McKinley High School - Nugget Yearbook (St Louis, MO)
- Class of 1916
Page 1 of 170
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 170 of the 1916 volume:
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K The arnatlnn Eine 1916 MMM 127 QI PIIUIIBUEU I111 the stuhcnts nf rrr Em jafiiilllllll Dlgll iarhnni missouri mb husscil fdncnurs isalnt iluuzs 3131550110 QI Zlssuch tlmce a pear this hung Ibuiumc Qllnelhe jallllllllf Qfmo I S Cooke, EdrormCh1e Helen Luth, Associate Editor GSOIQB Crewes, Busmess Manager r ll , :Eff-p -,mv gggfaf-m, iff:-,.. Lv fr. 'l Y' -, ' -'I fg ' ffm. ' Y ': 'V' 'le , ' 1, A' l ' ' 5 , L31 ' I . -Q I - . h I O : ' Q ' Q ' .Q I - - . . 5 . , v - . Y . . . . U ,- 7 . . i -- - - f I Ifll 1 f ffl ll 1 f 4-g 523 f fffff' fflflff-'f flf ' ffuff uf,-f fun puf, f' 1 ,,,' ,ffm s1,,,f., ,-,,,,,,-, f-,ff H'ff1f'ff11 ffff !'1,'1u'f1' fwfr ,I ,ff-in l Hhfff fum, fu 'mf-ffu Y fff f'I1, ' Ii. f f Hfff fu fuvf ,ffrfrf I ff,'ff,fwf ffff fm f .lx ffwff ffl fff'f.v-1 rl.: ff' fffrffl flff ffl, I flf- fi ffl: fffffff I MNH fl fffflf ,vu ffnww .fff fff Hum 41' ,' f f'1' If ffl fff'1l.:.w,' fffff .vf V' fu' ,-,flfnwfl W Nflffl 1'. 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X ill I.'SS I .XX' U in :'I.fii4vi. i'I 'I,1xIIfiII,4.i 'tx .XI'X'.XN'IQI'SI,?.'l4fI1fifr'I If 'II1 xnxx' MLN: 'IL Nvfrlis Ng IQX II,XN'2EI5 jug I-' Q08 1!,.x,.17.x'I'.1 X.s 315 Il'. fII5!IQY'I'f 3,0 .asian EDIT HIIFN NI Ll -l IOHN Q COORF PATRIOTISM Yes there s a lure m rt We all have felt that thr1ll scarce earthly that shoots through us when strams of mart1al music reach our ears and bear ourselves bravely to the death for our country And that IS patr1ot1sm7 Aye and so lt IS But st1ll there IS a duty wh1ch we often forget or put asxde a duty callmg each one of us, always to serve When we are at the helght of enjoyment when we are 1n the depths of gloom we feel lt callmg urglng us to g1VC of what we have to them that need And we have felt that to our country there are bonds of duty blndmg us ever closer Yes that too IS patrrotlsm But what can one gxve as the cause and 1nsp1rat1on of deeds of great sacrifice mn the servlce of that natlve land' Surely not momen tary though intense enthusxasm for that leads but to sensational acts And these deeds of patrxotlsm are never sensatxonal Surely It cannot l v ma- - - C.a.'.. YTI . .'.. ' '. y v l . ' A 1 9 We all have wanted, yes with all our hearts, to leap forward, onward, . . D , . . I . . , . . 9 . 9 ' ! Y S 1 . . u , , , . . . . 9 9 S ' THE CARNIATION be duty for through duty one can never reach the pmnacle of heroxsm of heroxc service It always leaves some factor mcomplete some shght vlbratxon lacking m the chord T1s not no not from duty that these noble deeds arlse for they are grand complete perfect IH devotxon not 1 note amass Txs then through love It must be love that men are hfted gulded to thelr deeds of servxce Tls only love only true love that makes all trials naught and draws the best thats ln us to the front And may that llttle gleam of heaven ne er be wantlng As our country calls us as xt ever calls may we be ready unfaltermgly to do 1ts blddmg THE VICTROLA Reahzmg that muslc hath charms and also that the best way to teach puplls the appreclatlon of good muslc IS to brmg muslc to them, the Carnatxon Staff donated a fund of one hundred and fifty dollars to buy a Vlctrola and records The 1nstrument was accordmgly bought nd has entertamed the school on audltorlum days as well as the pupxls of the muslc classes many tlmes Besldes furrushmg entertam ment xt has brought the school mto closer touch wlth the best musrc and the best muslcxans of today I was wlth deep regret that the Carnatlon Staff recelved the reslg nation of Herman Hoyer as busmess manager The reslgnatxon com mg as lt d1d when the Hnanclal affalrs of the paper needed careful attentlon m order to 1nsure 1ts prompt publlcatlon made matters appear rather serlous for the Carnatron However Mr Graves our edltor very generously consented to take up the less glorxous and more d1Hicult dutxes of the buslness manager and the posltlon of edltor was satls factorlly filled by john Cooke who assumed the management of the paper lmmedlately and dlrected 1ts completlon THE BEACON We recelve the news that Cleveland Hlgh School IS publlshmg a paper A school that can support a paper m the first year of its exxstence possesses a remarkable amount of school Splflf and loyallty the mterest and enthuslasm of ,the student body combmed wlth these elements should make The Beacon a success The book IS edlted by Thomas Gast and Carl Dxetrlch manages the busmess department Both attended McK1nley before the completxon of the new school changed the dlstrxcts The Carnatzon extends to The Beacon 1ts best wxshes for a satis factory Issue and confidently hopes the subsequent ones may prove a success I ' L 3 ' 7 . . U . , . . . . , . ' 7 5 . ! S 9 0 Q . Q . , . . . . 9 9 ! . . , . ' ! . , . . , . ' r . . . . . 9 1 ' ' ' tl ' Y! 7 L, l . . . ' g a . . . , 1 ' ' O CHANGE OF EDITORS. A . . . . L - l 1 . . . . . . , ' 7 ' I I , . I v 1 . . . . . , . . . . . . 1 66 S! ' ' ' ! . . . . ' ac n - - - - D .':. THE CARNATION KNOCKERS After l1StCl'llI'lg to the groans of one or more of those unfortunate people termed knockers one would become obsessed wxth the ldea that our Alma Mater was one b1g dxsappomtment that xt 1S a pumshment 1l'lH1CtCd upon the mnocent to have to attend an 1nst1tut1on wxth apparently no redeemmg features at all But thxs IS only the Jabberxng of a knocker and cannot be consldered any more than the twxttermg of a sparrow that slts beneath one s wmdow m the summer The knocker IS one of those people who have not caught the spxrxt of the school He IS not abreast the traces and pullmg for all that IS 1n hlm but laggmg behmd and rebukmg those near hxm for not pullmg harder IS not our 1dea to impress you wnth the theory that McK1nley IS wlthout faults but they are so outwexghed by McK1nleys excellence that time and effort to End and talk about them are not worth whlle There are many features of our xnstxtutxon that make xt a source of prxde One glance at the trophy case xs SUmC1CI1t to tell of McK1nley s athletlc achlevements and durmg nts exlstence the school has sent forth mto the world men and women who have made good c1t1zens and who have attamed prommence and leadershlp nn many l1nes It 15 also our opportumty here to come mto contact wxth a corps of cultured mstruc tors who are devoting thexr llves to thexr work not only as a professlon but wlth the hope of 1nHuenc1ng other hves our llves These are only a few of the sahent features and xf they were the only ones they would be enough to arouse the prxde of every McK1nley ite and make hlm proud to be a member of such an 1nst1tut1on rather than a dlsgruntled knocker SLANG How xs It that we so often hear pupils when talkmg on some topic mn class forsake the good old Engllsh of thelr forefathers and break mto the vague and often sadly xnexpressxve modern slang? Now we do not mean to mmxmlze the value of certaxn expresslons once slang whxch have through real merlt and popular approval established them selves firmly m our language They are good but they have endured and by no means may all the slang now heard xn the class room be placed wxth those expressions Why must the latest addxtlons to our prdgm Amerxcan push thexr way mto those places above all others vhere pure Englxsh IS studled and taught' Let them fight thexr way to recognxtxon on the streets lf they can then perhaps they may at last become good English llxn A6 9? ' ' 9 1 . . . H. . ,, . . . P . , . . Y . . . , 9 . . . . , . Y I 1 , - U ! D 1 9 ' 1 Y 9 1 - , . 7 9 H . . . ,, . . 1 I . . . . . . . . . . . Y W 1 ,I ,. -,. ,Q ANIH lrfb 1 Ml RXT SUI 'Xl 1terar H XRDI N I '23 IJN 5 NI XRTH4 BI Rf 'Xl XX ofu--.----,,----1-1-1.1---.1-1-1- Nz, .L.?,Q 5 1 , . - I P - i ' In 4, kb 5 4 8 ' , 1 EL .' HI IFS IN. .HA ' ' IAIITH ii ILIDICH. 'I ,IE IKLIC i? , ' Ar T ,- ' 'fl - .f . 2 I. .A .' 4, n-n-n-n-u------- - -..-u-u- -1- -- - - -----------n-nn-nn---1 ,P THE CARNATION Iiailto hdcliinleyl Hail to McKinley, hail to McKinley, hail to McKinley High Rah' Unto thee, McKinley High, praises to the sky e er ascend While with heads in harmony Humbly before thee bend. Borne to every mountain side, every mountain side O'er the ocean wide is thy name' And we join 1n a cheer All thy sons far and near In saluting our McKinley High And as every shout resounds against thy towers Where we spent so many happy hours St Louis stands with sword in hand The proudest Saint in all the land And hear his song As we march alon With true hail McKinley H1 h May thy sons ever be as true a Whose name We receive Firm just standin for ri ht Ever thy portals they leave May thy crimson colored Ha Never need to drag in diso race But borne by the manly Youth of McKinley Lead in the high school race Rah rah rah' Rah rah rah' li she ,kxtririff ,fiittt grit!! firm!-:fir 'iiiii t ftffft 6 -Q? . . y 7 Y . . .D - 4 A 'W 1 ' N Y ' Y . O' 3 . 1 . . .g I . s . Y . g .g ' ' - g - ' 'S 9 7 7 Y ' V U ' r f V ' . is L4 Y jr gli-25 x5 of 'e'i:e'5' A gf -ai , V ,-Mfg' -5 Tl-IE CARNATION The Women of Shakespeare A Masque for the Bard QThe curtaln rlses to the sound of deep solemn Ellzabethan musxc The hghts on the stage are very dlm Enter the Tragxc Musej Ttaglc Muse Ha1l' Poet of the Matchless Muse Ha1l to the bard who know all l1ves through whose blood and braln there crept the shadow and chlll of every death Come all ye Splfltb of the solemn deeps of unxversal l1fe and g1VC pra1se to the Poet of Avon' Fzrst Sp1r1t Hall sweetest Shakespeare Fancy s chlld Warbllng thy natlve Wood notes w1ld Second Splfll' Thou IH our wonder and astomshment Hast bullt thyself a lastmg monument Thzrd Splrlt All honor to the poet Who though h1s head be Hxdden ln the skles Plants h1s firm foot upon Our common earth Fourth Spzrzt He was not of an abe but for all tlme And all the Muses st1ll were 1n then' pr1me When llke Apollo he came forth to warm Fzfth Spzrzt He pours ln Hoods of supernatural 11 h Fancys br1ght bemgs on the charmed Sl Szxth Splflf Each chan e of many colored llfe he drew Exhausted worlds and then 1ma 1ned new CThe Traglc Muse and her Splrlts dance a dance of lnvocatlonj Traglc Muse I would that I could hear once more the Words that were created whlle I was guldlng h1s pen O Love thou teacher O Grief thou tamer and T1me thou healer of human hearts brln hlther all your deep and serious revelations Let me tread not boldly but wlth awe w1th1n the 1nmost sanctuary of Shakespeare s gemus Come julret lxve once more wlthm my heart fulzet T tt ,l , . . , . . , A W , . Ll ' I , . 3 ' 97 .. 7 7 97 .. U - , . . L , Y - 7 Our ears, or like a Mercury to charm. ,, , . .g t ' ' ' 'ghtf' Al O, - ' b 1 l . U. H 6 . W 9 . . . . n , 7 s 1 ' 9 Y g . . . y v . . . , . . . , . four -en THE CARNATION Ttaglc Muse Helena Helena touched wlth such soul subduln pathos let me hear agam the t1de of feellng that escaped from thy burst mg heart when the confesslon of love was wrung from thy soul Helena and The Countess Ttaglc Muse And thou Lady Macbeth whose amb1txon for thy husband IS the rullng mot1ve of thy life ambltlon gratlfled only at the expense of every just and generous prlnclple and every rlghteous feel mg In pursuxt of th1ne object thou art cruel treacherous and darmg The murder thou lnstxgatedst IS rendered more frxghtful by dlsloyalty and lngratxtude and by the vxolatlon of all the most sacred clalms of k1ndred and hosp1tal1ty Speak speak agaln the words that lxke an evil geruus led thy coward husband on and on to h1s murderous deed Show too thy shrmkmg soul when the frults of wrong had been garnered Lady Macbeth Tragzc Muse The fate of Rome once lay 1n the hands of a woman and that woman was Volumnla O Roman matron so full of lofty patrlotmsm patrlclan haughtmess and maternal pr1de I would see thee once more as when ln grandeur of soul you won from your angry son tleat peace for Rome whlch all the swords of Italy and her confederate arms could not have purchased Volumma Trag1c Muse Ophella poor Ophella' Oh far too sweet too Good too falr to be cast among the brxers of thlS workmg day world and to fall and bleed upon the thorns of Llfe The sorrow thou wast made to bear was too much and thy sweet m1nd hes m fragments a pxtxful spec tacle Thy song comes to me agaln lxke the pla1nt1ve call of the blrd to its mate as the evenlng shadows fall Ophe11a Traglc Muse Gentle true Port1a' come speak agaln the beautxful words that w1th true matronly d1gn1ty and tenderness plead thy right to share thy husband s secrets Port1a CSoft muslc IS heard 1n the dlstancej Tragzc Muse Hark that IS the Splrlt of Gladness before her beam mg smlle and gladsome volce my powers vanish om hands let us dance a dance of farewell e er she comes to take our place CThe Traglc Muse and her Sp1r1ts dance The Splrxts leave the stage one by one and the Traglc Muse dances alone The mus c that was heard so famtly ln the dlstance becomes louder The Traglc Muse stops leer dance A soft voice xs heard smgxng Hark Hark the Lark Q Tragzc Muse I have no power agamst that vo1ce fThe Tragic Muse leaves the stage just as the Spxrlt of Gladness I-nr I Q ' - ' 0 9 1 t, , - 1 1 , - - 1 1 ' ' 1 - 1 , - 1 - 1 1 b ' - 1 1 1 - . H . . 1 - 1 1 23 1 1 ' 1 , , 1 ' 1 1 1 1 ' , . J . 1 ' : , . . . . . . H ,, ' ' 1 1 1 - ' 5-.-n THE CARNATION enters The Sp1r1t of Gladness smxles trxps lrghtly around lrstens to the musxc wlth an upturned face full of rapture and Joy and smgs Hark Hark the Lark Whrle she IS smglng the llghts become brlght Wlth each added ray of lxght an attendant Sp1r1t of Gladness enters After the song the Sp1r1t of Gladness and SIX Sp1r1ts dance The srx Sp1r1ts leave the stagej SCENE II Splflt of Gladness I am the Sp1r1t of Gladness and Sunshme I am the Splflt of all that 15 brlght and beautlful 1n nature the silvery summer clouds the ralnbow showers the openmg blossoms I am the spxrrt of all rrch fancles These are my sxsters and we are ever near those who love us And now I would see once again the beautrful souls that were created Wh1IC I re1gned o er Shakespeare s heart Rosal1nd how sweet thou art to my memory' Thou art lrke a wlld beaut1ful melody such as some shepherd boy mlght p1pe to Amaryllrs n the shade Thou art l1ke a mountam streamlet now smooth as a mlrror and anon leaplnb and sparkllnb 1n the Sunshme Come Rosal1nd speak to me agaln and thou too sweet Cella Spznt of Gladness My kingdom IS filled wxth farrxes Shakespeare lc-ved us and oft would he v1s1t our haunts Tztama and all her faxrles 11ved 1n our woodland eer they lrved 1n Shakespeares heart Come lxttle faxry w1th laughmg eyes tell whlther thou wanderest and what thy dutles are Fazry Cendmgj Our queen T1tan1a and her elves come here anon T1tan1a and Slx Fazrzes fThey smg and dance Spzrzt of Gladness Mlranda thou art mdeed the daughter of nature Had Shakespeare never created thee we should never have felt how the purely natural and purely 1deal can blend mto each other Thou hast prung 1nto beauty neath the eyes of thy father thy compamons have been the rocks and the woods and the many trnted clouds and the s1lent stars Thy playmates were the ocean blllows that stooped the1r crest and ran rxpplmg to k1ss thy feet Thy person IS a parad1se and thy oul the cherub to guard xt Speak to me Mrranda' Mzranda Spzrzt of Gladness And even upon the stern pages of hlstory Shakespeare threw the danc1ng llght of hrs joyous soul He found Kath crme and Allce and gave them to us Katherme who so aptly learned and Al1ce who so successfully taught Katherme and Alzce fFrench dlaloguej Splflf of Gladness I would be a spectator once more 1n the court Nxt 1 ' D 7 9 I ,, ,, . . . . . . i 7 ' 7 ' , . , . nl T, , n , . . . , , 7 ' 7 . . . ,, . 4 vs ' ' . . , ! on of ' 7 l ' 5 9 ' Rosalmd and Celzai . . , . . , ' Y I 1 ' ' sc - - n - , u ! 9 9 ' Y Q . . M . , . . li 5 L , ' l 9 . vm THE. CARNATION where thou Portla w1th thy dngmty thy sweetness and tenderness kept the entxre court 1n pamful heart thrxllmg uncertainty untll the sur pense verged upon agony Come Portxa I would hear again that match less PICCC of eloquence that appeal for Mercy whrch wlth an 1rres1st1ble and solemn pathos falls upon the heart luke gentle dew from heaven Portia CSoft muslc m the drstancej Spzrlt of Gladness Hark that IS the Sp1r1t of the Future' Oh Traglc Muse why dxdst thou Hee when I came? Though thou art all that IS solemn and deep 1n l1fe thou art still my srster and together we were the 1nsp1rat1on of our Shakespeare Come thou Tragrc Muse w1th all thy tram and ye too Nymphs of Light and Gladness and brlng wlth you all whom you love Let us greet the Sp1r1t of the Future together fSoft music, Hark she comes' fThe Sp1r1t of Gladness and her followers are grouped on one sxde of the stage and the Tragrc Muse and her followers on the otherj lEnter the Sp1r1t of the Future She walks wlth a slow danclng step to the front of the stage As she passes the Qplrrt of the Tragrc Muse and the Sp1r1t of Gladness bow to her She stands 1n front of the stage wxth the Sp1r1t of Gladness kneelmg on one slde and the Tragrc Muse on the other Sp1r1t of the Future I am the Sp1r1t of the Future the great dark boundless future Shakespeares Tragxc Muse and h1s Sp1r1t of Glad ness have brought to you some of the flowers that grew 1n h1s garden They have shown to you the heart of that mlghty Splflt and so ye have seen all there rs 1n lmfe for as a drop of dew contams the lmage of the earth and sky so 1n Shakespeare s heart there was all of llfe He knew all vlrtues all crlmes and all re rets On h1s heart had fallen all the mghts and noons of fallure and success Great wonderful Shakespeare these creatlons of thy xmagmlatxon have worked thy w11l ln the Past and now I shall lead them on and on 1nto the Future where they will shed thexr tears and let thelr laughter r ng and re echo through my boundless realm where they w1ll carry the messa e of Shakespeare through unendmg t1me' Come' QWalks out slowly every one on the stage f0ll0WlI1gJ fCurta1n j Throughout her work the author wrshes to acknowledge her ln debtedness to Mrs jameson s Shakespeare s Heromes Kathleen B Hutter QW' SEQ! yy , . ! I ! Y I - , - - 9 1 ' ! l ' 9 , . Y 1 ' ! Y ! ! l 9 1 . . , . ' 1 , . . . . . u . Y 9 ! , . . . . ' 1 S . . . , . . ' g . 7 ! , Y 1 ' 2 U . . b . . , . ' 7 Li V ' !7 f-A-w -x . . Al nv s l M, A - vo X 1 Q0 ' j 5 I 1 ,f mr.. K . , , 1 .ul I I m THE CARNATION The H1StOfy of Chem1stry OLD that sparkling glxttermg eluslve metal which has always ttracted the mhabltants of the earth was perhaps the chief cause 53 of the begmmng of chemistry What made San Francisco and the rush of people to Callforma in 497 What was the cause of the d1SCOVCI'J of Amer1ca the deeds of the buccaneers and the p1rates9 Gold If gold had not been discovered 1n California would thousands of people have braved the horrors of the crossing of the Rocky Mountalns and of lighting the Indians ln order to get there? ban Francisco would not be the twelfth c1ty ln the Union but for gold Vvhen Columbus sa11ed on h1s memorable voyage he hoped to reach India But would he have wished to reach India 1f India were not sup posed to be the home of gold? Would Isabella have given h1m money if she nad not felt that lf he discovered a new route to Ind1a she would recelve great wealth? As It was Wlth Columbus and the forty n1ners so was It with the ancients Thousands of years ago in the northern part of Greece there uved a man called Hermes the father of alchemy wh1ch was to chem stry as legend 1S to history One day as he was tak1ng his usual stroll he fell to wonder1ng how he could increase his hoard of yellow lngots Suddenly a thought struck him Perhaps he could get It from iron ments with all the metals he knew of Hermes discovered new thmgs whl h he had never dreamed exlsted His 1dea spread all over the c1v1l1zed world Hermes and many other men held the theory that 1f a certam compound could be gotten the mere eatmg of it would make one young and if it was placed near certam metals it would change them into gold or silver This rock wh1ch even moderns would like to possess was called the philosopher s stone It was evidently akin to Ponce de Leon s Fountam of Youth From th1s time on everyone w1th a sclentliic mstmct tr1ed his hand at this new science called alchemy From Greece the idea spread to all parts of the Mediterranean world But after 4oo A D the interest 1n xt decreased owmg to the spread of Chr1st1an1ty Fmally the science was forgotten But at the t1me of the Renaissance old Greek writings were d1scovered wh1ch again created lnterest in it Even Kings and Prmces became alchemists But about 1600 the alchemlsts d1v1ded into two classes One class was made up of sw1ndlers robbers and pretenders who abounded in those days Th1s class was gradually wiped out The other class was composed of those who really tr1ed to get the stone by scientific means and these stud1ed and mvestlgated phenomena of nature Gradually I lic , y . , , . . . a , ' F -v ,AA . ' . , . . . , f ' , 7 . . - . , . . ' ' y v Q - 9 n ' or some other base metal. He hurried to his house and tried experi- Y 7 . . . , . . y 7 ' ! , . ' V y . . . . . ' Q ! 7 , . . 3 Zig: -Q-n T HE CARWATICDN huntmg for the stone became a mmor object To study the elements and compounds became the prlmary a1m Then alchemy faded mto the hazy past and chemlstry began From that t1me on many new dlscoverxes were made unt1l now the chemlsts are struggllng wxth radlum the wlreless and many other prob lems of the age Thus sclence and humanxty progress Perhaps ln the far dlstant future the men of that t1me w1ll look upon the work of our cherrusts as we look upon the work of the alchemxsts Who can tell? Harry Barth Interscholasuc Debatmg League Towards the close of the last term the Assembly and the L1terary Socxety pet1t1oned Mr Mlller to make arrangements for the forrnatlon of a hlgh school debatxng league Accordmgly a faculty representatlve and a student from each one of the several high schools met at Central tI1gh School and drew up the constrtutlon and by laws of the organlza t1cn The name of the league IS the St Louls C1ty Hlgh School Debatmg 1 vague and the membershlp IS llmlted to publrc hxgh schools The pox ermng body of thls orgamzatlon IS the Debatmg Board whxch con rsts of a faculty and a student representatlve from each school Thls ssxgns the sldes to be taken by them The school whxch wms the cxty champxonshlp w1ll be awarded a 1lver cup and 1f It wlns the champlonshlp three trmes the cup w1ll pass nfto xts permanent possesslon The constltutlon further provxdes that the members of the debatlng ieams be awarded the 1ns1gn1a of their respectlve schools On Saturday evenmg May 6 1916 McK1nley contested wxth Central on the followmg questlon Resolved that lmmlgratlon 1nto the Un1ted ttates should be further restrlcted by a lrteracy test McK1nley upheld the affirmatlve Central the negatlve The followlng composed the teams McK1nley Central Israel Trelman Robert Pllcher Louls Klem Alfred Norrrsh Bernard von Hoffman Edgar E Flory Alternates Harrls Rossen Herbert Everly McK1nley based 1ts argument on the ground that the proposed lltcracy test would do more good than harm Israel TFCIFDBU the first N11 l 3 D ' D 9 l . 9 1 9 v ' ! . , Q A , . . . . . . , V . A . . . . . . - .A V S. A . . . board determines the question which the schools shall debate, and also 2. 'g . ' 9 ' 7 1 9 - . . . U ,, .... . ' v . . . ,, . LW' . , . ' Y .W 'lvl'-'-TX THE CARNATION speaker for the ailirmatwe emphasxzed thls pomt besxdes showxng the economlc condltlons that necessltated a l1teracy test The debaters from Central attempted to show that unrestrxcted 1m mxgrauon was necessary on account of the shortage of labor m thls country It was on thxs polnt that the teams d1sagreed both quotmff authorltles to substantlate the1r statements Durmg the course of the debate the negatlve made the statement that mf there had been a lxteracy test 1n prev1ous years the Un1ted Smates would have lost a large number of great men g1v1ng Llncoln as an example McK1nley however overcame th1s argument by cltmg me case of Booker T Washmgton HIS parents had come over to thxs country as slaves and the allirmatlve usmg the same reasonlng as thelr coponents sald that slavery ought to have been contmued rn order to et such men The debate was lost to the afhrmatwe by the negatxve when they .luoted Dlllmgham a proposer of the literacy test as saylng that there was no better law known thereby admlttmg that the law was dCS1f able lnasmuch as lt was the best one known The McK1nley debaters showed unusual sk1ll mn oratory and out be t speaker for the negatlve whlle Bernard von Hoffman d1d splen d cl work for the aflirmattve The Judges were judge Selden F Spencer Rev Alfred Grant VValton and Mr W Flewellyn Saunders Harrls Rossen Workmg Through School URING the year IQIZ I had the good fortune to be glven a chance to attend McK1nley High School and I had the oppor tun1ty to really get acqua1nted w1th th1s 1nst1tut1on I also began to reallze ln that year the reat lmportance of gettmg all the educatlon that I could pOSS1bly attam My schoollng soon came to a close and I regretted that I could not attend any longer When vacatlon came I succeeded ln gettmg employment Wlth a cloak company Here I worked all summer on the mcome of S6 a week September came agaln and I hmted to my parents that I would lrke very much to return to school The Hnancmal condltlons however were such that I had to contrlbute my share toward the support of the home A week before the begxnnmg of school ln September 1913 I put an advertlsement ln the Post Dlspatch askmg for a pos1t1on after school hours I repeated thls three times but wlthout success Two and a 'lx nl , , . . I . y . 5 . . . , . A , . . . A ' . , y . . . . , . v . . . A , . . . KT ,J . l . . , . , . v s , . .- , . classed their opponents in this factor. Edgar Flory was by far the Q . . . - 5 7 i ' . . , . U . I y - . . U . . b , . . . . . , . . b . ' 9 . , . 7 7 'rv 3' TI-IE. CARINATION half school weeks passed and all my hopes of contlnumg day hngh chool vamshed But fortunately I met an old frlend of mme who told me of a cer tam factory 1n wh1ch students of un1vers1t1es were employed after school hours As soon as I heard thxs I made arrangements to speak tc the manager of that concern To my surprrse I was gxven a posltlon my work begmnmg the very next day I re entered school at once My workmg hours were from 5 30 p m to ro 30 p m The flrst week I earned S3 37 And the h1ghest amount that I earned the frrst year was S5 47 per week My total 1n come durmg that year was S140 68 Of thls money I gave SIIG 77 to my mother and the balance I kept for my schoolmg Then the next questxon was how to get my home work My wrltten home work was done between the close of school and gomg to work whxle the work wh1ch requlred no wrrtmg I dld on the street car go1ng back and forth to work At one t1me I had a Job makmg concentrated filaments on a machme lathe Each one of these filaments requxred from two to four mmutes contxnuous collmg Then whlle the machme was run mng It d1d not requlre much attentlon and I took advantage of these few mmutes to read or study lessons In this way I managed to com plete my second year of hlgh school successfully that IS wrthout a failure 1n any subject During the followmg vacatlon I was able to save up a l1ttle money whxch made me feel qulte confident that I could return to school IH September Thxs t1me I returned to school wrthout a days delay I agam worked after school but thls t1me at an average week s mcome of S7 ZQ I-Iavlng completed the two years of language wh1ch was requxred my course I recelved five more study per1ods a week Thls enabled me to do conslderable home work durmg school hours My servlces rendered ln the factory seemed very satlsfactory smce durmg the entlre t1me no complamt was made agamst me Thls very fact made me feel the more certam that after all I mlght eventually have the chance to graduate from McKinley My hours of work then were from 3 untxl IO p m and many tlmes until 2 a m Fortunately enough I have been able to keep thls job up to the present t1me and I also expect to keep lt for the future My present hours are from 5 p m untrl II 30 p m Thus up to the present t1me havxng always passed m all my sub jects wxth an entlre average of G have I almost worked my way through hxgh school and I hope to graduate this commg june Another questlon IS to whom do I owe my educat1on9 Accordmg T nt One v ' 9 S ' . , - . ' v . . , . , . ! . , . . . . . Y 7 3 l . . . , . . . , . , . . In , . 3 7 7 . ., . . . , . 