Luther L Wright High School - Hematite Yearbook (Ironwood, MI) - Class of 1921 Page 1 of 112
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(illjr ijrmatttr 1921 IJubliiihrii by th? IjrmatUr SUutri) fur thr iljtgli §rluml (UlasH of 1921 .iJrmuunub. iflirbiuatt ®o iflisii iftiliirfi) (0’fflmutnr au ifliaa tiUta Variant 3ln appreciation of their aaaiatanrr in all liiyli arljool artinitira attit tlirir ktn nraa anil rnnaiiifration for ewery atufirnt utr tlir ruinr (Elaaa affectionately hrftirate the 1921 iSriitalili' — Page Three i9£i e i02i Sl’PT. DrFAY R. RICE Du Fay R. Rice, Superintendent of the Iron wood Public Schools, was born in Cedar alley, Missouri, April 29, 1883. In October, 1920, he came from Das Cruces, Xew Mexico to fill the vacancy caused by Mr. Duffield’s resignation. In 1907. Mr. Rice received a Bachelor of Pedagogy degree from the Missouri State Normal. Four years later he received a B. A. degree from the Colorado State 1 Diversity at Boulder, following which he attended the teachers College, Columbia University, and in 1917 received his Superintendent’s Diploma. He then accepted the position of Superintendent of the rural and graded schools of Missouri and Oklahoma, which position he held for four years. After three years as principal of schools in Missouri, he was elected Superintendent of Schools in Oklahoma, Idaho, and New Mexico. Page Four iQ2.i lO Zi JOHN C. WATSON John C. Watson, Principal, was born in Livingston, Wisconsin. He graduated from Lancaster High School and received his University education at Wisconsin and Michigan. After leaving the University, he taught for two years at the High School of Argyle, Wisconsin, and six years at Racine College, a hoys' school. He came to Ironwood as Principal of the High School in 1909, and since that time he has continued in that capacity. Pa ye Five ioai m cv i i { e iO Zi BOARD OF EDUCATION Geo. N. Sleight A. G. IIedin Secretary President Alex I). Chisholm Trustee Henry Rowe Treasurer Page Six G. F. Coons Trustee FOREWORD i02.i th e i02i When time who steals our years away Shall steal our pleasures too, Thy memory, old I. II. S., Shall half our joys renew! Then while we have our Hematite Our joys shall always last; For hope shall brighten days to come, And memory gild the past. It was in 1890 that the Luther L. Wright School sent its first representatives out into the world to seek their fortunes. Since then the graduating classes have yearly grown larger, and the attendance of the entire school has increased to no insignificant degree each year. This year began with record breaking attendance of four hundred and sixty-eight students, the freshman class consisting of 198 members. This remarkable growth in attendance, however, is not the fact that we wish to emphasize; it is the irresistible I. H. S. spirit which lias identified itself with all and developed itself into a remarkable power with many victories of its own. Everyone knows what I. II. S. spirit is. It is that spirit which the class of ’21 desires to renew and perpetuate by publishing this annual. In this work we have been greatly aided by the encouraging help of Miss Jean Goudie. Our faculty advisor, Mr. Mason deserves the thanks of all, especially for the exceptional executive ability he has shown in assisting us in overcoming the present business conditions. “They tell us’’ that our school days are the happiest days of our lives, and that our palhs in life will grow apart after Commencement. Yes, we admit that as that time draws near our heart strings do draw a little tighter, and old familiar surroundings bid us stay. But we cannot hope to he school children always, for each has his way to make in the world, and each his goal to reach. So we are putting out this book to serve as a tie to bind the members of our class together, that the memory of old friendship and associations may inspire us to greater efforts. We hope that to the alumni, who chance to peep within these covers, this modest Hematite will be a proof that they have left the reputation of their Alma Mater in good hands. We trust that all will,— Page Seven To its virtues be a little kind; To its faults a little blind. “ 1!)21 HEMATITE-' BOARD Leola Ware....... Elizabeth Sisco. .. Albert Tederstrom Donald Smith .... Joe Cvengros .... Ruth Larson...... J ESSIE SNAVELY Gey J. Mason..... .....Editor-in-chief .....Associate Editor , . . .Business Manager Advertising Manager . Circulation Manager ...........Cartoonist ...............Artist .....Faculty Advisor EDITORS Ruby Anderson Marion Dear Gertrude Coleman Allerd Bergquist Anna Slivensky Ruth Grimm Elizabeth Kupecky Michael Nolan Ruth Madajeski Lois G. Lobb Ada Holmgren Annabel Miller Page Eight iQ2i TME- emi3i ill i02t Page Nine i92i i02i ___________ JEAN H. GOUDIE I ron wood High School 1904; University of Michigan, A. B. 1909; Teacher Central School 1909-’10; English Instructor in I. II. S. 1910-’21. LILLIAN B. SMITH Capac, Mich., High School; Ypsilanti, Mich., Normal; University, Mich., A. B.; University of Chicago, Post Graduate; English Instructor, Lapeer, Mich., High School; Mount Pleasant, High School; Niles, Ohio, High School; Garrett, Inti., High School; English Instructor, I. It. S. 1920-’21. ELIZABETH STONEROCK Reed City, Michigan, High School 1909; University of Michigan A. B. 1910; Instructor, Allegan, Mich., 1913-’14-’15; Hibbing, Minn., 1916-’17-’18; Americanization Work, Y.W. C. A. 1919-’20; Instructor in English, 1920-21. ELNA OLSEN Manistique High School 1912; Oberlin Conservatory of Music, 1912-’15; Roanoke Public Schools, Roanoke, 111., 1915-’17; University of Michigan, A. B. 1917-’20; English Instructor I. H. S. 1920-’21. MILDRED O’CONNOR Coleraine, Minn., High School 1912; University of Minnesota 1917; English and French Instructor 1917-’21. Page Ten i02.i e m l III i02i JANET 0. GOTJDIE Iron wood High School 1898; University of Michigan, A. B. 1904; Instructor, Battle Creek, Mich., High School 1904-’06; Latin and German Instructor I. H. S. 1906- ’21. MARJORIE SNAVELY Ironwood High School 1915; Carthage, 111., Public Schools 1915- ’17; Student Ann Arbor 1917-’20; English, Hist., and Algebra Instructor 1920. M. FLORENCE DRISCOLL Marquette High School 1910; Northern State Normal, Marquette, Mich. 1912; Public Schools. Houghton, Mich., 1912-’18; Public Schools, Sault Ste Marie, Mich. 1919-’20; Northern State Normal, B. A. Dec. 1920; Instructor, Algebra, Latin, Anc . Hist. 1921. (Miss Driscoll came to I. II. S. in Feb. 1921 to fill the vacancy caused by Miss Suavely’s resignation.) ROBERT S. FLETCHER Forestville, New York, High School 1916; Ober-1 in College, Oberlin, Ohio, A. B. 1920; History Instructor I. H. S. 1920-’21. JAMES L. MOSS Hopkinsville, High School, Ky. 1915; University of Chicago Post Grad. Work 1918; Georgetown College, Kentucky 1920; Coach and Math. Instructor, I. H. S. 1920-’21. Page Eleven i02i ROBERT O. BLACK Morehead Normal School, Moreheacl, Ky. 1916; Georgetown College, Kentucky, B. S. 1920; Coach and Math. Instructor, I. H. S. 1920-’21. IVA B. PALMER Fond du Lac, High School 1916; Lawrence College, Appleton. Wis., B. A. 1920; Chemistry Instructor, I. H. S. 1920- ’21. E. L FLAN I) WATKINS Mitchell, High School, Mitchell, S. Dak.; University of Chicago 1914-H5; Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis. 1915-’17; Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. B. S. 1919-’20; Instructor in Science, I. II. S. 1920-’21. FRED S. IIARTUNG Dakota Weslyn Academy 1915; Dakota Weslyn University 1920; Student Ass’t. in College Dept. Eng. 1919; Biology Instructor I. H. S. 1920-’21. EDNA M. BACKON Ironwood High School 1914; Ferris Institute 1914- M5; Marquette Normal, Summer Term 1916-’17; Sault Ste Marie 1917-H8; Stenographer 1917-H8; Commercial Dept. I. H. S. 1918-,21. Page Twelve e i02i tricv VICTOR B. BOYLES Charlotte, High School, Mich. 1913; Parson’s Business College, Kalamazoo 1915; Western State Normal 1915; South Haven, Mich. 1915-’17; Marquette, Michigan 1918-’19; University of Michigan 1919; Commercial Dept. I. II. S. 1920-21. FLORENCE J. SCOULAR Janesville, Wis., High School 191(5; Stout Institute, B. S. 1919; University of Chicago, Summer Term 1919; Applied Arts Summer School 1920; Structure of Sewing River Falls, Wis. Domestic Science Dept. I. H. S. 1920-’21. EASTER GEM GRAY Bessemer High School 1913; Lewis Institute, Chicago 1914-’1(5; Instructor, Crown Point, Ind. 1917-’19; Lewis Institute, Chicago 1919-’20; Domestic Science Dept. I. H. S. 1920-’21. . Helen McFarland Park College, Missouri 1919; University of Chicago 1919; Art Institute, Chicago 1920; Instructor Parkville, Iowa; Domestic Science Dept. I. H. S. 1920-’21. LOIS E. POINDEXTER Central Missouri, State Teachers College, War-rensberg, Mo.; C. M. S. T. C. 1920; Domestic Science Dept, I. H. S. 1920-’21. Page Thirteen 102.1 i02i ELMER E. MILLER Menomonie, Wis., High School 1903; Stout Institute 1904-05; Instructor Manual Training, Deer Lodge, Mont. 1905-’06; Manual Training Instructor, Lead, S. I)., H. S. 1906- ’07; Principal Manual Training Dept. I. H. S. 1907-’21. GUY J. MASON Pepin, Wis., High School 1913; Stout Institute 1915; Manual Training Dept. I. H. S. 1915-’21. HOWARD P. GORD Eveleth, Minn., High School 1918; Stout Institute 1920; Manual Training Dept. I. H. S. 1920-’21. MAX E. NEWCOMB Pepin, Wis., High School 1906; Stout Institute 1908; La Crosse, Wis., High 1908-’ll Instructor Manual Training, Lead, S. D. 1911-’16; Manual Training Dept. I. H. S. 1920-’21. WALTER J. WHITMUS Brookings, So. Dak., High School 1915; South Dakota State 1916-’17; Stout Institute 1920; Manual Training Dept. I. H. S. 1920- ’21. Page Fourteen SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Albert H. Tederstrom Charles Thompson. ... Norman Dahlen...... Gertrude Coleman ... Donald Smith....... .......President . . Vice President .......Treasurer .......Secretary Sergeant-at-arms Motto: The higher we rise, the broader the view. Colors: Red and white. Flower: American Beauty. Page Fifteen iQ£i 102.1 EMIL ANDERSON ‘ Prop. ’ ’ “Big oaks from little acorns grow. ’ ’ Oratorical contest 1919. INAH ANDERSON “Not stepping over the hounds of modesty.” Cloverland Campfire 1917-’21. RUBY ANDERSON “An all-around good girl. ’ ’ Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Glee Club 1919-’21; Gogebic Campfire 1917-’21; Declamatory Contest 1919-’20; Society Editor, Hematite Board 1921. LLOYD ARTHUR 1 Bonus” “I have a lot of oratory in me hut do not show it out of respect for Edmund Burke.” Junior Play “Leave it to Kate”; Midwinter Play i Touchdown ’ ’; Boys ’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Football 1919-’20; Michigan League Debating Team 1920-’21; Good Fellowship Club 1919-’20. ALLERD BERGQUIST “Ellary” “A little nonsense now and then is relished hy the wisest men.” Captain, Track Team 1920; Football 1920; Captain, Basketball Team 1921; Basketball 1919-’21; Ski Race 1920-’21; Good Fellowship Club 1919- ’20; Sergeant-at-arms 1919-’20; Bovs’ Glee Club 1919- ’21; Older Boys’ Conference 1919; Joke Editor, Hematite Board 1921. JOSEPHINE CAVOS I E “ Joe” “She has kindness and cordiality of manner. Girls’ Glee Club 1918-’21; Cloverland Campfire 1918-’21; Michigan League Debating Team 1920-’21. Page Sixteen iQ£i m c G i02i EDITH CHAMPION 1 Champion “Give us the girl whose happy life is one perpetual grin.f Cloverland Campfire 1917-’21; Girls’ Glee Club 1920-’21. GERTRUDE COLEMAN “Gertie” “A phasing personality is a personal letter of introduction, ’ Secretary Senior Class 1920-’21; Student Manager, Athletic Association 1920- ’21; Gogebic Campfire 1920- ’21; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917- ’18; Music Editor, Hematite Board 1920-’21. JOE F. CVENGROS “Dimples” ‘i One whom everyone wishes to talk to, whom everyone does talk of. Yell Master 1918-’20; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate”; Midwinter Play “Touchdown”; Football 1920- ’21 ; Basketball 1920-’21; President of Junior Class 1919-’20; Boys’ Glee Club 1919- ’21; Track Team 1920; Ski Relay Team 1920- ’21 ; Circulation Manager, Hematite Board 1920-’21; Delegate to Boys’ Conference 1920; Good Fellowship Club 1920-’21. EVA DAHLEN “Eve” “Silence is the argument to which the other man can make no reply. NORMAN DAHLEN Trugen’’ “A man of silence is a man of sense. Class Treasurer 1920-’21; Bovs’ Glee Club 1920- ’21. MARION DEAR “ Pete” “Let us proclaim her virtues from the house tops. President of Class 1917- ’18; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate” 1919; Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’21; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Cloverland Campfire 1917-’21; Literary Editor, Hematite Board 1921. Page Seventeen e iQ2.i__________ iO Zi MARJORIE DEAR 11 Repeat ’ 9 “Be glad and your friends are many. Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’21; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Cloverland Campfire 1917-’21. LILY ERICKSON “Lil” “Her sunny smile males her a delight to all. Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18. HENRY GRETZINGER ‘4 Hank” “Make not a bosom friend of melancholy. Cabinet Member 1920-’21; Boys’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Secretary Fellowship Club 1919-’20; Boys’ Patrol 1920- ’21; Ski Relay Team 1920-’21; Football 1920; Boys’ Conference 1920. RUTII GRIMM 1 Boots ’ ’ “Laughing is cheerful exercise; look at me. Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Girls’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Gogebic Campfire 1918-’21; Hematite Board 1920-’21. ALICE HEDSTROM “Al” “Modesty conceals her virtues. Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18. HERBERT HOBERG 1 Hub a ’ ’ “A good fellow among fellows. Boys’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Football Team 1920; Track Team 1920. Page Eighteen i02i iQ Zi _______________ LOUISE IIOSKING ‘ ‘ Louie’ 9 “We cannot help admiring the woman who believes in herself.” CHARLES HUMPHREY 1 Snooks’’ “A man’s a man for a’ that.’’ K. O. Club, ELLEN JOHNSON “Quiet and reserved, yet enthusiastic and conscientious. ’ ’ ALTHEA KELLET “Lose no time in idleness.” Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Gogebic Campfire 1917-’21; Declamatory Contest 1918. MILLICENT KINZMAN “Simple, steadfast, and demure.” (Came to T. II. 8. from Norway 1920.) ELIZABETH KUPECKY “Kupie” “She will outstep all praise and male it halt behind her.” Sec. and Treasurer of Class 1917-’18; Sec. Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate” 1919; Midwinter Play “Touchdown” 1920; Girls’ Glee Club 1918-’21; Gogebic Camp Fire 1917-’21; First Place, Declamatory Contest 1920; Calendar Editor Hematite Board 1920-’21. Page Nineteen i02i HAZEL LAGER “ IIlCKV “Costly tin habit as thy purse can buy.” Treasurer Lyceum 1918-’19; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Girls’ Glee Club 1918- ’21; Sec. Class 1918-’19; Gogebic Camp Fire 1917-’21. GERTRUDE LARSON 1 Gektie ’9 “It matters little what your work is but it matters infinitely how you do it.” Girls’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Gogebic Camp Fire 1917-’21; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Declamatory Contest 1918. RUTH LARSON 1 ‘ JEFF’’ “Always in good humor.” Hematite Board 1920-’21. WALTER LARSON ‘ Fat ’ ’ i‘A quiet youth, at times.” Bovs’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Football 1919-’20; Basketball 1919-’21; Track Team 1919-’20; Ski Relay Team 1919-’20. CARLTON LINDBERG “Slim” “The thinkiest thinker that ever thunk.” Football 1920. ALVIN LORENSON “Pal” “Language was given as that we might say pleasant things to each other.” Cabinet Member 1920-’21; Boys’ Glee Club 1918-’21; Football 1919- ’20; Good Fellowship Club 1919-’20. Page Twc nty RUDOLPH LUNDGREN 11 Rud ’’ “Reserved and radiant alike at times, thus best he is expressed in these few lines.” RUTH MADAJESKY i Rutta y ’ “For she was always friendly and carried a smile for all. President Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Treas. Girls’ Glee Club 1919- ’21; Junior Play Leave it to Kate”; Midwinter Play “Touch Down”; Gogebic Camp Fire 1917-’21; Dramatic Editor Hematite Board 1920-’21. ESTHER MARANDER i i ]£ST 7 7 “Don't talk of what you're going to do; just do it. ’ ’ ETHYLE MATTSON “Silence is the key to content LILLIE C. MICHELSON “LiIl “dir and manner are more expressive than words. ’ ’ EVANGELINE NELSON “Vany” “Her personality chiefly suggests business. ” Page Twenty-one i92i e iO£i NELLIE NETTEHBLAD 1 N ELL’’ “Her smile might capture a minister.’’ Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Girls’ Glee Club 1919- ’21; Cloverland Camp Fire 1917-’21; Cabinet Member 1920-’21. MICHAEL NOLAN ‘ Micky 9 ’ “There is nothing against which human ingenuity will not he able to find something to say.” See. Class 1918-’19; Boys’ Patrol 1919-’20; Oratorical Five 1918-’20; Oratorical Contest in Michigan 1920; Boys’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate” 1919; Michigan High School Debating League 1920-’21; President, Lyceum 1920-’21; Athletic Editor Hematite Board 1920-’21. ADELINE NORD 4 ‘ Ade ’ ’ “We find her eager and alert.” MARION O’CONNOR “Those who know her best respect and admire her most. ’ ’ Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Gogebic Camp Fire 1917-’21. GEORGE E. PETERSON “ Yeoit” “If there is a fight that must be foughty the thing to do is fight it.” Football 1919-’20; Basketball 1919; Capt. Ski Relay Team 1920-’21; Boys’ Glee Club 1920-’21; Older Boys’ Conference 1919; Fellowship Club 1919-’20. LUDVIG PETERSON “Lars” “I’m no shark, but can hold down the job.” Boys’ Glee Club 1920-21. Page Twenty-two LOIS PROUT , LoM “She has a curtain of dignified reserve.” Treasurer Lyceum 1917-T8; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Cloverland Camp Fire 1917-’21. ESTHER RADIO “Her ways are ways of pleasantness.” Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18. STEWART REED “I know him by his gait, he is a friend.” LILLES RICHARDS “Billy” “Worry and I have never met.” Cloverland Camp Fire 1919-’21. MYRTLE RICHARDS “She is to be called wise who has but few follies.” OLGA RODBACKEN “Chubs ” “Her attitude is one of kindly comradeship.” Vice President Class 1919-’20; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Gogebic Camp Fire 1919-’21. Page Twenty-three CARL RUNSTROM ‘1 Kalle 9 9 “Behold an upright and well disposed person.” Sergt. at Arms 1919-’20; Boys’ Glee Club 1918- ’21; Football 1920; Track Team 1920; Ski Relay Team 1920. MYRTLE SANDELL “Myrt” “Her record indicates diligence.” ELIZABETH SISKO “Still achieving, still pursuing.” Vice Pres. Lyceum 1920-’21; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate”; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Michigan High School Debating League 1920-’21; Associate Editor Hematite Board 1920-’21; Declamatory Contest 1918-’20; High School Reporter News Record 1920- ’21. EVELYN SLADE “Ev” “WhaVer she does is done with ease.” Sec. Lyceum 1917-’18; Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Cloverland Camp Fire 1917-’18. ANNYCE SLIVENSKY “ Hunch” “Always he in tune.” Vice President Freshman Girls’ Glee Club 1917-’18; Girls’ Glee Club 1920-’21; Sec. Gogebic Camp Fire; Associate Joke Editor Hematite Board 1920-’21. DONALD SMITH 11 Bouncer ’ ’ “The elements so mixed in him that nature might stand up and say to all the world, ‘ This is the man!9 ” Class President 1918-’19; Football 1919-’20; Junior Play i 1 Leave it to Kate” 1919; Midwinter Play “ Touchdown ” 1920; Oratorical Contest 1918-’20; Michigan Debating Team 1920-’21; Serg’t at Arms, Senior Class 1920-’21; Good Fellowship Club 1919-20; Advertising Mgr. Hematite Board 1920-’21; Boys’ Conference 1919-’20. Page Twenty-four iQ£i__________________m cxi tie iQ£i JESSIE SNAVELY “Sensitive to the aesthetic in Life. ” Girls' Glee Club 1917-'21; Cloverland Camp Fire 1917-'21; Freshman Girls' Glee Club 1917-'18; Artist Hematite Board 1920-'21. II ED WIG SOBOLEWSKI “Silence is her one great art of conversation. ” CARL STRANG ‘1 Legs 9 9 “He's tall and growing taller. ” Bovs’ Glee Club 1918-'21; Oratorical Contest i 918-T9. ALBERT II. TEDERSTROM ‘ Bert '' “A soldier of fortune in the disguise of a student.9 9 Vice Pres. Lyceum 1916-'17; Cabinet Member 1917-T8; Boys’ Glee Club 1919-'21; Track Team 1920; Pres, of Class 1920-'21; Bus. Mgr., Hematite Board 1920-'21; Good Fellowship Club 1919- ’20; Michigan Debating Team 1920-'21; Older Boys' Conference 1919; High School Reporter Daily Globe 1920-'21. CHARLES THOMPSON “Bud” ' Quality not quantity.'' Vice President 1920-’21. PRIMROSE TRET1IEWEY “Prim” “I shall make hold to say what I think. (Came from Houghton in 1918).; Sec. Girls’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Junior Play “Leave it to Kate” 1919; Gogebic Camp Fire 1919-’21; Declamatory Contest 1919-'21. Page Twenty-five LEOLA WARE “Leo” Portia “One who has a heart joyful to do all that is good.’’ Girls’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Cabinet Member 1920- ’21; Editor-in-Chief, Hematite Board 1920-’21. JOHN WEIMAR “Ole” “A tower of strength on the gridiron.’’ Boys’ Glee Club 1920- ’21; Good Fellowship Club 1919-’20; Football 1920-’21; Track Team 1920-’21; Ski Team 1920-’21; Boys’ Conference 1919. ELVIRA WEST “She hath her share of wisdom.’’ SIGRID WICK LUND “A reason firm and temperate mind.’’ (Came from Bessemer in 1919.) WALTER WINN “Hunka” “A girl, a girl, my kingdom for a girl.’’ Boys’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Football 1919-’20; Oratorical Contest 1919-’20-’21. GERTRUDE WUDTKE “Charlie” “Here she comes sparkling, helter-skelter, hurry-scurry. ’ ’ Vice Pres. Glee Club 1920-’21; Girls’ Glee Club 1919-’21; Cloverland Camp Fire 1918-’21. Page Twenty-six iQ£i Class Prophecy Dearest Elizabeth: Van Buskirk, Wisconsin, January 18, 1943. You can imagine the feeling of surprise I experienced when I received the account of yoar marriage to our old school mate, Lloyd Arthur, the millionaire 1 i shoe-squeak ’ ’ remover. I guess the world has been kind to all of us. At present, I am head nurse at the “Old Ladies’ Sanitarium.” Rose Marks Cohen is my special charge. She has grown quite old and grey from her terrible affliction—rheumatism. Charles Thompson is the leading banker here, and he often takes us riding in his limousine; but I am getting quite old and the jars ami jerks don’t agree with me. The other day I received a copy of the Ironwood Daily Globe which gave a very detailed account of the election of Primrose Tretheway to the office of Federal Prohibition Officer for the Iron County District. That’s the result of Woman Suffrage! It seems that all the members of our class are moving to the cities. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tederstrom are living in Washington. Josephine says she really enjoys listening to Senator Tederstrom. You know he gives long speeches in Congress. It always reminds her of the debating team. I imagine that her debating instruction comes in very handy now in arguing with Bert. Do you remember the little girl named Olga Rodhacken who organized an orchestra? No doubt you have heard of the famous Wolverine Jazz Band composed of Ruth Grimm as trap drummer, George Peterson as xylophone player, Esther Marauder as violinist, ami Henry Gretzinger as coronet player. Edith Champion, the famous acrobat, accompanies them and entertains the audience between numbers. After a successful trip through the West, they are now content to settle down in quiet Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Rutger Erickson stopped off to see me while on their way to Florida. Ricky is now superintendent of the Oliver mines in Ironwood. And have you heard how Ruby is getting on with her sales of Vacuum Cleaners? I displayed unusual ability in selling these articles. Jessie Suavely was here yesterday collecting taxes. My, but she looks fine! You would think she was a young girl of twenty instead of an old lady of forty! Annvee SIivensky started out on a very brilliant career as a vaudeville dancer, but she sprained her tee, and is now cook in the Newberry Sanitarium. It was a terrible blow to her family, even though they knew this to be the inevitable outcome. Joe Cvengros, who won the prize for his attractive smile, has settled down to the mending of hearts which he himself had broken. Michael Nolan, the great orator, is now a member of the Mormon Tribe in Utah, and is devoting the remaining years of his life to giving speeches on the “Trials ami Tribulations of a Handsome Man.” Our old school mate, Leola Ware, who gave promise of a brilliant future is now head saleswoman for the i Blue Jay Corn Plasters. ’ ’ Van Buskirk is quite a city; it now boasts of the annual visit of the Barnum Baily shows. Herbert Hoberg, manager, displayed his good judgment in including in his company, Nora, famous director of the monkey band. Nora’s fame is world wide and we recognize in her ability the same spirit she displayed when she was known as Hazel Lager. Walter Larson, who took lessons in voice culture, from Mr. Watson, holds the position of circus barker. And I had the pleasure of personally interviewing Althea Kellett and Nellie Netterblad, the diving girls. Allerd Bergquist who is now a prominent minister in V. B. is especially famous for his theological discovery which he presents to the public in book form entitled “How to Save Your Soul Without Going to Church. ’ ’ J had almost forgotten that I had an appointment with Gertrude Wudtke. Poor Gertie! She was crossed in love, and is in need of consolation from an old friend. Wishing you a happy honeymoon once in a while, Your old school mate has been, MARION DEAR. P. S. How is Marion O’Connor getting along as head instructor in the Manual Training Department across from the I. H. S. ? Editor’s Note: We would like to ask you, Marion, what has become of our old school- mate, Donald Smith. We had heard that he also sought employment in Van Buskirk and had worked up quite a business taking the old ladies of the Sanitarium riding m his Ford. Since you do not mention him, however, we are inclined to doubt the authenticity of the rumor. Page Twenty-seven J erTicxti (e i9£i i02i In Memoriam ‘‘To you from falling hands, ire throw the torch. ] yours to hold it high.” Ba:k in 1617, when the call went forth for volunteers to defend “Old Glory , to fight for freedom and democracy, and to rid the world of militarism, the alumni of the Luther L. Wright School nobly responded. They thought neither of the sacrifices nor of the suffering they would have to endure because they were so filled with glowing patriotism that there was no room for thoughts of self. From all ranks of life the men went forth, donned the uniforms of Uncle Sam and gladly did as they were bade. When the armistice was signed, all but three of Alumni's noble men returned. These three patriots gave their last full measure of devotion that our nation might live. One of these brave men, William Hooper, laid down his precious life during the battle of the Argonne. James Fish made the supreme sacrifice at Fort Ogelthorpe, Georgia, while Mauritz Nelson gave his all at Madison, Wisconsin. It is with the spirit of democracy that the Hematite Board sets aside this page in memory of the three gold star men on the Luther L. Wright School honor roll. JAMES FISH..............’14 WILLIAM HOOPER..........’16 MAURITZ NELSON..........16 “Fear not that you hare died for naught, the torch ye threw to us we caught.” Page Twen ty-eigh I Class of ’22 When September's golden days saw us at the I. II. S. in '18 We were seared a bit and, perhaps, a little green; Yet, that year we made our mark, showed our pep, and force, and brain. ’19 brought us back with steam; football showed our fighting strain. Parties showed our class up fine, when we gave them all had fun. Youth and vim, and nerve were ours, grit to put things over fine; When election time drew near politics were just our line. Sadly, Juniors thought of '20, when our class they'd have to face: Both siles knew that spite of custom it would be a narrow race. When we faced the world in '20, years had much discretion lent, We were out for every honor, and on victory we were bent. Long our list of gridiron heroes,—they were Iromvood’s brightest stars, first on any field of battle, there is nothing that debarred, Where we lead, the others follow, or, if losing, we are game. Thus we tca-li the younger classmen what makes up a noble name. Hard we fought in the election, tho 'gainst most powerful odds. And the very few we lost by, next years' triumph sure forbodes. Then our play, another like it on our stage was never shown! E’en the t achers and the Seniors, one like it have ever known! When the call came forth for service, leaders in the ticket sale, stood the Junior class triumphant and our pep did not grow stale. When the girls were given a chance for basketball, Qui k they answered and they'll show good work to all. Always have we been successful, for it isn't just tlie Winning marks the itor in the strife as to play Our part a grinning, but k the obstacles and fight. It's this the Juniors do. L. G. L. '22. Page Twenty-Hint Junior Class Roll Pearl Abranam Sarah Albert Anna Anderson Helen Anderson Marion Baur Anna Boiler Kdythe Burch Bernice Burn Flora Carlson Naomi Dear Monica Drazkowski Violet Bade Florence Ekquist Linea Erickson Bernice Gould M a rga ret (1 r;i iy kowsk i Mary Roscelia Grigg Julia Gustafson Gertrude Harden burgh Ruth Ileathcock Frances Hedlund A dell Hvdar • Gladys Jackson Mabel Johns Agnes Johnson Albertina Johnson Gladyce Johnson Sigrid Johnson Anna Kostelac Bernice Kropko Theresa Kurtz Gustchen Lindbolin Bertha Maria Landerud Clara Libera to Lois G. Lobb Maxine Mada.jesky Isabelle Morrison Mabel Nelson Sadie Nicholas Florence Nordling Hannah Nyberg Clara Peterson Evangeline Peterson Flora Ryan Lily Rye May Scott Elsie Severinson Catherine Siedleski Ilia Silberg Doris Slade Jessie Smith Ililma Marion Sonippi Arabella Swanson Grace Swanson Carol Thompson Caroline Treloar Caroly n Trethewey Anna Voitek Hildegarde West Charles Anderson Henry Anderson Wilfred Andrews James Bean Verner Dahlen Thomas Davey Carleton Fredrickson Edwin Gustafson Carl Ileidemann Comstock Hicks (Carlton Jackson Charles Johnson Luther Johnson Lennert Josephson Frank Vincent Jozwiak Verner Koski Everett Kronlund Eldridge Lindstrom Joseph Marszalek Erick Matila Phillip May Clarence Nelson Malcolm Nelson Anton J. Oleskv • Walter Olson Clarence Ostlund John Pea ire Gunnar Peterson Jethro Richards Maxwell Shand Peter Sepplan Clifford Setterlund Vernard Soraruf Reuben Tew Joe Flasich —i. o e iQ2.i iO£i The Sophomore Class When we, the present Sophomore Class, were Freshmen we were considered decidedly green by the upper classmen and we admit that -it did take vs some time to get well acquainted with our new surroundings. We have also tried to take an active part in all athletics which the s hool furnidles. As Freshmen we succeeded in selling the greatest number of Red Cross Seals, in consideration of which fact, Mr. Watson granted us an extra party. Thi party was highly appreciated and well attended. The girls of our class organized a Camp Fire Club in 1919. These girls play basketball to some extent and have succeeded in winning a few games. In the month of December 1919 we presented the first Freshman play, “Ice on Parle Francais”, which proved quite a success. A number of the members of our class entered at the time of the Oratori al and Declamatory Contests. We were pleased to hear when the judges had made their final decision that Ruth Smith had been chosen as alternate. We certainly enjoyed the sleigh ride whi -h was granted us in ovr Freshman year. Nothing exciting happened fluring the first part of our Sophomore year until the election of the “Hermean Literary Society' drew near. The Juniors and Seniors worked hard to win. They did not expect the Sophomores to have a party of their own, expecting that they would vote independently. But one day they received the surprise of their lives when we came out with our platform. It amused us to see their astonishment when we started in with our yells. At the final election, however, as is usual, the Seniors carried the election. T his fact was a great disappointment to the Sophomore Class, but we hope to stand a better show when we are Juniors. Page Tliirty-one Sophomore Class Elsie Anderson Mavme Anderson Ruth Bowden Anna Bowater Alice ('base Hazel Chipman Alfhild Coleman Mary Elizabeth Curry Anna Dahlin Ether Danielson Verona Eplett Karlan Erickson Lillis Cathrine Grigg Martha Ilakola Ellen Hanson Aila Elizabeth Holmgren Grace Hovey Louise Hummel Margaret Humphrey Anna Jacobson • al elle Johnson Laima Johnson Elizabeth Kellet Lily Korj i Helen Lager Adeline Mortier Emily MaeCrossen Gladvce MacCrossen • Signe Mattson Emilv Mickelson Ruth Mickelson Fiances Nezworski Alice Xvman Inez Olson Nimie Johanna Pauni Veronica Peliovic Lillian Pengelly Ldlian Pierson Celia Rosen Doris Samlell Pauline Slivensky Frances Smith Ruth Smith Jessie X. Stribley Catherine Turner Alberta Tregem bo Lillian L. Trethewey Ruth Trythall Lem pi Sofia Walli David Anderson James Bowden Theodore Bergquist Clyde Blackwell Melvin Carlson Roll Milton Carlson Ragnar 'ederstrom William Cole Steve Cvengros William Cvengros Harry Ellis Arnd Erickson Stanley Fauhl !klic Goodney Carl A. Gret.zinger Robert Healy Sigurd Holemo Charles Richard Hasking Carl Jackson Leonard Johnson Lloyd A. Johnson John Jones Tom Kctola Stuart Larson Laurence Lofberg Milton Lundgren (diaries Mattson Rolland Nanearrow Gordon Nelson Clyde Nicholls Leslie Olson Raymond Peterson Gordon Prout Andrew I Roth Joe Rowe Richard Shier Roy Stephens Edward Milford Tobin Dwight Trezise doe A. Yoitek Charles West —X 0 1 -3H± i02.i The Freshman Class Contrary to every precedent, the Freshman class of 1920-1921 lias proved to be the most prominent in the Iromvood High School. Even the members of the faculty, and the members of the Senior class have recognized this fact, for on the first day of school, the teachers had to fill every crack and corner of their rooms with Freshmen; and Seniors were heard to grumble because their dignity had been lessened when Mr. Watson made them share their seats with Freshmen. W grant that our prominence comes from numbers, we expect to gain eminence in school activities during the next three years. Our Freshman class lias made little history so far, but it has several things to its credit. We have shown our ability in tin record we made in the sales of Red Cross Stamps, Athletic-tickets and Hematites. Although we did not carry off the honors, we reached a very high mark. We also have the honor of having presented the first costume play, “The Twig of Thorn”, which is based upon an old Irish legend. This play, which was given under the supervision of Miss Mildred O’Connor and Miss Elvira Olson, displayed some remarkable talent on the part of the cast. Our Class proudly boasts two football, as well as basketball stars. The teams would not he complete without McKeyitt and Rowe. About the most important feature of the class is the Freshman Girls’ Glee Club. Under the supervision of Mr. Watson it has shown its talent along musical lines. In spite of the many obstacles which we have had to encounter, due to crowded class rooms and lack of seating capacity in our first year, as Freshmen, we have come through them all cheerfully, and we hope that Mr. Watson’s slogan, “Smile, smile, smile”, will carry us on for three years more, and make us a class never to be forgotten in the history of the I. H. S. A. M. M. ’24. Page TInrty-fovr Page T hi rig-five Anna Anderson Esther Anderson Esther A. Anderson Esther C. Anderson Irma Anderson Lillie Anderson Mary Assad Ruth Banfield Grace Barnaby Evelyn Bartlett Doris Benson Lillian Berryman Marion Best Lillie Blooimpiist Minnie Bond Phyllis Brown Viola Carlson Helen Coleman Bernice Carl Delaine DeRubeis Florence Donahue Elenor Drazkouski Anna Drazkouski Elizabeth Eplett Rilie Erickson Gertrude Erickson Anna Farney Edith Forsberg Alice Fleishbein Mildred Fredrickson Florence Freedstrom Louise George Dorthv Gribble Esther Gustafson Mary Gutt Tmpi Haapo.ja Sigrid Ilakola Ruth Harris Letlia Ileathcock Virginia Ileminguay Freshman Class Roll Helen Ilerbenar Ruth llicks Elizabeth Holeino Sylvia Holmlund Ruth Holst Sarah Hummel Ilia Jackson Jenkin Millow Thelma Johns Elsie Johnson Evelyn Johnson Helen Johnson Linnea Johnson Marcella Johnson Mildred Johnson Olga Johnson Ruth Johnson Saima A. Johnson Helen Kolson Anna Kopnisky Florence K roped 1 Alice Krugen Amelia Kubiak Frances Kutil Ina Kuula Saima Lehti Amy Lauren son Elina Lumakka Wilma Lindberg Erma Lesanante Astrid Lorenson Veronica Luczak Jennie Luoma Hazel McDuffie Edith Michelson Annabel Miller Adley Morin Ethel Niemi 11 elmi Niemi Rieka Nieuwenkamp Ellen Nikula 1 Hilda Noren Signe Oilman Esther Olson Hope Olson Margit Olson Eunice Ostlund Elizabeth R. Front Helmi Fumala Dorothey Richards Esther Ross Mary Roth Agnes Ruby Eld ora Rudberg Ruth Runstrom Gertrude E. Saari Julia Saari Sophie Saari Lena Sala Gertrude Scott Esther Violet Sillamon Della Soboleuski Lillie Somppi Ethel Staffen Signe Swan beck Annabel Swanson Ellen Swanson Christine Tinian Edna Tobin Margaret Voyce Caroline Walker Hilda Webb Lina Weber Agnes Wickman Jeanette Wilcox Mabel Williams Joan Wojciehoski w 2 cl; a Freshman Class Roll (Continued) John Aho Arthur Anderson Carl Anderson Flovd Arndt • Sam Rasharra Rudolph Beres Albert Rreding Ervin Buss William Carlson Henly Champion Harold Cox Constantine Cvbulski Gustav Dahlen Rudolph Egizi Carl Ekstrom Edward Ellis Michael George Marko Garednik Leo Gregory Ernest Gribhle Raymond dribble Robert llaggerson Leo Harper Douglas Harris Luther Hill Clifford Holt Eloyd Hydar Arvid Johnson Rerthel Johnson Herbert Johnson Lennart Johnson Orlif Johnston Toivo Kangas Joe Kapecy Charles Keranen William Keranen Sam Khoury Unto Kolinen Frank Krizmanieh Arne Kujanson Joe Kukura John Kupeeky Claude M. Larson Ragnar Larson Gordon Lee Edwin Lindberg Carl Linquist Everett Lofberg Luoma Gust Dominic Mackewit George Marincie Andrew Macisak Steven McKevitt Alden McNiflf Arthur Medlyn Herbert Mickelson Joseph Mieeikoski Arho Moisio Arne Xelmark Arnold Nelson Paul Nelson Walter Xetterblad Clifford Nordling Frank Obrvmski Roy Orhm James Pearse Percy Pen gelly Thomas Pierson George Richards Arthur Rodbacken Clifford Rowe George Rowell Verner Saari William George Setula Steve Sisko Joseph Skouronski Fred Suavely Henry Stephens Herbert E. Strand Herbert Swanson John T regem bo Sherman Upthegrove James Voyce Frank Walli Alfonse West Gordon West Walter Yankee Tom Yu rich f e __________iQ£i ORQAIUZATlOtlS The Debating Teams AFFIRMATIVE TEAM Elizabeth Sisco Michael Nolan Albert Tederstrom NEGATIVE TEAM Josephine Cavosif. Lloyd Arthur Donald Smith In October, 1920 the Iron wood 11 igh School became a member of the Michigan High School Debating League for the first time. The affirmative team comprised of Michael Nolan, Elizabeth Sisco and Albert Tederstrom, and the negative team comprised of Lloyd Arthur, Josephine Cavosie and Donald Smith, were organized and directed by Miss Jean Goudie and R. S. Fletcher. The first debate was scheduled between the Stambangh High School and the Iron wood High School. But due to the failure of Stambangh to produce a team at the specified time, Ironwood was given four points. On January 7, the negative team of Ironwood went to Iron Mountain to debate against the affirmative team there. Here, the decision of the .judges was three to nothing in favor of Iron Mountain. The next debate took place in Ironwood when the negative team of Calumet debated against the affirmative team of Ironwood on February IS. This time the decision of the judges gave Ironwood four points. The negative team of Iron Mountain debated against the affirmative team of Ironwood in Ironwood, winning by a unanimous vote of the judges. The last debate of the first series took place in Xegaunee when the negative team of Ironwood lost to the affirmative team of that city, the decision being two to one in favor of Negaunee. Although Ironwood was eliminated from the second series of debates, the time given over to the debating was not lost entirely as much good was derived from the experience in debating. The organization of the Debating League has been of illimitable value in developing the talent of the debaters. The coaching they have received has given them force of speech, poise on the stage, and