'I L. F2 B1 i F f 2 -I 2 - 5 , E E A ,s 5 5 Q X. r- a E .'v?A3'it1'.5,ilv4:h'TI'f ?i'i's:L1FZ,. S!S Vfdiff-ii EI -i'l':s?liW?,111PL'4l'Ifi'I'!-14EL-W.3'a!:2?. lZ iE'i1x'!P.S7vWEQf5!'IHl'iLhK'5i' 6vDBF-Yfl1:iL4U4zk'vL?xEji.!2'?T.'ZLi '..lF9i2fP92f?1'S'2?5E'ETfn+ARZ'4iEfd'!i5'E3l': 1i'HZridf'?lJE'3iZ!-319.6-'i. .H ew Z Fwf3.?BEBMHW e . 1-' az .pf And one shall never quite forget The voice that called from dream and play, The firm but kindly hand that set Her feet in learning's pleasant way. WHITTIER Plge 2 THE OKATO SENIOR STAFF Ili gi IQII ll. 'ilusamff Allun Wittkopf ..... Wilbur Burkhurclt . .. Henry Chr-istenson .lohn Hynew ........... Winifrml I-Iadlock Lucille Schwedler Olga Moe ........ lllyniene Parisey Mumlrian Qnsalley Evelyn Fencil ........ . . . . . . . . Class Play. Katherine '0'Hear'n .... Hazel Wittkopf .. Nofxman, Tonni-sen . . Edmund Heller . . . Francis Klozotsky . . . Beatrice Johnson . . . Bertha Kent ........ Minn-ella Bufrkhardt . . Agnes Mullen ....... Mary Classon . . . Ruth Joy ..... l+'Af'l'I.TY ADVISORS: Mins Dennis .......... Miss Shepherd . . . Mr. TDWZIIINOII .. . . . Dedication, editorial. Spec-ials . .l ................ Athletics . Class Phophecy, Holosfncts . . . . . . . . . . .-. . Class History .. . . . . . . . . . Class History . . . . Literary, miscellaneous Important Dates-editorial . . ...... .... l 'zunpnigns Seniors' Statistics. Glce vllll Typist Typist .. Cartoonis.t,Radiophans Jokes . . Buwiness Manager . . . . Home Economics . . . . . . . .. Glas-s Events . . . Freshmen class notes . . . . Junior class notes . . . . . . . . Phllathea . . Operetta . . . Pictures . . . Literary . , Business THE OKATO Page 3 DEDICATION This hook is rvspcc-tfully dutlic-:lied to him wlmsv dvvntiun and genuine intvrs-st ill school hun- in- crvnswl our undvrstunding of tho tl'Ul'4 vuluo of luml we-rk. To I'. 1f'P0wLlm1ick l'f1lffll12.Il, our 1'1'i,!1cipnl, in app:-wintiaxn of his uutiring sorvives during our four yvurs in Oc-unto High School, wo. thc class of 12925, dudivzltm- this issue of the 0KA'I'0. Page 4 THE OKATO High School Faculty THE OKATO Page 5 HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY Henry E. Smitzh, Graduate of Platteville Normal and Fniversity of Wis. ...... . .... Superintendent P. Frederick Pfaftman, Graduate of Tri-State- Normal, Angola, In-d., and Butled College, Iml., Principal and Science Gertrude H. Ames, Stevens Point Normal, Univer- sity of Wi-H., Summer School .. Home Economics Lorene L. Bogie, Ripon College .................. Languages, Citizenship Arthur C. Borgstrom, LaCrosse Normal . . . ...... . . ......... . . ....... . .... 1 .... . Phys-ical Education Leona 0. Bovee, Stevens Point. Normal, University of Wis., Summer School ....... Home Economies Milton D. Davie, Mil-ton College and Univerwity of Wis., Summer School ......... J ...... Science Floy E. Dennis, Platteville Normal, Wisconsin and Illinois University ummer S1-hools . .Mathematic-s Jeanette E. G1-va-aelkamp, Carrol Qmldege Hietory Os:-alr W. He-dlberg, Stout Institute .... Manual Arts Mrs. Anna B. Klozotsky, Whitewater Normal .... ...... Commercial Erna H. Klosterman, University of Wiseonsin . . . 'Mathematies Hazel K. Mill-er, Uniaversity of 'Wiseons-in ........ English Mable G. Ream, Beloit College . .......... . .... . . English, Duzunatics Rllfil A. Shepherd, University uf NVisconsin ...... . ..... t ................................. Enfzlisli Louis E. Smith, Stout Institute ...... Manual Arts Helen Taft, Lawrence College, .... t. .t ....... Musiq- Truman Thompffon, University of Wisc-ons-in .... Soc-ial Seienee Lurlyn C. Williams, Oc-onto High School ......... Set-r-vtlzlry Page 6 THE OKATO - 1:- Q AUSTIN ALLEN ' HAROLD BERTH Ausly nTllbb8,, Holosfacts 3-4. '4One cannot always be a hero But one can always b-eamanf' CLARENCE ARMSTRONG Armies llolosfacts 1-2-3-4, Operetta 3--1, Glce Club---Double Quartette 3-4 Oratory 4, Class Play 4. 4. FLOYD ARSENEAU Anjalak Holosfacts 2-3-4, Glee Club-Double Quartette 3--1 He has Z1 ouict nature, 'but mischief lurks underneath. CLA RA BENSON Shorty Ready to work, ready to play. lic-udy to do whatever she may. I Love me, and the world is mine. Holosfacts 1-2-3, Basketball -1. Studious and consclentious, That usually means success. LORRAINE BLANK I.orry Philathea 1-2-3-4, Honorary Mcmberg Glee Club 2-4, Debate 3, Opeletta 4. Is there a tongue like Lorraine's o'er her cup, t That runs for ages without winding up '? ORVA L BLUCHER Shindeck Football 3. Not only good, but good for sornvthingf' WILBUR BURKIIARDT Gimble Class Vice-Pres. 1, Treas. 2, Pros. -1, Okato Staff 4, Orchestra -1. 'The mind's the standard of the man. THE OKATO Page 'I - NATALIE CHOSA MABEL DEGEN EFFE Shorty Mickie Sincere with manners kind, A finer girl it would be hard to find. HENRY CHRISTENSEN Christy Okato Staff 4, Basketball 4. The1e are enough serious things in life, without considering yourself one of them. R U DOLPH J. CISAR Rudy What I don't see doesn't trouble' me. ELIZABETH M. DALEY Dale Philathea 1-2-3-4, Honorary Memberg Gloe Club 1-2-3, Class Play 4. Quiet, faithful, unassumingg All who know her, love her. I'll do something sensational yet. EDWARD DERKS Shecks VVo1'ry and 1 have never met. ROSE M . FA LQUE Rosie The mildest of manners, and the gentlest of hearts. EVELYN FENCIL .Evan Philat-hea 2-3-4, Honorary Memberg Glee Club 2-3, Okabo Staff 4, Class Play 4. Her thoughts are many, her words are few, And you never can tell what next she'll do, Page 8 y THE OKATO GRETA FRANKS Franks Glee Club 2, Philathea 1, Declamatory 4. I'm very exact, I'm very precise, I work awfully hard, I'm very nice. ROLAND FRANKS Farmer Prom 3. Ile is ready for anything, be it work play, I A very good fellow in every way. VERNA GAIN snub Glee Club 2-3, Philathea 4. Wouldn't I make a fine angel? HENRY GEORGE Hank Holosfacts 1-2-3-4, Glee Club 2-3-4 Operetta 4. I'm not a musician., I'm a whole brass band. Ol' IDA GOODMAN III!! Philathea 1-3 The weary minutes she doth kill, by working with a ready will. WINIFRED HADLOCK llpeggyff Class Vice-Pres. 3, Glee Club 2-4, Philathea 2-3-4, Honorary Mentiong Vice-Pres. Glee Club 4, , - Philathea Sec'y. 3, Pres. 4, Operetta 2. She is pretty to walk with and witty talk with. PAT HALLORAN asnintyvv Football 2-3-4, Basketball 3-4, Class Basketball 1-2-3. Eternal Sunshine settles on his head EDMUND HELLER iipipon Holosfahts 2-4, Operetta 3-4, Glee Club-Double Quartette 2-3-4, Vice-Pres. 1, Class Play 4. Most great men are dead, And I don't feel well myself. l Tl-IE C KATO Page STANLEY W. HELLM AN niHam.v Ilolosfacts 2-3-4 llis lvasliful ways ai- deazl, but his good looks are not. Oh My! MARION HERALD Mary Ann Philathea 1-2-3-4. Always quiet, always kind, A nicer girl you'll never find. JOSEPH HEROUX Smokey Glee Club 1, Football 3. Thinking is but an idle wasbe of time. A LBERT HIDDE AtBabeH Holosfacts 1-2-3, Oratory 4, Operetta 3-4, Glee Club 3-4, Cheer Leader 3-4. You'd worry, too, if you had as much on your mind as I have! JOHN IIYNES Johnnie Hay Mist 1, Holosfacts 1,2-3-4, Pres. Ilolosfacts 4, Glee Club 3, Okato Stall' 34, Class Play 4. ilohn, our student so meek, may hs coming sheikf' MARVYN JOHNSON --iiaww' The innocent look will never die, But I tell you, boys, it's all a lie. JOHN KENNEY Happy Jack Life is a pleasant institution, Let us take it as it comes. LAWRENCE C. KENNEY Larry Holosfacts 4. Studious and conscientous That usually means success. Page 10 THE OKATO vvnumian LAcoUnc1ERE Bill Football 4, Basketball 3-4. He was not merely a chip or the o block, but the old block itself. FLORRN CE A. LECOMTE Frenchy What she will to do or say, 'Tis wsest to let her have her way. LINA MAE MACFARLANE l'ackie Philathea 1-2, Glee Club 2. Being a friend to everybody, She was everybody's friend. LANDIS MALONEY Red Class Play 4. Enjoy life 'ere it's fled When you die, yuu're a long time dead. CHARLOTTE MACFADDEN HMM., Ph'lathea. Happy am I, from care I am free, Why aren't they all contented like me. NORMAN J. MLNARIK ssnukevv Holosfacts 2-3-4. With th-' sunshine on my face, While the freckles give me g'1'a'ce. OLGA R. MOE mole!! Philathea 1-2-3-4, Honorary Memberg Okato 34 Salutatory 4, Latin Club 4. Here's to a girl with a heart and a smile, Who makes these bubbles of life, worth while. RAYMOND R. MOSS i acmossyn Bay Mist I, Okato 3, Holosfacts 2-3-4, Operetta 4. My only books were women's looks, And folly is all they taught me. THE OKATO Page 11 CECILE PATRICIA NAGLE ulpatn Class Pres. 1, Treas. 4, Philathea 1-2-3-4, Vice-Pres. 4,- Basket Ball 3, Operetta 23, Glee Club 2-3-4. There's no one more Irish than Pat But we'1'e not saying anything against her at that. EVELYN O'CONNOR usisn Loved by many, but chiefly by one. KATHERINE J. O'HEARN uliaddyn Philathea 1-2-3-4, Glee Club 2-3-4, Basket Ball 3 lCap't.J, Operetta 3, Okato Staff, 4, Commercial Contest 4. She is a daughter of great Ireland blest You'll find her pathway leads to success. KENNETH NOONAN uKenl9 Holosfacts 2. Do your best and leave the rest, What's the use of worry. EVELYN 0'NEIL l6EvaH U Glee Club 2-3-4, Philathea 1-2-3-4,' Operetta 2-3. When joy and duty clash Let duty go to smash. CLYMENE PARISEY Llclyii X Bay Mist 1, Glee Club 1-2-3-4, Sec.-Trelas.. 3, Pres. 4, Declamatory 1-2-3-4, Okato 29334, Class Pres. 2, Sec.-Treas. 3, Operetta Q 1-2-3-4, Class Play 4, Double Quartet 1-2-3-4, Valedictory 4, Philathea 1-2-3-4, Honorary Member. Some are born great, others achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them. RUSSELL POCQUETTE Charlie Holosfacts 1-2-3-4, Pres. 3, Debate 3, Operetta 1-2-3-4, Glee Club 2-3-4. Nobody loves a fat man But with him this holds not true. MADRIAN QUALLEY Maddie Philathea 1-2-4, Honorable Mention, Class Pres. 3, Sec'y 4, Operetta 1, Glee Club 1-2-3-4, Jr. Class Play 3. Many students like her you do not find For to better her intellect she is inclined. Page 12 THE OKATO RUBY REMINGTON Rube Modest and quiet and a value to her class. THEODORE RIEWE Teedore Holosfacts 2-3-4, Sec. 3, Lalin Club 1, Operetta 3-4. Glee Club 3, Class Play Property Manager, A fellow of great knowledge is he, For all hard subjects are met with ease. ALFRED RHODE Dolly Class Vim- Pres. -l Basket Ball 3-4, Captain 4. Little of stature but winner of fame. EDNA RUSSELL Skinny A little work, a little play, A sunbeam on a winter's day. HENRY E. RYAN tlcabn Debate 3, Oratory 3, Holosfacts 4. Why can't they all be contented like me. ILSE SCH LUENZ Jumbo Philathea 2-3-4, Declamatory 2-3, Okato 4, Commercial Contest 4. The one type of phonlograph that has no automatic stop. LUCILLE SCHWEDLER uswmevv Glee Clubs 2-3-4, Declamatory 1-2-3-4, Okato 3, Operetta 2-4, Philathea 1-2-3-4. I know the way to men's hearts. 'l'hat's why I took household arts. GAYTON ST. PETER s-Katoyvr Holosfacts 1-2-3-4, Vice-Pres. 3, Glee Club 3-4, Oratory 4, Okato Staff 3, Debate 3, Operetta 1-2-3-4. The easiest way to solve a studying prob- lem is not to study. THE OKATO Page 13 ROBERT SULLIVAN Murphy 1-Iolusfacts 1-3, Glee Club 1. The wo1'ld's no better if we worry, L fe's no longer if we hurry. WESLEY TALM ADGE --Peter Holosfacts 1. Men of few words are the best men. NORMAN TENNISEN urrennyn Okato Staff 3-4, Commercial Play 4. Some day in the future all over the nation This chap will head ag big radio station! MARIE VAN ROSSUM ALLAN J. VOY Doug Basket Ball 3-4, Holosfac-ts 1-2-3-4, Uperetta 4, Football 3, May Fete 3, Glee Club-Double Quartette 2-3-4, I Class Play 4. T's nice that the school has many girls So all we boys may choose our pearls. ALLAN WITTKOPF s6Yung9v Class Treas. 1, Sec'y 2, Prom Chairman 3, Vice-Pres. 4, Holosfacts 1-2-3-4, Vice-Pres. 4, Operetta 4, Football 3, Baskehball 3-4, Okato Editor 4, Class Play 4, Oratory 4. 1 A fellow who has lots of pep, Combined with his amount oi rep. HAZEL WITTKOPF uMaria,, ssnayasv Declamatory 4. Commercial' Contest.3-4, Okato Staff 4. 1-some of the best keep their thoughts to But lt is such a serious thing to be such themselves. a tall, tall woman. RAYMOND ZIMMERMAN uzilnn Football 1-2-3-4. He is head of the class in inches. Page 14 THE OKATO 'fy' f I , ir I D ' 5 1' ' 4, ' K ' -X as-:T ,- ,-.. gr- if - -in . Q A Q l - W I 1 IIT!