Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)

 - Class of 1909

Page 1 of 176

 

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1909 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
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Page 10, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
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Page 14, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
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Page 8, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1909 Edition, Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1909 volume:

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X . f,'X.,,,'X ,rg ., AX --5.,X,11, 95 fl,, , I YH, I3.',1-1' '- , LX , ,-. 4 ,r ,,-, c,.,, XXX X XX W, A ,X,, ,, , A XXXQX ,i:,l.XX,X, XFX ., , 4-1.X.,-AMX X,.X'X:XX -43. X. I , -4.. ,, N , n , -, ,X F., ,W ,, , ,xl f... , . .A Q . Yu cr ,- :. YI' 1 XV, 4 w ,mg . ,' 1 L, , AX, 4 ,..,X S51 ,.x.X r CHARLES D. LARKINS, Pd.D THE MA UALITE IQO9 MANUAL TRAINING HIGH SCHOOL AVGLUME 1 - THE FACULTY Clin 'A Qu. Glharlzs jj. Zgarkius ani! the 28:1 mltg its 21 token uf out rstcem and mmvcrziatiuu uf their znnzhiucd efforts in nm: behalf, this volume iststu ce1:eIg dedicatcd. 5 The Faculty KAN IMITATION OF D12 QUINCYQ What is to be thought of them? W'hat is to be thought of the teachers of Manual Training High School, that-like the teachers in public school, also-brought suddenly into our minds, into our hearts, tortured with lessons, into our souls, into our beings, the realization of how cruel the world is? The teachers in public school paved the path of our edu- cation with torment-heart-breaking torment-such as no man can deny was awfully cruel. But so did the teachers of Manual, if we regard them as they were regarded by those who hate lessons. Fond parents bore witness to- public- school teachers as no easy marks, but so they did to the high-school teachers. judged by all who saw them from a station of righteous indignation, both were found harsh and oppressive to any who had to submit to their high-handed tyranny. Teachers they were that made the quarrels be- tween the members of our families. The grammar-school teachers rose to the rank of oppressors and absolute Amon- archs, both personal and public, that rang through the records of scholastic history and became a by-word amongst angry students for years, until they entered the high-school. The great, wise teachers of Manual, in the same manner, gained for themselves that name of tyrants, which was not undeserved. They never gave us a rest from our labors, as rewards for well-prepared lessons. They allowed us not to the festal dances in the city, which celebrated in triumph the freedom of school boys and girls. No! for their desire to oppress us was too keen! No! for their hard hearts would not let them! Poor, cross, hard-hearted teachers, whom, from our earliest youth, we ever believed in as folks to be feared. This was amongst our strongest feelings as children, that never once, no, not for a moment of remorse did they revel in the sight of our pleasures and the glories of our achievements. Coronets for you? Oh, no-honors, if they come, when we get ready to give them, are for those who come after you. Teachers of Manual, when the kind- ness of your souls shall be aroused, we will be graduated and gone! Call us back, O blinded teachers, but we will not listen to you! It is not and shortcoz We venture the fact tha appeared in that this coi of the discr book. It ha ie high-school. same manner, which was not nm our labors, allowed us not ,ted in triumph ior their desire ir hard hearts arted teachers, ved in as folks est feelings as ent of remorse and the glories no-honors, if , are for those when the kind- graduated and ut we will not Introduction p p It is not our purpose here to apologize for the failings and shortcomings which the reader may find in this volume. We venture to ask, however, his or her consideration of the fact that this Manualite is the first of its kind that has appeared in the Manual Training High School, and we trust that this condition will invoke the indulgence and leniency of the discriminating reader who shall discern faults in the book. It has been the conscientious endeavor, primarily, to make the book thoroughly representative of our school, and the rapid growth and advancement of her athletic, social and scholastic interests seems to justify this attempt to present their work, and its effects, to the student and stranger alike, in a combined form. How successful and effective has been this purpose, we leave to the judgment of the reader, trust- ing that it will be molliiied by the difficult conditions under which the material was compiled and edited. THEN MANUALITE A OF THE MANUAL TRAINING HIGH 'SCHOOL H.AROI..D RUDOIQPH,fEd'ii01'-ilfl-Cl'li6'f. ' JEROME I. BARRY, Assistant Editor. PAUL FRANKLIN, Athletics. ' MARGARE'F VVOOD, Assistant Editor. ALBERQI' HENDRICKSON, Gr-inds. IVIARY- XV. STEWART, Societies. , 1WAX RUKIN, Classes. . AI..BERT F. EDMINSTER, Business M anaver. 6 FREDERICK S. KINSEY, Advertising M anager. FREDERICK U. 'CONARD, Ass't Bus. M gr STUART PATERSQN, I ll-nstration M anager. . MORTON VVASSERM-AN, Circulation M gr 8 . , V 1 1 s S 4 K . . 'rg-uf A if 3 Lf' 5 Q. . --'L .161 gy., ,kr if wx 1 QL: wJ Pg 1 .LIQI-m . .EM 1. .J 5 Pe VIEVVS OF THE OLD BUILDING A.-COOKLI N G CLASS Q.: D Q.. 4 rm mi ff- sw El KD fb YQ UQ vu FD 1' 'D LT' fb Th 1 .... m w '-Y' li' 9 31.10 AA 15 C r-F ,... .4 FN V 1 Pr! ,... ,- ,.. ... ,.. . 'D P ,fx Li 98.19 I ..4 -i 9-J L CJ ,.. '-1 T3 9 v-3 ro T ro .f r- Q r-f ... I ff. 1 C fm F.. B.-DINING ROQM 8 'D ,il ,.... -. ...J .J 9-5 f-r C Ill U 0 LT' CD 'fl-3 ... ga F? f-. P+ ,-.. ,-J FD 1 1-Y- XA Domestic Science at Manual The course in Domestic Science is intended chiefly to prepare girls to be successful housekeepers, and to interest them in the problems of the home-maker. NVith this practical end in view, a study is made of the various kinds of house- work that will be of value to the housewife, so that she may be able either to do her own Work easily, and with a sense of mastery, or to direct and instruct other persons Whom she employs. H p The trained housekeeper will be able to select articles for her home more wisely, and will spend her money more economically than the untrained woman 5 she will also have more leisure and freedom in her life, because she has learned to eliminate the unnecessary in housework, she will be more just in what she demands of other people who work for her. because she knows how much physical strength and mental energy are required to do a given piece of work, since' she herself has already done that work. Picture A shows the girls at work in a cooking class. Each girl has her own desk and utensils. Usually two girls work together in preparation of the article for the lesson. The foods studied are simple and nutritious and are taken up in about the following order: Vegetablesg flour mix- tures, such as biscuits, muffins and plain cake, bread, milky eggs: beverages, meatsg soups, fish, simple dessert, fried foods, such as crullers and fish-balls, pastry, canned fruits and vegetables, ice' creams and gelatine desserts. Not Only are these foods prepared as single dishes, but the meal as a whole is considered, studied and then cooked. But the best of food is unsatisfactory, unless daintily served. Picture B shows the model dining-room with the table set for a luncheon, or a single dinner. As soon as the guests are seated, a waitress will serve the meal, from soup to dessert. The meal has already been cooked in the kitchen CAD, and will be served from the pantry But no family would be happy for many days if the mother thought only of cooking and eating. The need for cleaning is almost as persistent as ,the demand for food. Therefore, in each lesson neatness and order are emphasized, along with the work in dishwashing and general cleaning. As occasion arises, the metal is polished, stoves are black- ened, clothes are washed and ironed, rooms are swept and dusted. And then there is the ice-box. It is a day,-s work to clean that alone. The model dining-room and model bed- room are kept in order by the students. Picture D illustrates a laundry lesson. - The duties of a housekeeper have not yet been exhausted. For where is the home in which the mother does not act occasionally as nurse? A few lessons are given in simple nursing, and on the emergencies that may arise daily. The girls learn to make bandages and tie up sore fingers, and what to do if any one faints. Even the boys of Manual have beenf known to come to the kitchen to ask help when they - I3 .lf ' w C.-PANTRY A. gg J .1aAz-mxoq Qpl UEQS i 'S ss9.IJ,SL .LL QLLL awp I2 111 soup S1 pun p Q AN. 5110 S33 ED f-+' P- R -A Ui P-J 1 ...L LU Q12 U Fugql v-4 ffl UQ 2352 :PE n-1 ,,.., E v-- r-3 A+? aff? Efki PY' Q c FP 112 9 U9 HP L eq X 12 oslad aql I U9 p2uuELu P+ 1 ,... r-4 r-3 ,... v-4 v-J UQ B . 150 'LU I LI U12 LU U I F :D c: z urn vw P4 1 QLI mg 91 C NI Q C' A W' v-4., .4 r-7 U1 4 'ssqo UE Q MX DI P ST391 UOOU.I91p3 0 Eupxlas I U DU ssulaqos gc 3913 Id UE' S po I 'B 19 Seq emxour uaaq 91131, LIJXFS L3 .. .-J Q- V JUL 12199121 xp pan, U 1 sq D' SD 4 CD U' ru CE qmq P have been hurt in the shops, and have permitted their lordly lacerated limbs to be bandaged. The work described above is covered in two terms, in the Sixth and Seventh Grades, and now that additional time has been allowed for the domestic science course, the class plans a model house or apartment, and is working out schemes of decorating and furnishing the house. The serving of luncheons and preparation and management of afternoon teas is also a part of the work of the advanced class. We all love most dearly the home which we ourselves Domestic Art as a Dr. Larkins, in an address given before the University of the State of New York, has defined his concept of the aim of the manual training school thus: The aim of the manual training school is to develop the pupils, capabilities. The personal end is a clear working brain, there is no imme- diate end. The constructive work is changed as soon as the pupil begins to be automatic in his processes. Accuracy is demanded in order to train the attention and the will. The main thing is growth and adaptability, or, as some one has put it, to furnish the pupil with a means of finding himselff, As a factor in this great educational scheme, the hand work, as taught in the domestic art department, was intro- duced and its outline planned. The department is not trying to train the girls to be seamstresses, milliners, or dressmakers. Should any of them, however, decide to take up one of these trades as a life work, T5 have helped to make. The actual making of some article, therefore, for our school home, is just now keeping the class busy and happy. Thus, whatever knowledge has been ac- quired previouslyiin construction and design is being used now in our model house. The girls are being sent out ready to meet and conquer the difficulties of the home-maker, and worthy to be praised in the words of King Solomon: She looketh well to the ways of her household and eateth not the bread of idlenessf' Factor in Education Hhaving found themselvesf, we believe that the course will gnake ap solid foundation to build on. T A Our aim is to develop the girl through material construc- tion. Through the study of detail, to reproduce, from good models, well-formed, well-made garments. Through the study of color and design, to make becoming hats and dresses. Through freedom in the expressing of one's ideas, to construct something which bespeaks the personal taste of the maker. During the hrst term a skirt is made-quick workers add a waist, darning stockings, mending or patching of garments completes the work. Next term the shirtwaist and cooking outfit fill the time. Illustrations for first year's work. The work is dropped for cooking during the succeeding year, followed by millinery, and finished with the making of a simple wash dress. V rl MILLINERY CLASS 'I hd ffl 2' 3 CD FD A I-14 ' 1-4 FD '-1 O 2 4 P14 r-9 Jo 1 591110 sq U R -1od1111 1 QE,LT:f.5'QQ. :-wwf, '1:Zfv5 i?3 SGH? FD..:,.'T'U7Q-J,-' P-QQDUQ 3'1- :fum mfD'JQ,--- ,-D: F5:gQ1P-wzrg' gwm r-r ' 1-r' f-r H. U T 1'4SDU'QP-H 'UQFD ,bww-f Qin... ,4nxf7 - JQFD f-1 1' uf-0440-',O.J 14 .-1,-C mOF.rog- Mg f-fggw ::05:-'wo dm.. Of-H' f7!7m OZ? fD'fL:.gz-'gff F-12 ... ., 4, izfgir:-.CD C if '-f'-1 If-+:','fU SQYQ LI SH 3l 911 1112 .I -I I2 111 3' r-A n-J D SAX .MOU D 3 5 T' E z rn :U 14 2 0 ww W po.1d 311311112 1113 . D' 11005 9111 1151115111 1-4. S35 ,-. bil KJ O v-- . 1- n-J v-P gg. C r-1-.. 4 .... C 1 . v-9 1-. O v- v-9 r--. 11, 4 CJ cn f-P ,.. Z 1-4. -4 ,.4 f-Y' 1.. ,... 1-4 ,.J UT? ' Q Slllll 1-11111 V A I O sq A12111 lOLUl3lI.I P-SLT -1 1 mi: ' P 2.14 :UD5 UQSZI. NSU? -'C SIZTUQ 4 232 L- Q 1-'12, pans C UF! p P+ .... 1-J FD 1-4. ...A ..z r-.- 1-J 1... : UQ r-A. U3 r F O 1- fl. A RJ Ph P+ ,iw P-4 r-J C P4 ,Cl ffl 1-1 1-a f-Y' SD Pit. f-+ O .1 Incidental to the construction of these garments, some- thing is told of the history of sewing, of the people who first sewed, and the implements they made for that purpose. ln- struction is given as to the quality of thelmaterials to be used and as much as may be told of their history and manufac- ture. Again, while the garment must necessarily be plain, it may be ornamented by the addition of some sort of trim- ming. This introduces the subject of laces and embroideries, which is vastly interesting, from both historical and mechan- ical points of view, and enables us to teach how to dis- tinguish the good from the bad, whether as mere material or an artistic product. And now we come to the shopping expedition. Each girl must call her arithmetical knowledge to her assistance, and calculate for herself the quantity of material she will require for her garment, and the amount of money it will cost. Thus she goes out to purchase, not at haphazard, but with definite ideas. The next step in the work is the draughting. The draughting lessons are full of interest, for we are making clothes on a scientific basis. Moreover, before the draught- ing can begin something must be known about the propor- tions of a well-developed figure, what lines of the form must be chiefly considered in draughting, and how to make meas- urements accordingly. The knowledge thus acquired is extremely valuable to the girl, and it is noticeable' that she becomes an important factor at home, for not only can she shape her own garments, but those as well of sister and mother. fn making the waist and wash dress, still other thoughts are suggested and dwelt upon. The subject of color is con- sidered. Equally important is the adaptation of material to figure to produce the best effect. Dressmaking carries us still further into the subject of adaptation, since by a study of the good points or defects of a figure we can so plan our trimming as to emphasize in one place and weaken in an- other and thus produce a more nearly perfect picture. just here it is found that a little knowledge of the styles that have prevailed 'at different periods of the world's history, is a great help is producing artistic effects, and enabling us, in our gowns, so to use color and line as to make the best of the form of the wearer and produce a harmonious whole. Almost all girls are interested in millinery, but occasion- ally one is found who says: I have no taste for millineryf' Such a one is plied with these questions: Do you know anything of the manufacture of the textiles used in milli- nery? Can you distinguish the good from the poor in quality of the materials used P From the artistic side, have you considered the colors you may wear with good effect P Have you thought how one shape of hat will bring out the good lines of your face, while another will accentuate the bad ones P Color is the first study, and who with an eye for the beau- tiful is not delighted with the knowledge and power of appreciation that is opened up by a study of this subject? No girl, certainly. It is remarkable what results are obtained from the lessons on this subject. Sometimes it requires two or three attempts before a girl can see at all correctly the bI4 WIN C' CLASS 1 SEWINC' EXHIBIT rf- V- n-J 9-J r'f- p-4 y-- p-4 FD 5 SD ...4 LJ n-- FD r-F ,-4 .J Q L L-nf r-F v--. 