Palmer High School - Terror Trail Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO)
- Class of 1922
Page 1 of 168
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1922 volume:
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q fr fl If if ,kv r J V, f , 1 ,Lf sl K 1 f '77 Hi 'A-Lf fix' ' Qffl., if , 7 ' Dau? n X ,fm , g 1 1, Lf.4,', fl 1 41' EEEEEEEEEE E E 5 E 5 5 5 E 5 5 E 5 5 E 5 E EE M E 55 5 5 E 5 E 55 E E 35 5 E EEEEEEEEEE 5 EE l . E t E E E 55 EBUIIZHYIUII 5 EE To MR WILLIAM STEELE, ackiiowledjiiig his ehthus1 t EE 55 support of all the worth-while activities of the school EE EE his kindly help, and earnest eo-operation, 5 EE of theCUassofI922,dmHcaw EE QE this, Om' Book EE EEEEEEEE E E E E HE BE EE E E E BE EE EE 55 55 EE 5-T4 E1 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EEEEEEEE 5552555355555 EE EE EE EE 5 EE EE EE EE EE EE BE EE' 'E EE EE EE EE EE BE BE EE EE EE EE EE E EE EE EE E 5E1'5E'15E?-TJEEEEEEEEEL-I-'i HE l EE FOREWORD SESS ll li I l it BE H-15555555355 EE EE EE HE EE 55 EE EE 55 521 HE 55 5 EE: li-'E Shi EE Em EE EE EE HE EE Ei E 5? I5 EE EE Hi 'SE EE 555555555553 Q AM.the spirit of the Colorado springs nigh School. E EE It is my taslfr and glory to make citizens of a QE QE constantly fairer and loveher city and of a grow- E EE 6 ing Republic of the Spirit of Man. Those whom 55 I have possessed belong to me alwaysg they know the drudgery of slow discipline, the rack and strain of 5 EE difficult choices, the loneliness of far quests for the Holy EE Grail. For my schooling extends far beyond the four g QE years within academic wallsg my children lie on French QE 5 bame-acids with their Stan, smiling faces turned upward EE E to the starlight, or strive with unselfish, tireless hands to QE guide the stumbling feet of little ones. I have been mis- QE .EE taken by those who should have known meg I have been EE cheapened when I should have been ennobledg even now HE I feel stirring within me the seeds of a finer nature and of QE gg a grander future, but were I mortal, and to die, men 5 could say, Here lies the Spirit of the High School, which gi spent itself to increase intelligence, brotherhood, and love EE in the earth. EE rsss - EE EE I SH iiii I SZS it Hill I BE Ell PLEASE admit to every loyal Terror heart and home this 1922 EE edition of the LEVER ANNUAL-fthis picture-storied record of our QE E fun and frolic, our hopes and happiness, our ambitions and achieve- EE QE ments. -R. EE 1 Q R. M. GRINDLE Principal of Lincoln Annex F. H. BAIR Superintendent of City Schools W. S. RUE Primtipzzl of High Schnol L. D. VOTA VV Dl.f6ff0V iff lixtra Currifulur .-'lftivities 6 Editor-ill-Cliief .... --lssistaizt Editor. . . .Alssistant Editor. . . Business Jfanoger. . Literary Editor ..... Orgarzizotions Editor. . Alurnizi Editor ..,. . .-lthletic Editor. . . Foozdty Editor. , . .Irt Editor ...... . Snapshot Editor. . . ,llirror Editor. . . . Mirror Editor. . . . Foature Editor ...., .Al dvertising Jlanagor Annual Lever Staff If . . . .EDWIN NORTON . . .ELOISE VAN DIEST . . ,HAROLD WINTER . . . .ROBERT DZEVVMAN UNIARGARET OSBORNE .........RUBY WILT . . .CHRISTINA CRANE . .,.... ALBERT BROWN .lssistant .-lztiertivirzg Manager. . . ....... . . . KATHERYNE GWILLYM . . . . . .HELEN SEWELL . , , .WILLIAM DENNIS . . . .PEARL SHOOK . . . . .LOUISE DANKS . .NIIRIAM MIALSBURY . .LAWRENCE LEHMAN .KENNETH DAVIDSON it 5: :C Cover by DOROTHY WILLIAMSON X K K FACULTY SUPERVISORS L. D. VOTAW W. H. STEELE L. M. HUNT MISS PANSY DAWES MISS PARSONS 7 FAC ULTY PRINCIPAL: PRINCIPAL OF LINCOLN SCHOOL: WILLIAM S. ROE ROSS M. GRINDLE The Master of Our Innfl New Waggins of Old Tales. Other Members Of the Family. ENGLISH lj CECIL H. GRAVES . BELLE TURNBULL Bell in the Fog. NANCY JITDEN Sweet Clover. LULU B. SIVIITH Fated to be Free. LILLIAN BATEMAN Virgin in Judgment. EDNA M. LEE Good Woman. LEONE MILLS Daughter of Today. HARMONY VVOODVVORTH The Veiled Lady. MARJORIE DEARING, W A Pair of Blue E3'es.'lEXAb,,gXb,Q,,SfJ-lvA,uJI, DOROTHY GILFILLAN Agatha's Aunt. HARRIET JORDAN Harriet and the Piper. I RUBY M. PATTERSON The Palmistf' WINONA NORTON Joy in the Morning. RUTH SHELLEDY I Dropped from the Clouds. MATHEMATICS MABEL BATEMAN Dere Mable. I RUTH BATEMAN The Feminine Slant. W. R. BALLINGER The Bondage of Ballinger? M. F. MAXWELL Happily Married. MARY C. STRACHAN 1 'Mary Minds Her Business. Q 9 . 44 tx If If If u Nobody's Man. ELIZABETH JOHNSTON Bachelor Betty. EMMA GRANT Emmy Lon. MADELINE STRANG But Yet a Woman? HISTORY LILLIAN JOHNSON Lilly of the Valleyu EDITH HALL Cricket on the Hearth. ROBERT POER The Tang of Life. I-I. C. REHINI All for the Love of a Lady. ERNESTINE PARSONS The Dwelling Place of Light. BYRON J. READ Back Home. L. M. HUNT Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come. MODERN LANGUAGES ELLA TAYLOR Aloodsf' EMMA B. GRANT Honor of the Name. FRED E. HARVEY lllan of Clay. FLORENCE BARTLETT Spanish Gold. ,.,.u kgggt -I I , , . ., EDNA DESSAINT Her Tongue. EDNA JACQUES Colonel Jacques. DAGMAR HOLM To Love and to Cherish. SCIENCE MARY AVERY Oueen of Hearts. EDWARD HEDBLOM Good Natured Alan. J. S. LEE '1Lord Jim. LJ , . r WILLET R. WILLIS i and the Word. W. H. STEELE True as Steel. DANIEL SHUTTS Calling of Dan .Mathews. H. E. PECKHAIVI Dr. Breen's Practicef' ART PANSY DAWES Lady of the Decoration. C OMM E RCIAL ALMA LARSON The Song of the Lark. CARRIE B. SPROUL Angel of Forgiveness. LUCILE PRATT The Kentucky Cardinal. PEARL V. TURNER Pearl Jflaidf' DOMESTIC SCIENCE ANNA MEIER Cabbages and Kings. JENNIE THARP It is Never Too Late to Blend. LENA M. BROOKER Won't You W'alk Into My Kitchen? MANUAL TRAINING LEON FOWLER That Printer of Udellsf' -I E. H. HALE In the 'Tire of the Forgef' 1 T. J. CLARY 44 You Newer Know Your Luck. JOSEPH ALBRECHT The Wood Carver of Olympus. F. N. LANGRIDGE Cheerful on Request. ALBERT MCKENZIE Big Little Person. n 44 MUSIC . FRED FINK The Music Master. CLARA B. HOFFMIRE The Prima Donna. sf II PHYSICAL TRAINING KLARA R. T. JENNINGS The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. -iT1T.l. REGISTRAR: MARGARET M. RUSSELL The Woman Who Toils. SECRETARY: MILDRED DENTON Bearers of the Burdenf, ASSISTANT SECRETARIES: RUTH K. VERMILLION His Qjicial Fiancee. MARY JANE ROUSE Cinderella Jane. . EXTRA CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES: L. D. VOTAW The Man Who Understood Women. LIBRARIAN: VANITA TROVINGER The Haunted Bookshop. ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN: EUNICE PHELPS Left in Charge. COACH: DAN KLINE 'Rules of the Game. CAFETERIA MANAGER: LAURA TARR Trail to the Hearts of Men. MATRON: LIZZIE C. DAVIS Mother Machreef' 10 Y ici f ww I E A' F ' Q 2 Y !,f' . Q' HY WH i 5 ,9 ii nl .gi WX ' VA ' um , 'Wf Xwx r M i ,P f qi N . X H, f ca 'f'f' xx. 'L Y, X '.' A 0 O 4 W' ' I 112, ,jx X A fn M . . iw 4ii ,-Q S A nmmmnm I 3 iff -, V.',,4 HJWFWJ ,ff ffl fl fr,,x z jaw fgyrfpiofigj i is ,i5 1 4-ff Q32 ,.,,- A f rr, 5:13 Iii.. :xr 2- fl Y ' ' j,,-Y f -NV' f ' A , 251 Class Prophecy TIME: June 9, 1942. PLACE: Small Village in the Ozarks. CHARACTERS: lvwlan Johnson Seekin refu e from crowds and cares. lDan Warner g g One lovely day in early June Vivian johnson was strolling through a pasture near town, and warding off the sun's rays by a brilliant scarlet parasol. This was a bit irritable to an amicable looking bovine creature who was sudden- ly possessed with a desire to investigate the thing. Vivian, comfortable and contented looking, uttered a shriek and fled for the fence, the animal after her. A man of quiet dignity upon a like stroll rushed to her rescue. A few minutes later the two were safely over the fence and were recovering their breath and dignity under a giant tree. Why-why-Dan Warner, how'd you get here? gasped out the ruffled spinster. Astonishing, but true, the knight to the rescue was Daniel Warner. Commonplace greetings were exchanged and then: Dan Warner: We graduated from High School twenty years ago today. Seems funny, ever hear from any of the others? Laurine Allen is my secretary: we have headquarters in Boston. You see, I'm president of the National Coast to Coast Railway. Margaret Knowles, my wife, has been the one who helped me to success. What do you do?,' Vivian johnson: L'I'm just Clare Thomas' private secretary. He lives in Buenos Aires because of his large interests in South America. Gladys Humm his wife, is a society leader there. Saw Charles Topping, Charles Chaplin II, down there recently. He plays in person and surely scored a hit. Told me that Noel Jamison and Ruth Goff are married, Noel is an Idaho doctor. Robert Newman and wife Harriet Brady with his secretary, Miriam Malsbury, were in the city for a brief visit. Bob is a New York broker. Dan Warner: Had a letter from William Poley, who is in the hardware business at Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Nora Cordingly is his stenographer. Lola Mae Gossard and Helen Steuert are secretaries for Robert Spurgeon who is the United States Ambassador to England. Ruth Atnip, his wife, is a favorite in London society. Marjorie Harrison and Elizabeth Mortimer are traveling around the world with their husbands, Charles Hopkins and Clifford Fritchle, who are doctors in Detroit. Did you get to hear Margaret Osborne when she was in New York? Vivian johnson: Yes, she is truly a marvelous pianist and people surely realize it. Then there's Robert Ormes, the greatest novelist, who sometimes writes under the pen name of Humpty-Dumpty, and Edwin McCaughey, the renowned physicist who is aiding the world wonderfully by his scientific dis- coveries. Ruth Vermillion is President of Bryn Mawr. George Shivers was a Richmond doctor, now he is a United States Senator from Virginia. Dan Warner: Yes, and Genevieve Huber is a great emotional actress who plays only to Paris, New York and London audiences, Frank Strachan is ranked as an equal to Walter Hampden in his portrayals of Shakespeare. I daresay you have seen Burdine Ecke and Malcolm Putty on the screen very often. Their pictures are always favorites, and contain no slapstick action either. Vivian Broadbent lives happily with Albert Brown on a Colorado ranch. Oh! I saw in the London Times last week that Arthur Weiss was accomplishing wonderful work among the cannibal tribes of the South Seas whom he has undertaken to reform. 12 Vivian johnson: Really-Aand Asher Wallace is a Kansas minister while Harold Trump is pastor of the biggest church in Miami, Florida. Glen Hamerick owns a large hotel there and an annual visitor is Lois Tubbs who broke the world's record in long distance swimming there a few years ago. Her home is in Alaska where she teaches, she told that Frank Onufrock ran a matrimonial bureau there, and that Mildred johnson is a beauty specialist in Juneau and her regular customers are also Frank's. Harold White, one of the beauty buyers, is prospecting for platinum, recently found there. Lida Kwist also lives in Buenos Aires, she teaches English in one of the high schools. Dan 'Warnerz Several of the '22ers are teaching in C. S. H. S. Hazel Guley supervises the Lever class, Corrine Baum and Eva Clark teach French, Mildred Burt, Isadore Blacklock and Dorothy Tompkins have chemistry to explain, Clifton Lipscomb teaches algebra, Ethel McKerral and Wilma Risher, domestic science, Luella Kier and Olive Bullard, English, and Lucille Jones, Spanish. Edwin Norton has become an expert demonstrator in physics, and performs experiments for the classes. Ruby Wilt and John Holland, who are married, teach in Cleveland's largest high school, Lillian Evers and Katherine Gwillim are gymnastic teachers at the same school. Vivian johnson: 'fLouise Cody is in Rio de Janeiro teaching, and Bea- trice Ziegler and Verda McCleary are there as Y. W. C. A. workers. Helen Sewell designs clothes for a Fifth Avenue establishment. The last radio controlled ship launched was named Madame Marian after Marian Land, wife of vice-president Lees Armit. Dan Warner: When I came through New York I saw Clothilda Mraz, Freda Rawley, Alida Wigton, and Louise Sellergren among the Ringlet Beauties, the main attraction of Ziegfeld Follies. Was also in Lowell Clark's studio. He married Louise Danks. They had some '22 artist grads in for tea-Edith Mehring, Bill Dennis-the McManus of today, and wife Melva Shady, all of New York City. Met Clark Sunderlin at the Grand Central-just came from India, where he manufactures automobiles, to consult with the eminent scientist Arthur Sharp who has condensed the wireless telephone to a watch form. These are rare and still a wonder. He is now working on a second, but secret device about which much speculation has ensued. In Chicago I called at the Wilfred Hollingsworths, she was Anna Hen- dricks, he is the pickle king, having outclassed Heinz in the number of varieties. Robert Range, who married Eva Stout, lives next door, and owns the Range drug stores common throughout Illinois. In his employ are Peggy Coray, Enid Galley, Earl Goodrow and Lawrence Hupp. James Vaughn is editor of the Peoples Home journal, he and his wife, Mildred