Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA)
- Class of 1917
Page 1 of 136
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1917 volume:
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fl x IIX -1 , 'x V I I X ' 1 1-fn ff T -if w i I J F .H .X- I I Y A r' . ff X U - If N K A ,, X' PN L ,fl U Y V x v ,. N l s 1 v l w x 3 , W x 1 4x 1, N I X. X W . X ' 1 0 M, YH 5 :X ,, ,f .',, , fu-9 f ' . HV' .1 A ,ltjl 1 .rv A. ,J A . ,I J. 4 n x f N f 1-L ,lr I --L,,,,.s rf . 417, 4, ,X , , vx fu X' Nx . '35 3 ff. f JI The LOWELL December l9l7 fi X 'i L - Q-gs -'-' ' 3325 ' --I- PURLISHED SIEMI-ANN'UAI.I.Y BY THE STUDENTS OF LOWELL HIGH. SCHOOT SAN FRANCISCO, 'C-Xl.. Gln Qbur Engal anh liatriniir Qlnxnpaninnn anim 3'Haru1tg Ahuinnrs mlm hmm an unnrltinhlg HPI uaihv their lifzfa mnrk tn inin 1132 rnlnra Uhr Clllzwn nf Errvmher 1517 hmm in Igiglgwi 25122111 anh Iynnnr Bchiratr this Enola Mu Y 1, if x FACULTY MEMBERS MR. ITRAN Ii NORTON ........... MR. FRANCIS ll. CROFTS...Vice-I?1'incipaI ancl Head of Mathenmties MISS ANNIE G. DUFFY ................... ......,, Head of' English NIR. HI. P. XOURSE. .... ...I-lead of Classical I-angu:1gfe MISS M. M. COX ....... ..,. I -Ieacl of Modern Language M R. T. A. SMITI-I ,....... MR. A. KI.. CLEGI-IORN.... . . . . . ..Iilea1I of Science . .Head of I'Iistory .. . .Head of Drawing . ..I'1'incipal Uepartni ent 'Department IJCIJZIFUIICIII Department Department l3e1Jartn1enL Ilepartln en t MR. 1. J. SCI--IMIT .,....... Miss ELSIE Eowmifxn ....... MR. if. W. ROCKHOED .......... MR. CHARLES C. DAN1foR'rn.. MR. A. 1.. 3lcCARTY ..........., . M ISS MISS I-I AR R I ICT W' Il LC.lfI ......... FRANCES I-IODGK I NSON. MR.. FRANK ll. TUCKER ....... . MR. GEORGE GARTON ..... MISS Ii. M. INIARTINE .... lvl R. CHARLES VVALS H ....... MISS MR. MISS MISS MR. M ISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS M ISS M. D. BARRY ..,........... LEROY I-I. STEPHENS .... ANNIE N ICHOLSON . . .. EDITI-1 FENCE ...,... AARON ALTMAN ..,, . HELIZN o'n.Lx1-1.EY .... M. MAHR ,............ M. '11 MORRIN ......... NEAL HENDERSON ...... AX N 1 E RAR R IZTT ........, GERTRUDE C. IIIZCKIIA M. . . ,. MISS H EIQEN PXPIFIN ...,..,..... MR. VVILLARD NORTON ........ MR. T. I-I. RI-IODES ....... MISS A. II. HUNT .....,. .. NIR. GEORGE E. NUNN .... MR. A. J. NEXNKIAN .....,... .. MR.. C. VI-'. FENDER ........... MR. FREDERICK XIV. KOCH... NIR. A. XV. ,IOI-INS ............... . MR, I'. Rl. l7URSl ......... MR. CJILORGE KAST. ...... .. MR. A. J. N. ROBERTSON ...... . MRS MISS NORMAN DUXRURY ,.... . FLORENCE IQAYANAGI-I. MR.. IV. A. VARRELMAN ...... MISS CONSTANCE R. KEOI--IAN MISS CLARA NENVIIOUSIE ........ M R. COURTNIZY S. OVERIN . . .. . . .. .....lX'IatI1emat1es ...Nlalln-nmtics ............IX'I2llIIlC'I'I'lI-IIICS .........................Rl2I.l'IlClllIlllCS Classical I.anguagc-s and Mallienuaties . . . ............ .... C Iassicznl Languages . . . .Classical Imnguagcs . .. ...... Classical Idanguages .. . . . .. . . , .. . ,Classical I.1ll'lg'll2I.QCS . . . . Classical Languages and English .. . . . .. ... . . . .Morlcrn Languages ..........................G'Cl'l1l2ll! .Moflern Languages and Englisli ........ . .. ..Gernmn and Iinglisli ....Drawin,fz .. ..lTJl'ZlXN'I1'lg' ... Iinplisli ...Iinglisli .............lSI'IgliSl1 . .......,...... En glisll ...History and English ....Classieal l.2ll1g1,12lgE9 ... . Moclcrn Languages .............IrIistory .. . ............ History ..,...................I'Iistory . . . . . I-Iistory and Economics .......Science ...Science ...Science . . .Science ...Science ...Science ...Science ...Science .....Science . ........... . ................ Music .-.Director of Rlzysical Education . . .,DI1'CCff1l' ol Physical Education X Qs 6 -' :ll P z: K ES? is 0 Z. bf X ZX! + SFYLIOT R Tl RNLR BRKNCFS 9 I OV lfl T IOHN f0NYO11X FIJYK XRD I XCKQON , 1 1 14- u -4 1- V1 if ,N .- .U. L 'JL - v -.V - f , - A - A' -..u 11 J,'.- . -.- . L 7- f 4 Zvi! s X Z7 27-23-52- ,Q 9' KESWHUHU Q'- . J ' K 'wax ff-N QQ f X XX '-N X E515 2 DJ f 'HW x H' w: J O ' S xx H 75- J' X , : , , A Y Q. ' ' ' YJ f E XT - , K D '-. + x X 1 R ,Q . N g-'S X 9 SWS X aw NORMAN DIE l:ZAC1'1 ....... MARGUERITIC RUTTIELL R0l.I.A H ESS ......,.,... . ALFRED RALS-ON ...... OTTRINGIEN STRAUB ,. EDXNA RD JAC KSU N ...... RUTH T'ENNTZIfE:X'1'HER LEONARD EDLEMAN ., ARTHUR IX-'IATI'-IEXFVS .... GERALD VILLAIN .... june 1920. December 1919. 9 ..-.President Vice-President ... . .Scxcrclary ... ..'1'reasurcr Rcwprcsuntntivu ... . . Prcsinlcnt XfiCC-IJI'CSidCl1lL .... . Secretary . . . . .'l'1'c:ms1.1x'c-1' Representative ff l, 4 I1 : ,, 5 z ,Liv at ,:: r , WM uullll I -Q 'Q I T 551 ,xW E Q I 5' E n.: .., 1 .. 2 , ut, u . 'JG 18 1 D f '. , - if ILP' NS ' ' June 1919. MERRILL MGRSISI'IIiAD .. ....,....,.. ........ I 'rcsirlcnt Rl IR IA M TROVX- BRI IJGE ... ,... Vive-Tf1'CSi1l1f11i EARL TRE.-XDNVELL .... ...,.,.. S ccrctafy RAALPH CAHN .,,,,,,, ......... ' l.1l'CIlSLl1'LTI' l.f,7'l'OX X-VEl-I,S ....,. ... .......... .... T Qcprcsc11tz11ix'c December 1918. ' JOHN CONNOLLY ..... ........ ........, .......... I J 1 'csiclc-nt SUSAIKEl,l.l3I MOSHER .,... XfviL'C'Pl'CSiflCllt MARION CUNHA ..... ...... S ecretzwy VICTOR SALSA-IAN .. ........ rFI'CElSlll'Cl' IiYIil.YN DE LOYG .. ,.... Representative 1 jf ,- ' 1 D X X X af- 6 xx I 3 SYN -A , - f f- X x fs- f xwflyrl C . 'A 'M X 1 ' X X K 3 f June 1918. FRAVNCIES STOXN liLL ............ ..,.. I 'resident SORRITA COXVIZR Y ,,,,,. Sgmgefm-y HOU INGRAM .......,.... , ......... Treasurer' ,LOUISE BRESLAUER .... ,.,............. ..., R e 1Jx'0sex1i:1it'vc' December 1917. SEYMOUR TURNER .. .......... . .... ,,,,,,.,,, I 1-Qgidcnp NIILDRED HOX-YE .... Vice-President R. TRAUTNER .. ...... Secrclnrv .-1. Bmmlclclz .. ,,,,,,,, 'I-,.mWQ. H. NOLAN ..... .... .... R c prcscntatix'c lil GRADUATIN G CLASS OF DECEMBER l9l 7 ADELE ARATA ENOLA ISADGER OL l. VE BROOKI N G j'L'DI'I'H CAMPBELL GRACE CUTHBERTSON HELEN EAKIN S :X RA H ELLIS I! ERG G ENEVIEV E I3'LEISCI4I.M.-KN M URIEL If ULTON MARIE GREEN ,RAMONA HAYES NIILDRED HONVE RAE HYMSON DOROTHY LELAND AILEEN MAC LYMONT KI.-XRY BICISRIDE IRENE MCCARTI-IV :XLICE NCCA W .XDEL HEI D MQJGOIVAN MERIEL MANSEIELD ELEANOR OSIIORN YERA PENNINGTON CECILIA RUIEURY RATI-IRYN STONE R EVA S UGARMAN DOROTHY ULIXIAN EMILIE VVINDELE SADIE ZEDERMAN JOHN I-I. ANKELE, IR. FREDERICK RAI-ILS .'XR'I'HUR ISOERICKE LESLIE ISOTTOMLEY N ATHA N I EL IRR AU ER .XNT HONY CLIN IIA GEORGE DAWSON EDNVIN ITRIEDIYIAN LLOYD FRONK' HUGH FULLERTON CHARLES .-X. GATES GEORGE GERDES VHILII' S. GIQTTINGS JQIIN HIXGIS R I CH A R D H ARM S G EORG E HI I3 I! ETT ARTI-I'L'.R KQXIIN IRXVIN LEO KAUFIXIAN XVALTER KENNEDY R ALPII R EI.'II'AR'1' LAWRENCE RINSPEL MILTON KLEIN ROBERT LEVY OMVND LILLEL5XND TEYIS I'.XI,'I. 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Club 11 I Reading Llnb lb Cfulcls I PHILIP S GITTINGS MARIE GREEN Rcfxdlng Club 16 1 11 mg Club lb C I0 xh lf' Cn s lmY Com !l'll Lew 16' qNVIlI1lllIll Pluln RICHARD HARNIS Qlamp Plull llul xx si 7 GEORGE HIBBETT Liu.: 1 Li1m.1e Blu: I ack I lnlvrclxsz- Sulynnung linumlaie Baseball Iulenhss 16 B15 cr. 11.11 Ilndm 11 l1 Bmlullmfnll Intelclasb lm 0 ll Bus ulbull 'T'e-.im Q Lplam 110 D Bdskntb Lll Ielm 11 Mm 'mgox 110 lb I2 xsllctlull lr- n Imluol Bdsehxll In Pl C1155 16 L Il8.l11D1lJl'lhI1lI'1 :mn Ru. CIOSH lf IIanc'Ih1Illn claims lmu I0 IDI 16 lf'g13?2L.,, , XXX J, F0 I u ,Pg Q R., iq W ' I til Q, HIFI:-b Www I ?6b Puavep A Gong sm-ag :XX X if .1- Exif ff' MARIE , TQ Y SCI-1001. A 'H R XNXXN UUUKJ I D,-9 X W 1.102 1. N ' X 3' ui V X 's A X if A MHEADIPIAY pu-rcu HES AFRAID HELL AE X S r-'ns-raked YQ Fofz A GERMAN sp-r -I X X4 HOT do 5 Q' Ncxpole ns Candles CI-sewmo cha :+Qw+ig EVER,' THING OUQ S 552.1 f. LT yl 1. 54, ln. N if, 'Www f 4 1.53 ,HI fb I, ' V , hz nl' I .1 11, 1 '15, jpg V. A 'I Q - 5 -:E - 5 '1r, '16, '17. 1 ' 2 s Q .sq . J. - ., I, 9 he ff '- sg .J X Q .E 1 - . - N, ,gh 75 RN N. X I f x XI' . Q' . , ff Q I 5 , Lg ' , I . 4'f:'H, 1 uv fix 55? - ' HER ., :,1.'E1!,'Fff al , 'fzitx'-' -Sz? .-1' lf f ' . ' T: DQ- ' -' L.1' f ' '. 'ug 111 X N 'CII ' :J 1' 'l:' . I - , nn, ' .gf X 'S t ' x: . ' 'g ,. 5 ff- v . -- 0 113ff5?5if3b- -53:13 -5 ' 'sal in. Q 11 'E- fi ty N Q mi.sl2.2LfA, ' .x.-':4:'gQj2j , . ' ,- 'lil . A ' Q-JS, '1,. ' x A ,, 5-A 2. SR B T I -1:52 1 W-1 U' 1 -- I ,-1-g fem 1 Tri ' I1-I, '15, 'llig '1'l'fI'Ii , - N ' ', ti, : '14, '15, '1G: X .' ' - '1.5,'17g I 31513. 1 .215-Milf' Q Sum '16, '17: 12 - 1. , G4-1---1 5 ' '1T2 'Tl' ' ' L -I . Q: Ta 'igf:- X,-q f'. l.- . J, -'s -.al '1 w 'l xx '17: ,, ' ' ' 2: In- 'Z-' ' i , . 5 fl ., P. -.. ,,,. P. I. E. Trzufli Te 'lil -rl ,' .' ','Z -,' 2 - Q . - I.-. : '. '14: Trafxk A, 2'- g' ' ' -ll I 14. NIILDRED HOWE Reanding Club '16. 'l,'i: Swimming 'JGC Cast Girls' Rally 'lllg Cast of Mrs. Coulson's Daughter '17: Cast. Girls' Jinx '16, '1'T: Cust of All in A F0g '162 Cast of His M0061 'YViI?e '1'I: Girls' Jinx Committee '17: Vice-President Dec. TI: L Council. RA E HY M SON Gmmluutc- ln 5'E+Ell'SI Runflin: Club '17. Ow- LA- LA- .i T, Q B fi ,ff FRN X I 41 9 - 9: J ,L K Jammu HB . L f ad. A I 5'0ME A Jvvofouf ef? Li Gglv fl , ,, , vo' f- aw df XX 73 X X . . n - Egluh' Easel -mm , 1- Qhxey do N16 N 'E ' -f giibag 13 2:-:sf - I :UQ I ni ,ffx OVJING TO Tug ' N,C.L. I wn..1. ARTHUR J. KAHN 171 BE FORCED -ro . , . CHA?-G2 A1070 T1.1ek:1l1l1F Cllll: Iriter-ronrn COMMISSION rue ' -: .ass l't'i1SlIl'P!' -, FRGM '15: Class Secretary 'lt': Cast nf All in a Fog 'llag NQWON' Cast if His Moda-I Xvifcf' Q I 'f2ILkJ,jf. 1'-1 n-.Af-1 '17: Saff Squirrel Fund gh -xii' 1 ff ' 'jlit F'rcslmmn Row-ptiun X Cmnumittcee '1.'T: Reading Cluln '16, 17: Pnltml Ralilmuds .f fl :fi um f Rprsmitntivo '17. L' ' 7 e.,.af.?'Iw Joseph-1 KAUFMANN H Ez- 'XVQ5u'0r of Block LHC ' 1 ,Q 'Fraukl Tnturul:?ss '14, H-ES Ml-195 ,l 4-'l '16, 'TC Trac: 'Penul 'A. ' K X '15. '16, '17: Swimming In- Hu MARK :N i f texicfass Dec-mngarfn' 37: AND 'TS L N At 1 eric suxznver ': . e- N0 , 4 N W5 halxting '16, 717: Rvmlinaz MASIKMALLA cum '1.7: Radio cum fm. e,THE,e .isgiw '16, '17, Vicec-'Presirlent '15, H 5 ' -XNX93. President '16. Seem'eta1'y '16, X,f Iil , N N11 Rnprli-sent:l'fiw: '17: Stump I ' muh wg mking cum 'wa X, X SBFJO1' Hike Comrniltev '1T: -if ' 1 'FEOSSIIIIIE-lll Inter-room 'l'1':'wlc .E rl' Ill! x .1 . . .. '1 3 Raza.: A 0 . .., L-:QM Kseifgl WALTER KENNEDY A Q . - xg 'Vennls 'l'e-am '15. '1,6. 'l7. K xl, A f- A ' 5211 1 sg x , I' . ::l!','L ,' .. . - fr x: 4-ig 17 LAWRENCE KINSPEL Class Repwsentativ-3 '15-I Business SMH' 'l'I1e l.uw1'll '15: Sergeant nf Cadets '163 Glee Club '16, '17: Glow Club RGDr'6sentntivP IT: 01'- clmslr:-A '14, '15, '16, '1.T: De-- lvating Society '11'i: 11'1tv1'r-lass Fuulbull '14, '15. '161 Ir11.PI'- vlmss Swimming: '1lT. RALPH C. KEPHART 'I'1'ux1st'm'n-ll lrnm Missimx 'liz Apfxoinl.--nl lu Anrmpulis. MILTON KLEIN Mvmher L. H. S. OI'l'l1i S4 tra 'l-I, '15, '16, '17 KSN'- retnry '14. Rusinoss Mun- agm- Rem-esenl.aLix'v '15. President '16, RUDl'45'SGI'll:1l- tive '16, Pre-sirlont '17, Re- m'c-sent:.xlivr- '171: Member San Francisc-u High Sc,-lwml f3l'4'IlQSll'il '14. '15, '16, 'IT Prcsfimlvnt '1G. 'ITIS B-lmnlv 1' Luwvll .luzz Bmmd '1'7: Me-'--- lim' nf l'JQc'wl'l1I'm-I' 'IT Sllmrl- ing C0ll1l'1'lill6U. DOROTHY LELAND ROBERT LEVY 'Frau-k 11111--1'l-lass '17lg lm-- huling '16, '1.7i Glee lfilulu '14, lil, '17: .Haiulin Club '1li: President Buys' Glee Club 'ITZ Gloc- Club HCL-Gptiun Comm i twvf '1li: Mm-t1'u1mll1,n n Quartet ll.. H. SJ '16, '1Tg Hiking Club '17, 18 X N I .V , ' - ' WILL , THB ' ruenlc was ro - Pur UP I K WITH THIS X 0? ', lLX,NAFEw fi' yenxns Q f HE CEP ' Annum. 5 gal KEPHARTI ,K us.:-A. ns.cn,eF 'W ' - XX N N- Q he 5 ' Y , T X E a s X. by E xns 4: n -.W H X -1-UT F Q THE'AuD Dvon 1.1:-csQTH' you mr-low Q - . www? gif X X nam. X TH - 1 L A ' H Q A1-gif Midi-3? K wEN HEEL A . USIC PATA LL. 145 eu ar-15 ,,.s Zi ak 'N W- ' Sl I l . . ,lf umm: l.n Q V Q .' - - Agn, ' .A HYXY5 ll 1 1 V m 1 9 1 , 1, ,el .1 1,3911 - Ns . 95 5 ,X 1 .-sx' E J' Bb 0' -N fzlflfl' on JM ' A ' A 54, 1?- w -RXNFL' 'X' .., if 'l?'S5 1 HE WAS TH: ' N MAIN PIINCHEP OMUND LILLELAND AT -I-HE 5vEN,gvQ Q J'1l1l'1f.. Smim lx 'Ie hmm lntu mom 1 PECEPW X me 14 Pcmllnb L,11b I AILEEN MAC LYMONT 1 1nsfe11c-rl 1111111 'I ns Puxkn s 1 mol Gnlx L1 ee Llub 1 SW1111111111, 1 I S H111 1 S 1 1c nh luh 11 11- lntm IVIURIEL NIANSFIELD 1113 JILL Club I 19 CVIHEI um 1 bw mn 111n,., lb SWIFIIIIIIII n 1 s '-I. -J TEVIS MARTIN I111111-. 111te1LI nb-I IIIIS 14 asm tbxll 11 17 Ouhns 16 11 Rqnxmull 1 1VL I1ch4t1 g Stunts QQYIIIIIIIIIGE I I ow ,, Clun 1 II 1 1 LJ Ll Lti 1 tl IK uten S 111111115 IJIIIIIUIILC bf 1 'll 1 VVII1L..GK LIIA Snlull E-m10i.N N lIEl IICt0II1II MARY MCBRIDE 1 11'-, SI'lllIl zb 111 G r - Lxleo Llub I1 A5510 mt I1I111111r1 1 1IJlfI.1111l Glee Cluh 1 'ISL Luis 11x 1 mt Mrw Loulwn '- I IIIDI LI 19 CQx ' 1 N TLIE VN ETEQNAL. 'EQ GS DEUBLEM N381 G- INOW Can I ,755 1 X Qs Ge-I P X b c o rc ..' ran k3oSI'? ll 1 um I S I , N NM VI V 1 11 wen. 1vL.Ef'soLL S Tx Q0 gcgmnukl Is' A Du Lenz uw-.nLAq A rcn oucuq seuo MA LOVE EW rr-Q-s. '1 EES 1-NJ vw N11 an me W X Q99 5' 0.692 nr: A-,SLE A THE ,env- N . 45 g N' J' IMI.. ' r -If '11, 'lsr 11. 1 , lvl- 1 . hal., ' 1 --wi -' 'I '11, .!'- Y g ,112 H - , .,, . ' if A ' I 1 , 9 FQ , fi' fi' '5- Ef 'Q' ' Q, 1 F-51? 18 - if rl-.., - .A ' '. LV.. '9'Nxs f,: 'UI '173 Gi'I,, C'4'1.:s 'F .43 I71 Fc-z'1i'f C ' l', 'ITZ U I' ' .1 ' g '17, ,L 4. -X I Mix B I MI! E pw '- -'- 1 ' X , 1, X11 N - K II 1 1 IXJIII 'EI Vi M Vhl'--Lin I 1 G'-,' f' 1- '16, '1': ' ' ' CI1. 13' , ' T1 ' '- IIlhE535,:, ..11'I I ' T' 1' '.'3 Q' ' ' I lf-1'- - ' w.f :lash '171 Cal.: ulf IIi.' , , ,Wy Muriel Wife '17. ,A ' 6 ' W ...-:- I QI I M1 Lug-Q. 4 A , , 'Pls' '? L' il '14, lu, '4 1 -'AIIJ2 '1'qI4 'F. '.Ig:'1111vl .E 'y--- tra '15, ' , ' 3 A '1..'2 - 11 ' 'Lt' 'l75 V' ' '11 '1-I: f T 'MISL 1 v- ' ' inf' I ' 53 Tr: :I' '14, '15, J '17 ps. F. A. 1,,. fu, 'ma K' I 11' . I 6, IT '.'-r fmt Z 'ITN la ' -' C ' H 'ITL L. I-I. S. S. A, :'L:1':- X, I f f., 'up '-r,1 L 1 I-1 ' I ., Pg'-'gg 'fa '24 o R '17, Qld! N, g V V- - , Tw T011 Club 'Hg ' I 1 '2 L CI1 'Hp C5ll1?'EI Klfluh 'iii 1,- ,i IJ' . . pw '15, 'II62 ' . :.a: .X ':. '151 ,J. If ,Q A. ,Nw X L,z T .TI .' '15, '1f'Z Cz- of ' ' J co f 'ez ff-1 '17, IRENE MCCAFITHY Reading Club '1'7g Girls' Glue Club 'Hg llelmtlng S41- ciety '16: Cast ol' Girls' Jinx '17, ALICE NICCAW 'l'runsfer1'cfl from Miss 1:lamlin's '1.5g Rezuling' Club '1G: Swimming '16: Cust ol' Our Aunt Frmn Califor- nia '16: Cast of Girls .Iinx '16, '173 Cast of His Modal Wife- '17g Red Cross '17. ADELHEID H. MCGOWAN Girls' Gln-cs Club 'l-1. '15. '16. '17: Assistant Lib1'uri:-in '15: Business llllunzagrm' '163 Represenlutivc '17: Rr-ruling Club '16, '17: Cast: Gl1'ls' Rally '1G: Mrs, Coulsnn's Ddl.lg!1tE'l',' 'l7Z Basliellnnll Iriteruluss 15: SVVll'l1llTlllQ' Club 'ITQ Class Girls' .Mb- lellre Manage-1' '15, ARTHUR NIOLINARI l'LfflllLU.72i1l In leruluss 'l Al: 'lfvnnis Intm-vlzass '15, '1h: 'l'mc-li lntvrvlanss '17, SQA K 1 J 7' X X Q X X ,IWW Oocf, X l lensw' Ulf. 1 S' ' 1 W K' ' will 'Mx rfb xxx 'fxff az UJHIS f N ly T0 THE Baan 5 N F HER Q Q :,Bf?7' our fue-i-WR 5 m -1 1 J'T'0P THEQEj ,Rib X, X vw-usfvzvfq - NEI.-T0 Q 5' L Namefs I ffffvrvafvsg, : 1 5.-.-f-1' lf. 'Y ' ng.-.nsrfern-.irq mn mn-r ' ff X Nunn Sauk A , -'Qi' ofu- :KN 'SH TEACH 551. . e OUT 7' X ' Nyffnnm x 'X Xiu A X' A , ' f' N b f A 1-,L Q ' S? . A he loolcS 1-le-ce I 'rv I bu4: he? :nw harm lC'55 I N 'X x FN 114 Q Z an . :Self J G' B V? LENQME A HAND, WILLM mv: n - -A ' .Sf V- Jn I, S ll 1- - S wi XWI, ALEX MULGARDT fg. Y x YQ! - 1rl+'ouEIu1ll lnterulass 'l -1. 'ik Q Nm N E Um: Tennis Im-1'c-las: '1f'g Q K - . 'Fug Rowing Club 'lag lfzrst rif QRXWNH, Qwfinw School lvlistw-SS 'ITJ Cust 'A' . ','jx, Of His IVIUCINI Xlfifef' 'ITZ NSS? , L Sevongl 'l'f-.-z1xx'z Football 'l7, - Captain '17. F K - X 35 20 ALLEN NEWHOFF fefuu nf 1 1 131011511111 P P I D 'Pew Ian. mm 14 lruk Intexchss 1 Ruse xx Inn xclaas P'u-.kcthall IXIILICIHQS bWlll1llll1'lg' 1ntr.14l'u-.s V LL-lwtball 100 ll: I3n'sIntly1ll 170 lb Semm Du Cmmmttnc All it S UU 1 f smtlnll Ps, am 'I H u mu 14 Fneshmm Intex 11711111 T1 ML 14 HAMILTON W NOLAN C1154 Repxesentltne 1 beuctmx Re-1d1ng Cl 1h 1 .Prmk Intnclflss 14 131 e Jl u exclass 1' no bll Intmclaqs 16 1 bu on: Footbwll IGIIT1 1 un 1 1191111111 .Inn n s Intnxclws 17 LWVVIIIL mint, Iutem clash. 17 hu I 5 1 Uweuc ms 119 RL.-uhng Lluh Ib 7 'il no Club 7 1.1 xdu L L 1 S L GERALD OCONNOR I1 'l'I'lSlGl1Lil nom bt I ULIB Bl'-me-hall 1nLmulx:.s ll V 11 B wkellmll ln ll L lss 4 Buss m 'loam 11 100 lb Bxskuthxll Q hunpionsluxp lemx 110 lb B'1skLLb'1lI le un 1 uh Ixltelclnr. 1 umm rack 1 6.111521 A thle-tu M U1 lg..u VINCENT O CONNOR lx msturcd fmm St 1 mx hue ljaselrall lnte-ul ws ll ll B lblxetlr LII Intel 1. uv- 1-I 1 SWIIII ming lllluulaw lt Bw-koi lynn 14 L plonsllip BAQ1-:L U1 all lr. un 11.1.c.th lll upL1m X 5 an V bk: Ibull lLll11 7 lun ll ck ' l L mln I or X ELEANOR S OSBORN llll'-I-LIIEA1 from Mxss mlm S 1 G 1 11 bum an x IILQI tLl'lL 17 -XQc0mp1nIst R9ll11Ilg Lluh Vlu PIESILIEIH 17 NNNIIU mmg Llub lf' lnluul as Qxm 1 M 1 1 G1 un 1 lmxtm .squlxu-,l Fowl u tm Squnxpl Fund -wswtmnl Guls Iowull It Xssmiule Ldltor 11 bturi mg, lmmmttoc Llxsk Pnstu Staff L Ilnx Lum nn eo lb 14 bemm Uv fxllhklllllltlt 11 Biwlut bun DA gn Du nmbu 17 hulheq Commuter- v Blank I Pflllw LOIHI'I11l.tLL 1 Rnd Lmsq Ixnxfhnp, 11 Lum: of qu pt Loumxl 71 C ck :- ,juu:t:2Zv75JFa Wir fe? 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T, Hr- .Ky f -I sg ' '1.7i Captz' '172 5X't T X C 711' . u-. -.,, ' 'I lu: ...AJ-, - K: I-:- mi - '--A 'ITL QS-Wm E S- Q ' - , v. ., . -. , -V - -2, - , 1 . . . . , . . g . .x. X - X ., 5 L, T , F1 ,v-g 1 rl V- Y I l - , 3, 1.10: , - -Eg N .tt , .. W. :V :, .ki I A - .. .1 - '17s aj- . -- J . r . xkky' 2 Q 1 -3 -1 -M ' fly.. g -,4. QM, . ' ' H J .4 ..' i A ' ' '73 -e, 'f'1.T. ' ' f ' : HH: L Hi . ..L..: , I. VERA PENNINGTON BRSliC'tl.J2ll1 Team '14, '15g 1-Zasketha-all Interc-la-rss '14, LB: XX'f9m'er of Block L I Swimming Interceluss 'l 6: lVezu'9r of Class Nunxerals: Swinmnhrxg' Club '163 Class Viv-v-I z'esirll--nL '16: llc-aflizmg Clnh '16. '17: De-lmlimz Club '16, 'Viz Rv-rl Cross '17, HAROLD REAMES 'l'1'z1nSfcl'rE-d from Fro- mcmt High School. C1:1lal:111d. '14:i: Radio Club '16, 'lT fs!-'f'l'6'lll1'Y T751 Czulels 'lik IT: S01'gi'l.lllf'MEl.i1J1' '1T. GRAYSON L. ROGERS 'l'!'E1C'k l'l'lf,Gfl'C'lil.SS' 163 Busw- hull 111t01'f-lass 'lfig Glu-0 Clulv '16, 'l7: 'l'Q-mais I'1tv--r- r-l-of-1 'IT LEO ROTH 'l'1'unsFe'11'1'vsl fx'a'm'1 Lllf-li in lim-u-111lJm' '16g Footlml1Team 'l7: Assistant, Cafeteria Mau- ngor '17g Block l. Rally Cmnxnitlelg '17: YVlI'l,L!'QLl L :mrl Scrnll: Ch2ll1l'l'11illl Reel Crueas Crm'nnitteQ. f PJ l --' ' MLS ffi 'N . S- - e yi ' f- , 4. V fx? V ,N. x ,xx ' rkj Q A DONT , Aka 1.0014 PM 'G-' Xfifixq . B 'Go-v-rv G-rv ..4r 5 3- ' 1 fl cu A ,kg , ' ' , uv 4 , Wx X hx xv AK .tx-X X 3-:r. 5 HER?-fe U , N -5 2 E L P I 5 AT- ten - sh vnl 'POKE ou -r YOQE dw I5-If A M S5 if f f,.,.,l.m ' L x ip .f.1.... NQNX N- fs' eer 13 'QWAYI X -f IMGEWIIW mLOOK K X' Lucey?-. . 7'A5 U5 l 11 WWE 0 'X : , Q- Y AQ AY ,Tix AANDI1- TOIVIE Fx N x41...' ll DONT A A ' ' BE , gf -li 55 HW Y R W lm! X f G CX 'Jw Q l XKCX N.. SHE5 ASA , CELIA Ruaunv R L l T1 .-rival '- H 1l'- , ' A' l gnzllgilxifll?Lg3cl2Bu!:lq xxxx fgil Xl '. T., '51 Hee ' ' Tu .. vi- + '1m:. '1'7: Gfl-ls' glifffgngna, '17. SLRSSJ cm- N Vu f I X :-J a ww. . ,J Xi , I l 22 WALTER SCHAFFER S. F. A.. L. Rep1'ese11tz1- '1. 16. 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Db I 11151111 IS N 1rI I XX L 73 G00'6v 111 IGSKIN f X X f X CX t UHF! 3 'iw X 1--w 11,-ji-oh' BOY Xuows xX 111c1LLev xx W xXx HES R PRETTY X noon nmv '95 fumwlr 1 WHAT WOULD THE 'JAZZ BAND 1 15 ws-rHou-r Ugg. Q-. TNNWE Q, vf QS A9- nh um ' KX XXS, XTQ xx W 4 X A fa n1.., SNESW11 W' EJ g N TNT-'EEES 5 ING' 0fYI.OOkE AT THE CSAMFS al-.EK P1-cl-ly geek HVKER X. 9 fx .3 I you MAY?-'F ' X ' WHEN READY GRID1-E WHO MQW! sur THAT srone sm:-ws P01 may ax-one ww Xu X V 1 Q11 iii N SX M ,L . N 1111 ' . P 1 1 X ' : 1 . '15, '16, , - ' 4. K.. H- , W .211 A -1-.. gf'-111 'X 5' J ,V K , .' ,1 : H? Q- . 1 X, 711.-Q IES, 1, '75 ..1'. -1 1 ' 1 My :U- Q N:-'1 1-1 TIG: Ca- f., 53 I1f0 f C.. Q2 gf, - 4.11111 ' fr u, 1 2 T- 1- . ' 1. . fr -rw H11 '3' , HQ- Ng 51.5 .1.,1Lw V. ,A ., 117. X 3 . IST' '.: 1131- x C -'Nfl :2'e' ' '- - T13 -Tvi S 1.1'l T. if ' 1. 12' H -'RW f a.?9 in 31,5 X 1 31, lf VIN X I 16 Q3 xx I H, , H , . x ,m. ' If..11' ,.'.,:'- 3 1 nic: H1--1 '11s: 1 -- M -lass '1f', l7. ' -. .X .' :ix 'N . x- 1' J 11 E f b 4 U-:1:.' Q I 12-,1 '-1 ,fzz .QR Xe ' PFI1: 'TG 17' f :f fth i11 1 N 5'1 'X . ' . ,H .eh 11- X -111: , f ... '-H 4 xx xt ix XX .H . X iv ge .. A L E X . .I ,.1 . L ' , 7' X511 . U . 1' 57 - - . NN . 'CX . .. 30,-Y, , ,Hi Rea C1113 'ITQ .1 'si .51 Q, 111 . 2 ,-:: I 1 1 ' 'X -. . ' Xxx' U wp. - mg ? '. V '-7,155 IQE ' V .f F .Q-7 'NN X ' YT: - .N 1.1 t 17- ', 3 5.111 ,l'1.' ,- 1 L 'e 'Sp : ' fn' f 3 TID ' 1 '15 11' '. ' '1 Sr, , 'ng . . yin. L Q 4. .. 1 It ,. .mg W 1, ,, -1:4 G' 1 .Y - 1- A D, .11 . 'IG. '1T1, v- Cub '16, ' 51-Q1 f' CL '17Z .Sta 1142311 '17: inig. M 1 11s..1,1 L91 Cas. 'wi ..ff' .1 A zz Q 'I P' 1. XA TH! ',.,1 'uf 1 ' 'Z .h 1 X i ::. ff3 '16, M1111 ' , 1 U- '16, 'xx Q 111 1 3 ,' .- 1 1 ff 1 Ill, 1,5 '17, ,i,. g1'm Li 1. 11 tl 1 A -4- '-'F 1 '. '17g 1.- s11 1: '17, '-H'1- 111 11' if'1. ALEXANDER SCHWARTZ REVA SUGARMAN FRANK SUTLIFFE Art Staff The Lowell '14, Irmimwlnss 'l-l: Glne Club 1'l': CQllH.l'tEt '17. R. K. TRAUTNEF1 Class Seumtawy '17g De-- lauting Sm.