0 un FD A ,-.A y '-1 O f P+ P+ U32 -Arr Om 1 f 'pc 6 I-4 :E r-J v o .iw ,G 'FT KW 11' r--4 1 Q. E. 3 ,-+ FD U7 F'Y' gquloq 50 SEWING EXHIBIT shades and tints of a given color 5 but improvement is inevi- table, and the results areseen in the effects. Some are the daintiest of combinations, others are rich and full in color. The mechanical part of the work is irksome to some of the girls, but even that is usually outweighed by the certain results. Every girl is glad to know how to make a pretty bow. Slowly and carefully the points in bow-making are taken up and soon the class-room is decorated with bows galore. In bow-making, as in the trimming of a hat, the laws of design are useful at every turn. When we do good work our bows and trimmings are as carefully thought out as any design in drawing. , The first hat is trimmed with paper, and each in turn criticised. Most girls realize that it is a secret worth having that will enable them to take an old hat and old trimmings, and from them construct a stylish hat, or, better still, to cover a whole hat with velvet, and do it as perfectly as any milliner. At the end of ten months they can not only trim hats, but they can make the frames and cover them with velvet, straw, lace or mull. But all this time we have been doing something else, something of vastly more importance, something we touched on at the beginning of this article, and something the girls have not thought about as they made their hats and dresses, and yet it has been the real object of our work: it is the making of character. Surely all will agree that these months of patient, persevering labor, of self-control, of the acquisi- tion ofmanual skill, have done much toward making broader, nobler Women of our girls. I-Iave we not, then, been doing our sharetoward helping our pupils to find themselves ? t 19 ll 1 A, 'L , , ,, Al fafliilm 1, f f X 1 I J Wlllkslllff fMfvfggWfmMu6!Mg Wfklwffftlmf f A fb Mmf M r R A 4, ,XA',a ' ' if w -V 17 14 V I mfr K 4 5 V., XNHT-H j '1 1 I . A f.. x m',1 7,'T4 vlkwlx ' M H 1 LL Wf I 4,46 Rx Y' W 1 I f 'Q , ff X ff 9. QWW 1 51-4 x , , f Af! x 3 A X fn E? - 'I 0 1 FIRST YEAR SHQP 0 cn 3 O CQ 2 ,5 SD X 3 fb rn Q- Q. ' an m DD, 1-1- O E m O Y 5 o T ... v-3 ,.J O Q4 FD ,.. T A D-0 29? 'D 20, 03 :-4 C- f-QBJ FDS E9- ft in .4 ,uapms B LU 951 VD D 1 LLI112911 ll 9111 go 'j ZH 1 U2 FT' T3 N 1 r-F ,I O LU 39 li OLUU DAX U ELQUQLLI 113.1110 UO P... H 393. ,Da L2 2-4 'MF Yr-4 H, ..,., v-3:14 GFS 1' 4+-M oo P-'Hi A 7... L.. 'CU 0 Q KD ill fl P-J ro FJ' 3 in 5 : O P-H f'Y' ,-4 P-J FD T2 'U he 9-5 O ET ,- ,U ,-.. Suouusp fi 5 Q U Q f: w E Z U su U7 I O fo 01151 p .X Cl sql, UI IS O 1 r-. 1-A 'T' lapoul 1 ... S-1 Lp I r'? CD '1 P-4 f-? +-J QU 19131118 32 QT f--rn I3 'Um D305 flu GTD me 'av 532 rim I U 1 .1133 Ax.11u9 p me 9111 T33 l 9 D UE UE LU F J,su up uoyq 1111 up 5. - n-5 F' PA rv' U1 0 S33 O .. l ,-1 E .qs Idmoo M O U7 1191 Iof ,.. W 1 ,-.. K up 9911103 '1 4 D-4 0 m U2 as E z Q: D ef Q 0 o 3 I bt 'Q 1 SHEET METAL WORK The About iles all dealing prineip It i. is the l sons to torg ar co-ecluc lets ma crank-s room hirty bt' l saws, out sa l chara not toe uvorite ' this : l, seeol LtiO11al 2 e muel aft, or Sheet Metal Room ' The room itself is not prepossessing in appearance. About thirty busy fellows, making a merry din with mallets, files and saws, and in the center of all this, Mr. McCall, dealing out sawblades and good advice. These are the principal characteristics during business hours. lt is not too much to say that the sheet metal workroom is the favorite boys' shop of the school. There are two rea- sons for this: Firstly, the popularity of the present instruc-- torg and, secondly, it must be remembered that this is a co-educational institution, and silver napkin-rings and brace- lets make much nicer gifts for her than the pattern for a crank-shaft, or even a bookcase. The course begins with the simple match-safe Cthat is, simple until you try to make itj, which is shown in the force ground of the photograph. After this one has a choice of articles, and they vary from such practical things as candlesticks and lamp-shades to hat- pins and jewel-cases. It is impossible to represent in a photograph the char- acter and variety of the work turned out, not only from the difficulties of taking the picture, but from the fact that good models are not securable, for the best ones pass out of the shop and out of the hands of the maker almost before the burnishing is finished. 25 Q, FORGE. At 1 IG Fourt top Hoc' is one This is he forge the tim . The clanging ofthe faced b iys :Korg Whole sc ine ligl' the little smoke from wl it one The ieeoinl amateur blacks: room. ' here a each of x hieh is the ceilin 5 are 1 ing the 1 -ugh 1 vise-bene es foi In dii erent The Forge eShop At the Fourth street extremity of the rear corridor on the top floor is one of the most interesting rooms in the school. This is the forge shop. Here there is something going on all the time. The hum of the machinery, in unison with the clanging of the many hammers upon the anvils, the grimy- faced boys forging their various projects into shape, the whole scene lighted by the fires which blaze brightly through the little smoke in the shop, presents a spectacle far different from what one expects to see in a school-room. The accompanying photograph, taken by one of our amateur blacksmiths, gives the general appearance of the room. There are sixteen forges and thirty-two anvils, above each of which is suspended an electric light. The floor and the ceiling are concrete, and the walls are unfinished, show- ing the rough bricks. Around the room are solid wooden vise-benches for cold-work, riveting, etc. In different parts of the shop stand various machines, electrical drills, emery wheels, apparatus for cutting iron, etc. There is also a slightly raised platform, on which there are perhaps twenty chairs, here placed for the benefit of the students. A small iron stairway leads to a balcony, where are the lockers and sinks. The boys first learn several primary exercises, and then they make candelabras. These involve many different prin- ciples which help the young smith in the work which fol- lows. After he has become sufficiently competent, he makes some article of his own choosing. There is a large variety of pretty, useful things made here, among which are lamps, tire sets, andirons, etc. Although not many of the students in- tend to become blacksmiths, the training derived from the forging done is well worth the time spent in the shop. The whole equipment is one of the best in the country, and when the students of Manual realize this fact, they feel proud that they may boast of receiving instruction in the forge shop. 'Hn- MACHINE SHOP X w .Mc , X, , X 1 5 J gf X 1 7. ff ,, ffm, f f W AMQK ff 1 K ff ff 1512! f v 1 f 1 1 ' f aw fpf,:f:Wfff2?ff- yr 'W' ms, 44-1 f 1 4 '1 f f f ff' f g,,,,,fg- fn. gif ,101 fff w w:.vz45wzf-, ma :W f Ww w f M f a +1 7 f ' f 74,4 ,, , K 252526 ,f ., f I X ,, 4 ,. 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'AJ m 5- c- O CD ,-L f-. r-. r-J UPI p 1591 11 1 LII, .IQ The Machine Shop The work in the machine shop is probably the most inter- esting of any shop workin the school, not merely because there is such a variety of machines, but for the reason that each student's work requires so much .originality of thought in devising the mostsuitable means of accomplishing certain results. There is often one student in a class who is doing a certain kind of Work, and, in that case, everything depends upon his capacity for original ideas. This demand for original ideas, the independence of each student from the rest, the variety and diversity of the Work-all these things tend to make machine shop work the most interesting part of the manual training course. V The accompanying photograph shows very well the variety of work done in the machine shop. There are two twist-drills, two taps, a couple of gears, a tool-post, a lathe center, a milling-machine arbor, a scratch-block, a jack, a cylinder of an air-cooled gasoline engine, a fly-Wheel or crank-disc of a Water-cooled gasoline engine, and several smaller articles-all made by the students. There are two students building gasoline engines. These are quite dif- ferent from one another, one being Water-cooled and the other air-cooled, and each of a different design. A great variety of operations is introduced in building these, as, indeed, there is in making all the other things shovvn. The work, on the Whole, is of an excellent quality, and the students owe a great deal to Dr. Lenfest for the careful training by which they have acquired sufficient accuracy and care to turn out such Work as is shown above. 29 DAVID DOREMUS Cff 1909 D1ed Februarv 25 1909 IN MEMGRIAM IN MEMGRIAM RUTH WELLS D1ed March IO 1909 Clay: IQIO . 3 Wfheu tir of El method athletic, lite there was df to El Certain eral organiz similar to it. form of gow. form, hy xx' found to he grew. The developed th tion, rm org: eo-operzztiou Splendid opg ment of athl with other 9 pride and the general proper certil at Allmmrv. Q twenty-fifth The Coustitu li th to 4 ztry 'iso xter thu ol N 'l'lll' ich flllll outg NCQ rizu and nrtu tics llthtw ,1-5, . eu r on 4 'ate 1d t 1 may 1311 t p General Organization lfVhen first the Manual Training High School found need of a method to establish, regulate and maintain the various athletic, literary and musical organizations of the school there was devised a scheme by which this was accomplished, to a certain extent. This scheme was in the form of a gen- eral organization, much inferior to our present one, but similar to it, of which it is an outgrowth. But a successful form of government is not invented in a day, so our first form, by which we attained the required result, was not found to be entirely efficient as the activities of the school grew. The outgrowth of this simple and crude beginning developed the need for a more complete and better organiza- tion, an organization which would more cordially invite the co-operation and interest of all-both pupils and faculty. Splendid opportunities could be seen in the future advance- ment of athletics and the interchange of contests of all kinds with other schools, if there was inculcated a spirit of local pride and glory in the achievements of our own. And so the general organization was regularly incorporated by proper certificate, which was filed with the Secretary of State at Albany, and the Clerk of the County of Kings, 'on the twenty-fifth day of january, nineteen hundred and eight. The constitution of the general organization, which is chiefly the work of Dr. Charles D. Larkins, cannot have too much praise given it, for at no time in the application of it hasthere ever come up a point which it did not cover. The by-laws and constitution provide for its officers and show how they should be elected. And it is with much satisfaction that in following the plan of selection therein pointed out, we have been correctly and entertainingly taught how regular elec- tions, nominating conventions, voting and canvassing are carried on under the laws of this state, and also how our fathers play the game of politics. Any observing student of civics is thus qualified to act as an inspector of election or poll clerk, or to preside at a convention. Not only are we practically instructed in these matters, but we have also learned how to win cups, trophies, banners and gold watches, as our cases in the corridors and the walls amply demon- strate. , The success and popularity of the general organiza- tion began at once, and to show how very gallant and just we all become under its beneficent and amiable ministrations, we have now elected a lady for our president. lf they of the fairer sex who become teachers are unjustly deprived of equal pay, they can at least say that in our Alma Mater they have shared equal honors. 4 - 33 CLASS OF FEBRUARY, 1909 rua iuw Con stuf stol our we Our ing' 1. 4 1 r soci 21 su in Ci X Pro: ther' 'Wfas fun. 7Ou1' long yc y, '09, with ,rd t1'Qmb1i11g, ultatious hole' ics! liravcly 2 brought us Ove for our H Liter mzmy wc .t last attaiucc first class-mea ,fiiccrs 1 v. ,' 1 1C5ldCll'C-LGI 'ice-P1'csiflQ11t CC1'Cf2l1'5'kIiT21l '1'ez1su1'Q1'--Cie ollowiug' C1051 1 gathering'- cess in every : arge. fe came into zeuzlde to the EL joilicr Cro' it warm, did j Class of February 1909 Four long years ago this most brilliant class of Feb- ruary, '09, with every appearance of bravery, but with inward trembling, entered dear old Manual. Many were the consultations held in those early days as to the choice of studies! Bravely we began our course, and as each mile- stone brought us nearer the Senior year we realized anew our love for our Alma Mater. After many weeks of 11lgl'1lE1TI211'C, brought on by Regents, we at last attained the lofty position of the Seventh Grade. Our Hrst class-meeting resulted in the election of the follow- ing offrcers : President-Bert Wforthen. Vice-President-Mildred V an Tassel. Secretary-Paul Franklin. Treasurer-Georgiana Vossnack. i Following close on the heels of that class-meeting was a social gathering-namely, a Salmagundi party. This was a success in every sense of the word, thanks to the committee in charge. Q I VVe came into prominence when we gave our junior Promenade to the Seniors at the Pouch Gallery. Never was there a jo-llier crowd than assembled that evening in May. Was it warm, did you say? W' ell, not too warm to spoil our fun. Q At the first meeting of our Senior term we decided to keep our former class oflicers. Next came the class-pin question, and with it the cry for a new design. But the com- mittee in charge wisely decided in favor of the old, and after patient waiting, the pins finally arrived, and were proudly worn by eachand every Senior. t Later on we gladlyaccepted the cordial invitation of the juniors to be present at their Prom. at the Rusurban. VVhat did itimatter to us that the dancing rooms were filled to overflowing? XV ere there not broad piazzas and a generous supply of cozy nooks and corners? As time rolled on, we began to think of Class Day. In the choice of members for the committee in charge of the exercises our President showed good judgment. VVho could have accomplished more than did our energetic chairlady, Eleanor G. Marine, with her faithful co-workers? They cer- tainly did admirable work in making our Class Day an 'oc- casion long to be remembered. -- Many poets sprang into prominence at Class Day, in- spired by the poetic genius, Chester Brown. Who won the prize offered for the best Christmas story? Who was the best all-round football player of the season 1908? Yes, members of our illustrious class. So, though we have left our Alma Mater, we will not be forgotten. 35 1 5 ' e 41, CLASS OF JUNE, 1909 Ah distiug Manu: until S Grade, Pre Vic Sec Tre Ho Thf the Sew all Com in the come za friendsl NVit in the g Heitma efforts had to the best 'Our Rusurbz say mi: crowded 1OL1gl1 inc ,lished the , the elas eptember with the SlClC1l'E--Sl 2-Presider 'etary-ll Lsurer-G Orary Pre members 311th and together Jwer grzui 'quainted ips we ha this purj 111. A C 11, Miss fe held 21 :op dzmei iime in tl' next soef 1, on the 7 liiut, i that we Class of June, 1909 Although individuals from the class of june ,OQ have distinguished themselves in the four years it has been in Manual, the class as a whole did not come into prominence until September 25, IQO8, when it organized as the Seventh Grade, with the following officers: i President--Shirley Aldridge. Vice-President-V--Molly Stewart. Secretary+Helen Hawthorn. Treasurer-George Cuno. Honorary President-Mr. Nelson. The members of the class had always looked forward to the Seventh and Eighth Grades as the time when we could all come together and become acquainted, a thing impossible in the lower grades, on account of the size. 