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Page 32 text:
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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
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Page 31 text:
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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 ' .
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Page 33 text:
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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. -
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