket Longo ood racket Sutton Star racket 05 00 S8 00 83 50 C8 00 If 1: F36 4. ii Q U We mil-.e 1 Specialty of C lass I IIIH Iimg Medals and II mdge-1 Note, the em ellence of the be-mor XJ and Senlor QB Clues Pms Nlade bs u WE MAKE AND REPAIR EVERYTHING IN JEWELRY SARTORI 8: WOLFF 417 SPRAGUE AVENUE DO YOU Know Where to go to get good ICE CREAM and CANDIES7 CLAYMAN'S 614 RIVERSIDE f.. I 1 9 I A ls Nlndr al Fa r-A We Nant' ll. f IsEE55i5555?Eet :i5: , IIEEI ' ' I WV . . . 22: , f::: I ::. .:E' 4- TEEEEEEES' ' II: 1 5. ' ' I I -1, -V-,---YYV. 0 gl. ! I' ,Q -I K I ,. HJII .sp -: , 2.1 , ' . ' . I 'ef'iTT..'f'fffTfi' ooo,, 1-50 II 7 Q . ' ..-...... . I l ' 1 ..... . I I1 N Ll I I2 I 1 I- I J . 5 ' 'I . A f If Mx K Z: J ' 101351 , Y x, IX ' A ' LI N J ' '4.li I? , ,li M ' FSR I X 1, 41. wa- ' O ' I ' I 'I I J' .', I , . 3 I H A' . . .. . . Y ,:,i,i,,,, ' ' I. ' I ' J H.: 'fQ5fmf 'www Q9 235123 Q3 ANGVIRE STUDIO OF ART PHOTOGRAPHY 609 Fernwell Bulldlng Spokanes Leading Photographer Artistic creations In photographlc I ortralt ure The know how touch carried out to the smallest detail malces the portralts of ANGVIRE. dlstlnctly dlflerent We have the Ieaclmg SIUdlO of the entlre Northwest and one of the most beautiful and thoroughly equxpped photographic stu dlOS ln Amenca VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME J I . I 'X -Q ia, Q 29 , SA N 11. R FOR S P R I N G ICES A D CA DY CLGTHES DON T FORGET We re sh wmg ih hn st lne of You g Mens Cl the Spokae adarepepared t give y u y ung fellow wh t u w nt the way you want lt Call ln and get cqua ed See the eally nlce th ng ha e Hurds Quality M d Cfate PTICC We Speclahze on Ices and Sundaes such as Amerlcan Beauty Teddy Bear North R J CQ THE P BLIC IS always Wllllng to spend thelr money for the e Worth of lt The quallty of our goods offsets the prlce as e prlee IS only falr for the quallty We furnlsh 350 5 E I HYDE JEWELRY CO The Store of Quahtyn SPQKAINE WASH 1 , a o ' e e i n ' o s in n , n r o ' o o s a yo a ' . ' a int . r ' i s we v . ' h , o - . . ' s. . 7 Y Pole. Country Riuersizleat Stevens . . . . th . . , th CQ O U I T , , . OUR PHOTOGRAPHS Are ln a class dlfferent from any made 1n the c1ty for DISTIHCIIOH ln Style and F1I11Sl'l and the Prxces Rlght SHIVELY CARPENTER STUDIO 511 KUHN BUILDING I g I Northwest School Furnlture Co SCHOOI XND CHI RCH SEAIINI HYIOPI X114 Bl M,lxBOXIilJS PII ll liNlI'l i TOWER BELLS MIPS ROI I IINC PARIIIIONS IHEAFER SEXFING POLDING LH XIRS XSSILNIBLY LH XIRS I LOBI1. l I I S AND SCHOOI SLPPLIES Sl Ok INF VS ASH IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN UP T0 D TE FURNISHINGS The Home or Office A Hotel, Club or Cafe BE SURE AND VISIT The CXTGHSIVC Salesfloor of the GROTE RANKIN CO. VVhere you wlll find the best assortment of defendable up to date furmshmgs 1n the Inland Emplre at prlces to fit your pocket book and on terms to sult every requlrement 1 Dre on Waslington Idaho Montana I O '. ,, 'l .. ,- I PI'I, f' ' . 'I E I .- ' , , ' 5 .' ,. - , U V v , T I A, 1 '. ' .A 1 ' .A i 4 Lv 4 v ku ' ' stalled 2veEhr3lO'lLRgJlIgl:cH STABLIS s - 4- - , . . 'w ' Y , lark hschool South 113 ll.: Jefferson Street , . ,, . I 2 . I 'FHED TLE S POKA WASH LEWIS Sz, Clark Spemal a n d Semor and umor Sundaes ARE A FEW OF OUR DELICIOUS ICE CREAM DISHES ANDERSEN BROS LEADING GROCERS 511 Sprague Avenue LHASE ik SXNBORN TI' 'XS XND COFIEILS RICHPI IPI BRAND OI' PI RE IOOIJ GOODS XIHI-N XOI WANT TI-IE BEST ISR FOR TRU BLU COOKIES and FANCY BISCUITS IN I KIRK ES N ANDENIIIIIE BISII,I'I IO PI10Nl4 XIXIQ gm WVICH REPXIRING POPIL-XR PRICFD .IEW ELERS XND DI-XNIOND XIFRI HXNTS z+mRIXEli51lJE xx Exn 1- Sl0h XNE WISH j Y' . . 5 f I ' ,T4, ,,,Y Y,,, I . . . I NE f I 0urF I ' -7! V y T Q' y S It v LY v - Lv o r ' ' ff 7? . , ,,b S Q wh 0.f',.9. Agents for I ' J Lv .I I A' 1 N . 