1 v ' ' ' ' nt U! 9 , , , , . we y- Tl-IE CARNATION to my Vl6VV'S lt IS partly to my parents and perhaps mostly to one sxn cere frlend who at the t1me I got th1s pos1t1on I know must have glven me good recommendatlons If I should be fortunate enough to get the chance to go to colle e and st1l1 be able to contmue my work Wlthlll and wxthout school as successfully as I have done ln the past I shall always be consclous of the fact that I certamly owe most of my educatlon to thls one partlcular person for lf I had not secured that posrtlon just 1n the mck of t1me all my hopes of ever gomg through day hxgh school would have been lost R E D Truth S V1ctory One CV6I1ll1g about elght o clock 1n front of a large OEICC bulldmg m one of the progresslve cltles of the Mlddle West stood Harry Cratcher sellmg papers When Harry was five years old h1s father had died of con umptlon Several years later Harrys mother remarrled becommg the wxfe of a man named Jack Stevenson thxs was not because she especlally cared for Stevenson but because she needed support Whlle nurs1n her first husband Mrs Stevenson contracted the dreadful dlsease and three years later had to be sent out West to a sanltarlum among the rnountams of Colorado Harry s stepfather whose true char acter had been kept from Mrs Stevenson went wlth Harry to lxve ln the hangout of a gang of thlves to which he belonged As Harry was trylng to sell hrs papers the words You better brmg home somethmg worth whlle tomght you young brat and lf you squeal on me lt wlll be the last thmg you ever do' kept gomg through h1s m1nd These were the words whlch Stevenson uttered as he turned Harry out of the house at half past six He had almost concluded to run away from town when a well dressed man W1ll1 m Wanger hurr1ed 1nto the cor ldor of the bu1ld1ng Stealthlly Harry crept up behmd and reached h1s hand mto the coat pocket of the wealthy man who feelmg thls swung around wlth h1s Est and knocked Harry to the Hoor A officer who happened to be pass1ng the bu1ld1n took charge of the unfortunate boy The next mornmg at eleven oclock a sherxff called out m the Juvemle Court State vs Cratcher' As the case proceeded the Judge heaped a great number of questlons upon Harry none of whlch were answered becau e he remember the words of h1s stepfather Fmally the judge sald to an oFHcer Take hlm to the House of Deten txon for a few days probably he wlll make up h1s mmd to tell us some thmg by that t1me What' snapped Wanger The young cr1m1nal ou ht to be sent 9 v ' 9 7 D 0' . . an ' Y ! 1 , . . . . , . . . Y Y y . . , . . , . e .. . , , 7 , . . . 0' to a - 9 ' Y - , , ' v . . H . 9 ! 9 1 . . . ,, . . , . v ' v 3 s . V. . . . . I . 1 9 v . fl ' . . . U bn . , . . 1 1 1 ' 64 99 ' 1 - - , s 1 , S . . . . H . - D : - . . ,, as vs gg - - cr cr . . 5 Twf-nty-Two THE CARNATION to the Reform School for at least slx months my txme s valuable I can t come back here every day Mr Wanger replxed the Judge the funct1on of the juvemle Court IS to correct not to pumsh That evenm Harry brooded over h1s troubles untxl he finally fell asleep from sheer exhaustlon In the mornmg as he was passlng one of the guards who was readlng a paper he saw the head11nes Multl m1ll1ona1re W H Wanger MlSSlHg No Clew Obtamable After ten fmnutes reHect1on Harry recalled the last words h1s mother had sa1d to h1m Always be truthful my son I want to see the Judge I want to see the Jud e' he crred and made an attempt to run to the office You cannot' was the reply you must wa1t a few days Not dlsheartened by these words he pleaded and pleaded unt11 Hnally he was taken to court As they entered the door Harry tore away from h1s guard and called Judge judge let me tell Well what IS It young man? asked the Judge The other mght after they threw me out I lxstened and heard them say son-e nng bout Wanger and kxdnappmg Before that they told me to steal whatever I could lay hands on Go to I6 South Thlrd Street w1th some cops as soon as you can The Judge ordered a squad of pollcemen to that address led by Harry As they approached the ne1ghborhood they went through an alley and cllmbed over a fence surroundmg a dmgy hut pomted out by Harry Upon knock1ng they recelved no answer and proceeded to pound 1n the door whlch yxelded to the sturdy blows of the olhcers When the door fell they saw Mr Wanger bound hand and foot and three of the an A week later the tr1a1 of these men came up 1n the Crrmmal Court and as Harry was on the wxtness stand tellmg h1s story a letter was brought m addressed to hmm The judge wlth Harry s consent opened and read It xt was from Mrs Stevenson and stated that she had recovered and would be home wxthm a week It was dlscovered that the gang had commltteed many other cr1mes Bach of the prlsoners was sent to Jall for dlfferent perlods accordlng to h1s offense jack Stevenson was sentenced for l1fe on a murder charge Mr Wanger was so pleased wlth Harry for causxng h1s early llbera t1on that he took hlm and h1s mother to l1ve 1n the beautiful Wanger resldence and now Harry Cratcher IS worklng to the top wxth the firm of Wan er 8: Scupper regarded as one of the best Flrm of lawyers 1n the state of Ill1no1s Gustavus Buder T t'll I I 9 l ' 1 Y I 7 H ,, vu - - as ' ' ' S 9 ' ' 57 , . O' b ' Y . . H . of Y 7 . . . . . . H . . , - . , . . . ' Sb Y 7! 9 3 ' N . . O' ,, . a b ' Y sn 97 Ki ' 17 . , - - y w 9 is n 7, ! F 7 ' GI ' ' 3, ' y 1 - ' U . . I 5 L, . R . . I .t. a . , ' C Y VV ! ' 9 l O' 7 ' 1 , . ' 9 V o' cr. za za Y ! . . . . , ' 1 1 7 ' 7 , . . . . . . 9 . , cr U . t, v wen y- ' uw'-e THE CARNATION On the Road to Success A g1rl who was obllged by clrcumstances to leave McKinley and take a short preparatory course for teachxng m rural schools wrote the followrng letter to a frrend here wlthout any thought of publncatron It shows plamly the enthusiasm that leads to success and The Carna tlon believes that 1ts readers w1ll be lnterested 1n seexng lt St Louls Mo March 26 1916 Dear Mlss Probably you will be surprlsed to ind that I am st11l rn the land of the lrvmg because I havent Wrltten for so long But really I ve been so busy that I don t have t1me to wrlte I have been teachmg smce September whxle Mamma worked mn an office and Grandma stayed w1th the chlldren But Grandma dred sud denly two weeks ago and of course thmgs are worse than ever now As I dont thlnk of anythrng but school I cant Write about any thmg else To begln wlth every body d1d h1s best to scare me They told me harr ralsmg tales of the puplls I would have That K boy xs slmply msane youll have George B and you know about that family and that blg S boy you know the horse butchers son and that W boy IS as w1ld as they make them and so on and so forth as long as I would llsten I sald to myself Well maybe the rest wrll murder me but l1ttle Wxlde w1l1 be the worst He used to come and play 1n our back yard ard I hated to think of what he would do to my d1SClpl1l'1C But he dld not greet me wlth Hello Ann and he behaved beautlfully He was well coached at home but the rest weren t Most of the A class were ten or twelve years old Cm second grade' and considerably older ln experlence They sald thmgs that slmply stunned me George B m partzcular always started such messy sub jects 1n our conversatron perxod Im not very iinxcky but when a second grader glves me the detalls of the best way to k1ll a calf that s a l1tt1e too much Flnally I got at the explanatlon he works for a butcher untll 8 p m every day and the butcher lets h1m help the men ln the slaughter house' ust xmagme trylng to teach that boy the ordx nary sxmple mnocent chlld thmgs' I had the gang of b1g tough boys and s1x pronounced deficnents one very very bad And I never call anybody bad rf I can help It There was one boy who was reported deficlent and who puzzled me very much He got to be a wonder 1n arlthmetlc but seemed terr1b1y self conscrous when he tr1ed to read Frnally I found the clew He had been told he was a fool and the whole famxly accepted that as a fact I beheve I earned thelr eternal love and gratltude when I d1d say he was all rlght Really I dldn t have any trouble at all wlth those Bad boys The boy who had been tormented half to death because he was Irlsh naturally approved of me And of course every boy rn the d1str1ct knew and llked Papa A perfectly n1ce g1rl from town xs a mysterxous bemg probably a secret enemy but the whole crowd sxmply took lt for granted . a , . , - . , ., , . . . , L , v - v , . . V 7 9 9 ' , . . , . ! 1 . , . . . . . H . . . , v is . . , s 1 ' 1 X ' ' 77 '11 r 1 . H . . Y 7 9 . . ,, . ' i . . , ' IC 97 ' 9 s - 7 , . . . . . , . - v . . . , . . , U . . . ,, . , . , -. , . . I ' x - 1 , . ' 7 ' KC 11 , . ' s v ' . - U ,, . . . ' s D Twenty-l-'our THE CARNATION that s G1rl would be a perfectly safe reposltory for troubles would understand everythmg and would be fa1r about everythrng Of course that helped When there was a row they told me fan' and square all about It If the lrate prmcxpal appeared on the scene well they re used to thrashmgs Besxdes they lrke to be treated llke men and grven some respon s1b111ty The two worst ln the crowd when put first 1n lme and told they were b1g enough to hold the lmes back certamly made a better job of It than I could I took the poster patterns from the Normal mstructor and put them and the construct1on paper handy When work was done they were prxv1leged to make plctures I had the best decorated room you ever saw Some of those terr1ble ch1ldren had the best 1deas for posters As long as they were g1ven somethmg to do and trusted they were line And they d1dnt need talkmg to If there was anythmg to be done a glance or a gesture of the hand was enough And work' Oh my' You know when that kmd take to you and work for you they work hard We had one rather funny lncldent I sent the same crowd of boys to the pr1nc1pal four txmes for beatxng a l1ttle boy because he was a jew The r1ng leaders of course were George of the Hend1sh Irlsh tem per and Henry of the Sw1tzer stolxdxty The pr1nc1pal dutrfully wh1pped them all around Now those ch1ldren are used to bemg clubbed w1th anythmg that comes handy and naturally the whxppmg dldnt bother them The rule ln school IS that all fightmg must be sent to the pr1nc1pal but the fifth t1me I thought It was t1me to suspend rules I had all books put away and then proceeded to lecture It had never occurred to any of them that lt was cowardly to beat lxttle Saul and they weren t proud of themselves when they saw It Most of them were afrard to Justlfy themselves but George sa1d D1dnt you ever get mad and want to fight? CI know the little fellow provoked them but he drdn t tellj I aid calmly Of course Ive felt that way but I thmk I d take some body my own sxze That was not qunte concrete enough The cr1m mals wnggled and prepared to be murdered George asked What ll I do when I get mad and want to light? I knew preachmg peace wouldnt do any good so I sa1d Well whenever you feel that you just have to iight remember that youre Irlsh and Henrys a Sw1tzer fthey re chums by the wayj and get out m the road take off your coats and settle the war That restored the room to 1fS orlgmal cheerfulness and when I sa1d Remember though you re to st1ck to Henry as a fightmg partner and let the lnttle fellows alone they agreed and moreover they kept the others from bothermg them I was a l1ttle afrald they mlght take my suggestlon too seriously but they dldn t They understood that kmd of language Another thmg they like good plctures and good storxes and a lot of them are acqulrmg llbrary cards My walk to the llbrary IS gettlng to be a regular processlon a few small boys a lot of gxrls of var1ous 1zes and about a dozen of the b1g boys They belong to the hxgher teachers but somehow I seem to be the1r confidante and the hbrarlans refer to them collect1vely as my ch1ldren They fall back on me when they can t get the books they want or don t know what they want and I have an Lncomfortable feellng that I am dlrectlng the readlng of half Tntll 1 KG 7 ' ii ' 1- , , . ! ' 9 7 7 ' U , . ' ' as ' n - y . . . . . . ' 9 3 ' 9 ' - as - as 9 9 . , . . , . . , . 1 a ' ' ' ! 1 J 1 9 - . . . . , 9 ' 9 , . . . , 3 I ' sc - 9 7 7 YY ' ' ! ' 7 C - u 9 , - x 1 9 7 I . . ,, . . . . H , , ' 9 17 ' 7 ' 66 , 7 ! ' 1 5 . , . , - as 1 v - . . . . H 3 7 ' , . . . 9 YI 7 9 . . , . .. , . . , , ' ss ' 1, - S , . 9 9 5 , . 9 s 9 1 V . . . . we y- 'ive THE CARNATION In snow txme I threw my newly acqulred d1gmty away and snow balled Very much to my surprxse there was none of the usual trouble They never threw when I had my glasses on they would come and ask me as a favor to wear a sweater and cap and zf I dxdn t there was no snow ballmg One day our prmcxpal got sxck and they pretty nearly drove the next teacher out In fact she went home the next day wxth some sort of a nervous attack and I had to watch the boys I was mor tally frlghtened because I was sure that mf they were so rude to a teacher as dignified as M1ss M they wouldnt do anythmg for me after my rompmg with them so I went out on the playground to stop thexr snow balllng the glrls fwho as It happened were darlng them to do lt, and they stopped collected around me lxstened to what I had to say and rephed Sure we ll take care of xt Aren t you gomg to play? I sa1d I had some work to do but knew they wouldn t need watching and the leading gangsters sa1d theyd keep the snow ballmg over to the1r own slde And they d1d It w1thout any more fuss They are consldered the worst ch1ldren 1n the county have been ralsed under terrlble condltlons and are all round bad lots I dont understand lt When I look at the letter I am mflzctmg on you I am ashamed of myself You know I always d1d tell you my experxences and puzzles and I m sure you understand Yours smcerely A L D The Fames Secret NCE upon a tlme ong long ago there l1ved a very 1nqu1s1t1ve 5 1stry Now It came to pass that a pr1ze was offered to the person who could ra1se a black tul1p wxthm a certam length of txme Chadro for that was th1s man s name determlned to get the pr1ze He worked earnestly untll he notlced that h1s nexghbor was also workmg for the pr1ze And now I m sorry to tell you a very wlcked xdea entered Chadro s mmd he would watch and walt and then steal the result of h1s nexgh bor s toll But to Chadro s disappomtment the bulb was kept ln a room the door of wh1ch was locked w1th such a compllcated lock that Chadro w1th all h1s cleverness could not manage to open It It occurred to hlm that he had often heard the story that the forest held a secret wh1ch none but the Falrles and Bunny knew There was a certam kmd of grass 1n the forest fso the story wentj wh1ch had the power to open any lock Any one that held a blade of lt could enter where he chose w1thout dlfhculty But the forest and the Falrles and Bunny kept thexr secret well and no mortal had yet been able to d1scover the mysterxous grass Tue t - , . . - 9 . . , ! Y 9 - , , s f ' 7 . . . , . '9 . . , . , . . I 9 ! ' dl l ' 9 ' 7, ' 9 1 - ' , . ! . . . , u . . Q 9 un , . 9 . U , ! ! . . , . , . . . . . s 1 9 7 man. He was a great student and knew all the mysteries of chem- j,l:llII!5, . . . lezrsswesl . . , . . I 7 ' , . . , . - . , . . u , . , . . . ' 7 9 ' ll y-Six THE CARNATION Chadro spent days and nights in the forest and at last he conceived a br1ll1ant 1dea whereby he hoped to gam the secret One day mother Bunny left her lrttle ones for a short tlme and whnle she was gone Chadro managed cleverly to catch them ln a wrre net He fastened the net to the ground and then sat back and watched When poor mother Bunny came back she was very sad She walked round and round the net that enclosed her crylng httle ones Suddenly Bunny s face grew brrght and she ran away as qu1ck as the wmd Soon Bunnys lxthe body was seen commg cautxously toward the net In her mouth she carrxed a long blade of grass Chadro watchmg from behmd a tree smlled Hrs plan had been good Poor unfortunate Bunny' She came to the net dropped the blade of grass on that xron prnson and the next lnstant the w1re had broken 1nto a hundred blts and Bunny was klssmg her dear babes Chadro rushed to the scene and he looked for that blade of grass far lnto the mght I have heard people say that durxng some dark mghts they have seen an old man wlth a long whlte beard that hung to the ground hunt and hunt untxl the grey llght of mornlng frlghtened hmm away And so you see Chadro never won the pr1ze and was very cruelly pumshed The forest and the Fa1r1es and Bunny st1ll keep therr secret and that IS why the Fa1r1es can get 1nto your room when you are so weary and whxsper 1nto your ears and brmg you such beautiful dreams K Hutter CIVICS Perhaps the subject least thought of and least understood the sub ject 1n whlch fewest people are mterested the one whlch has the whole natlonal good for 1ts Held and because of xts scope the subject most drfhcult to grasp 1S C1v1cs CIVICS ln 1ts newer sense not the old 1dea of memory work const1tut1onal documents learned thoroughly but wxth no regard to thelr applrcatxon but the newer C1v1cs the Crvxcs of the locallty the natxon Community C1v1cs And what IS embodled ln the subject communrty CIVICS7 What xs 1ts Held 1ts pr1nc1ples 1ts purpose? Wlth what does It deal It deals prrmarxly wzth practxcal problems tts field IS not narrowed to a locallty though lt may center 1ts lnterest there but embraces the nation xts pur pose IS to make good and mtelllgent c1t1zens of students C1v1cs IS essentlally practrcal The fundamental prrncrples are learned only to make one understand the actual operatlon of them What could be more practical than a thorough understandmg of one s clty country or state government a knowledge of provxsrons for publlc welfare T nt wn 9 7 n y ' , . , . . . , . . . . . , , . . , , v ! , 9 ' ! , . v - I 7 ! 7 9 ! 7 9 1 - - 7 7 9 s ' . . , . 1 , .- we 5'-Sw ' i- THE CARNATION pure food and water supply health and samtary condltlons, transporta tlon fac1l1t1es, care of the dependent people? Smce one comes m con tact wmth the local government da1ly, were It not well to become acqua1nted with 1ts work? Since the success of a government depends largely on the 0fflClalS dlrectmg lt, were xt not well to choose able oHic1alsP All these questlons and many more are embodled ln com mumty c1v1cs Our newspapers and magazmes take on new mterest after a course in CIVICS, words and phrases prevlously obscure are explamed we read artlcles whxch before seemed uninteresting, and our field of readmg has been broadened, llkewxse, our reasonmg powers are strengthened, we are able to weigh arguments carefully to look on both sides of a question before arriving at a dec1s1on Wxth th1s new conception of C1v1cs, lt becomes not a dry fiat sub ject, but one wide awake, mterestmg and really entertammg a truly lxve subject' gf, 5, mf. The Best Shall Serve the'State CCIVII Servlce J HE first six Presidents of the Unlted States were tramed statesmen of wide experlence and broad vlews who trled dlsmterestedly to serve the lnterests of all classes The seventh, Andrew ackson, was a hard lighter 1n prlvate as well as polltlcal life, and a bltter partlsan He mtroduced the spolls system To the vlctor belong the spolls Thls was the pI'1I'1ClplC of anclent and medlaeval tlmes when a soldler fought for the booty he mlght take from h1s captlves Many d1s honest and 1ncompetent men were placed 1n the government servlce men who showed extraordxnary sk1ll IH concealmg any fitness for the oilices rhey held They were not afrald to spend money freely on electlons, for they hoped thereby to get thelr own or the1r frxends hands 1nto the natlons pocketbook From Washmgtons admlmstra non to Jacksons scarcely anyone had been removed from oflice be cause of h1s pOl1t1Cal creed nn Jackson s iirst term many thousands of trimed publlc servants who had been appomted by Washlngton or Jefferson were dlscharged to make room for Jackson s adherents The 1n1ust1ce to the faithful and efliclent men thus thrown out of employ ment was not the greatest part of the catastrophe The business of the government was badly dernorallzed Why? Because offices all over the country were filled wlth men entrrely new to the work and often s1gnally uniit for the1r posxtlons It seems dxflicult to the modern hcusewlfe to tram even one new mald but at that t1me there were thou sands of government servants to learn thelr routme many of whom vc-re less teachable than the average mald and were concerned chlefiy itx lmgx , - 1 1 . . . . . . U 1 . ,, . . . . . ' 1 . F i. . ' , . A t , . . . L, . . ,, . . . . . . - 1 U . . . . . 11 - . . . . , . . , . , . . .- , 7 . . . . . , 1 1 ' 1 , - ' ' 1 ' . . ' 1 Tww-y I - 5' -1 1 THE CARNATION 1n drawmg thelr salarxes Thxs cond1t1on preva1led after every elect1on 1f the party ln power was defeated Corruptmon and abuse of power xncreased 1n natlonal pohtxcs unt1l Pres1dent Garfield was murdered ln a brutal conflxct over the spo11s of ofhce In 1883 after many years of hard and unt1r1ng labor by a few broad men the Act to Regulate and Improve the ClVll Servlce of the Unlted States was passed by Congress and sxgned by Pres1dent Arthur There was great oppos1t1on to the movement by pol1t1c1ans who resented belng shut off from the pork barrel much as a small boy would object to h1s mother s lockxng up the jam They were not ardent bel1evers 1n the sweet bye and bye they wanted the sweet now Perhaps they had small hopes of a re ward m heaven Those who had worked for the bill were greatly d1s appomted at the law as passed But a system whose very keynote IS efhclency was begun and 1S gradually replaclng that of m1ght makes rzght The C1V11 SCFVICC of a government mcludes all persons servlng it except soldlers and sallors The Pendleton act made prov1s1on for the appo1ntment of a commlssxon to frame rules and regulat1ons for the c1v1l servlce and gave the pres1dent power to lssue an order placlng certaxn classes of publlc servants under these regulatlons Durmg Pres1dent Arthur s adm1n1strat1on the number of oH 1cers appomted un der the new law was 15500 In thlrty three years that number has dent voluntarlly curtalllng h1s pol1t1ca1 power by lessenmg the pat ronage at h1S dxsposal S1x states and over two hundred C1t1CS 1n the Unlon have adopted the mer1t system for thelr local affalrs The New York const1tut1on of 1894 prov1ded that all the C1t1CS ln the State must adopt c1v1l serv1ce reform By a law of Massachusetts passed ln 1885 the reform may be appl1ed to any Clty wh1ch so deslres Most of the CltlCS 1n Massachusetts have accepted It A s1m1lar statute was passed 1n Ill1no1s ln 1895 and It was lmmedlately adopted by Chlcago M1ssour1 IS one of the states whxch has not adopted It St Louls IS trymg the CHTCICUCY system under her new charter, but IS encounter 1ng much oppos1t1on from pol1t1c1ans, and the EEICICDCY Board IS ln danger of belng dlscontmued because of lack of funds The EHKCICHCY Board consxsts of three members appomted by the mayor whose duty lt IS to make 1nvest1gat1ons and keep data concernlng the enforcement and effect of the efhclency laws It 1S certa1nly reasonable to belleve that a person selected for a posltxon by exam1nat1on IS better qualliied than one selected because of hxs pol1t1ca1 bel1ef An appl1cant for entrance 1nto the ClVll servlce has to take an exam 1nat1on partly oral and partly wrltten If hns grade 15 satlsfactory he Tss ents Wm . . . ' , . . H 7 . . . . ,, . . . v . 65 1, ' ' Y ' . . . ,, ,,. ' 7 ,. - . . . ,, . ' 77 ' ' il !! ' ' 7 . , . . . . 9 ' ' ' grown to 5oo,ooo. President Taft put in more than any other presi- Y - . , . 9 7 Y ' U ', '-. ' e THE CARNATION IS put on the waltlng llst and sooner or later recelves a posltlon Th salarles are regulated by a classlflcatlon on the b3S1S of dutles performed and there IS a regular system of promotlons There has always been a controversy over the respectlve merlts of the scholastlc and the practlcal tests The spollsmen were fond of saylng that a mall carrler dld not need to be versed IH astronomy hls tory or forelgn affalrs Grantlng the truth of thls he needs lntelllgence behlnd hls ablllty to read and wrlte shoulder a bag of mall and rmg door bells, and hls examlnatlon proves the presence or absence of thls commodlty At first the lmportance of the scholastlc tests was exaggerated It was Mr Roosevelt who checked thls tendency Whlle he was clvll servlce commlssloner a collector of customs ln Texas declared that he preferred one cow puncher to ten college graduates who could not brlng ln or brlng down the lawbreaker they were after To h1s amaze ment Commlssloner Roosevelt assented and proposed a test whlch Jould prove the appllcants ablllty to saddle and rlde an unbroken mustang shoot on the gallop, read cattle brands Cl3SSlfy llVC stock accordlng to age and condltlon speak enough Spanlsh for ordlnary ouestlons and answers and follow dlmCl.llt tralls The law provldes for the dlsmlssal of employes from publlc SCFVICC obedlence, and under no clrcumstances for polltlcal or rellglous aflilla tlons A person removed from clvll servlce IS furnlshed wlth a state ment of the cause and IS glven tlme to reply The merlt system has reduced the cost of admlnlsterlng the govern ment and has helghtened the degree of competency The workmg eHi clency of the postal mall clerks IS QQ per cent Under thls system the presldent and hlgher OH'iCl3lS of the country have much more tlme to spend on the natlon s affalrs because they are relleved of many vexlng appolntlve duties In theory and practlce then the merlt system IS shown to have splendld effects and, ln tlme, lt wlll become unlversal Not fallure but low alm IS crlme The hlgh alm of the C1Vll SCYVICC system IS The best shall serve the State Paullne E Annln Thls paper won first place ln the essay contest on ClV1l Servlce and consequently the name of Paullne Annln who served so admlrably .ls 3SSOClatC edltor of The Carnatlon last year wlll be tl'e first on the bronze tablet glven to the school by the Federatlon of Womens Clubs and placed ln our first Floor corrldor ThlTfY Y , . e ! , . ' 9 7 3 , . . , . 2' . , . . . , , . . , . y . . 1 ! ' only for misconduct, incapacity, inefficiency, insubordination or dis- 'r 7 . , , . . , , . , . . . ,, . . . . . . I 66 W! D . . . , . A THE CARNIATION The Study of Arch1tecture at McK1nley HE study of one of the fine arts architecture has but recently been advocated 1n th1s country as an add1t1on to the h1gh school fv .3355 course of study By archltecture IS not meant an extended course ln hxstory or deslgn nor what has hltherto found a place ln the hugh school course as arch1tecture the study of orders and the mere copy mg of structural deta1ls What IS advocated IS a short but 1ntense study of domestlc archltecture 1n all 1ts xmportant phases The majorlty of arch1tects or professors have bel1eved that the sub ject was too d1Hicult for the average h1gh school pupxl to assxmllate However at the present date th1s xdea IS losmg favor and the study of domestxc arch1tecture IS slowly but surely gammg ground We may well be proud to know that McK1nley IS one of the first to develop a course of archltecture along these lmes To our knowledge there IS but one school 1n the Unlted States besldes McK1nley wh1ch teaches archltecture as lt IS taught here namely Polytechn1c Hwh Long Beach CallfOI'l'1la At Polytechmc Hlgh a four year course ln archltecture ls Gwen complete ln pract1cally every deta1l There archl finxshed the prescmbed course he 1S able to take a pos1t1on as archxtec tural draftsman or to contlnue h1s study 1n the un1vers1ty The archltectural classes at McK1nley under the supervlsxon of Mr Moore have made remarkable str1des 1n the past two years The work IS taken up 1n the Sen1or year The three years precedmg th1s work are devoted to free hand mechanlcal and perspect1ve drawlng all of wh1ch lead to the goal arcm tectural drawlng One declded advantage 1n leavmg archmtectural study unt1l the ourth year IS that the pupzl has taken h1gher mathematlcs an essent1al study for archltecture Thxs glves h1m a broader Held of ldeas and he lS able to understand the problems that ar1se m arch1tecture Mr Moore has developed among other thmgs charts and curves for var1ous houses of 1deal proportlons For mstance In a bungalow of four rooms the l1v1ng room should occupy a certa1n per cent of the total floor space W1th these charts the students are enabled to produce a Hoor plan the rooms of wh1ch are not only re1at1vely well proportloned n respect to each other but also ln relatxon to the total Hoof space In the arch1tectural department at McK1nley a student 1S glven a programme and wlthm a certa1n t1me must submxt floor plans of the house spec1fied there1n Th1s teaches h1m to thmk qu1ckly and to or1g1nate Throughout the work the student IS ln the rmdst of a gallery of ever Thlrtx Une lT' ' l x.0 ' A ' ' , - 1 1 . . . . . , . . . . y , . .b Y , . ' . . y - . , ' A' U , . ' tectural study is considered from every standpoint. When a pupil has , . 7 ' s 1 9 1 ' f .... , . 4 7 ' ! U I 9 , . 1 1 1 , - 2 X X ll T fa 155532 xx gg Mix Z K if f I I f 7 fl. X Q Q,gg4...f.... ' w,xI'l'l -+1513 ' fx G ag Q AIJCAR jr N I rX.,7 -tl iw XXX 5X gm X fi M 7DjN A TCXBW xx QQ! V xy Z Q I rf M iiig xf , - , . '- fi Q. , k ffu .- 5 X .gl Ia , 1 'I N My JA-'f V Y K - I N Q1 I, 4 . NX ,JN ' - X , V 5 A .. Qi' ij. ga, -I H l- Al. V 1 TL N E' V 5 4- ' 4 ii X. AI- , 'KM V I pi , itz. . Qi ' - ', N x.J ,ff V M 'M M V X ' H 1' gi' I .A . ,I K. A 3 . f F 5' V . ' , 5 1 Eff? .V g 3. 2 w 'N Q I . ,, 1 L ., N' f U -- , V-f 5 Q VN M, H I ff ' f I Q., ' . W! ' P . w wi 'V ' f 7,1 ' Af- -. '- X 5 1, 1 Ig 315- ' ' . V I x X n Y he . L , A1- ' 1 ' 2 ,f . ' .V 3 , 33:7 ,Q 7 1 1 .5 5 5,51 Z . H h. ,,. , - T M V fx Z fe J ., I :'W g!f' Y V M , W.,K yigfx fri: fl! l V ' 1: . 