-iety 'l.6, '17: 1-liking Club '17, Reading Club '17: Orr:l1usLx-al. '16, 173 Stamp Club '14: Standing Lfomnlitteu 1JelJzLtil1g Society '17, Vice-I-'resident '17, Dul- egfite to Suu Frruwlsco Du- llalingg l.ea.gue: '173 Wfiuner nf Phelan Cup '1.T: Cadets- Sl'Zl','g'G3El11l. '16, Lieutenant '17, Rillv Club '16, 'l7: Sucr- rvlary Hiking Club '17. CHRIS TROWBRIDGE L. H. S. S. A. President '17, 'l'i'zu:k TEELUI LL, '15, '16, '17-Captairl '17, Foot- ball Second Team '16, '17, Travk Iuterclass 'LL '15, 'lfig liziseball lnterclass '15, '16, Tennis luterclzlss '15: Row- ing Club '15, L0well's Red Cross Unit '17: Reading' Clulgx '15, 'llig Custodian uf the Trnpliies 'l'1: Cast of 'l'lxe School Mistress '1,7g Cust of The Lion and tlw Mouse- 'lT: Cast of His Model YVife '1T: Fresh- n'm.n Reception Cunnmiltee '1T: VVG-arm' Circ-le L,gWf:u.r- er Blovk L: YViug'c-cl I.. amd Scroll S0cisi-ty. 24 x I 7 'K all 4 .. 'W Q- -. 1:-Na p, liggf' -11,123.3 Q, X ,Ns , ' P is 1 fi L N 10 -0 K I ,Xf- rl 1 ffl K ll M 13 D L Efs- l'275QN ' XXX, SEE! ' X2 lull C Wx . 'Wu'- an aw ul X' - -:me l' - X X 'N 5- + L' Q, , . ' 5.9 is l S ' ' 2,5 .R . : ' hm , '- Hrs- .lg -' 'N xi' C Q - -.zff 'V ' - N.--:.-: I , , f' 4 Zn,-2.1 , 1 ,,,,44',--.-IJ-129' , -'AM 'LH-'i'AsT . nance Hoff-fn. ' ruurs. I L'-. r-1-. 3'-:ws -fi! LL . X513 , 1' ' 'Q A STIFF .X CDLLAQ 3 'rua' ' .-lxklp mc. .3 1 .1- Q. 'Lili x cl- '1,,x ix J J l , X ll l 4 ,, WQN' F l ' SQL l x l 'Z L no if +Q l ... ,, , 1 an. . N Dark ut. 5 I ' li- Y 0 ,G jx for mslaneq 1' f - 'wg 5 . ' f , , l 1 5 'gzrfrvlv L r ' 3 I m J: J yn f V 1 No J 'emo . . :JAY 'fV FS YN aw EfF:'fs1A 'Q I N!! i XXNX E 'bf' n Q xx n L' Cl- A SX l X .f..r-'Li - - FET ll' Wal 'X , - N ,gw ,MQ-M 1, ,N Q A Q. . af . . ix 'A A S0 f ' .... 1 '- H ' lw,1,lj,ll pa B M--Q.. Q. , ,mgjmk .fr K 'R ul! ff' '- 5 55- H 5' , 1- Q E x F' T R l . C HAROLD TFIUMPOUR SEYMOUR TURNER lhy.,h Senlox PlL9ld1lll 17 xthlc tu Maumgex 14 bt iff Equine! Fund lx 1 1 Inlexd 1'-15 ll lpnms lntu 1 Q I 6.111115 'lm lC'.1pl un 1 Rc idlllg, Cluh 143 IiLllIISf'l1 1 no 1 Indnm Pfxsn Yl 11 Slumhnts Aff uv- Q mu m tu: nll md Qc los'-. 111 Il 1 1 tum Q nm mittr-C 1 Pxuputx Mun ut IliQ Mnrlel Vxfn DOROTHY ULMAN s ll J lf' Swlm mmf., 11 Intmc l xxx Pullm, Clm u mm get Lion 'N ux X nt Fmm C1 n ml N 11: K uulsun Q D1uy.,hto1 hs Nlmlc 'life mls x Class Svllldlflg, I nmmlltf-c Lzn Q lmx C mmm wr Assmnle I dum L Lovscll 11 Vaaiwtlnt lalztm Squlnel Food ll Xsfsiwi 'm Edltm S uulrl loud 17 Edxtm H urpm Numhm 1'hL Loud! 17 'md 'Nnclllcw imc X un N mher l Counul Claw Uxsimun 1 GEORGE F WASCERWITZ nu xx Club 1? T-Ixwco lrxll Inicn 1 msg 1 Im'-.1111 Sk nf ze own bunny.. Sawietx B l.SCb'1u Intel flask 1 dltlllllil 'wt UT Ihe- Imull 1 'wum1n1m,. Int: xrl us CHESTER WEST 25 xxx Ima .66 Q4 Y W, mfr A I A ru 74? XXQ Wffjlls , 9 XX, ti ae' uc 'nfs XX X Qgggrmev, ber: 5'3 3e'f-3fmW'.' X XX sWx :5 'ov' lf? z r s ts qlmugb XM, -2'-wp. ,w I, .N ...tim-'igjjv b Vi X S ,Aa W1 CLASS K Wauk- ,. ,COMF TA Queen YN 'ANXN X- ' WAV' xm wx 1 IAF Af? 'X As 1' E ru. L yu K 7 Inna MY Llxresr Q 'if novel. no TCI FDD 'me emma X1 aE,? 'Lx .a.A1.p GOT VER THE ETEIENGL IGN, No1I ...qv-qg 3 -3-.B 'Eu- -l Q. K 'G Jxgfx E MK , gf 7 ' M - . -sffgx ku ' ' 321' 1 Sw: ff mln K .- -1.2 5.-A ' We H ' 1 wmifw RY, ' ' F41 Al In' 'A A-', , , ': 'Qf1-1- :HW ' .- -Q.. 1.4. 1 HH K ' WW Efmp :ash ' . '5, '1': 1- ,,! '-E X 5 E PWWLQAW WWWFERWG y-Alf A573 . 1331411 1- Sz-fn ii sm-A zu 'LL'-Rel ' A , ,., A C- .1 in 411-2' ': - S A dis ,ac w- .. - V Z. 1 f f fT 1 W - A bf ' 3- 31.4 If .I l'Jel,uutiug' '1-lb, '15, LG: 'l'1-n- N ' mf CII ' DI - Hn PN 'f ':- 17: , 1 In ' f .1. ms. 'wg I-I V , .' ' ' . 'ITC Cust ut' ' ' Q 'R O ' 4 Xl ' Tzlifl '- I-M Qi' - E.-,. '16, 1 .- W -, .,..A,,f:.X- A f , '17, rx: ' -1 ' - . 1-3. YS-' '11, Jin: 'un J N, -1 -N ' - .. ' f I ' f- - a '1 : '1.:' .' ,- 'lt.-2 , - fd: .:': ' D41 ' v I'l1x N N ' 1 r fa .. :if,'.','25.'f' XQ 1 QR ,, - 'J' f Q :Q P 1 ji . I 'zu all .' 'LTI .li 7' ,'.:. .'T. W, 1 - f Cui' :':' ' .3 , ,.l -.i- . ' --2 4 '31 '- SUI' 'I'l L '-:ll '1411'lG- , ,-fE,fM,m 1? 2 4 .Q '15C N -E. ,-k sz E H.. A 4 ,,,. 'uw 5 'lf '16, f V . A Rf, 5, 'walwg V., 4' . r - ,,' ' ' - if g N W' qEE,mf f . 'N Fw. 'v- '- S A is , an N - ,js -, 'U , Lyfx . '- I B . 1 I f x., RAMONA HAYES L 11 mg. Tub 1 11s 11 uc Q I? 1sket11 111 Inte1c1f1f1e. 11 1 BllS1l1L'iS bt 111 Q11 N 011111 1 GWR R011 Clow- st H1 Mmlel YL C ld Hale u 11S C 1111111 A-,s1 111110 ML111l1L1' EMILIE WINDELE 91111115 Llub N1 hatmg ll Ghlb Glu Lulm 1 Htl Lvl 5 I mu 411111111 NLIIIIIIVI ' C' s lx SADIE ZEDEFHVIAN e1 L J Ile l11t'l11 1 so Linh 1 I 5NXl1Tlll1il'!g 11 '-1 .lint Q m11111iLtnL J1L's11'ic 111 C1115 R141 L ws: S., ll idli- lor' qt 11101 Clllnull bx Lrenhge L,r11l1x 76 wr V V 7 17 QM E 1 ll RHNONR 1.1455 THE HIGH HLT1rv0E STUFF lf 11 51.555 1 X Y Ci-4 I 'im i- X X, HER 1 JOY Xu I ,- N' J 1 Y--CJ -i - v , f?'J N ' 5 7 i,f111ll'Z 1 1 g j Q, 1' 1 f f '1 1 .,k 11--1 1' If C f '11', '1T: , 1 '1 ,Q 'I'e111' I 12'-12151. '1li. 'LTI , 1 l N ' :xx .z' '2 -.X-' ,'.5, 91 f W 'wg .1 1, -2 -1 1 , 1 1 '172 Ca: of ' ,' - 11 I W1 'nz 1--a - 111 31,5 F Jez '.: HL .0 . - 2 , - , , '. . h f 1 Gaza my In ' ,, +1 df S1 1 N f ' 9 H- ' T1 ' ', '17g1'111- 4,5-7111: ' A . K , 'H - . .1 41 A? -fl Z'.':I'1la 1 E. L -A -..XQ :Q:,F4,v '11', '17q .iwff 'fs-1' , '-11 '- ,. . 1 ' '17: C1151 ff.: 5523 11fGi1'Is'.Ii11x 113, '17g fivls' if-:iflif ' .1 . 1 'V-Tx' 'RHI j 11. 14 1 -. I XL 5:22 U. -.gr RL Q' 1'C ,,. f N 94 'E Q I 1 1 3 ' ., X 1 ,- Q I ,lx 1 -, Q ' 1113, ' 1 1221111 '1 C1111 'Hg 1 :Y ' 54 NV Q- '11. '15, 'ms CIM. 1 -1, X IL, 1,5 '15, 'llig If Y' ' G1 -, 'ik K . ' Ci'l:' . 3 ' 1- '1T: if-Q '-11,6 I 1 -AL' .1 , ' -Q' '.. 11 1. K F' -. f 3- .. ' 1 ' 1 11 ' fy X 1 I L- w f gqq I .IR rec: I' Squmd Rod W 4 No. 1 SQ REEL FOOD iroi.. IV PRICE. ONE NUT NO. 1 CHIEF NUT ..., .... E LEANOR OSUORN DOROTHY ULMAN HUGH FULLERTON I IUDITH CAMPBELL ASSISTANT NUTS .... .... 1 WALTER SCI-IAFFER KATHRYN STONE SEYMOUR TURNER , JOHN ANKELE Editorial. An editorial is a hard thing' to write: As it is-we have to sit up almost all the night To try and think just how we should instruct your youthful minds: To save you-in this world of sin-from evils of all kinds: Children! mind your parents-and your teachers-what they say ls very beneficial-in a psychological wayg Do your duty as you see it-in whatever way it lies, And yOu'll surely be rewarded when you meet above the skies. Logic. Proposition: A hurricane is blind. Proof: A hurricane is a wind: a vvincl is a zephyrg a Zephyr is wool: wool is yarn: yarn is a tale: a tale is an appenclageg an appendage is an attachment: an attachment is love: love is blind. Tlierefore-A hurricane is blind. No, Mildred, Mr. Koch is not a nondsectarian: he is an insectarian. Fashion note-A cake of soap is a valuable asset to the now popular low neck gowns. - 4 1 1 Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine I magine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine I magine I magine To Win In writi Imagine Imagine Imagine I magine Imagine Imagine I in agi n e Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine Imagine .Imagine Miss M iss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss M iss Miss Miss Miss Miss our Miss Miss I I iss Miss Miss Miss MISSES IN IMAGINATION. Hayes not passing an ex.g I-lynison with only three reefs.: Green with gay locks of gold: Stone with all her woes told: Fleisehmann homely and plaing Rubary going insaneg lVindele not Ilustered a bit' Cuthhertson learning to knit Qwristletslg Eakin without her famed laugh: -Y Sugarnian not giving up half Cot her lunch Mansfield not raving about boys: Pennington making less noiseg MeLymont arriving on timeg Brookings committing a erimeg Badger without a replyg McCarthy not going to die flaughingjg Arata absent a week: Ellisberg not spouting Greek: McGowan with voice soft and lowg Mellride with a shovel and hoe: Alice not waiting for Nell g Leland with some scandal to tellg Zeclerman leaving at three: Fulton off on a wild spree: Qsborn with nothing to do: Ulman minus her queue: Howe refusing to dance: this author with never a chance back the friends that shels probably lost ' ng just something, at any old cost. UR- u,IOI1l1 Henry not wanting clues: Tev. Martin having the blues: one Kinspell not talking to girls: Spiroek with pretty blond curls: Ed. Friedman not Cartooning our Iaeesg Newhoff not winning track races: Gettings reciting for Miss Duigfyg Wlaseerwitz fretting limit 1 : s 5 Slice Turner quite fat,-and Ieang Milt. Klein not out With a queeng Irv. Kaufman not bluiiing in Spanish: Koeppert looking quite mannish: Ilotto mley raising, the cleuee: I 30 s I lll1ZlLfl11L l111'1Q111Q 111 2121111 I111aQ111L 111dQl11L 11111121110 11111141111 l111z1Q111L 11112131111 l1111Qf111L 1114121111 11112131111 11112121110 11112121116 111111511111 l111z1Q111L l111.1g111L SLl11i'tcr l111o11111Q NOl11Cl.l'l1I1Q 11,s loom XX oostcr 111t11ou1 111s rul hzur Chas XX cst 112111110 1 care Roth not 11'111t111q 1Jl1N.!'5 lmhls out 1112 1.11 1e1s uuv s1Ctt111Q 2111 Fulluton bc1110 1111 mad, Art 1X'1llI1 111th clark IJILFLIHQ Cl1r1s llowbrulqg not l1c111Q 11 uns my Xlolun :111s1vC1111Q baulc 1111111110111 Clr11111Q 21 hack lcfl XrVlfl'lOUt 111s pd Qflll 1115 lnothgr not 11 a11L111f1 to 11111 C1111 Gatos not on thc, Ego Al XX1Lhoft bC111Q. slo11 l1OL11LlxL l1111tt111g FOI solcllcrs XlL1lQl.ll 111th 1cr1 131021.41 shoulflars 11111121116 Not s.11111Q tl11t 1l1e1 th111k ll11s 1101110 IS 10110111 ilu boys th'1t 1 haxc fO1Q'0'E'ELl1 lf vou rant 1111z1Q111L 11l1f1t Ixe szucl about ou llcasg flont blf11114. me, 1ts tha bust 1 mn do A LITTLE PERSONAL TOUCH Mr A Cunha was COI1l'lllLfl to 111s bed XX LCl11C,Sfl21X 11fLL111oo11 l1e1.'111s0 11 sghool ll1ursclz11 111or11111Q, much to tha 1llLdSLl1C of 1118 1111111 f11L11fls Mr Gettmgs al1sc11tLCl l'll11'lSCll from school on 1119 .11tLr11oo11 oi XX 041 1lL,HCllX lust as It was 111s pleasant c1ut1 to 111Lct 1111 pfnants 11110 112111 111'-.t lLl'.llI'llQCl 110111 an LXPLHSIXC trlp P1111 HZIVS 111 1111s ClLllNl1tLfl to su 111s llZ1lLl1tS ongc 111011: lfmausc of 1111pLrat11L lJL1S1l1LSK 111 flflkldllll l.1sl XXul11L-.1111 1 11 s nunssarv for Mr A Wzthoft io lLz11c school at 11oon Mr Fnedman 1111 sphool XXu111csr1z1y noon to hglp X11 Cf11'1111Qs 111111 hm 1JclI'C11'fS 501101 1X off X 11L1t l1ttlL Xlflllillllll party was Lnjoucl by sL1Lr1l 11111l11g1aclu11tLs 111 lo11Lll 111Ql1 last Wcrllmsdav 1fte111oo11 Xrtu the partv thc, guests z1cljol1r11ecl to l1rLL11c whcra 1 l1I'OlO11Q,L1l Lra11l was part1L11:L1tul 111, 11111111 to thc L11-1OVl11Ll1'l o1 all NIUOIIQ thosg 11110 co11st1tulec1 thc p.1rt1 11 crc Messrs Cunha, Gettmgs, Wlthoft Fr1ed man 1t Roth lm collcgtmg 101 thc 11111 LIO'-.s clo 1011 l11ppL11 to know 21111 c1osL 1r1L11cl 11110 l1.1s money '11 cl11l'1c1 Xh1 Q 011 XLIX 1 1111 lruncls 11110 14.lXL 11101111 .1rL close '51 1 K 1 . ,A C 3 1 -- 1-1. . : ' t' 1 f . 1 1.1, L- acl. g .1 1- M ' D- -xc - 1 1 . I . ', 1 X' -j A -' '1 '-- 1- 1 ' -11 1 1' - V' .-1 . ' if '- 1 , ' . .- k' - g 1. I I. ,.,. Y 1 A A U 1, 1 . 1 u 1 , n. A ,L I C... A . ' 1 ,L-' 1 , , f, - ' lv' S 7: f J , .1 ,.-,,, , ' .- .. . , ,.-A, .. I ' .1 1 Z 7 -r - S 1 A-3 'lr-' i s vu- 6 r. ' -'L -1 ' ' .. ,' - . Y , ' , .. 'I is ,sv . . H i . . M.. A 7 r ,X I .V y ' U of il very severe attack of heart trouble. lllc 1'CCOX'C1'Cl'l s11f11cic11t1y to ber. 3. if ' , ' 1 ' ' A z if , 'gf' : 'Q' '1 3' j -A '- J 1 ' -1- - 1 1 I- - :1 v 3 C' y ' ' ' D-1' 1- 3 3- J- ' .. 'fy . 'Iv 1 1 7 .1 'f ' 1 'fl ' ' 7 ' rj, ir 'az' -I ' I .-V ... lx l., N ., ,. -A. -1, 12 ' 1 Vw .1 , y 1- ls 3 ' '11 L- . y 1 1 - . -1 4- - 1-A f' , : 'sr 1: ' . 1 1 . , , c L If K- I - - 11 - -r r I l l ' , . - HFC fs 1 1-C' s ' . ' . Y 1, '1. mi F Z. , . - . , Q.. - '. 1 3 X'X1.l ' S '7 '-X-1 f' -1, fA'll. ', eff' on- of if '- .' ' 1' EMPTY SHELLS 12 30 A M Su 11115 1.11a111 011 111y H11Ol11L1t.I J 11111 11 a111t Lha ' I11 GIVC You A IOSC for your 11ps X puarl for your tenth Rnd a Sl1111C 101 you1 c11111111v 1r0v1 11 A 1e11 tor vour 112111 X Qhoe for your foot lxlld 41 b1b for you1 1211111113 11111111 Lx Lo11.11 O1 er111 Bovs dont V011 1:11011 bear IS 11.141 bad 114111 1 f 1Lf1der1 1 1119 XLd1'1 :111 Q nt t 1 1 11 r 1114 C 1301. 0111 X111 11111s1L alwayfi l1'ltOXlC'ltLS ITIC Huw O C11 111r1LLc1' Wham 111s thc. cougut 11-11 111Q11t' She from 11u1 O11 111111 11111 1111011 111111 N1 11Lt.'l1.1bC 111 fun 11L 111111111 1 A1111 111011 111 sp11e 1116 fo11ow111g 111q11t 11 naughtv M1 H'11001'ls 11cm pf1ss111g 1s11t lt a shame Lao Roth CfLe1111g1y It Suu 1 111'1x.1 T L 1111 get 111'1r11u1 11101111 11111 111 110 011 ut 10 mc L11 P X111 I cant S4111 111 01J1LCt to 1t L1 111 1x'1t1r111 N111 Slxcc 17Z1.IC1011 1111 110111t111Q 17111 110 NOL1 su. 11111 ca 11 1001 01 cr than Tzrst 110111 111111 so 111111 and c111L1L11tu1 t111w s111111Q 1JI'Of1'lC1 Second 110111 I was shut up .111 w111tc1' 111t11 F'1La1101s b'1t11111q q111L 1101 1111111111 111tL to mt 111 t11L clout 11111 U L11 110111 111.11evL N 11,111 e e 11110-,11t u11dL1'xt'111c1 11lQ suhjcct 11111 Lfmt Lx111z1111 'ICL X C111 1 1 1011 11 Q11 1 11 '1 D too' 'go n an ', , , , , .K J Yeh, , .F . . x -, , 1111 , . 1 . . . , -LL i J' , A ' . . . ' - -1 . V Z 7 . . Y . X :H V, 7 I y 1- ' ' ' ff ' K 1 1' 'W , ., ' , ' T -. 5 , , '. . - . -n 1 P . - ., , 1, . 1 , . Pell 111 .-71' - ' 1v' wa 1 11- 11 ba 1- 1 1-111c- 1,1z11!11- - !! N' .- -. 1 ' . 1. 1v. ' ', 1 .nA VY 1 3 Y W 1 ' 'X' ' . - L ,, 'av i. 1 'fn l'- ti 1 Lx' ' ' 1 1. 1 ic 1 I - ' 'ru ' , ' , 11 -' 1- 1 cr- rx A - : - 1 , Q 1- 'F1 - ' h f - Kr- Sr-. Miss Duiy-Yes, liquor the root of :111 c1'i1. Look at 2111 the .1 f f-' 1 '-'Q ' ' 5 ? M '- 1.-NV 1111 XVI 1 1 In -1 . 2 'V 1 - ji' V1 z x- 711, V, '1 U'-1 ', -'t11-. C 1 ,' ' ' ' ' j ' 1 1 r .' A , 1 ? -' . . J., -1 '. .- .' - ,-U , L. - Q ,: ' ' - .4 1 1 ' . '- .-.. ' ' L ' 1' . J ,his . L CJ ' ju 1' - 'X , 1 '1 11111: - 1121.3 21. gf, to 1 z1c11. 11' ' F 1 1 I 1 .1 1 Q' ' 1-- ' U 1 - 1 L C - v K . i GH '- 1 ., 1'1 f,1-t'.'1 1131 K. . Gmc! s V1 1lL 5164 L1111'4 X ID ABOUT DEC 17 111011 thc, 11Llc1 01 11111 Ol' It Our l11I211tS 11 l1tLI' Wu-,tlu Xml 111 t11L 11211111 of Xf111cg11tQ 11211111 X smtt 11111 1:11 oft mstles X 1101111 of dust muses 1.11111 1-110111 Chns Hymg 111111 qulxu Xgrow the wx '1tc1x 110111111 C111 11111 tamous 10111111v 1'l11LN 5111111 1Qr11 puts tha 11111 fX111 OXC1 thc mt ou 11101111 011L 10111 S1111 L. 11111 l11l1 ta 1.11151 but not 1L'1S1 011 our 1101101 T011 C111 Guruu 111 1111110r111' 11 N ould go to 111115 11Lf1 leaxc 1112. 111 10 111011111 11011 V011 SCL 111 01 11 111 rg rgprumtul 11111 Cc11111nr lf' 110111111 51 1111 1LRYLDOL1QXX11 I If 111 llc 11 ' er 'r Si 1- ' -, . 11 ' 11 Y i 1 ' A . f . J- di - - 'K j fl 1- ' 5.1: 11 . I Y- Z I 1 , . , 1 ' . 1 I. ' Y. ' 1 ' ' f I ' '1'. 11 - ---- v - . X - ' - . . ., 'c '. if , ' .vc ' ' ' Q' 11110 the basket, high above, T 1 .F .1 1 '1 k- .- 1 ' ' - - g 2 '1 1- -, F' fu'-So 'H 1' 11! 13'-1 ' ' -1: '- 1 ' 1 11 1 ' R11 5' ff ', z1z1.'1 30 1- r- Q 1, 'df 2111 1 16511 Def 1 . V INH1 INR L 7 T11 k V'-2741? '33 ' .5 HERE AND THERE AND EVERYWHERE XXhc,n 11 Lomas to egotwm, oux Qtuclcnt Bodx lmxy has Cmero backgd 119,111 oft the board, for at a cv,rt.m1 rally held at thg beqmmng or thus teun hc threw out hls chest and calmlv 1L1n'1r1xul You wlll now SCL thc 1I'CN1flLI1tr We would 1114, to lxllow vxhy Gram L rlppul out 11C1 pufutlv good smut ASL Slxne ha knows' Spam docs not pcrmxt tha puhhshmg of 111 the mcmbex-. cl thu '5lJ21I'11Sh Athleup Club but mc. ful obhgccl to 111Lut1on xts p1L-wldmlt Lattmgs We often wonder whcthu Smith va lmouu as I XX XX Juxt bgmuqc ul' hu first mo 1I11t1El1'w or whether It is chu to hu 11.1tu1u It a113o11L 11ot1cLd Quuml txuuk loads of jmpu pullul up 111 fxont ot thc whool WL Juet wmh to 1I1.fO1lTl hun OI her thit It xx as CL11111g1b Rad Lross taxes He surclx Ib gumuroxw with the papu 'lou had thnrc Wren t moms. hkc 111111 lhc IT1lx111g Club XXIUCI1 was Iormud 'lttc-:J the firsi Sumo: lulw, W1th lmh Lcwv 1nd Claxg Ixeuncciy .15 Lhartu mamhgrx, xmshm 10 munouncg hlck durmg the noon hou1 Tt 15 saul that Dcmosthcnu spokg xuth hls mouth full ot pdmhlns to Lurc H'E31l111l61111g', but kaufm 111 sflyb hm xxaws arc 100 old Tor hun HL tune 10 t11lx xuth hu mouth full of hot 114411, and clzums, that he va Q,'k.U.111Q 1311101 results than our old Gruk fT1L11f1 ex cr thought of Qgttmg Theres 'mlhmfr hlu buns, moduu DMI von u er Holme 111 thoie 1100l1t11T1C cl'mLcQ that mmf, hglcl bN Dugmbu lf that thu lcngth of the Cldl1LCN dqmmurlul 011 who SML was mcmg 11 X c lha Senmn dass IN Qurely ambmous L mu hurl 1 hst of so hrst L11-s m1h1t1ous 111 Enola Badge: N mamou book Nan 1.141 1Oi.llLlxL1S an mx 1 pwt' IOU1 idlmx hgh ucr, LoIhLt111q thats uhx wheriule ouz uma 1 onlx xalund at fixg Lcnts an hom' Wow ledlv louxe no 1I'1C11ll of 01115 hh qtqmhcus Im 111 thlt Rnd CIO'-U-1 tax ua rn xx oxth '1 htth more than that 34 , . Y. .- x l I - E ,A v z. 3 J , 1: , ' , fn -' A ' - 1 . 1 . ' ' ' I ' A l In 'S - -- I - A f .f - ,N ,' ' C f 'A , U , I Y. , ,, , V, D -.' 3 N .:: 22: 21: r 7 ' ,D . . y -. . ' ,. - - 1- .-- 'Y i 5: :gc :2: I 'H 1 A- ' '.f' ' . ' -1' x '- 'w , -'- 7' ' 11 5.1 ' 'j-n- -' L1 1' '-- --.U . 11. . . , g . .. . , . 1' V :a: :x 7 - - .1 r y A .1 N' ' ' - f - ,7 ff ' V + - 11- A V , - k . .A A L . . . ., h M lk :Sz tk ', 1'. '-- L ' . ' '- N , . , , . . , A , '., . I 1 ,' . . , W ,, ' v 1.s. 1 hu . L I Y- V , ' Y A n I x is Q. :Sc :iz :iz B, , 1- li 1 ' 'P, vv Y ' f W ' X' 1 .x 'I Y,' x ' ' A , . ' I , ' . Y Y . .. n. v, C , that they have held E1 great number of successful hikes to the Hou and :Sz rf: rf: . , -. -' -- - 7 ,A ff 1 ' . , ,. 4, - ' ' I , , . K' 1. 5 L, ' , a . , I : ,- J: -J A5 'q .7, - -u ' '. 3' PF'- . A M ,b' 'f '. L' t J' . 5: :K 21: - ' - A f -' w ' L I ' Y I - L - y . - x . -7 111 ' L' wil ? Ve lid! :g :l: :iz ' x A Q' '. ' X 2 7: 'Q - Y' ' ' '. full -' aj ' 1 ' S me ' . -, -,. , ' 'V , ' , 1, ..l,1,, A ,, . , , , .H C . P Y . :l: :iz :ia It is : ',l '1 I' il-'fll ' ,. f' A' .A If, '-'W d --1- . ,. .' .1 A . , , 4: 25: nz '.l' ,I ' li l u V , . A DECEMBER '17 TALE. The far famed class of December '17 was encamped one summer near the village of Ellisberg. lust as the sun was setting, the Campbell tinklcd softly. The jolly campers streamed from all directions across each Green or some Mansfield toward the camp Gates, For the evening meal. Wascer- Witz, the cook Cwho was a fOsDborn Germanl, watched over the people and kept them from all Harrnes. Vlfhen they arrived, he was just about to QTrumjpour. A'Look out! he said, I Kinspel a Klein. After the meal of CbjRo'th, Rubury's war bread which was Schwarz, and tried Badger, not even a fMcjCaw re- mained. By the time the sun had set in the West, all seemed to feel that Something was wrong. Hagis and Kephert, who controlled the Finances, led the party over Trow Bridge and past the Stone which marked the edge of the camp. Between them they explained the difficulty. Vacation was about to end and they still had Reames of provisions. They had bought too many sweets from the Sugarman, and more than enough meat from the Fleischman. They explained Howe they had ob- tained 'Bahls of Hayefsj, and pointed out a Fulton of iron for the use of Spivoc, the Smith, and a Fullerton of wheat for the use of Molinari, the baker. lt seems that Kephert was to blame for it all. Hibbett his CMcjBride that it was not too much. ln fact, the dispute became so heated, that whenever she dared Brooking the subject he had to Turner down, where- upon she threw her Woosterd at him and broke his Ankele. But now, as the forlorn campers stood looking at the heaps of goods Withfoftj Nolan' on which to store them, a noise such as distant thunder was heard. Little did they dream of the coming' catastrophe. December '17 was to be disorganized! 'lllierefore this story can have no end. After all, was their criticism of the man who controlled mat- ters for them at the climax, after all, he's such a dUlman. l guess it's the best Eakin do. CLASSIFIED ADS. Doi You Wish to Learn the Art of Smoking? l guarantee to teach beginners in three lessons. Special rates lor ladies. Apply Head Building. Lawrence Kinspel. Save Yourself from Disgrace and Discomfort. Learn to skate standing' up. Lesson per hour 39.03. Enola Iladger, direct from llfinter Garden, New York, l Fastway, Chicago. On Exhibition Daily. The only salmon-colored tie in captivity. Admission, Sc. 'Walter Schiiffer. curator. Museum of Bright Arts, Eureka. 35 MY OWN DEAR QRICHJ WIFE- .Xs now l Sit fzu' off from you, 'lfo show my love, naught else will do.- llut ,l, must write in meager verse,- l'l'o try anrl win xvhafs in your pursel. lfzieli moment that l stay out here Must be El Strain on you, my clear: How coulil you help but like my lace? f'Yoi1'1'e Such Z1 simple, silly :well lietxveen your cheeks, renl as zi rose, There rests Zl compliefiteil nose- Ymn' breath like ll sumniei' breeze l'l'hz1t happened on ri piece of elieeseil. '.l'he face you have appeals to met lfs something that you seldom sec- Mv thoughts and acts will all he true! llixeept when I am on El stexixl Goof!-iiiglil. my clove-clo write me soon To soothe my passion, lest ll, swoon: I f't'2l1'1l to clasp you by the neck, V Anil, say, You might enclose :fi check! Sisvmovu TVRNI-214. '17. DECEMBER, '17, FLOWER GARDEN. XYZ11'l4.lCl'il1g' NYillie-lievzi SL1g'ZlTlTlZlll ligreat trzivelei' in stully perioc Slininroclc-lrene NeCzLrtl'iy lnzitive of Erinl. Sensitive plzmt-:Xileen MCL5-'inont livery tCl111lCI'2l1l'lC1'llQfllll. Sun Flox-verfXlilfl1'c-Ll l'-lowe Csunny rlispositionl. llezillier-,luclitli Campbell l-ll2lllX'C of Scotlanflil. l-'our o'C'loelc-llary hlellride fguest of Mit Nunnl. Snap llrzigon-llorotlly Lilmzin l'full of pepl. Morning Glory-Rzimonzi Hayes livin new honors every A. lX'l.D. XY:i1e1' Lily-lileanoi' Osborn lcz1n'1. live out of waterl. 