Sanson, go abroad every year. Lawrence Lehman is his valet, and since Blanche Mathis, his wife, is her maid, they also enjoy the trips, Vivian johnson: f'Russell Kemp has become famous thru putting a marvelous hair restorer on the market which has achieved the promised re- sults. It is rather rare to see a baldheaded man on the street. Margaret Peterson and Edith Murphy are doing settlement work in Chicago. Beulah Harless conducts a vanity shop on Michigan Ave. I left Colorado Springs a year after I graduated, I wonder if the town has changed much since we left? Dan Warner: 'fYou know I stayed in Colorado Springs for ten years before I came east and was acquainted with a lot of my old classmates in business. Edwin Auld and Clyde Bassett were reporters at the Evening Telegraph. Erna Bernhardt, Esther Bish and Ruth Bosley were working at the Broadmoor Hotel, Ulysses Andrews and Russell Patterson were janitors at the First National Bank, Mary Patterson left for the coast to play for the 13 Women's tennis championship. Harold Winters owned a Photo Shop and was married to Margaret Poley. Eugene Broyles was making good in the adver- tising business. He was engaged to Mary Rouse. I suppose you have met a lot of our old classmates in vour travels abroad. Vivian Johnson: l'Yes, while I was on the boat coming from Buenos Aires I met Robert Beck who had been over to South America with his wife, Mary Schafer, preaching for the salvation army. Edwin Daily was captain of our ship. His wife, Maude Broyles, was in New York at the time. He told me that Mary Fraser and Audrey Edwards were working in Buenos Aires some- where. I heard Walter Peyser's famous orchestra at the New York Metro- politan Opera House. I noticed that Helen Killeen was being advertised in a moving picture show. Alice Shay and Juanita Smith passed me on the street without even recognizing me. I was in a hurry or I would have stopped them. Have you ever met any old classmates on your visits to the coast? Dan Warner: Why yes, you remember Jack Milliken, he and Robert Sheff own a large men's clothing store in Los Angeles. Gertrude Brewington, Reynold Bernhardt, and Charles Brice are all doing novice work in Hollywood. Kenneth Davidson is in the slapstick comedies with Ogden Loub. Kenneth is married to Pearl Shook. I had a letter from Carlton Wheeler and he said that Wrenn Whitlow and Leo Windolph had enlisted in the army. Isabelle Postleth- waite and Alice Cole have a school for the welfare of young girls in Los Angeles. Alice is married to james Lester. Jeanette Heckman and Katherine Sutton left for the Hawaiian Islands to teach the natives cultured dancing. It seems as if I meet an old classmate every time I take a trip. Vivian johnson: Yes, I do too, you know Harold Vorhies married Florence Bower about four years ago. Earle Gardner and Edward Hagus had charge of the lions in Ringling Bros. circus. I was at a Bazaar in Buenos Aires and whom should I meet but Helen Henderson and her husband, Charles Hathaway. Did you hear about Carl Sturdevant? He made a million dollars in oil and finally won the hand of Carolyn McDaniel. Lois Schrimph and Harriet Scott are with the Mack Sennett bathing girls, I guess Harriet Scott will be an old maid. Leslie Spingler was engaged to her but ran off and married Gladys Theobald. Phyllis Tarr is teaching cooking at Canon City high school. Dan I read of your Hue speech on institutions which you gave in Pueblo and thought it was wonderful. Dan Warner: 'lThank you. Say, by the way when I was in Pueblo, I visited the asylum for the insane. Roger Walton was a warden there. Helen Wallace and Eleanor Walker had charge of a French Cafe. While I was in Pueblo I went to see our school play Centennial in football. Ralph Thomas was referee, I spoke to him after the game was over and the Terrors had won. Pauline West and Teresa Wemyss are selling books for some company in the east. Cozine Strang has invented a wireless set for his Airdale. You l-:new Reava Winchester and Helen Wasserstrom? Well they are both married and have their homes almost paid for. Oh, by the way! Hazel Theobald and Mary Wilkens went abroad to study music in Italy. Winifred Thomson and Alice Reinking are two of Colorado Springs' society leaders. A year later in a Transcontinental aeroplane. Vivian johnson: Dan, Dan, here you are againg we surely do meet in unexpected places. Isn't this a wonderful aeroplane-and it's operated by radio. It's marvelous of George Dunning to have invented such a thing. He owns a big plant, where he manufactures these planes, in Washington. William Nassour is his head mechanic, and Maurice Mosely and Otha Strain are two of his pilots. Oh, by the way, George uses nothing but Gardner hammers in 14 his plant. Wray Gardner hurt a corn once by dropping a hammer head on it and so he invented an inseparable head and handle. Dan Warner: Olive Monck and Joyce Metz have a little restaurant at the plant station, and Harold Newsome runs a filling station across the street. Who do you suppose is athletic coach in C. S. H. S.? Durwood Gilmore-and in his spare moments he teaches fancy dancing at the Broadmoor. He is called the most graceful man in the West. Vivian johnson: That makes me remember that Bessie Livingston is athletic director in a girls' school in Florida, Nora Lisenby is mayor of Kissimee, Florida, and jane Love and Mary Bixler are on the City Council. The governor of Colorado is Eloise Van Diestg her husband, Ross Keyte is lieutenant-governor. They own the silk mills there also. Carlita Wetherell is in a Siamese Temple and is called the goddess of the crocodiles. The Prince of Afganistan, Warren Wells, and the King of Siam, Truman St. Clair are both suitors for her hand! but she can't decide which one is her favorite. Edith Perkins who married David Edstrom makes the most delicious frozen candies. They live in Good- land, Kansas, and David takes these sweets out on a route to sell them. Fred Acuff is called Babe Ruth II: he is a popular hero among the fair sex. Dan Warner: 'fAlfred Doleck and wife, Viola Essman have an elephant farm in Africa, they ship the animals to different circuses. Lucille Brundage gives vocal lessons in Fountain and has Daisy Clow and Florence Griffith as pupils. Curtis Engle is a mail carrier on Cascade Avenue in the Springs. Royal Olmstead married Ruth Larkin, and they went to China where they are in the insurance business. Lois Hanna has written a textbook on American Citizenship which is used in C. S. H. S. Virgil johnson was the publisher. Vivian johnson: Clency Hymas is I. D. Rockefeller, Jrls. chauffeur and has a case with one of his maids, Helen McBurney. Ruth Greenberg married a French Count and lives in an old feudal castle in France. William Perry, a famous baritone sings for the Mercer Record Company which has for its president, Naomi Mercer. Dan Warner: Hattie Lester discovered oil on a small farm she owned in Texas and now lives a life of leisure in New Orleans. Louise Long has joined a troup of comedians which tours thruout the United States. In a little town in Nebraska she met Glen Louderback, the village aristocrat and owner of most of the land in the vicinity. Marjorie Kratz and Gladys Daugh- erty run a rooming house in New York for the lonesome young men from the country. Vivian johnson: Well, Beatrice Prior devotes her fortune made by winning prizes in athletic contests to the creation of girls recreation camps. Marion Weaver hasn't grown up yet. He is still playing on the stage in Philadelphia as Percival Archibald. Who do you suppose the leader of the expedition that climbed Mt. Everest was? Harold Voreheesf' just then the motor of the aeroplane started and the voices of our two characters gradually died out with the ever increasing noise which it made. 15 Class Poem CLASS OF 1922 We the class of twenty-two, Now bid you sad adieug The class thatls been surpassed by none, The class that's proven true. Dear school, through these four years We've gone- With hopes to graduate! For Senior goals we've struggled on, To learn Lifels lesson great. We've taken pride, our school, in you, We've worked to lead the rest, We've tried our uttermost to do, What we believed was best. And now We part, dear school of ours, To go our many ways, With memories of sweetest hourse Which graced our high school days. Although We go to different climes In other land or sphere, We'l1 all remember school day times, The days of joy and cheer. The friends vveive made While there each day, Though numbered by the score, Will in our minds as treasures stay4 Although we meet no more. But e'er we go let's give a toaste To all who are to come, May they be qualiiied to boast Oi a class like twenty-two. just one more word as we pass by, And go upon life's way, May God look down on C. S. Highe And bless her every day. RUTH ATNIP MALCOLM PUTTY History of the Senior Class SCENE:-Room 311 Colorado Springs High School. TIME:-June 7, 2022, A. D. Teacher: CFacing a room full of shiny-faced, exuberant Freshmenl f'Can any one tell me what day this is? QWild waving of hands.j 'tWell, Mary? Mary: Today is the one hundredth anniversary of the graduation of the class of 1922, and tonight there is to be a big celebration in the auditorium in honor of the finest class that ever left the Colorado Springs High School. Teacher: Correct, John, will you tell the history of this unusual class in its Freshman year? john: The Class of '22 entered the high school, four hundred strong, in the fall of 1918. From the very start they were famous for their originality, pep, and enthusiasm, and were immediately recognized as the leaders of the school. The class party, proved to be the greatest success of the school year. Oh yes, and the class was one hundred per cent. behind all athletics. Susie: Pleath teacher, but they were thmart in their thtudies too. Teacher: Yes, indeed they were. But to go on to the Sophomore year. What can you tell of that Annie? ' Annie: 'lUnder the leadership of Wren Whitlow, they rose to still greater things. This year another party was held which even surpassed the one of the year before, much to the disgust of the upper classmen. Of course, they were always interested in the welfare of the school, and did all in their power to support its worthwhile activities. Teacher: Yes, well, Susie? Susie: Yeth, and they got all Ais bethidesf' Teacher: What can you tell of the third year, Tom? Tom: 'tThe third year was very important. Ross Keyte was president, and made a mighty good one. The junior farce, Nothing But the Truth, was the best play ever given in the High School. Then the class scrap was held, and it certainly was a bloody one. The ability of the junior barbers was not realized until after the iight. While in the contest held in Monument Valley Park there was no hope for the Seniors. Teacher: Yes, and--- Susie: CExcitedly, half to herself.D They thure were thmartf' Teacher: Will you tell us, Dorothy, of the senior year, or the crowning year of their history? Dorothy: CBeaming.j 'AThe Seniors took part in all the activities of the school, and it was a leading part. The class scrap ended in the only possible way-fa complete victory for '22, and the juniors, for lack of hair, did not oon forget what happened. A party was held in the second semester, and was ry clever and a great success. The Pikerls Day was a surprise to the ugtr C ass? men, and the members of the Senior class had a jolly time. Instead electing' officers to take care of meetings, a Senior council was selected, with la elk from the doors of the Colorado Springs High School forever: 'X X V Susie: Yeth, and they got diplomaths likewithef' -' 'X 'L U Thomas, president. On the eighth of june the most promising class pg? A i ii x 1 ill 1 X N 1 1 1 MARGARET OsBoRNE FRANK STQRACI-IA-, , 'l:,,x N, 'All W 1. it x . N i . W x x, AX X X The Will of the Class of l922 It was a dark, dreary, dismal night, and the lights in C. S. H. S. were burning low. White robed figures were gliding back and forth' through the halls and in one corner was huddled a group of weeping people. If one had looked closer they might have recognized that dear old patient group, the faculty, with tears in their eyes, knowing that soon the Fates would sever the thread which would send the soul of the class of '22 to a better and nobler life. Sirens shrieked and bells clanged as the weather-worn and storm-beaten clock in the pigeon-haunted tower began to strike the doleful hour of '23, The muffled sobs from the dim corner grew more impressive as the door of the chapel softly opened and a tall, weary appearing man, who proved to be the venerable William S. Roe, beckoned with a come friendsn to the faithful group, waiting in the corner. He seemed not to recognize 1923, gazing with a covetous gleam in his eyes, 1924, looking absently into space and 1925, drawing back horrified and awe-stricken, half hidden in the darkened recesses of the dismal hall. The faculty filed noiselessly into the dimly lighted room and were overcome with grief when they