'rfifavg X ' AX '1yfI !! TESSW -jj .1 y 1 I . Tfv 5 5 K X 1 A N !1 -,Nw K , X , I 1 I X 5, 1 fl Av A X I A- n fag V I ix ' I 'H ' J j ' A ,Q . : 'vw - f ' , 4 X 1' N ' X '- ii- fir' Xfflf ' ' 7,1 , 1' .mg U' Y :5 X gig' .E ,VW ' . Q ' Aa, Y , 'Y' 'A V X: ,, A-T ' '.', xv h 1 I ' 'E - - K H in Ilan.: ' . l ' -1 ,VV - . - ' af 6 ' M ,. f P73940 1i1'Iy- wo THE CARNATION changmg xllustratlons from the pages of the leadmg per1od1cals m att xchxtecture and deslgn and plctures of the worlds masterp1eces ln art and arch1tecture Upon the complet1on of plans and elevat1ons of hrs house a perspec txve to scale IS drawn and thls together w1th the plot plan worked znto a iinal sheet IS rendered 1n Water color From an art1st1c standpomt the work the students are accompllshmg IS remarkable and the dellcacy wlth wh1ch the drawmgs are made may only be judged by actually seemg them An umple work1ng llbrary and an envlronment of sympathy and enthusxasm are of great asslstance ln enabl1ng a student to develop any latent talents he may possess In summ1ng up we may say that the student has recelved at first hand a work1n'g bas1s for the study of archxtecture and a solxd founda t1on on whlch to bu1ld future study Marshall Reed The Beast Hlgh up on one of the desert mountains of the Amerxcan Rockxes two solxtary men an art1st and h1s comrade were spreadmg their blankets just as It was gett1ng rather dark They were not afrald although they knew that occas1onally bears had been seen ln these parts and that they had no protectlon but thelr rlfles If you hear one don t stop to waken me but shoot' was one of the art1st s last remarks before fallmg 1nto a sound sleep It was not long before h1s comrade was also 1n that bllssful state kept mcreasmg unt1l It was qulte a blast However thls d1d not greatly disturb the sleepers so they merely pulled their blankets closer around them and dozed off agam Then heavy ra1ndrops began to fall first very slowly and then ln torrents the thunder roared and Zlg zag lxghtnmg cut the sky Th1s d1d arouse the men but they real1zed that xt would be useless to get up for lf they d1d they would most likely be blown oFf thelr feet then too there was no place to go Almost all their belongmgs mcludmg the large art1st s umbrella whlch they had raxsed as a sh1eld from the wmd had been swept away After the thunder w1th the last great Hash of llghtnmg had d1ed away the art1st heard hxs compamon call hxm 1n a low hurried voxce McClure called he d1d you see that thmg durmg the last Hash? No rephed the art1st I d1dn t see any Well lt s b1g and dark colored S some beast sure as I hve' Look' As he spoke there came another flash and to hxs horror McClure saw a dark, bulky somethlng movmg towards them Both he and his Thxrty Three T A . , . . , . - ' fi- 9 n . . . , - . . S . , , . , y . . u , 9 z . . . D , . V . I Q u a Q I I Y ' l l 66 V 4 !! 3 7 ' . , , . . For a while everything was intensely quietg then a wind arose. It - 9 1 - . I . , 1 ' I 1 ' ' 1 E y . . . ' : , , . . . . . , . . ! , . , .... . v . . . If F! ll ' ' ' YY 3 9 ' H 99 ' ' KK ' 7 Y! 1 1 ' l If ' 7 ' ' !! , - u ' , . Q I 1 S 1 THE CARNATION compamon blazed away wxth therr I'lHCS wh1ch they had kept close beslde them and when the sky was agaln hghtened for an lnstant they saw that the thlng was evldently wounded for It was movmg wxth a very unsteady motlon At the next Hash they saw that zt had disappeared After thls nothlng more was seen of then' v1s1tor although McClure and his comrade kept a vxgllant watch during the remalnder of the night Next morning as soon as they were able the companxons started out wlth loaded TIHES to hunt for the object of the1r firing For a long txme they searched 1n valn as nelther the beast nor any traces of hnm could be found but at last they came upon a large broken umbrella the cloth part of whlch was plentlfully sprinkled wxth shot holes Eleanor Dodson Aud1tor1um Types Some go to see and hear others to be seen and heard The latter often succeed so well that the former fall utterly Some remmd one of Tennyson s brook I chatter chatter as I How To Jom the brlmmlng rlver For men may come and men may go Some go wlth a bored express1on on thexr faces Thelr general att1 tude seems to say that they have seen and heard everythmg worth whxle ages ago in some prevlous mcarnatnon and that nothxng worthy of thelr notlce can be presented now Some look sleepy and try to take naps to make up for sleep lost the nlght before at a party or by calllng on a best glrl or by entertamlng a beau Some mistake seats IH the rear of the balcony for park benches and the electrxc llghts overhead for the moon Some go to eat a belated breakfast for thelr rxsmg tlme forblds eatmg at home Some go to lmprove thelr artlstlc ab1l1ty Wltness the backs of the seats Some go to sharpen the1r wuts by plckmng out all the faults posslble and a few nmposslble of the speaker Some try to snatch every moment to study thelr Hrst hour lesson whlch they have not looked at before Some make the audltorlum the statlon from whlch they depart for frequent journeys to the office on mmportant busmess Some mxght as well be m New York or San Franclsco for all the llll l X . , . 5 O L ' , l 9 l l . . . . H ,, . 9 S , 3 . 1 ! lk 7 7 But I go on forever. 9 7 1 7 ! 9 ' 7 ! , . 7 'Vlj'-l'lI!lll' THE CARNATION attentlon they glve yet when the performance 15 over they applaud voclferously Some try to swell the number of encores for the longer the program is the shorter are the rec1tat1on perlods Some may the1r trlbe mcrease' go to enJoy the th1ngs offered and to get all they can out of th1s Ureat advantage Paul1ne Annm MISSOUTI State Poultry Exper1ment Stat1on The c1ty of Mounta1n Grove IS on the St Louls and San Francxsco Raxlroad about three hundred mlles southwest of St Louxs One travels a few m1les further than that since xt 1S necessary to go vxa Sprmgiield Mrssourl The c1t1zens of Mounta1n Grove gave the land for the experlment tatlon the state supplled the funds Dxrector T E Qu1senberry plann d and developed the poultry plant, and lt IS a real practlcal work1ng poul try plant as well as a dxsplay plant and experlment statxon Where many vxsxtors come from all over the world to vlew the poultry and contest plant It IS necessary to have th1ngs conven1ently arranged for v1s1tors to keep th1ngs splck and span and always m exh1b1t1on condr tlon MISSOUII statlon IS a show plant ln a show me state and xs Mountain Grove IS a small cxty about 1500 feet above sea level and rn the mxdst of the most beautlful section of the Ozark Mountams of M1ssour1 When the c1t1zens of Mountain Grove donated thxrty acres for the Poultry Exper1ment Station about four and a half years ago the land was covered w1th brush and a sadly neglected orchard Today the plant has a well kept orchard green lawns well fenced poultry parks well kept poultry bulldmgs of varrous types neat dr1ves and cemented walks The experxment statlon IS only a short walk from the ra1lroad sta tlon and center of the clty Close by some of the finest resxdences m the town are belng buxlt Poultry seems to be a lrve mterest ln Moun tam Grove and folks there appear to have no objectxon to vxewmg a well kept poultry plant from their front wmdows Enter1ng the statlon grounds the v1s1t comes first upon the resxdence of Dlrector Qu1senberry To the r1ght of th1s IS the large Adm1n1strat1on Bulldmg In th1s bulldmg are the oflices of the dlrector v1ce dxrector and the1r assxst ants the egg room a museum of poultry equlpment and a receptlon hall on the first floor upstalrs are the apartment for the farm superm tendent the laboratorles for pathologlcal and bacterlologlcal work and llul lx A S '1 S , . D . L p . . , . t . D P I s ' , ' , ' . . ' e , - , . ,. . . . , - always on exhibition. 9 7 ' 9 1 ' 1 ' 1 a ' 1 9 l . . . , . - . . . Q 9 ' y 9 . : ' - 7 7 1 y- -'i we THE CARNATION an assembly hall In the basement IS the mcubator cellar equlpped wnth a Candee mammoth lncubator and also the water supply plant In the rear of th1s bulldmg extend the poultry plant of the statxon and the laymg contest plant wxth well arranged drxves and walks Imme dlately ln the rear of the Admmlstratlon Bulldmg IS an orchard glven to brood hens and ch1cks Beyond thls IS a large brooder house equxpped with a Candee system Across the drlve from thls house are the elevator and mxll The elevator has modern equlpment for storxng and handling gram Extendxng on both sldes of the two drxves are the yards and houses devoted to the statxon poultry to growlng ch1cks and to the laymg contest pens Each yard IS plalnly labeled wlth the name of varxety and of the owner Every pen of adult fowls IS mated wlth a good male Whlle the contest flocks are all housed and yarded allke the exper1 ment flocks and growmg ch1cks are housed 1n houses ot varmous types Each house bears a sxgn gxvmg d1mens1ons cost capaclty and the name of the orxgmator All laymg hens on the plant are tray nested Records are kept of all stock The eggs mcubated on the plant are hatched 1n pedlgree trays and the baby ch1cks are banded Records are bemg kept of several generatlons of good layers ln the leadlng var1et1es Breeders hav1ng pens 1n the 1ay1ng contest have the opportun1ty to sell eggs from thelr contest pens paymg a normal prlce to the statlon for the eggs The statlon iills the orders packs and shxps the eggs The MISSOUTI State Poultry Experxment Stat1on runs demonstra txon trams to teach poultry husbandry and conducts poultry mstttutes whlch mclude lectures and demonstratlons Th1s of 1tself IS a b1g under takmg nn a blg state 11ke M1ssour1 where consxderable dlstances must be covered between demonstratlons At the Stat1on there ns much research and experlmental work under way It xs a great pleasure to know that 1n the show me state we have a State Poultry Experlment Stat1on that IS a cred1t to the whole country And It Dxd Thxs story was awarded first place 1n the Carnat1on contest Gone are de days when my heart was young and gay Gone are my fr1ends from de cotton Hel s away The sound of a solltary mournful vo1ce came from the dlrectlon of e old servants quarters long deserted and fallmg to rum Uncle Mac hav1ng put up the horse of the young Captam walked slowly along the dusty road to h1s llttle cabln Mammy L1za hrs wxfe had fimshed wlth supper at the Gret House and would be comlng home soon The old man sat on hrs step for awh11e studdm bout ole tzmes Fl I qx . ' 9 , . - , - ' - A ! ! , - . . . . . . ! I 9 . ' ! , . , . l ! ' KK H ' . . as , 7 ' 7 71 ! th ' , ' ' , 7 Y ! ! ' ' Cl 75 ' ' ' KC ' ! 9 ' !!. ' . D I ' nil' 5'-. if Il HE CARNATION and presently he began smgmg It was the sound of h1s song melodlous but mournful that floated up to the old fashioned rose garden at the sxde of the jackson s colonxal home A young gxrl w1th dark ha1r and eyes walked slowly down the wxde steps of the whxte p1llared veranda The moon llght showed clearly her damty wh1te dress and a bunch of whlte roses at her belt By her sxde walked a young cavalry oflicer tall and handsome xn hrs dark umform wxth clanklng sword and spurs S1lently they strolled across the lawn and 1nto the rose garden The man spoke first But Ann you wouldn t be leavmg here for good I know that but you dont understand the grrl turned away her head I just cant marry an army officer Why look how It IS now she exclarmed you must leave here 1n the mormng so you can get back to your reglment for some dreadful campalgn when you had much better be here' She stopped suddenly They had reached the old dlal rn the center of the garden and the man leaned aga1nst xt whxle the g1rl stood near partly 1n the shadow of an overhangmg bough Well Ann do you thmk you w11l change your m1nd9 Somethmg ln h1s voxce caused the grrl to start I don t know I haven t changed It much s1nce Chrrstmas But xt mlght change 1tself you know Ph1l Im sorry she added abruptly when you come back next txme perhaps I can say what you want me to Are you sure you are not gomg to get wounded or-or anythmgl' She was suddenly frxghtened by the 1dea I hardly thmk I would mrnd a wound or two rf I could have you to nurse me He sm1led shghtly Phnl don t she saxd sharply If you make them brxng you where I can get to you of course Ill come and nurse you If 1t comes to real war I may enl1st w1th the Red Cross as I ve told you before I mlght protest a a1nst that declsxon of yours rf I thought It would do any good but as mammy Llza says M1ss Ann s turrlble sot m her ways when she mek up her mme' You neednt try to pretend that Im the only stubborn one the grrl rephed laughmgly as they walked back to the veranda Your mammy always sa1d marse Phxl sho were one stubborn chlle when he wanted ter be' Gally she bade h1m good mght tellmg hlm she would be up wxth her father and mother to see hrm off rn the mormng -s Pk wk Ik The Mexlcan war raged and the lxsts of wounded and dead were long Some were m1ss1ng others were prrsoners of war No news could be passed from the troops rn the mterlor and the hospltals along the Thntg Seven 1 Y - 1 , - , . 1 1 it 1 ' YY 1 1 65 7 57 ' 1 1 Si ' 7 ' ' if 1 ' 1 1 . H . . 1 1 1 1, - . . 1 , . ,L . . . ,, . 1 1 - H , , . . . . - - - v H 1 - 1 1 1 Sm ' 1 1 - 1 11 H . . . ,, . . K5 ' 7 77 ' LL ' 1 1 - , . 1 1 - ' ' 1 31 1 1 - U U . . . b . , . , . . 1 1 1 ' Y !! SC 3 9 V9 7 . . . M , . ' 6 ' 1 ' 1 5 1 11 . . . . . . . ' 1 1 . , . THE CARNATION border were full to overflowmg Among the names of the wounded appeared that of Capt Phxllp R Stuart reported shot through the rlght shoulder Ann Jackson stepped through the long French wmdow of the lxbrary and went swlftly down the path to mammy Lxzas cabm The old woman was sxttmg near the door and Ann sat down on the step puttmg her head m her nurse s lap What s de matter honey am t yo hear frum Marse Phil yet? Well doan yo worry yo purty head case he am t dead an he cumln back soon too Chile he ben saym eber sence he s llttle dat he gw1ne marry Mlss Ann when he grow up an he am t gwme let nobody klll hmm fo he do xt nuther Marse Stuart tole Unc Mac when he went dere de oder day dat dey done sent Marse Phll home ter g1t well Mammy was convmcxng and although Ann rose without answering her face was brxghter Mammy she sa1d w1ll you come up and stay at the house to mght with mother? She lsnt very well Lawd honey course Ill come right along ln a m1nn1t And as Ann went back towards the garden she heard the old nurse mumbllng to herself and movmg around ln the cabm The g1rl walked slowly along the path to the rose garden She had no 1ntent1on of golng there but her feet seemed drawn on as by a magnet When she came 1n slght of the old d1al a tall figure lean1ng agamst It caused her to start vxolently Then as she sa1d afterwards havmg once started she could do nothmg but go on She s1mply could not stop wxth l1ght qulck steps she went straight toward the dxal The solltary figure turned and no moonllght was needed to show the radlant look on h1s face He held out h1s left arm and Ann w1th a slckenxngly smkxng feelmg reallzed that the rlght sleeve was empty What she d1d not realize was that the sleeve was empty because the arm was bandaged ln a slmg and covered by the coat Ann he sa1d softly and she went to h1m Phll she crxed desperately please don t d1e before I can tell you Phil m a rush of words I sald lt mlght change xtself and lt dldl And then they both laughed from pure Joy Frances Worth Hxs De11verance fThls story was awarded first place 111 the O :ta contest NE summer mormng a young man and a glrl stood upon the shore of Donwellyn Bay m Scotland gazing sllently out to sea Don -t 6 wellyn Bay was a beautxful httle place full of the rugged beauty of Scotland The waves danced agamst the hxgh cl1ffs whlch II tx Tn, v . . , . . . , . ! . . , , . li ! ' 9 Y ' n 9 - v Y 9 9 ' Y ! ' 7 Q ! . . , , . . . ' 9 v - v - - - v 1 - l ! ' ! . . ,, . . ' ' I 7 i ' ll S! ' Il ' ' 1 ! ' ' Y !D ll 7 9 ' ' ' ' 93 7 1 ' Y , . 1 1 v ' 7 D , . Y ' 9 ! . . . . , . 9 ll 37 ' ' 3 1 ' C6 ' U! ' KC I ' ! 1 . ,, . H . . . . . . ,, ! 7 7 ' , Y . . . .Q . ,. D wmv ' ' A lies'--51' ' ' .u..:n , ' 7 lil' j- '.' 'hi THE CARINATION towered far above the beach Farther back were long stretches of hllls covered wlth the beautrful purple heather and here and there could be seen the straw thatched roof of some old farm house To an unskllled person It was an xdeal day but the experlenced eyes of the young man on the shore percelved dlsturblng slgns There w1ll be a heavy storm tomght Ahce he sa1d turmng to the 1rl at hrs s1de Then questloned the glrl anxlously that means that you wlll be at your cruel work agam The man was s1lent and after a moment s pause the gxrl continued We must come to an understandmg Donald I can never become the wlfe of a man who l1ves at the expense of other l1ves If I had known before that you were a member of that dastardly band I should not have consented rn the first place You must choose between It and me But Allce the man replmed lt 1S xmposslble for me to do this It IS not the way of the Vaughans to break the1r word and I swore to my father when I was but a lad that I would remaln true to the band until the day of my death or as long as lt should exist Then Donald I am afraxd xt must be good bye tear dlmrned eyes as he d1sappeared around the cllff She was a typlcal Scotch lassle wxth auburn ha1r and eyes of blue and her face seemed merry even 1n her sadness Poor glrll she had a sad l1fe for her father Col1n Duncan who 1n every day l1fe was a well to do farmer was at nlght the leader of a band of wreckers who worked so darmgly and so ouletly that they were belxeved by superstxtlots people of the sur rounding county to be supernatural bemgs and no one dared to molest them Allce had one brother a dellcate lad of Hfteen who was the darlmg of hrs father s heart But upon the death of the1r mother Hugh had been sent to South Amerlca for h1s health and Allce was l1v1ng alone wlth her father 1n the1r home near the seashore She had just learned that her lover whom she loved dearly through a foolxsh vow made ln h1s youth was bound to her father s band and she felt as lf she could not bear the new sorrow Slowly she retraced her steps to the house to contmue her work wlth a heavy heart That nlght the sky became overcast wlth heavy clouds and as Allce lay 1n bed she could hear the wmd Slghlflg around the cllffs and the ram beatmg agamst the wmdow She was accustomed to heavy storms and usually they d1d not dlsturb her but tonlght she could not rest She tossed and turned restlessly wlthout hndlng any relxef and when about mxdmght she heard her father s step on the stalrs she hastlly threw on Th IN Wlne Y ' I 7 1 1 Y I U. . . b . S, ,. . . . ,, . 7 Y Y 9 i ' BL ' , . ,G . ,, . . . . . 9 D 7 ' 5 - ' as , . ll ' ' Il s 9 ' ' The man turned silently away, and the girl stood watching him, with - . , . . ' . . y .. . , 3 . ' ' . I Y . 1 ' ' ' 1 Y . 1 . y ' 3 7 . , . ' 9 Y Q . , . . . . , , . . . , . 7 9 . . v . I y . . . , , . . , . . Y THE CARNATION her clothes and followed h1m to the beach for she seemed to hear a vo1ce w1th1n her repeatmg over and over Go' they w11l need you' As the glrl approached the beach she could see lanterns Hashmg here and there through the ram l1ke Erellzes as the men moved to and fro and as she rounded the cllffs she saw the great beacon light gleammg steadrly through the storm to lure 111 fated shlps on to the sharp rocks Sud denly a breathless s1lence fell over the groups of watchers for far out to sea there was seen the lxght of a sh1p Nearer and nearer It came unt1l the form of the sh1p could be clearly dlscerned through the gloom On she came towards the lur1ng beacon entlrely 1nnocent of the dread ful fate awa1t1ng her Suddenly there was a s1cken1ng crash as she was dashed onto the cruel rocks and ln a moment all was nn confuslon the shouts of the wreckers mrnglmg wlth the shr1eks and groans of the drowmng In the hurry no one heard the cry of horror from the fngure crouched 1n the shadow of the rocks The wreckers sprang foward mto the water the1r 1ron bars ready to Stflke down any of the sh1p s passen gers who should succeed 1n reachmg the shore for 1n then' trade they dared leave no one al1ve to tell the tale of thelr shlpmates sad fate As Captaln Colm sprang 1nto the water he saw a hand stretched toward h1m for a1d and heard a fa1nt cry for help He llfted the 1ron bar to strlke mercllessly when suddenly hrs arm was sexzed 1n a strong grasp and he heard Donald Vaughan s vo1ce shout1ng xn his ear Dont man dont strlke' Dont you recognlze your own son? The 1ron bar fell harmlessly 1nto the sea and the captam selzed the lad ln h1s arms and bore h1m to the beach He la1d h1m gently down xn the shelter of the rocks and peered eagerly 1nto the boys face Sure enough It was h1s boy h1s own dear son but oh' how ghastly looklng and oh how motronless he lay upon the sand Long moments of s1lence passed as the father bent over h1s chlld do1ng all 1n h1s power to restore slgns of l1fe Not a sound was heard from the group of men wh1ch had now gathered about thelr leader They stood ln awe and fear these dauntless men for never before had they seen such a look of agony on the1r captaxn s face Thelr mlnds were so dazed that none of them except Donald Vaughn notlced Al1ce push her way through them to her brother s sxde Suddenly there was a famt st1r the boys eyes opened slowly and he gazed vacantly from one face to another A look of recogmtxon flashed across h1s face as h1s eyes met those of h1s father and he said famtly with a feeble smlle I wanted to surprlse you father and I guess I succeeded dxdn t I? A slgh of rel1ef broke from the anxlously wa1t1ng men and a cry of Forty 1 . Cf ' ,, 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 , - - 1 1 . . . . . . , 1 9 . . . , , . 1 , . . . . l as 1 . 9 ' 9 ' 11 , , . . ' , 4 9 1 1 v - ' 1 1 - Y Y 3 . . , . . . , . . . . 0 , : 1 9 . , . , . .6 ' ' 5 ,Y 7 , Y ' , THE CARNIATION joy escaped the father as he lnstened to the words of hrs son After a few srlent moments he arose and turned to hls comrades Boys h amd untxl tonxght I never reallzed how terrlble my sm has been But 'now through my own chxld I have been shown the horror of our work We have sxnned so xrrevocably agamst God and mankmd that we can never reparr the mlschxef but I am golng to do my best From now on I ann gomg to l1ve a clean llfe and try to avert the drsgrace I have brought upon my chlldren And I want you to do the same boys Won t vou for old txme s sake? Tears were 1n the eyes of more than one of the men as they gave thexr w1ll1ng consent for down 1n the hearts of these rough men was a great tenderness for thexr capta1n and hrs chlldren Only one man s vo1ce was absent from the chorus of assent Donald Vaughn had hastxly walked over to where Al1ce stood apart Al1ce he sa1d d1d you hear what your father sand? I am free at last W11l you have me now? As the glrl s answer fell upon the eager ears of the man the moon Lurst through the clouds enrlchmg the sea the rocks and the group on the shore Wlth her glorrous llght The storm was over and a calm beau Dor1s Talbot TO YOU Wherever rn thxs selfish world of ours There glows a llttle heavenly spot of love Untrammeled by the folhes and the fears Unsullled by the trouble and the tears To care unknown There blest by hope and laughter evermore Eternal realm of beauty and of peace Abode of naught save sweetest joys d1v1ne The dwell1ng place of llght and love o thme Shall I End home G D G 93 1. 0' I I On 1 , y . . . . . .. y., e Q , H . . . . . I '- 1 I v 1 ' 9 ' - I l . . , . y ' I I! 7 . . . . , . IS ' !! ' Li ' ' Y Q ' ' 75 - , ,Q I .QI 7 Y ' S 7 tiful peace reigned over Donwellyn Bay. 1 7 1 l ! 7 7 Q . . , . . , . V .9 Q. E it - V I. 'V' GG f f X- - 1 f 1 I I nl Y- :- Fl HE CARNATION The Soul of Bed El Dareb Over the desert bleak and drear Courses the sand storm through the mght Wrapped wlthm the dread storms centre Shrlekmg welrd and wxld and shrxll Is the soul of hlm who trled Through the powr wlthm hxm vested Bemg son of shelk Man Dareb To destroy the Arab umon And thus plottmg he offended Allah ruler of the world D1e thou shalt not everlastmg Shall thy soul the desert roam And keep v1g1l o er the unxon Of the people thou st betrayed So spake Allah god of natlons And the soul was Vlgllant And the people of the desert Fear thls soul of Bed El Dareb For should any utter treason Punlshment w1l1 be thelr lot Yet not one knows what shall happen What thls pumshment shall be For the soul IS e er xn darkness In h1s tent s1ts Abhou Kalem And IS flattered by hls servants Great thou art Oh' Abhou Kalem All Arabla knows thy name All who hear It fear lt master Great IS the powr thou wxeldest here Nay' dont Hatter me wxth greatness Thls one tribe IS all I rule None outside thxs fear my name Abhous face for one brlef moment Shows a m1en of dlscontent Then It brlghtens and hrs eyes Blaze w1th an unholy lxght By ambxtxon hes enilamed But then why not make them fear lt? Of Arabla Ill be kmg Y . . , ! 7 , . . . Y ' n ! , . as ' ' ! . . , . ! 39 3 9 ' ' 1 H 7 . . g . , . All have heard, but none have seen. i K4 I ' 1 .P ! 7 9 ' O ' Il Cl 7 ' . ' Y . . . , . . ,, , . ! . . , Ct ' , . ' ! ' il IHIL CAR NATION Abhou Kalem shelk thus speaks And he gathers round about hxm All the elders of the trlbe All obey save one who stays To blve Abhou warmng faxr Through the mght Full of mxght Comes the sp1r1t Abhou beware Have a care Death comes w1th It Abhou s face w1th anger flushed Then he answered w1th a laugh I ve declded to be kmg And I w1ll despxte all ghosts In the mornmb all was ready For the conquest to set out But when Abhou s tent was entered He could not be found w1th1n Then dld terror strlke the people All prostrated faclng Mecca Called on Allah to forglve Then from the w1r1d wh1ch passed above them Came the vorce of Bed El Dareb The traltor s pay Is death alway Fred Kramer ATV Tn F . , ,, , , , 7 1 . 1 I A lv 9 ! O. . . y . ' ' ! , - 7 ' I Tell me not such fairy tales, , . . U 1 7 , D V . 7 it ' ' THE CARNIATION LIGHTHOUSES ON THE SEA Llfe IS a great boundless sea It IS studded w1th beautlful lslands called the Islands of Happlness 'lhe world glves each one of us a shlp and wlth lt we must seek our 1sland To day you are young full of lxfe and amb1t1on you gaze out over the sea and reallze that to morrow you w111 be left alone upon the shlp You must gulde It and gulde It alone How well have you studled Llfes Chart? Have the authors of D1me Novels mapped the Qea of Lxfe for you Oh they w1ll lead you so far adrxft and the l1ttle xsland that you seek w1ll never be found' As you sa1l great wlnds wxll arlse jealousy Anger Hatred Greed They w1ll beat a alnst your shxp and you w11l End that you are lost ln the storm But look there IS a stream of light comlng from a Llght house and now you see that the e are many such llghts comlng from many such L1 hthouses The keepers are so w1ll1ng to help you and you have so long neglected thelr warmng The keepers are very old Some are hundreds of years old They are the great Masters of Lxterature Go to them They gxve pure thoughts The path whlch they pomt out IS the only one that leads to the lsland you seek In th1s modern age we are always ln a hurry So busy chasmg the dollar and keeplng up w1th the dlfferent movlng plcture serlals that we have no t1me to read anythlng that IS beautlful and elevatlng If you should not use your hand ln tlme xt would become useless If you allow your sense of the noble and beautlful to l1e dormant It w1ll d1e yes It w1ll d1e just as surely as the llttle caged blrd that IS com pelled to look upon parlor luxurles mstead of trees and flowers and God s blue skles I once heard a man say that he cared nothmg for any books but those deallng wlth travel Such a book as Les Mxserables had no attrac txon for h1m because there was too much love nn xt I cannot express how very much I pxty that man Let us hope that there IS a b1t of sentlment mn every heart from the busy man of affalrs to the t1m1d lxttle maiden Let us qult the loathsome experlment of l1v1ng wxthout love True the sentlment 1n your heart can not be turned lnto dollars and cents but what are rlches to a bare cold heart that has no sympathy wlth r1uman1ty9 In thls life all that we galn ln substance can never pay for what we throw away ln sentlment S many of us find that truth too late The day IS done so soon' The years follow one another ln qu1ck I I l v v I , A .H , . . , . . I I ' 1 y . , . . . , H . ,, s. . m , 1 n 9 1 ' . 0' . . . , 23 I , D r . . . , . .U . . D ' 7 . . H . ,, . . . . . . 7 . U . . . ' , . ' 9 1 , I - , . ' ' AL ' U1 s ' ' u ' - wx Y ' Y , Y . 0 ur 5' our THE CARNATION successlon and T1me urges us on and on Dont let another day pass wxthout vxsxtlng a keeper of the Lighthouse one of the Masters Let each day that drxps from the glass of T1me be a well spent one Let a wlse old book and a glance above complete a well spent day Kathleen B Hutter Good Bye There s a call we all must hear ln thls sprlng t1me of the year When the days dawn new on llfe Blddlng us away away to a land of brighter day Fuller joys more lastmg strlfe And our race IS not run but IS hardly begun The course that we all must close For the end of the fun finds the set of the sun Where the t1de of eternlty flows So were sxngmg to thee McK1nley Hlgh May our lxves be strong and true As we forge our way on the old tra1l on our own tra1l the out tra1l As we forge our way on the Long Traxl the tra1l that xs ever new Honor learnmg peace and love Speedxng us upon our way wtth the prayer that all must pray God be wxth thee fare thee well Tis hard to part at the last true frlend And the way ahead looms cold Let us know where e re our paths may trend We have honored that falth of old So we re stghlng good bye McK1nley Hlgh We w1ll thlnk of thee dream of thee long T111 we come to the end of the old tra1l of our own tra1l the out tra1l Txll we come to the end of the Llfe Trall the tra1l that IS ever new Cwlth thanks to Kxplmgj G D G I t 1 Q . y . , , Li ' - Y: S Y S Y I I , . Y , . . . . I 1 1 Thou hast showered us with all that our hearts should hold in thrall- y . 