'liiger Lily linost of 'em alter receiving' report carrlsl. DECEMBER, '17, FOREST. l.Zl1ll'CliXY2lltC1' Sehiiiler lhe got his in lootlnz-illl. Cypress-:Xvtliur Kahn lhe coulcl il' it waSn't for his urnisl. Ileeeli-Cliris 'llroivhriclge lhe's always therel. lleclxvooml-Philip lX'ooste1' lohl maybe he woulmll. l7ii'-lieoppzirt the wears his on his chinl. l ine--lohn .Xnlcele lhe does-hut lor XYl1U11l???il. liIlll3l'L'llil-',lll'ZlL'Il1'lC1' luever without one on a sunny clayj. Poplullar-'larry CYQQOHHOI' lnul cecll. 'lii'lCg'l'2llJl1 pole-Ski l'ui'ner. 36 BGYS ACTIVI 1' IES 115 last HL111estL1 1l1L boxx of DLLL1111JL1 lf l1.1xL 11LL11 must .1L 1xL 111 exL1x1l11114 xx 11C 11Lx mxe u111L11f1LL11 L1L A l'll1L S1 11L1111L 111113.21 11110112.11 tlll class sl1oxx111g 1LsLl1 111 L av 11111 Lrtf1L111Q,s as xxL we 011 tl1L '1L111Ll1L hclal 111C 100113311 tLz1111 has ILCLIX L11 su1111L11't from suL11 sfus IN CL11 111L1N lo 1 C11111111 9Ll111fLr .mel F111lLr U11 xx1111111 x1L FL 1r11L111 111 Llflllll AH c01111111f rom our 1111111l1L1x L 1x 110 .1 f-111L11L 111 811011 111 xxl11cl1 DcLL111bLr ll 11.15 11111 11q11rLcl 11111111111L11t1x Our 11tl11L11L rLLo11l 11N cl L 211-1. 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E' jl '1 1'--.T'.'1'El'.' 1' '1'. .1'le 1111: 1' lc Z1 1 1'n'.'f1l ' 1 ' lj 'L cl Q' - '- 11.1 z ft' ' 1' l, -' ftlft1 11' ' l1l'M-'.' J . if 1 l'1 bill 1. S, ' 1 lp '- 1 11,1 5 1' .ll ' Cl1,' ' ' Cl' - 1 - QOC-ll. 11-'l-'ll-F '-l1- 1 '11 - f' 11 ' :?- 1' Cl' ' ':-'Y ' if-.1111 cl yo yell 1 'llic-S? 1, --l 1 fl T , 1l 1 111 ' ' 1'1 Cl' A '--1111 ' -lo 'Q'-1 ' Q 'l ' '.'-.X11 jo lc-1 t1'1'11 you z11'c ' '1 111' C1111 . 1 111 -'11'5' Ut? 1' 1--Y ' f All S11 ' '.'-1 111011 5111 out 101' lg tl '1l1l 'r ---1X'l1t': tl' ,It ' 1111 xx'il11 S1l1l'll ',' 1 ' 1131? ' y- l 11'-1 . 1li.'lI.l FAMOUS PEOPLE Vlfoodrow llfilson. ...,......,.............,.,.. .. General Pershing' .... Jane Addams .... Norman Ross .... Sarah Bernhardt. . . Paderewski .... lflfalter Camp .. Enrico Caruso :Xnna Pzwlowa. . . . . George Nl. Cohan. . . Neyca llllcMein, . . Nl. I-I. de Young .......... Mary Roberts Rinchardt. . . Mary Pickford ..... . ...... Mrs. Chester A. llorgan. .. llilliam ll'ICfXClOO ....... . Williain Johnston. . . Madame Melba. . . ,lohn McGraw ....... Annette Kellermann. . . Ysaye .......,..... ldfalter Dainrosch. . . Lady Dult Gordon. .. liloorer .......... ........................ .Chris Trowbridge . . . .George Gerdes Grace Cuthbertson . . . . . .john Ankele . . . .Kathryn Stone ......Al l1Vithott . . .Vlfalter Schaffer . . . . . .Robert Levy . .Cecelia Ruberry . . . . Arthur Kahn . . .Enola Badger . . . .Charlie Gates . . .Dorothy Ulman . . . Mildred Howe . . . Dorothy Illorris . .Arthur Iloericlce . . . . . .Ski Turner . . .Dorothy Leland . . . .Vincent O'Conn0r . . . .Eleanor Osborn . . .Lloyd Frank . . . .Milton Klein . . .Alice McCaw . . .Leo Roth SENIOR GIRLS' ACTIVITY Did you ever see a lot of pep burst forth with a big bang and not stop booming for a whole afternoon? If you are a girl, you have: if you are a boy, perhaps you haven't. Ilut, anyway, that was what happened the day the Senior girls gave their rally. Grace Cuthbertson, vice-president ol' the L. H. S. A. and noted member of Dec. '17, opened it with a spirited speech, about the origin, purpose, etc., of the Girls' Rallies. Parthenia Dahl fa Low 4. but never- theless a Senioril. gave a recitation. There was the inevitable ukulele chorus, and a one-act play. The cast of the play included the Misses Uhnan, Howe, Dorn, Brooking, McGowan, Osborn, Ilreslauer, lXiIcl3ride, and Stone. Then, best of all, a dance and food ll The true Dec. '17 spirit was displayed at this rally, and if We are to judge from the rallies which followed, the spirit has been inculcated in all the other classes of the school. The following' is an extract from conversation picked up in the audi- torium the Friday before the girls' jinx: First Senior-I'-low are you going to dress up for the jinx, Alice? ? Second Senior HX. 3'lcCaw'l-I'ni going to wear a black tam with yellow trimmings. First Senior-Oh, you'll be all in black and yellow, then, won't you? 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' -' 1 ' 1 F 'g gg. M - ' 2 1 ' W .'1 . z, '- 's 1'1 -- '. 1' Q Q .i ' if-1'-.' '-1 gr, ' 'Q ' 1 , 311. 111. 1'1I5Q'1I. 1512 '18, SKIBBS' VACATIGN 1qaAl l'lRlS'l'lX'l.'XS! . . . That great day was very near. School 'VL had closed its doors, and those who departed were ntiglity 1,4529 t happy. 'Particularly so was Skihbs. Skilihs was going' home 5,23 J ig for Cliristmas, llc loved turkey dinners. steaming plum- sl' - 4 'A ,. , , . ' ' . lllvpl' Juddinffs and the like. l'nrthermore, he was articularlv l D 1 lg . 94 , happy to escape that alarm clock which so persistently drove him out of hed in the morning. :Xs the car Hew toward the train depot he was in a joyous mood. lflis foot would kick the brown suitcase from under the scat. :uid he grew tri'- Lunphant at the thought of leaving the Nsleep-killer on the dresser in the room hehind. That clock had caused him no end of trouhle, hut after all he was on the road to half a nionth's pleasure. Tatitztliziitg' visions came he- fore him, as in a paradox, wherein he saw the steaming' dishes ofiit was too much, he could hardly wait. Five minutes later the boy with the suitcase stepped oil' the car and nervously elhowed his way through the going and coming' crowds. ln the great waiting-room he put the ldulgirig case down and dug in his pocket for the ticket that he had bought several days before. Skihliis grew paralyzed. No ticket! Then through all his pockets he madly searched. .-Xbove, the great terminal clock pointed 1:35. Time was collecting no dust, and at 2:05 the train left for home. Then the hoy threw his case into the arms of a porter and sprang down the long corridor, all but upsetting by-passers in the path of his getting out and after that which he had left behind. 'lfhat porter little knew just what had struck him, or what he had cauglil.. He stood as a man suddenly hit over the head. gaping foolishly at the ease. Then there came two nien-disconcerting men. Une shook him and the other took what he held. Quite a crowd gathered, after the manner of the very curious. And the man who had taken the case held it at arm's length. eyed it rather suspiciously, and then held it to his ear. lfVhat followed, happened with lightning rapidity. The man had heard a fatal tickfi Down went the case in no slow manner, and then he turned and uttered one long painfully blood-curtlliiig' shriek. More shrieks followed, and when so many panic-stricken head-losers shouted 'l'iine-homhl considerable things happened. Women screamed and fainted, children hawled and dogs liarked. Newshoys whined and men expressed tltemselvcs heyond record. .-Xnd upon all, the swarming mass fought madly away from the suitcase that stood in the center of the great terminal. Once again Skibhs sprang from the car, :i yellow ticket dangling from his clammy hand. The car had not quite reached the depot and a line of cars stretched ahead. Something' was wrong. l'olice shouted and whistles shrilletl -ll above the clamor. ropes stretched here and there, and things had become topsy-turvy. There remained seven minutes. Skibbs was bent on getting that train. At length, he managed to squeeze through the frantic swaying mobs. The great room was completely deserted, even to the cigar stand. In the center of the tiled floor rested the lone case, and Skibhs wondered. And then from the railing of the over-hanging balcony, the pallid face of a man appeared. lille moaned something about being blown to smithereens. But Skibbs had no time for such things. He picked up his baggage and bounded off toward the train-gates. Again came the voice from above. Hey, kid. it was saying, Drop it! drop it! Oh Lord. drop it! lt's a bomb-a time bomb! D'ye hear? Drop it! The boy whirled in his tracks. A what? he called. But the man was lost to breath and voice. Screams and oaths were coming down the corridors. Monster locomotives wailed impatiently, and Skibbs, in a weary manner, set his case down and unstrappcd it. Many hundreds of eyes centered upon him from nook and corner, wherein people crouched for protection from the explosion that was presently ex- pected. But Skibbs did not know. The top of the case flew open, whereupon shirts and socks and all manner of things after the eye of a boy spilled out, one after another, only to expose the gleaming face of that sleep-killer. Beyond sitting' down and mopping his head, young Skibbs nearly fainted. One hand tore the collar from his neck and he merely gasped for air. Men with wicked-looking clubs and bright silver stars were shouting' down at him, but he was much too disgusted to live. Then, suddenly. he was yanked to his feet in no sweet fashion. and the hundreds who crowded about demanded to know why he had played so unlawful a trick, lrlad they had a rope. the old vigilance committee would have come back again. He was shaken and he was pinched and punched. A cur stuck its head in between many legs and, very nicely. removed a piece of the leg of his trousers. Police- men pulled him one way and the mob pulled him the other. Then the man who had shouted at him from the balcony came surging up. 'fXN'hat's the cause of this, kid-huh? D'ye want ta' hang fer disturbing the peace-huh? Can't ya' talk-huh? fl1r.rr0e1' I1Ic .lH Aw- began the boy. Keep quiet! yelled the man. You told me to speak! he whined. That will do! l-le turned to one of the stars. 'lliiI'lI'l'T him :lr 0 P g l ing, . ete. He km' tell 1t ta' the judge. iVVhat was the use? The sufferers of heart trouble and fainting were being carried out-and so was Skibbs. .Ns he was pulled through the swarming' mass, he closed his eyes. 'People looked murder at him and he was awfully sick. Suddenly somebody reached out and whacked him a smart rap on the skull with a plumber's monkey-wrench and the boy. unrequested. naturally went to sleep. .g, 4, .., .,, .,. .,. Skibbs trembled with palsy before the judge in the crowded court-room. 42 Upon the high desk lay the fatal suitcase, with its contents liberally dis- played. Then came a rap, sharp and quick, for silence. XfVell, young' man, the judge scowled down upon him: can you give an account of yourself and the uncalled for commotion that you have caused? Do you know the disturbance you have brought about? Eh? Skibbs swallowed with anything but ease. VVell, y'see, your honor, I-I-I was going on my vacation-going home. Absentmindedly I left my ticket where I was hoarding. and took that clock instead! The judge wiped his glasses. Absentmindedly, eh? IVell? Pretty line, thanks-all but my head-. Young man, have a care. or l'll fine you for impertinence and con- tempt of court! 1-lut your dear honor, I haven't done a thing, Skibbs wailed. l left my case with that porter there. fl' had discovered my hlunder and ran home to get my ticket, can't ya' see ? HI-low about that, porter? i'Yo' honor, I reckon as how that kid am ai' Keep your opinions to yourself. Did he give you his case or not? Yes or no? No, Self! Well, Skibbs, what have you to say to that F , Why, he's a-a-a-, ol1, he's loony. I gave him my case, I tell you. Gee. you are as had as he is. I-Iis honor, the judge, was petrified. The court-room sounded like 21 boiler factory. It took a dozen raps to restore order. Silence-dead silence came, and the judge cleared his throat. SkilJlJs! You are--ar'--ar'-oh. you're too young to trifle with. There- fore I Fine you one hundred dollars for contempt of court and ninety days in the county jail for absenrillivzdmlviexs! Next case! FREDERICK C. Rtmwiizmtiar.. A Day Gray- 'llhe houses, the fences, the shining street, The clouds that scurry with noiseless feet, The whistling' wind and the driving' slect. Gray-all gra y. Gray- 'lihe lnurky-g1'ay rain-dotted puddles that drain Into gutters that gurglc a monotone strain, Rellccting' the lone straggler, shrouded in rain- Gray-all gray. IXT.xI,vlN.-x Nlll.lfJER. 43 ALMOST A SCOOP 62 1-lli Ht.JL'R was early: to be more precise, it was very early :' VD Q44 Al -- fx at l il 'Vi K. li zine. Th ough to be exact, it was two a. in. The reporters room of the morning Tribune was the scene of our interest. and the person in question was one Joseph iW'alter Mack, cub reporter on the 'l'ribune. joseph, who, for all practical purposes, was known. as Joe Mack, was sitting' in a far corner of the room reading the contents of a late issue of a popular maga- joe didn't realize it. the type of magazine he was reading' was responsible for his having a newspaper job. Always ready to do any- thing that savored ot adventure the magazine had been a stimulus for him to take up as a profession. work, which the magazines told was full of adventure. So it was when joseph graduated from high school he became a reporter instead of becoming' a Hoot--walker in a live and ten-cent store. or some like peaceful worker. The room Joe worked in, known professionally as the local room, was long narrow room with a great number of desks in it, each containing' a typewriter. lfrom what .loc had read be was led to believe that this room was one continuous scene of confusion, with wild-eyed men dashing madly about, Nothing was farther from the truth. Instead, there were only a 'Few n the otiice most of the time, and nobody seemed to ever get greatly excited. The only thing that looked disorderly was huge quantities of copy paper scattered about on the desks. -loe had also heard of the scoop, or. as it is known about a newspaper office, the exclusive story. This is a large piece ot news which is put over by a paper on its competitors. joe had visions of lieing responsible For a scoop some time. To get back where we found Joe when our tale opened: He had been on the statif of the Tribune for about month, and the much sought afl- venture had not materialized: in fact, joe was disgusted with the job. T could have gotten more excitement it I had become a preacher, than l have found on this job. wailed Joe. .loc came no nearer scoring a scoop than he did an adventure. I-le 'found that the men who had beats, that is, station. had the best chance ot getting covered some taxed point like the police scoops. 'He was a general assignment editor sent him out to get. Mack was thinking' all these things over when Roberts. the city editor. told him it was man, only getting stories that the city time to go home. ,-X few doors below the Tribune office was a little lunch place, run by a man called -lake. .lake had been at the same place as long as anyone could remember, and his place was the rendezvous for all the newspapermen on the papers around. Jake knew all the boys by their first names. and when .loc first came to his place he took rt fancy to him, and the two became fast friends. On this particular night, joe stepped into ,lakes for a cup of coffee. Hello. -lake. Qloe greeted his friend. Hello, joe. my boy, how do you like the 'fame bv nr w? 5 V J 4-l The game is all right. but li am getting about as much excitement out of it as I would have got out of the undertaking profession, replied the cub reporter. Cheer up, You never can tell when something is going to break in this game. ft is the most uncertain thing in the world. Remember the XVright case, several years ago? XYhen that broke there hadn't been anything doing for three months, and it came about a quarter to three in the morning when the hoys were getting ready to go home. lt was seven o'clock when they got away. That is the way it is in the newspaper game. iVVell, we can only hope for the best. Say. who is that fellow sitting over there? I have seen him in here three times now. and he acts sort of queer. Joe pointed to a man sitting alone in the corner of the room. 'lfhe man was well-dressed: there was a look on his face that made one notice him twice: his thoughts seemed to be far-off. 'AI don't know who he is, hut he looks like he might bear watching, counseled jake. jake uttered this sage advice he and -loc noticed the gentleman in dispute walk over to the end of the counter at which they were talking. and take the telephone. The mysterious one got a party on the line and convcrsed very earnestly. Though he talked very low, the close proximity of the phone made it easy for .loe to understand what was being said. XVe must settle that aliiair to-morrow, 'loe heard the m:m under ob- servation though it may take blood to do it. as has been necessary before. I guess l had the right dope on that one, thought hloe, whose visions of a scoop were now more distinct than they had heen for some days. Keep a discreet tongue in your head, and don't let anyone suspect your hand, li will meet you in the lobby of the Palm Hotel at one o'clock to- morrow. and with these words the man of mystery closed his conversation and left the place very coolly. Come to think of it, he has the look of a murderer. Said joe. Right you are, Joe: that fellow is going to make it hot for somebody if he isn't caught, was lakes reply. Leave that part of it to me. This bird has murdered for the last time, was 'loe's confident reply. l oor -foe! his confidence was to he short-lived. lle left the lunch-place and wended his way homeward. along the deserted streets. This town is going to have more to talk about than it has had for twenty years, when I get done with this fellow. thought -loe, as visions of his papers big headlines and its complacent superiority over competing journals glad- dened his thoughts. XYhat praise would he his from the city editor? NVhy, he could even see the managing editor come out of his private sanctum to congratulate him for the ripping scoop he had put over. Aloe was not due to report for work until two in the afternoon. but he thought it best to put Mr. lloberts wise so that he could detail some help to cover the hifi' event and, anvwav, the police had to he notified. and Klr. 5 ' 4 . , . Roberts could do that best, .'Xccordingly, Roberts was apprised of the tale 43 and hke 111o-.t 1111,11 111 lu: posmon reserved co111111cnt however l1e told oe l1e would have anothe1 man accompany h1111 and that hc 111 ould HDIIIY the pohce eo that they co11ld be leady to do then part Proxnptlv at one oclock joe and P1gQe the extra 011 the deta1l were at the Palm IIotel There they met two plaln clotheb 111en1be1s of the pohce rorce and oe spymg the 1112111 he had seen and heaxd the mght before pomted hllll out to l115 COIUP3.1'1101'lS 'lhey qtuckly planned a capture ln ac cordance w1th th1s plan joe and I31ggs etat1o11cd themselves where they could ohserxe lllell' quaxry who wan st1ll standmg alone and l1keW1Se heaz wl1at l1e sa1d 'lhey had not wa1ted long betore '1 second n1a11 approached and shook hands w1tl1 the suspect I juet couldnt put xt through lXlo1se 5a1d the man wl1o had Juat come 111 VVhy not? demanded sha1ply the one addreemed aa Mmse henton 15 1 dead one I savx to that and oe clutched Blggg and Lnggs Qa1d Sssh' to oe Elllil the two of them ,ave the s19,n to the pohce to close 1n on the 111urde1e1 Xeb 111terrupted tl1e other I know you d1d but h1e new partne1 15 a l1ve NVITC and needs verv dehcate l1andl111g Vl ell tl1e1es no 111a11 we know capable of lllilllplllaflllg 111111 btt 111 I1lood VVL ll call 111111 111 Ioe Qaped at B19,gs a11d Bngge lowered at Toe Meanwlule 0116 of the plamclothes 111en had tapped llIo1se 011 the shoulder eaymg 111 '1 C'1ll'l'1 under tone If you be come w1th 1116 qu1etl1 we can avo1d a 'seene In language mme torc1ble tl1a11 pohte Move demanded an ucpl'1nat1on and Ins loud and exerted tonee had attracted a cone1derable crowd before tl1e ofhcer had a chance to do n1ore than Juqt talte out tl1e lnacelets VX hat he tluough the pre-Ns, saymg 111 '111 amazed vorce Ilello Casey what 1n h has Mo1se done? Blood 11 last' efcclanned Move If you know tlns Claly do, call 111111 off and bend 111111 to a safe le1111el Ill attend to h1111 later you bet yo111 hat but now vxexe got to Settle tl1e Vtfestwood hhlls caee Is l1e a Er1e11d of 101113 Mr Blood? WVhy INdXlJE we vc got tl1e w1o11Q, llldll Wfheres the fellows that gave ua the txp Casey looked around for Ioe a11d Image hut they we1c l1'lCOUSp1CLlOLlSlX hndmg a way to the street VVhe11 thex were safely 1nerQed 111to the paenns show I311QQa punched Ioe 111 the s1de saymg Wext t1n1e you have a stoop Ioe youll have to get some other sucl Cl to -hare the glory 111th xou Ill be very busy just then and I ay oe next tune you fall for a Louple of fellows tallnnff OVC1 the phone Quppose you incl out what they I6 t1lk111g about qome b s a1e small Qome b Q. tre cap1tal hut theres 'tlwayfs a b 111 your bonnet Toe dlflflf may am ljlllllg because he d1d11t lnow what to Qay Il 46 I 1 . J I 3 I 'I - 9 I I 1 .li 1 4 1 s 1 I 1 I ' ' ' ,, 1 -J L 1 ' C 1 ' ' .7 , , ' A ' .7 3 f ' . ' f, . 1' ' , . ' .4 I . .1 ' ' '. L I c . I I as - 1 , , f , ' If , ss , - 3 ' ! 3 ' 11 1- , , . . H .. . . 1, we '1 . '. . . - 77 4 I J .. 1, - 7 7 , TT' - 'QV , ' u 1 1: , I A ., . e . 1 J , O., . 1 Q . I . A i -- 11 ,v , 11 ' , x 1: , - - , A , , -1 Y ' 5 , ' I . . . . ,, 1' , ' 1 . ' ' ' ' 1 Ii' V, my - - as . di ' an Tr 1- '- . ' ' ' . V, n h . . V , c c , - A ' dl ' I 1 I: A' 4 ' I 1 ,I , ' .. c I ' - I ' I , ., N . . ' K v I I' rl. I had intended doing was never done, for just then a 111311 pushed his way 1 Y A 731, A -. 