saw the shrouded form of the noble and greatly beloved '22. Solemnly the venerable lawyer Roe drew forth a script, which proved to be the final will and testament of that renowned sage, and slowly and in mournful tones, he read these last words: I, the Class of 1922, being of sound and brilliant mind, do hereby declare this to be my last will and testament, in order to bequeath my rights and interests among the succeeding classes of Colorado Springs High School. I. To the Class of 1923, as my immediate successor, I give, for one day in the year, the privilege to look as they usually act. On this day only can their senior dignity and supercillious air be cast to the winds while they revel in all- day suckers and kiddy-kars. A II. Charles Topping bequeathes his title of the vainest boy in school to Harley Remington, with the hope that he will not abuse it. III, To the boys of the Class of '23, I give the undeniable right of leaving senior girls to attend the functions dateless, while the former escort the friv- olous sophomore Happers. IV. My dying request is that the succeeding class of juniors may stage a reception for the Seniors which will be both a credit to the former and, con- trary to custom, a most enjoyable event for the latter. V. Billie Sanson desires that the next feminine co-star of a Ryan will be as good to him as she has been to hers. VI. I bequeath to the Class of '25 the inexpressable joys which will ac- company their initiation into the solemn rites of pin-exchanging. VII. Arthur Sharp reluctantly gives up his position as matinee idol and favorite hero of the stage struck co-eds to Clark Metzler. VIII. Lastly, tofthe faculty, I leave the unceasing duty of proclaiming, henceforth and forever, the fact that I, 1922, died a martyr to a noble cause. The script slowly fluttered to the floor as the reader, in a voice choked with sobs, raised his arms heavenward and murmured falteringly, 'lMay he rest in peace. RUBY WILT EUGENE BRovLEs. 18 Class Scrap On March 30, 1922, a general stir, a wave of excitement pervaded the otherwise peaceful school. A prominent pate of senior hair lacked a few of its curly locks, while the junior flag proudly floated from the pole. This inter- preted meant that the annual scrap was Hon. However, a truce was declared until eleven o'clock Friday evening, when hostilities were to begin and end in a battle in lNIonument Valley Park at 11:30 o'clock Saturday morning. Feeling ran high on Friday but expressed itself only in occasional 22's and 23's on blackboards, sidewalks and the like. Carefully guarded plans were discussed by groups of boys apprehensively on the lookout for chance spies. After many deep and slack methods of defense and offense had been settled, the warriors of both camps cooled down sufficiently to sit in Sunday suits at the junior farce. At the stroke of eleven the scrap began, and waged fiercely all night. To tell of the fate of one junior boy who was grabbed, screaming and kick- ing, by eager senior hands, his poor hair quite cut, and then carried in spite of gurgling protests far, far away into the black night, when with very little ceremony he was dropped into a barn and the door was securely locked, is to tell of the fortune, or rather misfortune, of nearly all the class. This kind of work was carried on way into the hours, no longer wee and small, of the morn- ing, until at 11:30 the actual fighting began. There was for twenty minutes only an intense silence, while wild looking figures rushed madly at one another. Sacks piled up at the senior goal with alarming rapidity, and at the sound of the gun, bright-eyed, dirty-faced and utterly worn-out seniors boys and a few sad-eyed juniors crawled out of the heap of dust and wended their way home. l22 remained supreme! Pikefs Day Wednesday, April 26, dawned with a dull gray sky, and an altogether hopeless looking rain. Freshmen, turned a still brighter hue with the spring showers, thoughtful sophomores, and weary juniors trudged off to school. Upon arriving at their destination, a certain change was felt in the atmosphere of the halls. Gloom pervaded everything, and a positively sickening silence reigned over all. juniors in hushed voices inquired of freshmen, and the latter in turn asked sophomores what calamity had befallen the school. After much thoughtful consideration, a bright soul suggested that the bulletin board be consulted, and there the magic words, Piker's Day, were presented to eager eyes. What an excitement those two words conveyed! Longingly, the under- classmen looked out at the drizzling rain, wishing themselves with the seniors, far away from care and studies. But let us now turn our attention to a happier picture. At quarter of seven the old cafeteria was thronged with seniors, armed with lunches, and a delicious breakfast was enjoyed by the privileged ones. Then all rushed over to the car line where special cars were waiting to take them out to the canon. The ride out was hilarious to say the least, and the walk up to Bruin Inn, although somewhat wet, was the greatest fun. Lunch came next with the usual sandwiches, pickles, eggs, and cake, which are so dear to the hearts of picnickers, and still spirits seemed undampened by the rain. After lunch, a few daring ones went to climb inviting but rain-soaked mountains, while the more timid remained in the inn, playing games. About three, the happy crowd left, all declaring they had had the time of their lives. 19 HELEN MARIE KILEEN H7 M2 KN,-1-C. H. SH-Senior Year: Pleasure. REACTIONS: Zeta, Commercial Club, Pasin- apee, Terror Tribe. ETHEI. KI,-XE NICKERRAI. E. KI. RI,+G. C,:Prin1a Donna. REACTIONS: Sigma, Secretary of Sigma I-l-J, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. RLVSSELL RUSH KEIXIIJ Ri. R4 Kia+Traps 2 Confusion. REACTION5: Bank 533 tlfj, Orchestra IRQ HH, I-Ii Y. EDITH BICCAVV E7 IXI,,+Desire :C. S. H. S. MARGARET FLEMING KNOWLES M., FH, K2-I- Pat : Peg +G00d Sport. REACTIONS: Omega, President of Omega 1145, Sgt. at Arms of Omega 133, Terror Tribe, Secretary of Terror Tribe HJ, Lever Correspondcnt of Class CBJ, Pasinapee, Omega Basketball, Class Basketball My t-lj, Girl's Society Council. J, EIJIVIN KICC.-XI'Gl'IIfY J, E7 XIX-l-C. S. H. S. :A-l-D0uble+-Jr. REACTIONS: Alethian, Honor Society, Terror Tribe. IXIARJORIE KRATZ IXI5 K9-I-Characteristics I Friends. REACTIONS1 Alpha, La Tertulia Espanola, YERI3.-X BILL KICCLEARY Y, B., 1Ig+Optimism :Good Friends. REACTIONS: Zeta, Honor Society, Cabinet Member of Honor Society t-lj, Terror Tribe. NOR.-X ELIZABETH LISENHY Ng, E3 L10+Good Wi1l:Contentment. REACTIONS: Sigma, Vice-President of Sigma C-lj, Student Council, La Tertulra Espanola, . ,J-40, 5, , MW0-4Afe3 wv 'I' at . L' ' ' CAROLYN MebAN1121.s C7 BI.,-I-Effort I Dennishawn t?j. 20 GICURGIC CLANSMAN SHIYIERS GQ, C2 St+Danees+Good P:1rtner:I'aru- dice. REACTIONS: Masque and Sandal, Hi Y. Football HJ, Senior Play. RICHARD A. CRICXYS Rf, A7 Cr,-i-Hopes:Re:1lizations. HELEN ADIQLINE SICVYICLL H., Ag S.,-I-Stiek-to-it-ive-ness: Dependa- bility. REACTIONS: Zeta, Pasinapee, Cabinet meni- ber of Pasinapee, Senior Council, Green- wich Villagers, President of Greenwich Villagers 1-H, La Tertulia Espanola, Secre- tary of La Tertulia Espanola 1-lj, Terror Tribe, Zeta Baseball, Annual Staff, Girls' Deelamation. ALICE ICILEEN COLE Aft EH C-i-I-Big Heart :Good Friends. REACTION: Omega, Masque and Sandal, Le Cerele Francais, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. HAROLD TRIflNIP Hr, T2-4-Bashfulness :Aloofness REACTIONS: Senior Play, Track L,-lj. LILLIAN VIRGINIA CRLINIP L., Y., C2-I-Honest Effort :Good Intentions REAQTIONS: Oinega,Orchestru. LUIS EYADNAE TUBBS Li. E2 T7-4-C. S. H. S. :Pleasure REACTIONS: Theta Chi, La Tertulia Espan- ola, Terror Tribe. NORA LAITRA RUTH CORDINGLY Nu Lg Rf, CMH-C. S. H. S.:Diplom:1+ Diversions. REACTION: Commercial Club. RALPH ANDERSON 'rnoxms Iam A3 T2-I-C. S. H. S.:G0od Times-P Little XYork. G. EDGAR DRUMICLLOR Gi. E10 D7-l-C. S. H. :Yariati0ns. REACTIONS: Band, VVireless Club. , 2 1 HAZEL EDWARDS Ht. Erin-Action :Gracluati0n. REACTIONS: Alpha, Greenwich Villagers. ARLTNIC ICLIZAHETH LlfGGlfTT Af li. Li.-E-Good Sport :Popularity Rimerioxz Omega, J. CVRTIS ENGLIC ls CG EA-C. S. H. S. :Business R IQACTION: Com mereial Club. SARAH JANE LOVE SQL. L2-l-Sweet Disposition I Many Friends. REACTIONS: Zeta. La Tertulia Espanola. Secretary of La Tertulia Espanola, Pasi- napee, Senior Play, ICSTHA BVRDINIC ICCKE IC. B5 Eg-l-C. S. H. S.:Good times?- Varied eoifleur. REACTIONS1 Zeta, Treasurer ol Zeta 143. Honor Society, Le Cerele Francais, Seeres retary of Le Cerele Francais KL-U, President of Le Cerelc Francais HJ, Masque and Sandal, Cabinet Member of Masque and Sandal 147, Viee-President of Masque and Sandal l-lil.VVeekly Lever Staff,Terror Tribe, Y. YV. C. A. Student Club CBJ, Secretary- Treasurcr of Class ill, Secretary ol Class Ill, Scribbler's Round Table IZJ, Junior Farce, Delegate to lCtlitor's Convention at Boulder. LAVVRENCE LICHNIAN L. L.-4-C, H, I Dependability. REACTIONS: Alethian, Masque and Sandal, Hi Y. DAVID EDSTROM D, E5+Harp:Songs of David. REAQTIONS: Band,Urel1estra. AIARIAN IQVELYN OBIA LAND Blg EG Os Liu-l-Sincerity 2SuCCess. R EAQTIONS: Sigma, Treasurer ol Sigma HJ, La Tertulia Espanola, Pasinapee. AVDREY EDWARDS A, Ii7+Coneentraterl lillort:Bc-tternient. GLEN HAINES LOVDICRBACK G3 Hg LA-Effort I Result. REACTION: Alethian. 22 NI.-XRJORIIC ICLIZABIQTII HARRISON KI. E., H..-l-Chewing Gu1n: Rosie. REACTIONS: Zeta, 'Vice-President of Zeta C-LJ, Ho11or Society, Secretary of Honor Society 1-ll, Cabinet Member of Honor Society t-ll, Le Cercle Francais, Yice-Pres- ident of Le Cercle Francais H 1, Masque anal Sandal, Pasinapee, VVL-ekly Lever Statl, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. MILIJRICD BITRVVICLL JOHNsoN Mn, B3 jq.+Good Time :Satisfaction. ICIJXYARD HAGVS Ilfg Hw+Ambition+Honest liffortzllracle nation. REACTIONS: Alethian, President of Aleth- ian HJ, H. T. KI. C., President ol H, T. Rl. C. lil, RUSSELL JONES R 2 j'3+Goocl Looks I Demand. REACTION: Dclphian GICNEYIEYIQ BIARY HLBIQR G., B17 H24-France K?,1: Lll11e de Klielf' REACTIONS: Zeta, President of Zeta Nfl, Treasurer ol Zeta HQ, Le Cercle Francais, Greenwich Villagers, Masque and Sandal, Girl's Society Council, Senior Council, Terror Tribe, Zeta Baseball C-ll, Senior Play. LFELLA BI,-XY KHCR L., M3 K,,+Kinclness :Bright Future. REACTIONS: Omega, Lever Correspondent of Omega t-H, La Tertulia Espanola, Vice- President of La Tertuliu Espanola 143, President of La Tertulia Espanola, Pasin- apee, Terror Tribe. VVILFRED PIERCE HOLLINGSVVORTH VV., P3 H7-lrkesults:Conn-ntment. DARVVARD KIRST D3 K7-I-C. S. H. :Ambition REAcT1oNs: H. T. M. C., Commercial Club. BICVLAH TICRAL HARLESS B2 T4 HH- Disposition : M ystery. R13AeTxoNs: Omega, Commercial Club. Omega Baseball KSJ. LI DA KATHERN KVYIST L., K2 K7+C. S. H. :Chemistry+PIeas' ure. REACTIONS3 Alpha, Commercial Club, Ter- ror Tribe. 23 4 GLADYS EYELYN THEOBALD Gr. E2 T3-I-VVit :Jollity. REACTIONS: Omega, Sgt. at Arms of Omega HJ, Le Cerele Francais, Pasinapee, Lever Correspondent of Pasinapee, Honor So- eiety, Lever Correspondent of Honor Society HQ, Terror Tribe, Omega Baseball 531. MARY ELIZABETH LIVINGSTON M4 Ep L34-Personality :Good Company. REACTIONS: Theta Chi, La Tertulia Espan- ola, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe. THOMAS ALBERT TIMMONS, JR. T9 Am T7-I-Determination:C. S. H. S.-i- Diploma. REACTION: Commercial Club. JACOB REX LEFTON I3 R5 I.2+SilCl1CE :Eloquence REACTIONS: Alethian, Secretary of Alethian 633, Boy's Declamation Contest CSD, Scrib- bler's Round Table C3j, Delphian-Alethian Debate CBD, Weekly Lever Staff. VVINEFRED L. THOMSON VVG L3 Tiwl- No. 5l0:lNIisery. REACTIONS: Sigma, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. MATTIE LEONA LESTER IXI5 Ln L:+C. S. H. S. :Determination. CHARLES H. TOPPING CQ H5 T9+Se1f:Contentment. REACTIONS: Senate, Honor Society, Le Cerele Francais, Weekly Lever Staff, Terror Tribe, Scribbler's Round Table CBJ, Delegate to Editor's Convention at Boulder, Senate-Delphian Debate HD. HATTIE MAE LESTER H7 IRIS LQ-I-C. S. H. S. :Pleasure HAZEL MARGARET THEOBALD H10 INI7 T24-Friends :A Peek 'o Fun. REACTIONS: Omega, Terror Tribe. IAINIES BUCHANAN LESTER jg B4 L3-l-C. S. I-I. S. :Nothing. 24 ALICE REINKING A 1, Rf. 4-Smiles : Friends. REAe'rIoNs: Zeta, Greenwich Villagers. A. NOEL JABIISON Ag, N1 Jg,-l-Work :Action, REACTIONSI Delphian, C Club, Truck U1 l-if HJ. VVILMA RISHICR VV7 R ii, 4-Good Wi1l:Suecess. REAcT1oNs: Zeta, Pasinapee, Honor Society, Terror Tribe. YIVIAN CONSTANCE JOHNSON V7 C., J4-1-Modesty-Q-Eflieieney:nklerely Mary Ann. REACTIONS: Alpha, Vice-President of Alpha C-tb, Honor Society, Student Council, Lever Correspondent of Student Council, Terror Tribe, VVeekly Lever Stuff, Senior Play, Class Prophecy. NIARY JANE ROUSE M3 JT RA-OFlice:Pull, REACTIONS: Theta Chi, Secretary of Theta Chi 4-tb, La Tertulia Espanola, Commercial Club, Senior Council, Secretary of Senior Council, Terror Tribe, 'YIRGIL JOHNSON Yr, Jf,-l-Terror Tribe :lNIystery. REAcT1oN: Terror Tribe. FRANK C. STRACHAN Fl., C., S2+G00f1 Looks :Good Times. IQEACTIONSI Senate, Vice-President of Senate t-H, President of Class tlj, Junior Farce, Class History. YELTA BLANCHE JANUARY Y7 By, JE-J-Pep :Friends REAeT1oN5: Zeta, Terror Tribe. BIILDRICD SANSON M3Si.,-I- Billy : Most Striking Brunette REAcT1oNs: Omega, Secretary of Omega Q-H, Terror Tribe, Pasinapee. MARVIN JACKSON M., Jr.