9 I ' KC ' , 'Y , . , . . 9 Y Z ! y Y ' 9 , l n 1 9 , . , . g . fm' Y- iv, THE. CARNIATION THE OITA MASQUE The O 1ta Soclety IS justly brauhed by the favorable comments that have been made upon 1ts masque Its members feel a sort of commun1ty 1nterest ln It that IS a l1ttle unusual for wh1le the ood taste and 1ma 1 natlon of Kathleen Hutter was the most 1mportant factor and Gave Grace and final shape to the masque as well as Huent express1on everyone was welcomed to part1c1pat1on 1n 1ts development The play brew amongst the g1r1s and rece1ved touches from var1ous sources 1n 1tS executlon Grateful apprec1at1on IS offered to those who helped espec1ally to MISS Watt and Mlss Garesche and to MISS Buss and M1ss Ravahe The soc1ety IS Glad that lt had the opportumty to present mterpre tatlons of so many of Shakespeares hero1res before an audrence so apprec1at1ve as that wh1ch gathered 1n the Aud1tor1um on the evenmv of May the thlrteenth ff' 'plans J THE STORM A Translatzon from Vergzl Aeolus wh1r11ng the poxnt of h1s spear Struck open the cage of the wmds Eurus and Notus and Afrrcus fierce Rushed forth as an army arrayed Blew o er the land ln a w1ld hurrxcane And ploughed up the sea from 1ts depths Clankmg of chains follows shoutmg of men And clouds snatch the day from the1r sight Nlght rules supreme ln darkness that broods The skles roll wxth thunder and 11ght Paulme Ann1n X 1 7 ,. . . . . O. . . . . . . . O . U.- ' c o 1 -Q :D 5 Y . . . . . G , . , 1 . . , . . . b - - , . . 1 1 D 'I1 . -F A S31- -'ggzell Yi N' 1 1- . -. . f kai Ii . X , Y- ., 1 , 1,53 2' X N 1 '.'. AI ' l' P1 :ab f fnuh 6' 9 :' .gz - U. 'ti 1 .1 tk Y 9 I 9 I , . . . 7 ! - . 9 l-'or ty-Sig Foxtx sox en ll-IE CARNIATION DIXIE I wxsh I was ln the land of cotton Ole tlmes dar are not forgotten Look away look away' away D1x1e land' In DIXIE land where I was born 1n Early on one frosty mormn Look away' look away' away D1x1e land' Den I wxsh I was 1n DIXIE Hooray' Hooray' In DIXIE land I ll take my stand To 11b an d1e ln D1x1e Away, away away down South 1n DIXIE Away away away down South 1n D1x1e W1ll we ever dlscontlnue smgmg th1s song Never I hope But are the hlstory of th1s song and xts composer known as well as the song? I do not thlnk they are The author of D1x1e was Dan1el Decatur Emmett He was born October 29 1815 1n Mount Vernon Ohlo a small town near the center of the state When thlrteen years old he jomed the orchestra of Stxck neys Crrcus 1n C1nc1nnat1 Th1s so called orchestra was composed of orchestra but at thls tlme It was consldered qulte a line thmg A year or two later he Jolned Mlller s Caravan the headquarters of whlch were also ln C1nc1nnat1 The organlzatlon had wxth It an Eastern band of muslclans who took an mterest mn the lad and taught him to play by note the Hfe v1o11n and pmccolo Later he learned to play the drum and at one t1me was consldered the most celebrated life and drum player before the publ1c H1s work 1n the company was not entxrely wlth the orchestra H often sang comlc songs mostly darkey tunes and accompanied these wlth hoe downs and walk arounds He often composed h1s own verses to some popular a1r whlch furmshed a great deal of amusement for the aud1ence One of these compos1t1ons was Old Dan Tucker Th1S Emmett always consldered h1s best composltlon It was 1n th1s manner that DIXIE was glven to the publ1c The manager of this Caravan always 1ns1sted that a man should hold hlmself ready to compose some thmg new whenever he was called upon to do so I c rtx Flght CC 77 Y S . , ' ' . 7 . ' 1 . , v . , . . . . , . . . , Y 7 ' 7 , . 66 ' ' 55 ' V 7 ' 9 . ! , . . . . . . - two violins, a bugle, and a bass drum. Quite different from McKinley's , . . . . , Y V ! , . 1 . . . . . e . , , . ' KL -I 97 KK 57 ' . , . . . . . ,, ,, . , . . . . I . . ,, . . ,, . . THE CARNJATION One Saturday n1,,ht the mana er told Emmett to make a hooray and br1n lt to rehearsal Monday Emmett cast around and usxn hnally as h1s theme the saym of mlnstrels xn wlnter I wxsh I was ln DIXIC he developed that melody 1nto the words and tune exactly as they are sur o day Emmett hved unt1l 1904 He dled poor and dlsheartened 1n the same place where he was born DIXIC was Hrst used as a Confederate melody when jefferson Davls lady about the cho1ce of a tune anl she selected D1x1e because It was so pretty and catchy So the Southern presxdent was led to h1s oath of ofnce by the stra1ns of D1x1e DIXIE was one of the greatest xnfluences on the battleneld and a tavorxte melody ln t1me of peace S If you want to drrbe way sorrow Come and hear thls sonb to morrow Look away' look away' DIXIE land' Den hoe It down an scratch the grabble To DIXIE land I m bound to trable Look away' look avx ay' D1x1e land' Dorothy Hew1tt QQ? Forty N me .U U ., .. -. O ' g W . , , g , . g . , ' Lg T. ' . ' 1 7 was inagurated at Montgomery. The bandmaster consulted a young , , K' ' tt ' ' 99 bt ' ' FY ' . . . ' O . , , . s O, ' . ix 7 Tl-IE CARNATION THE TORTURES OF A NIGHT M john Astor Chlchestor was a tall man portly and dxgnlhed 1n every look and movement He was about to depart for Europe even though war was raglng there at 1ts hottest Busrness IS buslness war or no war was hlS oft repeated statement He had come from Cleveland to New York wxth a frrend who was more t1m1d than he Aren t you afra1d that youll be torpedoed by a submar1neP asked the frlend No my frlend busmess 1S busmess war or no war and the sub mar1nes dare not attack the Amerxcan shlps I am not afra1d he had answered rn h1s slow busmess llke tone The hour for the departure of h1s sh1p had been postponed and he dld not know the exact t1me for Salllng so he went on board 1n t1me for the former sa111n hour Th1s hav1n been at eleven oclock at n1ght he went to bed thmk 1ng of h1s frrends dlscourse on sea s1ckness He had never been s1ck before so surely the sea would not affect hxm There was cause for a great p1tch1ng of the boat however as he had been rowed out to It 1n Some hours later he was rudely awakened by f1nd1ng 1-nmself thrown out of h1s berth Slowly he crawled back to bed wonderlno lf lt were a submarlne wreck or storm Strange he felt too weak to get up to see he didn t seem to care whether lt was anythmg serlous or not Sea s1ckD Certalnly not' He was not sea S1Ck It must be a wreck Then h1s head began to ache and he forgot everythlng except that he was sea sxck Quite decldedly he John Astor Chrchestor was sea slck The agony of the mght would never pass he thought but when the dawn broke he dressed went out and found hlmself too weak to cllmb the stalrs to the deck After a sllght attempt at breakfast whlch he srmply could not force hlmself to eat he went up the steps to the deck looked out to where he thought the land had been last nlght and saw that the boat was st1l1 r1d1ng at anchor' Phyllls Fletcher left! , v r' , , . ., ! ' 1 J ' l 64 9 ' V ' HY 9 a 1 , ! ' . . . . ,, - 2 7 . . . . , . . . . U ,J . . . U , . . - 5 2 9 . ..,. - . . , . I . 3 9 a small boat, to where it lay at anchor. , . . . , g , . . C , I . , . . . , . 23 ' Q , , 5 ' u ' , : 7 S 9 7 ! , .- , l Q I Tl ' i 'ls' ,. I-'ifty THE CARNATION GERMAN DIE DEUTCHE ABTEILUNG Folgender Aufsatz Wurde von denen d1e von den Schulern der deutchen Klassen und von den M1tgl1CdCfU des deutchen Verems varfasst Worden smd ausgewahlt LIEBET EURE FEINDE Es war an emem schoenen Tag 1m Jum Draussen war alles frlsch denn es ha te am Tage vorher Ueregnet In der klemen Laube hmter dem Haus sass e1ne alte Frau S1e war am Strlcken und schlen tlef ln Gedanken versunken zu se1n Da ertoenten Stlmmen und bald standen zwel kleme Madchen neben 1hr und sprachen O Grossmama W1r haben dlch chor' lan e gesucht Bltte erzahle uns e1ne Geschxchte Sie strelchelte d1e Kmder und sprach ja das wlll lch gerne tun Eben noch dachte lch an dxe schweren Zelten d1e W1r vor etwa zwanzlg jahren durchmachen mussten zur Zelb des Span1sh Amerxkamschen Krleges Wollt 1hr Uern etwas davon horen9 a Uewlss sprachen s1e und nun Env d1e Grossmutter an Der Grossvater hatte Arbelt 1n Mamla sollte nahm er d1e ganze Famllle m1t W1r waren etwa e1n halbes jahr dort da wurde Krleg erklart und der Grossvater wurde 1ns Feld geru fen Ethche Wochen darnach fand e1ne grosse Schlacht statt Der Grossvater war eben 1m Beguff semen Gegner zu erstechen als dleser mederflel und 1hn um Gnade bat Er hatte e1ne Frau und sechs kleme Kmder zu Hause d1e dann um lhren Ernahrer beraubt wurden Der Grossvater hatte M1tle1d mlt 1hm und 11ess 1hn frel M1ttCfWC1lC War der Grossvater 1mmer mehr geehrt Worden und Jetz wurde er zum General gemacht Se1ne Soldaten waren 1mmer sxegrexch denn s1e llebten 1hn und trauten 1hm S1e brachten d1e groessten Opfer fur lhn D1es wussten Se1ne Fe1nde wohl darum machten s1e Jetzt emen Plan 1hn aus dem Wege zu schaffen Emes Abends lag unser General m semem Zelt und schllef denn er hatte den Tag v1el durch gemacht Auf emmal kommt e1n Mann atemlos 1n das Zelt schuttelt den General und sprlcht Kommen Sxe schnell fhehen S1e den Femde wollen Ihnen das Leben nehmen Eben als lch durch mem Feld llef uberhoerte :ch 1hre Plane Kommen Sle schnell Fxfu One 1 . . .' . y f D . . . .. . 2 H , s . . . ,. . . ,, . . . . z H , . . . 7 , . . - . . . i - D -av HJ , D 91 - , 2, . 3 H zu verrichten. Da die Arbeit wenigstens ein Jahr in Anspruch nehmen , . , - 7 , . . . . . Q 5 ' 1 ' s , . 1 . y .. . 1 N . , . . , i . . . .. . . .. . ,, , . . THE CARNATION Aber der General sagte ruhlg Lasst sle nur kommen Wenn s1e sehen, dass 1ch wach bm laufen s1e schon schnell fort W1rk11ch so kam es Als d1e Felnde sahen dass der General wach war und d1e Soldaten berext standen m1t 1hren Flmten waren sxe zu fe1ge um zu kampfen und l1efen schnell davon Der Grossvater dankte dem Mann herzllch da er lhm das Leben gerettet hatte Wer mag vmohl dleser Mann gewesen sem? Kem anderer als der der den Grossvater damals um Grade gebeten hatte Der Grossvater hat me bereut dass er dlesem Mann den Lxebesdlenst erwlesen hat Hatte er das nlcht getan hattet lhr heute vlellelcht kemen Grossvater mehr Amanda Horstmann as .yea GOOD ROADS Good roads have a dlrect bear1ng on our dally l1fe We have the at the present tlme so why do we need good roads One thlrd of the lnhabltants of th1s country l1ve where nelther the steamboat nor raxlroad IS accesslble w1thout good roads Take even the c1ty streets cannot they be classed as very good roads? How many people at the c1ty l1m1ts of a large c1ty would be able to use automob1les to go to and from down town were lt not for these good hxghways? The country IS the means of the wealth of the Unlted States 1n that It produces the raw materlals used 1n manufacturing the foodstuffs The c1ty IS the place where these raw materxals are rece1ved Thus xt IS appar ent that by bulldmg good roads the consumer IS brought nearer the producer and 1n th1s way both the consumer and producer are benefited 1n more ways than one At present good roads extend twenty to thlrty mlles out of St Louis 1n all d1rect1ons People of St Louls would not be able to get fresh garden truck every mormng were It not for th1s How many people would be able to take a dr1ve out twenty or th1rty mlles and be back aga1n ln the same day were It not for good roads? Very few would enjoy these beneflts Thus the scope of economy pleasure and health would be further wlndened by more good hlghways When the present good roads were contemplated the pesslmlsts howled Too many useless, extravagant thmgs now was thexr wall After the work was done these same people were among those to enjoy the resultlng advantages Good roads have proved thelr worth When the lmprovmg of roads IS projected let us all put out shoulders to the wheel and boost for them They mean much to you Charles C Tapscott l lllX Tun Y Y - 1 . : N . i . , . . ,, . . 7 ' ' Y 7 ' Y 7 V . . D . , , . , . 5,31 vgrsffv 1: 1 Nfl nvliilh Al ll-l railroad and the steamboat, the two principal means of transportation , 7 , . V , . 9 1 ' ' sc , . ' as - - Y ' 1 9 INTER CDS VITA VIRGILI P V1fgl11uS Maro natus est 1d1bus Octobr1bus anno septuageslmo ante Chr1stum, ln parvo 0pp1dO And1bus Erat f111us modlcorum paren tlum pater autem f1gu1us erat qu1 vero ln opp1do al1qu1d poterat et 'wros habebat Cremonae et Med1o1an1 studu1t atque XV anno natah suo vlrllem togam acceplt Se 11tter1s, mathematlcls phys1c1s et ph11o soph1ae, dxllgenter contullt Non dublum est qum Vlfg111uS clarlsslmus poeta Latmus Slt Hum: Romam 1ps1 amabant quod 1mmortal1bus verb1s Ulorlam Romae descr1ps1t Una de 11lustr1ss1m1s sententus ln elus celebrx Aenelde est haec VI 846 853 Tu Maxlmus 111e es, unus qu1 nob1s cunctando rest1tu1s rem Excudent alu spxrantla molhus aera credo equldem, vlvos ducent de marmore voltus descrlbent radio et surgent1a Sldefa dlcent tu regere 1mper1o populos Romane, memento, hae tlbl erunt artes, paclsque lmponere morem ,arcere sub1ect1s et debellare superbos Praeter Aenelda V1fgl11US Bucollca et Georglca scr1ps1t Illud opus tr1bus anms hoc septern anms perfeclt Quamquam undeclm annos 1n Aenelde scrlbenda consumpslt eam non perfeclt atque morxens praecepmt ut am1c1, Tucca et Varro eam comburererlt Quod autem non fece runt nam lmperator Augustus eos hunc llbrum edere 1uss1t V1rg111s qumguagmta anos VlXlt fructus am1c1t1a 1mperator1s Au gUSt1 et multorum allorum 111ustr1um Mortuus est m Calabrla Elus rehquxae Neapollm latae sunt atque ln Puteolana V13, non longe ab xlla urbe sepultae sunt Ibl hoc eplgramma legltur Mantua me ger1u1t Calabrl rapuere tenet nunc Parthenope CCC1l'11 pascua, rura, duces Israel Trelman Fxfty Three ' 9 a ' ' . Q . , .... . 5 . . ' ' v 1 ' D A . . .. , , : - . GL ' ' Y b . . , orabunt causas melius, caelique meatus , : . , . . . . . . , G . . ,, , . 7 ' 7 , . ' 7 I ' - . 1 . . . , - , . : ll ' ' 9 Y TI-IE CARNATION EL SHAKESPEARE ESPANOL Hoy el 2 de abrll hace tres clentos anos que salneron de este mundo dos hombrcs mmortales Wxlham Shakspeare fue uno M1gUC1 de Cer vantes Saaw edra el otro En el Campo de las letras cada uno fue el demo mas subhme que ha producldo su raza Y cosa cur1osa las dos lenguas que han Sab1dO S1 b1en manejar estos dos mgemos y que han perfeccxonado como medlos de expres1on artxstlca son las que mgen en el Mundo Nuevo Para la Amerlca Espanola txene Cervantes una s1gn1f1cac1on y una 1mportanc1a que no se explzca a los Norte Amerlcanos No le conslde rarnas nosotros como mas que el creador de aquel fantastlco aunque mtre so1o basta y sobra para proporclonarle una farna sernpxterna en la memo fl de mlllones de almas que hablan su 1d1oma desde MCJICO a la Republxca de Ar entma y desde Espana a F111p1nas G Frazxer ' 5 53' s 1 Fi V IH xftx Pour Zu . , . - . . i . . , 1 . - Y I ' 6 l l A I , , . . ,- pido Caballero andante - Don Quijote de la Mancha. Mas esta obra . A. . . y , , . 2 . - , . . . D Y 1 ,530 W Ae 4 x 9 3 N ' Q, e .,l THE CARNATION The VVash1ngton Un1vers1ty Scholarsh1p GEORGE GRAVES One of the ea er questlons of the last days at McKmley always xs Who won the scholarshlp For whatever other honors may be awarded the Washmbton Umversxty Scholarshlp remams a dlstlnctlon to be devotedly sought and won only by lon and fa1thful effort com blned wxth marked ab1l1ty Thxs year Georbe D Graves carrxes the academ1c pennant It IS some tlme smce one of the boys amed thls honor and McK1nley haxls the day' One member of each braduatm class has the reputatlon of McK1n ley specxally ln h1s care as the scholarshxp wlnner May all the 1deals we hold dear help to prosper th1s latest worker wnth head and heart and hand at our own dlstmbulshed and beloved un1vers1ty ALL ES Helen Luth QSQ Israel Trelman C75 Arlme Prxchard C55 Gladys Jones Q5j Charlotte Mlkulus C65 Ida Parker C6j Gladys Skelley fzj Homer Schroeder fry Ahce Ph1l1pSOH Cry 1- lfty Fwe ,-r---V ---W ---Y , L- .1- 01 . . . 3 Y ,, . Z.. v 0 ' - v cv . G . . . I b ' ' 0 ' cr ' I - o . . . H . . ,, . . . U . . . . 7 I E FEORCE CRAXI s LIST-U X BLDER Busmess Nlana Pl ASSISIIIH Buslness Nlanabel Every year the work necessary to secure ads enough to publlsh the CARNATION IS mcreasmg Thls IS a result of perhaps three cond1t1ons Flrst the advertlsers themselves are 1n many cases cutt1ng down expenses along thls l1ne Second the puplls fall to support the CARNA TION by patronlzlng the advertxsers and mentlonmg the CARNATION fewer so11c1tors As our best workers graduate no one steps lnto filll the vacancy and the few old staff members left have added responslblllty What IS to be done Here right at hand IS a field open a field offermg experlence of great value as well as iinanclal remuneratlon And It seems peculxar that ln a student body of over thlrteen hundred there IS no one wlth sufficlent mdustry and desxre for real busmess tramlng to commence advert1s1ng work for the CARNATION Ask any of the ad staff They wlll tell you that there IS great benefit 1n such work Get them to take you w1th them some t1me when they go after ads Notice the1r methods and then go out yourself and make a stab at It They say that there s always room at the top Here there s room all along the lme for wxllmg workers We have been greatly alded th1s year by Mr Moore who has helped to secure ads and subscrlptlons We have needed just such llvely mter est for a long t1me and we appreclate lt greatly Our thermometer IS one of h1s schemes There are more where that came from Watch for them Flfts in , s 3 Y ! And third, the work has, from term to term, devolved upon fewer and i t A mllbEl.lulCS bij Qi CAPTAINS OF THE TEAMS Football john Krenzer Football 6 Drummond Cloud Baseball 6 Wm Feuerborn Basket ball 6 Frank Palmer Track CSCDIOYD Geo Schuster Track QJLIIIIOTJ 6 C Grlesedleck fenms I5 Walter Haase REVIEW We ve got to beat McK1nley to Wm the champlonshlp Thls remark made by an athlete of another school at a recent athletic con test shows plamly the embarrasslng pos1t1on ln whxch the other schools have been placed by McK1nley s contlnued success ln athletlcs In the last year the four major sports were won by McK1nley A year ago the Semor track team carrxed off the honors at the Interscholastlc Fxeld Meet The Junlor team Hnlshed a strong thlrd ln 1ts d1v1s1on Soon after McK1nleys baseball team nosed out Central s ln an excrtmg ten mnmg game 7 6 Thls game gave McK1nley her th1rd consecutlve baseball champlonshlp In tenms last fall McK1nley Fmxshed fourth Our football team romped through the season w1thout losmg a game The basket ball team followed up wlth a champlonshlp These teams w1th the exceptlon of baseball have been well supported Surely such teams as these deserve the support of all McK1nley puplls Flfty we n - f, '15 ml., ,,,, 1, , - P . , '32 ' y '1 9 TN - I I Q , ' . f QV, 'iw ' .Engl u 'f ,J l ,-L.: rfw 4.-25 --, w , 1,- Q fs. Nici,-.f F., 'I , , ' '-Vr71'.f 1' 'I N, ff: fel f ev ix . 14 gg f --- 11 V4.0 M 'M - - fy ' ,- 5:2 ' 4 ,311 J f f 9 , I5 g-.gA... ..Y... - ......-........-. --A- -f--- - - , 'I su.. ....e..... ...,.-... , .,...... .... - - - - , , I -, ..,.,. ,,,,.,I..,,.-,,. , .,.. ,,,., .u,.,.. - . - , 'I -W ,..,.. -H .....,, ,......,.... - --, ld--- ' 9 , 16- ..,,.....,.... ,,...., ,,,.,.,, - , 7 .c... . , 1 , .,.,.,e ,,.,,, , ,,,,,-,,, e,-, ....,.. - e-- . , ,s..,,,,.,e.. , .v., 7 , ,- , A. ,.,...,,.,,.... e - F - f - an 1 U . . - - nv ' .. , - Y . , . . . . . . . . , , - , - . V . y ' ' . . ' '-I' v. TI-IE CARNIATION TRACK PROSPECTS Although McK1nley won the sen1or track meet last year by a safe rnargm she was defeated ln the jumor events Under the recently adopted rules the comb1ned sen1or and Junlor polnts Wlll determme the w1nner although the meets w1ll be run off separately as heretofore In th1s manner a well balanced all round team both Jumor and sen1or w1ll be necessary to carry off the honors McK1nley has such a team The Senlor team IS espec1ally strong MUfCh1SOH a newcomer IS very fast ln the spr1nts Leffler bCSldCS part1c1pat1n 1n several field events w1ll run 1n the spr1nts and hurdles In the quarter and half m1le Schuster IS w1thout an equal LaMont 1n the quarter and Pfeffer 1n the half are next ln l1ne Ronat and Schwerdtman Wlll run the hurdles wh1le 1n the mlle we have M Reed Peterson and Newman Suycott Leffler Wallace and Schwerdtman w1ll make competltlon keen 1n the Jumps Chllds Needham and Leffler are pole vault1ng ln reat style whlle Deeds Cloud and Feuerborn w1ll see that no po1nts are lost 1n The Jumor team w1ll have Grlesedleck B Reed Wlner Baumhoff and Wallenbrock 1I'1 the spr1nts and hurdles Hummell Mlller Hammer ste1n F1schell Russell and Palllou ln the longer runs and FFICS Gerber Wallenbrock and Fltzgerald 1n the welghts The other events are equally well cared for Heres hopmg our teams annex the 1nterscholast1c champlonshlp CAPT GEO SCHUSTER fly I gut 1 9 - ' . , A . ' 9 ' 9 a I ' l a 9 . , g y - - s ' 7 r , . . I . 1 . - , . , 7 . . y - . . g 1 , . . i the weights. . . . . . , 1 , . , . 9 1 s ' , 9 7 7 3 , . . . If ' f 1 ' i ,,, if-E nl Fl '- Ci l I 11? 1, '-UU-. ' UNM 5 0--5, 1 Fltty Nme THE CARNATION THE INDOOR MEET McK1nley made an excellent showmg ln the 1nterscholast1c contests held at the M1ssour1 Athletrc Assoc1at1on Relay Carmval at the Col1seum on March 25 Out of sxx events our boys captured four firsts and two seconds Schuster brought the hess cup to McK1nley for a year by h1S splen dld runmng 1n the half m1le finlshmg well ahead of O Connor of Central and Balley of Yeatman In the sen1or relay race Ronat Leffler LaMont and Murchxson proved themselves superlor to thelr opponents Central Yeatman Soldan and Cleveland finlshed 1n the order named In the 6oo yard run LaMont beat out a large field runmng the d1s tance 1n the fast txme of 1 mmute 23 215 seconds The semor fifty yard dash was won by Irland of Webster who de feated Leffler ln a halr ralsmg finlsh The Junlor fifty yard dash was won by B Reed of McK1nley but the Junior relay team met 1ts superlor lfl Soldan The above IS an example of what IS to be expected of Coach Castle man s charges th1s year It looks llke another blg year ln track McKINLEY vs WEBSTER McK1nley opened the 1916 track season on Apr1l 29 w1th a defeat at the hands of Webster Groves Hlgh School 64 1 f3 51 2 3 The county boys scored heav11y 1n the field events and also captured first place 1n the m11e low hurdles and 222 yard dash Murchxson sprang a surpr1se by runnmg the 1oo yard dash 1n I0 2 5 seconds defeatxng Irland Websters star sprmter After be1n forced to do h1s best 1n the quarter Schuster came back and won the half m1le won the1r events Summary 1oo yard dash Murch1son McK1nley first Irland Webster second Rountree Webster th1rd T1me IO2f5 Runnmg broad Jump Booth Webster first Leffler McK1nley sec ond Hart Webster th1rd Dlstance zo feet 4561I1Ch6S 44o yard dash Schuster McK1nley first Hammann Webster -ec ond LaMont McK1nley th1rd T1me 542 5 Runnmg h1gh Jump Rountree Webster Leffler McK1nley and Suycott McK1nley tled wlth a Jump of 67 1nches each 120 yard hzgh hurdles Leffler McK1nley first Booth Webster second Ronat McK1nley th1rd T1me 174 5 One m11e run Spencer Webster first Schall Webster second T1me 5 O3 Sxt w , 1 . . . . . . , ' 1 . 1 1 1 . - 1 1 - , , . ' - . . . , , , . - , - ' 1 , . . . . , xf ' . , X' . . , . . O, 9 U ' B , - with ease. Leffler, in the high hurdles, and Child, in the pole vault, also ' - W . 1 . 9 3 1 1 1 , , ' . ' -: , . ' i 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 ' 1 , 1 I ' ' W 1 . 1 1 1 1 5 ' . ' ' ' T. f , Y 7 ' ' V ' A ' ' W 1 1 1 1 , . , . . . . 1 ' . i 1 1 1 1 1 . ' ' ' -1. f 9 1 1 1 ' ' ' W 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 ii y THE CARINATION Pole vault Chlld McK1nley first Booth Webster Gerber McK1n ley and Leffler McK1nley t1ed for second Dlstance-9 feet 81nches 220 yard dash Irland Webster first Rountree Webster second Murchlson McK1nley thlrd Tlme 232 5 Shot put Kremer Webster first Deeds McK1nley second Feu r born McK1nley thxrd Dlstance 45 feet 25 mches 220 yard low hurdles Booth Webster first Irland Webster sec ond Ronat McK1nley thxrd Trme 272 5 880 yard run Schuster McK1nley first Skmner Webster second Spencer th1rd Tlme 2 0 Dlscus hurl Kremer Webster first Deeds McK1nley second Feuerborn McK1nley third Dlstance 107 feet II mches 880 yard relay Webster first McK1nley second Tlme 1 364 5 MCKINLEY vs PRINCIPIA McK1nley showed her full strength on May Ilth when Pr1nc1p1a was defeated 59 31 McK1nley won first place 1n every event except the pole vault and the hlgh Jump whlch was a t1e Schuster won the half mlle easlly whlle Reed galloped home first ln the mile Murchlson Was closely pressed by Colv1n 1n the Ioo and 220 yard da hes Deeds carrled off the shot put and dlscus throw and Ronat won the broad Jump Suycott t1ed for first place 1n the hngh Jump and LaMont won the 440 yard dash Colv1n was the 1nd1v1dual star for Pr1nc1p1a CAPT C GRIESEDIECK N t On T ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 - 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 . . . . I V, Y , h T. . .. - ' 1 A - 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 1 ' I . . . i , , , , . -. . ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 , . L .I . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I ' 7 ' - .. , , , . l . 1 1 ' 1 ' v ' ' 1 - S I - ' 1 ' 1 O 1 1 l 2 , . 4 . 1 'IJ il 1 3 l w - 1 . is fix y- e THE CARNATION BASEBALL PROSPECTS Although losmg several valuable men by graduatlon McK1nley agam has a strong team on the field Mr Schlek IS back on the Job and IS determmed to make a record of four consecut1ve pennants As moundsmen Wallace and FFICS have already shown thelr mettle 1n the prelxmmary games Both are left handers w1th plenty of stuff on the ball Conzelman wlll recexve the1r slants Reed at second base and Zoeller at thlrd are the new mfielders Both are good h1tters and fielders Regna and Feuerborn at short stop and first base complete the mfield Conley has been sw1tched to center field where he has shown ab1l1ty as a fiy Chaser FYICS and Wallace alternate IH r1ght field where the Thompson brothers are stlll fi htmg xt out for the left field pos1t1on Summers subst1tute catcher and Turner general ut1l1ty are the other members of the squad McKINLEY vs SMITH MANUAL On Frlday April I4 McK1nley defeated Sm1th Manual 1n a practlce gather1n s1xteen huts off h1s dellverv Wallace s worst blow was a home run by Imse w1th two on base Both teams played rather a ragged game m the field the game serv1n merely as a try out CAPT W FEUERBORN Slt T . .U 9 . g . game on the Smith-Manual campus, 9-7, McKinley hit Weidlich hard, . g . . . . M. , . V . g - I s 44 Y QA 4 T gg. , Q , 1 'N N- wo Tl-IE CARNATION MCKINLEY vs YEATMAN' McK1n1ey opened the 1916 season by defeatmg Yeatman at High School Fxeld on Aprll 22 score 5 3 Although both teams made sxx hlts McK1n1ey h1t at more cr1t1cal tzmes Four errors made by the North Sxders also a1ded McK1n1ey m the scormg McK1n1ey Jumped Into the lead In the first mnmg by scormg two runs but Yeatman forged ahead ID the th1rd 1nn1ng Costly errors after two were out were responslble for three runs but the lead dld not last long Commg back mn the last half of the th1rd mnln FFICS and Lenhardt drew walks Fagan then replaced Wlnkelman and was hxt hard three runs be1ng scored before the slde was ret1 ed The next Innmg Wmkel man went back on the mound and held McK1n1ey scoreless for the rest of the game Wallace pltched good ball errors deprlvlng h1m of a shut out In the iifth mnmg he walked four men but escaped scatheless Outslde of one bad 1nn1ng Wmkelrnan hurled hltless ball but the breaks were agalnst h1m Frles hxt safely tW1CC 1n four trles Wallaces trlple was the only extra base h1t of the game whlle LaBarge and Smlth gathered five of Yeatman s sxx hlts Score McK1n1ey Yeatman AB H O E AB H O E Zoeller 3b Reed 2b Regna ss Feuerborn Lenhardt cf DeVoto rf Conley c Wallace p Totals Magolo f LaBarge ss Fagan Smlth lf Owens c Van Lehsten Ib Behrens cf W1nkelman p Fo arty Huermen b Hausladen Totals Batted for Oetzel m s1xth mnxng Batted for W1nkelman ln mnth lllfllng McK1n1ey Yeatman o o 3 o o o o o 0- 'S 'ity Thr e . . . . . gy . , . ..., . ...... 4 I o o , r .--,- .....,.. 5 I o o , .-a, ..., - ...s,. I o 5 o , . ..,.,,s... 4 3 2 o , . ........,... 5 I 2 I , 3b. ....,...... 4 o o 1 , Ib. ..,...,. 3 o IO I ' , . ............ 4 2 3 o- , . ..,a...s. 2 o 2 I , . ............ 2 o 6 I Fries, lf. ......, .- ..,,. 4 2 o o Oetzel, 2b. .....A,..., o o o I , . ,.,,ss.... 3 I I o , . ..,.. 3 o IO o , . ...... .. ....e 4 o 7 o , . .... ...... 3 o 2 o , . ........... 4 I o o ' , . ....... 3 o o o - - - - g .e......... - o o o 0 -------------3o 6 27 3 , 2 .--------- o o I I .,....... I o o o ' ------------- 29 6 24 5 I 2 3 4 5 5 7 8 9 ' .............. 