'We have be- come acquainted, to the extent of never forgetting the friendships we have formed here, especially in the last year. W'ith this purpose in mind, we resolved to have a dance in the gym. A committee was appointed consisting of Mr. Heitmann, Miss Hobley and Miss Wood. Through their efforts we held a dance, on November 6, and although we had to stop dancing at eleven o'clock, all declared they had the best time in their lives. Nothing marred the fun. Our next social. affair was the Junior Prom. at the Rusurban, on the night of December II, 1908. Did anyone say rain? But, in spite of the weather, the place was so crowded that we needed no invitation to make 'use of the nooks and cozy corners which abound at the Rusurban. We had to use them, or be trodden to death. At the close of the first half of our Senior year, We all agreed that our purpose of becoming acquainted was being accomplished, and that in the Eighth we would try to continue this. The present Eighth Grade organized on Eebruary I 5, 1909, under the same constitution as the old Seventh Grade, and with the officers: . President-Arthur BJ Cozzens. Vice-President-Molly Stewart. Secretary--Margaret Longstreetf Treasurer-George Cuno. Gur first act was to send our regrets and hopes for recovery to our former President. Then Mr. Cozzens ap- pointed the pin committee, Mr. Heitmann, Miss LeSeur and Miss Schriefer. These were so prompt in obtaining our pins that we have been wearing them for quite a time now. The Class Day committee was then appointed, consisting of Miss Stewart Cchairmanj, Miss Ruwe, Miss Hawthorn, Miss VVood, Mr. Kerr, Mr. Von Wiegen, Mr. Aldridge and Mr. Heitmann, all of whom are working hard for the Class Day exercises on June 22. ' Mr. Nelson and Mr. Weed gave the class a most delight- ful time on April 23, in which we all took part. Really, we laughed so hard that it was only by concentration that we managed to close our mouths over the ice-cream. 37 ,p CLASS OF FEBRUARY, 1910 l'lO1lO1'Q1'f,' E Frank lf. Hard retary, Helen lf ant T1'easu1'e1', f ACClQJ1'Lllilg' T assembled in Grade, with thc the sociai attitr the last jlear at ln Order tu am iness meetings ' consisting' of f Wreiss, was apl, ple, the class evening. The first so held in the teas clay, March 2j were enjoyed i students alike. resi '12, eue CYCI eu: ufeh follc le O Blau mmpi ave 1-acc ,inte las ial N ers? 3 ' all VW Class of February 1910 Honorary President, Mr. Alfred Mackay 5 President, Frank F. Harding, jr. 5 Vice-President, Grace Beebeg Sec- retary, Helen French, Treasurer, Russel Burkhardt 3 Assist- ant Treasurer, Peter Garms. According to custom, the members of the Seventh Grade assembled in March, 1909, and formed the present Seventh Grade, with the following objects in view: First, to further the social attitude of the Sub-Seniors, and second, to make the last year at Manual more pleasant and more agreeable. In order to accomplish these ends, regular bi-monthly bus- iness meetings have been held. An entertainment committee consisting of Grace Beebe, Mabel Engelhardt and Louis Wfeiss, was appointed, and under the guidance of these peo- ple, the class has enjoyed many a jolly afternoon and evening. The first social was in the form of a Salmagundi party, held in the teachers' lunch-room, on the afternoon of Thurs- day, March 27. . Many interesting and humorous games were enjoyed by all thosewho were present, teachers and students alike. WVith the kind assistance of Miss Stone, refreshments were provided by the advanced cooking classes. The afternoon passed all too quickly. Several teas similar to this were enjoyed later on in the term, Miss Stone always showing her kindness in every Way possible. Two informal dances have been held. The first was that of the Seventh Grade, alone, which took place in the gymna- sium on the evening of Saturday, April 17th. Mr. Mackay's treat was the feature of the evening. The whole affair was greatly enjoyed by all who attended. The second dance, the junior Promenade, was held at the Pouch mansion or1 May 2Ist. The guests of the occasion included the members of the Eighth Grade, the post grad- uates, and some of the last year teachers. The halls, and especially the cozy corners, were Well filled, but not crowded. Theiiwhole affair was a complete success. X So, in such a way, the Seventh Grade has carried out its intentions--they have all had a jolly good timef' and hope that the oncoming classes will enjoy themselves just as much asthey have. 39 PROSPECT STAFF r ' ' 1 1 4 10-5. r ' ff 4 c,,f , , .3 ' xv. . .. i . ,Lf Ty ,W Win' s ': Ml MAX RUM . . . M .fxRG, x1:12'r You JEROM sz Bm RY . KIARY W. E- XEW FRED S. Km sux' V Q ' v! . 'RA ' f X ' , . . f gg 1 em ca Qffij HAROLD RUDOLPH, Edizfov'-1'71-Clz1'cf. A MAX RUKTNS. . . . .Assisfazzf Ediform JOSEPH KOEN ...... ..... G C'llC7'UI News MARGAIQET XVOOD. . . . .Assisfazzt Editor DUNCAN CAMPBELL. . . . .Asst Gc1zc'1'aIA News JEROME BARRY ..... . .AZ'lll'1Z7AlZT Edifov' PAUL FRANKLIN. . . . .Athletics MARY NN. STEWART. . . ..... V ...... S0cz'c1'z'cs EMMA IQERN. . . . . .E.1'cl1angcs .ALBIERT F. EDMINSTER, B7ISZ'7ZC'SS l7WA0ilClgC'l'. FRED S. IQINSEY. . . . ......... Adv. M mzagclf' NIORTQN XNVASSERMAN ..... . .C1.'7'C1LICIZLI'0711 M gr. STUART PATRRSON. . . . .lllzzsfratafovz Manager 41 Nvu.. THE MUSICAL ARTS SOCIETY ,VUL of Q111' the stu Socicfty but M1 zuloptea lil 1 tiring cf by M11 ' of 0111 : 11110 11111 of assmc S1101 ami 11101- 01 Xl T j'C2lI'S Q wclmcnl 1 cuts Q01 T110 pl XYCYIJUIL C QVG111 fO1'tS 1111 'C1 lD111'j', 11001. 111011612111 zmtcs, 102 ly Zlfftfl' thc 21111 XHYC 1 'fc-1' tu 1 of thc Ci 1x'Qlop111 forty, 111- Qt of xx' Class 11111 ic of Z1 CHHE11'-X' Sf 21014. ' as H5113 QC R11 SClCC1'1Ul!f 5151111 bury Zlllilf the 1111 scale. D1 ?Ol'C H11 fXVCI'1fj'-HX 3 11011 01'1gl1Cst1'z1 vas 'EO iVC'U'il L , bTi11g'1IlQ' 15 ., 10111 1 4 .4 , H 5:1 ,1. ,I , 4 ,Af T me Glee Clu end C f the first t ycaung men in t alluri tg power 4 versit f to the vzu est zu omg the ge Alt tough its 11 imuuf of twenty- . f 4 I.. 'Lf is ,,. A ...4 . 1 2 4 -L 1'-5 .-!EJ ,- .M 4 4,7 - I1'1'c5zf0'c11 1-A 1Slfc1'1'fc11'1'-A Lz'b1'a1'z'1g11z-31 Clz 'lIi'1HC'Ul' of Qllc PIOIHQI' N. Carl Bcckf Y1c1o1' 1011 2111 E. D311 C1111 15 11 the H151 13 play 21' and a 1112111 beg 11 p1'ac11cc 11 1-651 15 111 2111 IIHYCR 1116 .151 few 11'Gcl4 S001 as we had p ence as 21 club, 1111 usc. 1 111' H151 QW: 1f11c1 1116: Senior c accc 1cd, and S2111 s11'111 3' ZICIMOSS 1116 and 1 Sold, 111111 11 11121111 our 11611111 211 19111, Tl1a1eve1111 I11 R arch our ser Mandolin Club 1 fJ7'8SidCl'If-ALLEN HAMLIN. S ccretavfy-AR1'HUR KRAPF. Lib1'a1'rz'cz1fz-MARION GORMAN. Chairman of Mcmbeffslzijv C Ol7fL77Z1iH66'-LEAH STURDEVANT. MEMBERS. Homer N. Bartlett VVard Miller Carl Becker Mary Neary Victor Johnston Thomas Peirce Herrick Smith. Sarah E. Bawden, Leader. CLUB 1411s'roRY-F1Rs'r YEAR, 1906-1907. At the hrst meeting, October 26th, only one mandolin player and a pianist appeared. Nothing daunted, our leader began practice with them. The second meeting showed results in an attendance of ten. All the music we had for the first few weeks was the school song-book. However, as soon as we had proved our intention to maintain our ekist- ence as a club, money was invested in music for our especial use. - ' B Our first affair was on December 14th, when we in- vited the Senior class to sing college songs with us. They accepted, and sang with enthusiasm. A Manual Hag was swung across the platform and was saluted by The Blue and Gold, with which song the social was also ended. We made our debut at the school birthday exercises on February 19th. That evening we also played for the Alumni reunion. In March our services were again required to enliven the audience at the interscholastic prize speaking contest. The last effort of the season was our first annual concert, in June. The large attendance that crowded even the aisle in the rear of the music room evidenced the popularity of the concert. The total membership for the year was I7 5 the number of meetings, 29. - SECOND YEAR-1907-IQO8. VVe reorganized on October 18th. At the following meeting a constitution, which we have since followed more or less vigorously, was adopted. WV e worked quietly but steadily in our weekly practice meetings, and were able to give ouriconcert earlier, on March 2oth. ,That gave us a chance to have an extraimeeting for a frolic at the home of Miss Bowden, in June. Our membership for the year was 17, the number of meetings, 33. 'r1111uD YEAR-IQO8-IQOQ. Reorganization was a little later this year, November 17th. Loss in membership, through graduations, was more seriously felt. Still our meetings have been steadily going on and we feel that we have lost nothing, but rather gained in playing together in better style. VVe have, during March and April, furnished music on three occasions, namely, in Freshman auditorium exercises, in the Intergrade debate. Seventh versus Eighth, and in the Interscholastic debate with Boys' High School. Qur present membership is IIZ the number of meetings so far this year, 18, and the number of selections of which we now have full club score, 21. Gur greatest present need is three members who will play the guitar. 47 Q CHESS CLUB The many a be expounded- them, however, and of clear, lo through the pig applied most adx for if the chess life with the eo cision, with whit forces over the indeed a proinisi If these attril gained from the the Manual studf ination in his Cho 316 after 2 :3o, oi students ahsorbir against the oppor The game wa: since its iuaugurr. a school interest the Feb. IQO8 gra- largely through 1 establishing a pri Vxfeiss, Bruner, am the Chess Club. Ze This latter eompe Vai hex 'tie una 'lays lncs 1 hc hes: g' O1 IJECS, jam- it h TC U 3 is :'l3' I ht. intr ion mu uati C S iedc 'l li lCl 4 ed and though unsuei Essl I Chess Club The many advantages of a knowledge of chess need not be expounded-they speak for themselves. Chief among them, however, is the power of concentration and analysis, and of clear, logical, deliberate reasoning, that is acquired through the practice of the game. Such training may be applied most advantageously in the student's business career, for if the chess player confront the problems and battles of life with the coolness, conservatism, deliberation and pre- cision, with which he has learned to encounter the enemy's forces over the chess-board, his future may be considered indeed a promising one. If these attributes, and the many unmentioned which are gained from the game of chess, be admitted to be precious, the Manual student has indeed shown wisdom and discrim- ination in his choice of an avocation, for, in passing by Room 315 after 2 :30, one is almost always sure to see a number of students absorbingly occupied with exercising brain power against the opponent. The game was introduced into Manual only recently, but since its inauguration it has progressed steadily. It became a school interest through the efforts of certain members of the Feb. 1908 graduating class, which endeavor succeeded- largely through the strong co-operation of Mr. Allen-in establishing a precedent at Manual. Margraf, Schuman, VVeiss, Bruner, and Barnum were among the founders of the Chess Club, and comprised Manual's first chess team. This latter competed in the Interscholastic Chess League, and though unsuccessful in its light for the trophy, insured the brighter future when chess interests at Manual should become more stable and prominent. Upon the graduation of these initial advocates of the game, the Chess Club was re- organized by a new set of students, among which the school was represented in allits grades. Peter Garms was elected President, and the society progressed rapidly. In the Inter- scholastic Chess League, during the fall term of 1908, the team representing Manual, and consisting of Rudolph, Garms, Hobby and Ehrlich, captain, made a strong light and finished third 3 to be defeated by such chess veterans as the teams of Boys' High School and De VVitt Clinton High, which tied for first place, -was no disgrace. If By the Spring term of 1909, interest in the game of chess at Manual was at its height, the membership of the society increased rapidly, and the Chess Club rose to the first rank of the school's organizations. Harold Rudolph was elected to the presidency, and prominent among the sundry matches which the team played was its triumph over Manualis hereditary rival, Commercial High School, whose defeat at our hands to the score of 5 to 0, made a fitting climax for the eventful 5th of March-the day of the G. O. elections. Un this occasion Manual was represented by Rudolph, Ehrlich, Garms, captain, Morton, and Daisley. Chess has since become a most important interest at Manual, and among the many bright visions of its future here, is theacquisition of the Rice Trophy, which is awarded to the winning team in the lnterscholastic Chess League each year. a , p , 49 SENIORQDEBATINGEKXIETY A-R ionszll IZ ,Q1 QLIIHWI1 Xxvillltl' A rlllul' Hzzrx'-x V ox, M ZIIICI' THC Senior lJolm1i IQO3. 'fl1Qpri11zg11-5 o to CI1CfJL1l'ZLQfC clcimlsimy X . s fellowship muoug its what it has cllciczmvoup-1 those who have helped 1'CSC111Qi1'1g' it in iutcrscl Michaels, Roos, and Senior Debating Society r .P7fC'SlCf6I1ZL,, George Friou Veirc-Pvvsidcezzt, Duncan M. MacDonald S ergcanl'-at-A-1'ms, Jacob Friou Sc'c1'cim'y, Lowell Shumway C 0r'1'r'sjv011diM g Sec1'c'm1fy, Jerome Barry C7'l.f'l.C, Leo L. Bruder Lcagim Dflcgafc, Albert Von NViegen Ffzfzizlry 44lf? l.S6?7', NV. C. Richardson V Abraham E. Becker, jean V. Lutz, , Eugene Strittmatter, Albert F. Edminster, Frederick Marlborough, . Nicholas Stcmber, VValter Fribourg, Max Mcisel, Ray Thomas, i Arthur josephowitz, Mathew Murray, Edwin I. VValker, jr., Harry Kitt-Hy, Thomas Pierce, Morton L. Wlasserman, VValter H. Kloppenburg, Harold Rudolph, Christian F. VVolfe. Max Rukin, The Senior Debating Society was regularly organized in IQO3. The primary object of this organization is, of course, to encourage debating, and the secondary, to promote good fellowship among its members. That it has succeeded in what it has endeavored to do, goes Without saying. Among those who have helped to make a name for Manual, by rep- resenting it in interscholastic debates, are Brodsky, Heiser, Michaels, Roos, and Shumway. Three of those on the school team this year were members of the Seniors, as were three speakers at the general organization nominating con- vention, and twenty-four out of thirty-six of those on the grade teams last Fall and this Spring. At the meetings, held every Friday afternoon in Room 433, the boys always spend a part of the time discussing 'topics of general interestg indeed, it is very seldom they turn at all to the dry subjects suggested in books. QQ' PLATONIAN DEBATING SOCIETY Though now f'OlTI. Manual's rapichy gr: hear our moflcst taht birth of our g1'cz1t nz importance. 'Tis ihu it was then that ths TIT the name of the Juni From that time ma societies: but-pzwdo' ownership of two, alt junior, there was E1 v country as the Senior Platonian Debating Society A H 01fL01'a1'y President-MR. MCCREARY. P7'6Sid61'1f-MAX HACKER. . V-ice-Presideni'-MoRr1MER KLEIN. Secretary-MoR'r1ME'R FREEHOF. Reporter-lfVALLAcE HEBBERD. Scafgeant-at-Arms-STANLEY SMITH. Blumberg Kinsey 5 Robin Bagger Giellerup ' Schick Campbell Helmus Strelow Conard V Kean I Spurgeon Dittmer Nebel , Vieneister Von Deestan Poland I Weill Friend Regan VVeber Though now you've read so many startling accounts of Manua1's rapidly growing societies, stay, we beg you, to hear our modest tale. We wili not, however, go back to the birth of our great namesake, out rather to a date of equal importance. 