4 . t r . : .. - , V S, Z , Q. - f ,' 9, cr J . , ' ' -1 . 'X ' ' . f ' 2 gf, ' . x . . - , - Y I 1 V , A X , ' Q 11 H ' I 7 - 1 . , . A f 1' .1 - - v - ' 1 , 7 Q . p.. 1 1-1 .5 ' ' .:' ff Q ', V ' f , 5 , 5 ' : A11 ' ' J ax ' , , . , . . , ' ' ' ' I - ' 1 y . . D . . , , ., 1 , v , 5. f ' - Y. . , , 1 , - 7 r . L . .. , ., , 4 I , - , 1 ' 75 C .. . ' ' 1- V - ' - ' . Y . ,, S11i1.1,1' P115'11C12:. 'lS. LONDON Y, AMERICAN enters London. The smoke and dimness of ilu the air is felt more than noticed. I-flazily the clang and clamor ' of the bell and whistle of the American locomotive are missed. gyli Taxicabs in thousands, and hansoms, and the old time four- I' - - v A ' 54 .fi Q' 9 X wr 'Q Wheelers are ready at the platform. The American has a very good idea. He hires the first hansom. The driver when asked to show London is very pleased. Such a fare has not been his lot for a long time. lle makes as straight a bee line as the crooked London streets allow for what is after all the kernel of the huge city. The Tower of London! There it lies beside old Father Thames as though some magician had brought it from long gone times. Each stock and stone and tower is history. In this grim room the two little princes were murdered: here Anne Boleyn gave her young life: yonder Sir NValter Raleigh sultered a prisoners lot. ,lane Grey, the Traitor's Gate, the Norman Chapel, the huge moat, the jewels are mingled in a sort of procession, explained politely hy a f'l3eefeater who might have just come off duty with Bluff King lrlal. The visitor leaves the magic spot, vowing' to come again and often. The hansom with its lilting' tunes takes him up the road which in its youth san' the Roman Eagles. On he goes, past the Monument commemorating the lite of 1666, past churches mostly masterpieces of Christopher WVren, till the road enters the meeting place of many others, one of the nuclei characteristic of the city. Streams of the double-decked buses with their rumble, the choked roar of the underground railway, all tend to make a deafening confusion. Here The Little Old Lady of Threadneedle Street fthe Bank of Englandl nods good morning to the Lord Mayor in his mansion opposite. Up Cheap- side with its reminders of past market days. to where the Postofhce neiglibors the beautiful masterpiece of VVren, St. Pauls Cathedral with its lovely dome. the course leads, Our American stops the hansom and has a view from the very top. River. bridges. innumerable churches, and the dwelling places of seven million souls are spread before him, reaching out beyond the vision. Cabby drives on. Ludgate 'li-lill is behind him, and Fleet Street with its newspaper atmosphere and its glimpse of old London taverns. tlies hy. Now the Strand is reached and N r. United States arrives at the haven of his coun- trymen, the Savoy Hotel, gets out in the rubber paved court, dismisses his driver. and feels at home, almost as though the 'Huclsou were Howing' 'neath the windows instead ot a much smaller stream. Still the Thames is the Thames. Next morning within a stone's throw of the Savoy, the tourist views the Law Courts, which look ancient and hoary, but to the amazement ol the .Xmerican this building was built but thirty years ago. The Temple, with memories of Oliver Cromwell, and more lately of Dickens and Goldsmith, is situated by the river. jewel-like and unique. li'arliament, Buckingham Palace, and Hyde, Green and St. james' Parks, 47 C111 xxLl1 111101111 10 our 11151101 by C1CSL,I'lIJ110l1 'md 11ea15ay 11111 11151111111-.111 X1111ex 81111111868 111111 111 11S c11ar111 and beautv 1111 01d plane bxeathes 01 1111: 1111.110x1 112111 Saxon and Norman 1QO111'1C1.1'1CdC1 and L.1xa11e1 10e1 and Sflldlbl 11.111 111 iouud a 165111121 1J1rlLE 11c1x1a1c1 1 bv 1115 t011111s 111111111 lux 1111l111a111e 111 1011Q-11a11w 111115 beaut1f11l 1211111111 was detaud 115 Ulxvu LFOIITNXL11 -1 sol dmrs durmg the 111116 111e Nbbex 11 AN 11bed .141 1 ba1111111 T111 -1a111e 1C,LJl10L1Zl51N 11r1111e 1110 111lQGlS 110111 1111 Xf1re,111 Queens hands 1111 11 was 0116 01 111 11111111 111.11 10011 111e 5111er 011 1118 ancestm N 111e111o11a1 to pav 1118 01111 debtx 111L 1clLfS1Ollf.N 01 the lovely L101stLrw seem 10 11110 111111 1116 tuad of 1114 111ned111111e 111011115 who 11xfed here 111 1111 1111111e11111 1111111111 lhcre IS 110 41011111 111f11 V1 Ls1111111ste1 111xe the Tox1e1 IN dll e111111111e of 111e pmt 01 101111011 and 1 ng and 1111 101111011 11, 1101 0l11X a 1,1111 01 the 11.111 111 1,111 111e X111e111a11 L11SLUNClH 111111 all 1111 10111111 11s 01 1111 vxo11d 111111 1 1o111111e111a1 eenter 11c1e T111 11611111 111 S11Z'11'lJ118l IOS1'.1LS 111e b1QQest 1rf,11c11 11211111 1111116 11raf11 Rubva and 11111 Ill 11e1g111101w 111 a 111051 1111Q1.0Q1.1111111 11141111161 111011 1r11c1e 01 c0111111Q1ce 1 111 111161111 hue, some 01 t11Ll11, 11111 metal 1111s wool and exmu 1011011 1111111111 11L1r c111Lf 111a11u.1 111113 v111e11 one s1a11d1110 011 oxxer 11111 QC 21.1111 10011111 1116 se1c11 seae 11111tr11JL11e 111e1r tonnage and 111e 1.111 1-1 1111de1Q1o0d 111111 11 land Controle 111111 1111. c0111111cr11a1 511111131113 01 1111 xx orld and 101111011 a Q1101 111611 01 111lN 112111 11111 bundes 112. 101111116166 or pnrhapx bucause 111 11 101111011 IH 110 1111411 4111 ce111Lr 111 the Natllllldl X11 lxallnrx 111e 11r111s11 NI11se11111 .md d0lt 1lH ol other 1111151 1111por1a111 111u1111111f1115, p1'1u.less art treasuxew are 110L1'-Bd 10 111e11 11011 but .1 1111x 114111011 for 111x1a11cc F111 L1N1Il Nlarbles 1111 L.1uQ11111o Lani 1er the 1Qv1111a11 Hector 111 116 umm N 115611111 111. eu guve S111'JH1cll1CC 10 1111 re111ar11 01 111C forugu general 1111 1 fT'lLI'lf11X x1Q11 10 101111011 1111211 a plaus 10 sank' 1111 111C other hand 1111 1100111 p11111011s of 1110 111y a1e most 'sflllrllld 111 LIHY e11d of 1111 1111 s1101x5 street 1111011 street 01' 111o1101011011s uqlv 11Ul1NC9 11 11111611 1119 xxolf 01 1111111111 alxxave 1111119 ln Pet11L0a1 Lane or Mwldlcsex 51.1211 1111 street 111a11xe1 15 VCIV D1Ltl1I'6SKlL1C 11111 1111 p011ce111.111 11ov1.rs necu our X111e11c,111 fr1e11d 10 keep a11 we on 111'-1 watnh and .1 11a11d U11 1115 puma c111r111Q 1119 1 11 13111 X111er1ca11 leax es for 1115 111111 shores 1'1lb 111e111or5 .1 dcar one and 111 ls 1111prLssul 111111 the 1111.,111 and 111e force and 1119 beaulv 11 the worlds 111e1rop011s X1111 111 wp11e 01 1111 do111111a1111Q love 101' 1118 0xx11 1110dL1'11 clean I11l10C1H1.C utms 11lS 1101111 111:11 111 knows 19 the moxt blessed land on earth 11 1lx'x.11s c'1rr1e2 111 1115 11ea1t an 11iLC11011 101 old 101111011 xx 1 D 4Q ..,, .3 , . , . '.'. . . .,' ' C ,... - 1 ,,. ' .,A. . . , ' . 1 j. ., ' . '1 -, ' iz 1' '- g L .F 'Q ' ' -, 1'.'. ' 'Q' ' ' I' 5 1 .i ' ' 11- 'f ' ' ' 'Q .' - 1' 1' ' 1, ' A 1' N 1 ' ' .t 1 112 1 ,. ' ' ' 1 J .5 1 1' 5 1 ' ' i 1 1.1 1 '--' pm - v- ,- 1 ' .1 - ' - 1 -A Iv' '1 ., 'I- ' 'C Q1 ' . - - - f ,1 f --'a- ' 1 .r - Z x --'- - .1- V 1 '- - , -.1 'j- -1- ' 1 -1 -A '--, '1 - - 44,1 -7 E -' 1 ' J- 1 lv.: 5 - -I 1 A- L- - 1 ' 1 ' fa 1- ' -- -N-' f P - 1 .1 x- - V ' ' 1, - -A b V V 1 ,t 5 Y -' S T , 77 .' 14 .1 1,' Sw. Loxxfards the wharves and docks. is 1110 i111111e11si1y of the s11ippi11g realized. .-X11 J 1' .' ' ' ' 'A 'l . 1 A 1 ' f E ff! . 1 1 ' , A , Q, L, 'V ' K. ' , X, Q . ! I 'J 1 ,.' Y. ' ., 1 . A . . f -1 - -, - ' ' - ' - ,U , ., A - . , 1. A , Y j ' 'K , . . . . 1- .- . , .- . , ' Q ' .Z ' .. T.,-' 1 f 5' - , . - . N ...- 1'-, 1 12,1 ' ,' 1 1 ' '.,1 1114 Q' , -'1., 3 g f A+ . '1s . 1- Z7 '. ' ' ' are ' ' ' . . A1.1...' 13. M151'121, ec. '20, GRADUATION Freshmen, wise aurl lcuowing ull, Came we to this knowlerlge hull, Fillcfl with wisdom of the worlrl X'Vith eyes that scorriefl, ziml lips that curlecl. Each iulizrhiling alone .X sphere that turuerl zihout his throne. Swiftly four short summers spell. XN'hieh well into our fourth year lecl Meanwhile, daily lessons learuefl, CSave the few times when we spurned Sc-arcliing for a wider I'2il1gL'l -These lessons wrought ai NV0llll'1'Ol1S change. Now, as Seniors, soon to leave, Do we backward glance, anal cleave Unto these days so nearly spent, Discover with astonishnieut 'l'hzlt all is false which we have sung- 'XVe're but beginning to be ycmngl Close before us, days of stress XYhose outcome all the worlml must guess. 'llhanks to God, with lusty lung' XYC filler, that we now he yO11l12', To lake our share: still mzlrlcing time XVe soon step forwarcl into prime. l7ORU'I'IlY Llr.x1.xN , . 4 ' 79 .4 5 .W X . ,, .LJ - A , lf ll 49 A moving WHAT CAN BE DONE WITH WIRELESS K ' . C f agjkii a X21 'Wi TELEGRAPI-IY HE coming of wireless telegraphy has opened an altogether new branch for the use of electricity. It means the grad- ual decline of the telephone and telegraph. As its substi- tute Wireless telegraphy or telephony will be used. This means the disappearance of unsightly telephone and tele- 1' l 5- 1 Fghzff 54 graph poles and a consequent prodigious saving, for they take many million cubic feet of lumber, at a large cost annually. train, automobile or aeroplane will be constantly in com- munication with the world, even though. going at full speed. Its electricity will not be obtained from troublesome storage batteries, but it will be generated by its own motor. or taken direct from the air. This will save valuable time, especially for trains, as they will receive their dispatches while going, instead of having to stop at stations. This prolongs the life of a locomative, as most of the wear and tear comes from the starting and stopping. NYarning's that will prevent serious accidents will reach the train which before sped to its doom. Certain railroads in the east are now installing this system. They have proved that the expenses are being' cut down and their efficiency increased. On the ocean it is of tenfold more value than on land: for Where it means the saving of money on land, it also saves lives at sea. lt has been a big factor in the present war against the submarines, for attacked vessels can often get aid from nearby destroyers, and escape unharmedg in some instances the submarine is sunk. All ocean going vessels must have a tirst class wireless operator listening' all the time. Before the war about nfty thousand amateur wireless stations were in use in our country, and the number was increasing' each year. Our govern- ment wanted to encourage amateurs, but. at the same time, it had to make laws to protect its own and commercial high powered stations from the interference of certain unscrupulous people who did interrupt important messages. i For the duration of the war all amateur stations are closed. but our government has these sets and operators to rely upon. It will take many thousands of operators to man the aeroplanes and new ships ot war, with which we will have to defeat Germany, and the majority of them will come from the amateurs. lt is more often the industrious amateur, who has to economize on expenses. that finds some valuable secret or invents some new instrument, than the educated fellow who buys his own set. ln this war many new uses for wireless telegraphy are being' found. Torperloes are being made which are started, steered, stopped and fired. without a person on them, through the use of the wireless. One of these can, and l hope will. be sent into the Kiel canal and destroy it. Only a 'few months ago a boat sailed twenty-two miles around the 50 shipping of New York harbor, sustaining no injuries and returning' to the pier from which she started. It was run and uavigatecl by wireless telegraphy. Now you see what can and may be clone with wireless telegrapliy. aurl you eau look forward to an almost entirely new electrical world. SlxM'L IXl.'l'SClll'l,lE1l. On America Nlfhen brutal force and evil ends combine And try to force their pow'r upon the world, Then freedom arms and banners are unfurled And men give up their all and cross the line That marks the lands of life and deathg Of all earth's treasures is prepared and whirled, 3 And all of rights great power and might are hurled Into the fray for humanity divine And liberty of men, And oh, 'tis then America, with all her forces great. Takes up the Sword of freedom and of right. VVl1o with her allies brave and strong Defeats the evilg conquers for the fate of men That cries for progress: ah, L1 hopeful light. IQALPH CTMIN, '19, 2:01357 51 A STRIKE INCIDENT stu the interest ot the newspaper men Nr? , . Ns IYQX staE of the afternoon ' Record, which IUTIIING had happened in the town of .. - gjxf X. '. ' , ,,.. T , . . A l r l - - i' 17- if N -A 5 if y V 1' 1 - 7 ' lrlarlcm that would The all-absorbing lonqshoremcn s strike had not men dex eloped a new phase. the day was tot hot uarm but just plain hot. The at its best did not display a great deal of lite, now presented a scene of utter listlessness. Reporters and editors alike were sprawled out in swivel chairs, smoking and talking listlessly. The only person in the room that would impress one as being in anything but a morbid state was the slight figure of a boy bending over a book vouring the contents. He was known as Bob hlerrill of the press, Gull liireaking in on the tranquillity of the editorial buzzed a sharp summons, and the city editor reached down the receiver. Strikers rioting at Pier 36,'l came a business like v Thanks awfully, said the editor and hung up. and apparently de- or, in the language room the telephone out lazily and took oice over the phone. He turned in his chair and looked over the roomful of men. lfle at last reached a deci- sion and called the boy to him, who came with an eager expression in his face to where the older man was sitting. Hob, began the editor: I have promised you an opportunity to cover a good story, and now I think that your opportunity has arrived. tio down to Pier 36 and get something on this strike riot. 'Play it up big. Get a feature story on it, if possible, and do it quick. The man had hardly spoken the Words before the boy was dashing out of the room for his hat, f-Ie climbed on board a jitney bus and was soon running down the long line of piers. In the distance he heard shouts and saw a crowd of men. lflis heart began to beat faster as he thought of the great opportunity that might be at hand. X-Nflien he arrived he found the men chopping down the gates to the pier. and when they had completed the operation he followed them in. They next set about throw- ing the Wharf guards into the water and. with them out of the way. broke into the office and ransacked it. This did not seem to satisfy them, how- ever, and at the suggestion of the leader they advanced upon the piles of merchandise and proceeded to throw it into the water after the guards. Up to this time Hob had been enjoying the operations immensely. He picturi-d in his mind's eye what good reading it would make in the columns ot the paper. This unnecessary waste, however, brought to his mind also the struggle that his country was having in its noble eltort to feed the world. He thought of the people who could be saved from starvation by this very food that was being destroyed to gain the selfish ends of a few men. Ikvith these thoughts in his mind he completely forgot the story, and with a Husherl face he sprung upon a packing case and shouted to attract 52 thc z1ttc111io11 ol' thu f1'011ziu1l 111c11. ,llllljy stolmllucl for El 111111111-11t, Illlll 1l111'i11g that pause such 2111 appczll for thc cause of lllllllilliltj' 0211110 l'1'Q111 thc l'11,1y's lips lllllll' cx'c11 the most Callousccl ot the NYUI'lC11lCll stulipcil to listen. XX'itl1 clo1111f:11cc z1l11111st i11c1'cdiblc for his years hc' 11ui11tc1l out to lQl'lCIll thc Iiully of their ZlCllOI'lS. :11'1d, after 501116 time. b11cccc11lccl i11 llllllilllg' lllvilll Svc it his way. lflc then T.l101lg'l'lf of the thing' 1'c11lizc1l l1o11-' hc hz1cl ruinerl his chances to from 21 l'lfllU1'lCl'-S 111,1i11t of vicw z1111l get il big' stmy. 1-lc c:1111c l1z1clc to the office, :md related to thc editor his experience, with 21 XVOClf1C'g'll11t' cxpressio11 011 his face. XVl1e1'1 hc spoke ul his 'lz1il111'c to l1l2lliC good thc 1-ililm' la11gl11-cl 211111 tolcl hi111 that they had l1c 11rc'111lcl clo the work. sent z'111otl1Q1' 1112111 10 sec l11'1w X'VO111'lU' lll'll1.il CO1'lllll1lCCl thc cclitor. 'ANL111 hzwc hccclccl thc ll'lOL1g'llI ol 5 c llllllliilllfy. L1I'lSCll'lSl1lj'. lly your actions you have Cl'lSI1l2lj'L'1l thc Cl'l1l1'Z1Cl1'T that will uvc11t11ally 1'11z1lcC lxll1L'I'lCZl proud 11000111 my COl1Ql'?lflll?1llOIlSlil of you. .XS for thc' SIOYY-XYL'll, Nl',I.S!1X Il1..11Y 11. fail jj? kt NK Gi T I7 111111 s .11 I'dlJ1ILlI'OL1S song 111 1113 111.111 111.11 19 r111Q111q 11111 cl'1111111'1f1 111th 1011 111r 111111 111. 41 11121u11fu1 song 111211 1111 anqclw. are s111q111Q Itb a song that awakes 111111 1:1111 11111 1 111111101 rcst111111 It 111011Q11 t1'1 as 1 1111211 FOI 11110rv 11 11r111g-: to 1111 IQCC1 61.1111 the 11111111 111r011g11 the 1111111 01 1111 112,111 N11 11011111 111111 t111 11111111 211111 1111 10111 111111 t111 11113 X1111 up 1111111 our 1121111111 our 11211111 111111 111 51113 511111 1111 gflorv 111 b11111tc111 '111c 1o1111111g 211111 1111011111112 111111 s111111111g 111111 11101111111 Ot 219,15 111111 11211 uQ apart 1111 1211 ZIQL 111111 111111 111111 s1t OL11 11CrlI't5 111ro1111111ff X1111 Q1a1t1c us 111511 110111 the start 11111 1lI11xCf1 1111111 1111 410111 t11c 1101101 211111 10ve C71 1111 1xCC1 f11'lC1 t111 1V111t1, 111111 0111 RLIICI .111011 '1111r1 s 11 t11rc1 that 1111121 11111 S0 011 w1t11 t111 1111l011y s111 C11 1.115011 X11 AX 11 111-1 the Q100111 211111 the 1101 111111 1116 pam 111 t111 11111111 of 0111 S11 01111111 qi S 0 , ,.. , . . . . W , . ,Y . f . . . - If 1. ., . . . 1 1 . . L . 57 L ,1 - - r r 1 1 my 1 - 1 , 6 . , Y .. , A - .- 1 - 1 ,. -,. A . . . ' N K., p ' ' L 1 nn! . 1. V .. , A 1 1 - 1., ' . ' 1. - 1 , p . , x-1 , . , . . , . . 1, . ,1 1 1 1 1 , , ,. . . 1 1 . . , , , A .. . 1 . . . , . , . 1, , - , 1 . . 1 ,, ' , , x , . 1. , , ' 1 ' .I Y ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 2 1' ' 'l , K ' v 'A 1 . 1, .. , .... , 1 1- , AY , . . K , , . ,, . , V, , Y 11 1 ' I . 1 Q . , , . 7 ., .. . . , T . ,X . . 1. . . 1 - .. , , . V . . . . , , , , . 1 YD ' ' , . V V V ,1 1 , ' 1. v 1 ' , , Y , 1 , 1 , , , . ,. , . . 1 - - ,, J. f 3 - - ,1 , . . . I, ., 1 ,I . , . .V 1 ,, . , 1 ' . , , 1 1 - - 1 1 . - - 1 A . 1 ' 7 - 1 - . - ,1 1 y, . 1 1-, 1 g EDITORIAL Clfl.-KRIJES GIWES VICTOR SALSMAN G EORL5 E A. ROBERT EDITORIAL STAF F CI-IARLES A. Ci.-XTES, Erlitox' DOROTHY ULMAN, '17, Associate DEPARTMENTS. CORLEY, '19, Art Editor. L. INGRAM, '18, Sporting Editor. W'.fXL'l'ER SCHZIFFER, '17, Asst. S1N71'tIl'l5.lf Editor. ELEANOR OSFIORN, '17, Girls' Sporting Editor. GERAI- l REI.JERlCIi AI, H. FISCH .-X LI..-KN D. RALPH CAI-IN, '19, Exchange Editor. MARVIN OSBURN, '19, News Editor. SI-IELLY N. PIERCE, '18, Assistant News Editor. KENNETH PELTON, '21, .'x5SISi.I1lI1L Art Editor. IRVING XYEINSTEIN, '19, Reporter. BUSINESS STAFF. VICTOR SALSMAX, '18, Business M:-uizlgcr. Associates. D WORTHIXGTON, '18 EDGAR BISSINGER, '18 Assistants. RAI-ILS, '17 I'-IARRY LOVE, '18 GEORGE VAX Vl.ll'Z'l', '19 CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE. . '18 FREDERICK C. ROTHERMEL, '20 IXIALYINA MILDER MEYER, 120 SAIWI. ALTSCI-IUI,.ER NELSON BLACK, 'IS Xt'J'lll-llili term, another pcriotl ol' that stitiriggc mixture ol' joys and sorrows, work anal play. and give anal talcc. .Ngain we are enthu- siastic. with the Christmas spirit, the spirit of gnncl fellowship. Again a class of earnest senior students hifl farewell to surrottntliugs which they have learned to ,lore and respect. Life is an endless procession of events. Yet. as we panwe anal consider the events of this last dear term in Lowell, one lact stamlu predominantly in ericlence. XVQ have witnesaed our first true war-time term. lior the first time since the days of '61 have we noticed our ranks thinned hy war. The lore ol' country, the innate sacred regard For the right ol' Democracy, has prompted many of the tinest of our youth to join the colors. XVith a vigor and wliole- hearted enthusiasin that is essentially Lowell Spirit. we have responded to the best of our small capabilities. Everyone has done something: l.ike a lcaleiiln- scope are the activities of the semester llashetl before its-Reel Cross work, knitting, basket campaign, paper clrive. and rigid adherence to the policy ex- tended to us hy the National Food Conservation liureau. Into each lfiwcll has put her herat etiiorts. Each interest was accompanied hy that Same spirit of war-time willingness that made success assuretl. llut let us not grow hoastful. Wle have hut done our duty. Truly. the liact that we have contributed so whole-heartetlly to such causes of Humanity is worthy ot pride, but the thing' that we can hc ll109lL justly proud of. is that thing for which Lowell is famous. the Sjviril zuillz 'ZE'I'llC'fl fi -za'1.'.s' alrite. 'lihafs the spirit that makes a winning lfootball team: that's the Qpirit that makes a winning School, and it ia hut the inheritance ue have rcceix-'efl from our American traditions, traditions that engender the spirit that will carry the Stars and Stripes. the 'liricolor and Union black, over the top and estahlish the rights of uianlcinfl throughout thc world. THE LOWELLH' XYe have published eight issues of T111-1 l.ow1il.l.. llowever small and inadequate they may have heen, we must realize that the interests ni the school were divided this year, and that no one activity could receive more than its share ol the pecuniary support of the student hotly. We hopetl for more. yes. fought lor more. hut we took what was given us, and did our heat. Wie hope that you appreciate this. and try and make next ye-ar's l-ow1u.r. higger, finer, and more representative of the really great institution lf.