-i-Activity :Sueeess. REACTIQJN: Senate. 25 DAVIS GREEN TAYLOR D7 G5 T9+Middle Name:Chief Cliarae: teristic. REACTIONSZ Greenwich Villagers, Secretary of Greenwich Villagers C-lj, Band LU HQ, Orchestra C4J. REYNOLD H. HERNHART R, Hg B3-l-Grit :Success Rmcrroxz H. T, M. C. DOROTHY ELIZABETH THORIPKINS D7 E., T3-l-Self:Originality. REACTIONSZ Sigma, Le Cercle Francais, Senior Play. CORINNE HELEN BALIXI C2 H4 B3-l-Steadfastness:Goal. REACTIONS: Omega, Honor Society, Le Cerele Francaise, Vice-President of Le Cercle Francaise Q-lj, Terror Tribe, VVeekly Lever Staff. CLARE L. THOMAS C: Lg Teri-Ehicieiiey' -I-VVork : Good Result REACTIONSZ Delphian, Treasurer of Delphi- an HJ, President of Delphian C-LJ, Masque and Sandal, Senior Council, President of Class C-lj, Hi Y, Secretary of Hi Y. t3l, Terror Tribe, Senate-Delphian Debate I-lj. MARY BIXLER Mg, B3-PC. S. H. S. :Happy lylemories. REACTIONS: Omega, Pasinapee, Commercial Club. PHYLLIS BENTLY TARR P, B3 T5-1-Good VVork-l-Good Friends: Happiness. REACTIONS: Alpha, President of Alpha C-tj, Masque and Sandal. Lever Correspondent of Masque and Sandal, Honor Society, Pasinapee, Junior Farce, Girl's Deelamation Contest C35 C-lj, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. FLORENCE ALLENE BOVVICR F7 A5 B5-I-Ability+Ambition :Songsten REACTIONSZ Zeta, Honor Society, Pasin- apee, Le Cerele Francais, Terror Tribe. FRED THOMAS F4 T9-I-Good HllI1lOf:,ASSCt. INIILDRED LIYCILE HLRT RL, L2 B6-l-Ambition :Success IQEACTIONSZ Sigma, Lever Correspondent of Sigma HD, Treasurer of Sigma t-lj, La Tertulia Espanola. 26 it A , . 1 . HAROLD R. NICWSCJIVIIS Hf. R3 Ng-l-C. S. H, S. :Real Bent-lit, REACTIONS: Alethian, Secretary of Alethian C-H, Senior Council, Wireless Club, Lever Correspondent of VVireless C-lil. EARL GARDNER F2 G7-I-Impressions :Effect ROBERT B. NEVVMAN R, B. N.+Pull2Managerships+Fussing. REACTION?-I Delphian, President of Delphi! an C-tj, Honor Society, Delphian-Alethiau Debate CSJ Senate-Delphian Debate CSD, Senate-Delphian Debate C-H, Boy's Dec- lamation Contest C-LJ, C Club, Student Manager of Football C4j, Assistant Adver- tising Nlanager Weekly Lever CSD, Business Manager Annual HJ, Business Manager junior Faree, Vice-President of Class CBJ, Terror Tribe. LOLA MAE GOSSARD L2 M3 G,-1-Glee Club-I-Practiee:High C. REACTION: Commercial Club. VVILLIABI NASSOLR VVX N64-F. BA-B. B.+VV. C.-I-C. C.-l-- H. T. M, C. :Wild Life. REACTIONS: Football C39 C-H, Basketball C31 CMH, Wireless Club, Director of VVireless Club C-tj, H. T. M. C., Commercial Club, Hi Y. STANFORD WILLIAM GOSS Sgt W'5,G1.i-l-C. S. H, S. :High Aspirations, REACTIONS: Senate, Secretary of Senate CZJ, Senate-Delphian Debate. EDVVIN VVFBER NORTON Et. VVM, Nv+Work :Successful Annual REACTIONS: Commercial Club, Annual Staff, Terror Tribe. RLTH FRANCES GREENBERG Rt F7 G2-I-Dates:Contentment. REACTIONS1 Omega, Commercial Club, President of Commercial Club C-H, Terror Tribe. JAMES FLOYD NICFF, JR. Ju F2 N4-I-Application:Goal. R15Ae'r10Ns: Senate, C Club, Football 13+ I-ll, Track C59 C-H, Terror Tribe. CHARLES If. HATHAVVAY C3 E4 H9-l-Spare Time:Burns+Study. Rmeriowsz Band CZJ, Wireless CZJ. 27 X .QT Al Y . XL-X' fi so t'Q hx' is X K, , , ROBERT L. SPIIRGEON Rt. L., S3-1-Yariecl ActivitieS:Good Sport. REACTIONS: Delpliian, Treasurer of Delphi- an 633, Yiee-President of Delphian t-H, Senate-Delphian Debate LSD HD, Delphian- Aletliian Debate 133, Student Council, President of Student Council Ml, Terror Tribe, VVeekly Lever StaiI, 'Treasurer of Class t3,J, Boys Declamation Contest. LACRINIC FLETCHER ALLEN L., F2 A5-I-Attractive Get-up:Yogue. REACTION: Zeta, Greenwich Villagers, Ter- ror Tribe, LUITISIC EDNA M. SELLERGREN L2 IQ., INIG S,,+Blane Lair :Popularity REACTIONSZ Omega, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. VVILLIAM FRIED I.. ACLTFF NVQ Fi, L6 A7+C. S. H. S. :Dignifieml Name. REACTION: Commercial Club, BICATRICE LUIS SCHLEGICL Bg, L2 Sn-PC. S. H. S.+W0fkZIlCSIllt. REACTION: Commercial Club. GRACIA RL'TH ATNII' G2 R3 Ag.-5-Wiles : H. R. REACTIQNS: Omega, Terror Tribe, Vxfeckly Lever Staff, Pasinapce, Class Poem. CHARLES TRVMAN ST. CLAIR C8 T5 S2-I-Slang:Varied Vocabulary. REACTIONS: Iklasque and Sandal, Secretary Treasurer of Masque and Sandal HJ, Hi Y, Football HJ, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. JOHN LICICS ARMIT jf, Lg AH-Good Intentions:Burlesque REACTIONS: Commercial Club, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. BONNIE LEE SCRIINTPF B7 L3 S2-l-C. H. S.:COI1iClIlllIC11f. REACTION: Commercial Club. IILYSSES J. ANDREVVS VV2 -I3 A4-1-C. S. H. S. :Scholar 28 HVBERT CUZINE STRANG II, C2 S3+K. N. D.-'HJ A. Q. Y. :DL-light. RIDACTIONS: Vllireless, Vice-President ol' XVireless C-ll, Senior Council. GEORGE FREEMAN DLNN ING G3 F4 D1.,+I.ife :IUKNITCYCIICC+I,21lll2lgCS. R 1sAcT1oNs: Weekly Lever Staff, Senior Council, Treasurer of Senior Council HJ. I. PEARL SHOCK J., P4 S3-PC. S. H. S. : Type Shark. REACTIONS: Theta Chi, Commercial Club, Annual Stall, Gold Medal Typist C-H. MARJORIE M. DUBBIN M., INT, Dy,-I-Embarrassment :Red Face. RiiAc'r1oNS: Omega, La Tertulia Espanola, Lever Correspondent of La Tertulia Espan, ola HJ, Greenwich Villagers, Lever Corres- pondent of Greenwich Villagers, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe, Omega Basketball, Class Basketball CM. Senior Play. LAXVSON D. SVBINER L4 D3 S9+ 9 A Q Y :Contentn1ent. REACTIONS: VVireless, Secretary of VVireless I-ll, H. T. M. C., Masque and Sandal, Property Manager Senior Play. LAVRA GLADYS DAUGHERTY Ln, G4 D7-I-C. S. H. S. Illncertainty. REACT1oNS: Theta Chi, Le Cercle Francais. JVANITA SINIITH Ji S4-I-C. S. I-I. S. :Activities REACTIONS: Tillicum, Cabinet Member of Tillicum HQ, President of Tillicum I-ll. KENNETH DAVIDSON Ki. Dnpl-Action :Greatness REACTIONSI Alethian, Lever Correspondent of Alethian I-ll. Vice-President of Alethian I-ll, Commercial' Club, Terror Tribe, Annual Staff. ROBERT L. SHEFF R7 L2 S1.,+Brave Heart :Fair Lady. REACTION: I-I. T. M. C. VVILLIAM A. DENNIS XV, A3 DH-C. S. H. S.: BluFling -l- Cartoonist. REACTION5: Senate, Greenwich Villagers, Le Cercle Francais, Terror Tribe. 29 HELEN LOUISE DANKS H., L7 D5-I-Ambition :Lz1urels. REACTIONS: Alpha, President ol' Alpha 1,-ll, Honor Society, Greenwich Villagers, Terror Tribe, Annual Staff, Girl's Soeiety Council. YIYIAN lf. ISROAIJBENT V4 E5 B2+S11ap-1-Yivaeity:GooclTin1es. REACTIONS: Zeta, Le Cerele lirn11enis,'l'error Tribe, ICIYWIN FRANCIS DAILY E4 F, Defi-Study:Bright ffl lluy. ROBERT IRXVIN BECK R3 I3 B74-Initiative :Masque and Sunmlul. REACTIONS: Delphian, Masque and Szmrlul, Pres. of lvlasque and Saiiclul Q-lj, Le Cerele Francais, Terror Tribe, Senior Play, EDITH DANIELSON E1 D2+Coneentralion I Goal. NELLIE MAVIJIC BROYLICS Nl. M10 B5'I F1'lCI1ClS:C0lllCllllI1Qlll. REACTIONS: Alpha, Commercial Club, La Tertulia Espanola. VIOLA ESTHER ESSNIAN V4 En1E7'l'C. S. H. S.: Selim1l Marin. REACTION: La Tertuliri Espzuiolu, CLYDE B.-XSSICTT C5 B2 +C. S. H. S. :VVork-l-Determination REACTIONZ LILLIAN ROSINA EYICRS lm R6 E9+Srniles:Pleasing PCI?-20lll1lllj'. REACTIONS: Omega, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe. BESS ICSTICLLA BROVVN Bp,l5.1 B7-I-E:f'Bebe. 30 RLTH KICLLISR YICRMILLION Ri, K., YQ-l-Ability+Narne:Red REACTIONS: Omega, Commercial Club, Pas- inapee, Terror Tribe. KIARY IXIINERYA PATTERSON Mg, Mt. Pt.-l-Red : Pink -i-Athletics. REAe'rIoNs: Omega, Vice-President of Omega 133, Treasurer of Omega f-l3, Pres- ident of Omega C43, Senior Council, Girl's Society Council, Basketball 453, Baseball 413, Captain Baseball tl 3, Captain Baseball t-13, Scribbler's Round Table 623, Te1'ror Tribe. IELUISIC KIARGARIQT VAN DIEST E0 M4 V DA-C. H. S. 2 Many Friends+ Good Sport. REAeT1oNs: Zeta, Secretary of Zeta t-L3, President of Zeta t-13, Honor Society, Y. VV. C. A. Student Club C33, Pasinapee, Presi- dent of Pasinapee, Girl's Society Council, VVeekly Lever Staff, .Annual Staff, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. GEORGE E. PALLLINS, JR. G0 E2 PM-C. S. H. 2? JATNIES L. YAUGHN JH Lf. Y.,-I-C. S. H. S. :Pipe Dreams. REAc'r1oNs: Senate, Commercial Club. WALTER MORTON PIEYSIER VV7 Mt. P2-1-A Pianozjazz. REACTION: Senate, lylasque and Sandal, Senior Play, Stage Manager of junior Farce. RUBY ALICE VVILT R., AG NV3-l-C. S. H, S. 2 Friends+Popular- ity. REACT1oNs: Sigma, President of Sigma ti-L3, Honor Society, Lever Correspondent of Honor Society t-l3, Cabinet lklember of Honor Society t-l3, Masque and Sandal La Tertulia Espanola, Senior Council, Girls' I Society Council, Weekly Lever Staff, Annual Staff. I . FREDA ELEANOR RANYLICY 3-LvF3 Rf, Rt,-i-Good Looks:C1ood Type REACTIONSZ Omega, Commercial Club, Sec- retary of Commercial Club C-l3,Terror Tribe. HAROLD A. VVHITE H9 A4 VV.,+Goocl Intentions :Graclnation. REAe'r1oN: Delphian. IRENE NIILDRED RAHNI I1,,MgtR9-l-C. S. H. S. :Aspirations+Goal. REACTIUN: Theta. 31 51 ,QQ F ,Qv-'Ji EDITH MURPHY Eli, Mt.-I-Senior Year :Satisfaction RUTH ANNE LARKIN Rl, Ag, L:-l-C, S. H. S. :Senior Yenr+Pleus- lll'L'. Rkxterioxs: Seribblt-r's Round Table I2l. Commercial Club, Honorable Blentiou in Shorthand t3,l. FRANK ONIYFROCK li, Of,-l-Teaeher's Questions 2 Drawl, OGDEN Ii. LOVB Og, F., L34-S1ang:Hot Air. RIQACTIONS: H, T, M. C., Lever Corres- pondent of H. T. M. C. Q-lj, Hi Y., Terror Tribe. MARGARET DELANO OSBORNE XXI., D4 OQ+Stndy+Piano:A's-l-Paderew- ski Znd. RIQACTIONS1 Zeta, Sgt. at Arms Zeta I-ll, Secretary of Zeta HJ, Honor Society, Secf Treas. Honor Society L-ll, Yiee-Pres. of Honor Society Q-lj, Student Council, Terror Tribe, Le Cerele Francais, Annual Stall', Class History, Senior Play. LOUISE LONG 1.2 LH-Determination-I-Grit :Education REACTION: Omega. ROYAL ELVVIN ULBISTEAD Rf, E4 O9-l-Name:Royal-ty. REACTIONS: La Tertulia Espanola, VVirele:-as Club. MILFORD FISKE LACKEY M3 F., Ll, +C. H. S. Iklystery. REACTIONS: Alethiau, Masque and Sandal, Terror Tribe, Stage Manager Senior Play. ROBERT MANLY OR MES R2 IXLQ O7-l-VVorl4:R. O. VV. H.+Honor Society. REACTIONS: Aletliian, 'Vice-President of Ale- thian Q-lj, Honor Soeiety, President of Honor Society 1-ll, Student Council, NYM-kly Lever Staff, Terror Tribe. CLIFTON LIPSCOMB Cf, l.2+Geniality :Good Times. 32 LOIS HANNA L,, HA-Decision :A Career. RIEACTIONS: Zeta, Comniereial Club, Honor Society. JOYCE x1143'1'z 15,194 M2-l-C. S. H. S. :lvllli1l0VVl1 Quantity. CHARLES DICKENSON HOPKINS, JR. Cf, D4 HH-Soph :Bliss. REACTIONS: Senate, Greenwich Yillugers, Terror Tribe. OLIVE MARGARET MONCK O5 M3 M9-l-C. S. H. S. :Reereatioir REACTIONS: Omega, Le Cerele Francais, Terror Tribe. ANNA LAURA HENDRICKS A7 L4 H0-LA11 Interest :Inspiration REACTIONS: Alpha, Commercial Club. b VVALTIER C. MAHNCKI3 XY4 Cm Mg,-i-C. S. H. S. 2Diploma only. REACTIONSI Senate, Masque and Slllllllll, Senate-Delphian Debate. CLEN L. HYBIAS C4 L9 H3-I-C, S. H. S. Ilidueation. REACTIONS: Commercial Club, H. T. M. C., Terror Tribe. EDITH LKCILE TNIEHRING 125, L7 Mm-Good Lo0ks:Satisfacti0n. REACTIONS: Sigma, Terror Tribe, Girl's Deelamalion Contest, Senior Play. JICANETTIC HECKMAN jg HH,-C. S. H. S.:Goocl Times+Irres- ponsibility. REACTIONSZ Omega, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe. CLOTILDA MRAZ C7 M2 +Contentment 4-Smiles : Friends REACTIONS: Omega, Student Council, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. 33 JOHN TAIT MILLIKICN, JR. L T3 B15-leC. S, H. S. Illissatisfaetioil, KIELYA Gl,l'fNNlfRNlf SH.-XDY Mft G5 Sg,+Art+Stnrly :Fame REACTIONS: Omega. Secretary ol' Omega HD, Greenwich Villagers, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. M IRIAM KEITH IXIALSBARY M3 K7 Mlipl- Brains + G o o cl N a t u re 2 Friends. REACTIONS: Annual Sta ff. KATHARINIC BLACK SL'T'1'ON K3 Bt Sei-l-Popularity :Good Times. REACTIONS: Zeta, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. BLANCHE li. MATHIS BQ E3 Mg+Forcl -l-Corner : Disaster. REACTIONS: Omega, Pasinapee, Terror Trilie. ARTHVR GIIJICON SHARP, JR. Ay, G5 S-m+C. S. H. S.:Gra1nl times-P Leading man. R EACTIONS: Delphian, Cabinet member of Delphian C3J, Masque and Sandal, C Club. Yell Leader HD, junior Farce, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. IXIAVRICE INIOSELY My, lXI4+Indepenclenee I Tennis Champion. REACTIONS: Senate, Secretary of Senate, Club, Secretary of Club. Ten- nis HQ C-lj. If. Sl-IEESLEY 15351-l-C. S. H. S.:Diploma. NAOMI MERCER Nm M2-l-Determination I Diploma. H A R R I ET SCOTT H, S2 el-lklirror : Reflection. REACTIONSZ Sigma, Le Cerelc Francais, Pasinapee. 