-'Nr gurus: 'J , ' 9' lr tl pusrmo- wgymy I lj, l H-N ' . ' in 5 i W as ' Z 'F W1 vu.: voi..n I ll -Al 1 . -A 2 4- , The year ot' 1921 was the heginning of a series of eventful years whieh were destined to- change the entlu- eourse of events on the little island of 0. H. S.. for that year witnessed the flllillillllg of tile llepuhlie of '25, I One hundred and twenty-'one of :he izrarest and most toarless of tl-e island 'not in ar. :issemlny to diseu-ss an-d .plan the affairs of stafte. The first prusident et' the new repulblie was ehosen, with a meretnry of the treasury .und a seeretary of state. These lenders led the state eaplallily duri-rllg their terni. One of the iinpomtant bills palssed. in the session provided for a party. lt proved the success of the new government. Nor dill this thriving trepulnie prosper only in a social WIl3'. lt lshowed its prowess in support of the advancement of wc-hool spirit 'in education by furn- is-him: a yell leader of school pep meetings during the four years of its slrpzenniey. This yell lea-der of the asse-nitlaly sessions was Hallie Hidde. Diplomatic' and jorensie relativns were established hy Allen Wittko,pf and Ulyniene Parisey. Prosperity continued througth the next year, and all went well. Another party was 'lu-ld, which proved more -sueeessful than the first. This time our close alli-es. the freshmen, were ineluded in our court, The spirit of fellowship and denioeiwacy was heightxnelxl hy variuius organizations of the nations. in whieh the llepuhlie .was at all times an nnportanl fact.or. Hlee t'lulf, l'hilathea. Basketball. group sing:- ing. .sind llolosfaets ull figrured elosely in its history. ln the first year of t.he Replrbiifs stuttehood the 1'21ftl'l' soc-'-ety was organized, and the passiiig governineut eontuins the lust of tlle 'eltartrr nn-nihews ef that soeieety. liililllltlltltl was also reorganized tduri.ul:,f the third year ot' rule. and sefverhl new lnetihods and de. partmznts were introduced. Two other important eontributions were made toward the prosperity and stu-cess of the island. A lll1'llltl.4'l' ot' the Party led u eanipzlign to pay the standing athletie deht. Throufgh his efforts it proved Nl '1'I'FNl'Ul and the deht was efaneelled. The third period of the Repulvlit-'s eureer was -started somewhat under a handieap. The treasury was low, and the greatest campaign yet to 'he ear- ried on, the Proxn. was rapidly upproaeliini-'I- 'PRNUS were mnised, and the public sale 'uf randy und 'hot- dogs filled the depletecl t11'easury. The Prom on April 25th proved to he one of the most hrilliunt and vi-etorious eauipuigns ever undertaken on the orisis of O. H. S., and surely was the inoft sueeessful. It not 1-nly grain-ed glory and honor for its pmrtieipnnts. hut proved an advantagzeous undertl-iking finaneially At the beginning of the last und fourth ad- ministration a census was taken and it was astonish ing' to find that the population had decrezised to sixty-six. Only sixty six .of the one hundred and tlwenty four remained to witness the finish ut' the grand old Repwlilie. The fiufst of the events in this most eventful year was the Ju.u.ior-Senior Ihirty, arranged by treaties with our neiglnhoring repuhlie, the Juniors. It was held in the Guild Hall. and was one of 'the most pompous of its kind in the history of O. H. S. Sports and Olylnpiun pursuits were not lost sight of in the pressing affairs of state. The great teani dlllllllg the last YHII' of t-he Reirgn of '25 was eoniposod largely rf '25 nreuiherf. land euu-'ed many an enemy to Ho down lhefore its vulorous attaelcs. Toward the :pi-ing of thnr year the eitizens of the Repulhlie of '25 wlrr warned of an npprozu-lr ing erisis in r eir lives by the nppenrallee, on the Ilulletin Board of u list C-:xlled Eligible for Gradua- tion. This was the first thing: that threatz-ne'l the disunion of the 1-tate. for no siiiiilutiy eonstrueted eountry, lnade up entirely of student eitizens, Ullll lust long after grauluation. Later even mere warnings were issuezl, advising the illlIl'lt'fli2lf-P settlement of questions 'nlrout in- vitations, tlhe lust issue of the Uk':lto. pit-tures. ete. Diploinatie relations .with the Juniors were fuuther strengthened hy their l'roin. held April 17, :tt whieh the Republic- of '25 was well representwl. May 27 represented another of the lllost' inl- portant events in history. the Senior Floss Play. It I THE OKATO Page 15 Class History reverted to the hegiiming of the time of Adam and l-Iva, and its' sentiment wins as old as Adam. People from evrrywliri-e attended the great event, and none was dlsaippointed hy his effortls. Another affair -of the moment .was when Father lleis, at the Baccalaureate Sermon. gave the mem- liers eoim-eil that would be of great use on t-he new nulvenlture to he undertaken, the voyage in the Sea of Life. Grzlduzltion malzfked the last series: of momentous erises. and was the greatest triumph and most im- portant of them all. The great aims' and ideals that had been set up at the first had been earrieltl out hy jul it sixty-six of the ,lin-purest and most pemerver- ing. lt .was an impressive eene w-Tien eaeh wa handed the si-roll that meant so mueh, and repre-ienbed so mum-h. 'Phe passing out of the Greult Republic will be un ot-eision always remembered hy everyone who knrw of it. lt will leave its mark upon eiv'ilizat,ion. t'or it was n stu-eess. and Sum-ess Crown l'1ffo1't. Important Dates Sept. 5.ff-'l'he lnv.isii:n of the frrslimen in lligarh School. Szpt. ii Al irst Impression. of the Main Room. tldx- plorationl. Sept. ti fYalu:ible dit-coreriusf'l'he Fire Est-ape. Sept. S -Initiation-IOeonto River vit-tim.j October t ometiinejilfirst attempt at politiesg l'Ile1-tion ot' officers. tu-t .lzer tl.aterl-f,l ir.-t attempt'at. business, tFi-sth l'ond-nt'arnivalJ. Jun. lil--f-First social attempts. l l't'Slllllt'll Party. Fein. QS-Mr. Riley displays his ability as 1-ook! tl r: Sllllll'll m lrvel ! I fb ' . . June ti 'l l'.'SllllllIl sum up u sueeessful yetar. .lime T Y Our ret-ond impression of the Main Room. The llark Ages 1922-1923 - S'1'YJt. -l --The set-onul assault-Soplimures at 0. II. S. Sept. tlateri-l'retty ltlllfll-l'lilllltlI. l'l't'2ll?llt'l'S divoree the elzlss as pool' workersl. tletohtr - llall'd 'l'ilnes. Class dues. Ncuveniber-lioblned hair makes its dehut. .lllllll'Ill'j' --tlrippe epieIenii-t--Heasy-going? 1 i.1r the weaii ones. l rbl'lri1'y ff-fSopl1o1nore tent-hers get the mumps. llurrahZZ ---l:ut no! We had very eapnlnle substitutes. l4'e'ln'lmry 4luteri-Sophnlore Issue of the 0kato. May- - Barely makes the marks. Soplnnores reviv- inv:--llunning on will four. .Iune--tloozlihye to at hetter year. The Restoration 1923-1924 Sinpt. 7- lf at first you ,don't sueeeed try again. Junior Spiniit. Sept. 2S-Running tslow hut suriel. 01-toluer-Our fellow eiassmen appear with long' Jeans. Y! tietobei'-l ii'st teacher to appear with locks 1-lippedg Alr. Sllllfll sends his approvalg Mr. Pfaffnian is undeeided. November-Looks rather bad for the Prom, but .luniom are pulling h-ard. I.lt'1'9lX1bGl'-uI'1Ulll0 .lomnal driveg Juniors are sup- plied with peneils. ' .lanuary-Lots of resolutions and more resolutions. tl'rom disputesi. Fohruary-Still pulling hard. March-iMad-e the grade. All set for the great event!! April 25-The thing- Prom , April 26-Beloved Ils!! the newly-rieh. Uateh. our dust? .. April 27- Most siiecessful prom in ye'a'rs -qu0t'at- ion from Mr. Smitl1's Speech. May-To the last. hut fllot least, liapse of our inwas- ion. The Modem Age . .1924-1925 and still running fine Sept. 5- Slow and lCasy iSenior spirit. Oetoher-Mr. Pfaffman .deei-des to raise a moustache tSupport of Seniors! .Ianuary-tlutiside at-tivities' made suit-ex'-ss by brillia-nt m.:isculi.ne l'lillSSlll2li0S. l-'elrruarygliasket-hall-tlperetta. Maifeh-Prom rules Supreme. April-Information to puhlic. Open dates. fIl'u-rrah!j Mr. Thompson. Mr. llorgstrom. Flor-wi Dates. t'1'oo ha-d.j Mr. Louis Smith. Mr. Hedl'gerg. A pri I 4- The l'lllS1'Illbli '+0f our Early Birds. l'h1ilathea Bird llikens. April 17i 'l'he flilllul' of the eommotion -lirom! April 18-2:00 A. M.-Many Nil private. parties. fno goodj May 27-Our ln-i:11'ts speed up ihut not for love, Senior Class Play. May 28-'tlfarewell to thee, oh 0. ll. S. Uoininemre- ment Exereises. May 29-Our last impression of 0. II. S, May 251-Seniors forget their dignity. Seniors' pienie ,-tno- not at all privatej. May 2:1- we came. we saw, we conquered. Senior Statistics Xunrher enrolled as Freshman ...... .... 1 2-i . .xnmoer enrolled as Sophomores ....l04 Number enrolled as Juniors .......... 843 Numlver enrolled ns Seniors ............ Lili Nllllllfhl' graduated end of lst Semester .. 2 Nunmer of girls ...................... 2? NIlllllYl'l' of boys . . . . ............ .. . 38 Highest Average: Ki Girls: Madrian Qnalley .... 93 -S 39 37 Boys: Wilbur Burkliardt .... .. 86 --A ' 40 Senior girls with bohhod, hair .. 27 Senior girls with lorry: hiair .... . 1 Senior girls in Glee t'luh ..... . 9 Senior girls in l'h-iluth-ea .. 15 Senior boys in Ilolofaets .. 12 1 Page I6 THE OKATO N- Cl-GSS!!! LX1 I X, MX U e ,N . A X ffllllbkx 4 V, R .X so Il v ll ll ll l , f ay M, for , , X if A x i' ,. QW 1 X X A j f fill-up fy , L X 5 X TDCKETSJ K ' I g 1?-M'L.'3, I It was in the fall of 11540 on one of th-use dreary, dull, foggy, days. so usual in London, that I happen- ed to go into la hoek-shop to pawn my good old lngersol when lo and l:e'lold and everything else. if there wa'f.n't Albert Hidde perched on a three-legged stool anl looking just like the Czar inf Chezko-Slorka hiniself. Il'e had on the same old suit, he used to wwir when we were fre lnnen in hienll sehool, but my! how he had grown. He looked like u fat ohl Iluteh- man happily misplaced. He haul, on one of those skull ezlps so prominent .among the pompadour-seeking shiaeks of twenty years ago. Well Babe old Kid. says I. How's llllSlllt'95'?'. Oh 'taint so bad, and 'taint so goot eider. Holy suffering gvulvlfisll, he's even got the 'Abit- Goldfish aeeent' on his buetiness thinks I to my-self. Well after I'd passed around the eigurs about the fourth time. he seemed to jolly up ui bit. an-Q we be-gun talking about old times. 'l'he conversation from then on was moftly about our oltd Oeonto High Srhotl elass of '25, The first thing he wanted to know -was whether or not Austin Allen had suceeeded in getting: a .position driving a pulmotor on G'l'2flI'l4l avenue in Suamieo, or if I knew whether or not Rudolph t'isar was still the stage door .lohnie he used to be in his younger dvayf. And poor Ed llerks. he got beat ou.t of all his -l'ard earned dough .by some 'phoney' Unstor-oil well stoekg now ln-'s a prominent fisherman on the Hay Shore. Win-r-e's Floyd Arseueau? Uh. he's presii lent of the lt t'orestration Soeiety for reforesting the Sahara llesert. lfle always planned to be a lnnrber jaek. didn't he? lt-,-nn-nilslrr the vtaeation l'e went up in the woods with a lot of 'imibition for hard Ialnnr and eame ban-k with all the eooties from eamp No. l2? Marion Herald married one of those in-'eet' colleetors who makes abiult three trips yearly up the Annazon looking for .peg-lejzged gilli NVQIIIIIIUSGIS. Well, Marian gets a lot of traveling out of married life anyway. And Mable Degeneftie, yeh. she's runnin: a six l'undref:l aere eow raueh somewhere down in North Dak-0-ta. Say Iivabe. where's t'lara Benson? Oh, shefs he-ad lady for Do Less and Seemore 00.5 you remember they bought out bars Sawbuek tk o., a few years ago. Oh yes. and whatls ibeeome of Natalie Uliosa an-d Verna Gain and those kids? yeh, Nathalie joined the Ziefield follies I think: guess it was because her mother wouldn't let h-er get married to this Rudolph Valentino: she always was a good one at making some kin-d of foolisn move or -other. And Verna Gain. let'is see. well last I heard or her she was parlor maid for the Iiinkledinks. utoae millionaire folks out at one of those Wiseonsin Summer resorts. And Wilbur Hurkhardt? He's a eonstruetlon engineer for sznne big bridge eompany. 'l'hey're builfding a bridge that's to take the place of this Brooklyn bridge, beeause it's too light to earry modern trraffie. Yep, I remember when Wilbur lK 'lilll. he used to be the 'hash stretcher' for some d-inky Uonrtruetion Co.. rl wn at Green Bay when they built ra bridge there. I1et's see. Urval I-!lueher'! You must have heard of him. When he left O. H. S. h-e went to Notre Dame. and l-rat t'rowley's reeord dead blank, the first y-ear. Well he played football there two yerirs and then got a position 'un this Yale team. for a eouple of years. and now I guess hes weoaehing at California State l'. Lorraine Iilauk? I.et's see. just what I thought. Yep she's te-achinfr nnathenrities in some Iligh Sehool in western Ilenn-ylvania. She always did know het groceries. when it Cflllll' to lll'llllil'lll'.lfl4'r'Q remember our old Solid Geoni t'lass'! lt sure was a ,hard studying c-lass. THE OKATO Page 17 CLASS PRGPHECY And what became of Harold Berth? I haven't lrcarzl of .nm for Rl. long: time. I guess hc's trwveling snleswxnaxi for the Elgin Watch t'o. Harold always was u fast man: all travel- ln.: 1.-alesmen get tthut wuy. Do you rcnrember the wise tx-racks hc usrrl to ,pull in French class, and he got away with it too. Poor Roland Franksg he jointed the Barnum and Rally circus us an expert blacksmith, but one left lhinzl leg ofa day when hc- was shocillg the polcenorsc, 'ie got a kick in tile solar-plexus a-ml now ln-'le tickling.: u lmrp with Saint Peter fnct that famous tlaton of O. H. SJ. llidn't you ever hear of Vurtis Davis? Well l..ut's funny! Ile went in thc 1-inf: a few years after ln- lcl't O. ll. S,n:1n.l was making a bi! hit until he liumpel up against Kid Tonsilitis. Now I guess hc's selling matches on the street corners trying to niakc u living. A'f'i2ll l'lI1'L Armstrong? He madc the worst break of ull thc fellows I ever knew. He in-irriezl some jane that had a rich unclcg tliouzrhlt he'd get some easy 'jul-k'. but the rich uncle gave l1in1 the air and now. 'Doe' is w'lel-ling a pick :lu-d shovel trying to support one wife. one dog, and six children. Oh, well. the fili-'it fifty year.-1 are the hclrdestg hc'lI lem n. I Say Babe. you must have heard alzont this trunscontintenal air line didn't yill? Well Henry t'l1i'istIs'11sen is the lad tlmt's sole owner, ,proprietor manager. and janitor of that great concern. I knew that he'd uphold the 'Great Dane' ,title and set his aim high. l+Iliza'beth Dail-ey is one of the most prominent l'illll'1l-i'l1 lS of the 'Ladies Heavy Artillery Anti-tongue Wranfzliug Assoc-iation.' You know they have those littlc Wotliu-slliuy afternoon crackers. aml tea parties and they di-:russ bobbed hair, wild parties. funerals and the like don't-chu know? l+'1-iendly little associat- ion. never breaks up in a row-Oh. no! And remrmher Ro-se I-'alque and Greta Franks and Evelyn Fcncil and those kids? 'llhcy all made glllilli. llosc lffulquc owlls and an-perates one of thc largest hat shops in the little city of flhicmwo. She claims that her success its due to the fact that 'two heads a'c hetter than one,' when- it comes to fitting tln'-in out with li-rits. Yep, Evelyn Frncil is a stenog' for the great huun Magiqc Uzrmpany. She's Mr. Gunn's private secretary: last I heard she had quite a case on Chic, the office clerk. Nice going eh? Ycp. Greta- F'rank-s has more ,popularity than an umbrella on a uainy day: she .invented some new kind of anti-wrinkle post-toastiest and now -she's the person thats responsible for 'savinqg five million corn-fed Armenians. Did you hear of the wontdlerfiil honor given to Bi.ll?'