-iwell lligh School is. 57 DOROTHY ULINIAN GEORGE A. CO1-LLFIX ELEANOR OSUORN ROB!-IRT INGRAINI MARVIN OSBURN KENNICTH PlBI..'l'ON SHELLY PIERCE 'KVA l JI' ICH SCH KFFER RALPH CAI-IN IRYING YVEINSTEIN' GICFLXLD XYOR'I'llING'I'ON, :XSS4.ll'iilU' 1 ICIJGAH Bl.SSlN1,SlfIR. :Ks-zsovislte FR E I 'FISH ICK BA. I'l I.S H.-XRIIY LOVE GICORGE VAN VLI LGT SCHOOL V , .,, ' i xr, 5 ,px r -V ,WN 'ya-C . ,. i-T -. ' C .c:mQSfxxN NN' X -iN-N -' 354 - xg -NXXRQQNXQU1 X-N3 xx-QANQ . N X N y XX Q . . x s n N X x xxxsl x N lx 1 -X x x X N V xk ' X N' X X X - -.xx.xxx.yXxx. N Xl., W 5 ., A U vi - ' ,,.3:..A -11,1 N . ,N ' 7, V 4 5. mwNw,-Q QNX ff wmwww xc. 'QS RVN? 1 ,- 'X f 'QSM A-3 X ft' ,f ' rf .X f -- NQENQ f ff Q W: w wx . '- 1 'D :D I, VX- X u. ' sq' n,:S, f ' 1 ' ' Y ' fy v , x . 6 Q, U fa. M L 53. 1: ' ' ' 4 . ' '- - 'r:. ' X-' ' ' X, - xf 5 up 31, -Jjjilx vt . 5 ' Ng ,N - X ' fn? W ff :main . 14 ' H li 5 ' , Q' X X K 5 N e'nu.s' .HN I . L J T 7 I , , : 4 M I I A .5 A 1 23 1 J X I Q7 1 ,P Sf 'JEZTS V - N , V . ,, I lNQJ,,'5prIm ,A K -:Ep , Qxowuib X -' Q'.i4,,u ,FfliP1A'4fEf L x H gt Kg if ' g E.'f'22,.'e,f .px . iii 5 ,MEX . 'L XV- xg-L V V -f, ,4 A' TL . V N Num X D EX gs A J 3 Hi., I V NSN ix? 'V J ' X X -N E xxx N 1 mx X Z4 , XVXN x , X XXX mx xN NX X W l XX X X six X fl 5:-E :,. XX N- av . . 1 1 ' 1 ' J '15 X X x b Y P h ,rail 5 F ,A I 1 N X w A k K ' 1 H X x X ,- A X , XX xx I X i R Ai, . 1 NWN? xx 1, u X x X v I Ewxk x 1 xxQ.N , Y ,Y W T' Y A ',1. My Y I X , I X Qu' Q X Y ,X ..x Q, M XN I ' l:?gj3l.xxLx H- . S 'l . ,R Q X T '. N . ,sl ' X J Y Egg X '- X 1 f ww, fx .. X X XM L 5 ' -' ix, 5 X-Q X .gi . W, ' L 'xxx -X' N I .xx -.K V x I V ,X A- -h-shit.. x N ,I 'Y A XYUKX xlx grv X lv, xx . he -L X X gi fx, : :,.., . ' 'S-x - XX ' N Xfmn '91 gr- X PX . ix 92.-If .X ' '.xX , X X Psiv ,M flxhfji S V 55XfXX -:fl ' - -lwcmsy xui' . 'x xx' Ka YE 3 Am V S R, v .vs 5 gf X I ' x THROUGH THE TERM The fact that the nation is at war has been clearly made aware to the students of Lowell during the fall term of 1917. Many distinguished speakers have spoken to the student body and pre- sented the problems that confront the nation, and XA?s,gIlTEg-EQXIYRIIARTIME have pointed out the part high school boys and girls ACTIVITIES are expected to take in the great struggle. Lowell fellows and members of the faculty are serving in the various branches of Uncle 'Sanfs forces, and the girls have knitted for the soldiers. All these things show Lowell has felt several aspects of the great war. In addition to all this war activity there has been, as usual. a large number of rallies and other like doings. ln the line of rallies the girls were lirst, for they held their first one shortly after the opening of the term, on August 14. It was under the direction ol Grace Cuthbertson. The girls presented two skits and a musical stunt. The first playlet, Mrs Cou1son's Daughter, was presented by Dorothy Ulman, Francis Stowell, Judith Campbell, Adehleid McGowan. GIRLS' Louise Breslauer and Eleanor Os-burn. The second play, given by RALLY the Low Seniors, Mrs, Oakley's Telephone, had for a cast: Eclwina llarry. Francis Langpaap. Dorothy Hill and Mabel Goss. The big Freshmen Reception, that time every term when the poor scrub is made aware by the Seniors that he is a Lowellite, was given on August 17. The orchestra opened the reception. FRESHMEN and Seymour Turner, president, greeted the new- RECEPTION comers on behalf of the Seniors. Editor Gates, OF DECEMBERQI7 ex-President Voyne, President Trowbridge, Eldon Bassett and Miss Howe were all on hand to give the Freshmen words of advice. The reception was closed with a big dance. The cadets were very busy this term and made several appearances in public. On September 4 they appeared at the City CADETS Hall as a guard of honor to the first contingent of ACT AS GUARD departing selected men. They acted in a similar OF HONOR capacity at several other ceremonies. The boys also marched in the Liberty Day parade, October 24. Wie had the pleasure of hearing the first of several talks on the war on September 7. The speaker was Colonel Edouard delfiilly, of the French High Commission to the United States. He gave a very COLONEL interesting talk and told the students of the big job of de BILLY reconstruction that will come after the war, and told them SPEAKS their part in it. He closed his speech with these words: LI hope that you will be good citizens of the United States, good citizens of the world and good friends of France. 62 Ong 01 thu Wu' aa.L1x1t1Qs xx ls thc. 1x111ll111g of thc glrls 101 thc md Lro-,S 'lhe work was 111lr0c1ucLc1 xt Lovxdl bv Mlss Cox 'md waQ soon taken up bx 111f111x Q111q Some NCIV mu XV0l1x xx me 11111101 KNITTING 111 and 2111 l.X111b1t1Ol1 xx '15 held Lots 01 thu Oxrls 11111 than 1111 111 t111Q Wu A1111 maux 1 '-101l11L1 xx111 bg xxzum t111Q xxmtur xv1111 .1 5VVCZl1.C1 knitted bv 1 Tovx ell Qxrl 1111 guls wut: fu11 01 pup 1111s tum and 011 Scptclnbnr 70 1110t11L r.1 y VV'1.'-1 qu L11 t 11. t1111c bx tn umor Q,11'15 111g glrls 1111 JUNIOR sL11tu1 '1 pa11l0111111c VXlt1'l Q,11'111ottc 111110111161 but 1118 1.41111 GIRLS 110 z111xth111,Q 111 1 s11c11t xxav S0 thex had Svlxla 1111K-L11 rvul RALLY '111 1cL0mp111111u11t 4. 1J1ly1L1 How a U0111a111xLc1sQ 1 ccret bta1r1n, Margucntc Dalv was 11reNf:11lc11 1L LUNtOH1 L1V c1'111LL L10QLd t11L 1'f111x 111g buf f00t1Jf111 121111 on thu xz of thc Cogwxcll galnc W 1Q 11L1f1 011 ULt0bc1 -1 11Ls1f1u1t 11OVX1Jl1l1QC. 01JL11ul 1111 1111x 11111 Man FOOTBALL AQLI' 511111111 and C0'1cl1 Oxcrm folloxxcd 1x1t11 1:11115 1110 RALLY 111ec11nQ, xxaQ 11XL1'1C.f1 111111 1111115 of '1 1llL OI'C11LH1.1'l 1111 1111 Lomulv 01 thc L11'tL1110011 xx ns 1'L1I'1lIS11CC1 111 El Qtuut by 11111rQ 'md 5118111111 One ot thg 1913 thmgs 110111 Lhw 101111 xx as 1111 L10 Inmgt C 1111111211 01 tha qnnou 111111 111 thg tum thg 17 1S1fLt vxas lcft 111 319 10 bc. 51101 xx1t11 0111 L1Ol1'l111Q fO1 tht 11001 11111111011 01 the C113 11 THE L 11111x'11g11 xx 1s bmught to '1 dose 111 t11L 1'lTlC1C11L of 01101101 BASKET P111L 1 Q1 xxucx xvrs 111 the 11.1t111c of 1 Q1I'1XC 41111 quuou that sQvera1 1ms1xLts xxcm 1111111 by thg 111110 thc r111xL was 1u1011g11t to '111 gm f111 October 31 thrcu bug 1x11 111ut111QQ ware hnld 111 thc x1r11 F111 hml xx lb Z3.C1C11C,Sk-L11 bv Mr Lartholomexx '1 X 1X1 C X wolkcr xxho 11111 just ICUIFIILC1 flOI11 151136114 116. 1JlO'L1g1'111 bpfore the Ntudgnts vcrx X1Xll11X 111 LO11C11t10119 111 thu 13112011 Ld1111JS and at the 1111111 11011t s1101x111g thu 11111 thc X 111 C A 111axk.111 1111111112 the mm Nr 111rt1101o111ux told 0f111'111x huvs 111 thc t1c11L11cQ and 1J11s011x 11110 ug 1101 as 0111 we some 111311 wL110o1 vs 11 Llosul lux t'11k 111111 a 111111 10 111111 the N N1 L xx 11 xxo 1 1X1 the s1L011c1 111121.11111 of thc c11xf 111L StUdL1l'ES 1111111 trom QCJIIQIPHS 111111 1: 1 1u11c1LL11, 01 A1l1I11C'1.15011S md Ixobcit 1W'1.X1Q BIG WAR nf t11L R111 C10Q.Q 1119 xpndlxcrs xx un 111t10c111LLc1 11x Post MEETINGS 111'1sLQr C11ar1Ls 14 x X11 11111111111 spolxa 011 1J'1t110t1sm N11 DHXIS xx110 xx C10 111 Pmnm as Ialc 'TSf7L1O1N.1 1 1111111111111 01 lutare'-,L to slx 1Lqf11c1111Q thy Xl11C1lL'l11 1100112 111 Fmlmc 111-. f1kSL,l111 t1011Q 01 the INLII 11 work 111r1 131lX mam xux L11t11us11s111. 111x mgux 111 111L 11st 111cLt111Q, xx IN 011 f00r1 L011sQ1x 111011 tlu c1r1xQ 101 xx111g11 xxz1Q ihcn 011 1111 SlJC.'1.1xl.1S xun X118 'w11Lc11fx 10111111rst P1Ls1c1L11t 1x IN Ixman 111111111 01 5111110111 U111xc1s1tv and Nr -Xlbut Thrqott Ihwc 11101111 a'1 L111p1as11Lc1 thu med 01 consuxmg 10011 11111 1'-lxgd 1111 wtuclgnts 10 gat t1c11' f'1.l1'll1lLN 10 s1Q11 thu 100c1 1J1L41L,L 61 A 1 f ' '- z t : fzgi' 1 ' ' ' A f 7 ' I'- -. 1 ' . , ,, ,'.. . . 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LAIILCI Im c1uc111t1t1c-I I 1311 Ll Lou large to garrv to QL1ooI xt 111 Lu gone um 111 In LOIIIIIILILC on 111 LN Q11 QIQAILI' wan 1111 K10uIc JLLOINC 111 0rqa1111at1o11 ll'I1X 01' nun mIu111Q DAIIIUIIL SCIXILL 1 1 uuxom s L J S1 Llune, 1.111 In 111 I7 1 6-1- -F 1 . . ' 5 1 . 3 , N. - I .. 1 . fi . 2 - 1 C1 '1 ' K-.. ' ., 5 -T , . , V- '- 1 ,-.1 fl .- , . 1, .. ,'. - 1 1 -, 1 . V A . , , . ,Sk-. . .3 7'-' .1-I k'Y , 2 ' .1-y ---.1 'If -- L 1 1 11, I 1 1'--. , -f XJ' - 1 -- -I I ff' - 'r 'VI A I - - 1 IL- 3 I, 'U f 5 - ' ' 2 1-1 -' 'II'.' tl I - 'I L5. 'I '. -- 'I-I -I fi ,-M11 -. U1 Ofc' ' 211 tI : I':g' 'I' I 111 '18, 1 'Ag' t 'I 1 fl I 'I:1. 1. bv, . , ., 1. .h 1,'1't- 1,. , 1.2 .UN , ' 'J ' . ' -I 2, ' 3, ' 'I J' AL ., , . 5 ,, ' - . if V I . .1 I ' , 11 15' 'III1 1 ff- 'Is C3111 A' to the f' 113 I1e11, 11 U'tcI ' ... . ' Q Is I '- ' :1 Iy. 'A ' 1' . ' ' 7 .1I IJ gt' ' ' ' ' . ' ' 1 1 V f , 3 ' . SOPHOMORE Between the Soup and the SEiVlJ1Il'y,I, fezmturinmg AcIcIz1 I'-'1'. 'l'I'1'. -1 LI -- 3 I 1- If ' ' ' ' . 'III , 1 , .- . - 1, , .- . -1, - . M ., I A1 1 AI- -. I' -' A . . L 1. .1 S mi , A . VI. 1 I 4 X . l 'Y - - - Z . . , Y K, ,.l,,q : 1' . , 1, . 1 1 , 6il',Y, IA. 17 ' . IIH, . 3 1 d 2 'IL . l'11 I 1 I ' f ' CI' ' 'Inf Nates. '7:I' I 3 -'13 'Q 'I1 ' 1 'I 1 - V 1 I ,Z 11:1 1, , 1.17, E 1 ' 2 '1 yi 'I I III 1I'.I ' 'I - 1 I1 5. 1 ' 'I ' ' . fl- . ,1 , ' ' jf ' J , 'I ' , Y Xc:. a1'. 'I - ' I 'If VII 2 -' AI . -' ' P' I-, z I :I I I' If z 4 wc 'I ' I.. 1' -II, 1 1 '1 .' ' 1-. IIHII - ' I1 1I1 :1II of tI14: IAIITIC, 1cI1 2 1,1 ' it - I' .c'f'. 7 K Because the blinds were down and the lights were on, some of those pres- ent at the Senior dance on Friday, November 23. were heard to remark, Good dance to-night, isn't it? It was, all right! HIGH-LOW Original decorations, which consisted of Ilags of the SENIOR DANCE allied nations, a real Dec, 'l7 electric sign, and n BIG SUCCESS. Dec, '17 Special, a moonlight dance in which a , Searchlight figured promiuentlyf .Also divine music, furnishecl by Shorty Roberts' orchestra, and eats beyond compare. Could zmything' beat that? Not to mention, of course, an abundance of charm- ing partners. i MIL. STEVENS MR, 'l'I'CKER 66 ill? x X ill A, ef, - . Q757R 'r I xiiy 0 XXL if IH gr 91. h ?: . ' ' .,, ' 11 '7 - . ' '- V' 3 - -I Nu r 2 -L. '-i!: 'El Q' -5 4:-.ellr...'5Q.i' '- , 1 fi XX su X If Q I X : :N R3 - i Ho 4 . , ' E 5 , t 1 ff, 1 1' t 1, f 1 3. a ll 'lf'-X .. - .. ' ' I 'uw' x ,I 4 1 x I 52 2 f i. 'X' Ill f 1- Q., 1 X ' I 5 s Q9 .. ' .ffm ' -X x . ' .f tr ' 'AR ' 9531111-57 0' ? X , pw,-X , go ,ggi I.. 26,5 Q' xml'-:Mi 47,2 x, i ,u :ii 'S A 0 !! 5 3 ,u f' if' 'V -v1 , ' ss Ed. Itor answered the phone, said Hello, listened a while and hung up with a good-by. Al, he said, you go up to see Mrs. Lowell. Shes worried about the whereabouts of her children, hasn't heard from them for an age. Find out about them and submit a report to her. Al. Umnus went up to see the old lady and to find out just what she Wanted. lt's my older children that 17m troubled about. Some have been gone for a long' time now, and l haven't heard a word about them. 1 yearn for news about them, so I rang' up Mr. Ed. hor. Al. Umnus soon left and set about the task ol tracing out the paths of lX l'rs. Lowell's old boys and girls. A month ol' search resulted in the following which he submitted to Mrs. Lowell: fljark Tyrell, '17, is driving' a truck in the Aviation Department of the service. james Ransaliott, '11, is the proud father of jim jr. Reuben Goldberg, '01, is still amusing the public by his clever cartoons. Robert and Alan .-Xckernian, '10 and '15, respectively, are members of the Second Artillery Corps. lgiob is a second lieutenant, and Al. is a non- com. Erie Falconer, '12, big brother of Donald. is an oiiicer in the Reserve Corps. Edward 1-larrison. '13, is a second lieutenant in the army. H. S. Ross. '12, is a chief yeoman in the navy. K. llusse, '10, is a lieutenant in the tooth-pulling department of the navy. Sis liatten is with the base hospital, U. S. A. Dick and Paul Tissot are in the navy and Officers' Reserve Corps. respectively. Al 1-lfyman, '15, hopes to drop a bomb on the Kaiser's Cranium. He is in the Aviation Signal, Officers' Reserve Corps. Charles XVeinsheink is with the Field Hospital Corps. Dwight Mitchell is a member of the army. lrle is hoping' to go over the top and bitt some of the foe. 67 i' 'ix x ,. Gam e . X nt ? Xafx X V - ' N sig 'Ex r WV g J' Cor! .,, v 4 , - lfv 1 i Although only about twenty-five to thirty in number, the exchanges on The Lowellsl desk this year have been newsy and, on the whole, very good. UI' the animals we received, El Miradorf' ot Alhambra High School. seemed the best. The Oahuaif' was also excellent. A few ot our magazines were, XVhims, an excellent publication from Seattle: Madrona. the magazine of Palo High School students: High School, and a few others. llut perhaps the best exchanges of all, for interest, steadiness and news, were the newspapers and publications like The Lowell. Of these, The Russ and Scribe News were the best. The Russ is published by the students of San Diego High School. lt is a large, 1'our-paced. six-columned sheet, full of news and snappy write-ups. Each issue it contains illustrated articles. The Scribe News is a four-page, Eve-colunm paper, containing' a great quantity of interesting news and clever cartoons. It is published weekly. The Commerce Spirit is a paper of the same size. lt not, how- ever, so newsy, and its write-ups are not as good. The Spirit always has good editorials. From Hollywood comes a two-paged, six-column supplement, published weekly. .ln this limited space, a fine little journal has been worked. up, having its own cartoons and pictures, ads., etc. Cflakland also gives us liN'eelily Aegis, one column smaller than the Scribe Newsfl It is a good. high school paper, but there is no unusual Feature about it. Fremont T-li. publishes a weekly, Green and Gold. that is steadily improving. From Stockton l-Ii. comes one of the top-notchers among the DELQCTS. Guard and Tackle is a paper of four pages, six columns. its articles, editorials and cartoons are excellent. San Mateo publishes a .little paper each week. They believe in home industry so print the paper themselves. l?'lenty of news and a fine ex- change column are features of The San Mateo Hi. lVe take occasion to thank all the publications with which we have exchanged. for their courtesy and promptness in exchanging. 68 f' EW u-1 -- U N mf Mau lkgfgi, QQ. M, A Sx . :f A ' ' 7 . 1 '. ' ,, 5 L .--1 ' A tn' ,' ' 4 -f 7,121 if , 2. E . 4 1 , ' 1 J --E1 qjinlmjk l ' ' Q N Y. .v LP- li T' - -xii F V , 1'-'r1:f:: wr .- ' ' -1 W- . ' ' ,,. J rN '? ' , Ng I.,-, ,.g 2 fi f QV SF A. I ,. , D ' Q., A Q, We 1 2 -'s ' , '- Vw - 1 fir. '19 ' 2'-'I . -Y h 315 I' ,:'?':'l KI I ' H01 fa ' i 1. -Ring '45-f 'fl b 7ffQL -.-5. In lf' '-fa, ff' 4 . .5f2'N- TI-IE STUDENT BODY The Lowell High School Student Association needs no introduction, but a brief explanation of its duties and responsibilities is always useful. The students' association is a body of pupils and teachers, to bring the students together and to unite them in carrying on the activities of the school in an organized systematic method. The governing body of the association is the executive committee. The L. ll. S. S. A. ofhcers, class and organization, representatives and managers, are entitled to a vote in this committee. The committee appoints numerous officers, as book exchange manager. trophy custodian: grants numerals, both school and class. and sets dates of various activities. lt controls permission for class activities, rallies, etc. lt grants money from the budget, controls the cafeteria, book exchange, etc., and organizes and superintends student activities of all kinds. To become a member of the student body, one must be a pupil or teacher at Lowell and pay seventy-live cents dues per term, for which a receipt. in the form of a membership card, is given. This card entitles the holder to all privileges of the association, among' which are the Lowell fnot the Annualj, the athletic contests fsave the linalsl, the privilege of voting, etc. Of the fourteen hundred attending Lowell, about twelve hundred pupils are members of the association. Wfith the dues collected the ex- penses of the term are paid. Xfilhile the book exchange and cafeteria are practically self-supporting, the athletic teams, the societies and various activities require money, and it is to defray expenses that the money is granted to the various organizations. 1 The voting system in use now makes use of primary and final elec- tions, The primaries result in two people being' selected for each office. and the final eliminates one of the candidates. A majority carries the election. Voting is now done in the rooms. though privacy is assured by regulations. ' The ofhcers of the L. lil. S. S. .-X. are as follows: President, vice- president, secretary. first, second, third and fourth assistant treasurer, editor and yell leader. The assistant treasurers' duties are as follows: First assistant has charge of dues: second assistant has charge of athletic equip- ment, funds, etc.: third assistant is business manager of the Lowell g fourth assistant is cafeteria rnaliager. - The officers are elected semi-annually. 70 CHARLES C. TROYVBRIDGE GRACE CUTHBERTSON 'PEVIS IWIARTIN XV,-Xl.'I'ER SCHKFFER NELSON ,BLACK MARION CVNHA VIlf'I'UIZ SALSMAN ICLIWON l lASSE'l' 11 Q, CAFE fxf '51 64133 ' x 1 x , igagireqv' I1i1QXQ 557 -I. ,L J 7x Il x1ll!1l1i I Mfr EQ 27? 046552151 Kuff M '1 14' A x 1'1UI X-Z X 1110111 511111s'1f111 111111 111 11N 111110111 1111s 1N 1111111 11111 10 11111 1111110111- 1 I1 011 111121 01 111111 11111 11a1t11 C1111 10 111111 10111111111 11111 1111 1311111111 IH 110 1 1 11101 1111111 0111: 1111 01111111 1 10011 11'lC1.1 11 11111 10wcs1 110ss11111 111-110 11 111s 111111 1111 L11f1CLlNO1 01 1110 112.1121011116111 10 11c01111111s11 11111 1111 a 11114011111 1 11111 11 11 1 101111111 1 111 5111111111 1XHSOL1P11.101l 1116 12111111111 IN 21.11 111s1111111011 1111111011111 111 1 1111111011 11 11 1111 111111 01 11111 101111111111 11'l19-111111.11 11. 111 1-. a 11111111111 01 1111 155011111011 10 3111 1111 111111111 111111 1.111161 s111111011 11V 30111 T 1 1111011 we 11 11111 be 111116 10 10111111110 11 '111 111111 111111 01 1111 8111111111 1011 1 -5 NVQ 11111 LX 11111111110 110111 111111 111.1k1s 111 11011111 10 Q0011111f,w 111111111 su 111111 811011111 111 1101 Q111 11 0111 5111111011 Gre 11 c11c111 IN 11111 10 N11 R110111s 101' '1ww1s1111Q 111 111211111112 1111 111111111 10 r11111e1 QTL 1111 Q1r11C0 10 11s 111st011111b 111 1011111111011 I 111s11 10 11111111 111 H111111111N 101 111111 5111111011 11111, 111111 11111 I 110111 11111 112110 111111111111 111 11 FIDOW S 111Qs1 11 73 1. 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O . 1 H -1 1 .' . - :P K - 1 ' 1' ' 4 - - . 1 - - ra JA , - , V V- 11 530 V V ,,. - 1 ,V - .. .1-gi, VX 1 ' V' f - V ' '1 r-f' V .ix 1 1 , . . , ,V , . ' - . 1 '. f' 1713. Q, -7' . , ' 1 ' 'N N ' LT' xg. 2 - -1+ w I . A., ,A V V fs- A D x . V V ,,. 1 - , V .. ut L..' 4 XZ, N . - 1 ' V V' Q. g VV: 1 . ' . . ' I 1 . - if ' XQ 1592- T5 , . . 1 - - - ...AS A '-' I . , ' ' 1 'X , f f ' ' 11- 'F' 1 - : - 1 is I 1- 1, 1 1 ' - 1 . 1 ' v YV Lf U .U L4 1. O . - 1 - 'D ' 1 Q 1 V . f A . 1 , . , - , . ,. , 1-r ,. 5 1 ' F I , :' , , . V f. 1 '1 ,V 1 - J V ,V 2 1-1 - ,.. 3 V t , V A-I 3 ' ' . . '. J? V1 , VV- V 'V . V L.. 1 :A V J , , 1 A .V . . . . F 9, 1' . 1 V l . :A ' '1 1 .' . . . - ' 1 L C t-weve X xi l X715 X se ..... 4 ,xxx , , o G5 ' alle. ,- 6, U 1-:1ef!!,'x P ' J Q t-X 1 1 S r QsQ'1.Ef-fi? K it .. ' ,th . ll M Q, f Q - V- - - Q asrfet M ff' e e sa c eww NOLAN, See. HANLEY, Pres. 'l l'RNER, Rep. The Reading Club continues to maintain its place as one of Lowell's foremost organizations. Meeting every X'Yednesday afternoon, it has suc- cessfully accomplished its purpose of instructing, and at the same time entertaining, the members. If anything the programs have been more interesting' than those of preceding terms. The members are distributed in tive sectionsg drama, short story, magazine, poetry, and humor, with a section leader in charge of each section. Each section leader must have ready a good program when his turn comes, and thus the members of the club are provided with a variety of programs, drama predominating. This plan has worked very well and there has never been a dull moment in a meeting. It has been customary in the past to present a large linal play at the end of each semester, but from now on the club will devote its efforts towards but one big play a year, in May. To successfully close this ter1n's work, a one-aet play was presented at each of the last two meetings. These turned out very well and required much less time and preparation than the customary final play. , As a result of this plan to present but oncibig play a year, the Reading Club expects to make that play the best possible, and hopes to gain for Lowell the honor of leading all other high schools in dramaties. 74 I3 X 1? 