skill in rebuttal. The League, as a whole, has been successful and we hope that this year’s debating teams have established a precedent for the coming years of the advancement of the Luther L. Wright School. Pane Thirtv-Mght Hermean Literary Society The Hermean Literary Society was instituted in 1890, the year of the dedication of the Tromvood High School. The purpose of the Society is to inspire the students of the high school with spirit of individuality and at the same time to develop them in declamation, oration and debate. The Hermean Literary Society lias an adopted constitution which governs the activities of the organization. Officers of the society are elected every year. 1'p to 1910. the Caucus system of electing officers was used. After this date, however, the Caucus system was replaced by the Australian ballot method. Under the Australian ballot method, all the phases of electing are carried out as in any official election. Seniors, juniors and sophomores may have parties in the election, the freshmen may not. The officers of each party are nominated at the primary. The officers are a president, a vice president, a secretary, a treasurer, a sergeant-at-arms, and five cabinet officers. The day of the final election, a chairman is elected by the school. Each party, of course, tries to create dissension in the other party by nominating as many candidates for chairman in the opposition as possible. Besides the chairman, who is appointed by the school, two ballot clerks, inspectors, and registration officers are appointed by Mr. Watson and put on duty. The election then proceeds with due campaigning and hilarity. The voting is done in secret under the watchful eyes of the inspectors. The primary object of an election of this kind is to acquaint the pupils with the voting system used in the U. S. The party elected has control of the programs for the year. Each officer has his specific duties to perform while in office. The president acts as the presiding officer. In case of his absence, the vice president assumes the responsibilities of the office. The secretary calls the roll at the beginning of each meeting and keeps a record of the programs. The treasurer has no duties, for the simple reason that no money is ever collected. Order is supposed to be maintained by the sergeant-at-arms. The cabinet officers hold the most responsible positions—they prepare the programs. Last fall, three parties entered the election: Seniors, Juniors and Sopho- mores. Much interest was manifested during the election, especially when William Cvengros, a sophomore, was elected chairman of the day. The contest was close; the seniors, however, won out. The officers of the society are: Pres id ent—M ichael N dan. Vice President—Elizabeth Sisco. Secretary—Annabell Miller. Treasurer—Florence Donahue. Sergeant-at-arms—John Kupecky. Cabinet Members'—Alvin Lorenson, chairman, Nellie Xetterblad, Leola Ware, Henry Gretzinger, Steve McKevitt. Page Thirty-nine G iQ2.i iO Zi _____________. - GLEE CLUBS - As Mr. Watson was such a phenomenal lover of music, he organized, in 1910, the first Watson Musical Club, composed of the best girl singers in the school. The club of 1921 lias proved as successful as those of previous years and it is known by the people of Ironwood as “the club with the smile and the high spirit.” The members practice vocal exercises and songs every Monday night under the direction of Mr. Watson. At the beginning of each year a “try out is held for the purpose of determining whether or not new aspirants to membership in the club are sufficiently talented, after which a certain number of those recommended are elected by the members of previous years. The Watson Musical Club owes a great debt to Mr. Watson who has worked constantly for the individual development of every member and has given the club his undivided attention. Although there are very few of the members who hope to become great singers no one will forget the splendid chance she has had to develop what talent she may have, and after all, why should not a Galli Curci spring from the I. H. S. as well as from any other school? The Freshman Girls' Glee Club confines itself to the most talented along this line in the Freshman class. Its frequent appearances on programs and at entertainments, and the generous applause that it is always given prove that it has been a success. The Boys’ Glee Club is larger this year than it has ever been before, and although it was late in getting organized it is showing great development in force, expression, and excellence of tone quality. This club meets in the morning between eight-thirty and nine o’clock so as not to interfere with basketball practice after school hours. Page Fortji Top Row—Margaret Humphrey, Leola Ware, Primrose Trethewey, Jessie Suavely, Gertrude Wudke, Julia Grata fson, Elizabeth Kupecky, Gladys Johnson. Second Row—Emily MaeCrossen, Gladys Jackson, Gertrude Larson, Nellie Netterblad, Edith Champion, Ruby And rsou, Josephine Cavosie, Francis Hedlund, Anna Anderson, Marion Dear, Ruth Ileathco k, Maxine Madajeskv. Third Row—Gertrude Coleman. Jes i Stribblv, Edith Bureh, Helen Lager, Dire tor J. C Watson, Naomi Dear, Mary Elizabeth Curry, Miss Edna Backon, Pianist, Marjorie Dear. Bottom Row—Ruth Grimm, Ruth Madajeskv, Hazel Lager, Flora Ryan, Gutcheon Lind-bolm, Carrie Treloar, Gertrude Ilardenburgh. ro 6 Page Forty-two hind son. Boys' Glee Club Top Row—Herbert Hoberg, Comstock Hicks, Ludvig: Peterson, dames Bean, Everett Kron-, Alvin Lorenson, John Weimar, Carl Strang, Lloyd Arthur, Carl Rumstrom, Walter Lar- Middte Ron'—Lawrence Lofberg, Michael Nolan, Phillip May, Walter Winn, Director J. C. Watson, Joe Cvengxos, Wilfred Andrews, (diaries Johnson, Norman Dalden. Bottom Row—Raymond Peterson, Carl lleideman, Walter Olson, Albert Tederstrom. Edwin Dahlen, Bernard Sorauf, Allerd Bergquist. b Freshmen Girls Glee Club Left to Right, Top Ron:—Margaret Yoyce, Anna Kopniski, Lennea Johnson, Miss Olson, Pianist, Mabel Williams, Dorothy Richards, Jeanette Wilcox, Lillie Sommpi. Second Row—Annabelle Miller, Let ha Heathcock, Viola Carlson, Florence Kropidlowski, Mildred Fredrickson, Helen (Coleman, Elizabeth Ilolemo, Ellen Swanson, Siania Johnson, Adelv Moron, Siania Lehti, Hazel McDuffie, Elizabeth Eplett. Third Row—Ruth Runistrom, Virginia Henmiin way, Florence Freedstrom, Amy Loren-son, Sarah Hummel, Astrid Lorenson, Elina Lumakla, Eunice Ostlund, Dorothy Cribble, Del-laine De Rubis, Director J. C. Watson. Bottom Row—Alice Fleishbein, Gertrude Scott, Ruth Banfield, Della Sobolewski, Ilulda Noren, Eldora Rudber , Anna Farney, Annabel Swanson, Ina Jackson, Ina Kuula, Francis Kutil, Elizabeth Prout. o Page Forty-four S-O-C-I-E-T-Y iQEi e 1O2.1 Society J The social events of our Freshman year were unusually successful in brightening the school year. Although the dances were performed by novi -es, the students derived great abundance of entertainment from these entertainments. Our Sophomore parties, likewise, were filled with joy and wholesome pleasures, but the dances, now, had attained the perfection of ease and grace. On Junior day an unusually pretty party followed the play, “Leave It To Kate.’’ The hall on this occasion was effectively decorated in brown and yellow. The entertainment was the termination of one of the happiest days in the history of our class. The Junior Prom, the big event of the third year of our class career, was held in the Scandinavian Ilall, which was decorated in the class colors purple and gold. The I. H. S. smile displayed by the Senior guests was evidence of their enjoyment. One of the main features of the evening was the grand march led by the president of the class, Joseph Cvengros. After this feature, the regular dancing was resumed with Oalvi’s orchestra furnishing the music. Realizing that this year will end our merry school life together, the Seniors are putting forth every effort to get the most enjoyment from their social gatherings. The first party held on November 19, proved their great success; and we realize as Commencement time draws near that our high school days are the happiest days of our lives. R. ('. A. 21. Page Forty five i02i ALLERD R. BERGQIJIST Honor Athlete 1920-’21. For possessing the best combination of team spirit, athletic ability, and the old I. II. 8. loyalty, Bergquist won the distinction of becoming the first Luther L. Wright School Honor Athlete. The selection was indeed a just one for he possessed a true “never die spirit, always giving a helping hand to his team mates and being equally at home on the gridiron, basketball floor, and cinder path. Page Forty-sir Page Forty-seven i02i SIGNAL! THE SQUAD Page Forty-rigid iQ2.i i02i Football The Luther L. Wright school football team of 1920 was a successful aggregation. Had not the team suffered from injuries, it is probable that not a defeat would have been chalked up against it. Pearse, the fleet-footed half back, wrenched a knee and was the first man to turn in his suit. Johnson, the allupper peninsula tackle, suffered a broken thumb during the last part of the season, and Hoberg, the stellar roving center, had the misfortune to break his arm in the Marquette game. On August 24, 1921, Coach James L. Moss issued the first call for football candidates. Only a few men responded. Others were either working or enjoying their summer vacations; and after the first school session on August 31, fifty men reported for practice. The remnants of the 1919 eleven were the first to respond, and around these men Coaches Moss and Black were to build their team. The first few nights of practice were held in ‘civies’. As soon as the uniforms were sorted, the men were issued suits and tentative lineups announced. For the first week, signal practice made up each night’s workout. Coaches Moss and Black were well pleased with their material, although they had to teach the men the fundamentals of football. Guy J. Mason, faculty manager, scheduled the outside teams that would make worthy opposition for the Luther Wrighters. The first game of the season was with the ‘pick’ of the Alumni. Although defeated, the Moss and Black aggregation showed up creditably. The score, 7 to 6, indicates that the high school men displayed football that would class them with the best teams on the range. A week later the St. Ambrose team met defeat at the hands of the I. H. S. squad by a score 54 to 0. Calumet, with one of the best teams in the upper peninsula, came here October 8. The local men were baffled by a cross buck during the first part of the game. Before the Luther Wrighters solved the play, the score was 21 to 0 against them. But when the Red and White found a way to break-up the crossbuck, Calumet was held. Unfortunately, the Hur ley-iron wood game of October 15 ended in the middle of the last quarter because of a dispute which arose during the course of the fracas. Marquette, with a much praised team, played on Longyear Field October 30. The score was 33 to 6 with the Moss and Black marching on the long end when the game ended. The final game of the season was with the ‘friendly enemies’ of the Luther L. Wright School,—Ashland. Outweighed considerably, the I. II. S. men went down to 2(i to (i defeat. The Badgers, however, were able to score in the second and fourth quarters only. And in this game, Ironwood crossed the Ashland line for the first time in several years. Bergquist, although suffering from an injured shoulder, registered the six points. Page Forty-nine i02i Football Personals At center, Herbert Hoberg proved to be a dependable player, especially on the defense. Thomas Davey, left guard, played a steady game throughout the season and improved his style of playing in each fracas. Right guard was held down by Alvin Lorenson who outplayed his opponent in every game. Captain-elect Charles Johnson, left tackle, was an all-upper peninsula man. No consistent gains were made through him by any team during the season. Right tackle was taken care of by Clarence Nelson, a junior. Although light for a tackle, Nelson held bis own. John Jones, a first year man, will make hh mark in the game as he is big and strong. Left end was filled by Joe Cvengros. Joe learned the game faster than any other man and showed speed toward the end of the season. A number of men were tried for the quarterback position, but Carl Runstrom was by far the best. His work running the team in the Marquette and Ashland games was a feature of the season. Captain Donald Smith was the regular right halfback, lie proved to be most useful as he could play any position on the team. The left halfback position was filled by Steve Mc-Kevitt, the freshman wizard. McKevitt is slated to become one of the best players that the Luther L. Wright school ever had. At fullback, Allerd Bergquist proved to be the ‘find’ of the season. He played wonderful football; be is a born fighter. The only regret of the school is that he will be lost through graduation. Among the valuable men who will be back this fall are Everett Kronlund, John Pearse, Clifford Rowe, and Holland Nancarrow. Those who will be lost through graduation are John Weimar, Lloyd Arthur, George Peterson, Walter Winn md Earl Yankee. The success of the 1920 football team of the Luther L. Wright school was due to the coaching of James L. Moss and R. 0. Black. These men worked as one, having played on the same team at Georgetown College, Kentucky. Rain or shine, the high school mentors were on the campus working their men; often they came out in suits and played with the second team. Their ability to coach is unquestioned, and it is the wish of the 1921 Hematite Board that when the season opens this fall, James L. Moss and R. O. Black will be back to have charge of the coaching reins. Pa jt Fifty i92.i i02i Basket Ball, 1921 Top Row, Left to Right—Mason, Mgr., Cvengros, McKevitt, Black, Coach, Rowe, Yankee, Moss, Coach. Bottom Row—Runstrom, Nelson, Bergquist, Captain, Peterson, Larson. Summary January 8—Minocqua f), Iromvood 18. At Ironwood. January 15—Ashland 28, Ironwood !). At Ironwood. January 21—Odanah 16, Ironwood 14. At Odanah. January 22—Saxon 11, Ironwood 10. At Saxon. January 27—Bessemer 13, Ironwood 7. At Bessemer. January 29—Bayfield 25, Ironwood 17. At Ironwood. February 5—Odanah 15, Ironwood 24. At Ironwood. February 9—Saxon 4, Ironwood 26. At Ironwood. February 12—Superior 17, Ironwood 19, (overtime). At Ironwood. February 18—Wakefield 13, Ironwood 10. At Wakefield. February 25—Bayfield 25, Ironwood 22. At Bayfield. February 26—Ashland 6, Ironwood 24. At Ashland. March 5—Wakefield 13, Ironwood 15. At Ironwood. March 12—Bessemer 22, Ironwood 14. At Ironwood. Page Fifty-one A Review of the 1921 Season When Coaches Black and Moss issued the call for basketball candidates in December, there was a hearty response in so far as numbers were concerned. Out of the thirty men who answered the call, all but five were of the green variety. Fortunately these five were letter men of last season although they had received but little training. The veterans of the 1920 campaign were Captain Bergquist, Nelson, Peterson, Pearse, and Cvengros. The coaches suffered a setback when it was learned that the clever Pearse would be unable to play because of an injured knee. Black and Moss faced a serious proposition to fill Pearse’s position, but after several men were tried, Yankee was given the regular berth. When the regular team took the floor, Captain Bergquist was at center, Nelson and Yankee at forwards, and Peterson and McKevitt at guards. Cvengros, Larson, Runstrom, and Powe were also members of the first squad. The Luther Wrighters started the season with a victory over Minocqua, but fell in a rut and lost five straight games before they could hit their stride. Of the remaining eight games on the schedule, Ironwood lost but three games. The surprise of the season came at Ashland when the I. H. S. team romped away with the Wisconsin cagers 24 to 6. In this game, Captain-elect Nelson of the 1922 five was the star of the fracas, registering nine field goals and playing a stellar defensive game. The Luther L. Wright team developed slowly but surely, and in the last few games of the season showed remarkable strength. Next year, the results of this year’s coaching will show. CL A R ENC E N El .SON—Foma rd. f 4 Click” has been in the limelight on the basketball door for the past three seasons and high school fans are beginning to take his thrilling work as a matter of course. He is undoubtedly one of the best forwards in the upper peninsula—at least that was what the Ashland people said when he scored nine field goals against the Ashland high school on that fateful night of February 26 when the Luther Wrighters defeated them 24 to 6. Nelson was unanimously elected captain for next year; so the basketball team is assured of a good leader. EARL YANKEE—Forward. Earl broke into harness in mid-season and since then occupied the opposite side of the floor from Nelson. Although the most diminutive man on the team from the standpoint of avoirdupois, his ability as a basketball player was unsurpassed. ALLERD BERGQUIST—Center, Captain. On offense, he was great; on defense, greater. The husky captain of the Luther Wrighters started the season at guard but was shifted to center in midseason and held down the pivot position in great style. I. II. S. loses a valuable man when Allerd graduates in June, and his position will be hard to fill next year. GUNNAR PETERSON—Guard. Although rarely ever brilliant or flashy in his playing, Gunnar could always be depended upon to do more than his part in every game. To attempt to break down his defense was almost as hopeless a task as the subduing of the Rock of Gibraltar with a bean shooter. It simply couldn’t be done. STEVE McKEVITT—Guard. 1 ‘Steve” was the running mate of Peterson and won his place through hard increasing work. He was a veritable terror to the opposing forwards, exhibiting more different varieties of high class guarding in one game than most guards are able to show in a whole season. CARL RUNSTROM—Sub-guard. Although waiting until his senior year to do it, Carl showed the followers of the net game and his work was always of the high class variety. JOE CVENGROS—Sub-center. Joe was the all-around man of Coach Black’s net artists. lie was equally at home no matter whether the position was guard, center, or forward. CLIFFORD ROWE—Sub-forward. 