34 LOLISE CLEKIENT CODY Ln. C9 Ce-l-XVork+Play :Happy Median. RISACTIUNSZ Zeta, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. Senior Play. DOROTHY MARGARET VVILLIAAISON Dt. M2 AY1n'i'Ed'l'S111llL'S 1 Happiness. REACTION5: Sigma, President of Sigma HJ, Secretary ol Sigma CSJ, Greenwich Villagers, Terror Tribe, Sigma Baseball GJ. LOWELL ARCHIE CLARK Lf. A., C4+C. S. H. S. :UIJO4lg0H-i-IDCDOIIO- ability. REACTIONSZ Commercial Club, Lever Cor- respondent ot' Commercial Club HJ, Mas- que and Sandal, Business Manager of Senior Play, HAROLD LEX' ISON VVINTER HU, L3 Wf,-l-C. S. H. S. :Independence REACTIONSZ Senate, C Club, Lever Cor- espondent of Club HJ, Annual Staff, Basketball 13? HJ, Terror Tribe. DAISY AGNES CLOVV DQ, A., CQ?-C. S. H. S. 2 Pleasures. RIEACTIONS: Sigma, Pasinapee,ClassBasket- ball 439. HELEN ESTHER XVALLACE Hg, E7 W'2+Honest Etlort-I-Determination :Progress REACTIONS1 Alpha, Honor Society, La Ter- tulia Espanola, Pasinapee. CHRISTINA ADELLA CRANE C., A9 C1u+W'ork+XVork+VVork232 A's. REACTIONSZ Omega, Honor Society, Cabinet Member of Honor Society HQ, La Tertulia Espanola, Annual Staff. ASHER WALLACE Aft Vl'5+C. S. H. S. :Happy-go-lucky. PEGGY CORAY P3 C7-l-Jokes F ?:Popularity. REACTIONS: Theta Chi, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe. CHARLOTTE WOLGAMOOD C2 VV5,+Goal : Happiness. RI-IACTIONS1 Omega, Commercial Club. 35 JACK YATES -I3 Y3 -l- Driving + Dancing : Diversions. REACTIONS: Senate,Yiee-President of Senate Q-lj, Masque and Sandal. LAVVRENCE Hl'PP 1.5 H6-+C. S. H. S.:C. C, REACTIONS: Delphian, Terror Tribe. RUBY YOUNG R 3 V74-Training :HSlC1'10g.H REACTIONSI Sigma, Commercial Club. GLADYS M. HVIXIM G, M2 H5-1-PrOvidenee:A President. REACTIONS: Theta Chi, Vice-President of Theta Chi, Honor Society, lX'Iasque and Sandal, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. BEATRICE NEOLA ZEIGLER H5 N2 Z3-l-Purpose :Result. REACTION: Alpha. GLEN O. HAMRICK Gi, O9 H7-l-C. S. H. S. :Future Activities? REACTION: Band. ROBERT RANGE lig R3-l-Joviality :Good Times. REACTION: Senate. DOLORA FRANCES HOLT D3 F2 Hg.-1-C. S. H. S.-i-S2 :C0ntent1IIeI1t. REACTION: Omega. ALFRED B. DALECK A6 B2 D5-I-GO:Get There. JOHN FREDERICK HOLLAND jg F5 H2-l-l.ength:Altitude. REACTIONS: Senate, Senior Play. 36 EITGENE BROYLES E2 B74-Basketball+Crutches+Basketball -i-Crutches : Success. REAcT1oNs: Senate, Treasurer of Senate 1-tl, C Club, Secretary of C Club 149, Senior Council, Basketball 130 14J, Terror Tribe, Weekly Lever StaiI. DANIEL ESTERMAN VVARNER D: E5 XVI-I-C. H. S. :The Athlete and then some. REACTIONS: Senate, President of Senate 1-lj, Terror Tribe, President of Terror Tribe 149, Athletic Council, Student Council, C Club, President of C Club 14j, Football 139 140, Basketball 133 149, Captain of Basketball 1-IJ, Track 137 1-IJ, Captain of Track 135, All State Basketball Center HJ, President of Class 112, Class Prophecy. OLIVE MAY BULLAR D O., Mm B9-I-Good Intentions:Diploma. REACTIONS: Alpha, Sgt. at Arms of Alpha 123, Lever Correspondent of Alpha HJ, Vice-President of Alpha 14j. REAVA L. WINCHESTER R3 L5 VV7-I-C. H. S. :Work-kPlay. REACTIONS: Sigma, Le Cerele Francais, Pasinapee. HARRIET BRADY II2 B3+ Yes :Satisfaction REACTIONSI Zeta, Lever Correspondent ol' Zeta 14D Student Council, Secretary of Student Council, Terror Tribe, President of Girl's Glee Club. ARTHUR GORDON WEISS AH G0 VVU,-1-C. S. H. S.:All 'Work+No Play. REACTIONS: Honor Society, Commercial Club, Weekly Lever StafI, Scribbler's Round Table 135. HELEN F. HENDERSON H5 F4 H8+C. S. H. S. :Ambition HELEN PHYLLIS WASSERSTROM I-Ig Pg W2-PC. H. S. :Aims REACTIONS: Omega, La Tertulia Espanola, Commercial Club. EVA CLARK E. C.-5-Pallete :Posters REACTIONSZ' Zeta, Greenwich Villagers, Le Cercle Francaise, Pasinapee, Secretary of Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. G. VVARREN VVELLS G1 Wm VV3-l-Trombone :Noise RIEACTIONS: Delphian, Band, President and Manager of Band 1-H, Orchestra, Boy's Declamation Contest 135, Terror Tribe. 37 Llffl E. XYINDOLPH I.. E5 YVQ-l-Schooling 2 Possibilities. REACTIONSZ Alethiun, VVire-less Club, Com- inereial Club. K.-X'l'llERlNlf l'Rl'lfTT K.. P,.i+Frit-urls Zlill-l0XIl'1eIll. ALIDA SECILY WIGTUN .-X., S., VV9-PDetermination :Populurity. REAQTIONS: Zeta, Le Cerele Francais, Terror Tribe. ,- . , . f ' ' n .sl ' WILLIAM XY. PICRRY W., W2 P74-Iiffort IC. S. H. iemcrioxg H. T. M. C. CARLTON H. VVHICICLER Ci, Hg YY1..+C. S. H. S.+VVork: Gradu- ation. REACTIONS: Senate. Club, Terror Tribe, Basketball HJ, Truck 1,33 HJ, Muiiuger Basketball HJ. KATHARINIC NELL PAULY Ki N., Pf.+ElTort :Satisfaction REACTIONS: Zeta, Honor Society, Yiee-l'res- iclent ol Honor Society, Masque and Silllillll, Terror Tribe, Senior Play, Girl's Deelu- mation Contest Nl HJ. GRACE PAYLINIC WEST G., Py, VVQ A-Thoroughness I Knowledge, R EACTION: Omega. BIEATRICE INIARIE PRIOR B, Mg PU.-l-Athletics:Champion REACTIONS: Theta Chi, President of Theta Chi l-H, Student Council, Yiee-President of Student Council, Commercial Club, Terror Tribe, Pasinapee. LEU XVOLGAMOOD Ll.. XYH-C. S. H. S. :The Tfsual. ISAHICL PUSTLE'l'l-lXYAI'l'lf Ii., PH-C. S. H. S.+Study:C. C.+I5i- versions. REACTIONS: Zetu, Terror Tribe. 38 -J N-.' 14 J' 1 ,JT X CARLITA POOLE XVIQTHIQRELL C9 Pm VVH-C. S. H. S. :Variety of ?? REACTIONS: Zeta, Lever Correspondent of Zeta 145, Masque and Sandal, La Tertulia Espanola, Le Cerele Francais, XVeekly Lever Staff, Terror Tribe, Junior Faree, Senior Play. EDITH PERKINS Em P3+Senior Year :Satisfaction REACTIONS: Terror Tribe, La Tertulia lie- panola, VVeekly Lever Stall. IVIARION VVRIGHT XVICAXIIER lVI3 H4 VV,-I-Labor : Excellence. MARGARET SUSAN POLICY M5 S3 P5-I-Good VVork :C. C. REACTIONS1 Sigma, Secretary of Sigma 141, Honor Society, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe, Iuterclass Baseball ill HJ HJ, Sigma Base- ball 129 H9 K-ll, INIARY I-IELIEN VVILKINS M7 H2 VVU,-l-C. S. H. :Study Only. REACTION5: Le Cerele Francais, Pasinapee. XIALCOLINI DAVIS PFTTY MU, D3 P7+Goml Company:The l'n- usual. REACT1oNS1 llelphian, Secretary of Del- phian HJ, Greenwich Villagers, Treasurer of Greenwich Villagers 147, Terror Tribe. Class Poet. RODGER FRANCIS WALTON R5 F9 W',,-I-Good Will :Attainment REACTIONS: Delphian, La Tertulia Espan- ola, T1 ack C-lj. JAMES RLSSICLI. PATTERSON J1nR5 Pu'l'C. H. :XV0l'li. TERESA VVIEMYSS Tg VV3-1-C. S. H. S.:Honest ElTort+Di- ploma. REACTION: Commereial Club. YVILLIAKI POLICY W7 PM-I-C. H. S, :lncliflerenee REACTIONS: Alethian, Club, Commer- eial Club. Student Council. 39 ALICE SH.-XY An S2+C. S. H. 2Se11i0r Year. EDWIN C. AULD Eg, C7 Al.,-l-C. H. S.:Football-l-Co11Sis- tent Fussing. REAQTIONS: Delphiaii, Treasurer of Del- phiam Q4-D, Hi Y, Secretary-Treasurer of Hi Y. CED, President of Hi Y. Q-lj, H. T. NI. C., Yiee-President of H. T. M. C. QSD, Football HD, Track Q35 HJ. CARL R. STURDIYANT C7 R2 Sa-i-Kinetic IEnergy:Good Grades. REACTION: Band C3j C-tj. INIYRON L. BRIGGS IXIN L9 B2-l-C. S. H. S. :The Ifiikuowu? REACTIONS: Baud,Oreliestra. HELEN INIARGARET STEUERT Hit, My S9-Q-C. S. H. S. :Effort+Results. ERNA BERNHAR DT ISS B., -I-VVork -i-Play 2 Coutentment. EVA BERNICE STOITT Eg, B4 S2-l-Dimples:G0od Looks. REACTIONS: Theta Chi, La Tertulia Espane ola, Terror Tribe. GERTRIIDE BREWINGTON Gt, B 5, + Diploma -l- R. T. I Sat isfactioii. REACTIONS: Zeta, Sgt. at Arms of Zeta C-lb, Greenwich Villagers, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe. CLARK NORRIS SITNDERLIN C2 N9 Srl-Spirit :A Good Fellow. REACTIONS: Alethiau, Baud C55 HJ, Orches- tra, lXIanager of Orchestra 142. L U C I LLE BRIINDAGE Lg. BA-C. S. H. S.+Gradu:.1tio11:Happy Summer. R EACTION: Omega. 40 CLIFFORD FRITCHLIC C7 F., +VVork I College. REACTIONSS Delphiau, Lever Correspondent of Delphiun, Terror Tribe. n IIIQLEN INIARGARICT IXICBTQRNICY H7 Mgr Mf.+Wi1l:Attainment REACTION: Pasinapee. KI.-XRY FRASER M., Ff,+C. H. S. :Diversions ?? VVILLIANI INIAHAN INIALSBVRY XY., MG NIL.-leGrin:Good Sport. IlEACTIONSi Alethian, Treasurer of Aleth- ian ill, Hy Y., Conunerciul Club, Terror Tribe. RUTH GOFF Rf, G54-Graciousriess 2 Friends XII' RIEL ELIZABETH MORTIM ICR Mg ICT IXI:t+GOod VVill+Ifffort:Favorable Results. REACTIQNS: Zeta, Greenwich Villagers, Lu Tertuliu Iispanola, Pzxsinupee, Treasurer of Pasiuapee, Terror Tribe. Delegate to Edie tor's Convention at Boulder, XVeekly Lever Staff, Senior Play. HAZEL MAE GULEY H2 M1,G1U+C. S. H. S. I Diversions. REACTIONS: Zeta, Student Council, Honor Society, Lever Correspondent of Honor Society C-H, Le Cercle Francais, Lever Correspondent of Le Cercle Francais, Orchestra, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe, VVeekly Lever. NORMA MILLER N7 BI,.+Diversions 2 Happy Outlook. REACTIKJNZ Sigma. DERNVOOD S. GILIXIORIC, JR. D4 S2 G7Jf-NO Change :VVallc-er. REACTIONS: Delphian. Assistant Track Manager HJ. OLIVER JACKSON MILLIER O, JT KI,+C. S. H. :Preoccupatioir 41 KATHARYNE MORGAN GVVILLIM K., Mg G3-lf-Preparedness:Fame V REACTIONS: Omega, Treasurer of Omega l-lj, Le Cerele Francais, Treasurer of Le Cerele Francais C-lb, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe Annual StalT, Omega Baseball CFU. CHARLES BRICE C3 H,-i-Determination-l-VVork :College R15AeTIoNs: Alethian, Commercial Club. EARL Goooizow A icq Gg,-HC. S. H. SJ 4 :Graduation. REACTION: Terror Tribe. Rl'TH IRENE BOSLEY R7 lg B3-I-C. S. H. S. :Vlfork +Satisfaetion. REACTIONS: Zeta, Le Cerele Francais. EN I D VVELLA GALLEY lf., VH Ggrl-C. H. S.:Preparation+ College. REACTION: Omega. ICSTHIER LEONA BISH EH, Lt, B7+Praetiee :Perfect Rr2AeT1oN: Alpha. NYRAY RODGER GARDNER NVQ. R3 G4+Flattery:Good Looks. REACTIONS: La Tertulia Espanola, Presi- dent of La Tertnlia Espanola I-lj, Sgt. at Arms of La Tertulia Espanola 633, Le Cercle Francais, Treasurer of Le Cerele Francais HD, Hi Y., Terror Tribe. J. ALBERT BRUVYN ji, A5 BQ-l-Bulk : Football -I-Fussing. REACTIONSZ Senate, Secretary of Senate l-ll, C Club, President of C Club Hl, ' Masque and Sandal, .Athletic Couneil, Football Q3J, li-lj, Captain of Football to-lj, Annual Staff, Terror Tribe. FLORENCE G. GRIFFITH Fw G2fGg,-1-Flueney +Capability : Attain- ment. 7 REAcTIbNS: Sigma, Honor Society, Treas- urer of Honor Soeiety K,-ll, Pasinapee, l Terror Tribe. X ISADORE ERMA BLACKLOCK A ln. lf-, Bg+Modesty :Style. TREACTIONS: Sigma, Le Cerele Francais, Lever Correspondent of Le Cerele Francais 149, Pasinapee, Terror Tribe, Senior Play. 42 ANNA ALMIRA ELKINS A7 A2 Em-l-C. S. H. S. :Play. REACTION: Theta. JAMES WRIGHT MAHAN HELEN CURTIS I7 W3 lVIf,+C. S. H. S. :Eternal? H3CIO-l-HOnesty+WOrk-1-Work:Reward ES I ' SPING ER DOROTHEA MAE WOOD L L E L L7 S54-C. S. H. S. :C0IIceit. D9 M2 W5-l-C. S. H. S. :Progress. REACTION: Senate. ROSS KEYTE R9 KH-C. S. H. S. :Good Intentions-I-Good Times. REACTIONSZ Senate, President of Senate 133, President Of Class QSJ, junior Farce. OTHA STRAIN WRENN WHITLOW O10 S9-i- Dodge :Overwork. W4 W9-I-C. S. H. S. :Dancing-k ?. REACTIONS: Delphian, C Club, Basket- REACTIONS: Delphian, President of Class ball C35 HD, Football C-lb. 125. ANNA LEE SCHMITT - A1 L2 S9-l-Work:Reward. REACTION: Honor Society. 43 3 n 'Q W 4 4 5 . ,qv Q 0 x x r , X J-1 Q- . 1, '7 - A ' ' ,V . E X-WIZVZQZ ffqffflidf- Kfmfnlffc ,1'!f 171'6 f M uf'l 'f?'?4 ' ' W N I 3 f- V I ' v - - .1 4 fini! , 1-iff, xlj' 'an al' I l'l1 ' ' X L 1 A r Maw ffm LQ3' ZA ' 'J I 'X P Q J ff , f fm .C+ .94j1. gf5 f,f6t47, 'I 1' X ' , f L A 'Lfpg , V ' f X 03 ' 0 -1 . ' K 1 ' ' ' P- , . , ff. Nawfx-A 5 , U If -, . L ,A-a V A kqvyg- ,f-wp, bv- v . rw :2 fWMfW WW fr ,f , , , - X ny, lr n ' - , E ' ' - L 'J . ii! fb, L'-nv Z rl J J s N ?WX1l,, ybf XyL'6V-L4' IKM' 71 'Mx ' ' fp, V MJ!.fiff' 'is ,ll , ll ft.. LL!!! .45 ,Ig U .L 4 , V, A lx, ---4 ,LQ WW . I A - 'J l'I, - '- Lf f L AL I .Nj Nf, ,J 5 -.., 11 xv K7 ' X , - 'N Q 'r X U 1 kj ' A ff 4, qw W ' , 'f ' H ,T ' X ,gt ' S. A M 3 X I JftGfL4'n7lVlyff F f, ' 4- f . Q ef, P gg x ij bfi! Q , Mzlgffh V' 7 f 1 ff, N ,, fy! ,v X - VQXXV, pzcb I Y W 37 6,4 N 7:5 JV, '10 1 N XX .-J f . ,, 527 ! Q a . X X X- 2 C, N XX X. N 2'-fd-rp If . 1 W E lux. - N 1 rw , ,f . 1 7 Wg Q .. Y ff? , Q j?j ' 4 's 0 A 4 X N ' fvfzfflg li Q fp , X? Bw. 5 ' .T ' If x 1 1 . -A an 1 , U VM ., 193' ' N . il! i 0 X M V ' I ,lf .A V - X - if QMQVZ- ' -9 yif2Q?L'if aw ' ,QQ i.ffj?,.I6' fm.,-:AL MM YJ ,,,,,N.,-,,,, Q67 X1-f-fc'l iv--J I ' x ff 4 . f' ' I 'I J JJ . w ,tulip Cfild fl .- ,I f' 39194 WM ar iw Aww WM . ,R , ' - A , f. f , '-' J w D . '0 'C 1 gif .L UL A ZLJ- I, Q f' E I X Al' 'J' , I N K, f ,V lj J! 1,543 ,ymf f,,,fp, LVL-1, , f xi - 7j M4 Il fb ' MA-QC I ,Q f , W! .J . ff - . X . fff,74Q0Q,f! 1 5-Wifi, .. f -ff'-f 'J I '41 M, My aye, M nw ga Wifi ,T . ni I 1 gif' 'H A ss? . N 5 . Ist' l, 4 f., , A N 5' 154 ,, 5 , A vxf- x if Wx., ,W A mf, 2.jffw . . 