1, g and .'L..,I:. if 522 BIZ. Cohen Co. ' I ' I I ' I , V: .I , 1 . Always New and Up to date That IS the Young Men s ver dlctofourapparel Suns that are correct 520 Upwards Chlcago Cloth1ng Company Young Mens Sh p Buttercup ce Cream Pure and Delzczous Q 9 SPOKANE BAKERY BASEBALL TEAMS TRACK TEAMS FOOTBALL TEAMS Get Our PFICCS on Satlsfactlon Guaranteed Full lme Carrled D 8: M BAE? 2ff?53?E Carrled By McGowan Bros Hardware Co Howard and N P Tracks l 1El I gr wish to take is 7 VX? opportunity to thank 'JL' buslne ss men or their support ano interest in our school paper Cur aovertusers are o the highest class o irms in Spo hane ano rt as my oesire to have the stuoents show their appreci ation o the support rom these irms by patronizing them give them value for their money' Chas 'E Uiogers Business manager E ' 0 co. the stuoents uno Fbe . ' f . . G . H . D ' ' I- f - . . Q ' 1 r f r Main Both Phone Systems Home 5412 A114-Q MAIN 5412. N E 21 523 PRAGUE If 17.5 f7?0M GREFWOUGHJ 176' 6000 A1141 The Qualzty Grocers 1?5Z?5e3e'?Qf3,ZZ9 DEPARTMENTS CFOCCYICS Bakerw Dehcatessen lrults and Xegetahles The most Qanltary Nleat Nlarket ln the iltx OUR AUTO DELIVERY SYSTEM THE MOST PERFECT Use Greenough s' Fme Teas and Coffees LDIN 0 N U Base Ball Goods Are used hy the Nztronal Iexgue Xorthu estern league and other lug Le xgues schools and colleges through out the country 'lhey have been the standard for H years We arc etclusne agents for Spaldm Base Ball Tenms Indoor and Outdoor Athletxc Foods We Issue a hnely lllustrated catalog flClCl'lblIlg' all the se goods rn det ul Be sure and et one WARE BROS CO 1255? , Dellclous lce Cream an Ice Cream iff 5, 'X S 'Ez VE- O 1 ' :-: j :-: ' ' Q' G 4 f' o 9 Z A I - 1 0 -1 Y, I . 414 E' Sr , d . P- sig ,J A , . sod. g fl , , . , . f . , , D 1. . : -A . . 7 l I . . A L Tyr-: . I ' v . . , 2. I g I ownrd ' ' ree I VEST WHILE YUU are SA VIN Stop Wasting - Invest Wzsely - Be Independent I Tbas been sazd that sa'bzng IS szmply a matter of stoppzng small wastes If tbzs be true zt zs 'within tbe pofwer of every man to sa'b Comparatvvely fefw fortunes are made zn a day the 'vast majorzty babe grofwn from small begznnzngs and are the result of long and careful e fort HE excuse zs sometzmes offered by those fwbo do not sa'be that they cannot afford rt As a matter of fact safvmg rs the cheapest good habzt zn the 'lborld Ha'bzng learned to save tbe next most important thzng rs to znfvest your safvzngs safely and profitably It zs to fzll these e quzrements that our Real Estate Sa'bmgs Bonds are de signed THESE 'Bonds bafve a 'bery 'kvzde margzn of security they are issued rn denominations of 3 I 0 0 or multiple there of for a period of hbe years and bear 6 Z interest rwbzch zs payable sem: annually They may also be purchased by makzng payments of 510 or more at con'benrent intervals An zn'vestment rn these Bonds zs an effectzfve safeguard for your savings ASK FOR FULL PARTICULARS Of th C ty of Spoka Pala' In Capztal and Surplus Over .KI 300 000 00 1 f , , f , ' ' , ' , ' ' ' r - Ghe Dag di Hansen Security Company 0 o p ayer- rano We have always refrarrred from exaggeratron rn our advertrsrng and prohrbrtel rt by 01. salesmen, and Wrth thrs polrcy rn mrnd, we say wrthout fear, the new bOLO APOLLO rs the supreme achrevernent rn player prano burldrng lt rs an rnstrurnent whreh reeerves the enthusrastre prarse and exelamatrous of pleased astonrshment Irom the most errtrcal professronal musrerans and geuurne rrrusrc lovers There are manufa turers who CLAIM for therr rnstruments melody accentrng devrees The SOLO APOLLO rs the ONLY Player Prano whrch DOES accent the meloey correctly One who never before sat down to a Player PIHHO CAN accent the melody or a composrtron PERFEL FLY on the APOLLO, whereas the trarned expert CAN NOT do so on ANY OTHER Player Prano, and no eomposrtron rs perfectly renderel unless the melody rs correctly accented Clever salesrrranshrp and praetreed nraurpulatron mrght lead you to rmagruo heard the SOLO APOLLO but NOT AFTER you ha e heard rt Lrsten to the salesmen s remarks of cther player prano and hare the rnstru ments demonstrated then come to our store, see and hear the SOLO APOLLO and the truth of our statements Wrll be proven to you There are many other rmportanf features rn the Apollo not found rn any other make that we wrll explarn when you call Your old rnstrument We Wrll accept as part payment and arrange convenrent terms for the paynre rt oi the clrfferenee Sherman, , la Sc Go G 1' 1 Steznway and other Pzanos Apollo and Cecllzan Player Pzanos Vzctor Talkmg Machines 810 SPRA G UE A VE P . . . -V e l . W , correct interpretation was being obtained from other makes if you had never , vi- . 1 ' . ' 2 . . , . , , '. S , ' , . , 9 ' ' A Fr m 'llllihrv . Il, ia I


Suggestions in the Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) collection:

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Lewis and Clark High School - Tiger Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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