3 ' Ni-TW Xu ,K W Z T- -1 f 1' I . ' V ' L., f 2 21. R in K8 'l'RA,IY'l'Nl?1R, See. HISSINGER, Pres, OSBURN. Hep. ln spite of many difficulties, the Debating Society has completed Il successful term. The most important events of the semester were the Nieto and Phelan Cup Debates. The former was won hy jackson, and the latter hy Miss Posner, Kirschner and llissinger. llesides these, sex'- eral topics of current interest were discussed in extemporaneous debates. Some of the subjects discussed were the Labor question, and Compulsory Military 'llraining in the High Schools. It is needless to say that much interest was displayed in these questions, which are of such great im- portance at present. Tryouts for the Lowell llebating Team took place: and, finally. to com- plete the term, a very successful mock trial was enjoyed hy the society. The Freshmen and Sophomores, who took a very prominent part in the work of the society, produced many good speakers, and the pep shown by these classes promises a very successful future for the DebatingSociety. Through the work of the ollicers and the active co-operation of the members and the able assistance of several teachers, especially the Faculty :1Xdviser, all those who have attended the meetings and taken part in the debates will agree that this term has been a great success. lt is hoped that under next terufs otlicers, the Debating Society will prosper and he ZI pride to Lowell and a satisfaction to its members. 75 iiftgo' t E f '5 A S -Z it ji 5 x V' X M ' lg eon -Q can OSBORN. Pres. Q UICKJIESON, Rep. Clrl.-XPIUS, See. Never before has there been such an interest taken in the musical organizations of the school. The girls have taken an important part, and the material in the club is decidedly an improvement from last term. The girls have not done as much outside work as the boys, but this is not Surprising as the boys' club is a good deal larger and they are not so busy as the girls-all spare time has been spent in training the quartets and chosen parts. The ofhcers of the term are: Presideiit, Eleanor Osborn: vice-presif dent. Muriel Fulton: secretary, Emily Chapiusg business manager, Jean- nette Nliller: representative, Majorie Diekieson. Miss Keohaifs hard work and interest have not been halfappreciated. N'Yithout her uneeasing etlorts, the club would have been completely dropped, and her encouragement has helped many girls over hard places. Our sincerest thanks are barely sufheient to show what she has meant to us. The accompanying was divided between Mildred 'leove and Eleanor Osborn, both of whom also played for the ljoys' Glee Club. As many of the members of the club are graduating. it will be neces- sary to hunt up more voices for the coming term. It is very gratifying to note the good voices of the lower elassmen, most of whom. are new members ot the Glee Club. lt is hoped that the same interest will be shown next year. The Glee Clubs are very much in demand and have made quite a name for themselves. Next term, they will be more popular than ever and it remains with the girls to maintain their good names and bring more credit to their school. 76 fl KECTHAN, Di1'Grf-M055 LEVY. Pres. lYorlc! This has been the slogan of the Boys' Glee Club since the beginning of the past semester. The Glee Club has' accomplished much unrler the able clirection and untiring efforts of their clireetress, Miss Constance R. lieohan. Several concerts have been given up to :late of writing, for the benefit of the army and navy. Several quartets were picked, and the interest shown was very en- couraging. The Metropolitan Quartet, consisting of Robert Levy, man- ager: XfV2lltC1' Fell, Earle Crane and Louis Muller, deserves special atten- tion. These boys have earned quite a reputation for themselves, and an- other quartet, The Lowell Quartet, is following' in their footsteps. The latter consists of Harlan McCoy, Wfinston Harrison, Frank Sutliffe and Charles Gates. The officers for the term are: Robert Levy, president, and Will Des- moncl, representative. Mr. Levy's voice will be greatly missecl next term, but we are for- tunate enough to be able to retain Mr. McCoy, whose voice-was the discovery of the term. 'The boys in the school have been very backward about trying out for the Glee Club. and tenor voices are needed badly. Let next term show more iiiteiiest and progress. 77 I --- -at ' e r f o f or-is Y- of or r'.jr1 25 :5 i i E Q - e 5 5 2 2 T - ire 2-me ssffeeegssl iff 5, 2.352-1-sa - 3, is, ffl. - so ee -- vera -Q fe S--esf 54' .. 4 U ua C The Orchestra has shown remarkable progress this term. Many new members have joined and everyone has been practising faithfully and taken an active interest in the work. No school is complete without an orchestra. and this one is fast becoming one of the best in the city. The membership has increased from 15 to 25 this term, which is proof of the growing interest in this department. The Orchestra has furnished music for all the school plays and there 79 have been several concerts at the Presidio, given by the Glee Clubs and Orchestra. Miss lieohan has divided her time between the Orchestra and Cilee Clubs and Harmony classes, and has worked tirelessly and given up much extra time. The Orchestra has even won 'favorable outside comment, and with a little more support by the school it will soon lead the city school orchestras. It is exceedingly gratifying that this organization is fast being recognized as a very important factor in the educational and social. advancement of our school. TlH2SEXTET This term there has been organized an instrumental sextet. There has not been much opportunity for these players to do public work, but neverthe- less they have been doing some very good work. and with the coming term they will have opportunity to show what they have been doing this semester. The sextet is composed of cello, Hute, clarinet, tirst and second violin. CADETS The Cadets have existed four terms. the result of the patriotic vision of Major Nourse. .Xt tirst the organization had much to contend with, the apathy and even hostility of the public. lt was not until after the sixth of April that recognition was gained. In the second term the armory was built and guns secured: in the third the Cadets participated in the May Day parade and Memorial, Day exercisesg but this present term has been by far the greatest. In addition to the weekly drill every Monday, the fifth period Vvednesday and the siXthiiyTl1t11'sclay have been devoted to lectures for those desiring to take the officers xexamination. Opportunities for target practice have been afforded on several occasions, and two days of the Fall vacation were spent in camp: also the Cadets have most creditably served as a guard of honor to the drafted men at the City Hall. when the various quotas were being sent on to France. on the average once in every two XX'EICliSHCll'lI'lI1g the past month. They likewise marched in...the Liberty Bond parade. The Cadets 'have been a credit to Lowell and, established one year before the war, they are Lowell's pioneer war organization. A Cadet with his knowledge of the preliminary steps, such as the school of the soldier, thus finds himself three months ahead of his compatriots. As it is time which counts more than anything else, every moment conserved is a step to victory. lt is the spirit of obedience, of loyalty and service to their country. that has been quiclcened in the Cadet that makes the organization worth while. 80 CADETS AT CAMP Some camp! W'ouldn't have missed it for the world! Too had it Wasn't for a week! Such were the exclamations of the group of cadets that came back to the city, on October 13, after two days of camp life, days spent under strict army discipline profitable to all the fellows. Early on the morning of Friday, October 12, thirty cadets, each car- rying blankets and his own provisions, met in front of the school to start out for the Leona Heights riHe range. The destination was reached about 10:30 A. M., and then came the search for a suitable place for encamp- ment. After a site had been selected, mess call sounded. In a few min- utes a dozen fires were blazing merrily, and the fragrant odor of bacon, ham and sausage reached the nostrils. 'When the pans and dishes had been cleaned, the company was divided into two parts, one for those who hadn't fired a rifle before, and the other for those who had. Then the former were led to the sub-caliber range, while the latter made records on the two hundred yard one. , A company of transbay cadets had at this time also taken the op- portunity of visiting the rilie range. That night some of the fellows were restless: they felt that they ought to have some excitement: so about 11:00 o'clock they stole cautiously over to the transbay camp. Then fol- lowed a series of delicate operations while the invaders Passed the sentinels, deftly separated the chimney top from the stove, and returned to their own camping place. They slept soundly till morning, knowing' they had performed a good night's work. The next morning, Saturday, after the strangers had been smoked out pretty well, the pipe was returned. Target practice was resumedg this time the cadets, who had not lired on the two hundred yard range, were given a chance to test their skill. That night there were some pretty sore shoulders among the crowd. About 3:30 o'clock that afternoon they broke camp and started for home, arriving' in the city about 5:30. s 1 X41 I flp .JO 95- 81 L COUNCIL 11. ADVISORY MEMBERS. Miss A. Duffy NYS. N. DUXl'll1'V Judith Campbell G1':u:Q Cutlxlrertson lirlwina Barry Lmiisc Brcslziucr Klzmrjorie Dickieson Miss E. Pcnc L ACTIVE MEMBERS. Class of 1917 Mildred llow Q Class of 1918. Class of 1919 Zoe King Eleanor Osborn Dorotlxy Ulmau Dorothy Hill Anita Nicto Francis Stoxvcll ASSOCIATE MEMBERS. Rzunona Hayes, '17 Clarita Bothe, 'IS 82 ' v n g- WINGED L AND SCROLL SOCIETY ln the service ol' Lowell. Honorary Members. Sidney Schwarz Vtlilliam Crittenrlon Archibald J. Cloud Class of 1917. Thaddeus H. Rhodes Melvin McRae Martin Mitan NVesley Mangels Leo Roth Stewart Manson Daniel McMillan Robert lllg1'Pl.1'I1 Alvin l-lynian Hubert Lloyd Robert Don Russell Green Alan Ackerman Richard Berndt XVillia1n Bender Hyde 'Lewis Robert Bernstein Harold Black Allison Rayman Erie A. Falconer Cecil lluntington lirnest Smith Roy Van Vliet Arnold Bowhay .-Xlbert Simpson Chas. E. Street, Jr. James Ransohoff Samuel Snead Henry Kreutzman Maurice NlCl,.2lllglllll'l Willard Morton Robert Ackerman lhlendell lflammon l'honias Laine Eugene Block Reynolds Mellenry Clifforcl Jones Francis Duprey Peter lbos 'Harold Maundrell Burnett lilamiltou Robert Hare Geo. Lang 'Otto Barlcan Charles C. Trowbridge Donald Falconer, Jr. Seymour Turner Charles A.. Gates lhlalter Sehillfer Class of 1918. Nelson Black Joseph Figueiredo Marion Cunha Porter Sesnon Class of 1919. Eldon Bassett Class of 1916. Voyne Vncosavlierieh Stanley Mentzer Reginald XVilson liugene Rebstoclc, Jr. Class of 1915. George Herrington Walter' Rhode Randolph Flood Class of 1914. Albert Bull lirlward lfVagener Arthur Carlagni Class of 1913. Erwin l-lirschfelder Class of 1912. Davis Vlfolf Vincent Mead Stanford Olsen Lynn lfVard Class of 1911. Thornton Grimes Artliur Marwedel Osgood Murdock Class of 1910. Milton Marks Paul McCloskey liverard Olsen Class of 1909. Lyman Grimes Raymond Flynn William Johnston 'Endicott Gardiner Class of 1908. Lelancl Sparks Elwin Corbet Joseph Leopold Class of 1907. - Leo Hammer Andrew Messis Class of 1906. Melville Long Class of 1905. Herbert Long' Victor Pollalc 83 Caesar Mannelli Robert XNIOFIIISCI' Sherwin b.lZlC,lqCll7lL Tevis Martin Louis Bering Eugene Mahy VlClOl' Salsinan Grant Atchison Howard Rnnsoholl' Charles Doe Alfred lireslauer Albert Brown Herbert lNilson Victor Furth James Conrudo Edmond Shanero Paul Tissot Bennet Golcher Byron Jackson, Jr. Bert Thomas Jack Tufts vvllllillll Rainey George Montgomery Frederick Maggs Harold Potter Robert 'Underhill Sherman Burns Leo VV. Meyer Edward Salomon Hollis Fairchild VVillian1 McRae Carl Burns Justin Fuller Marion Read Ramon Silhert l-lugh Young Harry lflynn Leslie Henry vvllllillll Garvin Wlilliam Lieb Adolph Tiscornia Alfred Roncovieri, Ji Hiram Johnson, Jr. WEARERS OF BLOCK AILXANDER LRAVIN I'RXNIx XIORTOX T II RI-IODI-S IRAINICIS I CROI Ls T A SNIITH IRI D W' IxOCH ARCIIIP-XI D CLOUD RFVI RISND III NIUI I I1 AUX XI VYANDEI CR XVI IN JOSLPII P NOLJRST MI I VIN HCR-XF I OUIS BI RIIXG III XRGART1 CRIXIISS III SIE IIARIII CATSAR 'XIAXBTI I I XRFIIUR DLNYE BINJAIXIIX COID ILOXD I-Illjll l'I Al I 'XXI NI VX IIOII CHRIS 'IROXXIRIDGL 'XFRX PIINNIXGTONI XIIRI XXI SXX II I I' ANIII-IOXY CLWHA IDIIII PASIXIORI NIVAI TER SCIIAFFE SI-IIRXVIN' 'XINCIxI'NLIIl IRX INC KAUI IWIAN IIRRRX XBIXAN TI XX ILLIAXI COOK Cl ORGL STAIX PON ISRIC RICHARDSON ROXPXI IINRREII ILI I FRSOX ILXSLR NIINYIII BTRLLSOY ILOXD S'I OCR 'OSI I-'II HOUSE I IO XOUXG NILXBTL GOSS DXIXIEL XIQIIIIII XN IICIIARD ILII IBN I LIGI XF XINHY I I DON I! XSSLIT I UCY GRINII S I OUIS I ICIITLNSTI IW PARRX OCOXNOR SII PIIFN IIIXRICIIS XX II I I-XXI COOK ERIC RICHARDSON BLOCK CIORGII DAWSON If PAUI CLANIPIZII' 19 ALBERT I-IOOPVR 'IO IXIXIIIS CARSON 20 DICK JULITX 19 IACIx STRAUSS Ib BARRX OCOVXOR 19 DOUGLAS RIDDEI L 20 ROSS PIZLTOW 19 IOSEPH I-IOLQII I8 RAS NIOXD IIXRXNOOD 90 FACULTY Ulon CLASS OF 1917 I 1:51 ctball P CLASS OF 1918 CLASS OF 1919 CLASS OF 1920 S AWARDED THIS TERM 84 Gold Gold Gold Golf Gold Gold Gold orwxx I Block Ilonoruy I lonorwrv Track Tmd Iootbull s 'dsl Ltlnll Cnrlk Ilmsketball lsclnll ISootb'xIl Trad Track Tr'1cI TFRLI Tmck Gzxls B151 ctball Cnlk I lsketlmll I ooilu Ill C1115 Pwsketbxll Footlvlll LI I not m Trwcl Tra.rI Tr'uI T1ack Debwte Dglmtc Delntc Deb uc Su ummm Tooth III Bm-.lcetlmll T1 'Lol Guls Sxumumn Su IITIIUIIIL I ootb 111 BWI atb III Swmlmm Swxmmm Su IITIIIIIIN, Tncl Culfa fraul Swxmmm SW1111lT!l1'1g Swunmxn Swim mm SWll'I'I1'I1Il1 Swxmmm Svvzrnmm SWITIIDIIIIQ' SNVJIDIIIIIIQ' QDWIITIITIIIIQ Sm 1111111111 . .. - . , -. . -. , I ...... .. 1 L 1- ........4................................-.,-...... . 3 2 + ,- ,-YIL. - my 3, I,. 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GRf f'I FOOTBALL Loxxcll du doped 1t1 100tb1ll LLL1111 unchr c0111p'11a1,1xc d1FhL11It1c.s t1111 11.-1 and although It VKLLS L11'1S'L1CLCSb1l1l 111 NXIUIIIIIQ' the mtv Lulu It had 1 1Lc01cl that 110 tnam ugul be ashamul to cl1spl'15 Out ot tha 111111 H1111 School tootball 10111115 th 11 11 are Qngagcd by thu Lou dl team 11 11:11 01111 111.11111 bx U10 xxluch 11 ffu trom bcmq '1 bxd ruord Tlus 11- the brat 111111 111 four wus that Lowell 1145 uot won thu b F A1 L Ruqbw gh 1111 1111111111111 but 11111 1.921111 11.11 h'1cl Qlidtll cl1fF1c11lL1Lb t0 c011tL11cl VV1t1'l than .1111 01 thc thru succpsxful tgams Ill 1914 thc. fllst 3111 we 11011 the t1t'L un h1cl a 11.1111 111.1dC up of xetu 1111 .md Loachul bw Z1 1112111 whom 1111011 uma 01 Rugbv and 1115 ab1l1LS 10 uupnrt th'1t 1411011111120 wma xx011d11tul Ru XIl1lll11Ll1X lhg mxt 1f.ab011, 1911 uc 11 orc l'l?111CllCrI'l3DCd bx hax111Q 01111 ugbt 1c1L1f111s but vxgre 212111111 uudu thc 21dx.111t.1QL'2. of tha Qxput tutuldgc 01 hex lWllll111C11X In 1916 we neu, 11111111111 enough 10 lose 0111 Ruvln 10.1111 who JO1I1Ld the 101011 md vxeut to frmcg but on thc othu 1111111 uc 11111 IJIACULJHV 111 Lntue nam of 1etLr111s fOL11lLC,1'1 111111 110111 the 101 tgam 11.111112 returmcl to pl'1y .1ga111 T ut tha 1911 nam 11.111 cl doublc IIZLIICIILLIIJ uudpr x1111d1 10 work N01 011lV dld WL lauk cl Rugbv Lomb but bU21du 11111 QlLclt d11.1dxC111t.1ge ug stfutul thc snason out w1lI1 011lv hw. XCtLl'1l'lS bank T10111 law VLZ11 s tr. 1111 Xllil It WV. unclu than d1f11u1lt1Ls 111.11 '1 tgzuu xv 1Q dcvglopul whuh clefaaiul mary 1121111 211.1011 1111 bay cxpnpi Lerkplu H1Q11, and remhcd thy 611:1lQ 111 tha Loutut TOI' thc. S I X L L11El1l1l7lOl1Shl1J SL.1L.011 was 2124111141 tln 10ld1L11 01' Fort M11-1011 who although thu out cl.1s-xcrl us 111 spgul 'mud wx Clght, X1 are 011IV able 10 ddcat us 10 to 3 I atu 111 thc secwou th1 team plund Sfd11101fl and qanta Clam L 1111 CI fltIL9 fjlll next game max w1tb I'1'tI11OI1t H1gl1 across the bax I11c1de111.1llx th1s 16.1.1111 11011 thy ch:1111p1011111111 our thcrc and un wuu the 01115 PIIQQI1 buhool team to due It thun XXL cdgul thuu out 1 to O bs a hen k1Ck nom crtccl bx Ldbc Leung 111611 111 qumk 1114102-1011 wg duteatcd thc IOHOXXIUQI cross 111 II1Qh bL1001H bv shut out sporu ovxdl l 1,21 1121111 11g1 Loxull 11 Xld.1'11Lfld H1211-O lowdl 11 U.1lcla11d lcch 0 Lmxdl 57 I'l11NK.151Y1-Y 111,11 of Oakland O Up to thlS p0111t 0111 rccorcl was u11bLc1t 'ably XXL I1 ul 111.15 ul fivg Ihgh Qchoolb .md had 111 1111 a total 0f 03 11011111 10 our ODIJOIILIHS O 111111 1.11111 our 1111111 11c,1kLlLy U1 h Last year thuf 111011111 0u1 I'f.LO1Kl oi 111 1111bcat,1bIc team bv dcfLat111.g us 1 to O 1761112 thc 01111 H1gl1 Suhool 10 flnlufxt us 111111 vear thu' brokn thc 101.11-1 01 our so 111 111100111 11111111112 lCLOI'd and mu through us IOI .111 0vcrwl1Ll111111Q, x1Lt01 v or 19 to O 1110111 thou 011 Lowull s Iugk ch.111ged Rgrkdgv 11 Ld 111 OVL11 111.1 9'LlI7CI'lU1llX aq.1111 and h1d b1dlV Shatlelul 0111 110 more record 1116 next neck wg plaxed our Ent lbagve game, 'md plamng 111 rather 15001 form nun ludxx t0 hold Cogbwmll t0 1 NLOFLILQS g.1111L 111111 vm 111 1dL 0111 f11st IULIFIICV to Htfmiord and 1J12'l.V111Q ll'1 br1l11a11t form, wc wmv, V1C.t0llOl1S ox L1 thu gtZ1llTO1Cl sLC011rl V1111tV L0 thc tune 0f 16 L0 3 111 H111 game up c11s11l11xuI thb Q1c1tcQ1 Rugby lmovxlulqe and h11u11. 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'--. --.V -'-.1 11. . 1. - - - 1' , nf 1- v-A , ' 1.11 .- 1 ,- 1:1 1 '-- '1 -1 .xyx r -x w- --1 - 1 f 1 I1 - ' .-1 1' I- - f- - -. 1 -. 1 . 5 .1 -4 . lhc followmg lb 21 111111111111g up of the 56.11.011 O111 11111. g.1111c of the 1. 1 v A-' A 1. - ',1--- -- f - - -1 r -- r fx ' ' A1 F.. fr - ' A- 1 H' 1 . 5 z 1' 1, . 1. 1. . -. , - - J 1 1 ' ' 1 W ' 1- A . f ' 1. . '. .,. y - 1 'l Q ' .1 . .1 '71 , 1-:1 , r I' '- f-.1, Q' J,.' .. ff ' '. . ,, ,f ., , ' . ,' . ...- If 1 1 ' xl A' - L - 4 I' 'l lf '1-0 '. 1. .- ' '- 'f ' 1 1 1 , ' , ' 1 IX , 1 K , .. ., . , . .-, . . g .ul . - J W - C- -. ,f, 2 . 71- 1 -'- V' 1. f 1 ,, . . . ' A . Q, ,, .. Y ., u . . 1- 1 1 - 1- - 7 , 1 , . 1 ' r- - -' ' - , '1 ' ' . .,. ' ' 1 .1 f ' ' P1 ' n .xt . Q . . . . , . , . . . . , . U , X ' 1, r', , - - .1 . ' - lx- W1 U 1 'N 1 f - .1 1.1 f - - .1 1- '. .'. - .' f . . . . .. 'Ti .1 . J' Ai 1 c - 1 ,' . '. ' . . 1' v vm y 1- 2 - - 1. ' - . . x x 1, t J 1. ' r 1 -1 - -if ' L' - 1- 1 2 S 1 .1 at V If-f 1. ' t 1 7 1 Z 1 . ' .l. ' V, N.. v . ' . ' ' ' , J., J. .' , ,,- ' . P' s . 0 - 'M-1 1 -1 1 '-,Z 1-1 - y 1 - - ' 5:1 44. . ., A , '., season. The next week we ran up against Poly in our second league game, and after a last and furious tussle we managed to Qc break on the good side of a 5 to 0 tally. -This put - 1 1 - ' - v' ' X f - ' . rl x Q ,, 1 us on an equal standing with Lick for the title. lhc U5 W next Saturday we again journeyed to Stanford. with a good reputation to uphold down there. But it turned out to be a sad day for Lowell. The team seemed to be in a terrible slump and played Rugby like a bunch of Poly interclass men. XYe suffered an ignoble and shameful defeat at the hands of the Stanford Frosh. 'llhe final sum up was 47 on the Froslfs side of the score-board to the hated goose-egg' on Lowel1's. On Saturday, November 3rd, at Ewing Field, before a howling' mob ot enthusiastic Lowell and Lick rooters, the final championship game of the league was played to decide the fate of Lick and Lowell. And against a team superior in team work and speed Lowell ended her football season ingloriously, by losing the championship to her oldtime rivals, Lick, by the score of 13 to O, a long to be remembered score. But let us forget the sad parts ot this season of ups and downs and give a great big rip-roaring E-rah-rah For the 1917 FOOTITALL TEAM, the team that did its best and fought throughout a season of great dilh- eulties and trials and against great odds for the glory and name of good old LOXVELL. The Team. Dan McMillan, height, 5 ft. SZ in.g wt., 191 lbs.-Front Rank-Dan is our vet at front rank. His ability to hook and his ever-present light have given him an enviable reputation among' city high schools. Dan was very instrt mental in coaching the forward pack also. 1 Fat Roth, height, 5 ft. 8 in.: wt., 188 lbs.-Front Rank--Leo came over from Lick last term and entering' into the spirit of Lowell he showed the same ability and willingness for hard work on the football team as he has shown in every other branch of student activities at Lowell. George Bahrs, height, 6 ft. 3 in.: wt., 193 lbs.-Lock-llahrs was an- other imported man. His height made him our mainstay in the line-outs and his determination and sticking qualities assured him his position. Jack Ferri, height, 6 ft. 1 in.g wt., 155 1bs.-lireakaway-,lack arrived with a rush during the interclass last term and has played an Al brand of Rugby all season. He is aggressive, has a good swerve, and was a big factor in getting' the ball to the back-field. Tony Cunha, height, 6 tt.: wt., 160 lbs.--llreakaway- l'his has been Tony's third year on the Lowell football team. This year he played an all-star quality of football and was one of the most feared forwards in the city, as he is fast, always plays the ball, and is a reliable taekler. Port Sesnon, height, 6 ft.g wt, 180 lbs.-Rear rank-Porter was one of our steadiest and most dependable forwards and a good, hard worker. He could always be found in the thickest part of the ruek in every game. 87 1-le is the conscientious type ol' player who is a g'reat help in making a team. Eldon Bassett, height, 6 l't.g wt., 172 lbs.