'Qi' J J l P J i ll SM.. The junior Class In September of the year 1919, one of the cleverest classes in the history of C. S. H. S. came into existence. In its Freshman and Sophomore years our class was gradually coming into prominence. Now the class of '23 has proved itself to be a most renowned group, for originality, scholarship, and athletics. Our class claims the distinction of organizing the first junior Council of C. S. H. S., and we believe that this method of administration has proved to be the most just and efhcient means of carrying on the affairs of the class, because it gives every boy and girl a hand in the government of the class, and it dispenses with class meetings except for the most important transactions. Our council was launched in September and began its successful voyage under the able supervision of Miss Lillian G. Bateman and Mr. Hedblom, who were elected by the class, and the enthusiastic leadership of Mary Clark. Through the second semester our ship continued its voyage with Dexter Hastings, who showed great ability as chairman of the council, at the helm. Green Stockings, which was considered the best junior play in the history of the school, was directed by Mr. E. Benson Sargent with the assistance of Miss Bateman. With regard to athletics, a large per cent. of the members of all our athletic teams this year have been juniors. The year will end with the Junior-Senior Reception which will be a brilliant affair. We must admit that the Seniors outwitted us in the Class Scrap, butf- we'l1 be Seniors next year. 47 ,N-45' v M. K W. , ,1 ,Q p P T55 1' ' Q, if Ls, ,ge- ' 1-1, A - ' film if-IAM, 4+-'whdjg 4. f ke , .., -tae- Gc 'W A ef- f J Y x5 ff if ff? lf l 2 , Z fine f Sophomores HISTORY OF THE CLASS or '2-l. In the fall of 1920 the faculty deported a large group of industrious students to Lincoln. VVe were not only industrious, but also a very enthusiastic crowd, as was made evident when we proved ourselves a great support during the athletic season. The next year we greatly improved the appearance of the Hall of Fame by bringing our illustrious selves back to it. VVe contributed many to both basketball and football teams. Among them were the two Phelps, Clarence Ryan, Iildredge XYaldron, John Murray, Dick Leggit. Then we established tirmly our reputation by winning the interclass basketball series of C. ll. S. Later in the fall we organized by electing two members to the School Council, being represented by Elizabeth Thayer and Frank Layton. Later an executive committee was appointed, consisting of Frank Layton, chairman, Irene Gaylor, Gertrude Law, Richard Donalclson, and Elizabeth Thayer. The party given by our class closed a very successful two years. 49 V111 vi 1 X Q , if V, A L ., ,X k ,. 'mg' i :nw wgwqv 'uf 'fi Lil-f : iii K b ,ff gs- 'kg-,.q.3 f f ti? f':., 5 1 ,fy 5. y Y if, Lincoln Annex Fifteen Freshmen answered the call of the oval pigskin. Out of green material Coach Lee milled out a light, fast, hard-fighting team. A team that will some day wear the Brown and White togs and fight for the glory of C. S. H. S. Like the Terror Team, they went through the season undefeated. A lineup was K. Baily, E. Cox, D. Key, L. Brown, C. Spears, L. Dawson, E. Bruno, F. Portor, F. Wright, T. Ault and A. Reasoner. The team won games from the following schools: Steele, Helen Hunt, Columbia, Deaf and Blind, Liller, and Hill Side. The basketball team' had a very successful season this year. The players were A. LeBeau, E. Wallace, B. Cool, S. Young, V. Long, E. Cox, L. Brown, and A. Gustafson. We lost games to the D. Sz B. School, Terror Second Team, and Taylor's Midgets. We won from Calhan, Fountain High CChampions of El Paso Countyj, Boy's Club, Manitou High, Junior High, and the D. Sz B. School. On the evening of March tenth the Lincoln School presented the play, 'lBeyond the Gate. The play was given in the Auditorium at the Main Building and every seat was taken, the sale of tickets netting the school around a hundred dollars. This will be used to purchase athletic equipment, library books, Victrola records, and any of the many things needed at Lincoln. A great deal of credit is due those who took part in the play, as all the roles were artistically interpreted. The costuming was effective, and the Lincoln Orchestra added the finishing professional touch to the performance. We have our home rooms organized as clubs this year. Every student belongs to the club of his choice. The Dramatic Club proved to be most popular and it was necessary to form two organizations. They promise to entertain us in the auditorium soon. The Debating Club is noted for its alertness. The other clubs are: Creative Chemistry, Home Efficiency, Sci- ence, Picture Club, Latin Club, Story Telling and Pioneer Club. The Student Council was organized early the first semester with the fol- lowing officers and members: Laurence Burnett, president, Theresa Williams, secretary, the members Mildred Broadbent, Forest Cook, Frances Gragg, Hazel Hall, Ralph Giddings, Allen Reasoner, Jamie Ross, Florin Russell and joe Kinkade. The Student Council was organized the second semester with the follow- ing officers and members: Bruce Cool, president, and Ione Cooper secretary, and members, Mary Beeson, Elizabeth Brand, Patricia Cogan, Harriet Eyer, Hazel Hall, Howard Hembrey, Joyce Miller, Mary Mintz, Ernest Phelps and jamie Ross. There are seventeen pieces in the Lincoln Orchestra, counting Mr. Fink, our director. The members and their instruments are as follows: Mr. Fink, violin and clarionetg Winfred Haigler, Pauline Cole, Charles Bybee, Helen McCorkle, Fred Wright, Anna johnson, Gerald Schlessinger and Dorothy Doty, violin, Eugene Weinberger, cello, David Armstrong, flute, Francis Kibler, oboe, Beryl Ritchey, clarionet, Helen Hale, cornetg Laurence Burnett, trombone, Harold Boyce, drums, and Maxine Cotter, piano. The orchestra has made the reputation of being the best school orchestra in the city. MARY BEESON. MIRIAM LARsoN. 51 f 2 EZ' J ' J X U N D Qi My N X snuunl. In She Goes CL j X J X W NU f QA L35 X Th Secr+ of T2JPPlflg5 S ess fNNX fl fm T Warner GOH er f H V 9 lg., 5 D lfj?,NJQ-,gjajf fn- wh Nb? 9 ff X GQ 2 f fa W ee eras JBNCKX fhur Cldeon P . R ll M E Lg. ' J kc QQ 4 O A are X f Inv: f T iw K , . 1 w X? L I , UQ, A ! i. K x-,Q sf, Y, .jigff X! Y' uv , H ,f g A gf 9 1 2655 , f HW' A Q if Q V X J Z 6 G , uct 'N W X 1 X ' W , if N . v ' ' X N Ml v9 Y ' Wy D.4 N. New m 'H ixffx' L-Lf' ' ,-X -4103! Anohler Wfufs Exlnr-fmenf -1 1' ATA k? I0 fx A 1 5 X, , U 2,5 .H tt . 5. ' F! - Ai 1,11 mf. ig ii xx ? X '3f ':-3 f f - 11 '1 4 H I U A I in 4 -, C. uyumnfnn H. km J1. 'FI' ff f B X1 1 f J ,. ,,- 1 A , if 5 if M : B fe -30 f ff 51 1 ' 5, ,L 1 ,- 1 I C J' f, . If Q . AC? A., i ts , 5.5 Q Q, , ' Q Wlmllllllflf A WJ' 52 W il '59 1' i lllllflh V . ll'gE7fx ' V iii, 7 C. fi 9 , fww' iti l I sr if 1 if sell? fl 1 si il ii pi if, 5 ii' ' i f I i lil' ,y ii , 1 X ii i! , pp 1. QW, 1 A ly. 1 Qi W i 3 If 1 ,ii pl. wil l tea' V9 1 li 1 1 lil p lfi 1 .2115 L,1i'H'1 A iq, l i plg .Ly XM ,. Wi it il i nxiixxf-lx I! 1 1 V il. ffyflg i l lffli gg lf f fn Q, Nil, I it :A- i 1- f e 1-A f i it .. , gs ae- . ii . I ii I i'IlIllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllil IIIIIIII ZIII I I lulll IllnlImullnmuumuluuu mhllllllllllllllwlliiliiii iii i til' Alumni History C. S. H. S. has not failed in sending-forth a large quota of boys and girls who Ctrue to the ideals and training which they received herej have succeeded in making enviable records for themselves and have become good and useful citizens of the United States. Every class, from that of 1879 to that of 1921, has had members of whom we all can be proud. It seems as if those who did not hesitate to answer their country's call in 1917 should be mentioned first of all. Jack Avery, William Argo, Merle Bunce, Abe Chayuten, Arthur Conver, Ralph Davis, Dwight Kinney, Clara Orgen, Frank Stratton, Alva Evens, Almond Bate, Harvey Filson, Howard johnson, Donald Holden, Lois Harlan, Edgar Hill, Max Klein, Wm. Weaver, Victor VVallin, Irving Sylvester, Lyle Voorhees, Lee Tillman, and Fred Weiss gave their lives in the World War. We sent 288 soldiers altogether, 5 Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Secretaries and 5 Red Cross Nurses. Those recent alumni who have achieved a line athletic record at C. C. are: Edward Patterson, who is a four-letter man and who was one of four to be admitted to Sigma Delta Psi, the National Fraternity of Athletes, joe Bruce, also a four-letter man, Dwight Nichols, Francis and Edward Ryan, Earl and Lester MacTavish. Some of the popular 'tTigers'l who werein C. S. H.S. class of 1921: Katherine Morton, George Arms, Bethany Reinking, Alex Chapman, Ruth Pollock, Elizabeth Knox, Harry McColl, Edmund Maher, CGlee Clubj Gladys Kinsman, Alice London, Chas. Waddell, Margaret Morris, Leila Taylor, Tom Thomas, Lydia Schilling, Donald Hale, QGlee Clubj Helen Brown, Dorothy Dorlac, Kenneth Ogle, Harold Staff, Cecil McIntosh, Richard Roby, James Flaherty, Naomi Counts, Sarah Mintz, Frank Awes CTreas. freshman class at C. C.D, G. P. Benbow, Brooks Brice, Harriet Stoneham, Margaret Druehl, Russel Deliries, Grace Garvey, Marguerite Conklin, Margaret Smith, james Strachan CGlee Clubl Ruth Hawks, Ruth Roberta Brown, jannette Taggert, Hazel 53 i Taylor, Curtis Haupt, Helen Duff, Charlotte Miller, Le Roy Ellinwood, Clyde Babcock, Stewart Bissell, Fred English, jo. Atkinson and Maudie Moffatt. At Greeley are: Esther McConnell, Grace Harris, Margaret Tucker, and Agnes Davis. Homer E. Britzman, Dell Margaret Collins, Virginia Corlett, Calvin E. Edwards, Richard Elliot, Hubert Glover, Gertrude Grimes, W. B. Hogg, Christine jenkins, N. Elizabeth Kaufman, Esther Law, William McAnlis, Lyle McFarland, Virgil Morris, Mary Newcomb, Harry Peterson, Ellis Spack- man, Emily Spencer, Beth Thomas, Dorothea Toerge, Margaret XVells, Louis Schnell, Robert Poer, Harry Wells, and Francis Scott are attending Boulder University. Russel Ward is at Chicago University and is the editor of the school paper, The Daily Maroon. William Christians is attending this University also. Cora McCorkle is at the University of Southern California. james Duncan is attending the Naval Academy at Annapolis. Hila Van Hook is now at Washburn College, Topeka, Kansas. Martha Hanna, Eula Brewer, and Lucille Cook were married recently. Hazel Kennedy, William Kennedy, and Miles Yoes are attending the State Agricultural College at Fort Collins, and are doing well in their college work there according to the Dean of the Faculty. Elizabeth Fertig is at Goucher College, Baltimore, Maryland. Lena Van Teylingen and Helen Jacobson have been attending the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. - Aileen Aitchison, of the class of 1920, has been studying expression at Sterling, Kansas. She will graduate from her course this June. Christine Miller, 1920, and Ruth Little, 1920, have been pledged by Con- temporary Society at C. C. Doris Haymes and Faye Lilley are members of Theta Alpha Phi, the national dramatic fraternity. They are attending Colorado College. George Gallagher, at the Golden School of Mines has been making a very creditable record. Frank Waters, '21, has a position on the staff of the Tiger, the C. C. paper. Mary Clegg Owen has been chosen president of Minerva at Colorado College and is also a Phi Beta Kappa. Ruth Staff, a junior at C. C. has also won the Phi Beta Kappa key. Gail and Elizabeth Burnett are earning honor grades at Randolph Macon. Milton Knowles will graduate this year from Princeton as an M. D. Jean Strang, '20, has been specializing in music. There are many more who have been doing most interesting and worth- while things. It is impossible to write about them all. However, our alumni will inspire every one of us in the Class of '22 to greater effort. We can ask no more than to succeed as well as they. CHRISTINA CRANE. 54 N , ..1 ,NA - .' I H: 'W I 1 I UQ HIM I + M2 4 HHH M Athletics About C. S. H. S. One of the things about C. S. H. S. of which everyone connected with the High School is justly proud, is her athletic record. There is probably no school anywhere which can look back over such a string of victories as C. S. H. S. can boast. They have won Championship after Championship, although this is merely incidental in an attempt to bring out the best there is in Athletics. The record of this year was more nearly normal than the past few years. By the co-operation of the student body,the support of every man on the team, and the leadership of a competent Coach, we were able to win the Champion- ship of Colorado and W'yoming and to play for the Rocky lylountain Champion- ship at Salt Lake. Coach Kline's second year here was more successful, if possible, than his first, when he established almost enviable record by producing a championship team from purely green material. Although not so fortunate in Basketball a good showing was made. The Terrors were able to enter the Boulder Tournament which is the Basketball classic of Colorado, but on account of unfortunate circumstances were unable to win the State Championship, losing to a team that they had previously beaten. It is too early to predict anything deiinite about Track. There is a quantity of good-looking new material out and Coach Kline can be relied upon to get the most possible from it. Several meets are in sight for the thinly clads. 