'Tis the year of nineteen hundred and five, for it was then that the Platonian Qaid its bare foundation under the name of the Junior Debating Society. From that time on, ManuaQ could boast of two debating societies g but-pardon me-I mean she could not deny the ownership of two, and could 'Joast of one, for besides the Junior, there was a world-famous institution known in this country as the Senior Debating Society. Now comes the present era, to be known to all future generations as the administration of Max Hacker. Long since has our roll limit been reached. At one time our Pres- ident was seriously considering the annexation of a chess club. However, Max does debate some, for it was under his captainship that the present team of Manual had such a terminal success. VVe may also proudly say that the other two members of the team, Harry VVeill and Fred Conard, are also members of the Flats, and from the present pros- pects itseems most probable that when Dr. Larkins pre- sents thc medals for the winning grade team, they will be pinned below the black andigold of the Platonian Debating Society. . , ,g ni - r .Jl ' - GIRLS' LITERARY CLUB It is iilterestiilg' 1 - become a part of th : girls. Since its low li steadily until it has :z aims for wllicll it lm: El Fl spirit of helpfulm .s and a desire tu bee ll wo1'ld's literature. 'The club meets eva '5' 323, under the supel 'i: iGirls' Literary Club Prcsidefzt, Cecilie Peterson Vfice-P'1'csiclc1zf, Mar o-rie Quinn S0c1'0z'a1'y, Mary Murtha .7VIn11zbc'1' of Faculty, Miss Mildred E. Miller Sarah Barclay Elvina Bock Helen Chatfield Mabel Cleary Viola Davis Edith Gankrodger Helena Gesundheit Helen Henze lt is interesting to note how the Girls' Literary Club has become a part of the school life of so many of the Manual girls. Since its founding in 1906, its influence has increased steadily until it has reached its present high standard. The aims for which it has always striven are loyalty to the school, a spirit of helpfulness and good-will among the members, and a desire to become acquainted with the best of the world's literature. 'The club meets every second and fourth Thursday in Room 323, under the supervision of Miss Miller. These meetings Gertrude Hilliard Sadie llflfalbin Genevieve McDonald Ruth Mott Marie Peterson Marjorie Quinn Cora Smith Elizabeth Stevens are devoted alternately to reading and discussing stories and poems written by the members, and to listening to the read- ing of extracts from books assigned for study. The club has the happy faculty of combining work with play in the form of frequentexcursions to places of interest in and about New York. Last year, there was a trip to Tarrytown, one to Rockaway Beach, and one to the St. Gaudens exhibit at the Museum of Art. This year, a picnic to Staten Island has been decided upon. I DRAMATIC SOCIETY Glee Club-Annex 154 P7'USfd67Zf-HAZEL VVILSON. ' I7-ifG-P7 6Sfli6l'lV'f-fxLICIA CONLIN. Recording SOC'I'L'f07'j'-IDA BOLLAND. E7lT0Z11'7iU' Sec1'e1'a1'y-ELSIE 'BOXOLD. 15 . Lib1'a1'iazz---CLARA ANDEIQSON. Musical Diafecioa'-MR. VON GLINDA. Miss Davidson Miss .If'eri1'1e Miss O'Neill Miss Doran Niss E. Arbeely Miss M. Arbeely M Miss Irvine Miss Riemann Miss Ficken Miss Tandy Miss Doherty Miss Baracca iss Harvey iss Rowe iss Seith iss' Montgoi iss Strong iss Goldberg iss' Munson iss Myers iss Gustafson iss Boylan Literary Club. C A nnexj LITERARY CLUB4S0a'aIfifas D'iSC61Zf7iZl17Z4-AQHIISX 154. I . President-HAR1z1E'r BOYLAN. l7'lC6'-IJ7'6'S'Zidf?7lf-ETJSIE ZIMMER. .A Secrcfary-RUBYMACK. I ' Miss Florence Ahearns Miss Lillian Hanley' Miss Alice Cochrane Miss Anna McHugh Miss Alice Conway I 'Miss Gertrude LeCo1nte Miss Gertrude De Lappe Miss Elizabeth Ross Miss Florence Scoville Miss Zena- Sheppard Miss Hall ' Miss Lesser Miss Stuart N German Club---Annex. 1547 'fDas Eriihliche Kranzchenf' ' Ininier lustig, iinnier froh, In Kranzchen,' geht es irnnier so. ' BEAMTEN. Priisidentm-ETHEL DEECKEN. Ve'ce-Priisifdentfi1z+L1LL1AN KOHLMAN. Sek1'etii1'i1fz.+EvELYN IRVINE. f Schafzmez'ste1fi1z-ADELAIDE BLINDENHOFFER. Ethel Cook May Deininger Marie Donlon Blanche Treuhold ' MITGLIEDER. Laura Euler Mabel Harrington Lillian Kern 4 HONORARY MEMBER. Miss Anna W. C. Geiss. 53a Florence Kidd Anna Koster Anna Rienian Dorothy Seeth. -1 i 5 gg 5 Z Z K . 'W f -g-ii' 'RATE ITIE naar-122 ru- J.:x? 'ff-ml!-'Jr K 5 ,V x v 4. SIGMA LAMBDA NU .ALI I1lANfIA3c1 I BEF A-CPz1Ss1x'cj xl Y, GAP BIA--X I 21111121 DEI TA-E1'z1s11111 EPS LUN-XIAe1st1 B11Ff21 Lafay Niclu Paul 91'a11k1i11 Lestf 'B Brion Sigma Lambda Nu Fraternity Oroiwurn IQS2 Lors HIGH Scrroor-. INcoRPoRAT13D, 1908. DiREcroRY. ZETA-Toledo High School, Toledo, Ohio. ETA-VVarren High School, Warreii, Ohio. IOTA-Lewiston High School, Lewiston, Me KAPPA-Geneva High School, Geneva, N. Y LAMBDA-St. Iohn's School, Manlius, N. Y MU-Ithaca High School, Ithaca, N. Y. NU-New Haven High School, New Haven, Conn XI-Defiance High School, Defiance, Ohio. OMICRON-Coburn Classical Institute, VVaterv1lle Me EPSILON RAPPA Colgate Academy, Hamilton, N. Y. HONORARY MEMBERS. Henry 1 W'eed Willard B Nelson Louis Odell Clarence VV Vail Edward Vanderpoel I. Clarence Smith John T Allen ici IVE MEMBERS. ' Paul Franklin ohn A uainaus T Howard 1 erris Homer N. Bartlett Carl Hendi ickson Leeter E Bnon James A Keri I Lestlie Doughty Frank Regan john Godfrey 63 Charles S. Mook Edward Astrom ' Ernest Streubel VV. R. Platt August Lubben Frederick Butterick Frank Stafford 'Lawrence Bainbridge Vifilliam P. Powell Charles G. Anderson Ernest Beardsley I. VV. Vanderpoel Alexander N. Thomson Jean F. W'olfs Charles H. Sprague VVestel McCai:ferty Maurice Thompson Frank Holmes Edward Bristol VValter T. Vlfessels W. R. Crossman J. R. Cutting G NON-ACTIVE MEMBERS. A VV. Beck , Roy Haskill G.-F. Purdy Edwin Bender Searles Rose. ' Ellis Bentley A. H. Howland A. Mortimer Clark Harold Gilbert VValter Ry. Stout Horace Scanlin Herbert Meyer Karl C. Bates john Wray y Frederick Splint George Maehler RobertRedlefsen Leo Lefller Edward Schiffmacker Raymond Collins Carl Heilman VVilliam Gowdy Eugene Main Stewart Nye R. J. Spencer ErnestpT. Mills Victor Cutting ' Henry'Allers ' i Emil Hammer . Henry Bischoff ' Frederick .Hendrickson ' John F. Malia Visicent Nairn Henry Ai. Fisher Irving S.-Carlile Daniel Allen Walter Ryneer Wfilliam Davis Francis Boyd Weldin Bowman George I. W'atson George W'illard O. Eugene Evans George Walker Edward V. Vogeley William Frank McKenna 64 Edward F arrier . . . V- P William G1 ay Ph1ll1 Lester Van Hofe Oliver S. Annable Alva Palmer Donald A. Douglass Alfred Phelps Russel E. Carlile Edward Minden VVilliam O'Leary I. Frederick Marble Carl E. Moehle . Hugo M agnison A Wesley Be Vier A. Campbell Harold Thomas Allen Shackleton Charles Haug Gilbert T. Nottage Floyd Youngs Francis G. Hoyt, Jr Albert Lytile S 'ricr my Phi1lipQ 1 Hofe mable 1. Jouglass ps arlile nden Qearx' Q Marble ehle nisou Yier H Jmas kleton ug Yottage ngs Hoyt, jr L16 GMEGA ALPHA PI. George A George A Edwin A Harry Harold F Russel B' Frederick Richard 4 VVoo1sey Albert B Bert Ding Paul Foe T612 lison eu Lsley Bothx rkharc Carve logget fonliu Cluuar wall C V' ,:- .- GAMMA DELTA PHI ROlDe1't i . H Doualcl, . Cl Allbertl EC KlvVllllEill'l ul. 0 julius V .Bu Martin ache Ellis Stl IC Ralph ll mgb l3Oll BQ. rclslc George lick' Ivan O. -Cc Leo B. 4 'Mel Gamma Delta Phi. Alpha ' HONORARY MEMBERS I. Newton Gray Q Charles S. Yerbury Robert G. Hurlimann Donald J. Clausonthue Albert F. Edminster William J. Urmond Julius W. Buttner, jr. Martin jachens Ellis Stone Ralph Longbotham Don Beardsley George Hickerson Ivan O. Lee Leo B. 0'Meara G ,ACTIVE LIEMBIZRS Harold VV. Rudolph Fred'k I. Southard Raymond E. Smith NON-ACTIVE MEMBERS Edmund Crr, ,w Harold Libby Charles Clark Fred'k I. Rothacker Charles Mannell Walter Stillwell Arthur A. Rauchfuss Edmund I. A. Williams Reuben Goldsmith Charles Wilson 69 Fred'k A. I-Ieitmann Bert W. Hendrickson Norman C. Clausonthue Robert A. Morton Arthur Lugrin Seth Timberlake Frederick Suhr Oscar Stout Edmund Burke Francis Mathias Ernest Muller John Thode GAMMA DELTA PHI CLUB HGUSE 'Y 'f ,.L'f'2f f' Q vfyf Q3 -QM A I-fl' 'f .rx .1 1 af, Y af a 4.5 f GEoIeoL: Aus X STU.-xR'r P.-X'l'ER5f, J :XLPHA Dlvwrlxlma Alpha ,,..,. Bffta. fx lplza, . Delta Alpha , Epsilon Alpl 1 Iota Alpha. , loambnla :Xlp a Umlcrou :Xlg 1 BETA lGjlS'llRlC'l, 3 Zeta Beta., , lG3l'IlCQ'8, Bda. . Nu Beta .... GA MMA Dlsifalcr Psi Gamma. . Rho Gamma. GA MMA ETA KAPPA Kappa Rota, . F su.. XJ- I w f 1 N 1 v . 1 5 J Tl 1 A - ' 4 W ,Yr . A- fa ,SL j Q. V , , I Y . 1. ,Env-A' ' A A , ,, , A I D I 5 .Q J PHI SIGMA if Mrs EVE' 31185 Em M155 1 Grace Beebe IFCHQ Mary Edgehill Hai N Helen French Nlarjo Olive Asbury Edna Bary Eloise Bramble Ada Bunker Elsie Burnett Elizabeth Burr Gertrude Clash Flora Cutting Sara Dissosway 'i fl , , RHo 'KAPPA LAMBDA Madeleine Bell Edith Bligh Jessie Christy Ethel Coumbe Rita Connel Loraine De Loiselle Josephine Devan W'inifred Esmond Edna Goudey Anna Hinshaw Christine Heinboekl C 'r 'Q , , A ff M1 fy' RHO SIGMA PHI Miss Baehelcler Miss Buckley Elsie Abel Florence A shlex' Jessie Austin Mary Austin Ruth Browu Liela Blair Edith Caldwell Louise Cauiielcil Dorothea Casey Dorothy Campbell Mary Douovau Carrie Droclge Miss Bachelder Miss Buckley Elsie Abel Florence Ashley fessie Austin Mary Austin Ruth Brown Liela Blair Edith Caldwell Louise Canfield Dorothea Casey Dorothy Campbell Mary Donovan Carrie Drodge A Rho Sigma Phi Miss Clendennin Miss Dethridge - 1 Jessie Dunne AQice Eggleston Louise Eggleston Tnora Fernstrom EQea11or Funk May F urey EQsie Flowers Fiorence Gerbing May Jonas. Lucy King Edith Kirby A Clara Lieder Miss Marquardt Miss Miller ' Anna Myer Emma McClellan Florence Moore Edith MacBride Madeleine Qtt Belle Reed Grace Reed Frances Reid Edna Roach Ruby Roach Edna Royle CfraceRowland Miss Stone Miss Tiberg Ella Ray Frances Sworacki Charlotte Stackhouse Dorothy Struss Margretta Struss Florence Shaw Mildred Van Tassel Lillian Vossnack Georgiana Vossnack Florence VVaycott Lulu VVorn A CLASS SONG-1909 w'0RDS-Hmfozd Rudozph MUSIC-Hamid B- NW . 5 JQ:50Jf-KJ 4 3. A 1 HI-JQJJI .11 IJ -41514 55 l1PPif1iJl'Z QI J VF i'4.JA.1J JH J fr 211 Q' '22 r'rVr riff fl 5 f' WD1 1111111 1 5 K1 3 F1 INp1111lb Q45 11L 1111 p 1 1 Q1 1 O Ag JI 1 EJ- Te -A i a-I F fr 111 lf 11 56' E mx? N' - 3 '-I5 1 ' :: '-' - V1 hd NI ggi .15 FEV Hblf F5151 1-if 141 riff! 5131 F11 31 el A- A 6 E 1 PTI rig? 5555? ,fi Ii cwfold B. Niver 01219231 - l n..ll on 9 . aol 1 on 3 - The Tune: Far Above Cayuga's Waters. Oh! NVe love you, dear old Manual! Love your Gold and Blue! Our eyes grow dim with yearning, 'When we think of you. ' In our youth, we built our castles ln your walls, so gay. And now as years have us o'ertaken, F ond memories do stay. CHORUS. Sing her glory! Shout her praises! For we love her well. Till our din the world upraises, Yell for Manual. NVhen on us fickle Fortune frowns, And we taste sorrow's cup of gall, Amid life's poignant ups and downs, W'e'll rally still, at!Manual's call. These happy days, 'within thine hall, Shall e'er remembered beg Thy sons and daughters, one and all, Shall render praise to thee. Gold and Blue p 1 A Tribute 84 Oh! VVe loveyou, dear old' Manual! Love your Gold and Blue! A And our eyes grow dim with yearning When we think of you. We have fought for you in battle, And always played the game 5' But no matter what the outcome, You loved us the same! CHORUS. Sing her glory! Shout her praises! a For we love her welll S Till our din the world upraises, I Yell for Manual. When these dear times are past and o'er, In our hearts still we'll hold Fond memories, cherished evermore, Gi thy dear Blue and Gold. Let all thy loving children raise Their voices to the sky, V And join in one grand hymn of praise To Manual Training High, -- IOSEPH F. 'PoLAND, IQII. 1 ' - ATEFXSO Jual! earnhag le, '37 ises! nd O er, ore, 'raise .POLAND,IQII. ATHLETICS Axsvxsom Athletics in Manual p In arranging the news for this Year Book several queer points in regard to our athletics came to light. To explain these fully it will be necessary to go back a few years and discuss the rise of Manual in the athletic world. VVhile the school was down in Court street, there wasn't very much doing in the athletic line. I suppose the main reason for this was that there was no nearby field in which to practice the sports. But with the change to the new building a new period, a period of great prosperity, was visited upon her athletes. just at this time we gained Cozzens and Clunan, and Youngs and Marble, and Harbison and Norman, and all those lesser lights who have done so much to raise the stan- dard of athletics in the school. But a far greater impetus than any other was the desire to play square. That was the keynote of all our striving and struggling- play squaref' To win the game was not held up as the goal which we ought to obtain at any cost, but rather we were encouraged to play the game in the right way, whether victory or defeat was our lot. VVe owe this spirit to the influence of those coaches who helped our early teams, Dr. Aldridge, Mr. Mageworth, Mr. Dickler, Mr. Robinson, Mr. Allan, and the others who did not spend so much time on the teams as did these. The rise of all our teams after this change of the school was gradual, but nevertheless steady and sure. Perhaps the 86 first team to show it was the baseball team who in the Spring of 1905 scored their first victory over Commercial by the score of 7 to 2. The footballteam of this year, although perhaps better than usual, still did not show such decided improvement. The year after brought victory to almost all the teams, baseball, football, but most of all to the track, for that winter they took the Indoor track championship for the first time. The next season brought still better honors. The baseball team won two of their three games with Com- mercial. The football team defeated Boys' I-Iigh, while the basketball' and track teams raked in almost everything in sight. Right now we are at the height of our power. W'hether we will fall and, if we do fall, how far we will drop, depends entirely upon the student body. In baseball we do not think there is much chance of faring badly, for the ma- terial is developed on the grade teams and then taken over by the school team. Qne team at present seems in imminent danger of going to pieces after this term. This is the track team. As Mr. A. T. Robinson told you from the platform, we lose not only all our Philadelphia relay this term, but also all the others who had any chance of ever making it. To make up for this loss we must get out every one in school who- can run even the least bit and then perhaps we may find a few who will be champions such as we have now, while others will be good for second, third and fourth places. The healthy state of our athle one considers that there are eleve school, excluding the eight teams f these eight are boys and three gii The football team of last year x cessful we have turned out, and nt into the game to the same extent a A few years ago football was account of the death of one of our received in a game, but it has sin newed vigor. This may be attril training which the team receives fi last few years he has devoted ah during the season to the team, ar except that of seeing the team he in one or more of its big games. Three years ago, when Mr. D the team, the chance looked brig spite of a bad defeat at the begin Boys' High team, who that year i. boys showed that they could play in it, and throughout the season cessful. But the day before the cards came out and disqualified in the Commercial game. NGN what eligible material he had eam who in the :r Commercial by at this year, altho at show such deci t victory to almo st af all to the track, c championship for ill better honors. f ze games with C almost everything 3oys' High, while ight of our pow how far we will dr J. In baseball we l n lg badly, for the and then taken oi ient danger of goir track team. AS N vrm, we lose not or e it also all the Oth school who C2111 f :may find a few'W while others