-Bill I,acourc'ere. of course. He's been chosen poet-laureate of the Figi Islands. His :greatest poem ls 'Who Made All the Noise on. bilent Night'. They say hc's rushing the queen of the islands, one of those 'Nuitsbrown maildens'. Imndis? Oh, he's one of the big guns in radio Has a new 31.000000 plant at Pensaukee that turns out over two hundred an hou-rg all you have to do is concentrate real illargl on the .station you .want and you get it. His llntcst invention is the 'Radio Bug' you hear so much about. He's the one who is really responsible for static too, they say. Alla-n Wittkopf has been a roal ere-dit to his clasf. Prominent? Say, he's running for President now, on the Independent. ticket. The bifrgest plank in his .platform is that the nnlximum number of wives ll main. can have shziullrl. be six. Ht-'s practically in the Whitc House now, and it's elcv-cn months till election. Remy Reininrton runs .a dance hall in Pcshtigo. She has made the town what it is. Henry Gvvltlc? Say-you must have kept track of him. Nels in grand opera-he mn sing five dif- ferent languagrs at once and just now hm-'s on a toni through Europe. Anvil Florence l.el'omte-She'-s happily married somewhere in the southern part of the Il. S. and has thc healthiest pair of twins you ever saw. Recently -'he won a l!.,Il0ll2Ii prize for being t'1c most sucooess t'ul mother. Ray Moss?-l,: t nn- -see-oh to he sureelle's gprominent in Hollywood circles-rrim-mber when Rudolph Valentino was so popular? They say Ray is falling right in his foot-lteps,-and Evelyn O'Connor, -sheis played leading lrrdy opposite him several times. -Ney say she's a secirnd Bebe lla-nicls-tand isn't it a coincidrncc?-V-Uharlotte Mclfalltllcn is hcr m-uid-in real life I mean. Iiatlller nice to have so much of Ucouto down there iso L it? 'Marvin Johnson? lle's depot agent at Pensautkee and is married and quietly settled down-lies seems contented. And Olga Moewyoifd never believe it, She's gone ln for politics and is elcctionccring for Allan Wittkopf for the coming election.-And 'away in tho -rutskill mountains living as a hermit in his nice little hutsfor you know he is a great poet---in Kenneth Noonan. As for Lina Mac M u-Farlanc! You'd never guess! She lives in New York and is tihe wife of an artistg she is his chief model they say. And John Kenny? Uh-he runs an orange uzrovc somewhere in llalifirrniu. Ilc's a scconld l,ut.her Hur- bank-he h-as allready produced a seezllessspnlp- less? jnilcclessetastelesa orange that surpasses any that has yet been produced. And who do you su.ppo'se is our chief conlediun? I-Ir' plays in all the leading Vauldeville Ilouses in the Vnited States. l'at Halloran, of l'll'lllTFtl'. Ile surely niak-ev a hit-he's thinkin.: of goinlf: into the lnoviesn As for .lohnny Hynes-we always knew hc woutld make a man out of hinraelfelie is the head one of the Chicziam 'l'ribune. He speciallizes on the 'Womenis Pa,':e's-l+'asl1iori.s, A-dviee to thc Love-lorn, etc. He writes that part up himself. And Cecile Nagle! She won the National Ulhaiiipionship game of tennis in .the U. S. and this summer is playinig in the Olympic games-Home l'll see her when she comes overg her husband, lby the way, won the championship for swinnninlg mud they are coming over together. They are very devoted to one another. As for Edmund Heller. 'lle's not such a lfig man-merely making millions yearly-owns the largest moving-pictures in the world. For a while he was la rival of the Paramount Pictures but now he's far ahead. Page 18 THE OKATO CLASS PROPHECY Did you hear about tllle national contest held recently in the l'niteil State-1? Wanted to find the IOOYM-l girl whiell inzelu-dies perteet nealth, perfee figure, and perfect beauty, Katherine 0'Hearn won first prize. She was offered u 'position in the movies but she rrfused. Ami remember quiet Norman Mln-arik? Say- he owns om- of the largest uiremail routes in the world and makes tri-ps over 'to Europe almost every week. He has erratell quite a sensation for he has never maI'ried und all the mlrtllers over here with eligihle dau.:ihters are keeping' an eagle like eye on him. Hi' always was dashing. Anil say-as long as you are in lflngllrmd, you had better look up Winifrerl Hadlock. She lives here now. She ll1llI'1'1l'll a Lord Somellauly or other and sp-ends sfx monitlxs of the year here in 'l'e ' herlutiful eoulntry home amidst her riding-horses. dot:-4, and motors, an-d the ether Six months in the ll. S. She is Lon- donli Soeiety loader, and she too has ereated quite a sensation. . Last time I stayed at the vlitz-Carlton Hotel in New York, wllom Should 1 see but Rusfel I'l1'e- quette. I was lstruek very mueh by his dizgnified and prosperous air, whioh was further neightened by .his bell-'hop uniform. And lememher Henry Ryan?-I ran ac-ross him l.e other day-the owns the largest chewing Igium faetory in the world-the famous Ryan gum-ehew more, think less, you've h-eard so mueh about. Remember Evelyn 0'Neil? Of course I oo! She owns one of the largest dre-fs making establishments rn Fifth Avenue. Haven't you heard arhout the 0'Ne-il Fiocks? 'Phey my she loves sewinrz. No-I ean't imagine it either. Theodore Riewe has heeome a great crystal guzerame of these 'Sees all. knows all, tells a11'. Hel-:-fa-lullwiusly rich, I healr. Earns it all telling wives whether their hu1S'hamls really went to lodge and if they did, what they dill tlu-re. Clymene Parisey?-Very-Oh y-els-She's presi- -dent of the W. ll. '1'. Il. Onee in preaehing in one. of our prisons 'she met the notorious 'Black Jack' and lIl!l1'1'li'lil him to neform him. ' Robert Sullivan-oh!-he and Wesley Tal- madge have gone into partneiship out on a naneh in 'liexav-'-'llhey make lu speeialty of raising three legged Jael: Rilhhit stew with a Niagara punch in itg one drink 'and you fall. 'rldna Russell runs a Reality Parlor in Cream City. 'Phe lateft style of coiffure is the solos-e erop. 'l'u:ht to the sealpejust like a man's. Her idea. Ruthsr elever. An-d Ilse Seliluenz, she's a living model in one of our exclusive New York Shops. You s-eel they need someone with n rather dignified belar- ing-n Gaton St. 1'eter-say-he's heen all over. For a while 'i1e,was a sailor and went from Honolulu to Aralhia. He still likes the sea so h-e hauls in nets somtwvhere ln Sturgeon Bay. l l l l l l I l r Not So 1-Lug ago .us I was traveling through th-e U. 0. I in-rt llzla Goodman. She has never nmr- ried. She is a lgreat traveler and leeturer. Her chisel' sulbjeet is 'Why livery Girl She is Twenty One. Should Marry Before I saw a good Vauileville York. This-re was a wonal-erful 8: Jeff. Latter I diservered the other day in New impersonation of Mutt they were Raymond Zlllllllllflllflll and Orville Juekson. 'Bunny' uml 'Ami' a'ways did have their ups aml downs, in life. Hazel Wittkopf has joinrwl the Zilzfirlfl Follies. I just raw her rreently: she is the l1lf1lll .4l kieker ever known. She is quite wonderful. And no doulst you la-le Ill'lll1iZ11l1l'01l with our ln-st modern A1lll'1'll'.1ll author, Marie Van Rossum--ller la-test most wid-rly read hooks is 'Shattered Love D1'eams.' All liez' works are very popular. I saw Allen Voy reeeutly. Ise was sitting in his Tu-rkil-11 Harem amidst his beautiful wives. mlres- 'erl in the eharaeteri:tie f.owiug: rohes: yeseif was in the movies. H-e seemed entirely at ease nerelr- the- less. M.adrian Qualley? She leads a life of leisure. She married a multimillionaire and her summers- she spen-ds in Europe and her winters at Palm l4eueh.-- Rather -ellassy-elif!-Slie has 'been marriefl three times. The other two she divoreedg one was a farmer and the -other an undertaken I passed Alfred Rhode, one day in a beautiful limousine on Fifth Avenue. New York, you know. 1 hear he lives in an e4'alhorate baehlelors' apartment with a Chinese valet, and leads a gay life. He's one of the most prominent brokers on Wall str-eet. He's broken nearly everyone. they say. Norman Tennison broadcasts over Radio Station P. D. Q. in the southern part of China. liven the inlsects tune in with their antenna-e when they hear his voice. 'tllucille Sehwedler got her long desired 131. A. degree at Columbia. where she met and imirriefl a great traveler and explorer. She goes with him on all his trips. they say. and now they uve exwloriug the heart of Africa. She has done womlerful work among the natives, .distributing hooks to them. Their favorite author is Van Rorwunif' Oh Yea! Speaking of your jobs. Joseph Herouxls got the softest.-te-'ting mattresses for Simz-1on's Bed Urinipiany. He said all his sm-cess is du-e to continual praetiee during this plastie stayzes in dear old 0. I-I. S. The papers are full of Stanley Holman. who ls Offleial globe trotted' for Pheeko Slcwllki-'ii Govt He ree-eived the Honorary F. 0. B. degree from the Prince of Ileigle in appreeiation of his large do-nation of eounterfeit money to the Starving Hottentots in Brazil. Gosh Halle. didn't our 4-lass of '25 do some tall lI1l1g'1'-lltlllgl I Wouldn't like to try aml loeate some of them ten years from now: I believe we would even fi-nd some of them on the moon. XVel1. so 'long. I'1l se you to-morrow night at the 'Dew Drop Inn,' and we'l1 talk things over. THE OKATO Page 19 Last Will and Testament of The Its i CLASS YVILL Last Will and Testament of the Class of '25 'Phe Class of 1925 of the Oeonto Hiyh School, of tae county of U1-onto, State of Wiseznisin, 'being in 'sound and sane minds and memories. and not acting: nn-der the infueince of any person whatsoever, do llllllill, puhliisli. and declare this our last will and testament for the purpose of disposing our good will and personal grudges and lrequeathing our luck. looks. and love to our successors. and to that end c-hex rfully igire, devise, and bequ-eath to the same as follows, to-wit: Article 1. To our lllUSlC 'beloved facility members, we wlish to give our most profound gratitude for their willing services throngllont our yearns at U. H. S. Article 11. First. we leave to the class of '26 our ability at bluffing. and our personal grudges. Second. we leave to the class of '27 our uncon- querable class spirit and our nmenifieent intellect. Third. to the 4-lass of '28 we leave our success in social affairs and our good intentions. Article 111. Polleetively and individually we do bequeath the fol lo.wiin1j.'r : lst-Olga Moe's way with henux. to Evelyn Swie- darue. :Ind-Alfred Rinde's way with girls to Francis K. 3rd-Russell Pom-quette's paid sullsuziptirm to the l'olli-e Gazette. 4tihf-ltolnml Franks wills his rare photographs to lflsthel' Chase. 5th---Katherine O'Heurn wills her fraility to Eunice lllll'lllN'l'j.fttl'. titll-l'l11'iisty's silence to Grace Ford. 7t'I--l'egg's winmnm-ess to Mmlge Wheeler. Nth--llse's gnyness to Furl Westergnavrexl. 1 l i i I I l 1 1 i 1 l i l 1 Sith-Lucille and Norman din hereby hand down their mutual love and affection lwhieh they in turn inherited from Mae Porter and Stanley Crookisj to Francis Klozotsky and Ruth Heller. 10th-Clymenes -rare and costly talents which she so industriously displayed, to Tamar ldmbry and Eleanore Fninelle. ' 11th-Evelyn Fenc-il's unusual scholarship to Noel Keene. 12thHMadrian's inurkofl authority to Bernice Gor- don. 13th-.Iohn Hym-'s snintliness to Lovell-e O'Gmdy. loth-Vevr'na's avoirdnpois to Miss Klosterman. 15thiHenry Ryan's dancing abiliity to Roland Wittkopf. 16th-Babe heqneatlfs his job as yell lender to Henry Vullings. llrh-Ray Moss's strimng grace to Euniee Break- stone. 18th-1ted's daddy ability to Mm. Borgstrom. liltll-Hiazel Wittkzwpfs typing talent to her younger sister, so as to leave 'it i.n the family. 'J -0thWGaton wills his quiet but sweet little giggle to Lovelle U'Grady. Article 1V We wish. the funeral service to he held at M-ae's and the remains of the Glee Club to sing' hinge: Awhile, so we may ,he well prepared to get a harinonious start on the lung life-work ahead of us -we also desire that our loved tevneliers do not give way to their emotions, for fe-ar t'he other elasses be jealous. In witness whereof we do hereby set our hand and seal this 28th day of May 'in th-e year of our Lopd. one thousand nine hndned twenty-five, Slglllhll-Tll-lt. Seniors, ' Witllessrs'Ili-roto, .IUNIIUR CLASS, COfDITlCUCCfHCHl EXCI'ClSCS The program for Commencement Day is as fol- lows: Processional -- --- AgT1eS Mllllefl Invocation -.,................ .....H R ev. Garrison Salutatoiry ............................ Olga Moe Duet-Sing, Sing Birds on the Wing ......... 1- ,,,,,,-,,,,,,, Alice Ramsay, Clymene P8l'lS'9'y Valiedictm-y .e..........e....... Clymene Parisey Music- Joy of Spring ...... Double Quartette Commencement Address- Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow .......... Prof. Curtis Merriman Music-Sparkling Sunlight ...... Girls Glee Club Priesentory of Diplomas ........ Supt. H. E. Smith Baccalaureate Exercises The Itaeenlaureate Sl'l'lU0ll was held at the Presbyterian Church House Sunday, May 24. 'Phe prograln was as followisi: Processional .c......i,.,,,. High School Orchestra Prayer ......,,.. ......... ,.......... R e rv. Lease Music-Four Leaf Clover -- c- Double Quartette Sermon .................. ,....c F ather Deis Music-Morning Invitation --- -- Glee Cllib llenedietion ............... Rev. Dies Page 20 THE OKATO Class Play---Adam and Eva James King, a rich- man .......... Landis Maloney llorintha, his parlor maid .. . . ...... Evelyn Fencil Clinton he Wayne, his son in-law ..... .. ....... l Clarence Armstrongl .lulie ll: Wayne, his eldest -daughter ............ tllymene Darisey Eva Kinix, his youngest dlaughter .............., Winifired Halrlloclr Aunt Athliy K .cker, his sister-in-law ............. I4llizal:eth Daley llr. .lack llclametcr, his neighbor. ...... .Iohn Hynes llorace Pilgrim. his uncle. ........ Edmund Heller Adam Smith, his busin-ess manager ............. . Allen 'Wittkopl Lord Andrew Gordon, 'his winulvl-he-sonein-law. Allen Voy .lames King is tired of family life. The only lime they fuss over him is wlirin they want some- thing. lzllt whori Hill Dvay aririves they are careful t.i' avoid him. Adam Smith, a young gentlemen just .back from the wild-4 of Manouse, is Mir. Kingls business manager and envys .Mr. King and his home life ant' family. Adam anxl Mr. King 'l'llllillIIO places. From this many 'lIlllll'4'lIl'f.f incidents arise. The chief are: Adam pus-tcnxls to hits family that Mr. King.: had gone rbarnkrupt and that the only thing left for them to do is to go to work. At first tney are stunned. hut, thc y gallantly arifle to the occasion. The girls run a chicken farm while bhe men are all employed at viarinus positions. Best of all Adam has accomplished his purvpose and the family is contented and happy. Mr. King returns from Manouse lonesoin-e for his family and gets the surpri'-e of his life when he finds This spend thrift family at work. During this time Eva and Adam have begun an acquraiutance which has .already passed the hounds of friendship. .lamew Kim: was portrayed well ilny Landis Maloney. Ilan-dis as an indulgent imposed upon father ueminded us a wee bit of our own Daddy. Evelyn Fencil in the part of Corinthia. a sympathetic aml thoroughly dlrnnesticateil maid, had ai of the qualifications. The religious affairs inf the play were augmented lay the l'ious' ideas of Clarence Armstrong as the -cake eater son-in-law of James King. Ulymene l arii-ey as the l'fft'l'Vt'l't'lllf,!4 matron. .lulie De 1Wayue. played the part to perfection. Winifred Hznllock. as Eva King. was in t'!e role of a partner in the chicken and bee inliustuy and was evrn more bewitching than as a society butterfly. Elizabeth Daily, as aunt Ahluy, fund m1 mory classes su-ch il fine thing. but then it is hard to X't l!l0lIl-ll0l' prices. A fortune hunter? tWhoi-ver woulsl have thought of .lohn Hynes as a fortune f1unter'H But we can point to none Letter' or more able to play the part than J'uhn. A pen-nilness. hut warmheaiitexl hnchelor with bad digestion 'an'l lI'l'0Illlll l.u XVho el-ie could play the part of Uncle Horace with such naturalness as Eil- mu-nd Heller? 0h! Anlam! Adam took a bite from the apple offered him by Eva. Nothing else to do but get llcr for his partner in life. Allen Wittkopf as a modern Adam was so real 'and so well adapted to it that he made all of the girls' hearts accelerate. Allen Voy, a Scotchman .with lns charming man ner anid his abbreviated woids made us like him. He chcanged so that we could fongive +l1is coming over te marry an heirem. Q 0. H. s. CAMPAIGNS 1. Mir. Pfaffan for Order. 2. Miss Bovee vs llllS'llWRFhillg'. 3. Miss Bogie for Strictness. 4. Mr. Louis Smith vs baseball. 5. Mr. Thompson for jokes. G. Eva 0'Neil for dancing. 7. Monica Williams v-s tardiness. 8. Henry Ryan v-s detention. 0. Marvin Hynes for lhetter chewing gum. 10. Clarence Becker vs more zeros. ll. Ulymene Pa-risey vs study. 12. Trmuan Drake for girls. 13. Lut-her 'Madison for more Phy. Ed. 14. Girls vs swearing. 15. Boys vs lll69kiHES3. 16. Whole school vs spring fever. 17. Orval Grunert vs obesity. 124. Seniors for diplomas. 19. Mr. Borgstrum for less loafing in Phy. Ed. 20. Students for a gym farther from school. 21. Teachers vs spring rush for library passes. 22. rblturlents vs iamhithin. 23. Mr. H. Smith for leavtintf: a thought with us. 24. Clarence Armstrong for that indifferent attitude. 25. Mr. Pfaffman for a class in which to put theories into practice. 26. Francis K. vs his growing popularity with hi-s the gi-rls. 27. Miss Miller for 'successful Dhilathea meet- ings. 28. Russell Poequette for the use of big words. 29. The faculty vs loitering in the halls. 30. :Mi-'s Ream vs chewing gum. 31. Winifrcd Htadlock vs showing emotion. 32. Girls for a bid to the Prom. 33. Fellows for showing their independence re- igarfding Poem bids , 34. Christy vs reciting. 35. Miss Ames for getting numerou-s Senior af- fairs underway. 36. GlFLQ for pa-:ses to the roller rink. 37. Junior classes of '24 and '25 for funds to finance fhe Prom. 38. Evelyn Swiedarke for a chlance to ala' her laugh. silvery 39. Floyd Arsencan vis blnsihing. 40. Peanuts vs hashfulness. THE OKATO page 21 t'o:n-li B0l'LZSll'0lll H. t'ln'istcnson l.. Murphy N. K1-0n.v, lilnxmgur IC. llnrtz H. Iierth A. Wittkopf E. liillt'llt'1' F. fi3lS'lllllllIl Basket lp924f-J5 Wm' wus tit-vlnrozl. tielnwnl Borgstroin culled for 1 l'l't'l'llll5. :intl fifty nn-n wportiml. l'1'in1z1rily for train- ing :purpose :intl to pick ont good lll'll'f0l'illl, ml- sham btrttlt' wus holtl. 'Flu' Seniors t'u1'1'ie4l the flag lsnvk to wunp. 'l'l14- timitwzll fonntl ,frootl lll2llfL'l'l2ll. nn-tl pit-ke-tl hiv first sqnaul. They wt-ro strenuously tlrillted for ll stomly two ww-ks, lwforv tht-ing t-nllwl out to bflttlv. 'l'l1vir first invasion took plum-v nt Wnlwno, whvrt- thvy wt-re vivtorioits. killing twt-nty1n1v of tin' 011-uiiiy. und losing only fonrtt-on of their own. Next they invtnletl Shnwamo. lloro tfwy were ont,-nnllilu-.11-tl and lost twt-nity-two mon to Slnm'uno's fifteen. whivh was 4-ollnsitlt-n-tl only at slittzlit loss nnrlrvr such ft-arfnl lmmlicn-pts. The nt-xt lmttlt- took plum' nt Ot-onto Falls, wht-in' an stinging.: li1'fl'llf was hztntlt-tl tht- enemy, killing: svvon. of their nn-n, and XVtllUldillg' only one of our wnli riors. 'Pho following wt-ek West tlreml Huy in-vzuliwl the Uconto l!2.l'I1ilI'kS, :intl went Home with :1 vivtory. 'Phvir ranks were tlwfn-:ISMI hy five, :Intl they czlrrival I1-n Ot-onto .svulps with tht-ni. The Ntrong Slinwuno trilw next battled thu tlvonto warriors. nntl tit-t't-:ttrtl tht-in with ai low nf only four nit-n. 04-onto lost sixteen int-n in this fnay. Next Oconto invatlml lVl2ll'ill0fflt'. A lmmtl 'b.1lI.t.h' was fon-ght, but tiht- goth' were with Mnriiwttti. Ten Ot-onto mon tit-ll, 'hut Mnrinottt' lost 1-iight. llt-jetrwtl :Intl itlisutppointvtl. the wnrrions t-anne hut-k to enum. Frirliay the thirtovnth Fklte smiled on -Ucontn. With four fins-t-vlnss offit-4-rs vonrt-niurtiult-tl, and il group of rookies llliilllg' their pllnvv, with only two nights' tlrill to tlwiix' 4-rt-dit., they vlinlkotl up an ovvr- wllofininig vit-tory over VVt-SIL De Pore. cnptnrillg -tliirttwn of tht-ir lllt'll. :intl they inipniisonotl only nina- of ours. tt'ontilnw4l on Page 223 Page 22 THE OKATO ATHLETICS H'ontinued from Page 21 l The following week the Faillls uttnu-ked us. Ex- pecting a victory, they went home -defeated-only wound-ing three of our men, and losing twenty-two of their own. Next a huttle was fought at West De Pere, where the locals were lllllillllylltlll and defeat-ell before they could get the men in onlie . Twenty-four local war- riors weve lost. io twelve of De l'el'e s. The lust lmtlle on the home field 'wus played wgvainst the ohl foe. Marinette. Vim-tory wais 0conto's until the lust minute, when men llllSllIll0l'SfOfNl the eomman-'l. Mnrimtte took the ll'ill'2lIll'l'l'g0. and de' feated Oc-onto in the last few minutes. They c-f1.ntured fifteen 01-onto men, and Oconto took only nine of theirs. Our warriors ne-ver gave up the ship. but nl- ways f0llfJlli their hest in every eneountor. ATHLETICS OF THE YEAR The fact that football was out of the question hit the' biggest part of the students very hard but such a thing was unavoidable. It would be alto- gether too much of a chance for the school to as- sume the responsibility of putting a team on the gridiron with that enormous debt on its hands. Next year's chances for a football team-a winner too-look mighty rosy just now. The receipts from Community .School Day almost took care of much of the deficiency. In order to clear the debt en- tirely the Seniors are debating- as to the advisabil- ity of paying off this-deficiency from their treas- ury instead of leaving the school a memorial in the form of pictures or furniture. As we go to press prospects look mighty good for the adoption of this plan. Let's hope it goes through! With the football season put. out of the way we looked eagerly forward to the basketball season, when Oconto High could do her stuff. The team played professional ball all through the season and we certainly enjoyed an unusual number of wins at the expense of Wabeno. Oconto Falls, Gillett, and West DePere. After the schedule was done' we gave the terms at the bournament quite a scare' by defeat'ng Gillett, the Falls, and' also by holding Marinette to a tie in a two pevriod ovefr-time game which resulted in a tie between Marfinette and us for third honors in the distrfct. The High School had every reason to be proud of the team and the coach. After the basketball togs had been tucked away and the moth balls inserted, Mr. Louis Smith sprung a new one on us. He asked that all boys stay after school one night and then he unfolded his plans to develo class base-ball teams. As the season has been rather cold to date. not much prac- trice can be done as yet but it will soon be warm- ing up a bit and then we can have some real sport with the pill. A class tournament is planned if the teams can get in enough practice before school closes. TOURNAMENT The quintette left for Marinette on Thursday, March 12, and played that night against the old rival, Marinette. The flrst half was hard fought, Marinette scoring' five points fall on foulsl and Oconto scoring three, on a field goal and a foul. The second half things went wrong'and Mari- nette came back and gave our five- a walloping to the tune of 25 to 7. The second game was with Gillett. The boys' spirit seemed downhearted and the enemy almost trimmed them. They had to play a five minute over time period to beat Gillettg the- score ended fourteen and: thirteen, with Gille-tt on the short end. Next our warriors battled Oconto Falls and their spirit seemed still somewhat broken. They had another hard time beating the Falls, any other t'me the boys would have walked away with them. After beating them twice' before, the team couldn't let them win so' they trimmed the Falls to a score of eight and six. The next battle was with Marinette again and the boys fought for third place. Marinette ex- pected an easy game but something happened. Four of the team were seniors playing their last game for the Gold and Blue. So Dolly , Allie , Christy and Tubb-a with the help of little Mickey went into that game to win and when the final whistle blew it was a tie game. They played five minutes over time and it was still a tie game, so the judges figured the teams were o-n a par and they called off the game and gave both Oconto and Marineitte the honor of third' place. This was the end of the tournament as far as Ocon- to was concerned and the coach and the boys were satisfied with themselves and called it a victorious year. The letter men are: Harold Berth, Allen Witt- kopf, F-rank Cashman, Henry Christenson, Alfred Rhode. Sad bu-t True A pnper is a great invention, The school gets all the fnmegl- The printer gets nigh all the money Anil the stuff gets ull the lvlaune., AC-H, Loui fSJ ! One day as I ehancerl to pass. A beaver wins dnnnning u river: A man who had run out of gas Was doin-g the gsmne to his flivver. THE OKATO Page 23 Editorials SUCCESS CROWNS EFFORT Those distinqnished. diligent. faithful, ambitious, llllll vllf' 'getic members of the class of '25, after care- ful consideration and severe mental storm. chose as their motto. Success Vrowns Effort. And if one will review carefully 'tive history of the present senior class from its freshman to its senior year he will easily nnvlerstnnd why they chose this motto. ln the early part of Selptember. 1921, this noble class began the fuce which might be likened to n der'l:y. That first day of High School was the .start uf the hang race. Life. Among: the entries were all types. some pacers. some trotters. some running horses. and a few lalzgards. 'lllley are off! The first year gone. first flll'ill in the race. a few broken down, several bolted. Some silow in advance of the rnck. Second year. and' second corner turned. lint look l'ow they halve thinned ont. Down flat, one-two- three dozen. Some quit and lie down: they cannot stand the place: they will not get up again in this race, be sure. We can almost tell now who lll'0 going' to win. Three years gone and third corner turned: more drop out but less than in the seconnl year. I4llldll'l illlC0 and grit ary needed now. Some diark horses. nn- noticed in tile first year. show elose to the front. ldzlur years gone-race over-no more running: all that are on the course are coming in at a walk. IVllo is ahead? Ah+ea.d? There is no more straining for victoryg all are victors who have finished the race. who have stuck to the en-dl, and through sheer determination and constant effort have obtained success. The spectators see the finish of the derby and are convinced that Success Crowns Effort. Success Crowns Effort. Tests-Fai ln re ?