Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA)

 - Class of 1921

Page 22 of 216

 

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 22 of 216
Page 22 of 216



Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 21
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Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 23
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Page 22 text:

,li . ff +- fi i , I T Vt, Y J . lx ll if ' 1, 1 Literar TOTEM AWARD CONTEST. It has been the custom in the last eight years for the Totem Weekly to conduct a. Totem Award contest, and to offer for the best short story or poem a. Totem-Award Pin. This year the Annual Totem conducted the contest and made awards to Irwin Rieger and Phyllis Jansen for the following short stories. True Partners By Irwin Reiger Tell us a yarn, Bill. It was the youngest of the three who spoke. l'm new to Alaska, you know, and l like to hear 'em. Reflectively the other man shifted his gaze from the campfire up the valley. Midnight was approaching, yet there was no darkness, and the July sun still shone upon this vast world where nature reigned supreme. The wilderness, parting to let the river through, extended everywhere luxuriant, and sent its breath over the land. Far off across the hills stretched Alaska's untamed im- mensity, into other endless distances and other Silent Places. He nodded toward the head-waters. Couple of fellows had a great experience up there, once, he said remi- niscently. lt's quite a yarn. He seized a twig, and bending forward, ignited its end in the flames. The man was a miner, yet there seemed a hidden polish of education just beneath his rough exterior. The fact would have provoked no comment, for queer things pass as usual in this mighty land in the shadow of the pole. Lighting his pipe. he tossed the twig away. ul was in the country at the time, he began, so I got the facts first-hand, and I know the whole thing's true. Good many years ago a couple of fellows came up here to look things over, prospectors, you know. They came up here in the summer, and built themselves a little cabin, and got all rigged up for the winter. They sank a few shafts, and everything went all right for months. Then one of them had an accident. He got worse as the days went by, and his partner saw that he would have to get help, and get it quick, to save him. There was a doctor a hundred miles away, but their two dogs were gone -strayed off and been eaten by the wolves, probably. It happens every once in a while. There was the unbroken snow between them. And it was right in the middle of a cold snap. He might have let the fellow die-why not? Well, he didn't. He covered the poor fellow with everything that would hold warmth, and hit out into the night alone. That was the only chance, and he took it. This fellow-we'll call him Cameron-put on his snowshoes and struck out over the hills. He told me how it seemed. The auroras flared in the starry sky, and the moon shone down fiercely in the utter cold, and the wolves howled all around him. I know what it's like, because I've been through the mill myself. Well, he made it somehow across the divide, and came to the cabin of another prospector, over on the Squaw. PAGE SIXTEEN

Page 21 text:

HAIL AND GODSPEED. HAIL-guide, instructor, elder brother, friend! VVe, starting with the untried arms of youth, Bearing our yet unblazoned shields to war Amid the grim realities of life, Salute thee, who hast laid earth's armor by. VVe bid thee Hail!-we do not say Farewell. ln that Great Power, Which Was, Is and Shalt VVe all do live and move and have our being. It matters not which side the veil called death Our life continues. 'Tis the self-same life. In all the boundless universe of God There no Farewell. Thou art but gone before Into another grade of that Great School VVherein, throughout the ages, every soul VVorks out the Course the Principal hath set. Therefore, for thee, we hail with joyful hearts A larger sphere of usefulness and life. In due time we shall follow in thy steps, And so we chant no solemn requiem, But these few heartfelt words of comrade cheer We give thee as thou goest on thy way Upon the Great Adventure waiting all: Ilail and Gosspeed, O brother on The Path! Fzzring the Light, press ever on and on. Our lips abjure that mournful word Farewell, And say Until Tomorrozu! Be, PAG Fl FIFTEICN



Page 23 text:

Men are big-hearted up here. In about half an hour the prospector took the back-trail over the hills, and Cameron, with the other's dog-team, went careening down the dim trail to Lindeman. At every cabin he grabbed a fresh team and plunged on in this grim race with death across the snows. He made that hundred miles in two days-a third of it on foot. No other man could have endured the strain that he did, and held out. He had to build a fire under that little town to wake it up. But he did it. That doctor was a man. He was one of those priceless gems that make the world better to live in. He went. The miner uncrossed his legs with a sigh, laid aside his pipe, and resumed, after a moment: Well, that blizzard was just about the worst in years. It blew like sixty, and it was raw, damp and cold. Those blizzards are bad. You can't see ahead, nor behind, nor anywhere. The driving snow stings like need.les. The wind leaps at you in savage gusts, and the trail is gone and a man feels like lying down on the job, and yet these men struggled through it all, and got ahead. They never knew how they kept the trail, or how they held on through the nightmare. Yet Cameron was always somewhere out there ahead, leaning into the storm and stumbling on in the lead. The man was a miracle of endur- ance. They nearly had to tie him on to make him ride. Finally the storm let up, and they went faster than ever. At every cabin there was a fresh dog-team waiting, and they switched them all relent- lessly. Well, it was a wonderful race. These men played a desperate hand in the big game against the North, and they played it big. The thing they did was epic. It was a big thing in a land where big things look small. They stopped for nothingg and went through everything: and over everything. Just about twenty-six hours after they started they were back in the valley where the cabin stood. Cameron was staggering now-two hundred miles in three days, over seventy of them on foot, with maybe six hours of sleep- think of it! And yet on this home stretch he had gotten off the sled and was struggling on somehow out there in front of men who were half-dead themselves. They say the skin was drawn tight across his cheeks, and his eyes had sunk way back in their sockets. His strength had gone long ago, and he was going ahead simply on his iron will. The thing was magnificent. Pretty soon they broke into the clearing, and there was the cabin, with smoke coming out of the chimney. That other prospector was there. Cameron reached it first. He threw open the door and stood swaying by the bedsidle, looking at a wan face there. It smiled. Wlrat relief must have come out on poor Cameron's haggard face! 'l'm here, pard.' he said simply, and dropped there beside the bunk. The grizzled miner ceased, lost in reflection. Well, he roused himself at last, Cameron won the race, and they saved them both. That's all there is to the yarn. There was a pause. The fire leaped and flared among the fresh wood. flinging new light abroad. ' ls that true? asked the young man after a moment. All. replied the other. All Every word of it. There are strange things done in the midnight sun, By the men who moil for gold: And the Arctic trails have their secret tales, That a magic world unfold, quoth he. The youngster's eyes were fixed absently upon the flames. PAGE SIC VENTEEN Q . .4 iii I1 'f A ix, I rr fn

Suggestions in the Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) collection:

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Lincoln High School - Totem Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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