will t. To make UP f V 1 l I iS. fe ,, 541 iff? Efisf ,. ii-I- G-l V -V JZ J 'f- .w 33 Spl THE FOOTBALL TEAM , CAPT. IACK GAB sopmuch to a coach when he has to dc the lirst contests. The first game was played agai and their Worth may be ascertained were unable even to score against 0 The next game was a sore trial opponents indulged in tactics that 2 except in a prize light. The refers decisions to our opponents and sec penalizing us whether we deserved i ball was dead. The scoring was done in the last minute of play and not until then was either goal in imminent danger: But the forward pass just mentioned washere made and through it the ball was brought so near our goal that it was an easy matter for them to score. After the game the captain for next year was elected. This was Norman, who throughout the season had played a star game at right half. It has since- been discovered by him that he will not be here next year, and so another elec- tion was necessary, Arbogast this time being chosen. The chancesifor next year are very favorable, as but two or three of the first 'string of players have left SCl1OO1, and there are several good ones on the second team to take their places. ' The Track Team The Manual track team within the last few years has taken the most prominent position in her list of athletic teams. Through it she has gained' renown not only in the city, but throughout the whole country, wherever there is an interest in high-school track events. Up to a few years ago the team just pottered along, not doing anything special in the meets, winning a few points now and then, and occasion- ally getting first place. - But three years ago, that is, in the Fall of 1905, Mr. Mageworth, then a new teacher at school and fresh from college, took charge of the team and coached it and trained it in such a manner that we soon had our Cozzens, and our Clunan and our Youngs, and all of those others who helped to make it' the grand success that it has been for the last couple of years. The first consequence of his training was that Manual surprised everyone-perhaps even herself-by carrying off the beautiful trophy offered for the championship of the city of New York, when Boys' High, who has always been the acknowledged leader in track work, was picked by every- one to win. This was only the beginning, the first link of that chain of victories which has enabled Manual to take the first place among the schools in this form of athletics. The team had done so well about the city that Mr. Mage- worth decided' to let them go to Philadelphia. No one at this time thought that we had the least chance of winning the championship of America. It was only as a sort of reward for their work done here that they were sent down. Then we did not know the speed in those legs of Cozzens, for this was his Hrst season of running in high school and he was then only slightly over fifteen years of age. However, wefdid win, thanks mainly to him, and even though the time was not extraordinarily fast, it was the championship. The next year, with practically the same team, we carried everything before us. But two meets in which the team was entered were lost. This was the year when 'Dutch Cozzens and Floyd Youngs made those great records of theirs, which have yet to be lowered. All through the Spring the boys had e been discovered by , and so another eleg- being chosen. favorable, as but two have left school, and and team to take their , was picked by every- ning, the first link of 1bled Manual to take ghis form of athletics. city that Mr. Mage- adelphia. No one at chance of winning the ,y as a sort of reward ay were sent down. :hose legs of Cozzens, ' in high school and he mrs of age. However, l even though the time 2 championship. same team, we carried in which the team WHS vhen Dutch CozzenS acords of theirs, which ie Spring the boyS had been urged to get out and practice field sports' as well as running. But they did not do this, and the consequence was that Boys' High captured the outdoor championship by but a few points and took the Five-School meet by the small margin of one point. ' This year the team again started out with colors flying. In spite of the report circulated among the schools that Manual was down andoutl' in track work, we entered what was practically the second relay team in several races and captured Hrst place in all but one. The indoor champion- ships fell to us by a greater margin than ever, and gave us permanent possession of the beautiful trophy offered to the first school who should win it three times. In the Barnard meet we were beaten out. by Boys' High School, who cap- tured nearly everything in the novice events. But we re- deemed ourselves in the Poly meet when we fairly ran away from the other schools in the effort to obtain the trophy. The loss of the indoor relay honors was the only defeat we really felt bad about, for but a couple of weeks before it Cozzens had an attack of sickness and his doctor would not let him run. VV e were beaten out by only a few feet by' Boys' High, but nevertheless it was enough for us to lose the trophy. But we were almostreconciled when we saw the second place trophy, for it is thought by some to be the most beautiful one in our possession at the present time. It cer- tainly is handsome, but is not a perpetual trophyg that is, the school who wins it may only hold it a year, irrespective of how many times thev may have won it before. A The Fourteenth Regiment practically presented us with a 92 trophy, for they offered us one for an intergrade race to be held at their annual meet. Manual also obtained two other trophies at this meet, both of them first places. Qne was for the school relay and the other was offered as a prize for a relay race between the Boys, High and Manual faculty. It is needless to say that this kind of a race is always watched closely, and the Professors, if they win, always are con- gratulated, as they never, would be in class, however hard and faithfully they may do their work. After this all eyes were turned to that important race at Philadelphia for the relay championship of America. The tryouts furnished a surprise and caused a shake-up on the team. Snyder was shifted to first place and Stevens was run second, while Harding was taken merely as a substitute. The other posi- tions, those of Sanford and Cozzens, were the same. From the time of the second relay it was a Manual race. Up to this time Boys' High had been leading, with Manual in third place. This showed the wisdom of letting Stevens run, for he walked by the others as though they were not running and handed a big lead to Sanford. He ran a splendid race, the fastest up to this time, and gave a greatly increased lead to Cozzens. Needless to say, he did not let anyone pass him, and he was not even pressed hard, for he characterized it as the easiest race of his career. ' Next came the Princeton meet, but we did not win there, for it seemed that one of our runners had an off day and was not up to his standard. -- I As Mr. 'Robinson said, the thing that developed and gave tie track work a new impetus was the Manual meet held at the Fourteenth Regime this brought out was l high jump and Snyder but one month more at to our score in that time Stevens afterward o and Poly meets, and first this he has discovered th. peted twice with the rela Snyder was the othe: his true light. He hanc and also has obtained pl tered, besides running o Now comes the harde has Withdrawn from the 4 -1 , intergrade race to t lso obtained two- othg c t places. One was f tered as a prize for ld Manual facult 'ace is always watch n class, however ha k. After this all ey t Philadelphia for t le tryouts furnished y. e win, always are cor r c l he team. Snyder W: itute The other po weie the same Fro Manual race Up ling. with Manual of letting Stevens r xp they were not runni ie ran a splendid ra was run second, whi ' . s ., l . I ' - u r c , greatly increased le: 1 .ot let anyone pass hi r he characterized lt t we did not win thel w had an off day and nat developed and ga ie Manual meet held V1 -2 ' 4.1 Q., .1 7, p A a THE BASKETBALL TEAM Basketball enjoys the at Nfanual. liy it, yeare trophy, through the girls' championship of their li which, although so small other, except, perhaps, tl' team in the Indoor ehami VVe did not hear of tl Manual came to her prese- up for use. Then the teal: play, and they used it to ti since then they have had 2 a championship team, Last year it was a pleas up a strong, fast game, an grinning of the season was had Marble at center and T rest of the team. It tool: 2 But Marble was grachiatefl anyone in school then iylifi the team was greatly weak This year, or rather, l chance, apparently, of turni captain and played a good g SOCCER FOOTBALL TEAM This sport is 1111.11'111.,'q1.11'11 1 started inthe 192111 111 1111 11, 1z11' took it up a1111 111111: 111- 11 :1 11- Hfillllillg team, f1f111g1'e 111115111 11 it, but as may be 1grs111g1311f.1 1111 Mr. Lewis 1111c1e1'1111111i 111 151111 work that the 11ex1 F'-, 11-51: he 11:1 team win t11e e1111,1111111f11fef1-fp 1111 This Was the year 1111-1 1Z1,111L'1 player. Of eo111's1f 1111 1Q1V1l,' 1.1-1 one-man team ELIIC1 1111 1 11111 111.31 Wfe won again, 15111, 1111,-1 1111111 1 who had gO11C to 1'1?11Q'1I7,'11f1 111 e with the team f1'o111 that 131111111 These two teams c1'1:q111e11 111' for many others to Q1l15i'11L'Z11C. The Hrst C11a1111'11o11f-111111seas against them, a1111 11111 111111111111 1 1X1a1111a1, for the hrsi time 11 team this year. Q10I151l1C1'1l1Q' 11 at this sport, by the 511l,111Y111g' e might indeed have a goo11 team coached by Mr. 1fCZ1l'S111Q', and 11 star. Fett is speedy and 1111110 ' 1 5 I .1 'i e ,J 'VVe never seemed to have except when we had Harhison only twirler we have had what hold our opponents, and neve when the game was going ag years ago that he entered schc was so closely allied with the includes necessarily an account Those were golden years ft and few who cared at all for i were always sure of seeing a gi on our side at least. 'That jrea Commercial and we did them ti standing 7 to 2. This game between the student bodies of tl' over whose flag should he raiser As Commercial was our cl' we were always glad to welcoii not enough honor could he git' he won the game the following catching for him. and so well not a single stolen base was rec- game. The score was 4 to 3. 3 in the ninth inning. The gan battle as could be wished for. rated in second place among tl Harbison seemed to have a hit 1 Baseball Team 'We never seemed to have much success with baseball, except when we had Harbison pitching for us. He was the only twirler we have had who could be depended upon to hold our opponents, and never went up in the air, even when the game was go-ing against him. -It was just 'four years ago that he entered school, and from that time on he was so closely allied with the team that a history of one includes necessarily an account of the doings of the other. Those were golden years for us, in this line of athletics, and few who cared at all for it missed the games, for they were always sure of seeing a good exhibition of ball-playing, on our side at least. That year was the first that we played Commercial and we did them up in fine style, the final score standing 7 to 2. This game was also enlivened by strife between the student bodies of the schools, who were on hand, over whose flag should be raised on the pole. As Commercial was our chief rival during these years, we were always glad to welcome a victory over her, and so not enough honor could be given to Ken,' Harbison when he won the game the following year also. Evans was still catching for him, and so well did he play his position that not a single stolen base was recorded against him during the game. The score was 4 to 3, Manual pulling it out of a tie inthe ninth inning. The game was as pretty a pitchers' battle as could be wished for. Hennig, of Commercial, was rated in second place among the pitchers of the city. But Harbison seemed to have a bit the better of it, for he struck out two more men and did not allow so many hits as Hennig. Up to the ninth inning the score had been 3 to 3, butlivans then secured a safehit, which sent a man, who was at second, home. . ' I The following seaso-n was the most exciting we have had. F or that year it was decided that we should play three games with Commercial, the winner of two to take the cup that was offered. The first game fell to us, 3 to 2. The second was a victory for Commercial, by the same score. Wlieii the time for the third game came around our chances looked dubious, for Harbison had- not been feeling well, and it was not known whether he could last the whole game or not. Toward the end he started to weaken, and Commercial secured two runs, while we had but one tally on our side of the board. When the ninth inning came it looked as though we were doomed to defeat, for the first two men at bat went down easily. Already the Commercial adherents were climb- ing down to the field to cheer for their victory, when .Isaac- son, who was at bat, sent a slow grounder toward third, and arrived at first safely. He took a desperate chance and stole second, beating the ball out by a close margin. There was not a sound from the bleachers when the next man went up to bat. This was Rothenberg, who could gen- erally be depended upon to make a hit. He did not disap- point us, for he knocked out a two-bagger, which sent Isaac- son in, tying the score. y i 99 , ' This prolonged the game an inning, and it was an easy matter, it seemed, to score again in the next and shut out Commercial. Thus we won our last series of victories with Commercial, for that year we lost Harbison, and with him seemed to go our luck, in baseball at least. For the last two seasons Rooney has been pitching, and the team has not won very many of its games. Last year they had as fast a squad as could be wished for,-but still they could not seem to make the plays run smoothly, and when once they started to go to pieces the other team was always sure to run up a big score before they could pull themselves together. Still, they did the best they knew how, and it was hardly their fault that they did not win the games with Com- mercial and Boys' High, or those others that were victories for our opponents. c This year it is even worse, for to the date of writing but two games have been won, and only one of these with a team of any standing at all. Thiswas Rutgers Prep., and it surely was a good game, for but one of our players made an error, while the fielding was as 'perfect as one could wish. Another good game was 'a tie game with Commerce. Here also our boys played well. But outside of these two games there has not been a game where the playing was at all good. Boys' High defeated us purely on account of the errors we made, while -we were ignominously trounced by both - 1 Erasmus and Poly Prep. In these games the boys could not even seem to see the ball, for they hardly made a hit, while their fielding had no kind of form at all. - I suppose that all we can do is to hope for better luck next year, when perhaps we may have some fresh material who can play the game. It would seem as though we should turn out a good baseball team, for this is the game played by most boys at school, if not on the first team, then at least on the grade teams. These teams are the ideal form of athletics -for a school, for they give a great number of students a chance to play, whereas but a handful can hope to obtain places on the reg- ular school teaml The champions of the grade league are rewarded at the end of the season with Manual medals. The contest is usually hot and the boys take as much interest in their team as they e would if they' were playing on the regulars. r , C ' Two years ago the Intergrade league was first tried, as an experiment, and so well did it succeed that it was decided to make it a permanent feature of the school. That year. to the surprise of everyone, the First' Grade won easily. The next season the Fifth Grade came out on top, after a couple of exciting games' with the Third. This year the same grade seems to be leading, although different players are on it,- but everyone is expecting to see them lose soon. IOO amos the boys could not mrllljs made a hit, While all. lu hope for better luck me snooze fresh material eem as 'though we should this is the game played e hm team, then at least of athh-lies for a school, llllClClllS a chance to play, l obtain places on the reg- lS of the grade league are with Manual medals. The rs take as much interest in hey were playing on the :league was fu-st tried, as an ,ceeecl that it was decided to he school. That year, to the wracle won easily. The next Ht on top, alter a couple of ' Tllls Year the same grade H mem l5lH5'ers are on it.