2 o 3 o o o o o ---5 --------------- 3 .i. '- e THE CARNATION Two-base hits Fries. Three-base hits Wallace. Sacrifice hits Owens Oetzel Stolen bases LaBerge 2 Fagan Smxth Van Lehsten Zoeller Reed Lenhardt Double plays Lenhardt and Reed Wxld pltches Wmkelman Fagan H1t by pltched ball By Wallace I Bases on balls Off Wallace 4 off Wmkelman 9 Left on bases McKmley I0 Yeatman 7 Umplre Mueller MCKINLEY vs CLEVELAND McK1nley had l1ttle trouble defeatmg Cleveland on Aprxl 2Q 5 o Wallace allowed but two h1ts and only one Clevelander reached second base durmg the entire game He also gave but one base on balls Schulz allowed slx hlts but was w1ld wlth men on the bases In the lirst mmng McK1nley scored two runs on a base on balls an error and Conleys tlmely slngle Regnas tr1ple cornmg after Schulz s error and a iielders choice added two more runs 1n the th1rd wh1le smgles by Conley and Regna w1th a stolen base added the fifth run 1n the elghth 1nn1ng Regna wxth a tr1ple and a sxngle led McK1nley at the bat Conley w1th two smgles and Wallace wlth a tr1ple also showed the1r ablhty at the plate Conzelman playmg hls first game beh1nd the bat caught 1n fme style besmdes p1ck1ng several base runners off the sacks Baumhoff at second base for Cleveland handled everythmg that came h1s way wxth out a nuscue Score McK1nley Cleveland O A E AB H O A E Zoeller 3b Murphy lf Conley f Baumhoff 2b Regna ss Placke ss Feuerborn b Kllpatrlck 3b Reed 2b Yochum rf T Thompson 1 Llppert Ib Conzelman c Flack c Wallace p Schulz p Totals T0ta1S Score by 1nn1n s McK1nley Cleveland o-o Three base h1ts Regna and Wallace Two base hlt Conzelman Stolen bases Conley Q27 and Feuerborn W1ld p1tches Schultz 2 H1t w1th pltched ball Flack Base on balls Off Schultz 2 off Wal s r F 5 - 1 , 9 5 ' : : 9 3 . : . ' 5 5 . ' ' : , . 3 , 3 , . : ' , S , - Z . , ' . Y , . , . . , . . , s - 9 , . . . . ! 7 ! 7 ' , . . . , . i , , , . . ' 9 . Y ! . ' 7 , - AB. H .... ..... , . ....... 4 1 5 3 1 , . ...... 3 o 3 o o , c . ....... 4 2 1 o I , . .... 4 o o 4 o , . ........ 3 2 1 1 I , . ....... 4 o o o o , 1 ,.---- 3 0 7 o o ' ' , . .... 4 1 3 o I Fries, rf. ......... 4 o 4 o 0 Whitbread, cf.--- 4 o I o o , . .... ..... 3 o 2 1 o , . ...... 3 o 1 o o . , f.- 3 o o 0 o ' , . ...... 3 I S o o , . ..l. 3 1 7 2 o , . ......... 2 o 7 3 o , . .,..... 3 1 o 3 o , . ........ 3 o 1 3 1 ----------30 6 27 ro 3 ----------26 2 24 IO 2 . . U i D . I 2 3 4 5 5 7 3 9 ' .l....,zaa,... 2 o 2 o o o o I x-5 ----l-----a--- o o o o o o o o - . I . ' l I A . : . ' ' : , '. . . . 1 . : , Z - Six y- our Tl-IE CAR XIATION la e 1 Struck out By Schultz 8 by Wallace 6 Left on bases McK1nley 3 Cleveland 6 Ump1re Mueller MCKINLEY vs SOLDAN McK1nley sllpped 1nto second place by be1ng defeated by Soldan on May 6th 4 2 Wallace allowed but s1x h1ts and fanned eleven batters Wlth azr tlght support the result would have been d1fferent Harr1son who went the full route for Soldan allowed three h1ts and fanned elght batters Two of these h1ts came ln the seventh 1nn1ng when McK1nley scored her two runs Leschen scored Soldan s first run m the thlrd 1nn1ng He reached first on an error was sacrxliced to second and scored on Wllllamsons hut to center Soldan added one more run 1n the s1xth and two m the seventh due to ragged lieldmg McK1nley scored two runs mn the seventh 1nn1ng Smgles by Feuer born and Frles a sacr1iice by G Thompson and Conzelman s Hy d1d the work For Soldan Leschen played a clean game in the field and h1t safely twlce Bogglano and Harr1son hxt for two bases Wallace p1tched h1s usual steady game but recexved poor support Score by mmngs McK1nley 2 o 0- Soldan Batter1es McK1nley Wallace and Conzelman Soldan Harr1son and Savage MCKINLEY vs CENTRAL By defeatlng Central on May roth 9 7 McK1nley remaxned 1n the pennant chase Wallace held the h1ts down until the mnth 1nn1ng when four runs crossed the plate Walte on the other hand had nothmg but hrs good mtentlons and was stung for eleven h1ts McK1nley took the lead ln the first 1nn1ng and was never headed In the mnth Central counted four runs on four h1ts and several errors Wlth a smgle needed to t1e the score Schlercher grounded out to second base Wallace allowed three h1ts up to the nmth 1nn1ng McElwee replaced Walte 1n the seventh 1nn1ng and pltched hltless ball The battmg of the entlre Cr1mson team was good Conley gatherlng three h1ts and Reed and Feuerborn two each Score by mmngs McK1nley x-9 Central Batter1es McK1nley Wallace and Conzelman Central Wa1te Mc Elwee and Schlelcher 1 e I 15 l C, - 5 , S , - 5 i 1 1 ' T ' , - l . . . -. . l . , 1 , . . . . . . . , Y 3 , . . . , . n - s I I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ' s ......,.........,...,.s.s.ss.. o o o o o o 2 ------....------------..------------0 0 I 0 0 I 2 0 O-4 ' W . 9 i 9 l . , -, . . . I . . . . . , . . , , . , . 9 , . 1 1 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -----------------Y------------3 0 2 O O 4 0 O --------------------------e-------I 2' O O 0 O O O T v i v D y ' , . Sixty--'iv Tl-IE CARNATION BASKET BALL PROSPECTS When McK1nley defeated Yeatman 1n the final game on March 4 the curtaxn was rung down on the most successful season McK1nley has ever had By defeatmg Washmgton U St Lou1s U Concord1a Semmary and all of the hxgh school and preparatory school teams 1n St Louls MCK1UlCy was conceded the college and hxgh school champxonshlp of St Louxs But two games were lost durmg the ent1re season and both by small scores W1th Palmer and Feuerborn at forward and center the task of fillm out the team fell to Mr Callan who was coachlng h1s first year at McK n ley Menze at forward Conzelman and Leffler at buard were h1s sel c t1ons and a glance at the record made by th1s team shows how well he succeeded J!- iv i aj 'N CAPT F PALMER Qui Xxx 1' . . , 3 . ., . ., , ' l . . , . . U 1 b ' ' I - . , - L D - ' 1 K s O4 9 5 . 4 F' v V sq p I K X l l ,W Q X X , f' va -l 1 'V N a.,-,.J rf. 5'-. N Sixty-Sm,-vcn TI-IE CARNATION For next year, Conzelman, Palmer and Feuerborn are lost by gradua- tion, but there will be an able lot of substitutes on hand. With T. Thomp- son, Voelke, LaMont, Peterson and G. Thompson to choose from, another team of championship caliber will be in order MCKINLEY vs CLEVELAND McKinley dropped its only interscholastic contest of the season to Cleveland on February 26 29 26 The defeat was probably due to he crippled team which McKinley was forced to use three regulars bein out of the game because of injuries However the Clevelanders were in true form and deserve great credit for their aggressiveness Cleveland took the lead when Cole shot several baskets shortly after play had started and held It throughout The combination of Kraehe Gibson and Cole worked like clock work while on the other hand the Crimson lost many chances to score by inaccurate passmg and shooting The whistle blew Just as McKinley was making a last desperate attempt to keep a clean slate for the season The entire McKinley team played well under the Circumstances but the real surprise was the work of the Cleveland outiit Cole and Gibson lead in the scoring for the Blue and Gold while Menze led McKinley in field goals wlth four Line up McKinley Field Free Name Goals Goals Points Menze left guard T Thompson right forward Feuerborn center LaMont left guard Leffler right guard G Thompson right guard Cleveland Cole left guard Gibson right forward Lippert center Kraehe left guard Schulz right guard Totals S 1 I gli D A- ! 7 ' ' . . . y O V . g ' 9 , . D . . s . . , . g. 9 ! , ...... ,e ,,..e,, .,..,,,e....,,, 4 o 8 . , , ,...,..,....,. .... 1 o 2 , ---N--------H--- -'---------- - 3 8 I4 , ..............e.......s..... o o o , ' .........,.-.... a.......... o o o . , ....,... ............. 1 o 2 Totals-- ......................... ......... 9 8 26 , -,--h----,-,---- ,,,.,... ....,.. 5 o IO ' , ' ---------, -Y-H--, ,,,,-,.. 3 5 II ' , -,,a,,,,-,,,-,-,,... - ..,.... ---- I 0 2 W , ,,w,,-v7,--a,,- .... .......... 3 o 6 , ' - -,A--,,-,,,,. ,.., .......... o o 0 -,--we-,aw-G-,--U,,ere,,,-------- I2 5 29 fix X- 'Ii'1 THE CARNATION McKINLEY vs. YEATMAN. On March 4, McKinley defeated Yeatman in the best and hardest- 'fought game of the season, 32-29. It was the decisive game of the season, and was witnessed by two thousand spectators, the largest gathering that has ever witnessed a high school game in St Louis The McKinley Band and the Yeatman Glee Club gave both players and spectators plenty to applaud Yeatman scored first when Winkelman shot a field goal but McK1n ley soon evened the count The lead see sawed back and forth the half ending I4 I3 in McK1n1eys favor Coming back with great confidence Yeatman p1led up a six point lead It was here that the Crimson displayed their real mettle Ihghtmg desperately they overcame the lead and when the whistle blew were a scant three points to the good It was another sample of the true McKinley do or die spirit Drewes was the one outstanding feature of the Yeatmamtes play totalmg sixteen points on five field goals and six foul throws Menze led McKinley in field goals gathering four while Feuerborns sixteen po1nts were the result of three Held goals and ten foul throws Our guards Conzelman and Leffler besides guarding their men sneaked 1n just enough baskets to decide the game Palmer s absence undoubtedly weakened McKinley just enough to make the game close although T Thompson played well Score McKinley Field Foul Goals Throws Points Voelke left forward Menze left forward T Thompson right forward Feuerborn center Leffler left forward Conzelman right guard Yeatman Wmkelman left forward Drewes right forward Shanley center Von Lehsten left guard Gxessow Fl ht guard Hausladen right guard Totals 9 ' U . . , . ' ' y . . . , . . , . . - . . . . 4. . 9 9 ' 9 ' ' -cc ' 9! ' ' I . . . , 7 . . . . ,l . 5 l U 7 I I . 3 , . , ...... - .......... ......... o o o , .............. ............. 4 o 8 . , ' ................... o o 0 , U, .-,.. -,,,..,....- .... ,..-. 3 1 0 16 ' , ------------------------- 2 0 4 , -------------------- ---- 2 0 4 Totals ....... ................ - ............ I I ro 32 ' , ------------- ------ - -- 3 I 7 , ' .......,............. .... 5 6 I6 , .............,........... ...... 1 o 2 , ,.,sa....f..,.......... I o 2 ' , 'g ....,....r ................ I o 2 , ' ........................ o o 0 A ........... ,v,.........,e....,.... r II 7 29 Uixtv-Nine TI-IE CARNATION All star basket ball team Palmer QMQ rxght forward McElwee QC left forward Feuerborn QMJ center Conzelman QMQ r1ght guard Laramore QCD left guard McK1nley Yeatman Central Soldan McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley Soldan 30 Central 23 Washmgton U 22 Cleveland 20 Yeatman 20 St Louls U 23 Soldan I5 Central 20 STANDING SUMMARY McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley McK1nley Won Lost Undergrads I5 Pr1nc1p1a 44 Cleveland 2 Grand Av Pres 34 Concordla Sem 28 Sm1th Manual II Yeatman 29 FOOTBALL PROSPECTS Football last year was a great success The team showed 1ts appre c1at1on of the support of the student body by golng through the season ln Fme style wlnnlng all of 1ts games most of them by top heavy scores It was the outcome of hard work by the players and excellent coach1n by Mr Crosby Of th1s team elght members are lost for next year Conzelman DeCousser Merstetter eight M Leffler on Sprmg Crane and Feuerborn by graduat1on wh11e Krenzer Hoyer and Ittner have already left school On the other hand men w1ll return Needham Deeds Selbt Grresedleck and he 11ne and Cloud G Thompson and Reed 1n the backfleld practlce wxll be held to try out any new materxal on hand These unknown qL.ant1t1es together wlth the exper1enced players named above glve promlse of another successful season th1s year TENNIS PROSPECTS Next year McK1nley wxll be represented by four veteran players Cheney Altenbernd Kuhns and Henderson Haase Hoffman and D1e trlch are lost by graduatxon. In order to get a lme on new materlal, a sprmg tournament was held, whzch also served to gxve some of the new players valuable exper1 ence Th1s wmll contrlbute a great deal to the team's success next fall, as 1nexper1ence was the ch1ef reason for the poor showxng made Sexentx T .1 L D: : , : , ' : ' ....................... .............,..,,....,. 7 1 ------------------------------------U-22------U 5 3 ------------4-------------U--------------------H 3 5 ---------------an------------------------------- 3 5 Cleveland ...................-....-,..,-, ,,,, , - ,,,-,-...,, 2 6 ' . 34: , . ' , 33: : - , 43: , - ' , 51: ' ' ' , - ' , SIQ ' ., . ' , 26g , 9. ' 2 : 37: , . ' , 29: . -, - , 27: , . ' , 44: ' ., , 46: - ' -, - ' , 23: ' - , . ' , 86: , - ' , 32: , . ' , 52: , . , ' g ng-0 A THE CARNATION Mr. Castleman will be succeeded by Mr. Taylor as coach, who will have Mr. Bandeen as his assistant. There is only a limited amount of material on hand, but we expect to make a creditable showing. PICK-UPS. Keep your eye on Championship Row and watch it grow. Our basket-ball team was invincible when at its best. Regna has already played on three championship baseball teams. This is his fourth year under Coach Schiek With eight M men returning it looks like another football championship Coach Callan turned out a winner his first year If pep counts for anything we know who is going to win the baseball pennant As usual our track prospects are bright this year We claim the champion booster in Mr Voss The coming graduation causes us to lose a number of stars in every branch of athletics JUNIOR CLUB BASEBALL RESULTS Triple H I4 Little McKinley I3 Sherman 5 Little McKinley 4 S C L 8 Triple H 7 Sherman I7 Triangle 9 Triple H 3 Clover Leaf 2 S C L 8 Little McK1nley 7 Sherman 8 Triple H 5 Triangle I2 Little McKinley 6 Clover Leaf I0 S C L 5 Basket ball 1916 Baseball 1916 Track 1916 Tennis 1915 S nt Tuo COACHES Mr Callan Mr Shiek Mr Castleman Mr Castleman . . ,, ,, . . . 9 sc as - - ' ' ! , . . ., 3 . . , ' , 9 ' , - . . ., g ' ., . , s ' , - -, S , - . . ., g ' ' , . I 5 . 'Q ' 9 5 . ' l ' , 3 . . ., . ' 1 -----A- ----f--A-s------ ---------- ---------- - Football, 1915 ..a..1 -1 ..1...,a ada-. ...,.. aaa- ......,....1.. Mr. Crosby , --s--....s.-.,..L ,. c.,...s.c....s.......a....sf . 9 - ---- W -------f ------ -f-- ----- --Pf - - ------ - - A u , ............1a.. ,. . . 1..1................... . . CN-V0 3'-V ' THE CARNATION VVEARERS OF THE M Basket Ball 1915 16 Schwerdtman Palmer Captam Conzelman Leffler Feuerborn Menze Tenms 1915 Haase Captam Hoffman Cheney Kuhns Henderson D1etr1ch Sen1or Track 1915 Leary Captam Cloud Leffler Schuster La Mont Rxckett Kammerer Suycott Feuerborn Ch1ld Murray Jumor Track 1915 Stlth Captam Berger H Gr1esed1eck C Grxesedleck K1lpatr1ck 5 S2 Y' Q Gerber Hunter Wlner Baseball 1915 Regna Captam Turnbull A Coates Conley Feuerborn Anscheutz Wallace W Coates Menze Football 1915 Krenzer Captam Deeds Needham, Selbt Ittner Feuerborn Cloud Marstetter Reed Conzelman Hoyer Crane Leffler G Thompson De Cousser Robertson cc an , . Griesedieck wg? Q ! 3?3 .':VL Z Tl 8 lbjllllllm ' H I LDA NIABLEY Moderator M1ss Watkms Basket ball Coach Mzss Mornssey OFFICERS President Luczlle Gulbor V1ce Pres1dent M611C6Hf End1cott Secretary Eva Segel Treasurer Ehzabeth Mztchell Sergeant at Arms Estelle Lezber 0 HIS term the A A glrls have been up and domg Our socxal in :3 calendar conslsts of a roller party a masquerade and a h1ke to be' im On account of the few 1rls xnterested 1n tenms we are sorry to say that the Tenms Club 1S no more However We w1ll have our usual tournament under the ausplces of the Ath1et1c Assoc1at1on We re just a l1ttle proud of our basket ball team for they have won live out of seven games for us Next year we w1ll play only mter class games w1th g1rls rules and we v ant lots of g1rls and lots of enthuslasml Basket ball team Mel1cent End1cott Catherme Callahan Lucllle Guxbor Ora Woods Elsa Fmger Ethel Kunze Tenms team Mel1cent Endlcott Katherine Orr Gladys MCGUlg3n Hllda Mabley 'sex enty Four I r I - 4, ' 4. ' rs - .- . . . 'Eg i . . If l ' , , - . .1539 we v cr' ' ' ' za n ' 1 , . . 3 . . , D ' . . , , u' c ' Z 5 7 , 7 7 ' : 3 7 l SQ-venty-Five -1- - wo 2 A I GEORGE SCHUSTER PAULINE GERLING jan 26 The Graduatlon Pro gram was greatly enjoyed by all present g gave a dance among those present were many McK1nley1tes Jan 28 The Alpha Delta S1gma fraternlty gave a dance at Moolah Temple Many McK1nley1tes were present Jan 29 The Entre Nous gave a box party at the Shenandoah 1n honor of M1ss Irma Bryant and M1ss The'ma Parrott graduates of McK1n1ey jan 29 M1ss Laura Mohan en X I S tertamed a number of her frlends Wlth a Eve hundred Jan 29 M1ss Ruth Warren a w1th a dance at her home Feb 4 M1ss Bermce Collms en tertamed several of her McK1n1ey fr1ends Feb I0 MISS Gean La Mont enterta1ned the Enter Nous Feb MISS Hortense Andrae enterta1ned a group of her frrends wlth a Valentlne party Many Mc Klnleyltes were present Feb 3 Woodrow Wllson spoke I E WI A if T f xy I -' ' Jan- 28- The H05 CH Alumni former McKin1eyite, entertained n I ' . II. ' THE. CARNATION 1n thls c1ty and made a great 1m presslon on the McK1nley puplls Feb I5 A number of McK1nley ltes spent a pleasant evenmg at a dance ln Carondelet Feb 16 The Senior Cookxng Class entertalned the1r mothers The spread was a good sample of McK1nley glrls cookxng Feb 18 Many McK1nleyxtes en joyed a communlty dance at the Horace Mann School Feb I9 The Tyler Place Chr1s t1an Endeavor gave a Valentme party at the home of Mr Allan Sheppard Feb IQ Mr Rlchard H111 en tertamed hls fr1ends w1th a dlnner party Feb 25 Many McK1nley1tes spent an enjoyable evemng at M1ss Genevleve Rlley s party Feb 26 The Century Boat Club gave a 500 and dance Many Mc Kmleyltes were present Feb 26 M1ss Martha Starck en tertalned Many McK1nley1tes were present March 3 M1ss Marguerxte ORe1lly entertaxned a group of her frlends March 4 M1ss Clara Schenk a graduate of McK1nley gave a 500 Many of her McK1nley frlends en joyed the afternoon March 6 Rhythmlc Cxrcle gave a Mothers Party March 9 M1ss Paulxne Annm enterta1ned the Entre Nous March IO M1ss Bernlce Collms entertamned with a dance at her home Many Mclflnleyltes spent an enjoyable evemng March IO The Assembly Llte rary Soclety gave a dance wh1ch was greatly enjoyed by all present March II Mrs Boehmer enter tamed wlth a dance many McK1n leyltes were among those present March 1 2 M1ss Georgene Brookes a graduate of McK1nley entertaxned a number of her frxends ln Webster March I7 The College Club gave a spread everyone enjoyed It but then a spread IS always en joyed March I7 The Church of the Unlty gave a play Commence ment Days Many of the perform ers were McK1nley1tes March 2I Many McK1nley1tes attended the danclng class 1n Car ondelet March 31 The K1p Klub many of the ncembers of whxch are Mc K1nley1tes gave a dance at the Old Manslon Hall Apr1l 1 The Parent Teachers Assoclatlon of McK1nley enter tamed 1n the school audltorlum wxth a sllght of hand performance Apr1l 6 The Glee Club and Mandolln Club gave a dance It was a b1g success Apr1l 3 MISS Geane La Mont entertained the Entre Nous Apr1l IO Several McK1nley1tes attended the Lenox Hall benefit at the Park Theatre Apr1l I4 The Llterary Soclety dance was a b1g success there was a plenty of punch Apr1l I5 The Entre Nous en joyed the afternoon at the Shenan doah Apr1l I7 The College Club of St Louls engaged the Shenandoah Su w 1 , - y - ' 1 1 L5 I! . . - - , - . . . - U N 7 9 ' it 7 U . . , ' I , . A - . l 1 , I. 9, 66 ' YV . . , , ' Q Q 1 . . . - 9 ' . 9 . , i . . . 9 . 1 ' ' . as 99 xc - ss l ' ' . .. H 5 79 . . . , Y ' ' ' ' ts H , . . . - , , t 'C!1lj'-Sv 'An THE CARNATION Theatre for the performance of the M1k3d0 Many McK1nley1tes were present Apr1l IQ The New Senxors gave a spread and a dance Judglng by the buzz and laughter lt was a great uccess Apr1l zo Many McK1nley1tes en joyed the evemng at a dance m Carondelet Aprxl 28 The Semor Class play was a reat success It was one of McK1n1ey and one of the most Successfully produced MISS FlSh ers and Mr Hoffstens sk11l tramlng the performers made It a Hnlshed productlon Aprll 29 The class play was re peated and met w1th even greater success May 5 The Rhythmmc Clrcle gave a May Day program ln the audltorlum The dances were char acter1st1c of dlfferent countrvs The program was topped by the wmdmg of the May Pole by the Senlor glrls May II The Rhythmlc Cxrcle gave a dance whlch was greatly enjoyed by all present May I2 Several McKmley1tes enjoyeda hlke at MeremacH1gh May I3 O 1ta Soclety presented an Oflglnal masque m honor f Shakespeare ln the Audltorlum at 8 p m May 18 The Carol Club dance was well attended The Hoor was crowded but the more the merrler 0 V 4 if ylllsl h1x1lllXlllll V sf ' H ' ' , M i sy ' . . 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I 4 Hf J1'J1.1:4'r Qczztlc and nfl T- , X 111 .y Tl-IE CARNATION THE IRON MAN ' The prophecy of the class of June 1916, T WAS Just past supper tlme and havmg 1ndulged 1n a good meal I was not very enthusxastlc about go1ng out for a walk wlth my dog So I saxd Caesar begone and Caesar went Well w1th the dog gone I drew a large cozy chalr up to the fireplace mlnus the Ere this be1ng summer tlme and nestled myself 1nto one of its dusted corners In order to helghten the effect of lazmess I put my feet on a llttle stool whlch was some feat consldermg the s1ze of the stool Not bemg a person 1ncl1ned to morbld perusal of the fo1bles of the day or mght nor bemg partlcularly mterested 1n the art of thmkmg other people s or my own I was at a loss as to how to spend the tlme wlthout d1Sp0Sll'lg of my watch I thrust my hand 1nto my spaclous coat pockets for no other reason than to g1ve them somethmg to do and then wlthdrew from the left pocket a com I turned on the llght by I'31Sl1'lg the bl1nd on a nearby wmdow fthe moon was shmmg brlghtlyj and examlned what I had ln my hand It was a sxlver dollar Thats curlous I murmured an Iron Man How 1nan1mate he appears all dressed up 1n h1s ruffled coat and yet lf he possessed a silver volce 1nstead of a sllver charm what a wonderful story he could tell Well you never can tell what a dollar can do came a reply xn a pxpmg voice I started m dumb dismay and glanced furtlvely about me I reas sured myself that no one else was present and that there was nothmg of Importance ln the room except the dollar and myself Dont be frightened came the vo1ce aga1n And then I percelved that lt was the dollar speak1ng I should not have been so surprlsed for I have often heard that money talks What are you domg here? I mquxred for by now I was mtensely mterested My purpose xs to tell you that which you wlsh most to know State your request and It shall be granted I am constantly growmg older I replled and may never be able to learn what has happened to the class of june IQI6 which graduated from McK1nley Hlgh School You should be able to grant my request You are m1staken came the answer mf you thmk me young Examine me closely See how bald the head of my eagle the stars 1n my heaven are blurred and though my m1lls keep gomg around they have lost much of the roughness whlch marked the1r youth However age IS a storehouse from whose h1dden recesses many memorxes of 1ncal culable value may be scraped Hear then the story of your frlend ln the form of my own adventures N ne Fou 1 . x , - I , 1 ' 3 7 7 ' 3 1 7 1 3 ' 3 Y 3 ' 3 3 7 , . 3 3 7 ' 3 GC Y ' 33 CC ' ' 3 3 ' . . . . 3 9 . . . ,, , . If 33 ' 3 3 Ki Y ' 53 ' ' ' , . . . . ' 3 cs - 99 ' ' ' ' 9 . . 4, . . . ' 33 C6 ' 33 ' 66 3 3 9 3 ' ' 33 CC ' 33 ll ' ' 7 I ' ' 7 3 I . U . V . .. . , l'i ty- 1' THE CARNATION The Iron Man then told the following story The first th1ng I remember after bemg turned out of the mxnt was be1ng struck by a draught of hot a1r I heard some one talkmg about art Germans and pol1t1cs Glancmg upward I noted that the hot a1r was emanatlng from Fred Kramer who was argulng with a barber named An gelo Regna Kramer lnslsted that a pretzel was a sea farmg anlmal be cause xt was salty and Regna 1ns1sted lt was a falr seemg anlmal be cause lt wasnt crooked Regna who was shav1ng Kramer at the trme mlght have made some cuttmg rep11es had not the pretty mamcurxst Julla Starck settled the argument by statmg that a pretzel was the effort on the part of a pxece of dough to make both ends meet Th1s llttle sketch put me to sleep and when I awoke I found myself ln an uncovered box The box was bemg held by M1ldred Samuels who had Jomed the Salvatlon Army M1ldred always was good wlth the salve stuff Two of her l1eutenants Irene Schm1dt and Marle Wmgerter were talkmg about the person who had dropped me m the box From thexr descr1pt1on a tall d1SJO1l'1tCd person w1th a rapxd fire tongue I easxly precexved It was joseph Razek The next th1ng I remember was hstemng to a conversatlon between George Watson who by th1s txme had grown up to be a man and Paulme as the sllver VO1CCd huckster Paullne had been d1sappo1nted 1n a love affalr and her only recourse was to become a school teacher so that accounts for her belng master of the zero mark and the threatemng look Once when I escaped the mamacal grasp of Albert R1st who was a clerk m Dxetzhold s Dellcatessen I rolled down the street and was picked up by W1ll1am Krueger who blt me several txmes to make sure I was harmless I not1ced several feathers on W1ll1e s coat and concluded that he had taken a fancy to chlckens fthe d1ct1onary Variety, I next came across Nelda Wleland who lacked only a llttle temper to become a prxma oorm1 Accompanymg her on her tour of the Arct1c jungles were Ruth Backof M1ldred Calhoun and Stella Young It was w1th some surprlse that I read m the newspaper one day of the breakmg of an engagement between George Schuster and Alxce Wledeman They had been engaged as dancing teachers by the manage ment of Craneroost whxch was a fashlonable hotel owned by Walter Crane Glanclng further down the page I not1ced that Edna Ewers had succeeded m d1scover1ng a new headache tablet for rubber dolls but that her dxscovery was approprlated by Margaret Spuehler who used xt 1n stead of yeast to make her vo1ce r1se when she lectured 1n the Novak Home for the Deaf I next b came conscxous of bexng ln a vlce llke grxp The sensatlon X metf, Fne . . . . , v . . ' . , . , - , - . . - ' 7 7 1 7 7 ' 1 ' 7 ! . . . , , . . . . . - , 1 . . y . Gerling. As usual much was spoken, but little said. Watson was known 7 7 7 7 7 ' 7 . , . , . , K' . ' 7 7 ' 7 ' I . 7 7 . , ' 7 ' 7 7 , - l THE CARINIATION was not unllke that of standing rn lxne 1n the McK1nley lunch room I became aware of the xdentxty of my possessor when some one addressed lum as Walter Haase Haase had become a banker 1n Erv1ne Meyers Penny Savmgs Instltutlon It was not untrl I had gone the rounds of a sewmg c1rcle whxch con gregated 1n Kather1ne Cunmnghams Hat Empor1um that I heard of some of the glrls of the class From the gosslp wh1ch ensued I learned that Marguerxte Noble was devotmg her energ1es to convertlng the natxves of Borneo by means of a correspondence system Helen Luth and Norma Fmk were managlng a glue factory a natural outgrowth of the close attachment between the two Dorothy Mepham was endeav ormg to prove by a woman s reason that every year 1S leap year wh1le Gertrude Schaefer supported by M1ldred Schlottman was engaged ID the greatest suffrage propaganda ever held on th1s s1de of the Rhme It was not my luck however to stay ln th1s company very long and I desc nded from th1s exalted posltlon lnto the hat of a beggar who stood w1th a slvn I am bl1nd pmned to h1s back Erwxn Standlnger who I afterwards learned was the knlght of the tearful story chuckled as I dropped lnto his hat It IS sa1d Erwm was always good at klddlng the publ1c Flndlng myself 1n th1s predicament I settled myself for a long stay and probably would have stayed longer had not an accldent stayed my stay I was dropped by Erwm 1n the mlddle of the road when luckzly Sldney Kollme who was joy r1d1ng 1n h1s new bxplane happened to see my gI1StCI1lI1!, face and swooped down and Wlth a powerful mag net whlch by the way was perfected by Alma Beckman the greatest physzclst the world has ever known plcked me up Su however who was a happy go lucky fellow and of the dont care zf I do type donated me to the fund for a mun1c1pal bakery shop whlch was to be 1n the hands of Gllbert Frazler and Joseph Pourc11l1e experts with the dough As fate wxlled I passed 1nto the hands of Kurt de Cousser the mus1 cal comedy matlnee 1dol Kurt could nelther s1ng nor dance but got by only on h1s wonderful ruddy complexlon Frank Palmer the stage manager at Kurts theater recexved me as a txp from Kurt The star player of th1s company was Jeanette jones the versat1le stenographer She could t1ckle the 1vor1es on elther plano or typewr1ter The great tragedlennes Ethel Barret Carolme Merkle and Genevleve Rxley were retamed to lend sobr1ety to the play and always ofiiclated at deaths and marrlages The play that was belng glven that mght was ent1tled Weary WIIIICS Worrles the plot bexng taken from the wonderful dventures of W11l1am Feuerborn Hrs worrles cons1sted mamly 1n the disposal of many cups whlch he had won at the last Olymp1c games Hxs legal advzsor Horace Grlmm explamed that 1nasmuch as no saucers went wlth the cups It was felony to sell them So B111 dzd the next best Nlllft l 1 I . . . 1 . . . . U . . . , . 1 . , . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 E . , . . H . ,, . . . . N 23 1 1 - 1 1 . . . . . . . - 1 1 ' 1 , . . . . . . . . 1 ' 1 . . 7 . - , 1 1 1 . . . . , . . I , a -1 1 ' ' 1 . - - , 4 , . J . . . 1 . . 7 1 1 ' . . . . 5, ' 1 11 ' - 1 1 , . . , . , . 