1 ‘Cliff” was always on his toes as a basketball player. He showed the stuff of a real basketball player and should prove to be a valuable man for next year’s team. Page Fifty two iQ2 e____ 102,1 MANUAL. TRAINING DEPARTMENT. Page Fi ty-three iO£i iQ2i The Manual Training Department The Manual Training: department of the Ironwood Public School system was opened in January, 15)08. During the first year, but two courses were offered, bench work and mechanical drawing. Later, however, the various departments of the school were completed, giving Ironwood one of the best equipped Manual Training schools in the country. Work in Manual Training is started in the seventh grade when the boys go to the bench work room twice a week. The boys of the eighth grade also go twice a week. The things that are made include coat hangers, towel racks, bird cages, hammer handles, ink stands, and other useful things. Students of the Luther L. Wright school spend an hour and a half at Manual Training daily. The Freshmen spend twenty weeks in the cabinet making department. This year, the boys made writing desks which are a credit to themselves, their instructor, and their homes. After the time lias been spent in this work, the Freshmen boys take up the fundamental principles of mechanical drawing. The Sophomores have more variety in their work, their time being spent in three different kinds of work. Twenty-four weeks are divided between the foundry and pattern making. The remaining sixteen weeks are spent in the mechanical drawing rooms. Four classes of work are studied by the Juniors. Ten weeks are spent in the machine shop, ten weeks in the forging rooms, ten weeks in mechanical drawing, and ten weeks in architectural drafting. The first sixteen weeks of the Seniors’ year are spent in the architectural drafting department. The boys, last year, drew two different sets of house plans. The remainder of the year was spent in the machine shop where they made gasoline engines. An interesting fact regarding the Manual Training is that the engines which are turned out by the Seniors are, with the exception of a few parts, made entirely by the boys. The process starts in the mechanical drawing room where the boys draw the plans. In the pattern making department, the patterns are made which are used in the foundry. In this department the boys mould their patterns and complete their castings. From the foundry the casting goes to the machine shop where the finishing touches are put on and the parts assembled. The success of the Manual Training Department is due to one man, Elmer E. Miller. Mr. Miller has been principal of the institution from the first year and has been responsible for its advances. Through his years of hard work, he has perfected the school which ranks as one of the best, if not the best, in this section of the country. What is more, Mr. Miller’s students and former students appreciate the interest he has shown in them. The old-timers give this advice to the fellows who are going to Mr. Miller’s class for the first time. “Do the right thing, and in return, Mr. Miller will help you.” Page Fifty four Page Fifty-five Monsieur Beaucaire Monsieur Beaucaire, a comedy in three on April 12th and 13th. The play was very Monsieur Beaucaire...........Michael Nolan Duke of Winterset ...........Donald Smith Mr. Molyneaux................Stewart Heed Harry Rachell................Joe Cvengros Captain Badger ..............Lloyd Arthur Beau Nash ..............Albert Tederstrom Lord Tombrake........................Alvin Lorenson Sir Hugh Guilford...................Ludwig Peterson Henri tie Beaujolis.....Charles Thompson acts, was successfully presented by the Athleth picturesque, costumes of the eighteenth century Marquis de Mirepoix.......Carlton Lindberg Francois ......................Walter Winn Victor .............................Rudolph Lundgren Louis................................. Carl Runstroin jean ................................Walter Larson Berquin ...................George Peterson Pierre ................................Carl Strang Winton, Lady Malbourne’s servant .......... Herbert Hoberg Association of the Luther L. Wright School being used. The cast was as follows: Servant to Nash.....................Allerd Bergquist Lady Mary Carlyle.................Gertrude Coleman Lady Rellerton, (Lady Mary’s aunt)........ Marion Dear Lady Malbourne......................Althea Kellet Lady Clarlse..........................Ruth Madajesky Lady Baring-Gould................Elizabeth Sisko Estelle ................Elizabeth Kupecky Marie. (Lady Malbourne’s maid) ........... Ruby Anderson i02.i i02l Valedictorian Salutatorian Carlton Lindberg, the valedictorian of the Class of 1921, with an average of 93.44, comes from a family, every member of which is endowed with exceptional mental ability. lie is not the first of the family to be so honored for his sister, Miss Frances, was the valedictorian of the ('lass of 1917. Carlton, like his brother Arvid, is especially interested in every branch of science, although his work in every subject has been excellent. It is to be hoped that he will continue his studies at one of our great universities. The scientific world needs him. The subject of his commencement address is “Aviation, Its Future.” Miss Gertrude Larson, the salutatorian, with an average of 91.8, has a most praiseworthy record for her entire four years’ work. She is not only a painstaking, thorough student but she is an original thinker. Miss Gertrude, too, is deserving of a liberal education at one of our great universities or colleges and we know that she has enough ambition to achieve that, aim. We hope that she prepares to become a high school teacher. The subject for her commencement address is “High School Education.” P u)( Fif ty-sir Declamatory and Oratorical Contests of 1920 Miss Elizabeth Kupeckv, senior, won first place in the final contest held in Iron-wood which entitled her to appear at Ashland. Here, she also won (first honors. Miss Kupeckv represented the T. H. S. at the district contest held in Iron wood where she was judged third place. Her declamation was “The Road in the Shadow.” A representative of the Junior class, Miss Frances Hedlund, was judged second best at the final contest here. For this, she accompanied Miss Knpecky to Ashland. Miss Hedlund spoke an extract from “ Strongheart. ” Delivering an oration on “Robert Emmett's Last Speech”, Michael Nolan was given first place in Ironwood and later went to Ashland where he also was rated as the best. In the district contest held in Iron-wood, Mr. Nolan was ranked second Walter Winn, senior, was given second place in the final contest in Ironwood which allowed him the privilege of going to Ashland. His oration was “The Reply to Corey.” Page Fifty-seven A Line 0‘Day CALENDAR August 31—School starts—“nuflf sed.’’ September 15—Green in front of room makes one think it is St. Patrick’s Day. September 19—Rivalry among classes selling football tickets. September 26—Senior Girls try to show their intelligence by wearing large rimmed glasses to history class. September 27—Trv-out for Girls’ Glee Club. September 29—Students enjoy selections on the Victrola for half an hour. October 7.—Report cards. “When a feller needs a friend.” October 16—Ironwood forfeits game to Hurley. October 30—(’amp Fire Girls sell doughnuts and coffee at football game. November 1—High School is decorated with poster for Lyceum Election. Both Juniors and Seniors show marked ability as artists. November 6—Great game with Ashland; 26-6 in favor of the latter. November 12—Election day—Seniors victorious. November 24—Junior play. November 24—School dismissed for Thanksgiving vacation. November 29—Students return plumper than usual. December 3—First Lyceum Program. Girls’ Glee Club makes its first appearance. December 12—Paul Revere is decorated with a yellow stocking. Miss Stonerock very much petrified. December 13—Seniors enjoy a selection from “Macbeth” on the victrola in the English room. December 15—Freshman Class Play, (’lasses raise fund for French relief. December 15—School closed for Christmas vacation. January 3—Students and faculty come straggling back. All New Year resolutions broken by going to Jussens. January 21—Affirmative debating team wins from Calumet. Dance after. January 28—Basketball boys give a sleigh ride to Bessemer and a car ride back at 11:15. Six couples attend the St. Ambrose Prom. January 22—Hildegarde Geuder entertains students and faculty with light opera selections. January 24—Semester Exams—everyone completely submerged. January 28—Long sighs—exams over with. January 29—Hematite selling campaign in full swing. February 4—A very dismal day. Mr. Watson has students recite, “It is not raining rain to me.” February 11—Sophomore Play. February 18—Debate with Iron Mountain team. February 21—Mr. Whitney talks to the school on the subject of opportunity. February 22—Mr. Watson reads a lecture entitled “Aces of Diamonds.” March 1—Glee Club sings at Woman’s Club. Has picture taken after. March 4—Ski Race. Ironwood comes in second. Lyceum program—We all enjoy Mr. Wat-kin ’s xylophone selections. Hair ribbon day for girls and change of style of hair combing for boys. March 17—St. Patrick’s Day. Students help Freshmen to wear their green. March 21—Northland College Boys’ Glee Club and also the Augustana Boys’ Glee Club entertain. March 25—School closes for spring recess. April 4—Girls come back with new Easter hats. April 8—Mr. Fletcher announces to the American History class that he knows of nothing which he dislikes so much as the female “horse laugh.” April 11—Charlie Johnson sells 36 tickets for “Monsieur Beaucaire”—the rest of the school sells 15. April 12—First night of Monsieur Beaucaire a huge success. April 15—Last and shortest Lyceum program. The cabinet advises next year’s candidates to run on a “short program” ticket. We assure them their election will be unanimous. April 18-19—Declamatory and Oratorical contests. Page Fifty-eight ioai THE HONOR ROLL Which was presented to the Luther L. Wright school by the class of 1920 and the alumni in honor of the alumni who served under the Stars and Stripes and in honor of those who gave their lives that the world might be made safer for democracy. Page Fifty-nine iQ£i J f(eiricvli(e iQ£i An Appreciation Guy J. Mason, who lias been Faculty Advisor for the “1921 Hematite Board,” merits the thanks of every student, for we realize that he has worked with us constantly to make this annual a success. His suggestions have been most helpful and his work untiring. As he planned our selling campaign, we contribute the success of the publication of the “1921 Hematite” largely to him. We also wish to express our gratitude to any and all other members of the faculty who have aided us in publishing this annual. The Editor. Page Sixty Page Sixty- Who's Who and Why in the Class of 1921 Name Description Pastime Ambition—1921 Realization in 1940 Emil Anderson Gambler Hunting To become a plumber To ! e a dressmaker A farmer. Ruby Anderson Independent Dancing _ To Ik a lawyeress _ _ _ _ Homemaker. Talking to the girls Joking A trip to China A minister. Allerd Bergquist Josephine Cavosie With Champion Whiskers To talk to someone Running a chicken farm. Loving Giggling __ Beautiful by request S. R. Giving tn knowledge Kidding Mr. Fletcher Taking care of kids _ _ _ To settle down _ To Ik an angel _ __ To lead a wild life Leading lady in Macbeth. Clerk at Jussen’s. Leading lady in Ziegfleld Follies-By request S. R. A garbage collector. Still single and hopeful. A brick layer. Cooking for three. Friendly Breaking hearts A taxi driver _ __ _ Going to church To have r. beau _ Iverv uriving bakery wagon Philosopher _ _ _ Marion Dear Sincere Holding down the davenport _ _ _ To behave herself _ _ Marjorie Dear ________I Lively Lily Erickson ________1 Sweet Henry Gretzinger_______Smarty Ruth Grimm __________ Alice Hedstrom ______' Herbert Hoberg______I Louise Hosking _____1 Charles Humphrey_____• Ellen Johnson _______• Althea Kellet _____ Millicent Kinsman____ Elizabeth Kupecky____ (’ey — Demure Bashful Bold Angelic innocent Unruly . Good _. Haughty Shimming ________ Roller rink _____ In the woods ____ Trying to eat and thin _________ 1 I njecting pep _ _. Fishing --------- Musing ---------- Taking it easy Working _________ Garruiing _______ Musing __________ Eating __________ grow Holding up the davenport 1 To be somebody great ----- President of I. W. W. School marm in Dixie. To be a partner with _______A saloon keeper. Hazel larger Gertrude Larson Ruth Larson Walter Larson Carlton Lindl erg_____ Alvin Wrenson Finicky _____ ___Dignified_____ Good-natured Refractory _ Slim ________ Useful ______ Rudolph Lundgren . Ruth Madajesky Esther Marander____ Ethyle Mattson ____ Lillie Mickelson Evangeline Nelson Michael Nolan _____ Nellie Netterblad Adeline Nord________ Marion O’Connor Lois Prout _________ George Peterson ____ Ludvig Peterson ____ Esther Radio _______ Stewart Reed________ Lillis Richards ____ Myrtle Richards ____ Olga Rodbacken _____ Carl Runstrum ______ Myrtle Sandell _____ Elizabeth Sisco ____ Evelyn Slade________ Anna Slivensky______ Donald smith _______ Jessie Snavely _____ Hedwig Sobolewski Carl Strang ________ Albert Tederstrom _. Charles Thompson Primrose Tretheway _ Leola Ware _________ John Weimar ________ Elvira West ________ Sigrid Wicklund Gertrude Wudtke Walter Winn ________ Dressing __________ Studying __________ Locking happy — Driving milk wagon Looking ___________ Running the car __ Silver top Pleasant Ambitious Meek Good______ Persistent Dashing Good scout . Blushing ____ Calm ________ Indifferent . Peaceable _. Ambitious Blende ______ Ardent ______ Lively ______ Dark ________ Chubby ______ Hard boiled - Faithful Plodding Sociable_____ Hopeless Gallant _____ Artistic ____ Undisturbed Six footer Business like Abbreviated Popular ______________ Philosophical Lanky _______ Ponderous ___ Distant _____ Sparkling __ Blochy ______ Driving the grocery wagon Keeping in line with Ricky 'typewriting -------------- Being Silent ______________ Doing Shorthand ___________ Writing themes _________ Everything in general. Nothing in particular Laughing _______________ Giving current events Killing time ___________ Fixing her hair ________ On the campus __________ Exploring around mines Giggling --------------- v aiting for Gertrude Waiting for Bill _______ Being a good girl ______ Calling up kids ________ Boyish ----------------- Getting lessons ________ Bending over books _____ Among tile girls _______ Telling jokes __________ With Marion _ Amusing herself In school _______________ Not much of anything _ Making date with Josephine Running around __________ Keeping her nose powdered Keeping busy ______ Chewing gum ------- Cooking at the I). S. Dreaming __________ Running around ____ Sleeping __________ Dept. To monopolize the floor_____ To be a nurse_____________, To get a girl ______________ To Ik a business woman____ To Ik a lawyer ___________j To save __________________j To finish her shorthand _ J To be an angel __________ To make a hit ___________ To get a permanent wave in her hair _____ To become a nurse________ To become a missionary_____ To be a farmer ---------- To get knowledge ________ To open up a nursery_______ To become president of the Eskimo Republic — To be with Ricky ________ To own a typewriter _____ To be a great talker_____ Not much of anything ______ To become a business woman ___________________ To own a Ford ___________ To become an athletic teacher _______________ To do her best ___________ To be a movie fan _______ To get fat _______________ To get there first ------- To live a quiet life _____ To get up in the morning _ To set the example_______ To get ■hooked up _______ To keep house ___________ To become tall ___________ To own a factory _________ To find a freckle eraser____ To be a typist __________ To Ik a history shark______ To be in the movies ________ To find a permanent whisker remover_______ To make good fudge_______ To have curls like Maiy Plckford _________ To shrink _______________ To be a journalist ______ To become a janitor __ To Ire a 12 o'clock girl in a 9 o'clock town ______Leader of Suffragettes. To be editor of the Mercer Daily --------- To become a poet ________ To be a Chemistry Shark Not to overwork _________ To be up in society To marry a rich girl Selling Blue Jay Corn Plaster. Working on a farm. Grass widower. Waiting at the church. A man of leisure. Cuty Cute in latest comedies. Speed record in shorthand. An old maid. Mrs. Milton Sills. A beau. A deaconess. A meal ticket for some girl. A know nothing. A benevolent old gentleman. A teamster. Mrs. Rutger Erickson. Manager of the Wool worth Store. Settled and contented. A business woman. Owner of an orphan asylum. A second Edmund Burke. Record breaking swimmer Olympic games. Keeping house. School marm. Married probably. A machinist. A factory laborer. Working in Finnish bakery. A bond salesman. An old maid. Living with Lillis. A minister's wife. At the poor farm. Country school teacher. Daily Globe staff. Dancing teacher. Food for squirrels. Owner of Smith Shaving Soap factory. Pianist Rex Theater. A wild life in Mexico. Still tall but shrinking. A pensioned street car rider to Jessieville. President Harvard University. Out in the wild west. A painter. A small woman. Still free. Married to Charlie. A bachelor. Page Sixty-two e iQ2i • HE ' e m l iii i02i JOKES Mrs. Marauder was packing Esther’s lunch one morning when Esther asked, “Mother, do your specks magnify?” “A little,” answered her mother. “Well then,” said Esther, “I would like it very much if you would take them off while you’re packing my lunch.” Bert and Josephine entered a car, headed for Jessiville. ‘ ‘ Do you suppose we can squeeze in here ? ’ ’ asked Bert. “Don’t you think, dear, we had better wait until we get home?” was the embarrassed reply. __________ Fat Larson: “Prof, hurry and get the shovel; Mr. Moss is in the snow bank! ’ ’ Prof Nichols: “How deep?” Fat Larson: “Up to his knees.” Prof: “Let him walk out then.” Fat: “He can’t; he’s the wrong end up.” Mr. Fletcher: “Can anyone give me a discussion on the population of Georgia ? Alvin Lorenson: “Yes, sir, the population of Georgia is too dry for agriculture. ’ ’ __________ Miss Olson: “Steve, spell needle.” Steve McKevitt: “N-e-i-d-l-e, needle.” Teacher: “Wrong, there is no i in needle.” Steve: “Well, tain’t a good needle then.” Carl Strang: “What’s the hardest thing when you are learning to play basketball?” Robert Healy: (Who had just fallen for the third time) “The floor.” Ludwig Peterson: “George, they say prohibition has brought sunshine into many lives. Is that j-iglit?” George Peterson: “Yes, and moonshine into others.” Mr. Watson, angrily: “I want this room to be so quiet that you can hear a pin drop.” A few moments of silence reigned and Elizabeth Knpecky called, “Let it drop, Mr. Watson.” ___________ Charles Thompson: “I want my hair cut.” Barber: ‘ ‘ Anv particular way ? ’ ’ Charles: “Yes, off.” Tommy Watson had been very naughty and his mother threatened to whip him. Tommy immediately ran upstairs and hid under the corner of the bed. Just then Mr. Watson came in and Mrs. Watson told him about Tommy. He went upstairs in search of Tommy and began to crawl under the bed when Tommy said, “Hello, pop, is she after you too?” Donald (affectionately): Marion, dear, I’ve had something hesitating on my lips for sometime now, and— Marion (interrupting) : “Oh, Donald, how I do hate those little mustaches. Page Sixty-three iQ2i THE- p(e in e i02i On February 14, the Boys’ Glee Club gave a concert, before a large audience of vacant seats; the affair proved a howling success. The following solos were rendered:— It’s Nice to Get Up in the Morning, But It’s Nicer to Lie in Bed. . .Walter Winn That Girl of Mine...........................................Lloyd Arthur When the Right Little Girl Comes Along...................Alvin Lorenson Little Ford Rambled Right Along............................Donald Smith Have a Smile............................................Allerd Bergquist They Go Wild Over Me........................................Joe Cvengros If I Knock the “L” Out of Kelly..............................Mike Nolan I Ain’t Got Nobody Much....................................John Weimar Come Josephine In My Flying Machine...................Albert Tederstrom We have been bribed to tell: that Carlton Lindberg is a good student; that Donald Smith is too busy to accept more positions; that Earl Yankee wants a girl; that Esther Marauder is a fine typist; that Prof. Nicholls is a good scout. We have been bribed not to tell: where some people went the night of the debate; what Mr. Hartung thinks of the Glee Club; how Mr. Fletcher curls his hair; why some girls let their gooloshes go a flopping; what happens at the cabinet meetings; what the Hematite Staff thinks of its job. THE BONEHEAD CLUB Anyone is eligible who:— gets kicked out of the assembly at least once a week; who bums school to go to a matinee; tries to bluff Miss Goudie; puts one over on Mr. Watson; doesn’t. buy an annual; chews gum in the assembly; runs a Jussen bill. Some people are naturally crazy; others take Latin. Page Sixty-four i(mi v2!5 ernex{i(e Alumni List CLASS OF 1890 Mercy Bennett, Mrs. Quinlan...................... Maria Sullivan, Deceased James Sullivan, Insurance and Bonds ............. Charles Walker, Civil Engineer .................. Robert J. Basset. U. S. Civil Engineer........... CLASS OF 1891 Mary Luxmore, Mrs. George H. Carah............... Armand Bates, Deceased. Margaret Combs, Mrs. Crowley..................... Myrtle Carus, Mrs. Chapman ...................... Mary Lyon, Deceased. Georgia Richard, Mrs. Thos. McRoberts............ Emily Sampson, Mrs. Morrill ..................... Margaret Sullivan ............................... CLASS OF 1892 John Kelly, Mining Engineer...................... Clarence Luby, Lawyer............................ Albert Brewer, Deceased. Thomas Sullivan, Merchant ....................... Ida Lamielle, Mrs. B. Wallace.................... Eva Owen, Mrs. L. Price.......................... No class in 1893 CLASS OF 1894 Maude Healy, Mrs. W. Cole........................ Margaret Hartigan, Mrs. J. M. Bush............... Kate Shea Molly McCarthy, Deceased......................... Clara Lamielle, Mrs. Kollher..................... CLASS OF 1895 Frances Nelson, Mrs. P. D. Kaye.................. Mabel McConnell, Mrs. McClintoc.................. Bates Burt, Dean of Episcopal Church............. CLASS OF 1896 Luther Brewer, General Manager, Coates and Tweed Henry Grils, Deceased. William Lelonde, Lawyer ......................... Rosa Cook, Mrs. C. Taylor........................ Clarissa E. Mace................................. John Niven, Lawyer............................... Ruby Richards, Mrs. Chas. McMichael.............. Florence Whitney, Teacher........................ CLASS OF 1897 James Goudie, City Engineer ..................... Marion Healy, Mrs. Fred Larson................... Edith Mace....................................... Kate Nelson, Mrs. K. N. Sedgewick................ Mamie Roche, Mrs. Ed. McKevitt................... Mary Stevens, Mrs. Clyde Kendricks............... Dennis Sullivan, Deceased. Maud Williams. Mrs. Fred Brewer.................. CLASS OF 1898 Janet Goudie. Teacher............................ Albert W. Johnson, Ins........................... Anna Johnson, Mrs. C. Lambert.................... Isabelle Mace, Librarian ........................ Abigail Lyon .................................... Carrie Fuller, Mrs. F. Triplett.................. Ethel Williams, Teacher.......................... Roscoe Brewer, Deceased. i02i .St. Paul. Minn. Ironwood, Mich. Ironw'ood, Mich. . .Newark, N. J. Ironwood, Mich. .... Butte, Mont. ..Detroit, Mich. Cleveland, Ohio . .Eveleth, Minn. ...Butte, Mont. ..San Francisco ..Seattle, Wash. Ironwood, Mich. .Wallace, Idaho ...Baker, Mont. ..Ironwood, Mich. .Ishpeming, Mich. Ontonagon, Mich. Fort Mortan, Col. ..Topeka, Kansas ...Pittsburgh, Pa. .Marquette, Mich. .....Duluth, Minnesota ...........Hurley, Wis. .......Ironwood, Mich. .........Duluth, Minn. ......Milwaukee, Wis. .....Windemer, Florida ............California .......Ironwood, Mich. ........Ironwood, Mich. ..........Duluth, Minn. .......Milwaukee, Wis. ........Hibbing, Minn. ......Ann Arbor, Mich. .......Ironwood, Mich. .......Ironwood, Mich. ...San Francisco, Cal. .....Minneapolis, Minn. .........Duluth, Minn. .....Menominee, Mich. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. ..........Boise, Idaho Page Sixty-five iQ£i _____ (eiricvii (e iO£i CLASS OF 1899 Percy Williams, Supt. Eureka Mine.......................................Ramsay. Mich. Oscar Olson, Chief Engineer, Oliver Mining Co.........................Ironwood, Mich. Edward Tew, Physician ................................................Bessemer, Mich. Lillie Larson, Mrs. Beddow............................................Virginia, Minn. Lily Lamielle, Teacher.................................................Wallace, Idaho Alphonse Scholler, 111. Steel Company..............................South Chicago, 111. Arthur O’Neill, Attorney at Law.......................................Ironwood, Mich. Ruth Dietz, Mrs. Haas...................................................West Virginia Celia Beaulieu, Mrs. O’Neill..........................................Ironwood. Mich. Laura Scott, Mrs. Lory..................................................Eveleth Minn. Laura Bowden, Mrs. William Treloar...................................Ishpeming, Mich. Norman Winn ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Mildred Larson, Mrs. Charles Gunderson................................Escanaba, Mich. Sidney Nast, Wholesale Merchant.......................................Ironwood, Mich. George Edwards, Deceased. CLASS OF 1900 Gordon Bayington, Deceased. Harry Dietz Lulu Fuller, Mrs. J. C. Raddock....................................Green Bay, Wis. Frances Hartigan, Mrs. John B. Patrick...............................Ironwood, Mich. Harry Hickory, .....................................................Ishpeming, Mich. Agnes E. Johnson, Mrs. Lemmon....................................Fort McKinley, Me. Clarence McCarty Mabel L. McDouga!, Mrs. O. Olson.....................................Ironwood, Mich. James Powers .......................................................Marquette, Mich. Arthur Redner, Asst. Supt. McKenna Steel Co..........................Bessemer, Mich. Rudolph Schoengarth.................................................Coloraine, Minn. Nettie Tosch ..........................................................Racine, Wis. Arthur C. Urquhart, Attorney at Lawr..................................Detroit, Mich. Walter L. Winn, Chemist .............................................Ironwood, Mich. Anne C. Wright, Mrs. Harry Bridgeman....................................Flint, Mich. CLASS OF 1901 Clyde Urquart, Physician .........................................Hurley, Wis. Will Lewis ............................................................Kenton, Mich. Lew Brayton .......................................................Spokane, Wash. Joe Gregory. Oliver Mining Office ..................................Ironw’ood, Mich. Florence Gray, Mrs. Ross Hamilton.................................Washington, D. C. Lida Coutch, Mrs. John Weber.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Dora Oxnam, Mrs. Luther Brewer.........................................Duluth, Minn. Selma Stenstrom ...................................................Ironwood, Mich. Nettie Triplett, Mrs. Chase........................................Ironwood. Mich. Signe Steele, Mrs. Mellen ..........................................Homestead, N. D Hilda Anderson, Deceased. Bertha Hocking, Mrs. Joe Blackwell...................................Ironwood, Mich. Dottie Sleight. Mrs. J. C. Elder........................................Chicago. 111. Alice Roche, Mrs. Turner..........................................Aberdeen, S. Dak. Irene Cavanaugh, Stenographer......................................St. Paul, Minn. Ethel Williams, Mrs. Bert Dickinson................................Morecraft, Wyo. CLASS OF 1902 Edith Brewer, Mrs. Harry Lyons........................................Evelyth, Minn. Nellie Powers .....................................................Houghton, Mich. Sigred Netterblad, Mrs. Harry Barron....................................Miami, Ariz. Mary Kluck, Mrs. Posinski .........................................Green Bay, Wis. Ida McClary, Mrs. William Peters....................................Wakefield, Mich. Gertrude Nagelstock, Mrs. J. Heller....................................Oconto, Wis. Pearl Clemo. Teacher..................................................Detroit, Mich. Jerry Shea ........................................................Milwaukee, Wis. Ira Prout, Physician...............................................Wakefield, Mich. Donald Chisholm, Deceased. Thomas Mullen, Physician...........................................Dowagiac, Mich. Alex Chisholm, Supt. Steel and Tube Co...............................Ironwood, Mich. _ Page Sixty-six iQ£i______ i02i CLASS OF 1903 Gladys Coe .........................................................Bellingham, Wash. Margaret Exworthy, Mrs. Ray Schaeffer..................................Detroit, Mich. Daisy Cuvier, Mrs. Elbert Appleton....................................Ironwood, Mich. Louise H. Johnson, Deceased. Christina Miller ................................................San Francisco, Calif. Claude Larson, Game Warden............................................Ironwood, Mich. Ethel McLean, Mrs. M. E. Scroggins.................................Minneapolis, Minn. Olga Monroe, Mrs. Thos. McMahon.........................................Tacoma, Wash. Zella Walker, Teacher..................................................Pontiac, Mich. Guy Fuller, Deceased. Douglas Rothschild, Doctor.............................................Detroit, Mich. Ethel Sleight, Mrs. Arthur Cole.......................................Columbus, Ohio. Birdie Nast, Mrs. Gust Simon..........................................Ironwood, Mich. CLASS OF 1904 Grace Rule, Mrs. M. M. Turner........................................... Akron, Ohio Jean Goudie, Teacher, I. H. S.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Chas. Wester, Clerk, Oliver Iron Mining Company.......................Ironwood. Mich. Naima Lundgren, Mrs. Harry Martin....................................Ann Arbor, Mich. John Junell, Lawyer ...............................................Minneapolis, Minn. Ida Peterson, Mrs. Claude Larson......................................Ironwood, Mich. Lucille Williams, Mrs. Thomas Silleman..................................Duluth, Minn. Herbert Wetzler, Advertiser ............................................Duluth, Minn. Adeline Dietrich, Mrs. Arthur Justice.................................Evanston, 111. Freda Norberg, Mrs. Edgar Larson......................................Ironwood, Mich. Laura Kunim, Deceased. Alma Wester, Mrs. Axel Uskoski.........................................Greckle, N. D. Mabel Tonkin, Mrs. Barrot............................................Ironwood, Mich. Hayes Kelly, Physician ..............................................Monrovia, Calif. CLASS OF 1905 Agnes Anderson, Mrs. Roscoe E. Berg....................................Atlanta, Ga. Sophia Bray, Deceased. William Peterson, Wholesale Flour Feed.............................Ironwood, Mich. Dean Nelson .........................................................Milwaukee, Wis. Katherine Owen, Mrs. A. Pinkerton......................................Waupaca, Wis. Ed Oxnam, Sec. Chamber of Commerce....................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Seaborg, Lawyer .................................................Detroit. Mich. Byron Shove, Engineer ................................................Ironwood, Mich. Edith Thomas .........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Ella Winn, Mrs. Guy Hoyt...............................................Clinton, Iowa Jessie Woods, Mrs. A. Olson...........................................Ironwood, Mich. John Kluck, Public Service Garage.....................................Ironwood, Mich. CLASS OF 1906 George Abeel, Garage..............................................Los Angeles, Calif. Mildred Abeel, Mrs. Harbine Monroe......................................Tacoma, Wash. Josiali Baillies, Steel and Tube Company....................................Pensacola, Fla. Doris Chisholm, Mrs. H. H. Talboys.............................................Joplin, Mo. Orville Collick, Music Teacher........................................Ironwood, Mich. Augusta Erickson, Mrs. Julius Johnson.................................Ironwood, Mich. Oscar Fieldseth, C. N. W. R. R. Co...............................Ironwood, Mich. Herbert Jussen, Supt. Townsite Mine...................................Ironwood, Mich. Hildur Johnson, Nurse .................................................Chicago, 111. Joe Kropidlowski, Lawyer ............................................ ew York City Tekla Lindquist, Mrs. Will Olson......................................Ironwood, Mich. Irving Monroe, Clerk...................................................Hibbing, Minn. Clarence Moore Polly Nelson, Mrs. Gregory Kolleck................................Los Angeles, Calit. Hilrna Stohihammer, Teacher.............................................Duluth, Minn. Claire Sullivan, Mrs. Ulrick...........................................Hibbing, Minn. Howard Snyder, Hotel Prop............................................Bucklin, Kansas Marian Walker, Mrs.................................................. Cleveland, Ohio Page Sixty-seven iQ£i mcviiie iO£i CLASS OF 1907 Maude Arthur, Deceased. Thos. Bond, Chief Accountant........................................Paulton, Virginia Byron Brogan, Lawyer.................................................Ironwood, Mich. Kathryn Carr, Deceased. Herman Dietrick ...................................................Brooksville, Fla. Marshall Gleason ....................................................Eveleth, Minn. Frances Healy, Mrs. Russel Williams.....................................Chicago, 111. Helen Hough. Mrs. Rudolph Larson....................................Graceville, Minn. Dudley Houk, Insurance Agent................................................Ironwood, Mich. Hilda Johnson Vallie Kumm ....................................................San Francisco, Calif. Eva Lofberg. Mrs. Harry Trezise.............................................Ironwood, Mich. Werner Larson, Real Estate Agent............................................Ironwood, Mich. George May .........................................................Milwaukee, Wis. Margaret Moore, Mrs. Irving Jillday.................................Bay City, Mich. Arthur Schneider, Bell Telephone Co.................................Baltimore, Md. Margaret Urquhart Alda Utley, School of Expression......................................Boston, Mass. Ada King, Mrs. Wm. Caddy.............................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Weber, Mrs. George Goodman.....................................Little Rock, Ark. CLASS OF 1908 Tekla Anderson, Mrs. Minor Vandermaid................................Petosky, Mich. Lester Anderson, Farmer .............................................Ironwood, Mich. Byron Best, Engineer.................................................Ironwood, Mich. Raymond Dick, Farming ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Bonita Drazkowski....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Dennis Donovan, Attorney ..............................................Duluth, Minn. Clara Ethier, Teacher ................................................Ramsay, Mich. Amy Erickson. Mrs. Clarence Holt.....................................Ironwood, Mich. Ernest Eade, Machinist...............................................Eveleth, Minn. Esther Grant, Teacher...............................................Cleveland, Ohio Edwin Hendrickson Earl Hubbard, Mail Carrier...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Clarence Holt, Oliver Mining Co......................................Ironwood, Mich. Ethel Holmberg, Teacher..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Melvin Johnson, Salesman.............................................Ironwood, Mich. Elizabeth Josephson, Dietician .....................................New Orleans, La. Julius Johnson, Steel and Tube Co....................................Ironwood, Mich. Helen Kropidlowski, Mrs. N. J. Miller...............................St. Paul, Minn. Ed. Lesselyong, Broker ..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Leo. Leader, Armour Co................................................Albany, Georgia Mary McLean, Teacher..................................................Detroit, Mich. Jennie Nyberg, Daily Globe...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Jessie Oderdorfer, Teacher..............................................Flint, Mich. Amanda Strom, Teacher................................................Hibbing, Minn. Florence Ryan Louise Smith, Mrs. Eslie May.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Nina Tolan, Mrs. Albert Wagner.......................................Ironwood, Mich. Luther M. Wright, Bond Salesman......................................Lansing, Mich. Marion Williams, Supervisor Music....................................Virginia, Minn. John Sepplan ........................................................Ironwood, Mich. CLASS OF 1909 Alfreda Anderson, Teacher ............................................Ironwood, Mich. Harry Bay, Justice of Peace...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Norman Backon, Chief Chemist, Steel and Tube Co.......................Ironwood, Mich. Lucy Bonino, Mrs. John Hurley...........................................Hurley, Wis. Carrie Bond, Teacher..................................................Ironwood, Mich. Eva Bartlett .........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Davies, Engineer ...............................................Escanaba, Mich. William Gribble, Captain Aurora Mine..................................Ironwood. Mich. Grace Hawley, Mrs. Baillies Healy.....................................Ironwood, Mich. Page Sixty-right i02.i i02i Silas Hough, North Star Varnish Co.....................................St. Paul, Minn. Elise Jensen, Mrs. Lutey..............................................Iron wood, Mich. Sigurd Nelson, Lawyer..................................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Nicholson, Teacher ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Nels Nicholson, Forester ..............................................Tulalip, Wash. Erhard Oie, Chemist....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Victor Peterson, Merchant .............................................Ironwood, Mich. George Peterson, Merchant..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Frances Sampson, Mrs. W. L. Taylor....................................Wakefield, Mich. George Sleight. Student...................................................Chicago, 111. Esther Stenstrom, Teacher........................................Iron Mountain, Mich. Eunice Stevens, Mrs. Guy Rogers.....................................Fond du Lac, Wis. Florence Sutherland, Mrs. A. J. O’Brien................................Ironwood, Mich. Hilda Swanbeck, Mrs. F. Talaska........................................Ironwood, Mich. Adrian Worun. Teacher of Science..........................................Racine, Wis. CLASS OF 1910 Clara Anderson, Mrs. E. Sahlin......................................Ironwood, Mich. Olive Apps, Mrs. E. B. Williams.......................................Hurley, Wis. Fanny Bay, Mrs. Paananan....................................................Touring Erna Blaesing, Mrs. S. Talaska......................................Ironwood, Mich. Sam Brody, Druggist .......................................................Chicago, 111. Stanard Bergquist, Teacher M. A. C...................................Lansing, Mich. Margaret Crosby, Teacher.........................................Minneapolis, Minn. John Drazkowski, Dentist ...........................................Ironwood. Mich. Hildur Erickson, Mrs. Roach.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Clara Fieldseth, Secretary..........................................Ironwood, Mich. Harold Hedin, Oliver Mining Co......................................Ironwood, Mich Hjalmer Flink, American Radiator Co..................................Buffalo, N. Y. Clara Grant, Teacher ............................................ Cleveland, Ohio Abner Holmberg, Draughtsman McKenna Steel Co........................Bessemer, Mich. Willard Holt, Mech. Engineer.........................................Detroit, Mich. Margaret Kellett, Deceased. Clifford Larson, Oliver Mining Co...................................Ironwood, Mich. Bertha Lofberg, Mrs. G. F. Coons....................................Ironwood, Mich. Dora McNamara, Mrs. C. E. Stevens...................................Bessemer, Mich. Wilbur McNamara Lloyd Owen, Furniture and Undertaking..................................Baker, Mont. Selma Skud, Mrs. Dan Cohen...........................................Chicago, 111. Lucien Sobolewski, Chemist.................................................Chicago, 111. Edwin Stenstrom, Steel Tube Co....................................Ironwood, Mich. Hjalmar Wester, Steel Tube Co.....................................Ironwood, Mich. Lillie Wester, Deceased. CLASS OF 1911 Hildur Nelson, Nurse ............................. Rhinehart Thalner, Buick Motor Co................. Esther Jacobson, Teacher.......................... Ernest May, Instructor Com. High School........... Emily Jeffry, Post Office......................... Jessica Bond, Teacher ............................ Fred Trezise, Teacher, Lawrence College........... Harry Trezise, Ironwood News Record............... Cora Arthur, Mrs. Fred Trezise.................... Emily Chisholm. Mrs. Neil Harrington.............. Leonard Bray, Westerlin Campbell Co............. Carl Anderson, Halsey Stewrart Bond Co............ Abbie Larson, Librarian I. H. S................... Maurice Lieberthal. University of Wis............. Mae Strom, Teacher ............................... Albert Rye, Reid Murdock Co..................... Whitney Crosby, Electrician....................... Arvid Lindberg, Electrician....................... Stella Ledin, Teacher............................. ......Evanston, 111. .......Flint. Mich. . .. Bessemer, Mich. ...Milwaukee, Wis. . . .Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ... .Appleton, Wis. ...Ironwood, Mich. .....Appleton, Wis. .....Madison, Wis. .......Chicago, 111. .......Chicago, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. .....Madison, Wis. .......Ogden, Utah .......Chicago, 111. Minneapolis, Minn. .....Norway, Mich. . .. Ironwood, Mich. Page Sixty-nine r02j_ f(!m 1O2.1 Hannah Hovey, Teacher.........................................................Cleveland, Ohio Robert Kieg..........................................................Los Angeles, Calif. Leon Larson ...........................................................La Crosse. Wis. Hilda Olson, Mrs. Axel Olson..........................................Iron Belt, Wis. Harry Lundgren, Deceased. Lillie Bergquist, Mrs. Jewell..................................................Montreal, Wis. Treffley Bartlett, Bartlett Hotel.............................................Iron wood, Mich. Esther Olson, Dietician ..................................................Chicago, 111. Lily Champion, Mrs. Ed. Link...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Signe Hogan, Mrs. Thorval Erickson.....................................Ironwood, Mich. Jean Larson ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Laura Dietrich, Nurse.................................................Washington, D. C. John Anderson, Asst. County Agricultural Agent..........................Ironwood, Mich. Algot Johnson ........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Alice Worum, Librarian D. H. S............................................Duluth, Minn. Maude Slade, Mrs. Will Gribble.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Victoria Anderson, Mrs. Vance Berg....................................Castlewood, S. D. Esther Hubbard, Rural Teacher..........................................Ironwood, Mich. Lottie Ericson, Linotype Operator Ironwood Times.......................Ironwood, Mich. Abraham Anderson. Architect............................................Ironwood, Mich. John-Abeel, Automobile Business......................................Los Angeles, Calif. Anna Ball, Mrs. Thomas Conley...........................................Eveleth.’ Minn. Louis Mark, Physician.............................................McConneJsville, Ohio Charles Anderson, Physician............................................Ironwood, Mich. Annie Richards, Teacher, Ironton School................................Ironwood, Mich. Pearl Rowell, Mrs. John Medlyn.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Dora Watters, Mrs. Samuel Gribble......................................Ironwood! Mich. Arvid Ericson. Physician .............................................Ironwood,’ Mich. Lily Nelson, Mrs. Will Tonkin..........................................Ironwood. Mich. Dora Grimm, Mrs. E. A. Manthey.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Ethel Pauli, Mrs. J. Perkins...........................................Ironwood, Mich. CLASS OF 1912 Florence Bergslien, Mrs. Wiipa.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Sam Patek, Lawyer .....................................................Bessemer, Mich. Arne Carlborn Hilda Grimm, Mrs. J. D. Stauffer............................................Alma, Mich. Bess Dear, Teacher ...................................................Ironwood’, Mich. Edgar Slade ..................................................................Wicksbury, Kentucky Edith Carlson. Mrs. Anton Nordquist....................................Burnstard, N. D. Agnes Fredrickson, Deceased. Selma Naslund, Teacher.................................................St. Paul. Minn. Arthur Engberg, Traveling Salesman...............................................Indiana Leonard Hooper, Newport Mining Co...................................Pensacola, Florida Elizabeth Lofberg, Teacher..........................................Philadelphia, Penn. Alfreda Nyman, Teacher ....................................................Akron, Ohio Zella Banfield, Mrs. Dave Tousignant....................................Ironwood, Mich. Rekkard Landerud .........................................................Duluth, Minn. Will Lory .............................................................Kalamazoo, Mich. Ida Wiipa. Mrs. Nelmark..............................................Minneapolis, Minn. Isabelle O’Neill, Teacher ................................................Heydon, S. D. Edna Johnson, Teacher...................................................Ironwood, Mich. George Nelson........................................................Minneapolis, Minn. Elsie Macnamara, Mrs. Earl Campbell.....................................Waukesha, Wis. Henry Fieldseth, Teacher.................................................Eveleth, Minn. Esther Junell, Mrs. Ray Turner............................................Norway, Mich. Rayner Leader ...........................................................Detroit, Mich. Sally Larson, Teacher....................................................Detroit, Mich. Albin Runstrom, Accountant..........................................Fort Worth, Texas Fannie Holmgren, Mrs. Albin Runstrom................................Fort Worth, Texas Eda Johnson, Teacher ......................................................Gwinn, Mich. Clara Gunderson, Teacher ......................................................Marinesco Township Thomas Trewartha, Oliver Mining Co......................................Ironwood, Mich. Olga Runstrom, Mrs. Allan Hahn..........................................Ironwood, Mich. Page Seventy James Fish, Deceased. Agda Nyberg, Mrs. Leo Miller..................... Clarence Stenstrom .............................. Mabel Johnson, Teacher .......................... Harold Hammond .................................. Cora Woods, Deceased. Jeannette Skud, Mrs. A. Cohen.................... Hildegarde Swanson, Mrs. Howard Frace ........... Jennie Nelson, Music Teacher .................... Anna Hedin, Teacher ............................. Esther Forslund ................................. Rudolph Sanson .................................. Harold Waples, Prosecuting Attorney.............. Helen Hirschheimer, Deceased. Agnes Hogan, Teacher............................. Ernest Nicholls ................................. Elizabeth Nelson, Mrs. Paul Hirr................. Ruth Clemens, Teacher ........................... Hjalmer Peterson ................................ George Winchester, Teacher....................... Frank Talaska, Clerk ............................ Vera Cook, Teacher............................... Lucile Norris. Journalist........................ Richard Upthegrove, Electric Engineer............ John Kellett. Oliver Iron Mining Co.............. Maude Ross, Mrs. Roy Hoffman..................... John Muehl. Dentist ............................. Mabel JPearse, Mrs. A. Tamlin.................... CLASS OF 1913 Anna Anderson, Mrs. Bert Rowe........................... Edward Anderson, Deceased. Myrtle Arthur, Mrs. Hans Rhamstad....................... Lily Anderson, Mrs. Otto Kaartto........................ Albertina Anderson, Stenographer........................ Gertrude Alexander, Tourist............................. Lucy Albi, Teacher ..,.................................. Florence Best, Music Supervisor......................... Gladys Baker, Mrs. Rhinehart Thalner.................... George Brenzel, Homesteader............................. John Blomstrom, Dort Motor Co........................... Esther Carlson, Mrs. Fred Williams...................... Carrie Clemens, Teacher ................................ Florence Davis, Teacher ............................... Agnes Erickson, Mrs. Albert Nelson...................... Carlton Fox, Dentist .................................. Russel Gribble, Oliver Mining Co....................... Fred Gretzingar, Student, U. of M...................... Anna Gretzingar, Teacher............................... Minnie Gustafson, Teacher ............................. Mauritz Hedin ......................................... Nellie Hogan, Accountant............................... Violet Heidemann, Mrs. Shouldice....................... Edna A. Johnson, Nurse................................. Herbert E. Johnson .................................... Lucile Kluck, Teacher.................................. Justine Kupecky, Teacher............................... Mamie Koski, Mrs. John Luoto........................... Leonard Larson ........................................ Hildur Larson, Teacher................................. Nellie Nelson, Mrs. Virgilius Fern..................... Amy Olson. Teacher.......................'' 7 AV ’ i Hilda Pollari, Mrs. A. Anderson, Prin. Van Buskirk School Mae Pellow. Mrs. Fred Marshall......................... .. . Bessemer, Mich. .....Detroit, Mich. ....Lansing, Mich. ....Oakland, Calif. ...Henderson, Ky. Los Angeles, Calif. Minneapolis, Minn. .. .Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood. Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ......Detroit, Mich. .......Fairfield, 111. . Des Monies, Iowa .....Detroit, Mich. .. . .Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ........Chicago, 111. ......Duluth. Minn. ....Ironwood, Mich. ...Georgetown, Col. .......Hurley, Wis. ..Ishpeming, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .. . Bessemer, Mich. . ..Negaunee, Mich. .......Chicago, 111. ..........California ..........Wisconsin ...Escanaba, Mich. .......Flint, Mich. ......Baker, Mont. .......Flint, Mich. ......Duluth, Minn. ...Ironwood, Mich. .......Mercer, Wis. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Bessemer, Mich. . .. .Ironwood, Mich. . .Ann Arbor, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ....Ironwood, Mich. San Francisco, Cal. .......Passic, N. J. ____Ironwood, Mich. ......Duluth. Minn. ..Ann Arbor, Mich ...South Bend, Tnd. ...Ironwood, Mich. ....Ironwood, Mich. .... La Crosse, Wis. ....Ironwood, Mich. ..Cedar Rapids, la. ....Ironwood, Mich. ..Van Buskirk. Wis. ....Ironwood, Mich. Page Seventy one i02i Arthur F. Peterson, Engineer, Anvil ..................................Bessemer, Mich. Judith Peterson, Mrs. Johnson.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Amanda Palmquist, Nurse .................................................Chicago, 111. Lillian Richards, Treas. Mich. State Tel. Co..........................Ironwood, Mich. Dorothy Snavely, Mrs. W. H. Hamilton................................Los Angeles, Cal. Charles Shaw, Dentist............................................San Francisco, Cal. Anna Sahlin, Mrs. A. Houle.........................................Bessemer, Mich. Helen Sobolewski, Teacher...........................................Ironwood, Mich. John Sompii, U. of M., Asst. Instructor.............................Ann Arbor, Mich. Pearl Silberg, Teacher................................................Ironwood, Mich. Ida Sepplan, Teacher ............................................Wolf Point, Mont. Mabel Stage, Nurse Geraldine Shand, Stenographer.......................................Washington, D. C. Edythe B. Sanson. Mrs. Harry Allen....................................Ironwood, Mich. Clarence Tonkin, Steel Tube Co......................................Ironwood, Mich. Leonard Thalner, Physician .........................................New York City Olive Truan Mae Wright, Mrs. Ernest May..........................................Milwaukee, Wis Paul Ward ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Chester Williams, Physician ...........................................Herrian, Ind. Lloyd B. Larson, Deceased. Hugo Hendrickson ...................................................Stephenson, Mich. Herman Hagren ......................................................Weeksbury, Ky. CLASS OF 1914 Arthur E. Anderson, Teacher....................................Mintoe, North Dakota Hildur E. Anderson Edna M. Backon, Teacher, I. H. S.....................................Ironwood, Mich. Mildred Beck, Mrs. James Stewart......................................Detroit, Mich. Esther Bergquist, Deceased. George Bickford, County Sec’y of Y. M. C. C.........................Iron River, Mich. Ruth Brogan, Teacher................................................Ironwood, Mich. Edwin Carlson. Timekeeper, Oliver Iron Mining Co....................Ironwood, Mich. Ruth Carlson, Bookkeeper....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Agnes Danielson, Stenographer............................................Minneapolis, Minn. Minnie Erickson. First National Bank.................................Ironwood, Mich. Hilda Flink. Mrs. Porter ...........................................Cleveland, Ohio Marjorie Fraee, Teacher................................................Hurley, Wis. Lrsula Gribble, Mrs. Slade..........................................Ironwood, Mich. Carl Geuder, Steel and Tube Co....................................Ironwood, Mich. Myrtle Hadley Eldo Hoffman, Druggist .........................................Georgetown, Colorado Edith Holt, Stenographer..............................................Detroit, Mich. Goldie Hovey, Mrs. P. Keitz.......................................Lake Geneva, Wis. Lyman Hubbard ......................................................Kaukauna, Wis. Esther Hyvonen ...................................................Minneapolis, Minn. Anna Jackson, Teacher ...............................................Escanaba, Mich. Elmer Johnson, Student .................................................Chicago, 111. William Justusson ...................................................Ironwood, Mich. David Larson, Newport Mining Co......................................Ironwood, Mich. Paul Lieberthal, University of Wisconsin..............................Madison, Wis. John Lofberg, Contractor ............................................Ironwood, Mich. Arthur Lorenson, Oliver Iron Mining Co...............................Ironwood, Mich. Goldie Mark, Mrs. E. L. Juster.................................Wichita Falls, Texas Rudolph Nyman, Traveling Salesman .................................Ann Arbor, Mich. Bertha Olson, Teacher ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Walter F. Olson, Grocer..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Mabel Pauli, Mrs. John Warren......................................Calderwood, Mich. David Peterson, Oliver Iron Mining Co...............................Ironwood, Mich. Mabel Peterson, Mrs. Carl Emunson...................................Ironwood, Mich. Helen Richards David Ryan, Steel Tube Co.........................................Ironw'ood, Mich. Elsie Schneider ....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Dorothy Shand, Stenographer......................................Washington, D. C. Page Seventy-two i02i Hoy Smith, Newport Mine..............................................Ironwood, Mich. James Soraruf, Deceased. Ethel Stone, Teacher .......................................................Colorado Crystal Thomas Arthur Trezise, Northwestern University..............................Evanston, 111. Ellen Williams, Teacher..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Gertrude Geuder, Teacher ............................................Ironwood, Mich. CLASS OF 1915 Fred Pickard, Cudahy Packing Co.................. Gordon Reid, Prop. Eat Shop...................... Eva Rowell, Mrs. Percy Drew...................... Caroline Rye, Mrs. Albert Benson................. Edla Saari, Teacher ............................. Jennie Sanberg .................................. Esther Sauter, Deceased. Clarentine Scuffham ............................. Israel Sher Auvo Silberg, Oliver Mining Co................... Minna Skud, Mrs. Frank Cohen..................... Marjorie Snavely, Student........................ Evangeline Stenstrom, Stenographer .............. Jonathon Stone Amy Swanson, Teacher ............................ Eva Tederstrom, Teacher ......................... Ernest Toomey, U. of M........................... Chester Toutloff, U. of M........................ Harold Trewartha, Oliver Mining Co............... Charles Trudgeon ................................ Agnes Hagren, Teacher............................ Julia Harper, Teacher ........................... Jean Healy, Phys. Tr. Teacher.................... Helen Heidemann, Teacher ........................ Hilda Hogberg, Teacher .......................... Bada Holmgren ................................... William Hooper, Deceased. Helen Hubbard, Home ............................. Edythe Jacobson, Teacher ........................ Florence Jeffrey, Teacher ....................... Pearl Jeffrey, Nurse............................. Anna Johnson .................................... Carl Johnson .................................... Mabel Josephson, Nurse’s Training School......... Signe Josephson, Student......................... Everet Kearney, Kearney Co....................... Walter Kellet, Oliver Office .................... Emil Kiel. Aviator .............................. Anna Knutson, Mrs. Snell......................... Agusta Kronlund, Mrs. Carl Larson................ Clara Larson, Teacher............................ Stanley Lewis Carl Liljgren ................................... Leonard Lindbohm ................................ Esther Lindquist, Mrs. John Burling.............. Carl Mielke, Plumber............................. Alice Miller, Teacher ........................... Adelaide Mortensen, Teacher...................... Klara Nelson, Teacher ........................... Gertrude Netterblad, Teacher .................... Marie Nichols, Teacher........................... Albert Nicholson, U. of M........................ Matilda Nicholson, Teacher....................... Clarence Nyberg, Steel Tube Co................. Hildegarde Nydahl, Mrs. Morris................... .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Washburn, Wis. .........Saxon, Wis. .....Ironwood, Mich. .......Detroit, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .........Chicago. 111. ... .Ann Arbor, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ___Dollar Bay, Mich. Ann Arbor, Michigan ... .Ann Arbor, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ......Virginia, Minn. .....Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood Township ....Bessemer, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood Township .....Ironwood, Mich. ____Ann Arbor, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .........Chicago, 111. ... .Ann Arbor, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ..........California .....Ironwood, Mich. ...Minneapolis, Minn. .....Ironwood, Mich. ..Crystal Falls, Mich. .........Racine, Wis. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .. .South Chicago, 111. ......Calumet. Mich. .....Abberdie, Wash. ...........Ely, Minn. ... .Ann Arbor, Mich. ........Elkhart, Ind. .........Chicago, 111. ........Hurley, Wis. Page Seventy three Esther Oksa, Postoffice Clerk.................. Gustave Olson ................................. Herbert Olson, Student ........................ William F. Pellow, Circuit Court Commissioner Martha Peterson, Mrs. Swanson.................. Anna Anderson Elsie Anderson, Teacher........................ Frances Anderson, Nurse ....................... Lucile Anderson, Teacher ...................... Elsie Arthur, Teacher.......................... Carl Baker .................................... Minnie Bashara, Teacher........................ Carl Bay, University of Michigan............... Either Barron, Mrs. Bert Secor................. John Chisholm, University of Wisconsin......... Margaret Chisholm, Teacher .................... Annie Eplett, Teacher.......................... Gustav Erickson, Oliver Mining Co.............. Jennings. Fleischbein, Traveling .............. Anna Foil. Clerk .............................. Bertha Forsburg, Nurse ........................ Ernest Gardner ................................ Caroline Gretzinger, Teacher .................. Daisy Grimm, Teacher .......................... Myrtle Grimm. Stenographer, Dort Motor Co... ..........Iron wood, Mich. ............Detroit, Mich. ..............Chicago, 111. ...........Bessemer, Mich. ...........Ironwood, Mich. ...........Ironwood, Mich. Castlewood, South Dakota ...........Ironwood, Mich. ...........Ironwood, Mich. ..............Flint, Mich. ...........Ironwood, Mich. .........Ann Arbor, Mich. .............Hurley, Wis. .............Madison, Wis. .............Flint, Mich. ...............Ely, Minn. ...........Ironwood, Mich. .....New England States ...........Ironwood, Mich. .......Minneapolis, Minn. ..........Coleraine, Minn. .............Durand, Mich. ........Manistique, Mich. ..............Flint, Mich. CLASS OF 1916 Jennie Johnson, Teacher Country School.................................Ironwood, Mich. Luther Anderson, Armour Co............................................Mankato, Minn. Pearl Anderson. Teacher ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Skulda Baner, Ironwood Business College................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Bergslien, N. M. I. Co.............................................Chicago, 111. Anton Bulinske, Electric Light Co......................................Ironwood, Mich. Myrtle Clark, Stenographer..........................................Minneapolis, Minn. Hugo Coleman, O. I. M. Co..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Mary Cvengros, Teacher...................................................Hurley, Wis. Gertrude Dahlen, Stenographer..........................................Ironwood, Mich. Alice Ekstrand, Teacher ...............................................Newberry, Mich. Judith Engberg. Nurse ...................................................Chicago, 111. Edna Ericson, Teacher .................................................Ironwood, Mich. Martin Ericson, Plasterer .........................................Grand Rapids, Mich. Tillie Ericson, Marquette Normal, Student ............................Marquette, Mich. Malvina Fieldseth .....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Clarence Gribble ......................................................Bessemer. Mich. Elsie Gustafson, Clerk...................................................Odanah, Wis. Ralph Heidemann. Student U. of M.....................................Ann Arbor, Mich. Charles Highhill Edward Talaska, U. of M..............................................Ann Arbor, Mich. Emma Thomas, Superior Normal...........................................Superior, Wis. William Trewartha, O. I. M. Co.........................................Ironwood, Mich. John Wick, Barr’s Garage...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Hult Wilson, Columbia University........................................New York City Myrtle Worum ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Will Wright, Northwestern University.....................................Evanston, 111. Leonard Netterblad, O. I. M. Co........................................Ironwood, Mich. Millicent Nicholls ....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Ida Niemi, Rural Teacher...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Herbert Nordling, Prop. Drug Store ...................................Wakefield, Mich. Irene Olson, Stenographer, Olson Berquist............................Ironwood, Mich. Edward Ossoski ........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Maude Pierce, Telephone Operator.......................................Ironwood, Mich. Isabelle Peterson, Teacher...............................................Elkhart, Ind. Hannah Rye, Stenographer, Kutil Plumbing Co............................Ironwood, Mich. lngamar Randa, Clerk...................................................Ironwood, Mich. Page Seventy-four 102.1 Sigred Randa, Mrs. Dale Hawley................... Mary Richards, Mrs. Harold Perry................. Inez Rowe, Student, Downer College............... Jeanette Shand, Teacher ......................... Hannah Sickkinen Tynni Silberg, Mrs. Herbert Nordling............. Aubrey Slade .................................... Joe Sobolewski .................................. William Somppi, Draughtsman ..................... Eunice Stevens, Teacher ......................... Flora Snyder, Mrs. Van Slyck .................... Eva Hyvonen. Clerk S. Ekquist Clothing Shop...... Clarence Johnson, Stenographer................... Gertrude Kropidlowski, Teacher .................. Arvid Larson. U. of W............................ Russel Larson ................................... Hilda Larson, Teacher............................ Herman Leader, U. of M........................... Willard Lee Lillian Lesselyong .............................. Lewis Leiberthall, Real Estate................... George Lindberg, O. I. M. Co..................... Elsie Lofberg, Stenographer, Legion.............. Florence Lawrenson. Teacher ..................... Linnea Lorenson, Stenographer, Scott Howe...... Thomas Lundin ................................... Lydia Maki ...................................... Edith Marks ..................................... Alice May, Society Reporter Daily Globe.......... Dewey McCarthy, Prop. Shoe Shine Parlor.......... Maurice Nelson, Deceased. CLASS OF 1917 Willard Anderson Milton Anderson, Employed by City................ Aloysius Arasim, N. W. R. R. Co.................. Jennie Anderson, Peterson’s Cash Store........... Will Bond, U. of M............................... Florence Berquist, Teacher....................... John Best, Gogebic National Bank................. Flossie Brenzel, Trade Dressmaking............... Maurice Brody Anna Dahlen, Stenographer ....................... Clarence Ericson, Oliver Mining Co............... William Frazier Nellie Foil, Iron Bank.......................... Howard C. Gitchell. Traveling Salesman.......... Richard Garland, Mail Carrier................... Hildegarde Gueder, Musical Comedy............... Evelyn Grihble ................................. Richard Heidemann, U. of M...................... Doris Hulstrom, Stenographer.................... Lempi Hendrickson, Rural Teacher................ James Gribble, Time Keeper ..................... Mina Homgren ................................... Gladys Johnson, Eureka Mining Co................ Ethel Jackson, Teacher.......................... Helia Johnson. Teacher ......................... Lillie Johnson ................................. Rudolph Johnson ................................ Edith Johnson, Stenographer .................... William Kupecky, Pabst Mine .................... Florence Kronlund, Librarian ................... Fred Tezak, Steel and Tube Co................... Alpheus Thomas, University of Illinois.......... ... .Ironwood, Mich. .........Flint, Mich. ....Milwaukee, Wis. ....Butternut, Wis. ____Wakefield, Mich. ....Ironwood, Mich. ..Cedar Grove, N. J. ....Ironwood, Mich. .. Watersmeet, Mich. ....Milwaukee, Wis. ....Ironwood, Mich. Grand Rapids, Mich. ......Eveleth, Minn. ........Madison Wis. .............Florida ..Deer Lodge. Mont. ...Ann Arbor, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood. Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. .....Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. .Ann Arbor, Mich. . . Tuscon. Arizona ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood. Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. . .Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ......Chicago, 111. ..Ironwood, Mich. .Ann Arbor, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood. Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ....Ramsay, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ............Dakota ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Davenport, Iowa Washington, D. C. ...Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .......Urbana, 111. Page Seventy-five Fannie Tobin, Teacher................................................. Hurley, Wis Harry Thomson, U. of M.................................7. . .7.7.7.7. Ann Arbor, Mich. Dorothy Urquhart .....................................................Miami, Florida Ina Vesala, Student ................................................Ypsilanti, Mich. Ruth Walch, Dental Assistant.......................................Green Bay, Wis. Edgerton Williams, U. of M.........................................Ann Arbor, Mich! Ina Weimar, Teacher....................................................Hurley, Wis. Harry Wennersten ..............................................’. . . . .Ironwood.’Mich! Hilda Johnson, Clerk, Peterson Bros...............................Ironwood. Mich. Clarence Schneider, Schneider’s Store...............................Ironwood, Mich. Anton Kropidlowski, U. of M........................................Ann Arbor. Mich. Minnie Anderson, Mrs. Leopold Noldin...................................Hurley, Wis. Elvira Johnson, Stenographer ........................................Ironwood, Mich. Ida Mullenberg, Stenographer.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Pauline Wojeciehowski, Cashier, Davis Fehr.........................Ironwood, Mich. John Morrison, O. I. M. Co...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Alice Johnson, Stenographer ...........................................Hurley, Wis. Lillie Jackson, Teacher..........................................................Alba, Mich. Clifford Trethewey ....................................................Detroit,’ Mich. Gertrude Lee, Teacher................................................Montreal, Mich. Julia McKevitt, Teacher ..............................................Ashland, Wis. Alice Anderson, Stenographer.........................................Ironwood, Mich. John Weber, Student, Mich. Automobile School..........................Detroit, Mich. Florence Larson, Teacher .............................................Lansing, Mich. Pauline Kacsir, Stenographer ..........................................Duluth, Minn. Lydia Larson ........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Nels Lager, Teacher..................................................Virginia, Minn. Frances Lindberg ....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Agnes Liberato, Teacher.................................................Augusta, Wis. Harry Mark, University of Michigan.................................Ann Arbor, Mich. Lilies Medlyn, Mrs. Noah Warren .....................................Ironwood, Mich. Joe Mackewiz, Oliver Mfg. Co.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Eva Nelson, Durham Co................................................Ironwood, Mich. Richard Ninnis ......................................................Ironwood, Mich. Eirck Nymann, Oliver Co..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Sam Ninnis, Newport Mine ............................................Ironwood, Mich. Edwin Nelson ........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Norberg, Piano Tuner...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Roy Nyberg .....................................................Crystal Falls, Mich. Mildred Ormes, Teacher.................................................Dunham, Mich. Stephen Orbick ......................................................Ironwood, Mich. Jennie Peterson, Teacher .............................................Kimball, Wis. Svea Peterson, Stenographer .........................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Renlund, Clerk, Jacquart Bros...................................Ironwood, Mich. Clara Rodbacken, Stenographer, Scott Howe..........................Ironwood, Mich. Janie Richards, Teacher..................................................Alba, Mich. Elizabeth Sorsen, Mrs................................................ Detroit, Mich. Minnie Stanlake, Mrs. Wm. S. Schanz................................Middletown. N. Y. Allen Shaw, O. I. M. Co..............................................Ironwood, Mich. Verner Swanson, DePaul University.............................................Chicago, 111. Revena Trezise ......................................................Ironwood, Mich. Joe Tolan, University of Michigan..................................Ann Arbor, Mich. CLASS OF 1918 Ingrid Lindbohm, Mrs. Donkers........................................Marquette, Mich. Jennie Lundgren, Clerk ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Andrew A. Luoma, Clerk................................................Ironwood, Mich. Nathelia Mackiewicz, Meyer Sausage Factory............................Ironwood, Mich. Arthure McDuffie, O. I. M. Co.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Frances McClary, Teacher.................................................Guinn, Mich. Elvi M. Mattila, Superior Normal......................................Superior, Wis. Flossie McKay, Rural Teacher............................................North Dakota John Morrison, Chemist O. I. M. Co....................................Ironwood, Mich. Marie P. Mazurek, Stenographer.......................................St. Paul, Minn. Luther Leader, U. of C....................................................Chicago, 111. Page Seventy-six i02i ____J ioai Frances Nelson .................................... Jennie S. Niemi, Teacher........................ Romanus F Nodolney, University of Notre Dame.. Harold Nyberg, Steel Tube Co.................. Ellen Lydia Nylund, Rural Teacher............... Ida Nyman, Mrs. Nystrom ........................ Ellen Olson, Teacher............................... Gertrude Parulski, U. of M...................... Anna Pearse, Stenographer, P. M. Mining Co---- Frank Pelkonen, Clerk........................... Catherine Petrusha, Stenographer................ Isabel Pickard, Teacher......................... Florence Peterson .............................. Elian G. Peterson, Nurse........................ Ruth Rylander, Clerk............................ George Sanderson, U. of W....................... Mayme Sepplan, Teacher.......................... Frank Soraraf, M. A. C.......................... Euginia Shymanski .............................. Florence Fieldseth, Mrs. Arthur Pearson......... Albin Grant .................................... Olga Grimm, Stenographer........................ Ellen Hagstrom, Mrs. Dennis O’Leary............. Waine Helli, Student, M. A. C................... Lydia Hill, Mrs. Leo Hinds...................... Agnes Runstrom, Home............................ Ellen Holmgren, Teacher......................... Leola C. Hooper, St. Luke’s Hospital............ Mabel Hooper, Student, Stout Institue........... Pearl Hovey, Home............................... Agnes Jackson, Student, Northwestern University Clarence Jackson ............................... Mabel F. Jackson, Teacher, Rural................ Ina Jacobson, Stenographer ..................... Amanda Johnson, Cashier, Iron wood Daily Globe.. John Johnson, O. I. M. Co....................... Matilda Johnson, Student Marquette Normal....... Esther Johnson, Rural Teacher................... John Kubiak, Stout Institute.................... Emil J. Aili. Business College.................. Hjalmar Anderson, O. I. M. Co................... Ida Anderson, Rural Teacher..................... Leonard Anderson................................ Einard Anderson, O. I. M. Co.................... Ruth Anderson, Augustina College ............... Emily Bay, Scott Howe......................... Lillian Bostrom, National Kindergarten College... Winifred Brenzel, Brenzel Tailor Shop........... Elizabeth V. Chisholm, U. of W.................. Edith Marian Cole, Fine Arts College............ Ethel Coumbe, Stenographer, Gamble Morfchak Esther C. Crosby, University of Minn............ Ruth Mildred Collick, Art Institute............. Odin Carlson, O. I. M. Co....................... Florence E. Dahlin, Teacher..................... Dagny Danielson, Clerk, Olson Bros.............. Leslie Davey, O. I. M. Co....................... Eva Strom, Mrs. Gately.......................... Margaret Swanson, U. of Washington.............. Russel Slade, Stout Institute................... Eva Swanson, Prudential Ins. Co................. Florence Swanson, Teacher ...................... Clifford Tretheway, Detroit U................... Lloyd Trezise, Northwestern IJ.................. Ella Weimar. Stenographer....................... Dorothy Wilcox, Business College................ ..Ironwood, Mich. Van Buskirk, Wis. ..South Bend, Ind. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. .....North Dakota Van Buskirk, Wis. .Ann Arbor, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ......Hurley, Wis. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. .....Madison, Wis. ....Norway, Mich. .. . . Lansing, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .... Lansing, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .....North Dakota .....Duluth, Minn. .. Menomonie, Wis. ... Ironwood, Mich. ......Evanston, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .. Marquette, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ..Menomonie, Wis. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .. .Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .. .Rock Island, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. .......Chicago, 111. .. .Ironwood, Mich. .....Madison, Wis. .......Chicago, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. .Minneapolis, Minn. .......Chicago, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. ......South Dakota ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. .Minneapolis, Minn. .....Seattle, Wash. . . Menomonie, Wis. ...Ironwood, Mich. ......South Dakota ......Detroit, Mich. ......Evanston, 111. ...Ironwood, Mich. ......Chicago, 111. Page Seventy-seven i02i CLASS OF 1919 Inga Anderson, Marquette Normal .....................................Marquette, Mich. Theodore Anderson, Light Company.....................................Iron wood, Mich. Alice Berquist .......................................................Ironwood, Mich. Mae Biddick, Marquette Normal........................................Marquette, Mich. Pearl Bowden, Marquette Normal.......................................Marquette, Mich. Stella Bunk, Clerk. Metropolitan Store................................Ironwood, Mich. Joseph Leo Carlson, Steel Tube Co...................................Ironwood, Mich. Vera Chandler. Stevens Point Normal................................Stevens Point, Wis! Earnest Dear, University of Wisconsin.....................................Madison, Wis! Myrtle Eddy ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Hilavie Erickson, Marquette Normal...................................Marquette, Mich. Lillie Erickson, Ferris institute.................................. Rie Raimis’ Mich Dorothy Frace, Lewis Institute............................................Chicago, 111. Raymond Erickson, University of Michigan.............................Ann Arbor Mich Stella Gorleski, Stenographer ............................................Chicago, 111! Kenneth Gunderson, Dairyman...........................................Ironwood, Mich. Forrest Gould, University of Illinois......................................Urbana, 111! Erwin Gustafson, Traveling Salesman...................................Ironwood, Mich! Ethel Harper, Teacher, Rural..........................................Ironwood. Mich! Walter Holmgren, Steel Tube Co......................................Ironwood, Mich Clara Liljegren .....................................................Ironwood,’ Mich! Ethel Lorenson, Marquette Normal ....................................Marquette, Mich. Milda Lorenson, Marquette Normal.....................................Marquette Mich Lydia Luoma, Rural Teacher............................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Macek, Superior Normal...........................................Superior, Wis. Gertrude McCabe, U. of 111.................................................Urbana. 