-Success? COMMENCENIIERT - Uommencenn-nt means our stalvt in a different life. In high school we have lived' was one large family silaring pleasures and 'displealsnres alike. lint now as seniiz'rs we have come to the parting of the ways. On the one side- are the stuifllents who will con- tinue education and learning in a iarger and broader field. who Will be more dependent upon themselves. lvnt who will have the consolation of ll1'll'l'll2lYlg' to a large school family. Commencement will mean chang- ing habits of young students to oldler students, but they will 'still remain in the division called stu,1lents. Un the otlier side are the students who will leave the la'q,re family of school people and will go to pa'rlldle their own canoes on the great sea of Life. For them it is' an unknown ship. They have sown the seed '-nt have nwrt yet reaped its fruit. If flll'0ll2ll the high school era they have earned. a name among the lbest, they will face the world with hope. ambition and eonrage. If'ate holds the strings and experience alone can tell. - LITERARY LUCKY THEMES RECEIVE PRIZES The themes which werre awarded first prizes by the judges on Community School Day are printed below. Bernice Gordon and Walter Damkoehler were the lucky girl and boy. NOSES A I wonder if eople are' to be judged by their noses,--whether tliey turn up or down, or whether they are humped, Grecian, or just plain ordinary noses? And what of their owners? When you see a beautifully gowned young lady, with a bit of fluff called a dog in her arrms, why you just naturally expect her nose to be just a bit uppish, don't, you? Then, when an old gen- tleman comes along and has a long, humped nose, why of course you know in a minute that he is going to be tefsty and grumpy and perhaps subject to the gout. Then there is a prepossessing nose with just a few frecklesg can't you just hear the jolly chuckle of the owner? It would take but a minute bo guess his nationality, especially if he had red hair. Next comes that acme of perfection in noses, the Grecian. The owner is apt. to becomev lop-sided profiling through life. You just know he belongs in the movies. But we must-n't forget that cub reporter nose. It is the acquiline. gossipy sort of nose. It is the most apt to be gotten into trouble and to become severely burned. It is much seen at Ladies' Aids and neighborhood gossip parties. Look to your nose and know yourself. THE FURNACE AND I There are few things F am better acquainted with around the house than the furnace. If there is any lolve between ns. it must be on the part of tlle furnace. Whenever I am around it.'s always th-e same. Fix the furnace, or Go fpnt some wood! in the fll'i'Il2li'1-Y I wake up in the morning an-d some one says. Get up and fix the furnace. I come home at noon desirous of finishing ia good hook and as usual I hear Put some wood in the furnace. But even at that the furnace and I met along fairly well together. We don't always agree or al- tContinued on Page 241 Page 24 THE OKATO THE FURNACE AND I tt'ontinue-d from I'a,f:e 231 ways disagree, as far as that is concerned. Sonia mornings IV-ll'Il I am either late or u little lazy I try to sneak green wood in, to start the fu-rnaice. My. what a kick the fu- 'nace puts up! She smokes. and r-:fu-'cs to burn until I have to give in-ggriidgingly. it is true, 'and start it all over again. But I always notice that it gives me in turn what I give it. lf I start thi- furnace with some goo-rl, dry kindling, in- stead of some old green stuff that woul.iln't lmrn in a thoufand years, it goes as well als any one could wish it to go. But. like .everything else, you halve to give it more than soinctlliirg to keep it going. You should treat your furnace like a giant locomotive. The dam- per an-d dfafts correspond to the valves and levers on the locomotive. If you do one thing wrong in tihc locomotifve some tlliuig else goes wrong. It is the same thin-2 with your furnace. If I start the furnace with- out regulating the check or damper. tihe furnace :promptly I't'Illlll-ll!! me by some siifnial. most often by smoking and some times by refusing to burn. But the furnace is soon due for a long rest. Summer will -soon be belle 'an-il I for more reasons than one ani glad of it. THE OLD ROSE DRESS Grandmother sat at the window and looked at t-he rows and rows of apple trees all in blossom. In her lap was an old rose dress with rows of tiny ruffleu and gold lace. Grandlmotller sigh-ed. then- said, And my dear, you say that old clothes will be the sensation of the evening? This tkess-ah, it brings back memories of long ago. when I first .wore this dress. I wonder if this dress were ever really new. It has been old so rery long, Why. it was old when I first wore it, but now-It is oh, so dear, and oh, so precious. Granny-wonft you tell me the isvtory about it- please do. You see, if we have to wear old clothed to-night-old fashioned ones-why I'd liked to' live up to your adorable dress, Granny, said Marljory Babcock. - Well. said Grandmother. it was many years ago. ln fact it was during the Civil lWar ill' 'fi1. I -WHS sixteen- years old. We were IIHJVIIIIZ' a lawn party-, social, we used' to call them, to celelbrate a victory for the North. I was very angry lbecauise Mother wou'-d not let me have a new dfress. I 'had one of Prudencs-'s made over. Charles Bowen came over with a young soldier, Richard Baibcock-who had lost his arm in the w-ar. Oh that terrilble war. Go on, Granny. Yes, dear. Well there isn-'t much to tell but we seemed to be made for each other and,-well. I be.- caine Mrs. Richard Babcock. Oh-Marjory that dlressl It was the sensation of my life. Everylbody praised it. I was always so happy when. I wo-re it. You may wear it to-night -and I hope you will have as bumpy a time as I did. But take care of it dau-lr ing-bccause Marjory, I love the dress soy That night, some after midnight, Granny was awakened .by -some on'e's kissing her. Granny dairlln'! This is the dearest dress. I-Everybody liked it so much. Andi-G1-a-nny. I also met my-well. somebody I like-oh, so well Granny. God bless you and the dress too. and may it make you as happy as I have been. L. M. I'. '26. SQUAD FIGHTS FIRES Ri'j.:'lit alhout! ...... Hu-u-umpli. Itiisponrling to the severe lon-.-1 blasts- that issued forth from the local mill whistics May 12, twenty boys from the hiizh school. namely: Francis Carter. Henry George, Floyd Ars.1-ne'.iu, Gordon Italic. Allen Voy. Pat Halloran., Norman Cole, Flare-nce Meinkcc. Ihisfwell I'ocqux'tte. tvarence Acmstrong, .lolm Hynes. Wilfred Lacoiircierc. Harold Bertll. Harry Whit- conib, Henry Ryan, Gaton St. IH1-ter. Ervin Shauer. Edniund Heller. and Allan Wittkopf. ,reported for duty within t.hirty minutes- after the call with packs nnl uniforms adjusted, ready for business. To the stud-ents of the school who .did not belong to the company it seemed a wonderful opportunity to escape from school duties. The memlbers of the company for the most part seemed to take it in al'- most the same way as these students did but uni doulbtedly before they -got to their destination they were imipressed with the seriousnesi of the affair. The splendid display of speed' and general willing- ness to assist is shown hy the fact that within thirty minutes iafter the call was sounded the company re- ported as reafdy to move. As the gnveater portion of tv company is high school boys it certainly shows how it makes real men. - When the com-pany was putting on its dlrive last fall for recruits many of the advantages offered by the i'0lllIP3l'ly were given by speakers, but this ad- venture fas it might -really he calledl was. not. mentioned because such a thing as this rarely hap- pens. We all hope the fire won't grow to serious pro- portions and are anxiously waiting to see the boys. ANOTHER HONOR FOR '25 Allan Wittkopf who had previously won first in the Elimination and League contests at Oconto Wlth his oration Return Am-erica. took first place again by a unanimous decision at Shawano. May lst. The few who attended the contest report: H+- gave his oration perfectly. In comparison with the others he seemed almost super-perfect. Altihouzh confident of our winning before the announcement we burst into screams of joy when 'Superintendent Diaivies announce-d 'And our best oration 'Return America' received a unanimous first. The Oration Baum America gets second place at District Miss Ream, Allan Wittkopf, Allan Voy and Cly- mene Palrisey went to Oshkosh to the District Con- test. There Allan gave his oration as nearly ner- fecly as one could have given lt. He spoke effortless- ly. with a keen sympathy and understanding. How- ever, Joseph Baygeron received first, with his oration A Sacrifice that Failed, -but Allan ranked very c'ose., both in the minds of the people, and in the judges' mtings, The school is proud to announce itself winner of second place in oratory. and close follower of first in the District Contest. SOCIETIES THE OKATO Page 25 PHILATHEA This past year will certainly remain in the minds of the seniors. Philathea, too, will have something to remember when the seniors of this year have left 0. H. S., never to return as im- mediate members of the Society, but to return an-d find the glorious old Society growing in ,both num- ber and spirit. The advisors for the past year in Phlathea were Miss Miller and Miss Klosterman. The lirst semester held the joint party of Phil- athea and Ilolosfacts which turned out to be a big success. The second party of just Philathea mem- bers was given on St. Patrick's night, and will al- ways be remembered by the- seniors as their last Fhilathea party. The meetings during the year have been un- usually Iull of life. They have brought many freshmen girls into the Society to help fill the places left by the seniors. It will be rather hard to f'.ll their places but if the seniors will will us of their good spirit and pep we are sure we shall get along. Each year Honorary Members are chosen from Philathea. It makes the aiim of every girl in the society higher. The following members were chosen as Honorar- Members for this year: Clymene Parfsey, Olga Moe, Evelyn Fencil, Elizabeth Daily, and Lorraine Blank. They were chosen for the fol- lowing things: being in Philathea for four years, having not only qualities which are needed to build up a good character, having paid their dues each semester, having apipeared in a program at least once each year, an having averages not below 85'W. t . Winifred Hadlock and Madrian Qualley are given honorable mention but were not chosen as Honorary Members because of the fact that they had not been here for four years. It is .in honor, and an honor earned and deserved. Seniors, though you may be far from us next year, do not forget the Philathea sisters who- will always wish ,you well and who will cherish happy memories of you. Mr. Pfnffnnui-Hovv dare you swear before me in class? ' Landis-How did I know you wanted to swear first? Local ipoliceman-You arc under arrest! What are you runnintg this car on? Mr. Dari-s-On my application. flint the Arm of the Law got him.J HOLOSFACTS tlf all sad words of tongue 'or pcn thc sad-dost arc thcsc, It might havc born. But don't ,ect wor- rie.l1 nobody died, und it di1ln't might hayc bt-cn. lvccanusc Holosfacts was thcrc with thc goods thin ycar. Tl'e'c might hav-u been a luck, of intcrcst prcf vahnt in thc society tho last tow ycars duc to tho fact that thc nn-mbcrs didu't take cnough intcrcst in thc tlifffrcnt functions of thc socicty. But this lririi school year everything wont over bil! hccautsc thc l1llllll'll0l'4 wrrc cnthusc-tl with thc proper Holosfacts snirit. and thcy tricd to make Holosfxrcts just what .I l-oys' high school socicty should lic. In tho 'hc.ginnirtg of thc ycar, with thc hclp of ,Mit-1-' llcnnis. a ncw constitution was forincd and a staiidnrrd was sft. Each boy had to como up to this starufaid in ordcr to bv oliwfriblc for ndnii-sion into the society. The scholastic avcrago sm-t Lin orxlcr for n boy to llll'f'Ollll' a mcmbcr was clghty. With tln-sc principlcs sct down, and with riond-whip as thc -1f'z'2't'la1'tl of thc society, forty-fivc lll'l'll1llN'l'S wt-rc cn- rollcd and cnjoyrtd thc cntertainmcnts. busiu-css mcctinlgs. and ref-'cations of thc society. At the lzrgitming of the ye-ar. Mr. A. J. Whit- comlb. a lllt'lllIll0l' of the local Kitwanis Ulutb, spoke to thc boys in the society, and outlincdt for them the beticifits of real friendship in a high school. and how in later life it holps to innkc better citizens. Hr said that a real society always has that spirit of friendshi-,p which mak-es it worth While. hater in thc year the Holosfacts memtbers wcrc tho guests of the Kiwanis Club at several of their luncheons. The society was fortunate that it could attcu-d those meetings and observe how an organiza- t.ion such as Kiwanis carries on its business. and how tht-y combine business in- such a way that it seems a pleasure. ..... . With the good start which the society now has, and .with its equally good principles, it ought to go 'big next year. She has a flying Start. now lct's sec 'er gto. As the only boy's society in high school, next yearis lllPlll'llQI'S ought to do their utmost in combin- ing the busint-ss of the society with the reorcftltions that are possible. They ought to have a 'good haslzct ball team and there isn't any reason- why they cnn't develop some good matcrial in oratory 'and defbatc. Well, fellow members of Holosfacts. let's see you go! Line up to our expectations and be able to show thc future m-cm'bers that the society is one worth .while joining. Be wblc to giive them as good Society as you would want a school orgia-nization 'to bc. '25ers will be with you in spirit! X Page 26 THE OKATO CLASS JUNIOR NEWS The junior English classes have been rather de- jccted these last few weeks, because they have been studying graninutr. The biology classes have 'been draw maps of city blocks. tliiology teachers assign suclii useless topics. There is a map of the whlntle city down in the office-.J entdeavoring to Miss Graaskamp has been inoculating t.he germ of historical knowledge into her junior history sections. lWo wonder h-nw the 'exam papers rejiifter. The French class tried luind. to master verbs and sundry other things. The notebooks have quite a nlunher of cheerful marks wfhtich seem to indicate that the efforts have not been in vain. lf one were to .wonder into a social problems ella.-'s the flow of or-atory one would hear ntitght be worthy of Allan llfittkopfg We mu.-:t preserve the natural resources of tour wonderful country. XVhere once great hexfds of -deer wander, n lone buck strays in lonely magnificence. etc. etc. tl'erhaps auch bursts of oratory were what caused them to leave.l The busy click of the typewriters indicate that the typing ciasvses are not idle. tOf courre. this is not unusual. for whoever knew a Junior to lbe idle?J SOPHOMORES Miss Mills-r's English classes are doing very interesting.-5 work. The Ii Class just completed the debate, uliusolvetl that the women of to-day are better than the wonuan of yesterday. The ne-ga.tive was exciting when the boys. fbegan to argue for the women of tostlay. The A Flntss lms been having Friday p1'0lIl'EllllS. Each work. a committee is appointed and requested to work on a pro-gmrani they think the class would like. Tfle 'students of the class like the workinr,: up of the program as well as the ent.e.t'tainment it affords. The geometry A class can- boast of especially bright students. Une dny while studying a difficult. theorem writ.ten by Garfield, one of the :students thought it was by President Garfield and said: If hc w.nt.e that. it's no wonder they shot him. The Latin 10 stud-ents are makintg -a large book. takint: in Roman artiteeture. Roman History, deri- vations in English taken from tal? Lirtin. and ad- vertisements with Latin words or Latin derivitives. The home economics classes. 