-Rear rank-Eldon was an- other of our vets. I-le was shifted from lock, where he played last season. to rear rank this year, Where he has played the same caliber of football as he did last season which, although he was then only a Low Sophomore, assured him his berth on the team. Red Gittings, height, 0 ft.: wt., 157 lbs.-lrlfiug forward- Red played one of the most important and difficult positions on the team. lt requires a man who can be everywhere at once and is both a good offensive and defensive player. Red filled this bill better than anyone else on the squad so the job went to him. He and the other red-head, 'l'ony Cunha, make a pair of wiry. rangy, fast forwards that is hard to beat. Dean Cunha, height 5 ft. 556 in.g wt., 132 lbs.--Half-back- Little Cunha, as he is often called, to distinguish him from his big brother, has a perfect build for a half-back, little halves that has ever been to his forwards well, and is a Manager Walt Schaffer, live-This is lfYalt's second team. llfalt was the only man this year. Robb Brown, height, 5 ft. appeared for his first time on variety of swerres and dodges Rugby for many a moon. l-,le the makings of a star backliel brilliant future ahead of him. and he is without doubt one of the gamest behind a Lowell serum. He is heady, talks good tackler. height, 5 ft. 1036 in.: wt., 160 lbs.-First season at 'first live and third year on the on the team to play throughout every game PWS in.: wt., 100 lbs.-Second five-Robb the big team this year, with the greatest that have been displayed in San Francisco also has a wonderful tackle. Robb has all d man and from all indications he has a Captain Babe Bering, height, 6 ft.g wt., 170 lbs.--Center three- quarters-Although Babe has been on the team four years, ever since he was a Freshman, he has never played in the backfield before. But he showed his all around adaptability by playing as stellar a game with the backs as he has the past two years at wing forward. lfle has a won- derful record as a Rugby player and this will make his third year on the San Francisco all-star team, which is a record equaled by no player in the city. Last yearls team did well in electing him to the captaincy, as he has been a line leader under great difhculties. Lowell teams will miss Babe greatly in the future. Johnny Connolly, height, 5 ft. 6M in.: wt., 135 lbs.-Wing- Iolinny never saw a football until the interclass last term, but as he was as game as they come and had plenty of determination, he developed into a reliable player in a short time and made good on the big team this year. He is a fine tackler and a ivizz at breaking up his enemies' plays. S8 4 7 ' ' Scotchy Campbell, height, 5 ft. 7 in., wt., 138 lbs.-NVing+ Scotchy showed the stutif he had in him last term when he was a little over half of the Freshman team in the interclass. lie has as much gameness and grit as any of 'em, and we shall hear a lot of Seotchy in the future. Jerry Villain, height, 5 ft. 626 in.3 wt., 135 lbs.-Full-back-Jerry was one of the fastest and neatest players on the team. l-le was brought up on the game down. at Palo Alto, and he knows it from A to Z. He has a dangerous swerve, a great deal of speed, and ease in handling the ball. all of which go to make him ai line all around back-field man. Bob Jannsen, height, 6 ft. yi in.: wt., 155 lbs.-Sub l7ull-hack- limb has one of the best trained boots on the team, and therefore was qualiiied for the full-back position. He is an all around player and is as good a forward as full-back. lric: is no doubt another member of the team with a bright football future ahead of him. Red Salsrnan, height, 5 ft, 4 in.g wt., 120 lbs.-Sub l-lalf-back- Red has the honor of being the smallest player who has ever played on a Lowell big team. But size is no worry to him for he thinks no more of tackling a two hundred pounder than the latter would of tackling him. 'liearlessness and determination made this little fellow an absolutely de- pendable man to put behind the scrum regardless of his lack of size and weight, which he makes up for by his total lack of any yellow streak. Dave Cohn, height, 5 ft. 9M in.g wt., 170 lbs.-Sub Forward-Dax'e's middle name must be light, for, from the minute he gets in a game until the time he gets out he displays enough iight to supply a whole team and have enough left over for himself. He is a rustling forward and all that kept him from being a regular was a slight lack of knowledge of Rugby rules, clue to inexperiencc. Hans Briesen, height, 5 ft. 11 in.: wt., 165 lbs.-Sub FO1'WV2ll'Cl-VVl'lC1'l- ever one of the 'forwards was out of the game we could always count on Hans to fill the position very satisfactorily. He was one of the hardest working fellows on the squad and showed a great deal of improvement toward the end of the season. I-le has another year ahead of him and should be one of our best forwards next season. lllesides the first team squad there are also all the second team men who have a great deal of credit and praise due them, for playing on the second team and serving as opposition for the big team and getting beat up by them day after day is a thankless duty to fulfill. The only redeeming feature being that next season said second team men will be on the first squad and can take out their revenge on their second team. Those to whom praise is especially forthcoming are: Captain Nlullgardt, Manager Spiegl, Hill, Grondona, Ludemann, Russell. Ratner, Jennings, Fullerton, lriarmon, Harrison, jordan, Cuthbertson, Newton, Flood, Bernstein, Griffin, La Forque, Shumate, Gwynne, House, lhiilmots, Smith, and our friend 90 lNollenberg, who was going time on the big team when eliminated from the rest of the season by an injury. The following statistics are of intertst concerning the team: Average Weight of team.. . ..... 15-H6 lbs. Average height of team ...... .. 5 ft. 914 ins. Average weight of forwards. .. .......... 163 lbs. Average height of forwards. .. ...5 ft. ll 3-10 ins. Average weight of backs. .. ......... 145 lbs. Average height of backs. .. ....................... 5 ft. 10,5-2 ins. It is interesting to compare the above iigures with those of last year's team : Average weight ot team. . . .......165 lbs Average height of team ...... ...5 ft. 10,3-5 ins. Average weight of forwards. .. . ..... 164 lbs. Average weight of backs ................ ......... ...... 1 6 Z lbs As may be seen from the above figures the most striking' dilterence between this and last year's teams is the much greater weight of last year's backheld men, there being a ditlierence of seventeen pounds to the man between the two backtields. SWIMMING TEAM. Lowell's swimming team again the champion of the F. A. L., winning by dint of grueling practices and a lirm determination to retrieve the laurels which Lick came so dangerously close to capturing. This term the swimming team is the only one to get their blocks. The practices were rigid and severe yet the whole team attended at almost every one. 'With one exception the Lowell swimming' team has captured every meet that it engaged in, including the San Francisco Athletic League, which we won with a total of 54 points, leading' Lick fthe runner upl by a comfortable margin of 11 points. The Stanford Freshmen fell before the team, 59 to 17 points. A challenge to the Varsity was refused con- sideration. The one defeat of the year was taken at the hands of the Stockton mermen, 41 to 36. The valley high school has a strong team and considering the limited number of Lowellites who made the trip, the showing was excellent. This year's team was a championship one mainly through the efforts of Dick Julien, the captain: Barry O'Connor. manager, Jackie Strauss, jim Carson ble Work. Dick Julien, about the Bay. an d Hooper. Ledarre. Riddell and lflouse also did nota- this year's captain, was the greatest high school star Dick captured three hrsts in almost every meet. 1-le broke the breast Stroke record for the S. F. A. ly. by a remarkable margin. Barry O'Cormor, the manager of the team, is a consistent point 91 A. Setter in the tank. Barry's plunge-for-distanee record still stands un- broken. a manager he is full of pep, having' arranged all of the out- side meets. Jackie Strauss is a new man nn the team and a great swimmer. -laekie's specialties are the 220 and the 440. He is bound to make a remarkable name for himself next term, which is his last. jim Carson is a hard worker and a fast man. Silent .lim is a fast relay man besides pulling down. some very helpful points in the shorter races. A1 Hoo er is a rromisinff Somhoniore. In the 150 he is a hard man D in beat. Ai will go after the weight record in that swim next term. Keep yi-mr eye on him. Doug Riddell is Lowell's stellar diver. Doug may be small but he can deliver the goods as he proven during the past season. He was beaten only by Phil Patterscm of Lick. Del Ledarre showed a world of pep, Coming out alter the S. F. ,-X. L. when all chances of a block had tled and making' weight with a rush. 'Del will be 21 junior next term and should make a name for himself. joe House was the same old hard worker that he has always been. lle placed in this year's baekstroke. Pelton is a comer in the water world. This chap is a consistent worker and will make himself known in time. He did excellent work this term. 5-fig? 9 15 9.2 T r - ' JI' 7512'Qif5rf+A io rs' Ji ii ' i t F' wouto Move Qiyf V, ii THESPH-fx iwtiiildlliiw - ss 1?-Q-gs? r If uv r r 'X ' at X . ' s , Q si ., Q i s , qt 5 i l E I '.-ff' KX 2 L'5iifhu'5 ,. Z9 A .rw gs, 92 TRACK. Few stars but many consistent point earners were the characteristics of our junior track team this semester. There has been no activity in unlimited track this year due to most of the larger fellows being on the football teams. The S. F. A. L. hereafter will hold their unlimited track meet in the spring, following the lead of the other large athletic organiza- tions of the country. l-lowever, the lighter fellows in school formed a track team that lost the S. F. A. L. championship only by the shcerest of hard luck. In one of the closest and most exciting meets ever held at the Stadium. Lowell held the lead until the 'Final relay race of the day, and this was in the 1lO-lb. division. Lowell's weakest relay. Poly was our only rival, and a win would capture the meet and to lose would tie the meet. Through the toughest of tough luck the Lowell team was disqualified and Poly won the meet by :L scant three points. On the track Lowell decisively demonstrated her superiority, but in the held events our weakness was only too apparent. Two dual meets were held. ln the lirst, with Commerce, Lowell more than doubled the opponents points. ljolyteehnic, however, managed to get four and a-third more points than Lowell, in the other dual. The one brilliant star on the team was hard-working little joe Choy, lOO-lb.'er. Unbeaten on the track throughout the entire season is his won- derful record. V The other 100-lbfers were: Reese, a Freshman who made the team and made good by making 6 points in the S. F. A. L. meet. and the dual meets. This little maker has the makin's of a star in him. Weinstein. W'iuey is a hard-working little broad-jumper and ran a good lap in the relay. Hall, a Freshman, ran in the relay, and is a consistent trainer, which counts for a lot. Krueter, sub., is a sure comer, with a little more experience. The 110-lb. team consisted of: Martin, a dandy little sprinter and jumper. sure to make several points. Babin, a good runner now, a star, with a little more work. Berg, placed 3rd in the broad jump, in the S. F. A. L. meet. Geminiani, our best 110 man, but unable to run in the final meet be- cause of injuries sustained in the Poly meet. He is a hard worker and a comer. Stewart, a Freshman who has shown a lot of jazz. lile ran a good lap in the relay. The 120-lb. team were: Pelton, a Freshman, whom hard practice has done a world of good for. Ylfe expect great things of Pelton in the Future. Spivock, a veteran, but unable to do his best on account of sickness. 94 N Martin, a Senior, came out for track and made the winning relay team, through hard work. Church, a good high-jumper, ran a fast lap in the relay Manager Lupton, unbeaten in the 75-yd. all season. OYCODHOI and Caesar, subs., both Fair high-jumpers. The 130-lb, team were: Trowbridge. Chris was our efficient captain and easily won the 440. also 2nd in the lnindred, and on the winning relay. Newhoff. Alan is the fastest man of his size in the city, in the 100. As first man on the relay he always gave it a good big lead. Bull, a comer as a sprinter. lifatch him go! Stanford, a Freshman who sure can run a quarter. lfle will step right into Chris 'llrowlaridges spikes next year. Ludolph, placed in the shotput against fast competition. Brown, sub., a little more practice and experience will help Drown a great deal. O'Cor1nor, sub., was a hard worker. 'lYe are sorry to lose him by graduation. ' De Back, could not make weight. lily looking over this list we find that only two heavy point winners will be lost hy graduation, namely Capt. 'llrowhriclgfe and Newhoff. l-loth of these men crossing the tape for 'tirsts were followed by Lowell men getting second. So taking' all in all, with a little harder practice, there is no reason why Lowell should not be the next S. F. A. L. Junior Champions. TENNIS. This has been an exceedingly successful tennis year at Lowell. It happened that not suliicient opposition could be found either in the high schools of San Francisco or those of the bay region, for the well balanced. team composed of 'Vifallace llates, Skee', Turner, NVilton Smith, Carrol hlensen, Tevis Martin and Lymon Martin. So it was that the racquet wielders tackled both Stanford and California Universities. In the latter case the collegians proved a mite too strong--the scores being very close, however. The showing made against the older players was very creditable to Lowell. At Stanford, the team was far more successful, making nearly a clean sweep. Wfallace llates. Slice Turner, NVilton Smith and Tevis Martin, the invaders, lost but one match to the Stanfordites, and that only after a hard fought tnssle. .Xt the beginning of the term, an interclass meet was held at Golden Gate Park. The tournament was marked by the large number of entries and great interest shown. Some keenly contested battles were staged, but, finally, lX'ilton Smith emerged the victor. l-le is now only a Freshman, and from all indications he will be a very valuable asset to the team. t'Skee and Teris will be missed from the team because of graduation, but there remains plenty of material to make strong teams in the future. lX'allace has been playing a line brand of tennis, and there are lots of others to keep Lowell's fame as factory of tennis stars. 96 L 'rw . V mf . A1 ',- L'-,.. ,.n, li ,.'- Qfilvl. Lf4l-ERI:-':iI . ' I Le3'L':f'nJ-L 1 '.-f'L.: 1555- ,lv I T' E .1 fn.. TV. ,SM.I'l'f-I C. JENSEN XV. BATES S. TURNER r J I GIRLS' ATHLETICS BASKETBALL. Basketball being out of season, the intcrclass was not held until late in the term. Not as much interest was shown as might have been. but a good team has been picked, which threatens to break all records. lnterelass teams : Freshmen-Egan, llronistone, 1.nclwi . llendt Morse, llallorv lrlvfen- 1, F0 I en auer, Cuth bertson. Pi clchard. Goss, Sophomores-linoles, Raphael, Forrest, fxlackintosh. Juniors-Klartin, Cunan, llrickwedel, Helen Yan llorn, Coburn, Lawlor, Burke, NlcHugl.1. N l aclcintosh , The Senior:-1 have been too busy to organize a team and unable to try out for the team. The Lowell's girls' Basketball team has won over the last sccntive games-a record unequaled in this city-and although have been held so far. arrangenlents are still possible, and there that this record will be spoiled. X-'7l11'Sit y 'lf ea ni : l7orwards--linowles, Raphael, Martin, Egan. Centers-lforrest. Rosenthal. l-Ielen hlaekintosli. liermlt. Guards-Coburn, Cuthbertson, Clark. Langpaap, Hagenauer. TENNIS. -F Lb H aski n, Ren wick, Clark, Rosenthal. were thus sixty con- uo gamen is no fear The tennis interelass this term brought out abundant material and the team is a match for any school in the city. There has been great difheulty with the lloard of Education in arranging' athletic meets of any sort for the girls. So far no matches have been held, but in case Lowell is able to participate in one, you may be sure that she will feel eoniident in vietorv. The semi-finals in the interclass left Helen Ulaclc, Charlotte lllosiner, Louise llreslauer. and Eleanor Raphael to play for first and second place on the team. The Enish resulted in a close tight between Helen Black and Charlotte llosmer. Eleanor Raphael defeated Louise llreslauer. In the set for Erst place on the team, C.. Hosmer defeated E. Raphael C6-All C7-55, Team : C. Hosmer has shown great form in her playing and is Consistent and speedy. E. Raphael tsnanagerj has lived up to her reputation and her steady. swift work will maintain her place on Lowellk team in the future. 98 BASK ETBALL Top Row-H. Mackintosh, B. Clarke, M. Hagenauer, G. Knowles, E. Raphael, E. Forrest Middle ROWQM. Cutvhbertson, Mlss Newhouse KCoachJ. I. Eagen. Bottom Flow-R. Coburn i,Mgr.J, E. Rosenthal. SWIMMING. Although this is not swimming season, yet the girls showed such an unusual amount of pep and enthusiasm that the swimming' club was reorganized and about one hundred girls joined. The interclass was held at 'Sutro Baths on September 23rd, and a surprising amount of material was discovered. The teanrpicked from the interclass has tried hard to arrange an interscholastic meet, -but so far it seems impossible, although they still have hopes. ln the meet last term, which was held in relays, Lowell returned the victor, winning by several points. The news was only learned a few months ago, however, on account ol' earlier complications. 'l'he team con- sists of: Mary Wocker tmanagerl, star in the EO-yard breast stroke. worked faithfully on the team and made a record in the breast stroke. She swims second to her sister in the backstroke. Lillian Tasse takes the short distance and plunge. l-ler progress from last term was very noticeable, and her place on the team was undisputed. Lucy Grimes is another who made a remarkable showing. As a fair swimmer last term. she worked hard during' the summer, which resulted in an immediate position on the team, She is the star in the plunge for distance, Lucille Jacobs, a newcomer in school, was assured a place on the team from her wonderful work on the Girls' High team. She takes in long' distances in record time and shows remarkable endurance. Dorothy Lauer, steady and sure, swims the short distances and swims a sure lap on the relay. She has taken great interest in the team and has worked faithfully. Florence Green was counted on last term to make a place on the team hut was prevented by illness. l-lowever, her place was held open for her and her splendid work in the 25, SO, and relay is most noticeable for the short time in which she has had for preparation. Hermine Wocker, a promising' star, takes iirst place in the backstroke and has a great future ahead of her on the Lowell team. Her work has heen very consistent and faithful. Eleanor Osborn fcaptainl swims the short distance sprints and relay, and is the only diving entry. 100 SWIMMING Top Row-H. Wacker, L, Jacobs, F. Greeh, M. Wacker Clvlgny. Bottom, Row--L. 'Grh-nes, E. Osborn, QCapt.J, D. Lauer. 1 ZOI I am ' , I L W2 l Ag 5 gr 'J XT-' , Ev -me 'U3.l.Sll x NXOU Xx 'lg 112 llooi SP12LlI anal ,imll lull llflq lcluolv ou SE OJOLI1 P1112 du 11921121 :mul SIJES alll lmll num? 1S9l12l KIQA null SQ lleclosugq 'LUQLIJ iq .mop sl o.roLu pun KSIIEE onll lo paloaclxa Sl axour pull aloux 'Xcl 05 smlal SV 'SLUE31 IOOLIDS LlBlLl Alla alll IIE dn 1112013 01 DDILUQCIXD Sf Llolqm 'LLIEQ1 lblo sql nos A-lCl'BClO.ILI lllm Euglcls lxox 'llollad 9 alll lo sl1lE pun polled g Olll lo Sllffg 0111 IIOOAXILQCID 91.11123 la lol .SLIEDIPILLI alll II! mon one SUEIJ 'LIQAEE uonq SUI! lloclclns alllll .'i'.1oA 'osly lazlll noi SB lsnf-lei lbaonxounuoo 1011 sml .to-.1a.xo S1 uoseas llrzclaslzq :ull pun '4m,xaMoLl '.'3ulslJd.mS lou sg slrllll 'suolllzloodxo Sll O1 du lmlxll lou sml UIIZDJ, llreqoslzq KSIJES .mls lln .mo JTZLI1 Xmas ol 51.105 one :JM I'IVH'i-ISVEI CZ. gg NOTICE TO KNOCKERS! TI-IE FOLLOWING JOKES ARE NOT ORIGINAL. NEITHER DO X-VE EVEN PRETEN D TO KNOXIN' XVI-IERE THEY CAME FROM. IF YOLVVE HEARD 'EM BEFORE, FOR TH' LOVE or MUD DONT TELL ANYBODY! KEEP THE HAD NEWS 'IIO YOURSELF AND R EM EM I-I ER- If you clon't like the jokes we print, XYQ know youkl change your views, If you just got a little squint At those that we refuse. In Our Caf. Osborne-Say, I've been standing at this counter now fo' t t R . , it 1 wen y minutes, waiting for that turtle soup. Iililflli-IQIN sorry, but you know how slow turtles are. Gates tlianding back DorothV's poeml-Take it away! Take it away! Dorothy-Vx'asamatterI Wfhy are you so disturbed? C 1t 'Ill ' ' Jc es- ace it away. Your meter so leaky that I'm afraid to go near it with Z1 gas mask. I It-len E. fat the g21ITlQD-l'VIlICl'1 is Smeareni? He must he zt new boy at school. 'Ilrumpour--Iil nh F .'XQ,'2IIlI-Sl'lICEl.1'Cl1'l. I I it-ar them shouting at him all the time. Mr. Cleghorn tin liistoryl-Irlow do you suppose the clilifriwellers kt-pt wzirm in winter? I-Iarnis-Uh, I guess-er-they userl the mountain range. Voice tztt rally!