1 1 1 1 U . . , . ,, . - 1 b 9 7 9 , . Av. X Y-S.X THE. CARINATION thlng and gave the outfit to hrs s1de kxck Eulace Settle who acted as press agent on B111 s clean up tours Seated 1n one of the box seats were Margaret Lav1n and Eunice Kemper the great dramatlc crxtlcs who wrote for George Graves perl odlcal the Mldmght Sun On the staff of thls paper were Charles Tapscott the everlastmg Joke and Louls Klem whose experlence ln stretchmg art1cles was only equalled by Rev ames Conzelman D D ln ns rare lecture on the mental moral and physical worth of football At the conclus1on of the show I was handed to Ph1l1p Brown who l ad made a fortune sell1ng peanuts 1n the theater As Ph1l1p escorted me down the avenue I heard some one telllng h1m to get out of the street Glanclng up I percexved that th1S command was g1ven bv Capt Margaret Natlon of the trafhc squad The ammum tion bearer Anna May Morr1s stood near at hand well supplled wlth powder and cold cream whlch was manufactured by the Peerless Powder appropmated what was left of the cosmetics used 1n the Senxor Play From here I passed 1nto the hands of Ceal1a Fuegel at whom Cupld had shot h1s dart but mlssed Lucxlle Glubor represented one of h1s Mrs I am now old and worn and owmg to the many 1nqu1s1t1ve teeth I look decldedly more l1ke two b1ts My vltallty has been exhausted but 1n splte of age my face IS sllck and smooth I have undoubtedly been ln the hands of a cla s of people who bear me great love and want their money s worth My story IS now complete Here the Iron Man heaved a Sl h H15 sxlver VOICC ceased to speak and reluctantly I placed h1m 1n my pocket Civ T , y . . - . y v ' Y , . . . , - . ,, . . ,, . , . I Y ' ! l I ' ' . I , . ., : . , . 7 1 . 7 . ' ! . ' . y , . . ' 65 ' ! Plant. This concern was owned by Marion Judd and Marie Hogan, who 5 , . . . . . , - i . . , Q . ' 7 .g s . . . , ' . .'i1+,-zj.-s- '. Tl-IE CARNATION CLA SS PLA Y If the class of june 1916 has done nothxng else than the promot1on of the Shakespearean fest1val g1ven on Apr1l 28 and 29 lt has accomp l1shed some hmg worth wh11e Not only was a productlon un1que or1g 1na1 and pleasmgly rendered but also the tercentenary of the death of the great poet iittmgly commemorated and the poet h1mse1f honored The character of the offermg was a po1nt 1n 1ts favor s1nce It gave a h1nt of the un1versal1ty of Shakespeare Then too It gave an op portumty for a large number of the class to share 1n the honors And the part1c1pants certalnly recelved honor After long weeks of re hears1ng thanks to the energetlc work and unt1r1ng efforts of M1ss F1sher and Mr Hoffsten the players acquztted themselves well Al though the rehearsals meant hard work they were not unm1xed w1th fun and many expressed regret when the play was g1ven It has been one of the greatest get together affa1rs that has been grven that 1S the members of the class have become better acqua1nted through the work on the play than 1n all the SOCIHI affarrs ever held Fully real1z1ng to whom a great amount of the Cfedlt for the success of the undertakmg IS due the class of june IgI6 w1shes to express 1ts hearty thanks to M1ss Fxsher and Mr Hoffsten and the members of the Faculty Comm1ttee for the1r admlrable work ln the productxon SENIOR FOOLISHNESS By Dolly Barden Schuster breaks the records Lxttle Peggy Speuhler Regna gets the ball And lanky Clarence Mange Jeanette does the danc1ng Are our two local seekers MISS Merkle tr1es them all To help our book exchange Walter Crane 1S a very good swam And a very good swam 1S he He met M11 Schlottman on the stalrs Talkmg to Walter Haa se There IS a boy 1n our class and he IS wondrous w1se S1d Kollme IS h1s name and oh' those flashy t1es' Hlgglefy Plgglety Kafherme and A dluar a dollar a mme oclock Gen scholar Th'-'3Y 11 Surely be back but I Won Al1ce why dld you come so Soon? def when I came to practlce my Shakespear ean l1nes B1g B111 Fuerborn sat 1n a corner Mar1e Wmgerter sleeps t1l1 near Eatmg a d1sh of Hakes noon He looked at M1ss Gu1b0f and sa1d Ill want some more Alma Beckman IS a dandy But she sa1d Oh my goodnes They love Ethel s han' to curl sakes' And feed her sugar candy N t l ! 9 , - . G . 1 . . . . A L . , l - 9 ' 9 a ' S. - 9 . , . ' l , . KS 9! ' 7 7 9 S 9 3 7 Y T'-i . . , , . . , . , . . . . . l . , l 7 , , 7 7 , I , a Y , . u it . Q 9 i ' ' , n , . , mm if 7 77 ' H ! ' , ss U 1 ' . , I' y 9? fine y- iight ' KV'Id SSV'ID Nm U Nine Tl-IE CARNATION Young Mlss Noble and noble Mlss Young Each sald I started to smg and bxt my tongue Along came Staudxnger the drug g1st w1se Who said No one suffers who my l1n1ment buys Watson and jim are really qurte sllm But not when It comes to the dance If Gert should appear let me make It qu1te clear You would then see them merrxly prance' Brown and Natlon danced the hesl tatlon But when they looked for Grlmm and Irene They were nowhere to be seen mus1c plays Slng a song Nelda one of those sweet lays Razek also w11l dance and Rlst w1ll smg Now dont you belleve that w1ll be a pleaslng th1ng7 Smg a song of Carol Club Col lege too we hear Have you got your dues? falls on every ear Who are the fa1r smgers? you say do you not? Why Margaret Lavm surely compan1ed by Dot' Hey d1ddle d1ddle none of us play the Hddle But Settle vaults over the moon UI Hu cle Marlon grggles to see the sport And Cecella strrkes up a tune Hlckery drckery dock' Peggy looked up at the clock She sard Oh dear me what txme can lt be? I have to meet Teddy at three! Hokey pokey hanky pank Whats the matter w1th poor old Frank? Eun1e Eun1e you re not spoony And I don t thlnk Pourc1l11e IS Along comes Kurt and then good nlght shlrt I hope th1s dont make them slzz' Graves where have you been so long and often? Ive been to McK1nley to v1s1t Helen Graves Graves what dxd you there? cha1r' Julra Starck sat m a park On her face a look qulte happy She ra1sed her eyes and w1th sur prlse Said Well lf that xsnt Tappy' Hoke poke blmk thmk Well Ill declare 1f It 1sn t Norma Fmk M11 Calhoun came too soon But D1etzschold was there to meet er Along came Klem who cut qumte a shme Whxch seemed very much to please er 7 1 ' ' u . H . 1 s ' as - - . D , , . 9 ' 9 ' ' ' so ' , l 7 9 ' ll ' , 1 ' ' ar sa, ' ' y 9 1 1 s Y ' y 9 3 . . , 7 7 Y I . 1 , . . . . . , I . , , - ' . ' , . 1 3 ' . , . KK 7 ' ' ' , Y! K I 1 s . Dance about, Pauline, while the 1 frightened Novak Off of his ' ' H 7 a 9 9 11 - I u . ' ' 9 Y Y 7 . ' I I Y y ' ' - , . . 9 , . n a 9 , ' GC ' ' 7 57 U Y ' ' 9 ' . . ' 7 7 7 7 K6 7 3 5 lv, A , 7 , 1 a a , Cl ' ' ' Y, -li- , . . - 9 1 s 9 ac' . h : WW--' 7 9 7 9 Y 3 h . ' ze- ul' d I a Emucfnn-No Another term xs now drawmg to a close and we are leavxng McK1n ley wxth rnmgled pleasure and pam Pleasure at the antrclpatlon of golng mto the world to wm a place for ourselves and pam because we are leavmg McK1n1ey where we have formed so many frlendshxps and have had so many pleasures and so many trxals Our four years of tram 1ng by the faculty has made us ready to grasp our opportumtxes and to l1ve up to the McK1n1ey motto Work with Head and Heart and Hand We are justly proud of the talent exhxbxted m our class ln the pres entatxon of the Shakespearean program It was one of the bxggest thmgs ever undertaken at McK1n1ey and we carrled It through m a manner wh1ch reflects great credxt on the senlor class We are now l1vmg 1n Joyful antlcxpatxon of class day whlch marks the end of our work at McK1n1ey But thls Joy IS mmgled w1th regret for lt brmgs us to the reallzatxon that we are soon to leave our pleasant surroundmgs of the past four years In leavxng we wxsh all possxble success to the next class and hope they w1ll have cause to remember McK1n1ey wxth as much pleasure as we do Paulme Gerlmg X 'KN ,iffy 6 Qi- If lu 7, l fa IO 3cHwAAts. One Hunlr 1 0 ' 7 ! Y . . H . ,, , . Y ! ' 1 9 Y x I I .M nd' - , A ix -' C., M655 T,-f Y , , for J,,, , L , V 7' 'ff' Z A 5' 'J A f K 1 f E-'n 4,1,u.Eg.lHgfQ '17, Q'-. A y. Yv 4 ffl llf! r+m. 'R .aI-l2- , IQ-L A-f-Pr -'J ISV! OFFICERS Presxdent Arthur Newman Vlce Pres1dent Margaret Cheney Secretary Dorrs Talbot Treasurer Charles La Mont Sergeant at Arms Louzs Wolf T LAST we have attamed the goal for wh1ch we have been str1v mg durmg the last three years We are New Semors' Our formal recogmtxon as such dates from March the slxth the dav on wh1ch we orgamzed The next 1mportant event ln our hlstory was our spread wh1ch was held on Aprxl the nmeteenth Every one pronounced It a great success and lt would be d1FF1cult to declde which was most enJoyed the spread xtself or the dance which followed To the Advanced Semors we extend our heartlest wxshes for success and happzne s and although we re ret thelr departure we shall endeavor to uphold the McKinley standards as they have done or even to llft them higher, lf possible lo am One Hundred Two -x , Y Y . . . 'H Y 4 , 5 7-41112:2-1Z'.'.'.'.g-.'-:'.'- .'-:'w.'.:1 1i.'..'.'-'.- -::.'.-lr:-g.-.-... . .. .- - '.':3:1'.'--'z A V f1':'.:I F. F-'A'.:.:'. '-1'-2' 151 :'ff- .':':- -1 iii.--1-fi:-2-'-.12 -Zf:- :f-Z-.1'-3:-Q1--: f.::.f-'S -- - Q '- ' - :If-fi 51351. gg :'..,'.f'.-4.12.1 1 . . .A1,g.,:J'g-. ' - .1..1r.j5:.'.-,zz .f:..,.'..:3:Q..g:..'..-,1.:..,:. 2:-3,11,:::'-2-,,l,.'.-..--D ::-.:- 1- - 122 ' '-'fzf-'-' T-1?-11' ----'--f'.1 ' - -- -1-5:-:'-'. -'-11' :-' - -1 -1 I- ' :Z'- 1 :g--,-Z 2. .1 '-25. ' -'zzz--I 1 :' : -.'.:-f- J -. -1: '- : .- '- .. - - : . . -'az fu- . '5':5'-.-f':1!- ..:1I-.1':-'-. lat? -f:3:..-.-..:? : 317- E 55: '32 'ii . '-T!-Z'.-'.' '.-27: .','- if.-I-.-'-'--5'f:1:-:.',-j-Q-5,139251.21135-2 5.1.-'gli-:1:'-11112-','-3,-1 2 - -PII-1I 'L'.'.','.Q ::.:'.'-112 ' Q Q ' y' r' ..-1-J:-:s12T1,E.w, Yi 5 W sd 315' A C YC-f as I . K6 , Y, 2 1 55 .39 . . . , - Y S , . Q . ' 9 g Y One Hundred Th we ,LE fb af' Q65 I ii! LLL H ARRIS ROSSEX Many school papers have had cons1derable d1lT1cu1ty 1n securmg a ta r S1ZCd exchanbe 11st Inasmuch as the purpose of the exchange 1S to enable magazmes to secure and from one another we beheve that fhe magazlnes should publlsh the full address of every exchange they rece1ve Amonb the general cr1t1c1sms to be made one IS that a school maga zme should not enter mto a ser1ous cons1derat1on of questlons arxsmg f om the war ln the exchange department It does not appear to us that the exchange department 1S the approprxate place for such artlcles or remarks The followmg comprlse our exchange 11st The Arrow, R H S, Rzdgewood, N I The Amherst Graduates' Quarterly, A College, Amherst, Mass The Argo, Rutger's Prep S , New Brunsvwck, N I The Aurora, N H S , Nome, Alaska The Breeze, Blazr Academy, Blazrstown, N j The Apokeepszan, P H S , Poughkeeps1e, N Y The Breeze, A H S, Alblon, Mrch One Hunflxul Fue 6 T flfil5Q,1fQ!--QQ-iQiQQ'Q V-:, iffl 5fl7 lnl' 7 e s gt , a, l A ,- -.,, ' . st 5 ,:,. '1-..1 H H l T v .' -1 ,-e-.A '.-, A'-,.v-, Q. ! The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The TI-IE CARNATION Cap Rock A H S Amarrlla Texas Caldron S H S Shawnee Okla CentralColleg1an Central College Fayette Mo Chronrcle Soph1e B Wrzght School New Orleans La Commerce Caraval H S of Commerce New York C1ty Daedalzan Monthly College of Industrral Arts Benton Texas Drstall' Gzrls H S Boston Mass Forum St I H S St joseph Mo Dragon St Georges School Newport R I Forum Senn H S Chzcago Ill High School Recorder Boys H S Brooklyn N Y Hrgh School News Central Hrgh School St Louzs Mo Hrgh Trmes S H S Sprzngfield Mo Hrgh School Gazette C H S Charlestown S C lV3gp1e De Wrtt Clmton H S New York Czty Lotus D H S Dover Del Nooz Emerson H S Stevens Pomt Wrs Mrrror W H H S West Hoboken N j Owl McK1nley N1ghtH S St Lours Mo Oahuan Runahow Academy Honolulu H I Owl Vanderbzlt Trarnmg S Elkton Ky Oracle famazca H S New York Czty Purple and Gray B H S Burlmgton Iowa Prospect Manual Tra1n1ngH S Brooklyn N Y Record Smzth Academy St Louzs Mo R 'mrnder L C H S Las Crucas N M Rayen Record Rayen H S Youngstown O .Scarab East Tech H S Cleveland O Trech Tatler H Techn1calH S Harrrsburg Penn Tatler WestH S Des Momes Ia Vermont Academy Lrfe Vt Academy Saxton Rrver Vt Vedette Culver Mrlztary Academy Culver Ind World St Paul CentralH S St Paul Mrnn Lewrs and Clark journal Lewrs and Clark H S Spokane Wn Scrzp Soldan H S St Lours Mo Yeatman Lzfe Yeatman H S St Lours Mo Beacon ClevelandH S St Lours Mo Trger E H S Edwardsvrlle Ill On Hundred S x , . . ., , . , , . . ., , . 1 . 7 1 I ' I ' I l ' , . . , . J I I ' . . , , . ., , . , . . . ., . , . I 1 ' x 1 ' ' , . ., , . ' J . , . ., , . . I ! ' I ' . , . . ., , . - , . . ., , . . A , ' . ., . - , . . ., , . , . ., , . , .... , , . . , . ., . , . The Owl, F. H. S., Fresno, Cal. I I 1 ' P V . . . f' '1 f' ' , . ., . , . . ., , . . , . ., , . . I 3 ' I ' c , . . 4. ., , . . Y , 1 I, , 1 '1 , . . ., , . , . . ., , . 1 ' '1 1 - I ' ! f' ' f' J I ' , . . ., . , . 7 ' 'I 3 , . ., . , . , . ., . , . A . , . ., . , . , . . ., , . vs i THE CARNATION The Record Congratulatlons Your lrterary department has un dergone a great unprovement The story Where Only Men Keep S1 lent IS excellent The Scrxp A typ1ca1 St Louls product Come agam The Tattler Welcome new comer welcome Your l1terary de partment deserves praxse The Dlstaff A few more longer stories would greatly lmprove the llterary department Cuts deplct mg school lxfe would arouse mor mterest 1n you The Argo More cut The Three Day Battle of Mxd years was very good The Lou1s and Clark journal An unsurpassed monthly They say a dog talks wxth h1s tal If that s the case your bull dog must be a stump speaker Ex A San FFHHCISCO edztor says that whenever he thmks of the pllght 0' Ireland h1s heart goes p1tV Pat x If hot a1r were lava some people would be volcanoes Ex Teacher All those who have not wrxtten the1r outlme m mk tell me oe I Wrote mme 1n bluemg x WSW Husband tossm restlessly n sxck bed My dear lt s the doc tor Im thmkmg of What a blll thls w1ll be' W1fe Never m1nd you know there s the msurance money x UNNECESSARY EXERTION Pullman Porter Next stop 1 yo statxon sah Shall I brush yo off now9 Morton Morose No xt IS not necessary When the tram stops Ill step off x FIGURATIVELY SPEAKING Tho they had never met be4 What cause had she 2 care? She loved h1m Ioderly because He was a I ooo oooa1re fl SHE DIDNT KNOW IT Mary Alice have you been eatlng a banana? Al1ce fglanclng 1nto a mxrror No why? Mary You have skm all over your face Ex SUBNORMAL I don t see why they call xt the normal school Why not? D1d you ever see the prod LC S5 Ex of QM On Hund ed Seven v .1 ' ' O' . , ,D o . 1. D H . . - D y , - - . . . n - - - -w as - ' , as ' . . , . . . ' ' n ... , - , . ' . ' : 's ' Q - , . . Y ' vv ' 1 ' - , H . - - . . ' ' A . ' . . ' ' v us E - S- ss - va ' v as ' ' . a 1 - 'ln E n v - . , .11 af . 1' . , . . 3 , . . . . . . ,. Q ' . -E v - . ' 1. 1 4 l .L . 4. v - . ' . . . . ns . A Y A as as J A . . . U ' ' 'II u E ' t - - - 1 5 S 1' , ,- I N fi F 1 - CCE! S Mxss Gllmore Qspeakmg of food valuesj What do onxons gwe you? Norma Fmk A bad breath Mr Tucker fcollectmg elephant money 1n a candy boxj I m col lectmg th1s money 1n a very candld way C ss Lead hxm out gently Mr Voss Get the strength out of your mouths and mto your toes Oh heavens forbld' M1ss Brown I went to a dm ner party the other nlght and on leavlng I wanted to put on my rubbers but I asked for my erasers' Une Hundred Fight TI-IE. CARNATION Clara L fm cookmgj Do you boxl eggs wlth the hulls on M Y Do you remember when Columbus dlscovered Amer ICB Mlss Fmk Found ln 305 on a desk There IS a waste can 1n the front of the room Please do not use th1s desk as one N F Heard on the Llterary Hlke rlght after the Maplewood Explo sxon Arthur Look fellows I have a piece of oak wood Klugman That s nothmg I ve got a piece of Maplewood Teacher fto pupxl who had just falledj Dld you study the es son for today Pup11 I ran over lt Teacher Well the next t1me run through xt Mlss Waugh I dont thmk you young folks should wrxte love storles you never know when to stop Kramer Water contamlng dxf ferent salts 1n solutlon w1l1 not mxx Tapscott Thats a salt fish story I-5 4,2 X X Y IH M5 L QJ-TLi,gNTw vu W JDEGN5 HJ NW fr Y 1' TTIN HE LOOQOLQT Egfr KT A QV? K OOONQF K U yt-A fl. N SNAKE V20 we W ,-:slam fgiifv AMX Xjltxr -ff 15 vez- 4 Q2 scour mom THE Lzrrremw it-dv-hx fVsfX ASSEMBLY HHKE EQ'-P Cr HD ff 4 ILL PLHGUE N rf rc WO'-f WWA WW' BO T KO A NX RL O1 L.E5'7 gf Towson: mm U1 9- O 5 57 R5 S31 mu :ww ww -af-Y 1 az JP' M-l f if . .4 0 'fr ' .5 I owzcm JZ 'fl bo -4 . 'if' ...I FW: uf M W5 snr: Z9 ww. I HE Nor Q 1 r13RhlN ,..gqgq-my-rr ov E E of F, 1 HMO i I' :JCB fx 15 HHMLEL C' CHR H HIT 6 VER? p9LPnbLE HIT One Hundred Nm , . . I H . . . . 7, . . U . 1 - r , H yy ' ' , us ' va - ' ' as , as - Y ' ' 9 Si . Y? ' S! , ' ' , as s - - ' yr ' 1 , . U . . . c as . n 1 a ' 9 7 ' H - ss , an 1 - n , an x . , . - ' 7, Y, ans hlxcfiafi fir lf x I A ' - -V W '- N 1 L k X ai- Y . gf OO aid, X, . mx: uf M 9 - X ff' ff fs- f 7' I A Q fcf 1' ..,i.-I-f-1 f-432' cr I : . jf 5 1 . , - r r 1 k 1 5, M . ., - kf K , X K ' 5 - ' ' , 1: com X ,ff f - f. ' I 1 . ' .f ,V Q 1' ,- -, 2 ' , X lf f ' w '75 4. ' vt 5,1-,A -K, .7 I y 4 IN Iliff I I I 1 ,,. 4 .JH V 1 , V , jig R, . V. ' - - f xfffg' n Q, ,fl X , . ' ji V f ' f r qv .- f L 1 ,-,?,,-- , 1 T I VX, - ,, , .x - , , K 1-sifi' Yrl' - ' X . X f' Q 7 11 f' ' . - 'f ' I ,- 5 yy ff' K, ' 4 'R , 'f. e -- he ' ' ' l Q5 IZ -- ,ew f f, rn :::g-- 1 f I I su. EI f TA:---'I-.::,,: .s. cn - 7 ,F I 't x X , -0-v--...- V 1 ' , Xxl- ,, , 1 '- . f so I Q IE ll ' , ff Lv- a Q f -.X M as f , I Wmwllw M e f1,Iv1..:!f V Q' - X, f Q we J I l l '4iQ 1 L V ' I ' 'I ln 'l' I llf- ef X .e 7 -' p1 Lfw'X 5 51 .mf 'Lf , ' -, . I , -QL? -I K ,All XX ,H ,,f ., . N .- -on 1 ku i 7 'ZZ' ? Icon: z C I T 'WP' moscow g ' 'im V N- QF rY- v -e Sf'-U' U mme, A Q Home ' ' , - Q- O , , f . l ., I. - 1 E 1' - E , f J- ' L4 -.Q':+f, . 1, E c-- 1 X, fl .. ',:,1' 1- .. Q ' A 4? Rpvvev' N - 7 - ff ' if '1,- ,EEx:rQ- V rw K., n- FU FR 3 N 1 ' - - - 1 ' ,l,. ' A .1314 .X gg , S : X 4' ' I fv, Q Y, 1 ' ' . E.. ig! : 5 l , , --- J' D - ,YV NVQ x, ,. :5 P . f ,- -. ..' -- .,. , . Z. 4- 1 f ' 'gf 'S ' - ' y L . I . .f --1 , E. 5. Y- 7 - - . 1. 1 2 .2 gl , F U si gg: , Q Q I N 2-. 3.1, 2 Y -1: fl Z H- . ,- - V 1 v 5,7 l R f ,V Si A 4 f . -3- 1' ,ww -f l S V -- ' A wlC.R xi H SE - i f' f' C' V H .' L tcvmglvwe . 1 1 ' 1 Av' C THE CARNIATION Mlss Flsher How d1d the church treat su1c1des 1n olden t1IIlCS7n Schuster They k1lled them Mr Yeaton What IS the most common mlneral carrled 1n Water D Cloud Bacter1a lllll? PREPAREDNESS Saw NT 1-x'K1N1.E-r vftmnovms 59,55 5 PCR scr-wwx DRESS WOR 5 6 BMHR was I k C if If 4-yr: TOWD R. WHCS TILKLI M jr' iq mon CHEM TRY GHS 'G mg jr lj L N QF A G Simofi LET THE ENEM WHSTE THEXR HHN-'1uN1T1ON CN THE SENXGRS H PDS TBTCO OJ lEP'lS 18 ONV HOUR Qu Y it LET B MEMBER OF ONECF 'rr-15 9 LYERHRQSQ 1 TN wmzew wx if 'gg Q 3 1 1, N Wiccm Bl5CU T5 'FOR 'Bu LET5 1 1' r fx. 1 Seen on a d1m1nut1ve New s musxc sl1p Vo1ce Bass FF Kle1n Q1n a class meet1ng for se lectlng Shakespearean charactersj Tapscott should be Touchstone Palmer The w1nds r1se 1n the belt of calms Mr Yeaton R1se? Palmer No but they go up On F1 dcdT 1 Pup1l What do you mean genealogy? Mr Tucker Your relat1on Adam and Eve Mr Tucker Cto de Cousser gaz 1ng out of w1ndow 1n 213, Noth 1ng to do Kurt but East St Louls Of course 1f she lmves there We wonder does she? look over to Our Edltor Say we cant ac cept th1s It 1sn t verse at all mere ly an escape of gas Aspxrmg Poet O I ee someth1ng wrong w1th the meter O E Yes we want l1ght po etry HEARD IN STUDY ROOM thls book IS Wh1tt1er Mr Tucker M1ss Gerlmg the clock w1ll run whether you look at It or not It IS a very tlmely art1cle Br1ght Pup11 She IS too, th t 1S why she IS watch1ng It S1ng a song of locals Good ones are so rare For what the Cr1mson doesn t take Are often very bare P D Ask any new J what the X ray IS and he Wlll probably tell you that lt IS the mlsslng ray s1nce X 1S always the 1'1'11SSl1'1g quantlty B111 Feuerborns sm1le 1S truly one that never wears off he has worn It smce babyhood' See Page 47 1 .L ' ' . H ' ' , as bu . , J . . . U ' , as ' - . . to , as ' xv yy , ss ' . . . ,, l - , as ' vs ' ' ' - 55 - V J T . 3 . U gl 7 .V , moo H f . ,, 1 I E ff E cou1.D,uEz Hut ' .,, ,T 4 vt 1 ff- 'f A i - 4, t: 1 1 ' . H 9 - A tif. S :, 1 T ' - I . . . , ' , ki, ,J ' ' 1 , Q - el 1 -1 fe 2 1 1 - ' ' l ' ' . U 1 S214 A ' h' S 1 is .X . ' W - - K' W: 1 n n u , - ,A 12-f T' ' 1 H -H RT , 5 l l 5 Q -'wwrv Q1-gif-Jil, 1-T gf' pf? 52 w L ff V 1 ' Y' R- '1 i f ,M z 1 -1 ka I 1 - , if X M, , . - N f 1. D '5 memes: 2 -- ' - 1 tj: 552-Q A -i 5.:vtE,usz 4 . 1 CD Nag-13? 1 g f K bomeor Mr. G: ' Oh, you are vvltty, but , , k Y , QQ, l' nm Quai . . . . ,, KJ:-Q r 1 H 11:1 , . ' 5 4 YQF ff ,- Q C-4 1 Y' L1 ...1- 0 , r j - fl nit wwe 1 . , , 'JY' 9 mmeer 1 ' 3 , ' I . 1 1 an , 1 I ' -fx , . , 1 , X - - ,.-. 1, ,1 . 1 ,, I . ,, , ' Tv'-m 1 - F- A - - 'fn I - ' , u ' Y K! 1 . , 3 6 3 ,Ji 1 . . . . ,, . K ,. i . . n -- Q 1 ,D - , , 61, ll 1 , ucv i n Q -' . 1 L E Y I lm. 11.11 ., ' to N1 .fx sewn Wy' Q , TR, ' V K 2 J 1 1. 1, k Q24 f U Q.:-1 N r - ' Q K- , . 1 . Tun L 1 . . 1 - ef . . . J, 1 ' , . o o I - . , : . u sr , .-...1- i . , . . . H . . . ,9 W , u ' 11 ' ' . , ac n . , . . . P 1 lfl I' ' Q! TI-IE. CARNATION NEW J DICTIONARY Program card Artlcle to be consulted at varlous t1mes usually when proceedlng twenty mxles per hour down a crowded corrxdor Test A search for a reasonable excuse to Hunk a fellow Lunchroom A place to be reached not later than one second after the bell rmgs Watchful waltlng A pol1cy adapted for lunch room use before the 1ce cream counter a b1g d1sh the pr1ze Preparedness Use of drmklng fountam so that It w1l n t squxrt D1gn1ty A quallty ln semors not much 1n evldence Gym A place where boys can play wlthout belng bothered by glrls The Blg Stxck A weapon now reported to have been transferred to Mr Voss on the part of senxors to be ob served wlth open mouths and star mg eyes Corr1dors Race courses usual ly obstructed by sundry legs clad mn long trousers Groan A sound to be made 1n class when poetry IS ment1oned Jumors Llttle t1n gods wheels Green The color of the human race Room 213 School for lmpas sxoned oratory Wanted Informat1on leadmg to arrest and convlctxon of person who broke my stick Mr Voss Yes Eleano Dodson always had flaxen ha1r xts just as curly ana yellow now as xt was when she had her pxcture taken See page 47 EXPRESSIONS BY THE FACULTY If you want to say say xf I don t care Room IO6 By George Room III If I wanted to I could get order one second Room 213 Boys boys theres too much noxse B 5 All rxght sxster Gym There aren t enough n s ln th1s type Cr1mson ofhce My unruly haxr shows not a stubborn d1spos1t1on but great w1ll power Room 305 Do you see yourself gxrls Room 101 Strange as xt may seem there are some things I know Room I0 HEARD IN HISTORY Mlss Connor The people are wondermg what to do wlth the ex Presldents Gutfreund Kill em Dld you know that the Assoclate Edltor used to be deathly afrald of men? See how she looked when she saw the photographer page 47 Mlss Flsher Where was Gold smlth born? Cloud In 1728 Tapscott fof coursej Dont get Mr Tucker black socks H 1sn t dead yet M Flscher I guess that exam w1ll wake you up raves tl put us sleep forever Save your penmes and buy an elephant O dl lmmortales dl xm mortales' what next I H l ill n v ' ' C6 ' V, ' , ' ll Y H7 -. ' Ll ,Y . i li . in . - . SL I i s s ' 79 I li ' ' L ' ' - ' u , 1 4 v 1 - - ,Li ' f Q n 64 . , T 9 ' 1 i ' ' - ni . . . O H . 5,2- 66 ' 7, , . . --' . . . U ' , ' ' ' 99 'T . 7- L - , n ' ' ' as A dance-Successlon of antxcs ' . , u - s ss , - . . I 1 U' ... 1 ' . J . . . on ' ' I sn 1 n ' . , ss nv . T ' - , as r ' . . . e ' Y I! . . r . l H - 1- . . ,, .....-. G Z No, i 'l to 1, r . , - . . , . 3 If ' u y - me un' rf-1 'I mw- THl:. CARNATION WHEN W111 J Razek catch h1s breath? W111 an antldote for blushing be found by CMISSD P G9 W1lA B O M andA W cease to be three hearts that beat as one? W111 get enough powder on her nose? W111 Mr Tuckers dreams of 1deal H1StOTy Teachlng be real 1zed9 W111 Tapscotts socks qulet down? W111 Dot Mepham fall to sm1le WANT ADS Wanted A 3 h1story note book guaranteed to be good for at least twenty hours l1brary work A Newman Wanted Apphcants w1th strong eyeslght to act as censors of neck wear Colby Chlld Wanted Some person to offer encouragement to prospect1ve mls Luth Wanted Some one to take the place of C S1dney Neuhoff as sell er of general notlons Whole School Wanted Some new stor1es and nerve to tell them G Watson Wanted Some new jokes Mr FISCHCF Wanted A publ1c1ty man to make known the fact that my name does not conta1n a c M1ss Mary Flsher H Luth The constltutxon was adopted 1n 1787 Mr Tucker Yes just about ex actly Mr Tucker Cshowmg d1fference between farther and further, 1 Il hed Tx 9136 Farther ns used to refer to pro gresslon m space and when you run out of money 1n college COnly a true Bostonlan could apprecxate th1s D jamtor seemg couples dancmg ln gym You folks cant dance 1n ere' 99 HEARD IN MATH 6 Mr Games Dont let x equal w It mxght mean war we dont know You d1dn t know the editor went out for track? Well see hlm ln h1s track su1t on page 47 HEARD IN CHEM I Mr Fxscher How do you get hydrochlorlc ac1d7 Mr H Take the cork out of the bottle HEARD IN MUSIC Mr Hahnel Now boys on the HEARD IN HISTORY 2 Pupll frec1t1ngj The Itallans were dn lded 1nto two classes h1gh landers and lowlanders Mr Rens I though the hxgh landers were the Scotch What IS the final beglnnxng of the reformat1on7' Mr Hoffsten There there now If you want to be funny put lt m the Crlmson Its a good suggestlon try lt George Graves has been accused of belng 1nqu1s1t1Ve well he must have been 1n h1s babyhood look at hxm examlmng the Flower on page Ll ' . ' . . ' ' v l . ., . ., . . - i . y . . , ' , ss 9 ' 77 I h . Q. .Q ' 7 171- . - ' . IK Y . . 'i , ' . W. , ! 3 9! . , . ' 3 , . . . -T - ' , cc a ' ' ' Q! T . . . H ' ' - 9, . . - . H ' . - . ' ' 7 i s1onar1es-Norma Flnk and Helen top of page thirty-nine. . B- .,. . , . - 97 . , sz ' - 59 . W T A na ' ' ' A D . . ' i! ' as 11 ' . 4' -. . . , , . . a 1 ' 39 ' . y . u s . ' : f ' ' 7? - . sa ' . . , ' ,, . . . . . . - 7 9 -- 9 ' as vs s as , ' . 47. I ll? llllf ' V ' THE CARNATION RESULTS OF AN INSPECTION OF THE CONTENTS OF OUR LOCAL BOX 2 double transfer Fourth and Jefferson A sheet Manlla paper blank 1 card advertxslng Xmas carol smgers torn 1n five p1eces 1 transfer Compton jefferson 1 ha1rp1n 2 b1ts of drred carnatlon stern A transfer decorated by blacken mg alternate squares I recelpt from Famous Barr for cap 72C I Pepperm1nt gum wrapper g61nches of fine wlre carefully colled Serxes of 7 Stlx Baer Fuller charge slxps torn 1n I2 PICCCS each Q84 p1eces 1n ally 2 defunct pens match m two PICCCS IQ of a common or garden varlety of lunch room COOklC We thank our contrlbutors for thxs generous offermg so truly ln d1cat1ve of McK1nley w1t Splflt and anx1ety to help Lend One Carefree H 'IPPIHCSS HeLp Wrlte Amuslng M1rTh What was that nolse john just cracked a Joke x Someone has sard It IS hard to fit a prcture 1n a clrcle well Fred Kramer seems to f1t pretty well see hrs black eyes on page 47 Afm. A A person must have some mlsery ln hrs l1fe or he IS not happy FOUND ON EXAMINATION PAPERS Englxsh 4 Translent Across the water Reek Vapor grven off by a dead body Gossamer A man wlthout a head Klrk A wharf ENGLISH 5 A daxry IS a place where the d1fferent products of the cow are taken from h1m We should not expect to reap oats when we sow Weed seed Leechmg IS the act of puttlng leech 1n a substance Hllde arde Merkle certalnly was a happy baby' just look at her smlle on page 47 HEARD IN FRENCH 6 Teacher Qu: ecrut Faust? fWho wrote Faustj HEARD IN ART Who taught you to shade? My father He sells shades Geor e Schuster may be th1n now but when he was younger well look on page 47 Trouble causes a person t change mternally as well as ex ternally ROOM 101 Have I grven you polsons yet? Next week then well take pols n Hun! .- .1 I ' , I . - . . 1 . . l 1 U. T , . . I , ' t l hi ' ' - . . 1 y, , , - 1. Q gs - , . , - yy ' M . . . I . . I . .,, . . U . 5 .' tj , ..-4 . H . I ' sa Pupil: Le diable Cthc devilj. A l ' ss as 'V U ' ' b 1 'O Q- li y U lr - 9, L-, .4 - 1 ' - .ni ss O Yi . . 1 , H i - . T- I ' - , y ., U . on. ..-.-.W -. 1 -.ha:..1'....---.- -.. O e fI'+:flTl.lI'I r:I1 TI-IE CARNIATION HEARD IN MATH 6 M1ss Hew1tt Let Qxj equal the number of eggs 1n a dozen Who taught you to two step My two step s1sters Mxss Alexander Is there any one absent today? Pup1l The g1r1 1n the front seat IS absent Ed1tors Not Owmg to the d1fhcult1es whxch confronted the engraver 1n reproducmg the baby plctures of the staff only a few of those submltted could be used Hovx ever we have attempted to se lect fair samples of the youthful stren th and beauty develop1n at McK1nley Do you take chem1stry? dont take things Im honest filled her vacant mo hvmg lnwardly agam Nancy ments by and agam ENGLISH 7 HIS beard was as whxte da1sy w1th a temperament lxvely Wxlllam Shakespeare was ln 1610 and dled m 1616 Franklyn was of a llvely perament and 11ked custard w1ne 1n the mormng FOUND ON ENGLISH PAPERS a a very born tem Wltll At the end there was a monu ment Whlch the car turned around A frxend and myself seated on two horses rode away ENGLISH 8 Tomorrow we w1ll take Gold sm1th s lxfe D1d you know that Margaret Spuehler used to be plump and chubby? See her on page The Domes k1lled Lornas father and ra1sed her to be thexr kmg sew, fi v.: 40 'thai' O1 H1 ldfoutn fi , 1 ' ' . Ln ' - - S . ' 7 ' 7, as Zu as ' as ' . ' , an ' l A: - ' 4 ' . . . ,, . . G . 5111 2 , - . , 4 7 w , . 1 ' - ' if ' O' 0' D D - v ' vs n ' 97 U M w ' 1 No. I , vw . G sa - U ' I ' u ,, ' 1, 'H U , , ', Y f , I fwlm N 1 ' ' ml , I I -1'-'Pa -KH! . l -Q- -': 1 -..- ..... . 