-f 2 them lose soon, T RIFLE TEAM Rifle shooting is one of tl' sports that have been introduc are actively interested in shoot nerve under excitement, pow clear judgment. These are ve. and besides, the boys are doir country. In case of war oug hasty levies of volunteers. TQ military drill, but they cannot 'h Roosevelt and General George rifle shooting in our high schc the above views. About four years ago a su' the gymnasium, a present trol memory to his father, General . boys immediately began practicl went to New York. The nex Ucame back good and strong' z New York City. They won tht of 237 points out ot 25o. In June the lirst outdoor sho Range, Creedmoor, L. l. ln a p their excellent control over the berg Winning the Presidents let ing off individual honors. At Madison Square Garde Show, Manual Won hrst place by schools of New York City. Under the auspices of the N Grand Central Palace, Manual ' TENNIS TEAM Manual is this year IQPVQSQI tournament. The team is Q Rooney and HCll,f,ll'lCliSUll, F Manual in the singles, and Rc for us in the doubles, For this two matches, winning lzoth of School 5-O, and Eastern Distric is considered the most chtheul: but Ferris and lfishel have sho ,QF A Tennis Manual is this year represented in the P. S. A. L. tennis tournament. The team is composed of Ferris, Fishel, Rooney and Hendrickson. Ferris, and Fishel represent Manual in the singles, and Rooney and Hendrickson play for us in the doubles. For this season the team has played lately, and Hendrickson and Rooney are working well to- gether. The boys -arelooking forward with fond hearts to the P.. S. A. L. championship and the gold medals. Mr. Allen is coaching the team, and under him the team ought to bring home success. Donald Clausonthue has been two matches, winning both of them. NVe defeated High School 5-o, and Eastern District High School 3-o. Erasmus is considered the most ,difficult opponent onthe schedule, but Ferris and Fishel have shown unusually brilliant work elected manager and has arranged some very good matches. lft is hoped that our team vvillwin the championship, so that we will have another P. S. A. L. trophy to adorn our shelves. 22 . M105 . GIRLS' TRACK TEAM Perhaps you have some tinie, afternoon, heard a joyous hubbul series of squeaks, coniing from t have wondered what it wasg well It was and is the girls' 'track teani was first opened there 'were no g stirred themselves and the result presented to her by the girls' bas they have not gained anything tn moral and physical, have been wor give to girls all the training whi which cannot be obtained in the c -are the practices of unquestioning c the girls are too often said to lackg actiong fortitude, shown by all the come up to a standard set by others who go ini' for events when they and a spirit of cheerful eonipetiti World could not exist, The phys many to enuinerateg let it sutlice tt fewer failures in lessons if more play, for then there would be no r Yerbury's oft-repeated question, ' girls, aren't they ? could be answer The aim of the track is to make atti for, as popularly' supposed, athle boisterous. a i - . ' V1 M GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM Although for many years the the privilege of practicing baslcetl Friday in the gymnasium, yet it Vw took charge of it that the girls had permitted to play interscholastic the girls began to take a lqeener i great many more Came down to th if ,Eli-.Ll 4 L .g GIRLS' BASE BALL TEAM Doubtless you will be surprisec site, called the Girls' Baseball Squa organized one. There are about t' didates out for the teams. There a --one to consist of girls from the other to be made up from girls fro have many good players, especiallj McMahon. The girls are all very all know, that is one of the 'things team. E E I n . ff'-wh., 5,-211' 14.-3 I -gf 2- M - -an . fue: f' .f-VT -'1 ' L. .Qi I k P-.4 'I .uns 13, 4+ 55 5 -- :3 :3 -4 A :II ,.1 -'MACD ,P .-1 fiiychn J E3 5050 f-Q- PO '-w'f3 0:34,-+-xrx Qn:1AL--A fbr-1-.-an :L :rfb 7:59 ' I-I F5853 QOQH - u-3 r-' -, fD,- -1, :Sw 73-107 l'v-4 'fflyfd' ':A'fQ.' 'fjlfo fD 54:i 3Df1:L 1241-1 FF'-gli jf:1:U.' 2,35 5.232- faOQ.,FW P1620 '1 -- '1 CU. FQ' :3 ' 13. f-7-:L-3'.',:,l:CD Cn'-4-rfglh 2:4:: '7f Q:-5? 7-D:r:.'.2g5 H.-'7D.j . Ehggfg. E' p aldus 1 mu .xu 5.10103 .AH IILL flip, ll LIIIZ palllzxa spums 9 'CU '4 PY' :- x'1 :L as U52 2 fb If ,.. . ..., ,A ,.... A F7 N., ,.. ..- ,-. P-3 id u-I 2 -O v A 5' as 1 E7 -x P4 ..A .J ..- ..4 nm ,- .-4 ,., ,.... A , 4 C ,-. K'-, FT L! 'SUMO E' 0 ou p CJ ll p 11. ...4. ..4 . -. ..f A LJ f.. .4 ,-4 71 Pu w J 25' N LD E '-' .-v .f 2 4 SD Q h-A 4' 5' FD s.: .... SIL' -J U-lo O O 'ED Z3 rm w J, w .f Q 4- QD I3 '-1 .-. '7 CD ZZ! :3 IIT2 :S- 'il n-A- rm U1-Nm IH .C sie fb 2.5 1 .--. I ,.... .. r--J f-r ,-..- ,-1 FD I -r -nn- f,, .1121 ' .X.,S1w,i' 'f ' .1 A -L , Q, Aghl J. K :eq ,1 ,.J f A.A ' -P N' l .. , f Aldridge-The Fairies' choice. Bernstein-Our shoelace and collar-button man. Burns-Instructor in pool and billiards. Ferris-Our Lady-killer. Foley-The Lite Wate champion. Floyd Youngs-The man with the price and form. Freiburg-The only one in captivity. Fishel-The man with the chest? Garnaus-Forget the stride, John! Gargiulo-Our Tough Muggerf' l Heinie Hendrickson-Manual's champion hot-air artist. His latest victim is a little blonde. Say, Heinie, do they have good pies on Ninth Street? How about the course breakfast up at N. Y. U.? y ' sflzhlermn f ,,,,r: . J .,.,., Y f W L -k-....,4:.x gk' 2 V W Hamm--Oh, that stag party,--never again! Howard-VV ho said Lycidas was dead? Norman---VVho said a shave? Dun. McKen. MacDonald-Had a bath and ai hair-cut. QLondon papers please copy.j 4 Kinney-Can you beat it, Sadie? I Koen-Is it coming or going? QBy way of comment, we would recommend the introduction of an iron chair in the third act of the school play. This would eliminate certain calamitous breaks that have occurred during rehearsalsj Kid NVarren-Our healthy student. Hurlimann-W'ho said a Martini ? Olson-Bluey, Bluey, Uley. - Reinhard4Vender of deceased canines. Bow, Wow! Rudolph- He possesseth great mental facultiesg ,tis 1:4 truly said that there are alwa Who must gorniandize on tl- knowledge? Seidert--The man from UB Synder-VV ho came home ii Stevens-He who casts no 4 Stratton--Shumway's Delig Miss Bev-er-Gui' Circus 4 Miss Brink-h-ff- I lgye my NESS Dorm-n-Our pensive Miss Sparg-Our Ballet Da Miss K-nd--The Maid from Mfiss Gait-er-Our serene Whose untanied eyes of priinev end of manis pensive hour. Teacher to Norman, in back with that rubber band ?' Norman: 'Tin making snal The grass widow is never 1Hd1C3t6.,,+OL1f Ethel take notii A teacher who gives good ma Heaven. A true gentleman never marri money, but because he has none. Sfaflersnn ' again l ad ? math and a hair-cut. way of comment, we in iron chair in the lld eliminate certain :luring rehearsalsj D es. Bow, wow! ental faculties, 'US truly said that there are always those greedy human hogs h w o must gormandize on the earth's meagre supply of knowledge. , l A Seiliert--The man from Barren Islandf' A V I Sy11de1'-Who came home in a barrel? Stevens-He who casts no Ipenumbra. Stratton---Shumway's Delight. Miss Bev-er-Our Circus Queen. ' Miss Brink-h-ff- I love my wife, but oh! you Kid l Miss Dorm-n--Qui' pensive Nun. Miss Sparg-Our Ballet Dancer. Miss K-nd--The Maid from Canarsie. Miss Gait-er-Qur serene-browed Grecian goddess, whose untamed eyes of primeval womanhood proclaim the end of man's pensive hour. Teacher to Norman, in back seat.: VVhat are you doing with that rubber band ? - ' Norman: Fm making snappy musicf' The grass widow is never so green as her title would indicate. -Our Ethel take notice. A teacher who gives good marks, is as asweetismile from Heaven. Q ' I . A true gentleman never marries a woman because she has money, but because he has none. s 1 I ' The best way to get help in this world is. to help yourself Oh, you Xams! A ' I ' Jeanette is a-charming creature' who changes her-heart as easily as her gloves. . A ' Miss H-ll.: VVhere was the Constitution signed ? Rudolph: On the bottom. Teacher to Garnaus: What do people raise in wet weather P A Garnaus: Umbrellas.'7 W'omen made us lose Paradise, but how often we Find it in our arms again.-Howard, take notice. Here's to love and unity, dark corners and opportunity.- Sandford, take notice. I Q 1 VVhen some men do get on the ground floor of a good thing, they kick because there is no elevator.-The fourth floor students-oi, yoi. A Why do girls kiss each other and men do not ? said M ri. Pet- to Miss John-on. Answer: Because girls have nothing better to kiss and men havef' That's the proper spirit, kiddo! 5 . It is rumored that Arbogast has married a woman forty years old. Someone asked Arby about it, and he said he was going to take her out to Utah. When asked why, he said he was going to get two twenties for the forty. Oh, you Arby! Garnaus had a little dog, It was a clever pup- Could stand upon its hind legs, If you held the front ones up. THE MANUAL QUINTET. Open for engagements. Snappy singing. i Classical. Semi-Classical. Popular. Tetrazzini Howard-Soprano. Caruso Olson-Tenor. ' Geo. Cohan Clausonthue-Airist. Curly Reinhard-First Base. Heine Hendrickson-4Second Base. All nienibers of the vegetable kingdom gratefully received. Teacher to Stratton: What made the Dark Ages ? Stratton: Knights .Freshman to Soph: Mr, Robinson looks as if he had loved and lost. Mr. Peters-The Bronx beauty. Miss Canfield-Our dark-haired beauty. Miss Schuetze-The articulation of wind is a strange mania. . Clausonthue-The Chorus Girls' Delight. Mr. Bates--He who cheats in solitaire. Mr. Grey-Mum's the word, or silence is golden. Miss Tiberg- VVhy isn't there a typewriter in every room ? Say, wouldn't that be .a dream lp Miss Stone--Inventor of After Dinner Pills. Cozzens--Our handsome waiter. Miss Meyers-T he Bay Ridge Boola Boola Girl. Miss Volkuarts-The strongest advocate in the school for the no home-work system. Oi, yoi. Mr. Kearsing-Beware of the lure of the fascinating Soph to Fresh: Nix on the spiel, kiddog by the absence fairies. A of alfalfa on his dome, it looks as if he had loved and got her. Friou-B-z-z-z-z-z-z-zl lr ! l l I6 It is rumored that llligilliggg the Summer at the sea-shore. Tip: Get a bass drum and l Mr. Holz to Olson: Tell ir Olson: Smokclc-ss lobaccgl Mr. llolz: 'llVliat kind of ti Olson: Chewing tobacco. Owner of lunch-room to C chocolate cake that was on the c auty. wf wind is a strange flight. Lire. ence is golden. L typewriter in every 1? inner Pillsf, ,Ula Boola Girl. AA oeate in the school for YC of the fascinating A 1 5' 8-B-ROOM 319 Aclcnowleclgecl by the jar teacher--except Mix Nelson-- How could it be otlieiwise x prefect Z' Mr. Vail, who keeps bands and everytliing' else a gi this is from liome experience? THE im Alva Blum-He-avy-wesiglit Amy Bonner-Special prog girl. Agnes Boxolcl-linoelq, sist Emily Brewster-Uni' Rem Dagmar Briiiison--Sinclierei' Louise Cannelcl-Ox'e1'wliel1 Florence Cll2lllll7C1'S-FOl'Gl'1 Marguerite cle llontemai'-f Carrie Deining-Oni' Sunil: Irene Fuller-Successful at Helen Hankin--Oni' everlas Helen Hawthorne-Heacl ol Fanny Healy-Qui Titian g 9 'Q ., -Q., 11 Z 5 . . 31' .L 12 7-F-ROOM '414 Some one once saint, manly! havell' And while it has been some, and just by others, there would say, a lot to be said on l Class 7 F is eoinposecl of a stars. The galaxy ranges all th as leading lady, along with prize a representative of the Prospect: of-as yet-unreeognizetl talent. Clara is not only tlrainatie, bi pathetic that the girls taut hell donlt try to help ite No one ques to move an audience to tears by exhibitions. Aeeiclentally, for nr ally, she moves Miss liaclieltlei' censure by het' impulsive interi come from her vain attempts to l Rae Costelloes Sit Hemel, t- where from 8:40 to 8:55, wliei' visitors are banished and all com taining, is cut oft by our lieartles the room shall be lcept absolutely from 12:55 to I. But our reputation is not alxi while reports Come -Fmiu the outsif our most Clemure merulsmers. il Rubin kngw how to make liistoij n s f.C1ass7F' 5 Some one once said, My! what an illustrious class 'I thas been confessed to be flattering by some, and just by others, therestill remains, as Sir Roger would say, a lot to be said on both sides. have ! And while i Class 7 F is composed of a group of greater and lesser' stars. The galaxy ranges all the way from Clara Buttling, as leading lady, along with prize speakers, class officers, and a representative of the Prospect,-to the would-be c of-as yet-unrecognized talent. ' Clara is not only dramatic, but so good-hearted and sym- pathetic that the girls can't help loving her, and the boys don't try to help it. No one questions Mildred Saul's ability to move an audience to tears by her wonderful declamatory exhibitions. Accidentally, for no one dares do it intention- ally, she moves Miss Bachelder to frowns and occasional censure by her impulsive interruptions, which sometimes come from her vain- attempts to be popular. r Rae Costelloe's AtiHome to Peggy Palmer lasts any- omedians where from 8:40 to 8:5 5, when even the-most charming' visitors are banished and all conversation, however enter- taining, is cut off by our heartless Prefect, who insists that the room shall be kept .absolutely quiet from 9 : 5 5. to 9, and from 12:55 to I. T C, 3 I 'T But our reputation is not always stainless. Once in a while reports come from the outside world which quite shock our ' most demure members. -Florence Frank and Celia Rubin know how to make history in. 337 very interesting, Q and sometimes get into difficulties in other rooms as well and then, Florence remains obdurate, Celia repentant, and diplomatic Agnes makes such rash promises for the future, that all three are forgiven. A Room 414' is 'equipped with up-to-date wireless teleg- raphy. The two operators are Jeanette Sparger and Hen- rietta johnson. In this way dates are settled and reports are made. Occasionally some stray' syllables are caught: Shir . . . mad. 'Last night . . . fight. I donlt caref' Gr, from the other end of the line: Dressmaker's, 2:30, Empire, yesg must have it for'Friday. Such a select clique we have! The dignified Mae How- ley, the dramatistg Helen.French, the scholar and favorite with everyone g Mary Edghill, another fine scholar, and de- voted to her .friend-Miss. Dickerson, our comedian. Miss Russell, her understudy, also adds her contribution to this gifted group. Then, Margaret Alexander-our won- der!