111! Francis Madejeski, Downer College....................................Milwaukee, Wis. Ida Malinen, Stenographer.............................................Ironwood, Mich. William Mattson, Mine ................................................Ironwood, Mich. Maude Miles, Mrs. M. Berik............................................Fullers, Mich. Dorothy Miller, U. of 111.......................................!.!!!!!!.. Urbana, 111! Wesley Mollard, Newport Mine .........................................Ironwood, Mich! Mabel Mullenberg, Marquette Normal...................................Marquette, Mich. Helen Nelson, Stenographer............................................Ironwood, Mich. Martha Nelson, Mrs. De Sautelle......................................Marquette, Mich. Jacob Nelson, Electrician ...........................................Ironwood’, Mich. William Nordling, M. A. C.............................................Lansing, Mich. Urho Niemi, Deceased. Anna Nord, Teacher in Township........................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Ollila, Clerk ..................................................Ironwood, Mich. Clara Olson ..........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Olson ...........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Blanch Palmquist, Marquette University...............................Milwaukee, Wis. Edythe Peterson, Northwestern University.................................Evanston, 111. Fanny Pelkonen, Marquette Normal.....................................Marquette, Mich. Pearl Pellow, Clerk..................................................Ironwood, Mich. Hilma Irene Radio, Bookkeeper.........................................Ironwood, Mich. Alfred Richards, Townsite Mine........................................Ironwood, Mich. Howard Richards, O. I. M. Co.........................................Ironwood’, Mich. Laura Richards, Marquette Normal.....................................Marquette, Mich. Rose Richards, Western Union Telegraph Co.............................Ironwood. Mich. Alice Rodbacken, Superior Normal......................................Superior, Wis. Margaret Ryan, Michigan School for Deaf.....................................Flint, Mich. Vanner Saari, Drafting Dept. Steel and Tube Co...........................Ironwood, Mich. Alice Sahlin, Post Office ...............................................Ironwood, Mich. Bertie Sandell. .........................................................Ironwood, Mich. Eleanor Sauer, Mrs. G. H. Phillips.......................................Ironwood, Mich. George Silberg, Clerk ...................................................Ironwood. Mich. Leonard Smith, Steel Tube Co...........................................Ironwood, Mich Evelyn Stephens, Marquette Normal.......................................Marquette, Mich. Edla Johnson, Stout Institute........................................Menomonie, Wis. Esther A. Johnson, Stenographer, I. H. S..............................Ironwood, Mich. Wallace Johnson, Chicago Northwestern R. R. Co......................Ironwood, Mich. Page Seven ty-eigh t Helen Juhlin, Marquette Normal................... Alice Josephson, Teacher......................... Gustie Justussen, Scott Howe Mills............. Knock Kellet, Time Keeper, Oliver Mine........... Oscar Ketola, Oliver Iron Mining Co.............. Hilmer Kronlund, Chicago Northwestern R. R. Co. Julia Kupecky, Milwaukee Normal.................. Ethel Lager, Marquette Normal.................... Elsie Strand, Marquette Normal .................. Emily Stromquist, Milwaukee Normal............... Evangeline Swanson, National Kindergarten........ Fannie Turner, Stenographer...................... Theodore Vicklund, Oliver Mining Co.............. Ethel Voyce, Marquette Normal.................... Loraine Wells, Stenographer...................... Ruth Williams, Stout Institute .................. George Berquist, Coyne Trade School.............. CLASS OF 1920 Helga Hyvonen, Kalamazoo Normal.................. Harold Johns, Timekeeper......................... Violet Jackson .................................. Edith M. Johnson, Daily Globe.................... Selma Johnson. Business College.................. Esther E. Johnson, Marquette Normal.............. Ruth Johnson .................................... lna Kerola, Clerk ............................... Femia Ketola, Rural Teacher...................... Lempi Ketola .................................... Francis Kubiak, Telephone Operator............... Florence May, Clerk.............................. Elsie Meilyn, Librarian ......................... Fay McNamara. Post Graduate...................... Hazel McNamara, Carroll College.................. Harold Nelson. Hogan Nelson Lumber Co............ Linda Nikula .................................... Theodore Nordling, Detroit Auto School........... Florence Pellow, Stenographer.................... Adele J. Peterson................................ Gladys Pickard, National Kindergarten School..... Dixie Rudberg, Albion College ................... Ruth Setterlund ................................. Roberta Shand, Post Graduate .................... Grace Stabler, Art Institute .................... Louise Skrowronski, Stenographer................. Lydia Anderson, Stenographer..................... Nanna Baner, Stenographer ....................... Urda Baner. Stenographer ........................ Emma Basso, Stenographer......................... Clara Bergquist, National Kg. School............. Walter Best, Oliver Mine......................... Gladyce Brenzel, Milwaukee Normal................ Hedwig A. Coleman, Clerk, Bean’s Store........... Gladys Cain, Deceased. Delia Clement, Teacher .......................... John Cvengross, Oliver Iron Co................... Edwin Dahlin, Post Office........................ Rutger Erickson, Oliver Co....................... Richard M. Fau!, Electric Light Co............... Earnest E. Goodney. Clerk ....................... Arthur Gribble, Stout Institute ................. Ellen Gustafson, Home............................ Eleanor Harper, Teacher ......................... Marion Heathcock, Albion College................. Marquette, Mich. ...North Dakota .Ironwood, Mich. .Ironwood, Mich. .Ironwood, Mich. .Ironwood, Mich. .Milwaukee, Wis. Marquette, Mich. Marquette, Mich. .Milwaukee, Wis. .....Chicago, 111. ..St. Paul, Minn. .Ironwood, Mich. Marquette, Mich. .....Merrill, Wis. Menomonie. Wis. ....Chicago, 111. Kalamazoo, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. . .IronwTood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ....Duluth, Minn. .Marquette, Mich. ......Chicago, Tii. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood. Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. . .Waukesha, Wis. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ....Detroit, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ......Chicago, 111. .....Albion. Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ......Chicago, 111. ..Ironwood, Mich. ...Ramsay, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ......Chicago, 111. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Milwaukee, Wis. ..Ironwood, Mich. ..Abbotsford, Wis. ..Ironwood, Mich. .. .Ironwood, Mich. ..Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. ...Ironwood, Mich. . .Menomonie, Wis. .. .Ironwood, Mich. .....North Dakota ..Albion, Michigan Page Seventy nine Blanche Hicks, Lawrence College......................................Appleton, Wis. Evelyn Heideman, Deaf School, Cadet.....................................Flint, Mich. Victor Hydor, Clerk .................................................Ironwood, Mich. Willis Tretheway, Ironwood Light Co..................................Ironwood, Mich. Nancy Wennersten, Rural Teacher......................................Ironwood, Mich. Gladyce Young, Stenographer .........................................Ironwood, Mich. Anna Johnson, Marquette Normal......................................Marquette, Mich. Hazel Lindstrom, Business College ...................................Ironwood, Mich. Nicholas Nicholas ....................................................Detroit, Mich. Edward Kurtz, C. N. W. R. R. Co....................................Ironwood, Mich. Esther Saari, Rural Teacher .........................................Ironwood, Mich. Inez Sepplan ........................................................Ironwood. Mich. Anthony Wodjak .......................................................Detroit, Mich. Hilding Anderson ....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Elsie Bloomquist, Telephone Operator ................................Ironwood, Mich. Aloysius Cybulski ...................................................Ironwood, Mich. Henry Eplett, Steel Tube Co........................................Ironwood, Mich. Arnold Jackson ......................................................Ironwood, Mich. Luther Anderson .....................................................Ironwood, Mich. Page Eighty cv a NV91HOIW ‘aOOANOSI ‘dOHS 3TAXS HH1 Page Eighty-one (em £xii{ e iQ2i i02l (Cnmplinmita of dJarquart Mvatlma y It mu' Gil ur 444 Reed’s for Service You don’t pay unless your order is as you ordered it. A La Carte 7 A. M. to 11 P. M. Luncheon 11 A. M. to 1:30 P. M. Dinner 5 P. M. to 7 P. M. Banquets and Specialties 219 Aurora St. Phone 967 Page Eight y-tivi iO Zi Iflp takp thifj nyyArtumly to nffpr mtr smtrprp ymift unalips In tlip (SralUtatPH nf flip (Claaa uf 1921. iHaif §urrpaa always attpnft tunt, parh anti all. ®hp (ftralttg Blwp fHriHillau $c UUiylp GUntliing anil iFuntiBljingB ■'Jfur tlip man uiltn rarra. The Leader Department Store Ironwood, Michigan. Dry goods, Ladies’, Misses’, and Children’s Shoes The most complete department of ready-to-wear garments in the city Munsing Wear Underwear Kayser Silk Underwear Kayser Gloves and Hosiery Phoenix Hosiery Black Cat Hosiery Warner Corsets Gossard Corsets Red Cross Ladies’ Shoes THE STORE FOR QUALITY, PRICE, and SERVICE Page Eighty-three i02i i92i Compliments of Meade’s Livery The W. G. Meade, Proprietor Up-to-date Rigs and First Class Saddle Horses Sanitary Dye Works We Call and Deliver Suits made to order 212 McLeod Ave. Phone 40 PHONE 129 Corner of Aurora and Lowell Olson and Bergquist Co. Dealers in Compliments of 3ones’ Building Materials Ironwood, Michigan Studio Paint, Roofing, Wallboard, Flax-linum. Builders’ Hardware Millwork Glass Copper Store Front Construction. Uronwoo6, Mticl)tgan Compliments of I. A. ISAAC The Julius Bentzen Jeweler and Watchmaker Electric Co. QUALITY SERVICE The little store with Big Values Julius Bentzen, Prop. Contractors and 132 Aurora St. Ironwood Dealer in Electrical Supplies Ironwood, Mich. Page Eighty-four e ioai ema iii i02t C. M. BEAN Watches, Silverware, and Jewelry Fine Watches and up-to-date Jewelry, Sterling Silver, and only the highest grades of Plated Ware, Cut Glass, and hand painted China. Stationery and School Books and a full line of School Supplies. Largest and most complete stock on the Gogebic range. PRICES REASONABLE Fine Watch and Jewelry Repairing, all work Guaranteed. C. M. BEAN “The store that service made’’ 220 Suffolk St. Phone START SAYING YOUR MONEY NOW LET US HELP YOU A strong progressive bank that takes an interest in YOU Merchants and Miners State Bank Page Eighty five DAVIS FEHR The Store For: Millinery Cloaks Suits Dry Goods, Rugs etc. You will find merchandise here of the latest and prices the lowest. L K. MYBAR Up-to-date Jewelry Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds, Cut Glass, Silverware Novelties Victor Talking Machines Watch, Jewelry, and Talking Machine Repairing. Let The Bright Lights Lead You To The White Way Everything that’s good to eat Page Eighty-six iQ2i 1021 Metropolitan 5 10c Stores rincl 3 oacl) Seeber (To, We operate the most complete sheet music department in Iron-wood. Distributors of 3 oseco an6 fountain ! ran Tood jprc uct;s All the big hits from the leading theatrical productions. Any special number you may want, come to us Hronwoo6, Mticl). We’ll get it for you. JUSSEN TRIER The Fashion Velvet Ice Cream Fine Candies Fruits and Nuts Clothing And Shoe House PURE HOME MADE CANDY High grade Guernsey cream from the farmers, Fairmont Dairy Farm. John P. Bekola Phone 64 Iromvood, Mich. Our Motto: “Cash Only” Page Eighty-seven Compliments of the Curry Hotel Sunday Dinners a Specialty 6:00 to 7:30 Page Eighty-eight e i92i ema iii iQ2l GRADUATION GIFTS You will find my prices a little lower. HOWARD, HAMILTON, ILLINOIS, ELGIN, and WALTHAM WATCHES. A fine line of Bracelet Watches and a complete line of High Grade Jewelry at honest prices. H. M. WICK JEWELRY SUITS and COATS to your measure of the largest assortment of all wool fabrics in the Gogebic range. LIEBERMAN’S TAILOR SHOP 118 E. Aurora Street Specialties for Graduation High school clothes for young men. The latest style creations in Young men’s and ladies’ Footwear. Suitable for every occasion. Skud Bros. Page Eighty nine !l f(ernc {v(e 1QZ1 i02l PUBLIC CONFIDENCE No one ever had it—and kept it—and earned more of it— except by the simple formula of making good. Confidence is the principal thing that can be gained only thru years of standing true; it’s the measure of good will —your good will. For recognition of our steadfast efforts to earn and keep public confidence we owe grateful acknowledgment, you may be sure we will guard this public esteem most zealously. THE HUB HEDLUND HAAPOJA CO. Every Garment New in Wearing Apparel for Ladies and Misses W. H. Boehme Louis W. Tust Suits, Coats, Dresses Skirts, Waists NEW HOTEL Womens Wear LANTTA TIKKALA Sunday Dinner from 12:30 to 2:00 Phone 1200 Ironwood, Michigan Iron wood, Michigan. Page Ninety ZH yf(e mo.it (e iQZi lOZl George R. Dear (Enntplimpnta of Quality ehr Plumbing (Eitii Sruij tnre and Heating ISalpl) l irka ©srar NorMing W Aurora St. Ironwood, Mich. Go To GAMBLE and MORGAN MROFCHAK’S COMPANY For the BEST GOODS At Right Prices Sherwin-Williams Paints Everything to build or burn Mixed Ready for use Chi-Namel in all colors and the Natural for Floors. Interior finish unequaled. The Malleable Majestic Range will last a lifetime and always bake right. Phone 492-or 247 Hurley phone 92 Page Ninety-one iQ£i__J (em txiUe__iO Zi W. EKQUIST CLOTHES SHOP Ready to Wear Clothing Shoes and Furnishing Telephone 451 120 Suffolk Street Ironwood. Ironwood and Bessemer Railway and Light Company USE ELECTRICITY FOR LIGHT, COOKING, POWER Safe, Sanitary, Economical When You Eat Eat At STRAND CAFE W. Aurora St. near Suffolk Page Ninety-two PROSSER COMPANY The ability to save money is after all one GOSSARD CORSET STORE of the tests of whether Ladies’ and Children’s you are to be a success Ready-to-wear or not. Dresses Rompers Skirts Vania Garments Waists Arnold knit goods IRON Gloves Dresses Hosiery Kiddie waists NATIONAL Lingerie Hoods etc. BANK Corner Suffolk and McLeod Ave. F. J. HAGER Ironwood LUMBER COMPANY Pharmacy “The Quality Drug Store’’ Dealers in LUMBER Drugs, Stationery, Sporting Qoods Lime Studebakers and Kodack Supplies Brick Wagons and car-Cement and riages Wall Plaster Harness Headquarters for School Supplies and Books Sash Blinds Lath Doors Prescriptions carefully Compounded Shingles etc. John Deere Farm Machinery 212 Suffolk St. Telephone 29 Asphalt Shingles and Cooting Paints and Oils Page Ninety-three i9£i i02i Compliments Of Ironwood Amusement Corporation Rex IRONWOOD IALTO IRONWOOD IVOLI HURLEY, WIS. THEATRES MATINEES DAILY AT THE REX IRONWOOD, MICH. REMEMBER OUR MOTTO “IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU” MUSIC PHOTOPLAYS VAUDEVILLE ROAD ATTRACTIONS Page Ninety-four i02i ___________ THE PERSONAL SERVICE YOU RECEIVE FROM NEW YORK CITY IN the first years of our business, we went into the New York Market twice 1 eac ' year to buy merchandise for Spring and Fall seasons. At best, such a J method is only partly satisfactory. Our determination to render constant, up-to-the-minute service to our patrons made it necessary to open permanent, all-year-round offices in New York City in the very heart of the Eastern Market. Oui New York City office is at 354 Fourth Ave. There we have an adequate number of thoroughly experienced buyers of merchandise. Those men know all the sources of supply in the lines we sell, namely: Dry Goods, Shoes. Ready-to- Wear Clothing and Furnishings for men, women and children. They also know the local requirements of each town, because our local manager is an important counsellor to our New’ York staff and it is on his judgment that we rely greatly for authentic information as to wffiat we must buy to meet your requirements. You have every right to feel confident that the merchandise in all our stores is up-to-the-minute in newness; thoroughly good as to quality. Because of the tremendous amount of merchandise we sell in our Two Hundred and Ninety-seven Stores, our purchase price is bed-rock low. Our operating cost is very small. We in turn sell to you at such tiny profits that you are assured utmost economy. It is sheer extravagance to pay higher prices than we ask of you. Therefore: For very good and sufficient reasons—it will pav you in many ways to buy constantly from Page Ninety-five i02i iO Zi PAUL’S The Largest Store on the range EVERYTHING TO WEAR for Men, Women, Children. Largest Assortment CARPETS, RUGS, LINOLEUMS, and DRAPERIES PRICES ALWAYS THE LOWEST R. PAUL The Store of Quality .... Hurley, Wisconsin At the REXALL DRUG STORE PURE DRUGS KANTLEEK RUBBER GOODS STATIONERY TOILET WATERS PERFUMES CANDY For a Clean Mouth and a Clean Tooth use | TOOTHPASTE KLENZO 1 MOUTHWASH 25c and 50c M. F. McCABE CO. Ironwood, Michigan Compliments of OLSON BROTHERS AND COMPANY Groceries and Feed Dealers IRONWOOD Page Ninety-six i02i ' f1'! ST SILBERG and -1-1 r JJ J, -J-1 Where Quality in KETOLA Food. Products is FURNITURE and Paramount UNDERTAKING We carry a high grade line of Cooking Stoves SULLI IT AN COUMBE The !h©;ra® ©2 pm® fo©d Products. Store phone 711 Silberg’s Res. 337 Ketola Res. 962-J 222 McLeod Avenue PETERSON BROTHERS FOUR STORES Buy your fancy and stable Groceries at the stores where quality always comes first. Fresh Fruit and Vegetables in season. Ironwood Credit Store Phones 100 - 101 Ironwood Casb Store Phone 157 Bessemer Cash Store Phone 182 Hurley Cash Store Phone 204 Compliments of the Elite Hat Shop Page Ninety-seven ioai ioai Compliments of THOMPSON POINT CAFE Go to PATRICKS FURNITURE STORE for Graduation Gifts Telephone 1216 329 Aurora St. lronwood, Mich. We carry the finest line of high class furniture in the country. Exclusive agents for the Karpen line of quality Furniture. John B. Patrick Co. Oriplett’s 3ewelr? 5Ztusic Store F. H. KEARNEY COMPANY The HALLMARK Jeweler of lronwood, Michigan. Jobbers of Corner Suffolk and Aurora Streets Feed, Hay, and Grain Soaps, Tobacco and Salt. Page Ninety-eight i9£i iO Zi An Invitation JUNE- Summer’s Sunny-hearted First Child invites us all to make the most of the golden summer, gladdened by the promise of a full harvest after honest toil. June’s invitation to be happy and care-free holds for all, all the year. Those who accept it have learned the secret of good living -a well-ordered present that provides also for a future harvest of contentment and peace. Accept June’s invitation through a banking connection here. The wise, full use of our facilities will help you to olve the secret of good living. We paid our Saving depositors $35,000.00 interest in 1920. HOW MUCH OF THIS DID YOU RECEIVE? OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS D. E. Sutherland, President L. M. Hardenburgh, Vice-President O. C. Davidson, Vice-President O. E. O’Connor, Cashier R. A. Douglas, Vice-President F. A. Jacquart, Asst. Cashier E. H. Madajesky, J. J. Gorilla, E. W. Hopkins J. W. Best J. H. McLean dngrhir National lank Of IRONWOOD, MICHIGAN Page Ninety-nine iQ2.i f(e mai i(e_____________iQ£i iEngrauinga in tljia Annual turn ntab? bg IHanunpramith -Kortmnjar (Co. iUtluiaukre. lUiaronain CSrt our £ grrial }Jrnpnaitiun on $our Annual Page One hundred Pre s of Eagle Printing Co., Marinette, Wi .
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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.