56 Football Games for Season of l92l CENTENNIAL-Terrors 31, Centennial 0. The first game of the season was against Centennial High school of Pueblo. The Terrors showed good form in following the ball and in team work. Be- cause of this, several Centennial fumbles were converted into touchdowns. The work of Bevan and Lebeau was the outstanding feature of the game. Bevan started a whirlwind defensive game that was impaired only by injuries later in the season. The tackling of Art Lebeau was almost superhuman for so small a fellow. He was injured later and wasn't able to finish the season. He is only a freshman and looks good for next year. CENTENNIAL-Terrors 18, Centennial 6. The following Saturday the Terrors journeyed to Pueblo for a return game with the Bulldogs. The game was slow, Warner's dropkicking being the only pleasing feature from the Terror standpoint. Centennial was able to cross the Terror goal line, a feat accomplished by no other team in the state this season. WEST DENVER4Terrors 0, West Denver 0. This was the only blot on the good record of the Terrors and one of the raggedest played games of the season. This is easily accounted for, however, by the absence of four of the regulars. West had a good back in Titley, who, but for an unfortunate stumble, would have made the game a West victory. Neither team showed any offensive or defensive ability. CENTRAL-Terrors 31, Central 0. A week later the Brown and White met the Central High School at Pueblo. After a week of hard work on the part of Coach Kline a very presentable grid machine was able to take the field against Central. The Terrors uncovered a passing game that baffled their opponents and kept them on the defensive during the entire game. Captain Brown showed marked ability atreceiving the tosses from Allen, completing all attempts except one. Fat Phelps was back in the game after being out on account of injury, and played a good game. EAST DENVER-Terrors 21, East Denver 0. After two weeks of rest came the big game with East Denver, Roscoe Hill's Angels. The angels were coached by Carl Sweiger, an old C. C. star, and were touted as the strongest team that has represented East Denver for several years. The first score came early in the first quarter after Chub Ryan, by a brilliant 65 yard return of a punt brought the ball within 15 yards of East's goal. After line plunges by Bevan and Phelps, Captain Brown went across for the marker. The rest of the game belonged to the Terrors. Brilliant blocking and tackling, team work and Terror fight were the main factors of victory. MANUAL TRAINING HIGH-Terrors 72, Manual O. Manual Training High of Denver was the next victim of the Brown and VVhite. The game proved to be a good practice tilt for the locals. Every man on the squad got a chance and the second string men were able to score on the invaders in the last period. The Manual team played an entirely defensive game. They received the ball and kicked to the Terrors who received and marched down the field for a touchdown. A new dropkicker was discovered in Eddie Allen who booted a drop from the 52-yard line. 57 fa A yy..--,. ,a.Q-mid CHEYENNE, WYO.4Terrors 45, Cheyenne O. The Cheyenne invaders were an easy mark for the Brown and White. The Terrors were the aggressors from the first, scoring in the first five minutes, a time record which they duplicated again and again. The victory gave them a strong claim to the Wyoming title as the Cheyenne team had only been beaten by a score of 14 to 7. Honnen did some good work in the line. Strain also showed to advantage, playing a strong defensive game. LAMAR-Terrors 10, Lamar 0. By humbling the Lamar team l'O to 0, the Terrors won the right to meet Longmont for the State title. The game was a hard fought battle on a muddy field. Team work finally triumphed for the Terrors, however. Bevan stepped through right tackle for a touchdown and Warner booted a dropkick for the total score of the game. LONGMONT4Terrors 16, Longmont 0. Longmont, the Northern championship winner, was one of the strongest teams the Terrors met this year. The game was a hard fought affair and it took all the Terrors has to come off the field victors. A great deal of credit goes to Warner and Eddie Allen. Warner as usual contributed by dropkicks, making three. The other points were furnished by Allen who showed great ability at hitting the line and in getting away some beautiful punts which did much toward keeping the opponents away from the Terror goal. Leggett played one of the best games of the season, outplaying his opponent who had been named all state center. Captain Brown was back in the game after being out two weeks on account of injury. The greatest moment of the game came when the Terrors held on the one yard line. This victory gave the Terrors the right to play Salt Lake for the Rocky Mountain championship. SALT LAKE-Terrors 0, Salt Lake 28. November 30, Coach Kline's charges started for Salt Lake to play the Leopards. Although the game was a defeat for the Terrors, they were given a wonderful reception by the Salt Lake people and received comments galore praising their gameness and fighting spirit. They were outweighed almost fifteen pounds to the man. It wasa wonderful educational trip and one that seldom falls to the lot of a high school team anywhere. It also established a friendly spirit of rivalry between two high class schools, which all Terrors hope will be continued. I 59 L 5 ', Football ORVILLE ELGIN, half-back. Dutch came from Iowa. He showed a great deal of pluck by working and going to school. He was fast but a hard hitter. Captain AL BROWN led his team to a most successful State Championship. Al was one of the best captains that a Terror Team ever had. His great leadership and fighting spirit stamped him by far the best tackle in the State. AL BEVAN, half-back. As captain elect, Bevan should be a success. Altho not much of a talker he has a business like way which, if followed by thc team, will leave no doubt as to the outcome. He is a speedy little half and one of the most deadly tacklers in the state. DAN WARNER, left half. Dan was without a doubt one of the best all around halves in the state. He was a good passer, good around the ends or through the line, and was one of the best high school drop-kickers in -the state. He graduates, and his place will be mighty hard to fill. High score man. FOREST PHELPS, fullback. This husky lad was a veritable battering ram. He was also good around the ends besides being a very dependable punter. Should be a strong man for next year. GLEN RYAN, quarter. Chubby proved to be the needed cog for a good team. He was a good general and level headed as well, but his ability did not end here. As a safety man he couldn't be beaten, and end runs were his specialty. FIELD PHELPS, end. Little Phelps made good at the right wing and proved to be a lighter thru and thru. His offensive game was the strongest and many times was responsible for large holes in the opposing line. He will be back. OTHA STRAIN, end. Rather small but was large for his size. Otha started at quarter but was afterward shifted to end where he developed into a good defensive end. His defensive strength lay in getting them before they started. HUGH HONNEN, tackle. Hugh started out at guard but soon convinced the coach that he was good for something better. After being shifted to tackle, the lanky lad put up a good game. Will be on deck for next season. DICK LEGGET, center. Only a freshman but the best center in the state. Fight is his middle name. He should be heard from next year. JOHN MURRAY, guard. john was the comedian of the team but at the same time this fdid not hinder his doing some mighty good work. The big boy will be back and should develop wonderfully next year. VVYAN COOL, guard. Cool put up the most wonderful showing of all, considering his handicap. He started late but finished as a regular. EDDIE ALLEN, sub half. Eddie was the best passer and punter on the team. He wasnlt impossible as a back-field performer, either, as he demonstrated in the Longmont game. - RAY RYAN, guard. Another one. Blacksmith came back from his wander- ings to assist in the guard position. Difficulty over ineligibility kept him out during most of the season. CLARENCE RYAN, sub end. And still another. Fifty was always full of pep and fight and could be depended upon to give his best. He has two stripes and will be back to get another. DON LONG, sub end. Don was fast and dependable. Will be ready to do great things next year. ZEKE LONG, sub half. .Zeke was a hard hitter with lots of speed. He was also able to take an endposition. He looks good for next year. LOUIS DICK, sub center. Dick was assistant pivot man and though he was not as brilliant as some he showed a mighty line spirit. ED AULD, sub guard. Ed was a hard worker and deserves a great deal of credit. Unavoidable injuries held him back. MELVIN HYMAs, sub guard. Hiram came in from the farm to show the boys how it was done. He is husky and strong, will speak for himself next year. 61 N e 2 AL. BEVAN Captailz-I ' ' 6 at Ifuotball i i 5 W: DAN W ARNER Ca piain Basket Ball , Q -2,57 ' 2 , J S- W NIACGRUDER Izzlvrrirwing a Freshman 64 DAN WARNER, Center. Dan played a steady game all season and proved to be an ideal captain. He made all State Center. He graduates. FORREST PHELPS, Guard. Fat was one of the best guards in high school basketball. He was always on the job and hit them hard. Captain elect for next year. Has two stripes. . GLEN RYAN, Forward. Chub was the Hoor man for the Brown and White and was also a good shot. Chub has played three years. GENE BROYLES, Forward. Gene was the sharpshooter of the team. He shot them from all angles. Was injured part of the season. He graduates. FIELD PHELPS, Center. Field showed up well this year. He will be one of the best men for next year. Was a good jumper and a sure shot. CLARENCE RYAN, Guard. 'LFifty finished strong. Rather small but full of fight. When he couldnlt run any longer he could still yell, HEY! Back next year. HAROLD WINTERS, Guard. Skinney played a mighty steady game at guard and center. He seemed to play both ends of the floor at once. He graduates. OTHA STRAIN, Forward. Otha was the hardest floor worker on the team. He played his position well. Will not be back. ELDRIDGE WALDRON, Forward. Archie was fast and played a good game. He is only a sophomore and should win some fame before he graduates. HARLEY REMINGTON, Guard. The big boy was game and a good tighter. He showed some class in Boulder. He should be a valuable man next year. 65 The Terrors started the season by making a tour of the Arkansas Valley during the Christmas holidays. Strict training was not in order as yet, but the Terrors showed good early season form, and were able to collect the long end of the score in all of the games played. TRINIDAD. Trinidad was the first Terror victim. In a rather hard- fought game they were able to win from the miners 40 to 30. Captain Warner started the season by playing a stellar game. LA -IUNTA. The next night the Brown and VVhite hoopsters tangled with La junta, scoring 65 points to their opponents' 8. La junta was only able to connect with three field goals, showing the strength of the Terror's defense. Broyles sprained his ankle in the fore part of the game and was out of the going for three games. This weakened the Terror offense considerably. ROCKY FORD. Rocky Ford fell before the Terrors the following night in a rough game. Most of the Melon Pickers' points were made on free throws. The Phelps brothers showed class in this game. Score, 31 to 15. WEST DENVER. The first home game was against West Denver. The Terrors were going good and the Cowboys hardly made a showing. Every- one on the team showed up to good advantage. Broyles was out on account of the bad ankle received in the La junta game. Titley was the best performer on the invaders' team, and his guarding was all that saved the Denver team from being smothered. Score 30 to 4. WHEATRIDGE. In mid-week, Wednesday, january 11, our ancient enemy, Wheatridge, went down to defeat by a score of 26 to 14. The victory was well earned, however, and the visitors were dangerous from start to finish, especially in the first half. The Brown and White team gave a good exhibition of floor work showing an improvement over the West Denver game. Warner was high score man. Chub Ryan was strong on floor work and Forrest Phelps did much damage on the guarding end. Towner and Glendon were the strong men for the Suburban team. TRINIDAD. The Trinidad engagement was a thriller, the Terrors just barely nosing out their competitors by a 33 to 28 score. The home lads were not up to form and after seemingly having tucked the fame safely away in the first half, they attempted to loaf the last period. But Trinidad would not have it that way and brought the score uncomfortably close. A miss is as good as a mile, and the scare proved to be a good lesson. MANUAL. Manual, as usual, was easy meat for the Terrors from Terrorville. They showed very little class and the game was slow. The entire Terror squad was given a chance and even then the Bricklayers failed to make any headway. Score 36 to 12. SALT LAKE. The Salt Lake game was an event in the school calendar. The defeat that the Terrors received at the hands of the Leopards in football was still fresh in the minds of the team and the school. Showing the best form and team work of the season, the Terrors were able to forge ahead early in the game and hold the lead the entire game, although the Leopards were dangerous at all times. Broyles was high score man and played a brilliant game. He had an able competitor, however, in Beers of the Salt Lake team. Beers was quarterback in the football team and was a mighty fast man in both positions. The Terrors remembered the good treatment accorded them in Salt Lake and everything was done to show the visitors a good time while they were here. Sight-seeing trips and entertainments were arranged in their honor. At the close of the game the score-board showed 38-20. NORTH DENVER North Denver was the next to take defeat at the hands of the Terrors. This was a one-sided game all in favor of the Brown and White. The Terrors showed good form in all departments of the game and did exceptionally well for so soon after the hard Salt Lake game. Broyles was high score man and played a stellar game. The final score was 38-11. 