1-A mt re. ' 1 ee Qrganigatiuns THE CARWAIION THE jll IOR CLUBS T THE END of the precedmg semester Mr M1ller conce1ved the ldea of havln jumor Clubs The purpose of these clubs IS to alle ABE vrate the feellng of stranveness 1n the new comers The member sh1p IS 11m1ted to the first two terms and the names of the 1nd1v1dual clubs are taken from the names of the grammar schools from whlch the members come The meetmgs are held during the audltorlum meetmgs and resemble those of the llterary SOC1Ct1CS Each club has 1ts set of oFHcers and a moderator besldes a baseball team debatmg team and declamatory team Debatmg dCCla1IT11I'1g and extemporaneous speaklng are the thlngs to whlch the members devote thelr tlme Th1s work prepares the mem bers to take an aCt1VC part 1n the llterary SOC1Ct1CS when they have Hmshed the1r second term In the establishment of these clubs McK1nley has shown avam 1tS Unlted States ln fact that has these clubs Rossen Harms X MM' M m L B Hn flux I1 l Rlxtc 7 , , l ' ' U ' ' - Q . to b - U - Q I 7 Y 3 ! ' 7 7 s . b. . progressiveness. McKinley is the only school in St. Louis or in the 7 1 - - W .dskff 2 N' 'S Y '-za ' C X s.: b . .A 41 , I 4 I 5 f K' 5 Q I x A ' . 1- ll w ten EIIYID HO NH' NVIAIHEIHS HHLL One Hundred bexenteen w 1 1 . One Hundred Enghteen THL T I ANGLL JUN O I CLUB V I v-4 , v-1 Vw v4 v--4 V- W-3 n CLUB UNIOR J LE AF CLOVER 'IHL , , , ' N ,M 1, . . ' 4 'rw-qv , px,--gf ' ' A 5' 1 , L ' ' 1 Q V qi h ' ...L.,A- . ... 4, A .N w 5.,.h,,,!A,, . n L . H , ,A . . , , . 5 f A - Om liundr ed N lneteen Une Hundred Tw enty Ll C JlNOi IX KIN IN Ll F' w II T In ' l'I.I'I lf' Ll' ' T I I T TH. UB H JUN OR CL PLE TR E I I . 'N ,A 4,.,un. -Q' C L JLNIOR CLUB S LITERARY SOCIETY Motto Vrta sine lrtterrs mors est Moderators Mr H R Tucker and Mr R E Taylor Pres1dent Louzs Klern Vxce Presldent Charles Tapscott Secretary Louzs Wolf Treasurer Israel Trerman News Ed1tor Henry Arthur L1brar1an Ralph D Oench HE LITERARY SOCIETY has enjoyed a very successful term both rn llterary work and 1n the addrtlon of new members Start mg wlth a falr membershlp though constant work the member shlp has now reached 1tS maxlmum growth Good programs have been rendered a Declamatory and Short Story Contest have been held a well attended hlke was enjoyed by all and the Llterary Dance proved to be very successful We can also boast that the team chosen to represent McK1nley ln the Interscholastlc Debate conslsted largely of Llterary Soclety members Smce we do not lose many members by gradLat1on thls term we feel confident that under the able dlrectlon of our moderators we can make next term s work as successful as the one now nearing completlon We would llke to take thls opportumty to 1nv1te any boy who has completed hls first year to v1s1t LS 1n Room 205 any Frlday afternoon and we are assnred that he w1ll deslre to become a member New Ed1tor Sergeant-at-Arms .................... B. von Hoffmann ! J ! A ' . 3 , - , - . . ! ! 9 . . . V . . 7 l CULLCUC CLUB l Colors Green and Whzte Moderator Miss Connor OFFICERS Presxdent Margaret Spuehler Vlce Presldent Paulme Gerlmg Recordmg Secretary Gean La Mont Correspondmg Secretary Violet Prrchard Llbrarlan Allce Wredmer Sergeant at Arms Ann Hrlpert HE COLLEGE CLUB meets on A Fr1days at 3 p m mn Room 311 The sessxons wh1ch are made very mterestmg by varled programs consxstmg of readxngs rec1tat1ons talks on current events and short story contests have been well attended thxs term The Club IS soclal as well as llterary we g1VC spreads teas and Hlkes We gave a green spread on St Patrxcks day at whlch every one had a dandy' tmme Any glrl who IS mterested ln college or llterary work IS cordlally mvxted to jom us L . Treasurer ,.......t , .,t., ..t. , . ....,. Dorothy Mepham Si l! ' ' . ., ' y . . . 3 5 . . 3 ! 9 . . . 3 . , ' KK Y? ' S ' . . . , CK Y ' HSSEHBLY Moderators Messrs Howard and Hosek OFFICERS Presxdent Horace Grzmm Vxce Presxdent Harr1s Rossen secretary Gerhardt Boehmer Treasurer Oscar Hammerstem Sergeant at Arms Erzc Altenbernd T has been the custom for a socxety to admlt havmg had a very successful term just to vary the monotony I suggest that those E62 who are lnterested Judge for themselves The Assembly celebrated 1ts tenth ann1versary by glvmg a dance to which the members of the three other llterary socletles were 1nv1ted An afternoon was very enjoyably spent ln thls Way The declamatory and short story contests furmshed unusually keen competltlon Great xmprovement along these lmes was lndxcated V1s1tors are always welcome to attend our meetmgs whxch are held on Fr1day afternoons mn Room 305 at three o clock 00: Hn. lluu4lx..l Ixwzl 1X I I 8 an a'S C0- wi' Il 9 '5 -viii Moderator Mzss Chase Motto Vzvere est Cogztare Colors Whlte and Gold OFFICERS Presldent Margaret Cheney Vxce Presldent Mznme Luckey Recordmg Secretary Dons Talbot Sergeant at Arms Celeste Evans Do I belong to the O 1ta9 Why of course' Have you never not1ced th1s pm? We meet every B Frlday 1n Room 211 and spend a very dehghtful afternoon Our programs are composed of read1ngs rec1tat1ons or1g1na1 storles debates essays and book revlews Besxdes our regular work we have a short story contest You have no 1dea how mterestmg the work IS Oh yes I almost forgot to tell you that on pleasant Saturdays m the Sprlncf and Fall we often take our lunch and go for a long tramp 1n the country You certa1n1y are welcome to v1s1t us at our next meetmg Any g1r1 of McK1n1ey who IS lnterested ln 11terary work 1S cord1al1y 1nv1ted to attend one of our meetmngs 4 6 ! ' H , 1 - Corresponding Secretary .........t,....... Norma Fink 56 Ti--A--------------n--- ' . t , . . . ,, sn I 4 7 ' ' ' I 5 ' 1 H . U . .9 3 b 9 .. . . . . ' 19 CLHSSICHL CLUB T ,Lv '1' OFFICERS Presldent Charles Tapscott Vlce Presldent Helen Luth Secretary Paulme Anmn Sergeant at Arrrs Thomas Theophzlos LTHOUGH the Classlcal Club has been steadlly progressmg both m quallty and quantlty lt IS deslred that the growth may be even greater w1th1n the next year The subjects Whxch this soc1ety takes up are of the classxcal perxod of Italy and Greece The programs are very mterestmg as well as xnstructlve All puplls who are at all mclmed to the closslcs are cordlally lnvlted to v1s1t the meetlngs of the Classlcal Club held every B Tuesday IU Room 202 The members w1ll do the rest L-A 2 L I no-Arm-nLz'f'l' Treasurer .a....,........a. ..- e e,.,..... ---Louis Klein - - A if-i-ii-i-i i --i ' I I l I , . . . 9 9 ' IQLLEE tum all Director: Mr. Halmel. OFFICERS. President ................... - ............. Robert Cox Vice-President ...7.................... Allen Sheppard Secretary ......... t-..--.. ......... Clarence Griesedieck Treasurer ............................... Colby Childs Librarian ..e.......e..e................. Fred Kramer HE GLEE CLUB needs no introduction to most of the pupils at McKinleyg its work is well known. The club has sung several times in the Auditorium this term, and judging from the applause the audience was more than pleased after they had heard several of our selections On the sixth of April we gave our dance and as usual every one enjoyed himself immensely We have planned to have several more good times before the term ends The club meets in the Auditorium every Thursday at 3 p rn Those interested will please give their names to the president or secretary C G Hx Hu 1 Y 9 , . Q Y i l . u- 1-lr.-cl 'Fwenly-liight ,,..z1 as 1 -25 :lsr ua 1 ' I - I 'ag 1: f 1 ' - - - I ' 111 'E L. lf' ' 'i.:u ti 4 9 rt-rg Dzrector Mr Hahnel Colors Red and Blue OFFICERS Presxdent Nelda W1l1ard Vlce Presldent fuI1a Starck Secretary jane Klezber Treasurer Margaret Lavm L Mellcent Endlcott xbrarlans Evelyn jewett Sergeant at Arms Eumce Kemper OCIALLY the Carol Club has not been very busy that IS to say we have not had any functlons thls term But the members have nevertheless been enjoylng themselves Mr Hahnel has care fully selected some new songs whxch we fa1thful1y try t interpret The club has nearly fifty members now after havmg lost many of xts old members by graduation Any glrl who IS up 1n her studles and muslcally 1ncl1ned w1ll be welcomed lnto the club To the graduates we extend our best wlshcs for a happy future 15 'Q ' -U 1 - 5 , 1 0 . Q Y.- 1.7 v.. lv- - , , F' ll! ' ,, 7.-'A- iyp ': i I A I g ': :gf A: : fl: f i I : - 1 - I ' U- 1 'v J I ii ,Q - -4 -7 ' l E v 55 -- 1 ll 11 5 l W 2:11 -' L, JL-- AL .., gr- - H '.u F - 4 ,- I 0 A A F : Q PNKU-q,f.,ls J in 7 l if ' 79 ' ' s 1 - ' O . l 6 Moderator: Mr. C. f. Hosek OFFICERS President .... s.,,,, , .. e . ,As,,,..,, Allen Sheppard Treasurer ,,..v,e,e , ,,,, ,.-,t e,,.., .- ,,,e Arthur Newman Secretary e,.,A..e.ee.,........,,,.. Edward Brungard F those members who have played with us the past semester, I think there is not one who will say that we have been an unsuc- cessful organization. During the past term we have filled many dates, both at school and outside. On each occasion we have not failed to entertain our audience lf one may Judge by the applause On April 6th we combined our efforts with those of the Glee Club to entertain our members and guests with a dance that proved a great success At the present time we can use a few more boxes If you play see Mr Hosek any time for a trial We regret the loss of Herman Hoyer which is due to his leaving school Brungard Secretary I K 1 Une Hundred Thuts , . - U vs ' 9 1 , . . , A.. 4, 7,....-W f , R yt L . . A, f .7,,,5f5wK-'awe R , xy., V, 'Ly BCHEST U SLU 'V' f Moderator Mr Hahnel OFFICERS Presldent Lours Wolf Secretary Wlllram Szmon Treasurer Dons Talbot Lxbrarlan Bertha Mueller HIS TERM the school has an orchestra whose membershlp 1S th1rty four The new lrstruments are one bass trombone and two vlolas and cellos We have spent many pleasant hours 1n prac t1ce and have recelved much benefit The orchestra helped to make the muslcale glven by the Musxcal Club a success On April Hrst the orchestra also took part ln the enter tamment glven by the McK1nley Hlgh School Patrons Assoclatlon On Aprxl twenty elghth and twenty mnth the orchestra furnlshed the musxc for the Shakespearean memorlal The members of the orchestra wlsh to thank Mr Hahnel for the tm- and labor spent so generously ln makmg the orchestra what lt IS Secretary On' Ilunrlrul Thutx Url' 1 l Y Z1-fi pfqfafi XM , . . WI if Q? Q-Q A -7 i vwll Vice-Presgcientiiij-iiiiiiivilfrr-ank Senkosky AVA OLVD S HHYTHDIC C195 Colors Whrte and Gold Moderators Mzss Watt M1ss Garesche OFFICERS Presldent Paulzne Gerlmg V1ce Pres1dent Hrlda Mabley Treasurer Helen Plcker HIS term we have g1ven a receptlon for our parents and the faculty and we are now workmg hard to make our May Day Bffim program a success Ou work conslsts of aesthetlc folk and soclal dancmg I our aesthetlc danc1n we are not confined to the four walls of the gym rfaslum but r1se to Grecxan helghts and Hlt about m sylvan woods and CIHSSIC temples Later we wxll perhaps be 1n Russxa makmg our feet move fast to drlve away the bltlflg cold or we may stop ln Norway to frollc w1+h the splrlt frlends of Grleb However we always return to the gymnaslum ln plenty of tlme to one step and fox trot before 4 30 One Hundred Thmrts Txxo as f Qs E 1 -9' L '9 .N - - M Secretary ...., ffffffffffffffffffffffjgfgafef Cheney , n F . r . , , . . H n . l 1 I g . . . . - ' ll an l l MM 5' Colors Green and Gold Moderator Mzss Ewers OFFICERS President Ida Parker VICC Presldent Rachel Burns Secretary Cornelza Vanderbeck TreasL rer Henrzetta Hosek Sergeant at Arms Charlotte Mrkulus OW would you l1ke to spend one of these Ulorlous sprmg Satur days out m the country where the trees are buddmg and flowers are bloommg and all Nature blds you a hearty welcome? Add to th1s a broup of Jolly people a p1cn1c lunch u der the trees could you pass a more pleasant day? If you are lnterested 1n nature study meet wlth us 1n room 110 B Thursday and learn more of our work and tr1ps Last term we VlSltCd such places as Chff Cave Falllng Sprlngs Meramec Hxghlands and Shaw s Garden becommg good frlends of the plants Secretary addiirlaauai -an 44119 U TN M592 One Humlrel Thxrty Three ruclnriuunu cuxgg Moderator Mr Zels OFFICERS Presldent Colby Ch1ld Vxce Presxdent Clarence Mange Secretary fullus Boehmer Treasurer Albert Skay Sergeant at Arms Leonard Wolfarth we may Judge by the lncrease 1n membershlp the Engmeermg Club has started a prosperous term The members have all 67935 been workmg for the success of the soclety and owmg to the large Held open to them they have made the programs varled and attractxve Under the gu1dance of Mr Ze1s we have taken up surveymg n Lafayette Park Besldes th1s trxps have been made and others are bemg planned We have VlS1tCd the Dlesel En me Companys plant a rollm mxll m Gramte C1ty and the M111 Creek Sewer All boys lnterested ln our work who have hmshed one year of mathematics are welcome The club meets nn 301 every Wednesday at 3 oclock Secretary W e llumhfml llllllX lull: I RIFLE CLUB Moderator G A Lauterbach Presxdent George Nelson Vlce Presldent Olan Meeker Sergeant at Arms Lawrence Logan HE RIFLE CLUB IS st11l ahve and IS very actxve Meetings are held on Monday afternoon at two fifty five ln room 212 After the meetmg the members adjourn to the Armory on Grand and Market Anyone who has a 22 callber r1He IS cordlally mvlted xo a tend the meetmgs 'mf Hvnflnfl Thlru I 'P l Secretary and Treasurer .....,.,..,.. .--Norman Stupp One Hundled Thzrtx Qu I STAF CRIMSON I, I W' -Ill l Moderator Mr R E Taylor OFFICFRS Pr 1dent Leo Suycott V1 e Presldent Gladys Bosshard Secretary F W Palmer j Treasurer Margaret Lawn Sergeant at Arms Dean Lelfler N the s1xth day of Aprxl 1916 there was orgamzed at McK1nley a Pedestrxan Club w1th twenty five pup1ls IU attendance The E 1nterest manlfested by the charter members was surpr1s1nb as It was at first feared that the pupxls would not respond to such an orgamzatlon After much dlscussxon officers were elected and a commxttee on hlkes was ppolnted to schedule a serles of hxkes for Saturdays The members hope to forget thexr labors and studles and to prepare them elves fo weeks of study by followlnb the narrow paths of the woods and breathmb the fresh alr BAND OFFICERS Pres1dent Drummond Cloud V1ce Presldent George Cloud Sec etary Russell Deeds Treasurer Frank Hokr L1brar1an W1ll1am Fredrzcks Assxstan Llbrarlan Kenneth Tureczek Sergeant at Arms W1ll1am Wallace AST TERM through the energetlc work of Mr Burr and several others McK1nley s Brass Band was orgamzed It has been pro H l' gressmg most wonderfully ever smce We are always m need of new members and consequently we mvlte all who play an Instrument sultable for a band to Jom us for you will learn a great deal and will also enjoy the work Mr Burr IS our leader and we feel extremely fortunate ln havmg such an able 1nstructor to dlrect us We meet every Wednesday at 3 oo p m 1n Room 401 Come and brmg your mstruments' fm n il ,, I I I I ' ' 5 I I I U 6 :- h I . . ,,..,., -,. .,,,e. .... enmen--- - ..,,.,,,.A.ee,,e....,.,,.. , . , r. . y . V . . l U! IF . . . . ff, A . . , , . s ' r ' ' cf , f . 0' . . We meet in 311 and all are welcome. . L . . L ....-...,-Y.w.... , . , . . , D - .l lltge k l l - , ! 5 , . ' 1 1- Hu ' '-'fl Thirty-Sw-v PHYSIOGRBPHY Mag Sl M f lil I WW '5 fW TZ I ls Moderator Mr W f Yeaton OFFICERS Presldent Horace Gnmm Vlce Presldent Szdney Kollme Secretary Wm Krueger Treasurer Wm Feuerborn Sergeant at Arms joseph Novak NEW CLUB has been formed at McK1nley the Physxography Club Wlth ten members pre ent we organlzed thls term and It was not long before our club was enlarged by the enrollment of ten new members Stlll smce we shall lose about half th1s num ber through graduatlon this June we need almost as many new members as we have old and consequently we mv1te all who have studxed physlog raphy or are studymg the subject to Jom us The purpose of the club IS to further the study of physlography We meet ln Room 221 every Thursday at 3 p m Talks are g1ven by members of the club on mlmng lumbermg rocks mlnerals etc and frequently we have a h1ke on Saturday W K SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH OFFICERS Presxdent Fred Wechkerlm Vxce Presldent jack Sampson Secretary Fred Ceck Treasurer Charles Thomas Sergeant at Arms Robert jones INCE thls club has been orgamzed the members have been work S mg to provlde McK1n1ey wlth an xmproved wlreless outfit EQ The club IS takmg up wxreless as the chlef toplc for dlscus sxon Wxth our apparatus we have heard Key West and Cape Hatteras, and we 1ntend to make a set that wall do better than that The club wlll gladly welcome anyone mterested ln wlreless, ln Room 104 every Monday C T 4k di 7 -ff ,L F K ,w a If .:. l 'Hr 1 ' . U - - , ., .R '32, ,A fx A -F 71 ' 1, 'U , .sf A QQ, . J. 3 1.5 ' of ll ' - ' ' A' ' 1514! ' 25 5' ' A H 4 ' 7 G - ,ku ' - ,f 13 EQ 1 . E0 AW! .rl Y 5 E5 ' fu . M . 'Z im.-4 , 1 A . 1 4 2 A ' - . ' s ' ' , ' 'JQQZ-u f. . , ' Y y - . I 1 ' V I ' 1 'J Une llllllllltll 'l'hirty-liighl EHMHNELUB M Moderator Mrs Ceczlza Hospes OFFICERS Presxdent Bernard von Hoffmann V1ce Pres1dent and Secretary Mrss Amanda Horstman Treasurer Harrrs Rossen Sergeant at Arms Paul Hartmann HE past term cannot be sald to have been a very successful one m the annals of the German Club Our membershlp has not grown zn the way we m1ght have wlshed We can see no adequate reason for such a lack of mterest 1n a German club smce so many puplls mclude German ln thelr llsts of studles We hope that every student of German w1ll pay at least one V1Slt to a German Club meetmg as our programs are very mterestmg and enter talnlflg and furmsh a reat help to anyone studymg German Our meetmgs are held every Wednesday afternoon xn Room No o and the German Club extends a hearty welcome to all mterested ln Ger man customs and the German lan uage The Secretary CYCLE CLUB Moderator Mr Callan OFFICERS V1ce Pres1dent Clarence Grzesedzeck Secretary Charles C Tapscott Treasurer Carl Hofmann Sergeant at Arms Lester Klauber Pathfinder Theodore Yaeger HE CYCLE CLUB IS one of the oldest organ1zat1ons at McK1nley and IS tronger thxs year than xt has been for some tlme Over nl ht runs are bemg contemplated The club has already taken a number of runs and IS startmg the season well Runs w1ll be announced both 1n the Crxmson and on our board All mterested m cvcllng are 1nv1ted to attend our meetmgs held mn No 219 every Tuesday The Secretary 'buf -'V I f C 1 ' ' L -0 1 ff Q 1 L, . jiieig . . . U . Y b ' - 3 41 L U b . . Presidentg ,,....,........... - ..e-,,.... Horace Grimm . . . . , . S . . . . - .U . D . . I , . . . ' . . UA., um- Ilumlrwl 'l'hirty'-Xin I WWWWWWMVWHw'WVwMW'WMW'wfwfwwwmwmfml WIXIWAW wln1mtwlmwml1pmlmuMiH'ml I TWEWMWMImlHWmWmWHlWWHW!iHl'l 'FWHM' Hwlllllf llmlnflnluulmum!mlrlrlllallnlnlllllllmlmlnmnmmmlmmmnun-zuuulimmmulr if Moderator Mt Parrot OFFICERS Presldent Clarence Mange Treasurer Phzlzp Brown Secretary E Landon HE CHESS CLUB accomphshed a reat deal durlng the last term Bes1des the very enjoyable meetmgs held every Week the club took an actlve part 1n 1ts Interscholastlc Chess Tournament An Interscho1ast1c Chess Leabue was formed at the be 1nn1n of the term Wxth oihcers chosen from the varlous h1gh school chess clubs Each school was represented 1n the tournament by the three best players of thelr respectlve clubs and each played one game wxth every other part1c1pant Although Soldan won the cup th1s year we hope w1th the support of the school to w1n lt next term The McK1nley team conslsted of C Mange N Osnoss and I Trelman To all puplls lnterested m chess we extend a heary welcome and hope to see them w1th us Tuesday afternoons 1n Room 103 Our Moderator Mr Parrott would be glad to teach the ame to anyone who would llke to learn QFWHNP 'F' i' lily!!! One Hundred L ortx .f 1 - ' '-I1 1 I r nj ' If' vw f 'a - '-'f nv' --up, X 'mm mm .mr mul, tml A ill' 'Il . : 1 W - A W - l 4 lm .-' ' ' II 1 I I ll. . 1 I 4' , I, H1 Ill 1 1, 'TL . ' f T, aww I llll-llill f . , ll ' 'V' zu. H W' ' lf l.',3'.l-llll IIIIIII!QtlIIl!lln.r.4L.lm..ahL.......J.....,...:Ilh1., .,.,. allHlllll.....,.Jl'....-alll-........ IE .......llIlIHQ Qllllll! .J , . ' , 4 l ' M, T ' L, N. 9 . . , . . . ' . , , , . . , . . . , - , g E, - Vu ' an - l' x 1 ' q Q 7 'I ' . NIEEIUN EEICIETY Q l W NY? I DI Moderator Mzss Gzlmore OFFICERS Presldent W1Ima Mann V1ce Pres1dent Marzan H111 Treasurer Dorothy Neuhodf Sergeant at Arms Verna Wlerheun Buyer Lucy Hanley HE meetmgs of the MISSION Soclety are held every Wednesday afternoon ln Room 320 Our work consxsts ln makmg clothes 'Lx' for new arr1va1s at the Clty Hosp1tal We Gam not only the experlence wh1ch naturally comes wxth such work but we get the pleasure that always comes from lendmg a helpmv hand Any g1r1 at McK1nley who enjoys sewlng 1S cord1a11y 1nv1ted t JOIN our socxety and we feel sure that she w1ll End our work mterestlng M C Hn llumll ll I 'Hx - C EJ lr ' ,e 1 6' '-l Q, Y' '5 ' 1 ' Sb lr'ls CM' nfs. Secretary ....e,.,........, --- ., .,... Margaret Cheney . I - ' . O 1 5 ' I D 1 . . . . . . . . O BOYS A A Ath1et1cD1rector Mr F C Voss OFFICERS PfCS1dCUt D Conzelmann V1ce Presrdent Wm Feuerborn Secretary F W Palmer f Treasurer Mr L M Parrott League Representatlve G A R Schuster HIL BOXS A A IS closmg 1ts best year ln the hxstory of the 0I'bdl1Z3tlOl l The beneral financ1al cond1t1on 1S far better than was '1nt1c1pated and the membershxp has reached a total of about five hundred members The unusually large membershlp th1s term probably IS due to the formatlon of the New J Clubs and the athletlc contest mstxtuted by Mr Voss at the bevmnmg of the term The mtere t shown m these two orgamzatlons IS at present runmng very hlgh and lt IS hoped that xt w1ll cor1t1nue so The New J clubs are financed by the Boys A A and any one playmg on one of these teams must be a member of e A A Tue New junlors have caught the Splflt of lt and the clubs are advancmg rap1dly Let us contlnue to help McKmley galn honors on the Athlet1c Held by Jolnlng the Boys A A Secretary O O 6 +.-..- .-. -,.-.- - - -..-..-......-......- .....-..- ,-....-,- - - - - -1.-..-4. 5 , 5 L - . l ,i,t-t.- - - - - - -..--11-...-..-..-..-....--V-..--.-..-.H-.,.... - -1- -M-,,,-,.,.....+ ---,sf----,.-, ,,,,,,.--,-,,, . . , 1'. . , , . 1. . . . U' I . . . U . . . . I , 4 . ' Ll li ' ' ' . b . -S I ' ' Ll YV v ' th , . . . . ' ' 7 . . . , ' Isl, .'- . T ' An '- fllln' llumlrt-ml Folly'-'l'w ' I W '11 'gp gf gd 1-' F 1 ' fX Q AI Lb j' WMA do Ti ll V64 YO R FA ILY IS SAFEST IN THE TWIN SIX whxch also best gratlfxes your every desire m motor car usage It IS the Packard of greatest refinement, luxury comfort and grace of structure the Packard of all previous degrees of progress so far advanced that lt has be come a ventable sensahon and wlll con tlnue so to be untul by wldespread use It shall become ln publxc vxew the modem standard of motor car sufHc1ency The I 35 Wlneelbase I35!f1Cl7E5 Przce wztb any open body f 0 b Detroxt 33 150 The I 25 W beelbase 125 mcbex Przce mth any open body fo b Detrozt 82 750 THE PACKARD MISSOURI MOTOR CO Locust Street at 22nd Sf Louis Missouri I .--255 , l uf, If C .-.- .-.-.u-.'. '. .'.- .-.'.-. .-.- .-. 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I gflig. ggn in I- . , gig I 'LL - - - I ,gee I eagle -' - 1 I' I CLE: E 3 f-2' Q ,--::-::---:::0-:Q----3::-i::,::::---- -------- --- --- --- v- 4 I 0 nu 0 0 0 nr 0 u South S cle Trust Co BROADWAY AND PESTALOZZI ST Capxtal and Surplus S220 000 00 Does a GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Ol FICI' RS 'X C F HEX R President HX NIFNZTNIWFRTII Vue lres1den B C' BRlCK'XI XXI X Ice I resldent OTIO I COSSR NNT Secretary l're lsurer P XX S 3 Per Cent on Smmgs Deposxts 3 Per Cent on Trme Certxhcwtes 6 months 4 Per Cent on T me Certltlcxtes 17 months Safe Deposlt Boxes lor Rant Open 'llondax l nmgs 5 to f '30 SEEN IN D S NOTE BOOK Kelley Take me life I m sav The solvents of Greece are mg me money for me old age Chloroform ether etc x MISS Wllllams Who IS your McGann When was Georcre teacher Washmvton born? New ay I dont know Maloney February 22 1735 hxs hart, McGann What IS the A D New jay hasn t any for? Burfflar Your money or your Maloney After dark I reck 1 e WL!-7L1'7l74 'JL vii- 'I-7L'2L'!-'l'-1LvL'i-f1'-'z4?L7'-'IL'i-7l5 rorlzcht uncker Carpet Rugs Furnlture Draperles INTERIOR DECORATING Twelfth and Locus 'ls 'eliti- ll Pal: c 1 0 o 0 O 0 0 1 Q 4' 0 0 I 1' 2 0 ' 0 ll - 0 U ' ' ' 0 0 0 0 mu 0 0 0 0 0 u O : . , 0 0 f 4 S, 0 0 H 0 . . . . r' f 'E . .....,,,.............,,.,.,,.tr...,,,..,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,4rt,,,,,,,,, ,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ' H 0 ' . ' . 2 '- . - 4' ,, . . L -r - ........,o........,, ..... ,....., .o..,. ......,,.,Y,,,,. l - ' ,Q t 4, 0 . 1. . J - ....,........,......,...........,,,.,.....,..,,.....,.,r.,. ..,, ...,.r,.. . . V - J 0 ll , , , , ,-f . nn 0 . 7 . A ..Y............,........ H 2 .......,..,,..........,...,, ,Q 1 , U 0 ll 0 , na 0 ' I - nu 0 0 0 . 2 .......,,...,.........,..r,..,......,........,,,..,.......,,,.,...,.,,,., , .,.4 . . V 2 ' 0 0 ' - 0 tl - ' '--- ---------'f----'----------' - - --------fA------A-'-- V A . 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' on. 12ffIf22e22 122'-222122 22122 22 22 22-22 22 22122'22'f22e22r22-2322A222222112 22122 22 22 '22'22f22 2I+2'12+2If22+22+22r22r22 22 2222 22 22 222,22 22222 22 22Q22'Z 221222 212 as it: Pi 2'-2 Q2 gg . it - 0- sf.: - 3' --- - -.-- . :Qi-1 Z5 Hi HI : 1 Y 2:2 f If rf li: 122 22 -I 22 '22'+221 22+22f-22122 -I2 22f22 22 22:22 22122-'12'22'--22'22'f1-22122 '22'-25'-2Iff22e22+22fI2 22 232522 22'22'Z'-22 222 '22 22 22 22122 2242522 52 231,22 22 22 22 2322+ vmizt' Um' .lair '1'fi.-ew.-' -....-o1 Have you Infants and chxldren 1n the famllya Unlon Da1ry Certlfied Mllk IS recommended by physx clans for baby feedmg f Q Q - Q Q- -Q QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ It requlres somethmg over 2 ooo h1gh grade dalry farms ln MISSOUFI and I111 noxs to furnlsh our custom ers wxth m1lk A telephone call ftII1III'1lIj W 1 ons xx III st'ut I mon Drum s rs xt xo ll homv I I- Un1on Da1ry Co jefferson 8: Washmgton Avenues Both Phones ooo-, Q, oo I- MISS Connor Where dxd the plebelans come from? Pupll They were lmported Mlss Sands fspeakmg of the Roman Klflgb If he dled he nom 1nated h1s successor Mr Flscher Where does the llght go when It goes out' Pupll Hydrogen found sproutmg out of the sun 'I-wifi 11- 7L'l-YL VY- wife?-vi Chas J Sutter Ii ELECTRICAL ENGINEER CONTRACTOR X nn ls 1220 PINE STREET F D HI1ALY ARTISTIC FRAMING I I 711 Locust Street Ohw un ntlal Ia .J NOTARY PUBLIC Cl-IAS J BURDE Real Estate 8x Insurance Money to Loan Rents Collected 301 Granlte Bldg 406 Market St ST LOUIS Victor 829 Sldney 729 GEO H HINTON sozo sou'rH JEFFERSON AvENuE Pnescmpvvows PHUTUGRAPHIG SUPPLIES PHARMACEUTICALS HEARD IN ENGLISH 8 Teacher What IS the Muse steed9 Schuster A Ford HEARD IN PHYSIOGRAPHY For Tuesday study the next three sectlons under the ocean Percy studled chemistry Percy studxed late, Percy breathed some chlorlne gas Hell not graduate TLV- 'Iii-1-'I-Ii 7'-'I-7L7L7l'l-1'-'rC1L1l'Ii'i-'!-1-1L7L 'F- IEGENHEIN BROS UNDERTAKERS Chapel Service Free -I 1c++1.++1L++1vc 11. x++vL+-A11.1.1.+ Tiff verve-,c7c-,f.,g,t, xI!'IIflfII1 The f rnnrrfnuz -::-:::----::-::--:::::o::1 ro::::::oQ::::c::::i::::o::? 0 ' II 0 I II . I I I O II . . . 0 I 0 0 II - o I I ' ' ' ' I I 1csmn1m1.- 1803 3 . .- . Q U . . I 2 2 ' I I I - . o I I I 2 II y ' - ' S Q XVI- Van Ifllrnish .Kn.'tI' Lf Ii ectrirtal . . . . 0 Q 0 ' I . . v I , 5: . . II 2 II . II . ,, .::-,:,x:,,m,c,-:,22,11 1: Fixx:::,:e,:,e,:::,,-, I 1: A 1 3 , U Y . . , , , I :I . . I I 1 vt. 1 1 V. .q I g g I'x'f-v'yxvIxv1':- fin wh: 1' 'en of inlvlli- II RHNIAI ING4 IIMIIFVIUCS 0 :JI-nl :uni vourtt-ous d1'1vI-rs. 0 :I 3 Il ' I 0 II . 0 0 Lg:1:::::::EQ::-:::::::::::A II -A AA,-A A A,-A A-AAY-AY-AAY- ' 'I f 'f''.'-'v -vifzvfv- i'.'1 ' II 0 Bel., '- U6 I ., IA- ' 0' S II II II ' II z ' ' O II II 'I - 4, II . I I 5 ' ::-::::::e:::::----::-::::1 A.-:::::-:::::----::::::-,::4 -::--::--::-::::--e:: ..... - .......... .. ...... ....-.....-, I I I I :L:::: :Q :::::--:::::--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1::::1 . . M . ' . l ll : th ' Us ' , is ' 11 9! . . . ' H H ' , In ' - . . . ,, . , . . H . . . . , .U . . ,, . . 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' ' ' ' ' III A Splendld Opportumty !I+II+X+II+II+II+IIrII+fI+IIfIf4iI+II+II+XrI3f or e 9121121421+jj+jj+jj+jj+j+jj+j+j3jfij5Ljj+j1Ljj4c HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE A UNIVERSHY coURsE In Modern Business Principles and Practzce Leadlng to the Degree B S C A FACULTY OF EXPERTS SCIENTIFIC INSTRUCTION THE LATEST METHODS Courses offered In Economics Credzts Accounting Insurance Investments Advertzszng Banhmg Etlucs Industrlal Engineering Mercantlle Law Etc School of Commerce and Flnance ST LOUIS UNIVERSITY GRAND AND PINE SAINT Louis lvussoum FREE CATALOGUE U CI 0 o f th ! ! ' I I 9 O O IV pt. -:VO r- '1 St Louns and Tennessee Rnver Packet Company lllxl' TINNISSII RIXIR ROI E Excursion Season Now Open Only S15 Round Trlp nncludlng Meals and Berth STEAMER SAINT LOUIS l lc-ul u Ol w frx on cu xt n for C11 xrdcau no luf lm 1 ml llllllllli., on the Xllssls lppx Ohm 'ind Tlnnesslt luxe-rs 0 Battltholri oi Shiloh tml NX ttlrloo X11 'Vlrlntosh Orchestrl JNO E MASSENGALE Trf Mgr St Louis Mo OWS U LQ 213406 Retall Dexlm rs In MEATS POULTRY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 2037 Gravols Ave Bill Snlnew 140 Km Xxctor Thu QlI'Il3.flOIl takes great pleasure ln rccommendmg the -Xs a first class motuon pxcture theater THIRTY NINTH AND SHAW I hear MCGIHHIS IS klng of hrs household Sure, hls wxfe crowned hlm wlth the stove 11d Ex Holland says that Ccensoredj started the war Dont bel1eve all that you hear from Holland Geography says Holland IS a low lymg country x john had limshed the quxz and wrote at the bottom of hxs paper Durmg this exammatlon I was unable to catch anyone looklng at my paper Further I wxsh to state that my own S O S signals were entlrely d1sregarded E Mr Ammerman What kind of paste d1d you use Mlss N Glue CRAIKIIER PLATES Unsurpassed nn Quality and Easy of Mampulatlon Llrgflx used bs the Illflifllw of thc McKinley Hlgh School Nlmull Int on request CRAMER DRY PLATE C0 ST LDUIQ, M0 lllnlmn The flllllllflllll ' V I ' I li, ' CHX ' 'I -I ' 'I I YT YVil I ' ' wh: 'fl' :t, foci nl' Pint- St., ov - j M d. ,' 2 5 p. 1. z mf' Gir: . Cu' ' , I'z14 ':1 :lnl 1 I 1 ' fs f I ', ' 1 - :Q ' - . t I . . V , . q . 