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Page 29 text:
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Pago Foil ripen L. C. H. S. ’24. EIGHTH GRADE. TOP HOW: (I-eft lo right)—Leslie Sanders, Sylvester Glnyoski. Edward Ew rn«n BOTTOM HOW: (Left to right)—Lillie Schmidt. Dora Schmidt. Alice Shaw Ituth Johnson. HE Eighth Grado at the loginning of the term of 1! 23. had nine member» in the olas». They wore: Inei Kara- bee. Lillie Schmidt, Mae Anders, Roth Johnson. Dora Schmidt, I eslie Sanders, Sylvester Glnyoski and Alice Shaw. Mae Anders left ns t efore Christmas, residing near La Porte. Inez Farabee now attends the Crocker School. This leaves our class with seven pupils. While the boys are studying Agriculture with disgust, the girls are studying Domestic Science with pleasure, as the following poems show: We’ve a dear little teacher in Domestic- Science In whom we place our reliance. Her knowledge is great. What she keeps in her pate Can always withstand our defiance. The hoys poem : Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. If Civics don't get us. Agriculture must. Besides these subjects we have Ih-cii studying English. Heading. Arithmetic. Physiology. Geogra- phy and Spelling. We are of a stern and very studious type, never doing anything out of the way. Of course, no class is perfect and so it is with ours. We find several of our studies rather hard to get. but we always take the bright side of a thing. The High School has been lacking in one thing, which is of great importance that we. Eighth Graders, have found out. that is. the following commandments: (1) . Thou shalt not whisper. (2) . Thou shalt not leave the room without permission. (3) . Thou shalt not copy from they neighbor. (4) . Thou shalt keep fingers out of ye neigh- bor’s desk. —ALICE SHAW.
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Page 31 text:
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L. C. H. S. '24. Page Fifteen SIXTH AND SEVENTH GRADES. TOP ROW. (Left to right)—Marguerite Dau. Evelyn Lumluhl. Do rot I: a Gustafson Norma 14 liremlt. Berenice Halck. Harold Vamlewater. ., CENTER ROW: (Left to right)—Karl HIkks. Raymond Hockelberg. Eddie Gloyeske. Iteni t osier. Martin latszlo, Melvin Sniedman. BOTTOM ROW: (la ft to right»—Alfred Prentice. Gladys Biggs. Leona Henderlong. Irene Ifuszar Helen Ksserman. Louella I au. HEN school began we had twenty pu- pils In our “new ' room, bur Edward Anders and Violet Palmer left us for other schools. We have had a busy and en- joyable year together. On Hal- lowe’en we had a marshmallow roast : on Thanks- giving a Joint program with the other grades: at Christmas a Google-Sparkplug party, together with the H. S.: on Valentine’s Day a box and on Feb- ruary 22. a Washington's Birthday party. Our St. Patrick's treat was furnished by Marguerite and the Sixth Grade girls did their best to give us a good time on April 1st. Most of us were “game” to eat the salted candy though. We are hoping for more good times before school is out. We have tried to help with the P. T. A. pro- grams and this with our library books, painting and basketry, have kept us interested. In the Seventh Grade are Norma and Doro- tha, the two inseparables.” Norma can not l car to be parted very long from her dearest Doro- thu.” They surely must l»e kindred souls for they even miss school on the same day. Then there is Melvin, who gets so lonesome that he has to go over and sit with his l»esr pal, Martin. Then they study so well? ? ? Eddie would take first prize as a giggler. Marguerite's paintings are envied by us all. Hen- ry’s silvery laugh is just one of his many charm- ing qualities, but it gets him in trouble at times (mostly noons and recesses). Evelyn is usually a conscientious worker, but sometimes the lessons are just too silly” for her. In the Sixth Grade we have Harold, the champion frowner and scolder. Helen does noth- ing worse than ring the Ik 11 to make us get back to our lessons again. Louella gets nothing hut A’s and B’s on her card. Gladys is too quiet, we (Continued on Page Twenty-two)
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