-Sit clown in front! Hassett-I beg your parflon, hut I'm not made that XYZ-ly. Fond Marita-Xiiliy are you coming home so early from school? Sesnon-Uh. merely 21 matter of principal. I-Ie1'e's at nickel, saicl a thrifty housewife to :L tramp at the floor. Now, what are you going to clo with it? lX'elI, mum. replied the hungry man, if .Ii liuy at touring' car I SIIZIIIYI have enough to pay, my Chauffeur: if l purchase it steam yacht there won't be enough left to defrf 1 f N ' ' ' ' ug the tom of imininng her: so I guess, mum, I'lI just get a schooner and handle her myself. 4 I0-1 EH WHADRYAOIHMK HES' BEEN oA1N-rms D p I5 'pl W NEW cs-latin' GR EH 5 C-,AQU ERE conE5 A 1 BIRD l ig! 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L ,i 51' - . . un M. 1 -I--2 tj. 11 -Q' ' 1' A '- 2 -T'-1 - :1 - 11- f-1111 1 -111 1- 1-1'-1. Two Freshmen were watching a barber in the process of singeing a eustomer'S hair, when one suclrlenly broke out: Say, -lim, he's lookin' for 'ein with a light! Ten Years- Ago. A tall, thin lacly, clressecil in more than orclinziry ZllJ'l'Jl'CX7lEltCll Skirts, sympzlthetically remarked to a small boy. on Z1 very chilly clay: Are your leggies eolil, clear? Small Boy fiSOI1'lCBVl'IELl syinpathetieallyl-Xopel are yours? Conductor las young lzicly passes coin hox. without dropping' in hex l1lCliCll-N'O1l,1'C fare, Miss? Slit--Oh, do you really think so? :ll1llC1'l1XXll1Il'l is worse than a giralii with si Sore neck? Vl'C'onnor-JN eentipecle with eorns. XX- lien the donkey saw the zebra, He hegaii to Wag his tail. l'll he clarneclf' was his comment, That horse has been in jail! 'llhere iS Z1 Small matter which Some of our SL1lJf'liC1'll3Cl'S and aclver- tiSerSSs have Seeniingly forgotten. 'llo 113 it ii? neeeSSary in our l3u3Sine-335 Ylle are very niocle3St zmrl do not like to Sipeak about it. Slierirer-Cam one exist on garlic zinfl limhnrger alone? Gerfles-Yes, quite alone. No one will bother yon. The Unanimous Psalm. f.'Xl'ter the twenty-thirrl.J Nr. lllank is my teacher, l shall not want another like him. l-le maketh me to recite in class, lfle Seolcleth me before the Still pupils, lle troulxleth my soul: Yen-though l bluff through English-l am shown up hy him: l' expect no honors while he doth teaeh me. His frown zmcl his Seowl rliscomfort me: lle maketh an 'fool of me-in the presence of my elzissinates: lle lilleth my hezlcl with bunk: My brains runneth over. Surely if this man teaeheth me all the clays of my life. I shall surf, l'-e Z1 lireshmzm forever! 106 ONCE upon 1 QI I II I U H U I D , . 1 This is one of Q Q X , . VQAIXY 177, -V ,- Q 2 the distlnctlve- , A N WZ Ai?-'j f Z ly fashionable , - 'ffhif .X I if X K models now I I - 5 shown at 1- ' f ' ll ' Z . 'N in 1 X X! X I f ' THE f ,f JUVENILE X 1 H i g h Waistecl, d o u ble breast- g 'I wwf B X1 1 1 gt - e cl cl e s i g n, ' X Q splendidly tail- - b X 4 orecl to pre- f serve its grace- lx b Q Q -- A- I I: ful shapeliness. l ' A XV XV Q k I xx KN S15 to S35 Q A I xxx XT- xnxx The Army- RQ 55 M 'Q N x fashioned back R M tb YI Mx - and fwfd , - :high pitched fm A 'h REX N' ' belt is the sea- 'I , Q, U I K X' son's newest Q x x RJ 2 style note in 1 X, Overcoats. . - f N 1 l, H 3 ' i . f A ix '22 's' S15 to S35 ' or 'N 2 Siraihrrh Qlilnihes WERTHEIMER 8: F INSTERBUSCI-I The Juvenile , 130 GRANT AVENUE, SAN FRANCISCO I II II WI ll Il H 'IIN H lf.. 107 TIFIERE was a class of Seniors ' :JL n u u llgll u ll- n ID 3 FOOTWEAR or DISTINCTION 2 Q . Shoes with the dash and go Q..-- L- that young folks want. 5 The newest, cleverest foot- , Il . ' i A' 'V in Wear creations are always Q M m-Tm,,, A..1 e here first--and moclerately prlced. SOMMER SL KAUFMANN U 119-125 GRANT AVENUE 836-842 4MARKET STREET jj ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll IE Miss Cuthhertson, when she was in a zoology class, was giving za recitation on the rhinoeeros. No one was paying' attention, so she said: ul beg your pardon, but if you vxnt -to realize the 'Full hicleousness oi the rhinoceros, you should keep your eyes on me. We hear that George Corley drew an hen so real that when he threw it in the waste-basket it laid there. Given: A To prove: Proof: Clj C25 li-gil C43 tml C57 Proposition XXXVIII. Freshman. Freshman is not worth two cents. A Freshman is a baby fself-evidentl. A baby is an erier. fllroposition of Married Mans evidenced A Crier is one sent. lproposition of 'lvelegrzipliyfl Freshinan equals one cent fAxiom ll. But one Cent is not two cents. fl,'1-op. on money valuesj Freshman is not two cents. CAxiom t'xX'lSt0fl.l I had a little doggie who went :incl bit a calf, And though he did it jokingly, I really eouldn't laugh. 1 cut a little birehwood rod and took him clown a peg, Because, you see, the calf he hit was one thz1t's on my leg. Mnlgzlrdt tflesperatelyil-If you don't consent to marry me, I'll hang myself to that tree out there. Miriam Cealmlyl-No, you wont liather says he won't have you hang'- ing' around h ere. METRES. The-re's a metre lambie And a metre Troehaic And a metre for a sigh or a groan, 'lint there's a metre far sweeter Tlian all these metres: lt's to metre by lTlUOllllQ'l'1l.-'2ll011Cl mg F. S., Dee. '19, IHGI-I 11, 11111 EII II II I II I II II I E1 I I 1 RUBBER CEMENT FLCJGR PAINT D FOR INTERIOR FLOORS ., LUSTROUS AND DURABLE . W. P. FULLER 81 CO. Manufacturers 1 'I DL II I II II II II II IE UI II II II II II II II II ID H Compliments of II H MISS PRUSSMANN H H 2687 Geary Street U DI II II II II II II II II ID 109 WHO did Aerythmg U U CII' ll ll I Il Il IL. I' FERRAN S T D I O 107 Grant Avenue San Francisco OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS THE LOWELL D n n IL 4 I U 110 SCIIUOL woulcIn't keep witlmut 'em It 3: :ff ff: QI II II II II II II II II ' III I W1 TER QP-RUE : AMERICAIS FINEST RINK If Sutter and Pierce Streets Daily 8 to 12 M., 2 to 5 P. M. and 8 toll P. M. 5 2 Music at All Sessions 5 A staff of Expert Instructors for Straight U and Fancy Skating if II II I II II II' II II IU -I 62 OREAR 2 CANDY : Ice Cream Frozen Desserts 137-139 GRANT AVENUE SAN FRANCISCO U1 II II II II II II II II I QI II II II II II II II II ICI R. H. INGRANI S. R. EPPERSON W. F. FEILING FEILING 8: INGRAM Quality Grocers STORE NO. 'I S CALIFORNIA STREET at Sixth Avenue Phone Pacific 7300, Connecting All Departments STORE No. 2 CALIFORNIA STREET at 22nd Avenue Phone Pacific 7400, Connecting All Departments EII II II II II II II II II III! I11 I II II II I II II II II ICI SU they thought F: 1 'Jl ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll I' Phone Park 2666 OTTO N. FITZGERALD, Manager Office and Factory: 1155-57 MCALLISTER STREET ROYAL ICE CREAM COMPANY Ice Cream, Water Ices, Candies, Etc. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL RETAIL STORES! 1704 Fillmore Street, near Post 1155 McAllister Street, near Fillmore J Pence LIST BULK Ice CREAM ' Bull: ur uno rluvm' lwrick ic-we Creani nt lime 134.-,ln-Q.,-5.5 171:11-kpd in 1,19 stores. not packed in lcv. Q V ,U - - A 1 l'.'..'...'.. .. gi' nm-t .........,................ . 0 lip2l1?t.:::3:.:.:':1::.1 .,........ . .53 Quin-fs - .L M 1-65 114 Pints ........,,............., . .30 Quflffs ------1'f------------- V49 I. flllllft ................ .......... . . . .35 Gallfufl .': L77' BRICK ICE CREAM if-In :ulilitimml 1.1'1xll1.n1, pez' gallon ..... 100 E Assnrtefl, 3 Fln.vm's M, Pint .. ...,.......,...,.... . .10 BFHCK 'CE CREAM I Pint ...,..............,............. .510 Quart .,,....... . ............. .SD 11.63 Pints ....,. . ...,.................... .30 Qunrts L ..... .....,.... f 1.20 1 Quart ..,.................. ..,..... . .. .40 Qnurts ............... ..... ...... 1 . G0 Must zlpgwerriutv,-rl by those wishing :1 high Gnllnn ...... , .............. . .... 2.00 grade- SZLllli2ll'X dm-sscwt at a reasonable L-ost. Each zulditimml gallon, per gallon. 1.25 En u u n n n u u Qi lEll ll ll ll IQ gl llIil ll ll Il . E of San Franclsco : Junction of ' : Market and O'Farre1l Streets S and Grant Avenue 4-IS.Xg2:lr3V. l1ilfILl-il'lAN. Ci1Hil'Ill5Hl uf the : 7: ln. VV. l'lELi.lVIAN. Jr.. President : Cli.-Xl'll,lCS J. DEERING. Vine-President PAVI, A. SINSHEIMER. Assistant to the President. l-i. LJ. LAI-LSI-I. Cnesliiex' and Serif-l:x1'y Sl-I.vll.lFiS? IlWIlx.l?':?lEC, Agsliiant Cashier F PC. .sssant asiie' I I. .l. GAY, Assistant Cashier I : l.. IC. GREENE, Trust Officin- - I . V.l., I-IHlCKVVl1Il'JlDl1. Assistzml. Trust : Uflieer , COMMERCIAL, SAVINGS and TRUST DEPARTMENTS E Safe Deposit Boxes 54.00 per E year and upward COUNTER TOTAL ASSETS OVER S33,000,000.00 Ell ll ll ll lllll IE Ell ll Il ll lDl 112 XND they really did many things EII II II Il II II II Il II IU Miss Marion Belle White i SCHOOL OF DANCING - 2626 California Street 1 Phone Fillmore 1871 - High School Class, Thursday at 4 o'cIock Club for Advanced Pupils Reopens September I4, Friday Evening, 8:l5 Adult Class, Tuesday, 8:l5 Children, Friday Afternoon, 4:00 Ill II II II Il II II- Il II IU IIII IDI II Il Il ICI IIIIT IEII II II'-II -- MISS GILES DANCING STUDIO Arrange with Latest Ballroom Dances, for Vacation Coaching for pro- H I motion or Deficiencies or work UHSS nf Private lil H to make up all English subjects, l Latin and Mathematics. Special Attention to Beginners 2384 CALIFORNIA STREET -.-. Cm-. Fillmore west 4337 21 Grenoble Apartments 2211 CALIFORNIA STREET MISS L. R. LUCE F... 1,43 EII II Il II IEII IE Ell II Ill mor: II'JI ICI QI II Il II II II II III II IE COMPLIMENTS - of .- A FRIEND CII Il II Il Il Il II .II II IE 113 l N D thought that nobody else :Ez D Use Associated Gasoline MORE MILES TO THE GALLON PIERCE-ARROW LIMOUSINES j AT TAXI RATES SIMPLEX TOURING CARS I ATLAS TAXICAB co. :SUTTER WEDDINGS AND PARTIES A SPECIALTY DI U Il ll U ll H ll H Q5 114 1 Q NVOULD have the brains QI II II - II II I I II D STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! VULCANIZING TIRES AND TUBES OUR SPECIALTY All Work done by us Guaranteed Special Rates on New Tires and Tubes Full Stock of Accessories on l'lancl at All Times Be Wise and Hooverize Use Nitrolene Motor Oil lVlalces a 30 Shoot Like 60 Prevents Carbon Saves 575 to 20170 on Gas Saves 25670 to 5070 on Oil Puts the Pep in your Power Plant It is highly recommended by the government officers BUY IT AT THE 1 Union Auto Repair Shop 56 STEUART STREET - J. H. CHARLES, Proprietor If you Want to save money on all your accessories, tires, etc., clonit forget the address, 56 Steuart Street EIL II II IV II II II II, II ID 115 OI pep 'JI II II II II II II II II IU Cffbfefea 3 60 ESTABLISHED 5, FURS l67-U7 POST ST. U I36'l44 GRANTAYE. WOMEN'S AND. MISSES' CORRECT APPAREL and FINE F URS LIEBES or CQ. operate their own Fur Trading Stations, Ships and Factory, and are by far the largest fur house in America. The LIEBES LABEL is an absolute guarantee of Quality. EII I I II II I I I ID EII I II I II I I I I I set our next, surb at El I I I II II II II II IJ 116 O ' 165 6 lin :F Gi X LII IM QQ L,- Q9 Esker C9 Co. Wu ff fx, W ' N ,J - A Excluszve L , C .,., Haifers 1:39 V A : 127-29 Kearny Street : SEE STYLES, 53.00 AND UP i CLOTH HATS AND COLLEGE CAPS .Bl Ig ,.., f Lg ff' .L Ib 117 gn n u -n EJI ll Il Il ll ll ll ll ll III EH ll ll Il ll ll I FO they were proud of themselves ll ll Il Il Il ICI ROMEY'S MARKET l I ROMEY'S MEAT MARKET I543 Haight Street We Have a. Big Special Sale Every Saturday 3 Romey's Fish Market Romey's Fruit Market 4 A, FANTozzl. Proprietor A' MANFRED' Fish, Fruit, Poultry, Eggs, Fish, Oysters, Clams, Lobsters, Vegetables C b , Sh ' ', M l., 1 1 Q ra 5 Anmpb usse Q Coanplctcp- Line of Canned boocl Terrapins and Frogs and RlI1CZ1l'O11l-llilllilll Lucca Oil a Specialty Special Attention Paid to FRESH EVERY DAY Farnily Trade U WE SUPPLY THE LOWELL CAFETERIA l543-l 55l Haight Street EVERYTHING IN GOOD GROCERIES U TEAS AND COF F EES The oldest grocery house on the Coast IJll7 fZ.ClllII7' People Trudy I'Im'fv Goldberg, Bowen C9 Co. San Francisco and Oakland CII Il ll ll ll ll If ll ll IE 118 I ll ll ID BUT, like all Seniors 75 23: It 25: it UI Il 'll H H Il II II H ID 'I PHONE PARK 560 W. M. I O N E S .Q-IABERDASHER AND HA TTER I- 1. i A-r Merchant Tailor The Foremost IVIen's Store in the District 1524 Haight Street, Near Ashbury E ll ll- U ll II Il II ll IE UE H U H H II H II Il IU , -1 1 1 K5 S . . . 5 Mx' H- X ' 3 . 'X A ' ' -es- -g if s' - ' T - '15 -'Mft fi - -, ' 'WM - - -N S-wr? ' ' ' 7 '- T I --7 T 'I K ' ,-- I -U. gf sgg Tf5.,gr-357 -75 'f. -Jisiie, . S ' '53i':'fI,,. :- ,. - -.. ff - i52x ' ',. .. 'L T ,. .,.. 353 :N - 'i '1'xNi , .. -2: +235 :H Q Q S92 . .. ---' Wg -- -- is Ei?-S I 'v4fgsr?.rG77v.ilShsu1rxu::',,,.W,,,,',,e-s ,,, , 4 Uv-.kvxgtxwx MTU ,,,t . ww THE MOST USEFUL AND APPROPRIATE GRADUATION PRESENT FOR VACATION Milder Made SAILOR SUIT OR MIDDY BLOUSE FREE cATAl.oGuE Fon LOWELL STUDENTS 1039 SUTTER STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA El 7 II II I' H I' ' ll H H ID ' 119 ls H. El R da y came ll: 3 15: 3: it za: Ell H U ll Il Il il ll ll JD F J. E. SHOENIAKER, President H. E. SHOEMAKER, Secretary H. I. HAGER,Vice-President E m 'F - ly 0 am urg o., nc. lf We carry a choice selection at all times of the following articles .4 Et' ':.-:. ':!.'.! . 2 Saratoga L'-1 LTR O11 chi 55 5'-5 5- 5 Olives ps 'era FJ! -'wr 1 Horseradish Cheese 3 S fargo-E,-' E ance emi tc' 421' M L -in J ': gygf Q31 L il U IMPORTERS and MANUFACTURERS Q. 322 Davis Street San Francisco, Cal. El ll ll II ll ll ll ll ll ID 120 -XND they passed from high school :fi 25: QI ll U H Il ll H il H E Compliments of B.:.EEN,S E Your Old Friend El II all H Il H ll il H QI U II H H U Il U Il J. J. EDMONDS : GROCER 2 I OI Golden Gate Avenue, at Central Ave. PHONE FILLMORE 2108 ZIV ll Il ll Il ll II Il ll El I' ll Il ll il H ll ll ll Phone West 8668 J. R. DOYNE ...Uhr Elm... I 2308 Jackson Street : Inc Cre1111'1 and Cr11z11'ie.v ffIl7.f,'IIJ'.V Frcxlz and Sweet School Sll17PIl.L'.5' fum' lJfIIlgfl2II.lZc'A' En u an u u u no 'u n ' 121 NVITIHI Il sigh of pity li: if all Ell ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll lEl --f- ' Don't Waste Your Strength Conservation is the Word Now To Hooslerlze is to Hooverize The Hoos1't'r' CI!!Jl.lI6f Saves Food by classifying and protecting from waste. The P10051-l l' Cab 1' 11111 Srzwiv Sirps, by saving steps you save strength. The Hoosier Cabinet Snfvey Time, an hour is only thirty minutes with a Hooxzer in your kitchen. This is made possible on account of the HOOSIER COUNCIL OF KITCHEN SCIENTISTS REJXIJ Tl-IIS LIST Mrs. Christine Freder- Mrs. H. M. Dunlap, Miss Alice Bradley, ick, noted llonsvllolil Domestic Science lilxs ljrincipztl of Cookery, Eili Cicncy znnlinrityg pert, Illinois. llzxssnclnisetts. hczirl of :Xpplecrolt Mrs. janet M. Hill, EX1JCl'llllCl1l Stnlion, Principal of the Sum- Nen' York. mer School of Cook- ery. New Hampshire: Mrs. Nellie Kedzie Eclitor uml .-Xntlior, Good fo Jones, Household - Consultant, Nlfiscon- MES' 51195 Dresser' HOOSIER Sin onsultuntloi llonse- BOOKLET ' hold .'xCllllllllSlI'7.llIlOll. Mrs. Frank Ambler Massziclnisetts. l ,- by Pattison, Domestic Mrs. Fay Kellogg, 21 HUUSIBIS lillllllcll llfliciency llngincer, prominent New York Entitled New Jersey, :Xrchiteu:t, New Kitchen Short Cuts - - at - The Hoosler Kitchen Cabmet The HOOSER STORE Store 1111 1067 Market Street Opposite Jones Ell ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll IU 122 THE JAMES I-I. BARRY COMPANY THE. STAR PRESS PRINTERS and PUBLISHERS I 122- I 124 MISSION ST SAN FRANCISCO PARK 6380 d 63 I WOI ODX could do what they had done TIEII SIDNEY L PEISER 81 CO Scientific Optlclans Sec nd Floo H ad Bu ld g 209 Post Str et Co G ant A Sa Fr c sco Tlh Sit 476 t X t 7 FOXHALL CREAMERY G ROIXIANIDER P p 2312 FILLMORE STREET CHERRY BLOSSOM Confectlonery 8z Bakery HghGrd Gods Pp1arP s I-I IVIARTENS 1573 HAIGHT STREET MINOR S Haberdashery 830 Market Street Westbank Bldg L1ttle Automobde Co 431 Van Ness Avenue SAVE FIFTY PER CENT ON ALL YOUR AUTO PARTS We have Wheels axles gears hearlngs cyhnders plstons crankshafts camshafts crank cases trans mlsslons hubs racllators and other parts W1HdSh1CldS E56 up Presto Tanks H55 50 and 56 50 Some good buys 1n motors 2 4 and 6 cvhnder as cheap as I5 lm Jfzgaif Om Pvzfcfv ana' Gmzfs BL ne Bllilllg III II II II II II II II I 124 1 ' V 7 I . , . rf: 2: :2: I: :ls ' : gn IEII n n II IQ go n n u . Phones XVCS. 981 Vos 98- o r, e i in . A It A ', I-O ' e , r. r venue u an i e ep one u er' 2 En n an u :cu IE EI u u u lun QI IU! ll H H IQ QI IIIII II II II Phone Market 2377 T I phone Kearn 7 i a e o o u rice '1- U I - - . UI II II II IDI IU UI II II II IIIII ICI UI II II II II II II II II IE n 1 2 f E . 7 5 7 7 , 9 7 9 1 ' : 9 1 I - 7 - , - 1 .fi 1 , . , I ID E1 u n u n u n u u in BUT the next class did 73: ii: it i The German Savings and Loan Society : SAVINGS fThe German Bankj COMMERCIAL 526 CALIFORNIA STREET : SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. June 30th, 1 917 E M ASSETS : United States, State, Municipal and other Bonds Ctotal value S16,697,680.00j, standing' on books at .... S15,659,362.66 Loans on Real Estate, secured by first Mortgages ...... 39,000,684.86 Loans on Bonds and Stocks ................ ,.... ....... 5 3 1,266.98 Bank Buildings and Lots, Main and l-Brzluch UHiccs Cvalue Q S600,000.00j, standing on books at ................,,. 1.00 Other Real Estate Cvalue S195,000.00j, standing on books at 1.00 Employees' Pension: Fund, fSE259.1542.8Sy, standing on books at ..................................,........ 1.00 CASH .......... . . . . . . . . .... 9,374,973.29 Q 'mal ,... S64,5B6,290.79 LIABILITIES 2 Due Depositors ..........,...... .,.. S 61.381,120.63 Capital Stock actually paid in .... .. 1,000,000,00 Reserve and Contingent Funds .... .... 2 ,185,170.16 Total . . . .... S64,566,29O.79 For the six months ending juni: 30th, 1017, a clivideml to depositors of MZ, pci' annum was declared. EI H ll II ll Il ll il Il ID 125 NND when they ,lEldl13tLfl Sportlng and Athletlc Goods U Large Assortment of Ice Skates, Shoes and Supphes U HEADQUARTERS FOR Baseball and Tennls Outfits Manual Tralnlng Equlpments and all Kmds of Hardware and Tools JOOST BROS 1053 MARKET STREET Between 6th and 7th Streets Plone Market 891 I-Ioovenze Yes' But don t forget to Neollmze Re Sole Your Shoes Wlth NEOLIN REASONS Wears Longer Than Leather It 15 Flefnble and Waterproof Very Easy on the Feet Remembe It IS Made m Three Colors Black Whlte and Tan CALL AND SEE E KANTOR 227 Valencla Street And he wlll CXPIBID how to make old hoes new by Neohmzmg 703131. The World s Largest Mlllmery Store qsrx FLOORSD 23 GRANT AVENUE San FFHHCISCO Eat at BOOS BROTHERS 1059 MARKET STREET 725 MARKET STREET When rn Los Angeles V1S1t Our Cafeterzas 3 South H111 Street 828 South Mam Street 328 South Broadway 648 South Broadway 521 West F1fth Street EH ll ll H Il U ll Il Il ID 126 AA i Ay O, , A :yi 23: :ga 4: :Ig :pe ag: 9- gg: DI H Il U U I1 11 H 11 l ID 'I U1 N ll Il ll Il ll U H In D1 ll ll ll U ll ll 11 U 1U . , . . , . I . . . , , . ' 9 . . S . . . U1 ll ll ll Il I1 U ll U IU U1 ll U Il' ll Il 11 ll ll IU , I I D1 11 ll U U ll 11 U ll 1U U1 H 11 ll U ll IL Il U 11:1 4 5 ' ' THEY thought the same! . . , r.. QI IE!! ll ll H IQ fQf4zZ?z?fgj1?fZzz2?'ZwQ GRANT AVE. AT POST ST. E Buy Your Q Knitted Glfts From Headquarters 7 . fmxxwx Q, . 1 -- W is :I Sweaters gin II r . 'liufjila :- Hoslery 5Y,,j- L4 . g Mamas 'iii'f'.':I'i?1l 9511 1 -' SCaI'fS f' : - , I' 13 1O'f9EI3z K , ,it 11,17 S .- I .1 ,XO H ,,,, Underwear gf 'I'-M. fl' ,,.. wil., W. ,NA 04,26 'I :qc - u 4 I ' U Q 7,,'1 it M.-G-, ., ' ':,, ,',' X:-5 iff' 1 Sport Sets C, 41.5.41 fix? lj BathRobes I GYM SUITS, PENNANTS 5 Made to Special Order D'ALIA1EAGindMPANv'm Bags, Burlap and Twine PHONE MARKET 8402 1181-83 HOWARD STREET SAN FRANCISCO CII ll H Il ICH IU 'Q DI IDI il ll Il GABE M. COHN Bouquet-Cohn Cigar Co. 118 California Street Phone Kearny 1161 STORES: E. Cor. 5th ami Mziwkct 951 Market Street N. YY. Cor. 14th and Church Streets S. E. Cor. Church and Market Streets S. E. Cm: Hayes and Fillmore Streets 11S Culifornizfz, Street 1 El un an u lun IE: cn u u u um 1E QI u u n n n n u n IEJ ..,. A 4 2 1 -.-r1: 1111--' 1 will . . I W' ,,,,, , ' 'H A, , H W - V ,V, I 'f r - El ,,, . 5031 H 51 D ,..., .. fi? A Q ' S , :emi by .ra ..... V..,V - ::::::.,.a:s,s-'e:,, , Q- ' '- -. swf., PM H fn ,-., A - 2 wr- -': . -:- '.aJ:s - - D , . L - 'f ' vigrx: T1 '- 3. 25 f', .f .,L4:A f - F.: V171 4 'WM E ' 2 1-A 1 1 Nfl 01 . ' 1 iff' 2 IIJWE., I- R 1 ' ,,.,,i.,,f1 Q , EAM' H- sf , H...-3.3 , y.,3 5.4 ' V4 fl 'E 4' ---- , J ,xA, , A AA I A , 'V I J, -1 ' ' , '1 Y . 'YY ' R gf ' O it . ., - is t , V ,gy Air- 1 -A 1 fjkxl h 5 3 ' 7 : . Ja '-fiii,?'Tfl?'F 3553 ' .,., 'gg : ' rs -- - t ' L lk 5 -gi? A? 'fl' : CLINTON CAFETERIA The Most Beautiful Cafeteria Dining Room in San Francisco 5 136 O'FARRELL STREET Opposite Orpheum Theatre 5 BREAKFAST, LUNCH or DINNER High-Class Ladies' Orchestra and Soloists Large Comfortable Rest Room for Ladies and Gentlemen with Telephone and Conveniences En 127 OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 7:00 A. M. TO 8:00 P. WM. 1 n u n n n n n ul in NON fxmt it funny? it ' r 25: UI Il ll Il ll 0 ll ll H DIRK VA ERP'S COPPER STUDIO l. rg ll Upon every article in our Holiday disf play of hand Wrought copper and brass, consisting of desk sets, lamps, smoking sets, book ends and many other Christ- mas suggestions is our trade mark, the Windmill. This guarantees superior quality and artistic distinction. The least expensive prices reveal ex- quisite care in every detail of workman- ship and harmony of beautiful line. A gift of copper is most appropriate, it has sentiment and permanence, a conf stant reminder of a giver. l DIRK VAN ERP 1104 SUTTER STREET, SAN FRANCISCO Franklin 5846 EH U H il H ll H ll ll 128
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