2ll 0 busy making delicious brexnls and tbuns. If anyone would like to have t'Iist proved ask Mr. Pfaffuntn about them-he has sampled them. OTES FRESHMEN NOTES The table for tile radio that is in the office was made by the freslunzm manual arts boys. They have also completed a radio cabinet which they 'started a short time ago. All but two of the freshman boys have finished their fern stands. and nrariy all the boys! 'llllV0 filled. t-ftained. and varnished their book racks. necktie taacks, and handkerchief boxes. Several are wiring their tnnle lamps, and! by the end of the week, the boys will take their completed projects home. The science classes have been studying on tree. plant, animal, and bird life and their influence upon man. 'llllose who take Latin have been working on their notebooks which contain every exercise they have completed up to the present time. rmgulsli 9 B. have finished reading the book. The Vision of Sir Launfal. Some of the algebxa 9 classes completed the work reqniretd of the freshmen and' took some ad- vanced algebra wonk. RADIOPHANS During the pa-st School yeear the boys took a vezy active. interest in radio, and some of them built setls for themselves. At the beginning of the term. Mr. 1'faffman suangestetl that the pupils of the physics 4-lass who were interested in radio get tllgixtll-till' and build sets. So some of the boys started .saving heir small change. and they 'soon had enough for parts. Th-ei iris of the physics class did not. seein to like the id.e.a of building sets. Probably the financial or possibly it was tue building of them which they disliked. tHowt-ver, they like to listen to a good radi0.J ' The boys who made sets were: Lan-dis Maloney. Norman Tennisen, Stanley Hellnum. Hensly George.. lkhester l'2l1'4llll'ill, Russell -Pocqtlette, Allen Wittkopf. Tluiotlore Riewe, Albert Hi-dde. Raymond Zimmer- man, and Clarence Mienke. Most of these were one tube sets. A few were three tufbe sets. All the boys report good reception and long distance. sitle of it botsheretl tllehl. In addition. to a .new supply or regular phytsics laboratory equipment bought this year. partts for a tllrce-tulbe radio set. were ordered. The set is to remain in school, in order to Show physics and science classes the way a- radio works. The set was built by Landis Maloney and Norman Tennisen. Most of the boys who built, theit' own were uieinbers of the senior class. So don't be su-rprised if you hear of some of them being great radio ,engineers and electricians in a few years. THE OKATO Page 27 DEPARTMENTS COMMERCIAL NOTES The tag day which is a yearly event with the commercial classes was quite a success this year and the department wishes to thank all the students and friends who helped to make it such. The commercial play, Not to the Swift put on by the senior shorthand class was also success- ful. These two events made it possible for the contestants to go to the State contest held at Whitewater. At the state contest our contestants saw George Hossfeld, who has been one of the World's Cham- pion typists for four years, put on a demonstration at the Normal on an Underwood typewriter. In some of the work he was able to write 235 words per minute without an error. All the students who have not earned an hon- orable mention in the shorthand work sent out by Whitewater Normal are planning to do so in the next two weeks. Watch the list.. The commercial arithmetic class has planned to have a candy sale as their part in helping the con- testants meet all expenses. ' Manitowoc Wins First Place in Commercial Contest The annual State commercial contest was held Saturday, May 9, at Whitewater Normal School. Ninety schools were represented in competition by 290 contestants. . Six contestants from Oconto, Hazel Wittkopf, Katherine O'Hearn, Ilse Schluenz, Margaret Good- man, Shirley Nichols, and Maria Wittkopf, left Oconto Friday morning to attend the contest. The contest started at 9:20 Saturday morning and con- tinued until 3:30 in the afternoon. Manitowoc high school took first place and won the silver cup, having won the greatest number of points. Marinette took second place, and Racine won third place. A full report was not ready be- fore trains left Whitewater so the only full report we have any knowledge of is rapid calculation and penmanship. Shirley Nichols won one point for Oconto in penmarrship. The first place winners in each event were as follows: Senior typing, Theresa Caldwell, Poynette, 71.8 words a minuteg junior typing, Alice Stoltenberg, Manitowoc, 51.8 words per minuteg shorthand, Rose Krause, Sheboygan, penmanship, Elinor Herman, Manitowocg rapid cal- culation, Ray Shebesto, Manitowocg advanced book- ekeping, Josephine Johnson, Oshkoshg beginning bookkeeping, Victor Anderson, Marinette. DRAMATICS CLASS ENTERTAINS 'Flu' Drnlnatics Vllzuss entertained us Wvllm-stluy. May ti. in tht- Assembly. l'nt Hnllornn wzls chnirnmn of 11 p1-orrrann which im-linls-tl tho following selections: iltllllli'-vl'lll'lg' Her Patil-nr ........ Marion Linmlgrcn lla- Colorotl Lntly in Sow-ivty ........ Shirley Nichols Inc l'nexpm-ctvtl Gnu-t' .............. lCrln:1 Russell The stuwlcnts' in this class are wowjkinig on the following devlzunntions whioil we may look f0l'Vt':ll'll to llt'lll'lTl2' in fntnrv usscinhlit-s: illlllllglllg H-rn vs ................ Helen .I. llnrvcy l'or's Raven in tlle Ifllevntor.. Clnrcm-o Arun--tronu l cnrod's Lt-ttt 1- ..................... Cecile Nagle Uur Gmlrtlialil Gontlvnlcn ....,, Russell l'ot-qinfttc Mr. Iinsn's Kintlvrgartvn Twistt-r ...... Nom-l Kem-no .Iinnny Tenrls the Bzllvy ............ Arthur F:tIln'y HOME ECONOMTCS The sophomore girls of Miss Bovee's cooking classes served group dinners on Thursday, May 14. The girls have had practical lessons on meats of various kinds, also. In high school, the girls who took the prizes for their cakes were Florence Rugg, who took first, and Marcella Chezek, who took second. The girls worked doubly hard on these cakes, for they had to. make a second one for each cake that was missing, and they deserve much credit for their labors. Elizabeth Housner took first and Marion Portertield second, among the grade schools. Miss Ames' classes are having some practical sewing lessons which are a. summary andg general testing of the girls' sewing ability. The tests cover everything the girls have done during the year and they will receive no help whatsoever on their sewing. They are also to take up lessons in etiquette soon and are going to study practical purchasing. In high school the girls who took the prizes for their dresses were Alice Benson, first, and Ce- celia Auger, second. Mary Heroux took first and Mary' McAllister second among the grade girls. HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA As nn org:nniv.ution we hope the high school Orcliestru is hero to to stay. During tho school your they lmve plnyoml on Illlllly occnvsions even though their program selections lun'-o not het-n at varied one. Nevis-rtlicless the expetience thc lll0IlllJOI'S gained by playing toegetlrer has ht-en invuluahlo. One thing has been very evident. and thnt is thc arlrseiice of -girl music-innts in the Ol'l'llt'Stl'll, with tho 'exception of the pianist. Besidvs the boys now at-tir-ely playing, there ure several more b02'lllIllllg' who will ha- of orcliesti':1 rulilhei' next your. This ll1l'2lllSIllillTl'll0l'0llllQ,'lll' be twenty or more boy inwsicinns hut no girl insicians. There is no doubt that the incinhers have enjoyed their experiom-e inl- nien-ely. and with the-in as at n-uclcns an larger and Letter trained organization can bo formed in-xt yt-nr. Page 28 g THE OKATO Departments MUSIC DEPARTMENT A Mt-ssner piano has been purchased from the Maigatter Music House by the Music rlepartiiiurllt. l'art of the money for it was paid with profits of the different operettas and social functions given by tlu- sz-hools of the city. The r-emaimller of the bill will be ipaid by the school lnoarlzl. The piano will be used for the lillHll'l'HtIl'l'l'll only. Much credit must be given to the lower lZl'l.l'Tlt'S, and to Miss Taft for their co.- opcration in this work. GRADE SCHOOL OPERETTA C'nderella, given by the grade schools of Oconto, was certainly a huge success. The fairies and elves were as dainty and fairy-like as any real onesg the Ladies were as charming as one could wish, and the Lords were as gallant and courtly as any gentleman who lived in the earlier days. The first scene took place' in Woodland, where the Fairy Queen and all the fairies and elves held a meetingg the Fairy Queen told of a poor kitchen maid who wanted to go to the Prince's Ball, which was to be given that night, but she had no pretty dress or any slippers to wear. So the Fairy Queen was going to make it possible for the imaid to go by giving her a beautiful yellow dress to match her hair, and by giving 'her a pair of golden slip- pers. The second scene was in the kitchen in Cin- derella's home, where' Cinderella was sitting by the fire, weeping, because she could not attend the Ball. Her two step-s sters entered and she helped them get ready, for they were going. When they finally left and she was again sitting alone, the Fairy Godmother appeared and changed Cinderella's ragged dress into a beautiful ye-llow one and gave her a pair of golden slippers. Then she sent Cin- derella to the Ball, with the command that she be home by twelve o'clock. The third scene was in the Ball Room at the Palace. The Lords and Ladies were all assembled, waiting for the Prince, when Cinderella stole in. When the Prince arrived, he saw Cinderella and immediately fell in love with her. They led the quadrille and as soon as the dance- ended, the clock struck twelve. Cinderella ran quickly from the room, the others following almost immediately, but all that they found was a golden slipper. The fourth scene took place in the parlor of Cinderella's home. The Prince was ushered in by Cinderella's stepmother. He carried a golden slip- per in his hand, and explained that he was trying to find the person to whom it belonged and fit. The stepmother immedfately called in her two daugh- ters, but after trying the slipper on both of them, it was found to be much too small. The Prince then requested to see the kitc'hen maid, so Cinder- ella was brought in. The slipper was tried on her and it fit to perfection. She produced its mate and the Prince knew he had found the girl whom he was to marry. So he took her away and they lived happily ever after. GLEE CLUB NOTES 'lille Girlls Gle-e Club has an enrollment of sixty members. This is 'an im-.reaseil number over other years. The girls started in with the right spirit and wer-r all willing and hepful. They made a llllillllllvl' of public tl'pDt'2ll'flI'll'l's. ..... . Tim- boys formwl an ortette and units-d with the givls in giving tile Uperetta, The Gypsy Rover. This was -a succes- and showed the progress made luy table clubs. A Girls' l'hoir was formed of twelve ineiulvcrs instead of thx' usual doulrle quartet. These girls have prolglressoll fllpiilly and also have appeared publicly szvaral timeis. The lllt'llllI0l'S of this are: lxiura Perry. Ulymcnc Par-isey, Agnes Mullen. Kath-'yn Harvey. Helcn .lare I'I'.ll'l't'j', Beulah Nichols. Shirley Nichols. Margarite Iieauxlin. Marcella Burkliardt, lone Kocfl. Alice R'2llllSflyv Abbie .lane Hall. SCIENCE IN OCONTO HIGH SCHOOL lWe speak of science and picture it as something daily activies are subject to in every detail of its l'a.Ws. Science is then a study of laws that iulfluiencc llli-il direct our every tlioulgaht and act. To introduce students into this study wc teach gl IlPI'll1 science. This simply means that the student's attei1tion,is directed to the commoul, every- -day things surrounding him. Thi-s creates a desire to know more and hence leads into tile study of fDlll'fif'fl tlllll lfielogy. It would be well it' we coulrl also add chrmistry. Biology calls attention to plant and animal life. 'Some time is also given to the study of the humazi body and the functions of its parts. Physics is more material in its application. lt d-rals with the mechanics of the material thimrs about us. In a general way the lalws of the following arlo ftudiedg motion, liquids, gases. lnacliinery. electri- city. sound, and lignlit. To this we ad-fl the latest and lll'VJP1 'l-l'Htll0 telephone. Enough intrest has been crratcd in this last subject so that about ten or tw-rlve radio sets have been built. Both science rooms of the On-onto High School h-.ive kbccn equipped in the last, two years with the most up-to-date tables and dcinoaistration desks. lt is doubtful if any other high school can be found with any better. Apparatus is being adlded yearly- an.l it its hopped that in -another year or two Oconto will also be ini the front line with enouagli apparatus for every istudcnt takinlg the work, to keep the in- terest allive throughout the whole year. This article cannot be closed without mention of the school radio set made by boys of the physics classes. The -aerial, has been so arranged that the set can be operated in both office and assemlbly.L We a-re confident that all students in our science claisses learn enough .of the fundamental laws- and principles so that with open minds they can con-tinuc their stud-y of science throughout life. Scienue serves its greatest purpose when it adds to the llvnily hap- piness and success of the individual. It is hoped that students of our High School will find their know- ledge of science a source of daily lnispina-tion. THE OKATO Page 29 845104155 1' . Have You a Line? STRAIGHT . .- ............... ? BEE ........ . .? VEIt'l'It'AL . . . . .? HOOK AND TIIUIILEY . . . .! SIDE ........ . . .? UHALK ......... . . ? HIGH XVATICR . . ? Il'SI'AL ..... . . . . . ? l'l,0'irII'lS .... TUIV ...... ? UOIINTY . . 'f IIREAIJ . . . . ? LIFE HRA.: ........... . . .? UITT ............... . . ? MR. 'l'HllMl'Sn0N'S ' YOUR .................... Early to hell' and early to rise. And your girl goes out with the otllim- Guys. Flare. Ilelleau-I've been tolnl I'm very pretty, I.. MRlIIrStlIl-QIHIIYI you take a joke? Keene-See Dan? Carlson-No, a coupe. Miss Ream-You can't Sleep '1 class. L. Murphy-I know it. I've heen tryiif' for the last half hour. Fhester S1-hwedlel'-Gee! I 'saw something funny today. Some one-'s wash was jumping around like crazy. l'. Noonan-Mayihe that wfas my athletic under- wear. Bill-What's the matter. llint? you don't look as well dressed as you need bo, h UillU'M'I'lHlt'S flllllly, theSe are the same clothes. Eva IW.-1 I'IIIi't'I'Illg doc-tor's offieei Hello. doctorg my name is Eva Wrobleskig can you help mp out? hoc.-l'm sorry, hut it's too l-ate to do anything now. V. Roddy -Don't you hate to have the, .wind lilow? QM. Williams-Oh. no. I'm not knock-kneed. .l. llarvey-Areu't life savers thrilling? A. Mullen- Yeh, they just take my breath away. 5 Mr. llavis--t'larence, how many rilhs have you? t'larince l'.-Gash, I dunno, I'm so tieklish 1 ean't count them. Mr. 'Plltnnpwson-Say Miss Shepherd didn't I see you taking a tramp through the woodis last Satur- dlay? Miss Shepherd-Why. the idea, that was-n't a tramp! Moss--tAs he stumbles over M-aloney's feetl- Why don't yuu put your feet wmhere t-hey belong? :Maloney-If I dlid you wouldn't be alhle to sit down for a week. The 'h School Orchefitra had just played the last liars of My Old Kentucky Home, when :some one noticed an old man weeping: huge weeps in the back of the room. Sympathetic Student- VVhy so said my .good man? Are -you -21 Kentuckian? Old 'Mau- No I'm a musician. It was the Geography class and Emmet wats at the map pointing out houndary lines at the teachers' directions- Mrs. K.- On the one hand you have the meat country of Russia and on the other hand what :Io we see? Warts! Exclaimed Emmet. looking isheepishly at his fhand. The shadows of night were falling fast. , The boys stemred on it and rusihed past, A crash! He died with-out a sound They opened up his head amd foundL-Excelsior!! Ba,.e H.-Wonder what that 'ruxnhligfr is in my stomach. It sounlds like it 4-var goin-g over cohble stones. Clarence B.- Maybe, its that truck you ate for dinner. Yeh! Aggie n 'ffel row in front of the movies the other night. Two half-sisters were trying to get in on a single ticket. 'I'here'is to be little change in men's pockets this year. Gosh, I wonder who loses: all the fault some people final? A split lip is not what it's ci-.zu-lien! up to llc. The reason why money talks is that there is a NV0llI'lll'S head on most coins. The disappointed lover is often happier than the 5II'tNllIl. It's hotter to be broke than never to have loved at all. Yep! Harold. a sock in the eye. is worth two on the feet. Page 30 THE OKATO MORE SMILES I'n1 ,being played for a sucker, said the vsu-uum 1-len nor. While waiting i11 the rail road station I noticed .Miss litkllll and Miss Aines who went up to the windwzw und said to the agent. Say. mister can you inforni me if tzhe four twvnty hus gone? '1'l11- four twenty tn11i11 left fifteen minutes algo. Annu wlrvn will the five ten he along? lt wouft ho in for an h-our yet. A20 t-wro any express trains -hefore then? Not amy. Any f1'oi.gl1t trains? UNO!! No trnins ut all? Nonv . Are you sure? Ut 1-oursv I ann. yelled tho 12ljIl'lll, as 1111 bit his initial s in tho lug of the junitor, or I XV0llllll1'lT have told you so. Alriyzl1t fi1'rtl'lld'l',' suid Miss llvillll as she slipped a ll'Elllll llll'0lIgll her uriu, l guess wo can 1-ross tho true-ks. in-uh! they llurivd tho station agent, il week ago. -Mr. :1vis44Spc-nking of color lbllll'illl094.ul -I know two fellows who wow ,ufflic-te'l i11 thut way. lt Sl'l'lll1ll to llll' quite ll 1-oiiicidvnvop two of l'lll'lll were hrotlivrs from tho sunu- f:1n1i1y. G. lh'u11t-HN' offs-I ,um-ifleiil up the street! .1. lil'llllX-'ixvilllll 1111111111-11e1l? tioorgv- A 1-ar run into :1 Hill'2lg4'. At tho l'ro1n llo-- Gov! Yfu look like ll 111illion. S114--f-Ul1Z Gm-o1'xZ:'! lbusinvss of giving l1is hand a tiny squeezej He-Yep! But I guess it's counterfeit. The class i11 Eiiglisht 11 was considering the Sentelim-Q'- Tl1ey hrought some lC0-CI'k'1lll1 to jllitlllillllil and me. Miss Ellllllllllllllg 'gi l.ll'llllll!ln, w.11u1t would you lmve? VValt1-r Kehl-More ice 4-remn. Shepherd-Why should me he used there? Miss lIlll0l f'2l!l anyone tell ine one important thing we huve nirw that we didn't IIIIVQ one -nluixdrvd years ago ': 0lll'. fsllltlll but egotistical fI'0Shlllllll, lll0' G. St.. Pvtor-I di.:ln't get the full swinfg of tl1:1t Miss Grzlzlskalup- Swing again. This noise must stop yvllcd Mr. I' I've been up he-rv for ten niinutes und I 1-a1n't nc-:ur niysvlf speak. fslllllll voice from rvnrj Fha-el' up! you lllll'I niiseing lllllCll. A fI'l'Slllll1lll who had been g:1zi11g: il fuffnmn t Il flvu tY'1:ougl1 tin- llllC'l'0F4'11lP llPfll'!'ll a lDl'0fllllll1il sigh on-I turning o Mr. Pfllffllltlfl said, Gosh! lllll'l S1-ioin-v XVUIlllt'lflll'f 'l'r:14'lu-1'--1Wl1at wood is pre-valvnt in your ron:- munity? Fl'l'Slllll2lll fl'Ulll lnu,-k- Quuck! Quuck. , E. H.- Mr, 'l'hon1pson, have any jokes llIlDPl'll0!l in your clz1ssrs? A Thompson--'My classes are ull jokes. A XVORD T0 THE WISE Try trtl get away with these as excuses: lin,-l roads lll'lWl'l'll Siuuiiiivo and Oconto? Oh. No, flll'l'l S l'HllCl'l'l'l' ull the way. llo11't try to ,pull th-v 'flnt tire. g::11:'g you m'un't ga-t uwuy with it. Ford 4-urs 'llllllvf get sue.. things as the int-:ish-s or flut tires. und you 'c4:1n.'t tell ,lll you llIltl a .hrrzik down bl'l'2llll4-l' you snoulml have trotted i11 tho rm- t of thi- wnyg und 1111111-111.l1l-1', you wervn't pick. lll'C1lllSt' you wi-ro i11 tho poolrooni ut ten o'clo4'k IIQDW. 1v1'ren'l y u? And you dinl11't stuy :home to work llI'l'llllSl' wi- know you'rv too durn lmlzy, und your grvut 2l'llI'lIllllHfl1l'l' didn't div tl1is time, bl'l Illl-40 tliero was ll hose- hall g::l1111- yesterday: by the way, who won? And you didn't have to go to Illarinetto with your in flllt'l' fu do sonic sliopping :lN'I'ill,1Fl' there urc- storos in Utfonio. null besides I sow you walking up tlpo truck toward Ponsaxukee with ll spear. So you sm- how it is i11 0. I-I. S. when you try to gc-t :ln t'Xl'll'alll0 pass fro111 Mr. l'f:1ff111an for livin! absent. fll0l'l s no uso- t1'yi11gg you skipped! You sure did! We-'ve got the A-vidvnco on you and you'll serve your time for your ovil doings! But-lc-t nw give you ll hint. Try thvso next time you'rv absent. und you'll get away with it sure ?. 1 1 llo 1 nt tho vor- 'Fell hiin that the trolley w'1x-- 1' k 1 , nuts of l'll'l1l1Il' Stn-V:-it. und li'I2l7Lt'-Illl Av-1-nuo. und tho cars wc-rv tit-d up fol' l1:1lf an hour. or that I .v hriwlgo on Su,n1'rior wus open for ten ininutes und you c-ouIdu't get pzist, Ur hotter yx-t. tvll 111111 you hid to rlunt rsktutovs. or that thi' vt 'l'2llllll'X' lllllhl, und you l . had to stay homo und bury it. But the be-st gnu and the host one til-:lt's sumo to work is this: toll l1i111 you went to a dance tho night lu-fore und that you had to take the morning off to 4-atcli up Oll slot-p. Aftvl'1Ml'. Pfllfflllllll is fc-d up ll those kinds of 1-xcl1sos.l1o'lI who like the fellow with both his logs out offq the YV0ll'li hc able to kick. BERNICE PORTERFIELD HONORED Bernice Porterfield, a graduate of the class of '22, has recently received high scholastic honors at Lawrence College, where she is a junior. She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic fraternity. She has also been chosen as a member of Mortar Board, another honorary sc- ciety. ' THE OIQATO Page 31 THE SENIORS' GENEROSITY One of the most severe shocks that the student body ever got was when Mr. Smith announced be- fore assembly the official notice that Oconto High Eviipld not put a foot ball team on the g-rldiron this a . The possibility of this happening again next year is reduced to a minimum by the Seniors pay- ing outl of their treasurv the sum of 8179.75 that was incurred by foot-ball teams of the past. Reporter-Enterprise ........................ 322.75 Aimory Rent .........A....,,..,..,..-,,-.. 61,00 Church House Rent ........................ 96.00 The Seniors in doing this are rendering one of the best services possible to the school. Probably some work of alt would be a means whereby the class would longer be remembered but as the class was desirous of living up to their motto Service they thought that an act of this kind would be of more service to the school at this time than any thing else. All classes, freshmen, sophomores, and juniors will get the benefft of this because it will allow the good old game of football to be played once again under the loyal blue and old gold banners. PROFITABLE YEAR FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION Since physical education was lntroaluceld into Oconto schools fur the first time this year. it has been interesting to note neactions regarding it. The sum-total of opinions 'has been strongtly for it. nl- way-1. Buys and girls feel that they lnxve had a most profitalhlc year guetting new niusel-es in-to play. learning new grunes. and lgettino' into a hetter spirit of fellowship. During the first and last of the school year. it Was W2l1'lll enough out-livie to have claw cs on the schorl grounds: otherwise f'..ey were held in the :yin a block from the school. In the out-ol'-doors, deep-lrieatliing and exercise made more re.'l-lwlooded pupils: in the gym. new apparatus got new muscles intf: condition and got old muscles into 'better con- nlitlon. 'l'here were few II'Ilgl'lllll'S all year. because at the moist only four or five people were slij.:'ltly lllll'l -amd many were benefited. I Physical education is on the ass-et side hy fl unanimous student vote! Community Community School Day proved to be the great- est success of the school year. Not only' was it the greatest success of this year, but for many years. Never before in the history of the Oconto Public Schools have they received the co-operation that was given on May lst. Approximately 2,000 people were present at the Armory. In the ast years, various means have been used to exhibit the work of the schools. Exhibits have been held in the individual buildings, and ac- tual class room teaching has been observed. There were ilisailvantaeros in lxoth systems-people having children in more than one building often found it ixmlpossible to see the work of all children. The ho ding of all exhibits at the Armory relieved this situation. Parents not only saw the work of one particular building, but of the accomplishments of the schools as a whole. The Armory was divided into booths-each booth displaying the work of a particular school. These booths were artistically decorated in the col- ors of the schools which the' represented. Test papers, essays, individual projects, and class proj- ects were displayeld. The work proved to be of the highest type and a credit to the' school system. The work of each grade or depalrtmcnt was judged and a prize was awarded to the hoy and To the girl Whose work received the highest merit. The piize-7 were generously donateal hy the husiness men of the City. Miss Eva Vansistene, a first grade critic of 1lwhk,osh Normal School. and Miss lqllpn lg, Mcllonald acted as jiidrzes. ' The following: program plrovezl of unusual inter- est to clvery one: Afternoon Program 1. Style Show hy Freslnnen Girls' tllrainatizedl. 2. lli-eh School Onchestra. Ji. Physical E'd1u-ation llemonstration. School Day Evening Program 1. l'lIk'sBa1ul. 22. Ili-'l'l2llllll'l.l0llS Sl. Physical Education Demontstration. 4. Eighth Grade Gilrls' Style Show. The Style Shows displayed the practical work that the Home Economics Ilefpartments are accom- plishing. 1 The workrof tihle Physical Etlncation I7l'lYNll'llllli'llf proved to bye of the very highest type. The student-s showed excellent traininler. and would do credit to a Physical Education Department. of much longer l'Slll'l7llSlllllt'lll'. The selections by the High School Urchcstlra, an-d hy the Elk's Band wlere very muclh enjoyed. The Lincoln School received' the Hlflflllil prize- lravinl: the highest percentae:e of parents an-l iruardians present. The percentage were as follows: Lincoln School .......... 5119? Washinyrton School ...... saw High School ....... ,, SWA l'eco1- School ...... ..... 5 572 Jefferson Scihool ........ slow An attractive bulletin was circulated in which a graphic design was m:1dc showing how Oconto spends its tax dollar. This ln-oueht out what per cent of a dollar is spent on thc schools. lt was the concensus of opinion that Community School Day was n marked success. The Type of woirk shown. and the interc-1 d'ispliaye.d lend weight to the aneument to make the affair an annual event. Prizes were as Follows: LINCOLN Kimlergarten istfliooks. class Qlnl-Box of Candy, L. Steinhlaus, Class Page'32 THE OKATO Community School Day First Grade E JEFFERSON lSt ISoyASm.nll l'llllil'. O. Hass, ii0l'!l0lI Fuse. 1 Kindergarten Ist Girl-Iloll, M4-lhn K'l'lllI. lst-Winton: Willium Kru-vgor Sefolld Grade 2nd--Snrxll l'Ir.lir. It Hass: i'l5li'l1l'l' Carlson Iv! Hoy-Wutx-I1, Allen VunAhle. Fifi! Grade Ist Gi.1l--ff'l'ablm-, Lillian I4Istres-n Ist Iloy-Books: Cla-s Third firadlm Ist Girl---Box of Vumly. III-lh-r Meat Market: I-t Hoy-ffFlushlig'ht, Byron LillllQ,fl'0Il flue V' Y Iwi Girl-Box of Fumly. .l. Kulmriw. Al1lll'it1'l Olson beoollll Grad? from-th Qirade Vt Boy-'IR-u S1-I and Rook. Hull, but mul glove: . . .- . 