4, . l'h Mum -16 :md Fl- tml 30. :::::::::::::---::e:--:::::::::-:::::::::::::::-:::::::i F:::::::-::::::::::::::::::1 al' Z . , rm - - . Q' 4 A 621 Q . .,-::::::::::::::::::::--:::4 U U 9 ll ,I . . . x I: ' 1 ' I ll 1 U 0 ll ll lu ll lil U H ll ll ll H H 1 ll - ' ' H ll ' lr ll ll 0 ll 0 - ll U U H ll 'U 0 5:1:::::::::::::::::::::::::::1:::::::::::::::::::::::::::4 H . . . . . . . U ' , H .. . . H . . . . . . ,, . ' ! - ' ' ' I . '- X. Q ' I 1-'11 ,u ' 1 . 1 1 ' :JY E ' - , .. J, y:::::::o:::::::::::::::::::::::::o:::::---::::::::::::::1 1 j 1 S - 5 - ' . . 1 2 sf 1 O e 0 D L 0 L-::::::--:::::::-::::::::-::::-:::::::::::-:::::-ee:e:::g - ff . , - 1 ..-A A BIG CLEA NEWSPAPER 0-00- 0 llll c e c llll ll c11 1 mee smrx 1 school boo s llllfllll 1 lug C6'1I1 nexxsplper x1111 M1 ltnoxx llflllllll of IC xx orld s Lx cnt lol111 D lxoclteftllcr llcnrx C Frxclt Cha 'xl Qchxvab xml hosts or other 1111ll1o11'11r1s 1l1d not haxe the '11lx mmgcs X011 l1ax1 TllClf l1lllL3Il 111 xx 18 'lCCllllTt!l hx rxptrunce a111l l1x rtaclm nexxsp lptrs that xx tu xx r11t1n so 1l11t they coulfl llllfltfillllfl excrx tl11n1, ln Qt Lotus thc lm, Clem xxtll xxrlltan 111xx spipcr ls oooooo., Q be St lluuls Glmmes LCP vs 1 xx ll lll13DLllS 111 Xlclxmltx ll1s:l1 Nthoo BETRAYED' The pollce have captured the escaped convxcts Where d1d they find them? One h1d 1n a barn and a plg squealed on hlm and the other h1d m a church and the bell tolled on hxm Ex A C Can you see what those boys are eatlng down at the other end of the lunch room? L I dont know but t sounds l1ke soup Ex oo.. 5 E EQ? 111 0502312 UQWPT Sgcrogglgfffgg ff FY' va-5'cUQc5':-U N S'm N 1-,..v 1-r O5 D-13 fxI-1 5-9 O 0 H 2 V1 11:00 2 My 5 A H5115 S1-1 51701111 E' 9. '1'gr1-1 3' 025C H 9-5 0 2 S -o' O ! 0 wsu o Q UQ Sm C3 W' 0 gl QE 0 :x 1: U' rm S 62030- HEARD IN SPANISH Mr Llndsay just a moment I must see what those gxrls are talkmg about Upon request we w1ll mall you our Booklet entltled How to znvest Your Monthly Savzngs m Bond LORENZO E ANDERSON 81 CO 310 N EIGHTH ST BOND DEPT VI I 111111 0 Our lrluzlzx y:::-:::gfff:::::::e:-q - y.:::1::-::-::::::::::--:::::1::e1:::::::f::::q 11 11 ' . . . 1' M U Q - f f 0 0 H U I ' U: U U 11 U I ll 11 11 F U I 11 4 , 4 312- 11 11 1- 11 :I ll . ' 5 'I 1' II 1' ' - If A A A - f ' ' 1 1 ' . 11 4 . rf Q 11 1' 11 ' . 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Q-- Q-- -Q OGETHER viflw our est efforts I1 pliotograpldmg the Semor Class, we exten our est wxs es Ort e1r Contmue success lk-A VA MILLER STUDIO 3546 Ohve Street, Samt Lou1s Both phones just East of Cnrand r -------'- Q' --- ---.---'------Q----- ----- - - 1 i b , i A In ' h f 11 - - A . x W ss swam fffiv as i., w '4 X xLLU5,,iA.Ur f A....... gu f . is GZ Urfffz ff1f YM nr 1' X --.Q Q Q- 0- BENTON COLLEGE OF LAVV Northeast Corner Grand and Franklm Avenues Tsssntx Grst lfar opens Septembcr 11 1116 lvnmng Smssmns Hnlx gh School 1 ruluxln s to I xxx four 0 ORQI I QORI IS B Dean HARRX I NFHXX1 Ikl RT A 'NI Secy Downtown Ofhce 1001 Times Bldg Phones Bell Oluve 3403 Llndell 4445 Hou can get anything and uery thing ln muslc muslc 11 instruments and accessories at '1 lov. er price at IVSUSIC CO 5lS LOCUST ST Mos? cox-4Dz.r:1'z music House m .11 Louis VISIT KELLERMAN S SWEET SHOP 1647 S JEFFERSON AVE Victor 558 Sidney 1596 Vp ..-oo H Hoyer Prmtlng Co QQQO S 8 EPSON A 9 V.. Bell L rand 3301 Kxnloch Nlctor 95 FRANK H FINK GROCER All Orders Promptly Attended To 3202 SHENANDOAH AVENUE HEARD IN HISTORY 2 MISS N Creadmffj The soldlers of Regulus suffered greatly from HEARD IN ENGLISH 6 Mr W All fish sw1m th1s IS a fish therefore, this fish swlms Mr Hlpple That lSl'1t exactly rlght Under what clrcumstances Wouldn t It be? Mr S If the fish was dead po Compllments of CONROY PIANO CO Mxss Waugh When you want to be entertamed what kmd of story do you read? begmnmg Mr Parrot What IS a scale? Stew Dent Feather on a fish s back Mr Castleman The sons of Noah were Ham and Eggs Brlght Student XVhc.n Things Look boiled Phone DYEING AND CLEANING G0 JEFFERSON AND ARSENAL ST Bell Sidney 3200 Kin Xlctor 3480 L 3'Ql':iL'5Xi5 SSQISVQYQZEUEF 'ID If 'IL 1'- 'iv 'A 'le 'IL 1- 'I- 1' 7'- 'L 1'- 1- 'le il 'll Sl 'Y- 'IL 74 7l 693' 113544 Wi? I 5. 1.1-+ -A is-A1 1 fair Hemmelmann Spackler Real Estate C0 SELL MONEY 622 Chestnut Street +11-ww-,L1L+-,L++++1.1wwe-f-1.+++11L++vL1Lf+1L+++++1Lv. ++++-A-fL+++sL41l,Q:5,,qs19TS'SW'Q , , ,,,- v-, ....v ----,, ,:eo::::::-::::::::::::::::f:22:22:01 I 4+ ll ll II . ll I+ tl II ry .'- K '-f L A , ' f ll 1' 4: - ' .1 Hi' 3- 3: 1 -. ,Xflllllllvll .1 ' ' s :f GE ' Q ,, 5 . J, LL. ., -. , ' .' . '41 ' -: , . . ., ' ll ' . ' - 1 , ' : ' q ge:::::::::L:::::-::::--:: ::::::::l:::::::::::::::::1::::i y:::::::::::::::::::::::-:eq '::::::::::::::::::::::::::oq ll r if - .V - 41 H H - - - , .- : J 5 4, . . U H , yy '+ ' ' I Il In H 0 ' ' U 'i 4' ' ' ll 4 . 11 H . M ff v. 13,3233:,::::,::::,::::::,il! :zlxxff:xfixcfffeceef-4 ,ti1:1i:::::::::fi:::::::::, ::::::::::::::::::2::::::1 0 - 0 lp I , , 5 , ' wr I' lx I o , u 0 ' u ll ,, U II - - M . 2 U nn I I p:::::::::::::::::e::1a::fi4 b-:1::::::::::::::::::--:::A ' , as . D . D : . - , , .. the weight of their arms. Leffier: One that starts at the . . I. . U H - xx . .. Q ., . . .. H , 1 - ' ' D - 1 vv I - , ss :::::--:::::::::::::::-::q y:::-::::::::::::::::::1:1:4 I o ,, f l . , n - -I b::o:::::::::::::::o::::::ol L::::::::::::::::::::::1:::A .. .I,f.'7IfAI I.I'fI.'rfI fl.: II ll ff II If If If I If If I I ff I fI+ff1?If+Ifrll I fl ffffff I+: I II Ifff Ifrflfflifllff ZIfI+I'II+IZ ff II If 2241?-Iffg . ge. , HI P- 32 1 SM H 9 ' :: If-2 fs 511 If 5 Q a 2. ' S S ., 3 L..E I.fIiI'ff'If I If ff: II ff Il :jf filflf ..'ff,ffffQlIAllflf I ffl: flifliflffff I If If-QI .. I. .. .. .Q 4. g.'.g,f'.1....,'. lg ' L .. .. - ' II Pal' ':' C ' .11I1'1'z'!i.v1'l'S v ---- ------- - - ---- ---------- I u --f- ----A --A-A''----Y---AA'::::::::::v:::::::1::::::::r --1 0 11 Q QUALITY DEPENDABLE FULL 11 O lv lr ll 0 0 FIRST SERVICE VALUE jg 'P ll ll ll TRIP to any of the Kroger Busy Stores wxll convince you that we are sellmg grocerxes that are pleasmg thousands of thrlfty house wlves We are sell1ng carloads of PURE FOODS every day m the week and buying so cheap that we can sell the hlghest quallty foods at prlces so far below the prevaxllng pnces elsewhere that the housewwes can save from 15 per cent to 20 per cent on every purchase KROGER S 67 QUALITY TORE WHY Indxgnant Customer Barber, why d1d you drop that steamlng towel on my face? Barber Because 1t was too hot to hold slr x HEARD IN ART 6 H H Where should we begm on the c1rcle9 B B At the begmmng There IS a meter of accent And a meter of tone But the meter that s sweeter Is to meter alone x SURE HE DID Deacon Susle I am sorry you papa was not at the meetmg Suse Please no slr, he went out walkxnv 1n the woods Deacon I am afra1d Susxe your papa does not fear God Susxe Oh yes slr I guess he does' he took h1s gun w1th hmm x Mr Fxscher What IS orgamc chemlstryp Miss Kellog Products of or ganxc substances contammg or gans Mr Flscher A church? vo- 0-000094 KODAK FILM DEVELOPING AND PRINTING GEO KAETZEZL PICTURE AND FRAME SHOP 1650 South Jefferson fo-oo--ooo 9 S rmcl 1F08 H1 SIMON RROS Dealers in FRESH AND SALT NIEATS Vegetables Fruit Poultry Etc 3124 Magnolia Avenue HAXI XOI P IXFS LXAWIIINED B1 FRED HALTER y -...... ----..,-- Jeweler and Optometrist km Nxctor 1 1 R Brokf n n repl xr Q d 2010 South Jefferson Avenue llfnfz re 1 ll U . . . U 0 u 0 . . . . - U 0 ll ll ' ' ' my ll ' u ll ' ' ' ll ll ' lr . . .. . . U O 0 0 . nu . ll ll li ll 7 ll 0 U ll li ll U 2 lr ll 0 9 0 9 0 0 Q 0 Q 0 wr 0 ll 0 I L::::ooo::::::q::::::::::::::::::::::f'::::::::::o:::L::::l ' , sn , ss ' ,, . . , I . 1 . . ,, vv , ns ' . . - ' 1 v : ' D ' . ' YY ' ll ' ' , . -E . . , , 7V r . e 4' . 1 , ' 9 v 9 l . . . ,, - u -E . . .. . . . N 1 . .. - 1 Y, I ' I , ss 7 ' - .v U . E . ' , sa sv ::::::::::::::::::::::::::q 7:11 e:-..:::-:::::::::::::1:q ll V la ll ' 'I ' I . Q ' al 7.' . ' ' ' U Q 4. I ll 0 X H I ll ' ll 0 ll ll 0 0 2::::::::::::--::--:f:::::4 ,, ,. gg 'L ' ll :E::::::::::::::::::::::1:q ' wi ren, G : 1 K' ., vi.-for 37041. 3 . U le- sf-S 1, , u ' 1 if 0 5 u ll ll .' ll Q . ' 1 1, . I. . . U . f U 0 ll -::::::::::::::-::::-:::::1 -:::::::::::::::::::::::::i , f 'un Tl f f'nrnul'un IX South Slde Tallor P URBAN Prop LADIES AND GENTS TAILORING Ladles Sults and Skirts Nlen s Sults Made to Order Cleaning Dyeing Repairing and Pressing 2155 RUSSELL AVENUE IU sc xou I st II rr IIIII IN Sl I0 Il I UI 1- If lx Supp LBLIITIHFIH S IDIIEITITIEICZY UI Iffe :son K I uma II xx Q blofk rust of 'Iluhlnlfx H Poth I hom s gt 101115 PFS' III ms I rcctl Iompoun cc ALGOINITE A sToNE TRIM Fon BUILDINGS Algonile Stone Mig Co 3900 CHOUTEAU AVENUE ST LOUIS MO Don t forget your yearly halr cut whlch falls due ln Mav Get lt at Malones Barber Shop Grand and Park Avenues A stone plt IS a small pool de pendent upon the ram for lts sup PY Colonel OCorn jones surely spent a lot of money on hls son 4 RUBT W TEIGII IL'5ImI INTERIOR DECORATOR Wlndow Shades Ready Mlxed Palnts, Olls Varnlshes Wlndow Glass, Putty Etc lone x Il url rio 2801 ACCOMAC STREET -- ---- H- ---- L-------. 4 Ask Ihr BUSINESS MANAGER Whom AD THIS IS ---.-.4 When you want the BEST FURNITURE go to H Walker Furnlture Co 206 208 N 12th St L ---- 4 Cheer Up' WHEN THINGS LOOK BLACK Phone CHAPMAN I who IS on the football team m col lege General I Zatlon D1d he get anything m return? Colonel O Corn Oh yes, he got a quarter back E Godfrey was not contented be cause they had no chlldren on therr hearth The Amerlcan Credlt Indemnlty Company of New York CREDIT INSURANCE ONLY Insures Manufacturers and Wholesalers Against Excessive Annual Loss Through Insolvency of Customers We Can Always Use a Few Hugh Class Sollcltors nm N J ' S t yIs1Ilr I I I TIL Isulfy N I ll S Audl X lu PII sul n 5 I I VIAHII IRRIIVI N Niger Adj Dept OFFICES IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES 4 Locust Street St Louis, Mo 30 Malden Lane New YOFK CIW --- X I,lIfIlIIIl 1 H111 IIIIIIIIIIII 5' f::tCt::::::p::5:::t:3:1 Fc:-:::::Q1 I I' ' , I I I I I II I . - . II I II . 3 : 1 -4 II I II -' : I j V ' 5 -1 A II II U' II I fl S Q jg -' 3 II I II bygrgr- 0 A - II II 5, - - :L-3 II II II ' ' II II , ' ,-I I' 3 - :, II II ' 'I 7-9,2 I II II II -, ' : E 1 II II 4 II I - V CA' I II II II 3 ' -' rg 5 I II I II I L L A r 'I II II II 'A -3 L, H :' S I II , - 'I I -...AAI , II ' II I . , 7344 3 II II , II I ' 1-55 H ' - II II II I- ' F ' II II I - II II II II 5 ' - r-1-Q: I , II I I r' j 5 1 I ' . II II II 4 'I -T: 3 I I ' II II 'I II II II I 'ff I II II II . EI'-IE II I - II II ' ' , 7:1 L II II . - Il I gg ' . I I I '4 . f 5- I2 2 II II II I . -- .- II II II , H A I II -, ' II II 5 up D I ' II I II I A 'r' gig 5 I I II II . . 1 ' II II I I I :I : 2 II I .' . . II II 5 Eg I 'I II I II I 33' II I 'I I ' 4. I D II II - ' , '. I II 1 . ' . I . , . 'I' ,1 ., I ' .I IIQ-,' II I I. - I :I 3 .z - I I 2 I I ' I , I JT Q - . Il I I I ' I II I I I I I I II ff , I :::::--:: ::::-:::::::::::::::: 5.::::--f:. II ' II I II A r., II II .-I 'd .., A I 'I U V' fr, Il I !::---2:--1 'f::---:::-y 'eg---:c--1 ' 5 Hp' II ' - I II I . I I II I II A , H C :I II , ' II II II I II II II 1 II 3 ,I 'E W -1 II . II II II I II II II T 'I I. 1 'T R II II 'I II I II Il II ' ' II ' ,IO K . II II 'I II I II II II I 'I II ' A . I: ' II I II I II I II , . , I U I ,, I ,I f I A . I I I - I I I fl 1 . - I I . ' if 5 - II II II II I II I II II II -J! I II II II II I II . II II - ' II II ' ' S? :ZZ - II I I I I I ' Z II I I. - II II ' Z I ' II II II ' I I I II 7' II 0 Q . 1.4 I - . . II II II I I 'Q II II II I -2 II I ' .. II II II I V II II ff - II I, ' II I II II I II II II T- - II I, . - . 'I 3,4 I II II ' II 'I II 'I 'I ' - II . I . II I D I II II -1 II I, ' - :I ' ' ' II II I II II H I I I I II II ' 7 II II I II E II II ' I ' II I II . I I II - II ' II II II II I II II II II , I II I II II I I I II II I I I II II L- ..- - - I , I A,,, -----..-.-.-.--.-.-.,-.----..----..---.----I - PHONE-BeII Riverside 1485 Tree Surgery A11 Work Guaranteed - Preparmg of new lawns a spee1a1ty Zaun Flormst and Landscape Gardener PLANTING AND PRUNING OF TREES SHRUBS HEDGES VINES AND PERENNIAL PLANTS GRADING SODDING SEEDING AND FERTILIZING ON LAWNS 6007 Vlfglflla Avenue St LOUIS IVI I-IATTINGER PIHHO Elfl MUSIC Co Everythlng Muslcal 910 OLIVE STREET HEARD IN AN ADVISORY MEETING Pupll Shall we fill out the back of the program card? Mr Crosby Sure' So I can call up your pa AUG R LILL O C JOHNS LILL CE, JOHNS Dealers m Fine Footwear 2202 SOUTH JEFFERSON AVE Free Bell Phone Sidney 3186 ----- Mr Hoffsten fm Senlor meet 111 J You know the fewer words m your motto the less xt w1I1 cost when the Horrst makes It up for braduatxon Excelsxor that s cheap oo------------ ----------o M J IOLIARKE WIC MAKER and COSTUMER Costumes for Carnivals Masquerades Balls Plays and all Fest ve Occaslons I -- Colleges and Schools Speclal Terms 521 Walnut Street 9 llnf n ll If Y -------------- ---- n Xl tor 1 87 W H KRUSE PLORIST 2846 Arsenal St St Louis 1 'I .. . . . .. . . . .. .. .. . .. .. -- I 'P I I I I . Y I I : I I I I . 3 ' l ' - I : - I I l I : ' I I : - I I I I O I : I -..,-..-M-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-......-.....- I : . I I : - I I : - I I : I , , , I : - . I I : . . I I : - I I : - I I I-I . , O : 1 I I I 'lx-.--..-...-..-...-..-..-..-...-..-..-...-..-..-..-..-..-..-...-..-..-...-..-..-......-......g. V.: :---: :::--: :e-:::::: : :f:-4 r-::----:::--::-::--::::f:-1 l z I - I I 2 I I . . I , , CI . I .. .. I , I I I I - 1 L---------------------4 5,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,-,,--4 - U , . N - ' , ss D . b s . . . gy '. . , an . U - , - - u 'Y . n . I -:aaa ::::::::::: 1 :ef :::f:-, ,:::-:: :::--::: :::--: 1 1 ::::7 II BF-II, Main 1101 II Sid v-5' 395 ' 1' 4 II II II Il o Q Il SIIVUCSS mr o I . 4' -gg A I I . . I , ' I ' i ' II . I, I . II I . Il . . II z I . Il ::::: 2 ::::::::::: :-:::::: -:::::e:e: Q 3 ::::-::: C-: f 1 14 . r lu ' IIHVHIIV 1 XI AFTER HIGH SCHOOL ---- WHAT? The world is demaniing trained men and women. Are YOU prepared to meet this demand? WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Samt Louis, Mxssourl, wlth lts splendxd facu1t1es and equlpment IS prepared to gxve you speclallzed mstructlon ln the field m whlch you are mterested College School of Engmeermg School of Archntecture Law School Medlcal School Dental School School of Fme Arts Henry Shaw School of Botany Address the Deans of the Various Departments for Catalogue Information wzth regard to Saturday and Night Courses on Appllcatlon Watches for College Men GER 'ai IXIIIEWSX Xxt ' 8 4 1 ll 7 my Gentlemens Flne Solld Gold Watch open face plaln pol IS ed case xxlth la c1rds 15 Jewel moweme nt only S 2 7 OU may choose from our famous collectnon of over 2500 tlme pleces comprlslng watches of all stan dard makes and everv one guaranteed for accuracy and dependable SCPVICC 0llR PRICES IRE TIIE LOWEST IN AMERICA Gentlemens Gold Fllled Watches 12 S114 open face 111111 model and filled vu 1 Illgh grade lj Jewel Elglll moxement SDGCIHI 11 slze hand engrax ed Illlllllllf., case fllled vslth Iaccards guaranteed mow enlent onlw Gentlemen s -1-Karat Solld Gold Watches beautlfullw hand en rawed case ruth monogram center fitted ruth Jaccards 1:1 Jewel movement and a wery speual walue at accard s Lllarmnd daccavd dt Klngb BROADWAY 6. LUEUST when Pnr hasmg ask for .luccard 5 Xmas Gift Coupons XII Pahom 1 Our 1111511 IN ,:-::-:::::::::::::::::::1::::::::::::::::::::::::::::e1 0 5 Q ':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1 z f x to 1 II 1 2 Y 1 , - . U . . Y . . - 2 l ' U ' . 3 . 1: Il 1--1 , -- H ll ' '. I ' , Q ef 'V ll -, X - , , l' -.10 ,v 0 Wil, ', , . , ff V 1 y' 2 I I. c05 oU'5.Z ' 2 E ' , ,i ' z ........ 2 l 'jg 62: 2 Gentlemen's Gold Filled Watches, 16 0 . E' LU , ' ' 1 - y 1: l , -- fl' l f - f , X .v ff I 1: ' , 3 ............. . 0 V ', M ,, 1 -7' ' I 'Q-.Ajf',.'5zf g - v, Q g , .. , . , 1: r ll , ' I y , , ' 1 1g ' . ' ' A 1 l , . . ll , I t A 2 .................... . ll 'Ill , ' , y , Q 4 'L Q Q 9 V. , , , 4........ ...... 0 , ' l Q . .............. . I ll 41 F . H , - If ll ' 7 4.::e:::::1ee:::::::-::ee:::::::::e:::::::e::::::::::::: - '31 ' ,f ' 'l'.'01's f. DRAMATIC ART ORATORY VOICE AND PHYSICAL CULTURE Real lersonal Duelopment and The Wlnkle Moore Truc Creatnt Work lllc method or the Curry School C O01 of EXPFCSSIOU or lxprnssuon Boston lS tlor Euclid Bulldlng oughlx and competently taught Note Spccxal terms made to hugh 10 ml xc Forest 5866 Send for Catalogue NULL me Euclld and McPherson Aves Call for Personal Intervxew M The Jamtors should be very If you want a Hat that IS thankful to the TCW .ls becommg to you you had beqt For what reason? be cgmmg to They are always helpmg them dust by slxdmg down the banxs GUERDAN S ms S 5 Bfoadwab' Greeley Pnnterv of St Louls between Fifteenth and Pune streets T xt 1 omplett Pl mt I quxppf d or nd Market and Quant, a up Walnut nd 2 f r a. our lo er Stamps .QQ 5.. ....-. NE ear of corn IS of small value but think of the crop of the entlre country and Its worth Each hour of 253,-E your l1fe may seem of lxttle account but thmk of what your llfe may be worth 1f you make each hour count It IS so w1th a Mercantlle Savmgs Account You may conslder the mckels dlmes and quarters that you spend wlth only a passlng thought too mslgnlficant to save Yet you w11l observe that hundreds of people around you are eager to get those small sums of yours They take them to the bank along wlth many other small sums l1ke yours MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY Member Federal Reserve System Government Supervxsxon Capltal and Surplus, 89,500,000 lIPII,lUlI The flllllllflflll XIII ::::::::::::::::::I:::-:::::::::::--::e,::::3:::::f::::q 0 U ll P 1, . . ., 0 9 0 0 U , .. 1 5 2 ,f 0 .5 ' . 'Q Y ' ll 0 M - , U 0 . , Q. v . ' H 0 ' ' ' , . . . f 4 0 , Y: . ' U u - . -, H ' I H 1: ' sul 1 pupils for Coz llllllg Plays 3 . . nr l'11lmli: Q nk' f. ry lx 4, - ll 0 ' 'P H u L:::::::e::se-::f::::::::::::::::::i::::::::::::::12:::::4 Y:1L1:::::::t::::::::i::::: 45 ' ' 0 0 , 9 vw K 4 li YY 4' . ' ' ns . ' ll H . . . IP ' 0 , Y! 0 ' li 1 ,, Yiee:e:::e::::::::::::::ee1 U 0 H 8 ' lr Q U ' U -1 ll ' 1. 1 . , .3 ' . f 1+ ', :: 5 Se cf o Set of 1 'st, i::::::::::::::::---::::::s 513:32:::::::-::,:::::::::::1 7 ,YI 5 . . . ' ' 7 . 3 Y , . y .-0.---00 0000000004 mart 5 flunrs Incorporated INTERIOR DECORATORS EIGHTH STREET BETWEEN OLIVE AND LOCUST F C MEYER Drugglst N E Cor Lafayette and Callfornla VS e handle Marmaduke Chocolates Ice Cream Soda and Fancv Drinks School Supplxes Ftc Brlck Ice Cream 25 Cents ,, ..--....-q s..-------.4 C PURMORT COMMERCIAL ARTIST 315 LOCUST ST Olive 1746 Dr1wlngs for Advertlsmg Booklets Wrutten and Illustrated GARDEN HOSE THE GENERAL MFG C0 Rubber Goods 18th and Pme Sts y0 000001 THE YUUNG MAY DIE E S Cook, Spec1alAgt MISSOU joe Razek Went over to Malone s Barber Shop at Grand and Park Avenues, and the barber scared up two flymg squ1rrels and a wood chuck Well, well thats a funny thlng ADVICE TO THE JOKE EDITOR Your comedy I ve read, my frlend, And 11ke the half you ve pllfered best But, sure your humor you mlght mend Take courage man, and steal the rest x F1fSt Freshle Aw, shut up Second Freshle You re the blggest dunce ln school Teacher fangrllyj Boys dont forget I m here Ex WITH VARIATIONS There was once a McK1n1ey maid, Who exclalmed m accents d1s mayed, I can t learn thls Junk I just know I w1l1 Hunk, I w11l get some blg F's I'm afrald AND THE OLD MUST RI STATE LIFE 15th 8: Locust GEO P BRANDT Drugglst 29 74 S C rmd Ave Lor Xlctox St St Louis Drugs Sundrles Candles Sodas I YDLII Fountum Selvlce a Specialty LSL ll K Id! u A A K Bell brand 4836 Klnloch Victor 56 Greeley Prmlerv of SI Louis Flfteenth and Pine Streets The Lomplete Plant Equlpped for Quallty Send '70 for a Set of our Poster Stamps Hts the Mak a s the kmd mother used make Many of our patrons prefer it to the made at home article to say nothing of the work and worry saved the housewife Mothers and grand mothers joln In the general pralse of QUAKER BREAD made In the Welle Boettler Bakery American Bakery Co I MODEL OF CLEANLINESS YIV Ijllflfllll 1 Our Iflzmlaeeu pee:00::::0:::::::::::::f:: r:::::::::::::::1:::::::::- I ' :I ' U . . , 4, . . . ll ' A , , ll ' .v I 'I F ' :, . . U y 022222222I12fCCCC:C:2COf:o4 10:1:::::::::::::::1::::::, :::--::::::::::::::::::::0 f:::1f::::222:::2::122:f::: ll J ll . . 0 . II ' II . .. o n - - , ll . - . . U 000::::::::::::::::::::::: t::::::::::2:22::::0Cf:2::: . . ., , I YCZCCSIIZCZLZZ3Z:::3fZCCCC' U T s II ' ' U -MJ - - . 1 7 . . lg ....... L. J. 1 ., . .. ll - ' ' ' ll v 4 I ' v 1 ll 5. A' ' a lr 'A LA I' 2655, Bell. Gran.. .8.,7: ' ' I A. ' : . ' L-::::::::::::::::::0:::::: v::::::::::::::i2333332323: 0- ll ,, . . ll ' ll . II - . ' I - :: A I u 3 - ll 'E 4 4+ L::::::::::::::::::0::::::: . Y::::::::::::::::::::::e::: II . ll 7 - ll U 7 U O . g 1 r TE . . 0 'I . , . . . . H ,U ll Yld I ' to . - 0 .vy ' , u v U A - - .H . - , t. v , . v as . ll . T . ll 1 ll ll ll 1 . . . . . il - II ' 5 II . sa 1 - - ll v ll . . , . . . ,, I ll ' ' ll -Ex. .xie:::::e,::ee:,:::,: Compton l le1gl1ts Launcl 2713 I5 I7 iq Parlc Avenue e Home o Faultless Wor rand 113, Victor 293 Y' T' ll SEIINIGER SCIIMIIIT WALL PAPER 81. PAINTING C0 Wholesale and Reteul WALL PAPER :Q PAINTING CO 3259 CALIFORNIA AVE 'XI XX IN II I Let Us GIVE You an Estzmate on Vour' Papermg and Palntlng L y -..----.. B T KEARNS Pres G W BURLEY Sec 1 Itron1zI the LEADER LAUNDRY COMPANY 2315 17 19 21 Texas Ave 'None Tut the Be t HI11 In I Ixmlorh Xlctor 676 Is ..-------4 La Salle Candv Shop M1x a cake mlx a cake Marle Hogan dear Mlx It and bake It wh1le I walt here Roll lt and pat It and mark lt w1th Wh1Ch stands for Krueger and Kramer Dont delay' And along came Ruth And to tell the truth She chased the blues away' M stands for Morr1s and Meyer When they leave McKmley We know they ll go hlgher ,..---..---I1 In Km Y Ictor 452 PLINDT BROTHERS GROCERY COMPANY 2857 Lafayette Avenue The Place to Buy Good Butter Q-, FOLLOW THE CROWD for your Prescrlptlon Work Pure rug, I re tm Lan ns Sundries FHL RLss1 I I IHXICIIAL H XV RIISS Irop .A Y REAL FOREBODINGS My son sa1d the father 1m press1vely Suppose I should be taken away suddenly what would become of you? Why Sald the son lrreverent ly I d stay here the questlon IS what would become of you9 x A few vlrls may love a candr date but all the glrls love a candy date Ex sanuazxv sped pue puelg doqg 1:-Jqleg sauolew 12 noA Bunrem sr paau nofx QABLIS sql K1nlOCh Klctor l7IlL Bell Grand 36Ill I For PHOTOS o o b--..--- STUDIO 3551 ARSENAL STREET Ilenfmn Thr f llfllllfllll YY v : V33333333' qllllllll-Ill-illllllillllll-ll1ll1ll1-ll-vin? I 5' 3 N ' ' II II II 77 II I I S3 ' ' I II II '-' I ' ' I: I I - . I I I 2 I I 0 I 3 .. II I nj ' I' I' I I II ' . 'I I' . ' I II II 1 II I II 3. I' II II II 'T II - I ll I' -I I' II II II I 3 II ' ' II 3 Q :I ' I 3 I l 0 II - I -- ' ., I II II - , I II II Q' 39 II II II ' I II II II :I Q i II II ' 2 U I' l II f ' II I I, II 'I I' . II II II 'I II I I ' :I I I -I A A- I 'I : - ' I I ' - II ,, ,, 'I 'I . ' Q . , I II I - '. I 'L II I , I' 1 I' ' I I II A ' ZII ,, I' 'I , , II II II - . E II I I II II . I II II II I-, Q II H I' I' I II II fl H II I ' I' I' II II II S : A I ,, 'I I' , II II II I , ,jg . I I I ' . . I I I I I A ' -- -..----...l I U .I ' ' I .. , .I . A p,..-.. ,, - I I cn II I , , I I N II I I' II A l ' ' I 5: II II . II , ,I .... ' - - - I I I- II ' . II . - I .Il l ' E AA I I IL I II II - - :Q I -- .I II III , - . : I 3' C I II rr Z , I I II no U 4 I Z ' .. II I' .7 'I I I' .I :I II U A I 4 1 E V A .' U U V II I I - II ' I 'I ' I 51 ' ' I I I . II U 5 V' T I I . I I II Y 1 , - . Q -me C I II II I Q . H Z- , - I I II I ' II .I X- H H II Q : ,: ' 0 A . I. . I II II , I .L , -A P: . IH II -4 I I I ' I H I I I ' I - - I I Y, . II ' ' - .I It 'I' I - a I I ' I - I I' Q, I ' ' A ' 3 I' : ' .I I I. I 'I I ? I I I ' - I I II II 5' If ' 1 . I -' 9 I I II I .. IL I I ' I Q, 2' I I - ' I I I I ' II II E11 . ' ' I If ' I I I . -N I . ' , , , , -- -4 A ,,4 -5..-..-..........-..-..........-..-..-..g. it 1:7 .. I Y -- -- --- Y--WW --fix has . L g A y li do not need to use any superlatives in regard to our pro- ,-be 1 f grams so loni as our weekly pictures lt Nitin , .7 . 7-7. inf. 1:11413 l I l are selected from l and General Film I inf -H Company. In addition to this goml and classic music, clean F' v eg ' ' tr . 'A . N ' . H Triangle, Parantount. V. L. S. lux DQ K y T service, Charlie Chaplin in his funniest comedies, The Mysteries of l fra I New Lafayette Theatre - I Myra. the petite and vivacious Billie Burke in Glorizfs Romance: all this elaborate and gorgeous program will he presented at e I JEFFERSON AND LAFAYETTE AVES ind during the summer season will be continued at New Russell A1rdome JEFFERSON AND RUSSELL AVES ADVICE TO SENIORS If you don t stop blufling, youll fall off the bluff Mr Fischer What an1ma1 sub stances contam sulphur? P G Plants Mr Hoffsten Cspeakmg of dx plornacyj Rens 1f some one stepped on your newly shined shoes what would you say? Rens Ouch' Mr H Qspeaklng of pedngreesj There are some fam1ly trees which wont bear inspection, for, mf one goes very far back he finds some Mr Yeaton That IS not a very good drawing of a trust fault C Childs Thats not my fault Mr Yeaton Mr LaMont what IS a kettle C LaMont A hole 1n the ground Mr Yeaton Well well' Mr Hoffsten freadmg Hamletj O my offense IS rank It smells to heaven Some odor 1n that HEARD IN SPANISH 2 Mr Lindsay The First Eng lxshman I ever heard tr1ll hls rs Cleaners and Dyers of GARMENTS CARPETS CURTAINS ETC Kin Central 3365 Bell Sidney 1269 JACOB MICHAEL Staple and Fancy Grocerles HULDEIIRIEU UYEIIIB 8. CLEANING C0 Meats and Vegetables Office and Works Aguitv for CUTtlC0 Bros Blue Label 2900 06 INDIANA AVENUE Canned Fruits and Xegetables n 1 l X 'mor 896 1803 Lafayette Avenue XXI P4 mm 4 Om Idlerhwzs I ., ! 5 I as ' ! I: V 4 I l it 1 . I ' s . ' f I T fll-Ie l ,I . g v - 1 I - i I . :ln-ac :: : :: 1: :, :: :: :: nc :: :: :: :: : :: :: ::7:: :: : :: I: -:fu--:in-n+ , Is ' ! . I ' 'V ' , ns s D9 . . : . , . ' U : , ' . : , . , . . ' : . at 4 ' . . y .U H , . . . . . H . - - ' . a , 7 one hanging on the branches. was a Scotchrnanf' i::::::::::::::::::::::f:::1 Q-:f:::::1f:::::::f:::1:::::v 0 , ' sid .-y IIT4 sm Q-A-3107 . , l X L::::::::::::::::::Q:::::::i iL133::::::::::::::::::::::A .' ' rf' ':' ' .- - ' I ' H NEW HOME OF THE POST DISPATCH Now Bemg Constructed N E Cor 12th and Ohve Sts IS up to fl ta 11c11s11'1pLr 1111111 xx1ll lou 1 pr f1L1l1l11 XNl1LllC1Jlll1JlL L lost lJ1sp1tcl1 X13 cs c nr 111 1 mc If ur 1Q111 1 l St Sport pwpcr lfl St Lo111s The lost DlSID3ICll IS thc one paper lfl e Lry St Io111: l1o111L 11111 thg o11lv Jper 111 11121113 homes If You Want a Job or Want Help a POST DISPATCH Want Adv Wlll Supply It CIRCULATION Sundays always more than 375000 Dally average more than 215,000 Venfmn ' The f'Il7'lI1lfl0Il ' XVII. ::::::::fi:::::::1:::::ff:::::::::Q::::f::::::::::::::::::1 ll ' U ,Jr . ll . , -K-I V-33.1. . 1, 11 - ,. K . ' ll 1 4 f , ll ', fi 9 ' ' Il ' Q Q ll I' K' K . -si '. ,- 3 L 51, ' A' ll 1451 1 , 4 ll ,J5f121- ' . k - ' 1 1. 0 41- - , , A I A vga.: ,wal 0 , .L . ' A--1 ,.','z.g.. 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BROS 415 N seventh Street HEARD ON THE WAY FROM SCHOOL D A N Eva why don t you Jom the Mlsslon Soc1ety9 E S I guess I ought to Jom Just for the prlnclple of lt D A N We haven t any prm clpal we have a moderator HEARD IN FRENCH 2 Mr Drake They dont have good 1ce cream ln France I comes h1gh and IS cheap REVENGE hope the man who took my watch Whoever stooped so low W1ll mlss more tra1ns than I have mlssed Because the thmg was slow x Fold a dollar b1ll place It ln your vest pocket and when you take It out you wxll find xt increases ooooo McKznley Hzghs Vzctrola p ---..-----.--.. l l l was selected by the patrons at Smlth Rexs The old rellable Vlctrola Dealers m preference to all other places Buy your Home Vlctrola here too Our large stock of all styles affords a chance for comparlson and therefore most satlsfactory selectlon whlle our liberal terms make lt easy to pay for the stvle you lxke best SMITH-REIS PIA O CO. VAL REIS 1005 Olive Street A. E. 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