-the smallest in the class, but quite able to carry off the highest marks-without any of the scholar's pallor. .And last, but not least, we mention our steady, faithful captain, ,Miss.Bagger, who guards the treasures of our ward- robe so conscientiously.. ' Modesty prevents us from dilating further upon our virtues and talents. Suffice it to say that we are a happy, lively class, carefully watched over by our prefect, of whom we can say: VVitl'1- all her frowns, wc love her just the samef' t Q A. E. K. 5 Izr 6-D-Rooivi 316. i t llflonsieur Allen--A treinendou small body. OfVe do hope that he to grow a moustache or notj Irene AHClCFSO1lk1NillYELl1lQGtlL Ai in French class. tlrene has perfec but it rather interferes with her Fi Florence Beh-The trouble xi never know when she is coniinff of-rubber heels. Katherine Brewster'-Qui' little D, 3.5 Zelda Cantor-Five iniiiutes of the history about PM Hannah Cohen-Such a pensivi Edna Feeley-Be careful, Miss Get jolly and Or before you kr 'Youlll he stoop Edna Goudey-Shels deinure ai' But let her alo She has her owi .,' Aa B 6-E-ROOM 442 .Demi Mr. John T. Robinson-l Brotherhood of F ree and Accepts ishment. Hail to our chief? I Berger-More commonly kr Berger in themfy Burns-Riot queller at Wash Beck-Qur secontl-hand cher play checkers. Boyd-ls the star or the E11 however, he reflects the light of c Conard-Une ot our sutlrag the midget relay. Cronin--Qur mascot, cornrnoi the famous sleclge swirrger, Crowell-ls helping to make De G3L1Cl6llZl-'AFl'GllCllj'U is Dittmer-Lasker's only rival Freehof--Our seconrl-rate str do penance, read his 'Dire Diler Ferris- Curlejv is an athlete Guagliarcli-lncurableY A haircomb, Clictionarjv and 'fhunrili l-Tart--Hart is the bravest ni: to eat cream rolls. I-lelmus-Helmus is 't1'e21Su1'6F account for his suclclerr prosnerity Jw - 1 , Q-31 5-B-RQOM 421 View for yourself, if reader you The youthful girls ot old 5 B, But thou, an artist better than l VVith experienced hand and amlg Can with your pen picture di If I but guide you by my law- Ot' the same dear girls, on anoti Not in youth, but, alas! in age. Miss Allison married a baronet, And the two indeed are both w Miss Arostegin, with lengthy na is also a housekeeper, they say, c Miss Breese did marry a college VVho lives in a place not found o Miss Busby's a dressmalqer, Mis VVhile Miss Coates is trying to e Miss Dietz has married an athle And the worst of that is, he love Miss Dohrmannis the sweethear He'll pop the question, l guess, w But Miss Duntze, so studious, gr Has married a man only halt her Miss Earlyls a singer Qthat's not Vklhile Miss Fuchs is married, wi Miss Gilsen is teaching the youn Therehy starting many a romallf Miss Hallquest's a worker in her For the good and the pious she C4 Miss Harrsen, so graceful, slend Captured a beau at a grand mas- ,-1 v R ,A-7' .A A 4 4, we 5-H-RGOM 336 A famous room is three-t Where pleasantry and lea And 5 H section keeps tl' In the successful high-sc Miss Mable Stone now le And roasts each failure z She knows, too, how to st In teaching these she take Here Cicerojs lost sister li In Mistress Wellbroclcs f And Mistress Bushongis 5 Doth many a Co-Ed. begi Miss Schroeder tells to al Her frequent travels, far Ancl clear Miss Collins pl Cheers up the room throu If mischief is the thing yr Miss Knight will unclerta And certain persons in th Are sure to aid the willin Q 6 gf 'N :S 5-L--RO O M 338 The Class 5 L consists of thirt home in the sunshiny Room. 338. the entering of sun rays, but for th a very dear prefect, Miss Rushn' girls, and we are especially fond ol good one, and we might say idez stantly reiterates the fact to us th: the world- only we will talk. Regarding absences, there are VVhy are Miss Bell and Miss Por is often asked. Wfe advise these gi and make their attendance better. VVC are held in suspense as to x Gallagher and Gelfand are referri Sally Ann. Perhaps the Easter joke. Miss Eich, the tltrlfy-rutile girl purchased a new f'peach-haslcet, that We have seen this season. Miss Horn, you should not ir fessor, especially on D'Ooge days sentences in the class-rooni, hy ini Lost: During the month of somewhere on the third floor. Fin returning same to Miss Agnes Lu smith required. Reward: Aninf Miss Boyd is worrying about ., 1, .N Q , ff' G1 en Long' and short of R Farrell Rouse X Morse l-Seen but not lrearcl. Cramer 5 VV'll' K COMES Does the hear bother Heilbroun y vvhite Our Psyche Girls. Fitzgerald - ' 2 Ol -, McDonald Lox ers of mo es 1 laterals. Gerrior-Renowuecl for her p VVohlburg'-Our actress. Streep--Fashion plate. Ketcham-Feeds birds in Pros 4-N-RGOM 323 ., x. '-4? 7N 4-L-ROOM 312 Man: Tl :Xl 3 3 I 3 3 fl Blumberg, Dora. , . Paukaxliu, Anna. . . Cahill, Marie.. . . . Clarke, Frances.. , . Carlson, Esther ...r.. Chapman, Margaret .... Harbison, Genevieve. . . Farrel, Mary ................. flu Mrs 'Wiggs of the Greene, Anna ......,.....-.--- Harris, Olivia. . . Henry, Helen. . . , y 1 V 's il , ,ieggyl 4 . X A 8-E-F-ROGM 415 Class SEP is unanimous be, in every respect, the bani' is renowned for its orclerly di is very well liked by the young claiming at frequent intervals He is extremely popular with tion coming to keep hiin com he'll be lonely. They just s' admiration. Very touching! RoLL- Mary Anderson- Look, Loretta Bee-Sunny jim. Rita Poll-Shes little, but. Lillian Schwartz 2 Ida Crane Eleanor Vlfoleott-and her Erlna Vlfitherington-The Miss Julia-beg' pa1'ClO11, S. -Our Q ,AJ . -fi' , 4. .a. ' - V f , k.-if .fn .-JZ' wi vs. . .f'v i' 3 . ,.. 0 4 P ' 5- 3,43 .4 , Y . 5-F-ROOM 435 Miss Juliet lilluine-Our 1 the fHCL11f3' Wild' with her ever Hi i' 4 ss hertrude Cfliarig5U the Retard Club and the aug Miss Naomi Cairns-The . believe a certain truth of phvs Miss Anna lireuml-Has Do you not notice that she zu a. m.? Miss Agnes Fitzgerald-'l who feeds all new-eomers. Miss Florence Gerhiiig-D plexion? Methinks it suO'O'est bb Miss Bessie Ciierhei'-A Q often makes two copies of hon tunate friends one. Miss lda Krisansky-The g mark underlined in the iarniliz R, ough ly sweet ,. iss Mabel Lakeman-Th Park who comes early. iss Betty Mfashin-She c smiles, especially when a Miss Loretto McFarland-' steadfastness, punetuality, pruc Miss Agnes Mael2nanjr--- charms are never laid bare to we all know she possesses Miss Marv Murray-C this young' lady. She must n ual ever f 1UO1'11i110'. 'KWl121T'S Miss Flora Mugge-A whom 3 o one must say, WhY, . .1- V U .4-4 3. ,f ,Lin 7,-, T .4 .sg 1.14 4-B-RO OM 320 sl 3-Q-RQQM 321 new-rg-r..-.. f 9f'Y'fD'1l,-r-fr-A ,.. fTf-fF5io:'PU:EV.3. 5?!23f-fsf,wp,Q.H znfbw-f5:LQgf2:: sr:-Q1-qmg-O H . ,. P33593 Uf2,jTo5'E,'ff7f,9,5O5lfbQm:r.,, I-vt-.F-ll W 1 CT' 1 C'D t '-1 f+.gw5Pewrf,fDimamouwdsagwm-fga Oxqgnm Zltmtzzv ,qty-QDJEU' zrggw, CD -A, v-.1-Y-1--D G ' ,-l',-A,..,.-p-.--.-., N1.,'Q,-,QQ QISZQE'-'J iwFTl'fF'DwCi?,'5-5' OfDrD:7 f '-'- 4 v- ..- 40 zggisfig-HQw-f:,m2JgaQ: ' -- ' ,f-J p-.4'w 1 fmfiijmggj gli. f UO5Qrm5:',-Avwgi ,-,, ,-A l..1f-Dy-4O- 7'41 1,-J-:-L W5 53-'D2L'jfQ:ff::Q.af+ QOMQQM , Q --1,-, -1C,..4.. ,-.t--1 Of-f,-,f-- flfb' m425'fg3Qj:4Hn.Z.QJUo3:'f:f5Q Ucfv-7.Qrxl,Srx MP1 QFTCID,-,..2.. Jy f'fJ. '-' 1- . 4r:A' L-. P-Q ,...-: N1 Z-' F'D3zfDil2,5C1QMP-42:-'Jffmrf-QI CQ .f1. 4-?:,:imf+f'Uy nm'i.5 :jane 'm5iDJTmfiQ1'J Q-'f3wT4 wf::4E'I - fn -F'-vm rn wf ,,,f FE 3-Iwi? D,--1'5SD'D F3 113:-I :inf-MP2 ,-'-TAfFD-Nrlgr,'-7 'f't4T f,2L4f 'j-'r-f-U3yiq L mmf?-,i4z..3HHf,awcmH 2,70 :,- Bri M- 'W' 0512- Hmm ' '73r-f-in L'-T',... '-'r Ofa3..,,OmrU,,'?..DJCDDm,.'OffjVf.J::-?,f4?,'mCN , I -f., - ' ,MQ ' f 1 5 F ,f A' ,, P I if ff ff Z 'kv Inf!! N i ',g:51s4M'f5' I x A . Eff ,Q Q i 5 R ,R - . . 1.4.4 Y I' 3-C-ROOM 311 2-B-RO OM 241 H , Q5 UD -11 E 'U T' gg :- VD FO 1 : E rf- :J SD PT' E. Q H V 3- 3 A 4 : FS f-f 5 -. ff -- 5914 ,...g P1 --UQ '-- -'3 YD ww CD -3 'D XJUO -1 W rn ' FD W H T' ,T ' rf FD P-1 VY U' 1 cn ,- QD SD Q f- C P1 ' - gg W 3 'O ' '-- V '-U 'P F A r-H ,.. 4-r -- FD ,L 0 I- UO ,-a fo ' ...A f-5 Ak' u-1 . A. n-- I,-L ... Q-5 ra L' O C SD f-J rf. ' -' V 1- 2 Q 4 : vw U' -.. H- 2-2 QQ : Lf' f-x fi P-1 S fi : .-1 :L ff il- Pv. fin 1-Q f'N f' A 4 wx . , .- -3 ,, U- F-1 ,..., G fff1-nsQ',1ff':f- ,J 4 M1 X, , -, fx 1'-rf V '... 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T ,'.3 VLf 'J 'r-O '35'-' 3-7 Oitof-f4:.f'DQ,0',,0c.'-rQAH,A'rD '-,T ,'1J'-- ,.a'3.... :V W- , .-A-C-D xnf'Dr-4-O1 'U ZZ'-:W -,O 4-1-'ZSOSDO mm Qfbmmmnwd--+QJ lj,-f-LnFD'2JQU9gj..4,-,.:1'3 mfD fZ 3 mfnrxilsg' Sri moflmfbz I- O.UfD,.1,4ZLUAf'Du.f453Jkj'CC tC7fD 'i-f GT2'T 'P '3WQ.i 0 '-' '-3'-IQ ZF: m,4'- -7' Cyg- rufn,-TQH4 T QAt:Ij'fnfTOfD :'w4-AH-:Jf+Q5',2,t,K7-iorw A 'fix i' F J ,I-A ff753'UEjC1'l7D3if'D1Q55'd:,-3.4 : fW'-JWOFSY3-Mwptgqm muff? jpg U'H,Hr-'-af -t5f5.i?C.DOE,-3: 'fS Q, -gy -V-.-1 --1 :I r-P. H E'5dQ35rf+?'eE'-: S.-fZ'CDf'?-U vw km, ,J f 233 2-T,.--RO O NI 1-B-ROOM 119 2-N-ROUM 324 v rf r-4 Q5 . '.T' 22 :- fb S L W 93 W Zh '- fn E V11 .- . '-- ,.: ' 4 X n-n- 0 'J U1 1 D U3 fb K4 U3 H Z' O :T ' 0 O' 1-4-. 'gg cn O -A Z2 U1 W1 P1 ' f-f V C Q .En LT 2 0 3 1 :-in '- Z 5 CD T .9 54 E-T' vf Q2 U, 0 if 2 'Q HD 3 E f-f- E fb 71 r-G FD UQ 5 Z3 ,-. ' f'D 'T '-' 0 LT' U' KE T .. A ... rw 7'-5 P-J tsl SD rw ,.. 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VI' N V7 'E C C P11 kl K N1 Herels to the teachers of our ar To those of the male aucl female To tho-se who have given us plel And to those who have marle us Herels to Latin and slsii-ol-tj g-QQ And loving Miss Stanton, so llklj VVl1o makes very deep lmwns, tl There is something' lmeneatll in tl Wlho tells us were lazy, lmwilli Although sll-3 must lmoxx' lllere Now to our linglisll aml lbraxvin And our fZ1SlllOll2ll,DlC tt-aeller, R VVllOlll we love and who returns Though We know smoolll never And llC1'ClS to a teacher named I Wfllo in Physical Culture clissolv Heres to Miss Geiss, so little al VVho in Algebra marks us surpr Here's to Elocutlou. we all love And taught by Bliss fxleserve, v OF SECO ND GRADE VH UL I 144 Fq LUBJQ1 E '11 ID 1 f spus f-1 CQ Ci f'N L4 , Al F 0 fb 51' Bly in .. .4 IT! H C3 Q Q, if W1 Q cr' Cl 'Tx 5. 5 T-4 C3 ,.. ,-4 ,T '71 -4 C1 ..- P.. ,mu ulvfy X9 . -JI? .N 'fr' 3, gg-1, 4 , A ' . 'g v C1'.i:-4'-5 f 3-W-ROOM 219 There are thirty in th Some of them own br Two are friends, as j Some have cards thej A few, who have earn Proudly strut about t If this poem does not Read on-learn more Three-XV, as you wil' A record-breaking Cla Qui' teacher we at won He coaches Manua1's XVhene'er his students He quiets them: ju His name, in short, is But don't infer he's a Our class has gained For its running, studi First we've Anderson Vifhose visage C,C1' ext Then Borgerg Brouglf Is ever seeking for a J .1 1 ,1 ,f --'P' If A. - 'FT - Y r 1:,'5',. ff ' .4 , z u Q M if P LII ww .Wm 4 A if 'X 1 H we QQ I W K X .X :gif ' lf K I - ' J , 1:1-P-L . ,HL H Q x f f 'D Q0 -1,1 . ' ' ' j 'I ,, ' . W - , 1. v Q- A? Q d. ,w x e- . A g g f. 4: N A ' ' Plmrwieolu . M. Beck-Studious jane. M. Bierds--T116 graceful z H. Brown--The sport. A. Bukoski--A fine buttm F. Clarke-XVQII up in Ph N. Clear f Q F, ,, H- Conoiy S-lhe fJCl'lN2 E. F621fhCI'S'EO11-Cyllly Z1 to N. Gannon-Get a me-gapl H. 14IZl1'tll13.1l11-T116 silent F. Holthusen--Dimples. F. I'IOF1lil1g-AMSS Prissy. S. Katznlall-VV1'ite that p K. Kellrweider-Always ts R. Levine-The coming dr I. Marbo--A would-be ops V' .ft OUR CLASS TEACHER. Dr. Kern is a good old soul, p But a very strict marker is he 5 Still he's so nice, so very, very nice, That we're happy as can be. Our class is made of the jolliest girls, Some with puffs and some with curls, Some are good, some are bad, Some are joyous and some are sad. , EIEREJS QUR LINE-UP. Abrahamson-She's discharged, but still on our list. Beale-Rah! for our line pianist. Berman-Has charge of the' Prospect for our class. Class Brewster-Our dear little pet, of course she will pass. Casserly-Who would by talking gain fame. Dalrymple-Dolly Dimple's her proper name. Davis-Her hours in giggling are spent. P Dent-Always working on lessons intent. Ebeling-Our valuable Victor talking machine. 15 3D Eiermann-just too cute for anything. Foster+ Maiden with the meek brown eyesf' Halk-She'll be a six-footer, some day, I surmise. Hanan-Ah! surely a mathematician. Herzberg--Uur popular song musician. Husing-VVho over translation ponders. Lindblad-One of the modern seven wonders. La Turen-The one who tries to amuse the girls. Le Claire-In history, for fair, she's one of our pearls. LuCas+Who,s always telling us something new. Mannix-She has a new style hat, too! McCormick-She'll be an artist so-me day, just wait. McNeely--Comes every morning at half-past eight C ?j Owens--Our belle, with complexion so fair. Partrick-So quiet, wouldn't know she was there. Reif-And, to be sure, her name was Jeanette. Reppke-A quiet girl, but, whom we shan't forget. Robertson-One of the heavenly twins. ' Sheirr-Who for goodness a medal would win. Simmons-Rather a queer girl, but still very nice. iWalsh-Oh! Mary's made of nuts, sugar and gspice! 6 . MR. A. HOI.ZMAN- Many a genius has bee The nicest things some Eva BONNER-'f0ur angel R CHARLo'rTE CONSOLLOY-U4 FLORENCE DEASY- She's good a Shes good a ln fact, in at Shes best of GRACE DUNN- She works ANNA FRANK- Fraukly, thy modesty NIALVA GLUCRsMAN- Such eyes! 3' C1iAR1..oTTE GUETTER- Leave silei I am but h LILLIAN HUNDLEY- They who forgive most .IS-XBELLE JENKENS--HA nol M.xRJoR1E .ToNEs- Now here's Acknowledg urmisei ers. girls. f our pearls new. just wait. lst eight .r. rs there. ette. 1 forget. d win. :ry nice. and spice! CHRIS N EERGARD- ' EUGENE STRITTMATTER- Too mild, too mild, T he wonder to all who know Eugene is plain I pray thee, swear ! How he gets so much knowledge and does not go insane. DONALD WALTERS- 4 . ' A 4.- 7' ' ' t ' lk' Y' .... . ,, HERBFRF REINLP W indy in running but no in ta ing HA bright light In the mathematics dass. C my LOWELL SPIUMWVAY-:KA chip of the old block . The mile a minute cyclist. ' 158 -T e Gre Open daily Qexcept Sundays to 4 p. m., and on Monday . Closes at I2 nm., Saturdays. ONE oFF1 Charles I. Obermayer ........... Alexander G. Calder.. .... Charles G. Balmanno. .. Williarui Ohermayer ............. Charles Ruston ................. BOARD OF Charles J. Obermayer ............ Charles Ruston ...... Alexander G. Calder.. Walter M. Meserole ..... W. J. Maxwell ........ Allan Bowie ........ Archibald Simpson.. .. Gustave Hartung .... Frederick VV. Starr... .... ,. .. ' DEPO NUMI f go insane, CPPD i ' 1' f,, 2 ll A 1 1' I li l ., T e Greater ewe ork Savings ankt 498 FIFTH AVE., Cor. 12th St. C I Bor of Brooklyn, City of New York. y I Organized 1897. W Open dally Qexcept' Sundays and legal hohdaysj from 9 L m Deposits received f1'0n1 391 t0 33,000- to 4 p m, and on Monday ex eninqs from 7 to 9 fm clock. l - . .' - Closes at i2 m., Saturdays. I I I I ONE DOLLAR 'WILL , OFFICERS. l Charles I. Obermayer. . . ............ .. ........ President. Alexander G. Calder... .... lst Vice-President Charles G. Balmanno .... .... 2 d Vice-President William Obermayer . ................ .. .. ..... ........... S ecretary Charles Ruston . ......................................... Counsel BOARD OF TRUSTEES. Charles J. Obermaycr. ................................. ,President Charles Ruston . ...... , .......... Counsellor-at-Law Alexander G. Calder ..... ....................... B uilder Walter M. Meserole .... .... C ivil Engineer and Surveyor W. J. Maxwell.. ...... ..... IV Iaxwell 8z Co., Dry Goods Allan Bowie. ....... .... . Driver 81 Bowie, Real Estate Archibald Simpson., .. ................ Real Estate Gustave Hartung ..... .....Furniture and Carpets Frederick W. Starr.. .... ..... , ............ . ......... t ..... L umbery ' DEPOSITS OVER ...... ......... . ... i NUMBER OF DEPOSITS OVER. All deposits made on or before the. tenth business days of ,Iann- ary and July and the third business days of April and October will draw interest from the first of these months. ' OPEN .AN john E. Ruston ...... Frank A. Selle ....... .. ..... Chair, Sth Ave Bch. Mech. Bk W. F. Vanden Houten. Channing Stebbins. .. Thomas Murphy.. . .. John Lamont ...... M. M. Belding, .Ir .... Hamilton B. McNair. Charles G. Balmanno. William Obermayer . Adolph Rehbein ..... Walter Critchley ..... William VV. Spence ..... William L. Dowling. Ludwig Merklein. . . . Frederic G. Lee .... .--.-...-.-,.... ACCOUNT ..... ....... . . . . Counsellor-atalqaw .. .- .................... Pl'llltNEl .... Prin. School 77, Brooklyn .. ... ...,Inspector Police Dept. .....................'