'lass Ist lioyff-lava-1'slr:n'p Penrll Motor R11-we I 1 P ,.. , . .I H ,, H Ist tlirl--Rollv'.' Slum-s, Smitlxnvimllw, Hu1'LlW:u'le Vo.. We l'nl'li x of hilfill ' wi lm Mary .hun Ford. Third flrade Fifth Grade ist lilii'--l 'i'.l'4llli5l'lli2 Ellgn-luv Phillips Ist lioy-Tooth Ii1'1ml1 N Pustv. Dr. B. A. Holyokszg Ist Gil-A KR-ilzir l'll1'St llllli l'9JlllY, 42110011 IiV'4i'llllI'- uni: 1'ilIl.IllI.l'il Baldwin 'Pvnnis Show, Geo. Sm-hwvdlvr, Harold Ii2I5'r0llft'lt lt ilill l'l k Bud ' C ' ' 1'7 IH'1'l' e I -s, tonwtan e harrison. lst Girl-- Choker Ill-udsg t'onstunc'o Garrison. Sixth Grade lst l',ov4Ii'.ms lmll Glovnvg H1llX 2lI'll fil2lllF9ll. ht Grrl- Anonymous. M, Ih'o.lkstom-1 Eliznlmetll Worth. lvl Boi'- lfli Girl --'l'oilt'I, Walter, I.. M. Young, Eunifc-e Strntz White Ivory illlllllll, White Ivory Bl'114h. Seventh Grade Nec-ktie, A. Xlllldlillliillll. Allen Ilrufz Eighth Grade lst lioyfPlaygrouml liullg Alll'2lll3llll Estroen Ist Uirlf -345 Sawing um-4-ount, UCollio National Iikmkq IA-lu 1.4-mbeke YVASHINGTUN Kindergarten lrvtfliook g Floss Lmlsliox of Dandy, M. K E. illilligillli Class fl lst ,. First Grade Ist Boy-Sm-ootm-1'g Iluvill lmlmkoshler I t I nl IJ ll o g .lvun Jarvis Secolld Grade Iioyfwutvll' Junior Rosenfeldt Ist Gill-2.2 lbs: Candy, A. S. Whef-Ierg Dollie Has-'4-nfelt. PECOR Kindergarten lst-Wagon: Geonge Burger 2nd-Doll, B1urry's Restallrulltg lst Helen Barry First Grade Ist Boy-Toy, Bruzeou k Son: Edward Roehne Girl-Urhildfs Rocker, M. M. MacQl1e'f'1 Co.: Luvilllo Adam Second Grade Ist Boy-Watehg 'William Topel lst Girl-Picture, Lee's Sftunlliog Evelyn Hull Third Grade let Boy-5 gal. lub. oil, Standard Oil Co.g Orvlin Woodworth ' lst Girl-Boy of Candy, Hein R19:IUHlllY'H.l1tQ Ida Mae Cain Fourth Grade lst Boy-Roller Skates, Schneider Hafrdwlare Co.g James Scanlan lst Girl-Parker Pen, S. W. Fordg Marie Topel Fourth Grade lloyglialll und hutg Frlmk Kent lst Gi'.l-Roller Skaxtesg f'h'u.r1otte Anlmziser Fifth Grade Hoy-'l'i'llllis Sllolrra, P. R. Keith: Miltoll Uoilllm Girl-Roller Skates: Huldu Johnson Sixth Grade Boy-l4oy's helt M. Goodinun: Toll Rom-Irwell Girl-iVhite Ivory Mirror, O. U. Wntterich: Algmos Itoso .. Seventh Grade Ist Boy-Nei-k.tie. Fuhry'S t'lothin.tI Store? Rnlllil Smikla ' Int Girl--Toilet Water. Iizlsxnxlitsst-11's G1'ov1'fl'y: Mudelyn Kerr I st 1 St 1 St lst lst Por-or Eighth Grade lst Boy-S15 Suvhm Ac-1-ount. Citim-n's Nutionul Hunk: Rulph 1i3.'llIllSH9ll Ist, Girl-Pont-ilg Ross' Auger Special Development lst Boy-2 Nec-ktii-S. 1'Ins.+on-Wlxitc-muh K Kuzrn- skig Marvin Williams ' lst Girl-Malteriul for dress. 1 puir shears. Dv- Cloux G.1'v':1Se Spot: Molly Geier. HIGH SCHOOL Physirs list Boyw-Loud Speaker, Maigaattier Music 00.3 Norman Tennisen lst Gil'l-flllflillg Clymene Parisvey Iron, Fulton Eelea-trio Fo.: Science lst Boy-Radio B Battery, T. V. Looneyg Rolhert and Neil Fulton. ' lst Girl--Box of Candy, Haye's Restaunnutg Esther Chase. ' Language Ben Gordon lst Boy-Base-ballg lst Girl-Silk Hosey Olga Moe Home Economics Grade Sewing let-Sport hat or collar lk cuff det, ery, :Mary Heroux 2nd-Assortment of toilet articles, Vanity Box: Mau-y 'MacAlliste-r Harris Millin- Q THE OKATO Page 33 Community School Day Grade Cooking llllll-llllllit' dress and tlimead to 0llllll'0lll'0I', Singer l'o.g lullfltlll Porterfiehl High Sehool Sewing-9th lst-l'll'eetirie flatiron and enrher, NVis. Puiblie Service: Alive Benson :Ind-Toilet water and face powder. S't'llllllllli llt'l'lSZ Cecilia Auger High S1-hool Cooking-10th lst-GirI's l'ou dnroy Jacket. G. 8: Martineau Fo.: Florence lining Z.lllll+l l0XVl'l'N. Sylvest.r'1 s: Marcella ClllQZsPli Manual Arts Grade Woodwork-7th Ist-ldverslmrp 1'eu4-il, C. Tisher .Ieweleirg VVm l!ra11dYe :2ndfFlnshlight. Corwin LeMay Grade Woodwork-8th lst-Watch. Edward Chosa 2nd-2 lflelipse eomb. ,pen K peneils, Hnnsen's In-ug Store, Joe livferett 9th Grade Woodwork lst-Knife, Hail Zinnnermall 2nd-Neektie. I'Il'llllIllll-2'S9ll'N. l'l.Llll Neubauer 10th Grade Woodwork lst-Knife. Ralbert Allen 2nd-lioy's sink hose. Blocks Clothing Store, Wal- ter Kehl 9th Grade Drawing lst-Knife. Henry Vullings 2nd4-Boy s neektie, A. S. 'lIhie1e. Paul Neulrauer 10th Grade Drawing 1st-Knife, Noel Keene 2nd-Hoy's hose. Jos. Jieha. Rolbert Allen Physical Education Girls lst-4 boxes monogramed stationery, Comstock K Co., Beulah Nichols 2nd-Silk. hose, Mrs. Cote, M. Beaudin Boys Ist-5 gals. motor oil. 'xvllil'll!llllS' Co.. John Hynes Zlnd'-Official Lraigue Basenball, Nlllllllllll Bostedt Biology lst Boy-Ball. Ervin Sellauer lst Girl-Statiionery, Abbie .lane Hall Mathematics AlgeL'ra- tFact0l'iIlgJ lst Boy-2 Neckties. Q'las-lon-Whiteomb dk Kuzen- wki. t'. Westervgaard ist Girl-l41ve1'sharp pencil, J. BV. liunkel, E. l nmx-llfe Geometry-tComputation problemsj lst Boy-League lhisrivall, L. Lehlay Ist Glirl-l-Zleetric Curling Iron, Kehl lflleetric Co.. Mau-ion Frease ' History Ist Boy-t'l1'ni1i, Allan Voy lst 1lirl-I-inndkerehief, Mrs. lfenguson, Ilazel Wittkopf Stenography lst Iioy-lflversliarp Pencil. .I. Heisimzer. S. Ilell- llliln lst H-irl-.lewel Box. llse Sc-hluenz English Themes lst Hoy-Flasliliglit, W. Damkoehler lsr Girl-lirownie gift box. A. Brunner. ll. Gordon Posters lst Boy-Necktie. B. N. 'Ward Eairl Gering Girl-Stationery, Josephine Amore English G-Special lst-Candy. L. P. Harlvey, Marie Wittkopf 2nd-Camly. H. Grandall. Grace Ford Social Problems lst boy-Bedroom slippers, Bond Clothing Store. John Kenney lst G+irl-Birthday Box. Lilly Nielsen Bookkeeping lst Boy-Eversharp Pencil. Rflllillld Blank lst Girl-1 pair silk hose. E. Millidge. Marion w Frease lst Rolie-Did you study last night? Tuffy--Yes, did-n't have much time though. Had to wind my wateh, flll my fountain pen, put a new blotter on my desk, find my lamp shade. hunt for mv book and borrow some lowe-leaf. By that time l had to write a letter. Silly-lf the principal doesn't take hack what he said to me. I'm .going to leave school. Sillier-Xvhy? lVhl1t did! he say? Silly-He told me to learve school. Mr. Davis-What is a vacuum? Q Edmund H.-Why-er I ean't .explain it, but I have it in my head. Henry George-I sing a little to kill time. Do-You picked your best .weapont Miss Klosterman-What is a polygon? D. Crooks-A dead parrot. Heard i-n English ll fShortest poem in captivity? Lice Adam Had 'em Phillip had a Thomas-eat. It warbled like Caruso: A neighbor swung a baseball bat. And now it doesn't do so. Bud-Were you at?rai-d when you father for money? Lee-No. I was ealm. and eolleeted. asked your Heard at Prom Wilbur-Do you like Kiplillta? Eva 0.-I dou't knowg I never learned to kinynz-. Page 34 THE OKATO COMPLIMENTS OF OF conio zify Wedzbaf ssaczkzizbn Dr. C. W. Stoelting Dr. E. A. Linger Dr. M. M. Hopkins Dr. C. E. Armstrong Dr. W. C. Watkins Dr. C. J. Ouellette THE OKATO Page 3 Compliments Qconto Company faery face .Fas a Jiar! So has every fortune.. Without the start there would be no race-and no fortune. If you ever expect to win those things that money can buy-a home for instance-you must make the start on a savings account.. The sooner you start the sooner you'll finish. Some of our best depositors started in a small way. Come in some day. cdzlzens Waizbnaf funk Largest Bank in Oconto County. HAIR BOBBING AND SHINGLING A SPECIALTY JOHN W. COTE MAIN STREET CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES STOP AT CALLIGAN'S Commencement Week for your Ice Cream and Cool Drinks. I can now take orders for a number of Ed. V. Price's SUITS at reduced prices. Also showing Broadcloth Shirts, 52.25 to 54.00. B. N. WARD Gent's Furnishings I PHOENIX HOSIERY in the new popular colors for men, women and chil- dren at S KEITH'S Page 36 THE OKATO COMPLIMEN TS OF THE . ?01fs'con.r1?2 yjubfzb Jerwbe Caorporaizbn GREATLY REDUCED PRICES ON READY MADE SUITS Guaranteed Suits made to order. Suits cleaned and pressed. J OS. J ICHA OCONTO, WIS. G-EO. SCHWEDLER -dealer in- HARNESS Men's and Boys' Shoes Gates' Tires and Tubes The Home of The Hoover Fulton Electric Company ELECTRIC APPLIANCES, WIRING AND CONTRACTING PHONE 86 907 MAIN ST. SAY IT WITH FLOWERS Flowers for the sweet girl graduate J.yZve.s'!er'.s' fforzkis Down Town Store Phone 339 Better Service THE OKATO Page 3 ARCADE BILLIARDS John Kaburis, Prop. SCHUMACHERS- BEST WISHES T0 THE for GRADUATES Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, U S. w. Form DRUG co. Gum, Candy, cigm-S, Meats and L cer'eS . PHONE 76 A and Cigarettes Billiards and Pool P l t k t CONGRATULATIONS eop es ea ar e to the 211 SUPERIOR AVENUE PHONE 195W SENIORS BEEF POT ROAST v OCONTO HARDWARE SOUP MEAT BEEF STEAK CHOP MEAT SUMMER SAUSAGE AT SPECIAL PRICES DfXNCING!! OCONTO, WIS. Thursday 8' Friday May 28th and 29th MUSIC BY IIENTUCKY ACES D I M E D A N C E S C. MCTAVISH, Manager. Roewe's Guernesy Dairy PHONE 264J Our Wagon Passes Your Door Page 38 THE OKATO Compliments l-lolt Hardwood Company GIFTS FOR THE GRADUATES AT RUNKEL'S l..ee's Studio -in- QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHS We Handle a Complete Line of Easel and Swing Back Frames Gift Pictures and Nlottoes Give us a Trial. Quality for Quality-we will not be undersold. M21 Tan I 000935015 SELZ is a short word, but it tells a long story-a story of long wear, long popularity of style, long satisfaction and of long remembering pleasure once you have bought a pair at the BIG SAVINGS-quality and style consider- ed-no matter what the price. f iw' K orBlack We picture you just one of hundreds of shapely SELZ models. We have the pair that will look good on you. Drop in and pick them out TODAY. Other Selz Models and Leathers Up to 58.50 ' J' .fabry .9 Zoifzes Imp Exclusive But Not Expensive Pure Bay Ice Herb Telford PHONE 404 TI-IE OKATO Page 39 Compliments lrving Brealcstone COMPLIMENTS TRUDEAU'S MEAT MARKET Pies Cakes Myown Cream Bread A. AUBRY 310 Center St. Buns Rolls The Care of Your Lawn PLENTY OF HELP NOW DURING VACATION TIME Lawn Mowers ...................... 37.50 and 59.00 Lawn Mowers Cball bearingl .... S10.00, S12.00, 313.00 Grass Catchers ffits any machinej ............ 31.15 Lawn Sprinkling Fountain ...................... 95c Lawn Hose ..................... llc and 14c per ft. Hose Nozzles ............ . ................ 70c Lawn Grass Seed .......................... 50c lb. Also complete stock of Trowels, etc., for those flower beds. Schneider Hardware Co. JUST PHONE 119 COMPLIMENTS to the GRADUATES G. E. BOND Tailor Wear-U-Well Shoes DeCLOUX'S GREASE SPOT Oldsmobile-Six Coach S1075 Page 40 THE OKATO YOU CAN DEPEND ON US FOR 0 usizbe Y CONGRATULATIONS -IN- to the QUALITY and PRICE GRADUATES plan fgnuxgl is behind every instrument we M. GOODMAN 0C0nt0 qyqffgr Oconto Falls YOUNG BROS. Congratulations l BARBER Bond Pickle Company SHOP Need another Bedroom? SHINGUNG A SPECIALITY FINISHING off the attic KNIIII Sh8eI1'OCk give JOHN VANGAAL you one at low cost. Sheetrock E HO is quickly erected, insulates BARB R S P El against heat and cold, is fire- SUPERIOR AVE A ':'5 proof and permanent. ' af You'11 find a Sheetrock lining , I ' - 0-0, for your furnace room and , I I-----NM garage a profitable investment, IT PAYS T0 BUY FOR REX' U. S. Pat. OH. SHEETROCK from 5 THE Fireproof WALLBOARD X Call on us for complele information abou! Shcctrock Urquhart Coal Co. WM. VANGAAL Cash and Carry G-rocery i Return 310.00 in cash re ceipts and get 25c. THE OKATO Page 41 E ERYTHI G FOR ME A. T. MARTINEAU Always First Mth The Newest CONGRATULATIONS to the SENIORS O. C. WATTERICH Jeweler OCON TO, WIS rineess and Gem Theatres OCONTO, WIS. THE HOME OF BETTER PICTURES Coming Attractions for a Month: May 28th-29th, Booth Tarkington's TURMOIL May 30th, Johnny Hines in THE EARLY BIRD May 31, Richard Dix in MAN MUST LIVE June lst-2nd-3rd, House Peters in THE TORNADO June 5th-6th, Mrs. Wallaate Reid in BROKEN LAWS June 7th-8th, Betty Compson in THE FEMALE June 9th-10th, George O'Brian in THE MAN WHO CAME BACK June llth-12th, Baby Peggy in THE FAMILY SECRET June 13, Richard Talmadge in JIMMIE'S MILLIONS June 14, Bebe Daniels in DANGEROUS MONEY June 15th, 16th, 17th, Betty Bronson in PETER PAN June 18th-19th, Jack Holt in WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND June 20th, Joe Butterworth in GOOD BAD BOY June 21st, Agnes Ayres in A STORY WITHOUT A NAME June 22nd, 23rd, 24th, Marion Davies and Harrison Ford in ZANDER THE GREAT June 25th-26th, Glenn Hunter in MERTON OF THE MOVIES June 27th, Fred Thompson in THAT DEVIL IMEMADO MERLINE'S GROCERY TOMATO PLANTS NOW READY PHONE 146 EASTMAN KODAKS Moore's Fountain Pens SEE THEM AT Brunner's Drug Store L. L. STEINHAUSE Good Things to Eat We Deliver PHONE 68 Page 42 THE oKATo we Conyraiulaie- Miss Bernice Porterfield, for reflecting credit upon her Oconto training by winning the high honor of election to Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic fraternity, at Lawrence College. Oconto boys and girls make good. This bank is proud of them allg is eager, too, to help them handle their finances as successfully as they do their studies. We suggest that a Savings Account is the surest and swiftest road to Success, and invite their accounts. 000I2f0 aizbnal .Zuni OCONTO, WIS. The Oldest Bank in Oconto County. lt's a Credit TO ANY COMMUNITY TO HAVE GOOD SCHOOLS, GOOD STUDENTS, GOOD BUSINESS. 9 THATS We're Proud CDF OCONTO ,223 Goodrich Kr Martineau Co. DEPARTMENT STORE THE OKATO Page 43 BOYS OUTGROW OUR SUITS T0 THE SENl0RSi BEFORE THEY CAN WEAR 'EM OUT! HEARTIEST That proves their Quality! THE FERGUSON CONGRATULATIONS! The Style wears as long as the GIFT SHOP garment., i May you, find happiness Clothes for boys from cradle to For Exclusive Giftware in your work, and prosper- fonege age' , ity ln its accomplishment. And for than dads American Express Building HANS-EN'S DRUG STORE and big brothers! THE SERVICE CLOTHING HOUSE ew Csequgvmeni We have recently installed a refrigerator cabi- net aind can furnish you with most any flavored ice cream you may wish for. dear! .Qarry 306 BRAZEAU AVE. Patronize Okato Advertisers fonyralulaizbns from Me Oconto County Reporter Obs .fouse of .good .93r01ilZny 3, 44 1HE OI no Q 1- ,T 4 N 6G 4 Ma1TfSLB3E25'?V13?198i3BanY Milwaukee , Wisconsin , ' Q 1 if-,E-If- .:w:'m 3.4 K '-1 :W .- .i',.5-5fQ,J:,'--5:L---U-3.' 54314 1, -L:-ul, G .:'113'Y5 fw'-j:.1,:414: qQ,1 'ij-,,'.5gg,!'ff:q5,j5'.1fxgg5-,grgyig-,tgp 3-gs? 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