.....Importer .....President Belding Bros. Sz Co. ...................Real Estate .... .....Vice-Pres. Mech. Bank ..................Secretary ...................RealeEstate .....Treas. of Cowperthwait Co. ....................Builder .. . ............. Builder .. . ............. Germania Ins. Co. .. . . . . . . . . .. . . .Pres. Broadway Trust Co. .. . .S2,000,000.00 ......11,000 159 Albrechtsen, Henry P ..... Arnold, Alexander ............ Balanced Shoe Company, The .... .... Charles School ............... Clarkson, John .... Coal Drake Schools ..... Euclid School ................... . . . Greater New York Savings Bank .... Gardner 8: Company ............. Higgins 62 Company ..... Haase, William ....... Harbison, Kenneth ........... Hefliey Institute ............... Heissenbuttel 8: Company, D ..... . . . Hollingsworth, W. C ......... Kampfe Brothers ....... Macmillan 8: Company .... Alphabetical List of Advertisers Malbin, A .......... McCormick, Joh11 ...... McFadden, George J ..... Metz, H. A ................... Michigan Condensed Milk Co .... Montauk Bank. . . . ......... . . . Natural Science Camp ........ New York College of Dentistry. . . Nutting, A. J. 8: Co ........... Prospect, The ...................... .. Railway Equipment 85 Supply Co ..... .. Riddell, Thomas ......... - ....... Ruel, Stanley ...... Smith, Gray 8: Co .... Treuhold, Henry .... Tiemann, D. N ...... Thoma, Herman L ...... Underwood 8: Company ..... Van Rees Press ........... I The competent graduated dental Sul f has the most independent life of any p1- New York Colleg 1909-11 Lilith COLLEGI- IBTFIRMARY COURSE. June Qd i and freei. LECTURE sEss1oN. oaobel A COb1ig21tQ1'j'D. For admission preliminary cducat i ' 1'equi1'ements write for 1 ii-.-1, ADDRESS ALL COMM NEW YORK COLLEGQ 205-207 East 23d Street Thpibggt preparation for the curricu lDoctor of Dental Slll'gG1'yi is il Manual education. 'l The competent graduated dental surgeon re 1 1 ' ce ves the quickest returns and- I has the most ind 2 dl ' f . I epcn cnt life 01 any professional career. I . CNeW ork ollege of Dentistry , 1909-1910 44th COLLEGIATE YEAR , ,. -i ISIFIRMARY COURSE. J une 2d to October Qd, 1909, fOptional and freef. 1 - LECTURE SESSION. October fifth, 1909, to June lst, 1910,' fObligatQryD. For admission preliminary educational curriculum and other ' requirements write for an announcement. .. .- ,T A ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO I NEVV YORK COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY Q 205-207 East 23d Street, New York, N. Y. I . The 'best preparation forjthe curriculumktoward the degree of D.D,S. IDOCUH. of Dental Surge-ryj is a Manual Training High School preliminary education. I . R ! I1 Ed Like. a'BBeai:hc::i1RL'i3h't -k 1 X . I, UCB IOFIS fl 3yS,l'Tla!' A In in EDUCAQM' IQIIO THE A IQ :':2::gT',.- X - - X 1, - rp . ,f g ff .. - . 5 ' 'gi ' -9 ed., rr - THE ' 54 di kts in All X' , X A . H I f f I if Commercial Shorthand Courses f I Thoroughly Fit 'You for a Successful Business Career SHORTHAND TYPEWFIITING BOOKKEEPING PENMANSHIP SPELLING ARITHMETIC A civltssnvics LANGUAGE TELEGRAPHY I v WE GUA ANTEE A POSlTlON T0 EVERY GRADUATE 1 Last year we Trained and Placed in High Saluried Positions of Trust 5 2,300 Young Men and Woinen. Age Is No Barrier Young and Old Ju, Alike Are Taught Individually and Thoroughly :: - :: 1: ' :gl Entire Year, Day and Eve ing , F' TH Your Case Considered Individually A vCaIl Now or Write for Free Book 4: AE ,.,-,.,.,AvA,Av.,-,A,.,-,-,A,-,-,A,A,-,-,A,-,-,-,A,-,-,-,A,-,-,A,-,-,-,Q 3 5- I Q Cffooisi. THE DRAKE SGHUULS, 154 Nassau St., New York City 'J-1 FD .Ci Q-1 H4 M-I .CJ 4- P-4 U' no in fc : Q . .METZ Cog , CHARLES 1 2 2 Hudson Street, New York City FHIHOUS Qutlllty l i I , Established Sole Agents for the United States and Canada for 1 5. Commercial and Steno, FARBWERKE ' . MEISTER LUCIUS Sz BRUENINIG - - IYD 7 , , A mm L Typewriter R'bbons 1 U IDUAL lm HOECHST-ON-MAIN, GERMANY IN ALL COLORS, Enlel' at QUE' time with- Copying or record, for all machines '--- ' , UNDERWOOD UPEN ALL ALIZARINE CGI-,QRS INDIGO MLB. C32l1'bOI1 Papers I Call, write or telephon ff ' C C A R- GF EVERY KIND, I - ANILINE CoLoRs CHEMICALS Suitable fo' my Purpose Telephone, Prospect Nor I - UN DERWLOGD ' i BRANCHESZ- Writing and Copying Inks EWU? f Boston, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Providence, R. I. I IN USE NEARLY . Charlotte, N. C. Atlanta, Ga. Chigago, Ill, GNE HUNDRED YEARS HOUZ7 San Francisco, Cal. Montreal, Can. Toronto, Can. ',,. w ,BOARDING AND LI, Hamburg, Germany l MANUFACTURED BY --1 . Ohfl Underwood 85 CO, - W. E. HoLL1NGsWoRTH,MANAGm - ' ' 30 RVESEY STREET, NEW. YORK, U. s, A, LABORATORIESLNEWARK, N. J. A , - - - -Seventh A-vefzzze and Ufziofz Street, A A 1-Q2 111765 ng Inks Co , U CH RLES SCHOOL FRANKLIN AND JEFFERSON AVFS E tabh hed 1888 Oommerclal and S enographle Ootnses Entet at any 'mme Wlthout d1S lClV21I1t30'G Call, Wrlte O1 telephone for eatalooue Telephone Prospect No I Estate of B C' Hollzngswortk BOARDING AND LIVERY sTAeLEs W E HOLLINGSWORTH MANAGER WM LOCKITT TREASU R Seventh Avenue and Union Street, Breekgfn, New fork as-fini J M 1 T FRS 4 J of Ijixgc Max The styles demanded by young men to-day have cre- ated a standard lts a type of dress that has no room for the common place We make a specialty of keepmg a l11lC to SHt1Sfy th1S demand and it certamly 1S a brl ht att1act1ve l1VC type of dress A NUTTING 85 CO CIINCORPORATFDJ I Clotlnersd for the whole fam1ly FULTON AND SMITH STREETS BROOKLYN ' L 163 ' --as , 1 V . V ' 1 f0?4.'??q V ' l l s C s , ,Q . gt 1 . L , 22 L at . A- t, N 8 - 3 . . y I T f . I , ,S fbbons yy NDIIVIDUAL INsTRUoT1on. F !! , tt yiyfi5 mb - S ' D' lj A I1 OPEN ALL SU ill O' f' t W J T S -Qt MMER sg'-fvum' 3 f' W5' PQe V l :N X ' ?'lfJ',,fn'11-: -'.--, I N li . F ' T T S 8 ttf - e lil. gl H ' ' ' ' ' E ' . . I 1 l C, . S. A. ' BOOKKEEPING , OPEN ALL SUMMER STENOGRAPI-IY CIVIL ENGINEERING ' TYPEWRITING REGENTS AND ALL I-HSI-I SCI-1ooL SUBJECTS A A DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS Students taking our Cornplete Office Course have the use of Typewriter at horne FREE CALL OR SEND FOR CATALOGUE I-IEFFLEY INSTITUTE 243-245 Ryerson St., ' A. Brooklyn, N. Y. I TEL. 149 J. PROSPECT 1 Telephone, I323 L,-South A ' ' STANLEY RUEL Y, A. MALBIN T A113011 AND DRAPER , AGENCY FOR SPALDIN.G'S ATHLETIC P 9 ' SUPPLIES. HIGH-GRADE SCHOOL 149 SEVENTH AVE. ' I SUPPLIES AND-STATIONERY FORMERLY 228, I I , , up CARROLL AND GARFIELD sTs., -... ' BROOKLYN, N. Y. 255 Seventh fiwfzae, near Fftlz Street, -Brookqyn MONTAUK BANK , FIFTH AVE. AND UNION ST. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Comptimefm gf H. M. RANDALL, PRES., GUY LOOMIS, VICE-PRES., -L , , ' ' A A W .LOCKIT1',v -P .,THOs.M.HALsEY,C V M The Balanced Shoe CO., CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, 5167337 I 40 West- 39th Street, . DIRECTORS H. B. BAYLES. M. D., W. L. NEWTON, HON. WM. M. CALDER, s. NOONAN. MICHAEL FURST, H. M. RANDALL, WM. H. GIESELER, J. S.SCULLY, WILLOCKITT, J.S.,SORENSON,, G1 LOOMIS,i .Z-Q H. J. SIRAUKAMP, G. W. MCKENZIE, G. WILDERMUTH, C. D. LARKINS, Pd.D. A 164f 5 Manhattan, New fork. The MacMillan I English and An ' PARTIA- Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum and O BacOn's Essays, 301 pages ......... B1ackmore's Lorna Doone, 642 pag Mrs. Browning's Poems CSelections Bryant's Thanatopsis, Sella and Ot Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, l Coleridge's The Ancient Mariner, i Cooper's Last of the Mohicans, 451 Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities, 412 George E1iOt's Silas Marner, 213 pag Emerson's Essays CSelectedJ, 275 pz Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford, 217 pages. G0ldsnait:h5s'T-he Deserted Village ai G0ldsmith's The Vicar of Wakeield HawthOrne's Twice Told Tales CSe1 Longfel1ow's Evangeline, 137 pages. Lowe1l's The Vision of Sir Launfal, Scottisi Ivanhoe, 48Q pages .......... 250 pages ....... . S,hakespeare's As You Like It, 195 p Shakespeards Hamlet, 323 pages .... Stevens'On's Treasure Island, 229 pa: Tennyson's Idylls of the King, 318 I THE MACMILLA 64-66 Fifth Avenue, - Nl rINEER1 EWRITISQ YH, N. Y. ETIC L Braakgvz 'T .JOo, The lVlaclVlillan Pocket Series of English and American Classics A PARTIAL LIST Arnold's Sohrab .and Rustum and Other Poems, 219 pages.. . . . . 25c Bacon's Essays, 301 pages .................. . ..........., 25c Blackmore's Lorna Doone, 642,pages .... ....... ...... A . .. 25c Mrs. Browning's Poems CSelectionsJ, 191 pages ...... ......... 2 Sc Bryant's Thanatopsis, Sella and Other Poems, ,238 pages ...... 25c Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, Part l, 471, pages .... ....... 2 Sc Coleridge's The 'Ancients Mariner, 109 pages. .... .... 2 Sc Cooper's Last of the Mohieans, '4517'pages. . . . . . 25c Dickens' A Tale of Two cities, 412 pages .... . .... zse George Eliot's Silas Marner, 213 pages.. . . . . . . 25c Emerson's Essays.wCSelectedJ, 275 pages ..... .... 2 5c 25c Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford, 217 pages... ..................... Goldsmifhisf-The-Deserted Village and The Traveler, 390 pages. 25c Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield, 206 pages .... 4 ......... 25c Hawthorne's Tvvice Told Tales qseiectionsp, 199 pages ........ zsc 25c Longfe'llow's Evangeline, 137 pages .... . ............... .... . 25c Lowel1's The Visionof Sir Launfal, 125 pages .... .... Scottish Ivanhoe,g.4i30mpqag-es ..... . ......... . ..... .... 2 5c 250 pages ..... ......... . . . . . 25c S,hakespeare's,As You Like It, 195 pages: .... .... 2 5ct Shake'spNeat'e'S Hamlet, 323 pages .......... -.-- 2 Sc Stevenson's Treashre Island, 229 pages.. . . . . , 25c, Tennysoxfs Idylls ,of the King, 318 pages ...... ........ .... 2 5 c T A THE MACMILLAN co1viPANY 1 64-66 fifth Avenue, -H -T - New YOYK SMITH GR l TN e know what young men like and cut our clothes accordingly. 'Vkfe make clothes to suit you. Wfe don't try to suit you to our clothes. . ' , Snappy, comioirtahle, athletic looking clothes are what the college man insists on. That's the kind we make for him. SMITH, GRAY Sc ooMPANY NEW YORK: BROOKLYN: ' Broadway at Wa1'ren St. Fulton St. at Flatbush Ave Fifth Ave. above 27th St. Broadway at Bedford Ave. OPEN SUNDAYS I Want You Young Men! 0' Young Women! X . BASKET BALL, QQ To Call at 454 5th Ave., A BROOKLYN, N. Y., , BASE BALL' W Between 9th and 10th ste., FOOT BALL, Over The Marquise Millinery Store. TRACK, HAVE YOUR PICTURES TAKEN. If your family objects, bring them with you, Baby and all. I make special inducements to overcome these objections. Groups a specialty. HERMAN L. THOMA, Phgtggfaphef, t . Prospect. l KENNETH HARBISON Athletic Ouzfjitter TENNIS GOODS, FLAGS, PILLOW TOPS, FRATERNITY BANNERS. PINS, CUPS AND MEDALS. . Sperio! attention given to order: 279 FLATBUSH AVENUE just above 6th Avenue. . D. I-'IEISSENBUTTEL Sc sCo. ilaagyg or-ioroias GROOERIES WINES AND LIQUORS . SUPERFINE CONFECTIONS AND ICE CREAM Seventh Avenue for. Fgftn Street 469 STI-I AVE., CORNER IOTI-I STREET TELEPHONE 538 H. SOUTH BROOKLYN I Telephone, I I IO South HENRY TREUHOLD, PARK SLOPE BAKERY AND LUNCH ROOM, 256 Seventh Avenue, Telephone 538 South Near Fifth Street Near loth Street BROOKLYN, N. Y. yearn 22. g1hl'BJZT1I5Pll MEAT MARKET 457 SIXTH AVENUE Brooklyn, N. Y. .THE STANDARD FoRs5 YEARS Outclasses all the so-called no-honing and no-stropping or Wafer blade safety razors. , The blade can be kept in perfect shaving condition indefinitely with our automatic stropping device. It is therefore the most economical and satisfactory safety razor. eff IYRAZ0 5-Aff . - - or at all cutlery dealers. 166 Telephone 760 South Sets 31.50 and up Catalog on request KAMPFE BROTHERS, - - - ' - - 8 Reade St., N. Y. City, The Official Railway Equi Register The P Railrc Railway Line Clearances ana Dimensions Are publis THI RAILWAY EQUIPMENT A 24 PARK PLACE Y .W -AL 1 ,L 1 E L - Yun-'i?1,LR IARBISON M Puyitier TENNIS GOGDS, FLAGS, PILLOW' TOPS, FRATERNEITY BANNERS. J MEDALS. W1 fo ordera' I AVENUE just above 6th Avenue. 75 S AND ICE CREAM ' Ffflz Sfref! BROOKLYN N Y ll'BlZT1t!SP1I KET .VENUE Brooklyn, N. Y. 3 The Official E E . M E Railway Equipment jjugguygjeydjnfgogf Register A deneed or Evaoorated A I W M1lk, Buy I The Pocket List of Q d o 'Q' Railmaateoffieials STAR BRAND GONDENSED , , PEARL BRAND EVAPORATED Railway Line . Clearances and Car Eine presents with I Dimensions M 'both Brands E All first-class grocers 11 b h A p bl 11 tl by Se Ot '- THE ' Michigan Condensed Milk Co. . E ' MANUFACTURERS V A MENT AND PUBucAT1oN co. RAILWAY EQUIP on A 44 Hudson Street New York M 2i'PARK PLACE, New vomx. KODAK thletie n Goods Largest Sfock of Photo 'Material I in Brooklyn . Geo. J. MCFADDEN 202 FLATBUSH AVE. Phone, 2816 Profpen' Photographer y V44.. Flatbush .Ave. soHooL WORK A SPECIALTY. Q RIDDELUS 151 Seventh Avenue, brooklyn, New York i rfportingi Goods 6' Kodaks ' Developing 6' Printing 164 All Work Finished Within 36 ,Hours . ALNVAYS SUMETHING DOING! 1 AT THE i y N. s. o. The most up to date and' best iequipped Summer Camp for boys in the count-ry. - g Three hundred acres of hills and dales on beautiful Lake Keuka. Fine athletic grounds, excellent food, all sports, trips, athletics, good fellows, glee club, theatricals, etc. ' Everything of interest to manly, Wide awake boys. It is the place for you if you are that kind. References required. For free booklet and further information see the Manual represen- tative, i 1 5 Joseph W. Beck, Room 442. I A ' Owner and Director, U Albert L. Arey, C. E. , 247 New York Ave. D..N. TI. GRO Wines ana 170 sl-QVENT Corner Fi BROOKL Telephone 839 South l L T, liotogr pl 4, Flatbush f SPECIAL D N TIEMANN lcljn New Yolk GROCER J Kodaks mtzng A' h 6 H m3 'MS Wlnes and iquors Ne Do1NG' 170 SEVENTH AVENUE . Corner F1rst Stree BROOKLYN N Y' Tcl Summer Camp for boys 1 es on beautiful Lake Keri Sports trips athletics, awake boys It 1S the p O required' Telephone S39'South .- on see the Manual repre 'wner and Director Albert L. Arey, O. E. 247 New York Ave. 'Sin every detail the leacling. Business and Sliorthautl 1 School of Broolilynfi. . E N . .Classes day and -evening. Positioiis for graduates. ' H FULTON STREETLAT .NGSTRAND AVENUE. A . DPAWING 1N1cs in ETERNAL XVRITING INK E , - Exenossrme INK s gl, . , 1 , S7 TAURINE MUCILAGE , 'Z , H E l'1O'l'O Mouvrmn PASTE EL n ' nicswrxo-Bcimzn 1'AsTE , A IQUID PASTE E mlm llmlll ' RFFICE PASTE , 1 , ,VEGETABLE GLUE, ETC., Gr ffWade'z'1z .B7'00kbflZj ' ,.' nmsgyc . . . L i Are tl1eF1nest and Best Goods of their mu Emancipate yourself Nfrom the use of corrosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins Inks and Adhesives. They will be a revelation' to you, they are so sweet, clean, well put up, and withal so eflicient. ' 1 - - AT DEALERS, QENERALLY ' CHAS. Nl. HIGGINS 81 CO., Mfrs. 271 Ninth Street, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Branches: Chicago, London ' Y l GARDNER Sc CO. THOS. W. TAYLOR 76 78 F l Street, Brooklyn, New Y k l l 2 5 5 High Class Photography :: :: GFOIIPS a Specialty L - I I , ,YEX . r .5QN ' TELEPHONE 199 MAIN ' ' I ' ' 1COIVlPLlNlENTS OF I C 0 A L Get tin Line for JOHN MCCORMICK H . 7 U FIFTH AVE., Between 9th and Ioth Sts. , ' SCHOOL, COLLEGE, AND SOCIETY PENNANTS TCFHI SCHOOL PENNANTS ----------- 75W x 1511 IOC each JOHN OLARKSON PARK fSL OPE GROCER FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC FRUITS - 207 Seventh Avenue L Th d S rect, Brooklyn, N. Y. I ORDERS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED x fa? AHC ASX VAN REES PRESS 171 X b wr L., f 'agi I A V E . i 3 77 e S I 124-26' Vamlewater Street, New York 4 fm e f 7 , r f I N I 4 V I , , , Q 4 4 , .1 ,..4 V , . ,Al H , 1' lgf, f,.'f'1g1:' V 'V . Q' .,, l 4 Q .JI ,. - , ., , v 3jr,:4.J, !.i,.q,? 44, fw V V, V M ' V 4 .- ' A V1 VV In ,V-jfrfu 1 f 14 if QV' .4 V' .. 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Suggestions in the Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) collection:

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Manual Training High School - Prospect Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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