67 LINCOLN BASKET BALI LA JUNTA. The second engagement of the season with La Junta was true to form. The Terrors took the long end of the score by a large margin. ln fact, everything was in favor of the locals. Every man on the squad, 17 to be exact, got into the scrimmage. Even then the Southerners were unable to break into the scoring column. Field Phelps was high score man by 22 points, only playing the first half. These easy games probably paved the way for the disaster which was to follow. The Terrors won by the appalling score Of 63-3. SOUTH DENVER. The upset of the season came when the Terrors met the South Denver Rebels. The guarding of the Angels under the basket was faultless and long shots from the floor rimmed the basket for the Terrors and failed to tally. If only they could have broken the jinx on long shots they might have been able to draw the guards out and get under the basket. where they were especially strong. Broyles, the only man who could be de- pended upon to make the long shots was out with a bad ankle. The Rebels five-man defense seemed to work to perfection against the Terrors, although they had met and successfully broken it before in the season. Final score was 16-ll. GREELEY. Greeley fell before the Terrors in a whirlwind game February 21. The victory retaliated somewhat for the defeat given the Terrors last year in football. The Spud Diggers were completely outclassed and outplayed except in the first few minutes of play when they gave the Terrors a close run. The guarding of Phelps stood out over the other good points of the game. The final score was 38 to 17. i1l,-li-1 The Boulder Tournament The Terrors entered the Boulder Tournament after a long rest which made their supporters rather skeptical as to the outcome. The first game showed Terror class but in the harderigames which followed, the team was unable to hold its own and was defeated by two strong teams, Centennial of Pueblo, and Greeley High. FOVVLER. The first game with Fowler was won by the Terrors by a 36-13 score. The game was opened by Broyles' spectacular feat-of shooting five baskets in succession. Broyles was then taken out to rest for the harder games to follow, but the shift in the team did not slow down the game. Many fouls were called by referee Dana. Fat Phelps was taken out on account of four personal fouls after playing a fast and furious game. GREELEY. The next game was played with the Greeley team which had been defeated by the Terrors earlier in the season. For this reason the team was over-confident. The Greeley team played a splendid game. The Terror team work was completely demoralized by james of Greeley who could shoot from any position on the floor. It was a hard defeat to take but the Potato Diggers won by a 33 to 20 score. YUMA. The Yuma game did not bring out much iight. Yuma led in the first half. In the second half Broyles was sent in and helped to even up the score, the game closing with a score of 29-20 in favor of the Terrors. CENTENNIAL. The second defeat was taken at the hands of the Terrors, old rivaleCentennial of Pueblo. Pueblo showed splendid form, especially in passing, taking the lead from the first and holding it throughout the game. The Terrors were unable to connect with the basket and their team work was ragged. The final score was 34-17. GUNNISON. Greeley having won from Centennial, the final game of the tournament was played between the Terrors and Gunnison to decide third place. The Terrors were still out of form but were able to win by a score of 46-31. 69 d 1 Q K i , .Q . 4 'wma Mm 'nn- LM i A 1 i -- yg, Wuww 6 'R y . X K .ia Q X5 X , x Q ..., Q 1 Tennis Maurice Moseley deserves great credit for having won the third leg of the cup presented for the Tennis Championship of the state, making it the permanent possession of C. S. H. S. Maurice also won last year and so has a two-thirds interest in the cup. He was also presented with an individual cup. The particulars of the tournament held at the Colorado Golf Club courts follow: PRELIMINARIES Simpson of Pueblo defeated Hughes of Florence. Brown of Fort Morgan defaulted to Oldfield of Cheyenne. Moseley, C. S. H. S., defeated Peterson of Manual. Bosworth of East Denver defeated Weaver of Greeley. SEMIWFINALS Oldfield defeated Simpson. Moseley defeated Bosworth. FINALS Moseley defeated Oldfield: 6-2, 7-5, 7-5. 71 1 2 w T3 Alpha Kappa DEAR BoosTERs or C. S. H. I am sure that every one in High X X A School, and also those who have left us Q will he glad to know the activities of X X Alpha. Although Alpha is listed among the oldest of the girls' societies. having been in existence for nineteen long years, she certainly has not lost her pep. Her social calendar has been bub- bling over with good times. Among these was the Alpha-Omega open house for Zeta and Sigma, from which noone went away downhearted. This joyful reception was returned when Zeta and Sigma entertained Alpha and Omega. Alpha also gave a spread in honor of her new members. This was preceded by a delightful program. The mothers of the Alpha girls were entertained by them during the last semester. A peppy program was given, carried out on the May day order. As one can readily see, with all the hikes, parties, spreads, etc., Alpha has not been sleeping. But she has other interests besides social ones, one of which is the supporting of a war orphan in France. The activities of the members of Alpha are not all confined to Alpha. With some representatives in the Dramatic Club, the Greenwich Villagers, Weekly and Annual Lever Staffs, and French and Spanish Clubs, she surely supported the school in every respect. Too much credit cannot be given to the faithful officers and supervisors. Phyllis Tarr and Louise Danks have made Alpha what it has been this year. But this could not have been possible without the aid of Miss Patterson and Miss Brooker. S ..I' OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER PHYLLIS 'PARR ...... ,.., P resident. , , ..... LOUISE DANKs OLIVE BULLARD, . . . . , I ice-Premlcrzt. . . , . .VIVIAN JOHNSON HELEN WALLACE .... . . .Secrelary . . ..,... HELEN PADI? MARIE WoRLEY. . . ....... Treasurer ..... , . , DOROTHY RUssELL SARAH GILBERG. . . .,.. Lewr Cvrrcspumlerzt. . . . . ELEANOR BULLOCK Sergeant-al-.lrms .... ..... L ols H.ARTER FACULTY SUPERVISORS Miss PATTERSON Miss P.rxTTERsoN Miss REAMs Miss BROOKER T5 I 5 I ,nl , gf! .'!f ff S Su ' T Gigi:-'0fPv'4'N ' ix A, X Wg3? rf4es. ef x se. 'sf - K ' -av-ask Lnfdt- AD I E K if A ,Q as ,N ' f ' , , A, I 7 J-are T .. W' it In . .aff - df X ii .ae I ai. if 1 -, 1 A e XII, g .,V,-ef.,-fffJ -1- Z N . ., 0, L ff f ' Q ' 9 .?b.nur'.A ' , 'Xxx . si' ' 2,3 1 I, ,NN nfl- ' ' . ,gasp J '- ' , i y rrfifv- -' - . .9 l V- ,L 4 -Aon. A 'X 5- X l igzgjzva ,,EN., ' i I X X- A v Wfifvo-3 L' t Eff! . 1 y W, as X - . ' ' ' I v .1 13 r WWW 'I' E ,' ,N-,cw X W, ' A . , E3 if 4.121 .amff Ar K: 1 X 4 2 fA f ' 1 - 4 . 'i Q L A :JXQ A 'T k' , 4 , 1 o . A f -'W3l1 1- ff , 5' 1A,.J,,,,rs.-.J:SjCfi'7f 'vw ' -4 If T QBPX gg ? at E! ,xlxi -Z-f ,Ju-J 4 P 'IA L, Q CD -sa... J-23 oo O 2, , -C 1- L3 ' Ll Zeta History The Zeta Literary Society, organized in 1903. has for nineteen years been active in everything connected with the growth and high standing of C. S. H. S. This year Zeta, under the careful and able supervision of Miss Dorothy Gilfillan and Mrs. Florence Bartlet, has not only maintained this high standing but has won the distinction of ranking first in scholarship among all other societies in high school except Ilonor Society, thus giving Zeta an extra repf resentative on the student council. Zeta furnished the one representative of C. S. ll. S. at Fort Collins for the dedication of the VVoman's Building, and all three of the representatives to the State Editors conference at Boulder. Zeta's Senior girls took the leads in last year's junior Farce and three of our Juniors are in this year's Junior Farce. Always active in athletics, the Zeta girls won the inter- society basketball tournament. The society stands solidly back of the boyis athletics, having the honor of having sold the most season tickets. Zeta, while leading in all educational and athletic events, has found time to do her part in a social way, also her programs this year have been especiallv interesting, consisting of detail work along literary, artistic, dancing, and posing lines. Zeta has entertained more this year than in years past, having entertained the new members with an elaborate banquet, While late this year Zeta gave a most impressive open-house, and her annual lNIother's Day proved in every way a perfect success, thus ending Zeta's social entertainments of the school year in the most pleasing manner. FACULTY SU PICRYISC DRS Miss G11.1fn.1.AN MRs. BARTLIETT OFFICERS CHENEVIISVE HUBER ,... .,... P residmz! ,.... ..... E LOISE VAN D1EsT IUOROTHY CHAMBERS. . , . . l'irc-Presidvzzt. , . . . NIARJORIE HARRISKJN ELOISE VAN D1EsT. . . ..... Secretary. . . ..... lV.lARGARI2T OSBORN BURDINE ECKE .... ....., Y 'reasurcr ............. GENEVIEVE HUBER TTARRIET BRADY .,.. , 1.4'zw ci0?'?'6'Sf70IIf1Jf'IZl' ..,, .fiERTRUDE BREWINGTON NIARGARET USBORN, . . ..,. S 'vrgwant-at-.1rms ,.,. .... C ARLITA XVETHERELI, 77 Y 'gig di J Sigma Kappa Since Sigma Kappa was organized iu 1912, forming the fourth chapter of Era, it gl , 4 g has developed and grown into tl1e splendid, . M progressive society it is. Sigma has always A M had a reputation for originality and pep. 'I The annals of our history are ornamentecl ' with bright spots of excitement and enthua siasm the annual SigmafZeta baseball games, the times when our revered alumnae used to march into the Aud wearing blue , and gold caps and serenading the school with A , n ukuleles, and those wonderful spreads! T However, our present history has not been neglected. This year, after a period of adjusting ourselves to the new society regu- lations, we progressed in the usual style. Last fall the Sigmites took an abundance of good things to eat and had a breakfast hike But that was a mere starter! in North Cheyenne Canyon. Then there was a party for initiates. This year we have had another spread, a hike, t11e alumnae day party, the openahouse given by Sigma and Zeta for Alpha, Omega and Theta, and an enjoyable initiation party given at the house of a member. Yet we are not frivolous, if we do have good times. XYe have a serious and intellectual side to our lives. XYC have sold tickets for athletics, have earned money for the Commercial Club, and have otherwise conducted ourselves like the loyal Terrors we are. As for intellectualityef aside from high scholastic standing, we have striven after greater knowledge of music, literature, and art, which, together with greater friendliness between girls, forms the principle aim of the literary so- cieties. 1921 DORf.1'lAlIX' XVILLIAMSUN. . . HELEN CLILDEA ,...... KI.-XRKQARIYI' PoLEv. . BIILIJRED BERT., . HELEN CRANE.. . . Miss DAwEs Mlss LEE 79 OFFICERS .P1'4'.vizlf'11l. . . l'ifc'-l'1'f'.vidf'11!. , , . . .Sf1'1'eft11'y, . . . . TI'l'tI.VlH'r'I'. . . . . l.e1'c'r fl0l'I'l'Xf70IIfjl'lIf SUPERV ISORS 1922 . , . .RUBY NVILT .. . . .NORA L1sEN1zv . , . IQTHEL 3ICK.XRRI2I, . . .... TNI.-XRION LAND . .IJOLLY T.-xvuok Miss LEE Miss SMVPH 1 80 I 6 T vlw 0 Q fr 1 4,231.22 Theta Chi A quiet, unassuming Freshman approached one of the school's dignihed Seniors and said, I've heard rumors that there is a new society in this school. Is this true? Tl1e sophisticated Senior, trying not to appear over-enthusiastic, replied, Yes, that is so. You probably are thinking of Theta Chi, the new girls' organization. From what I hear they're up and coming. Of course, he added hastily, I don't know much about girls' societies, but the girls Iknuw are interested. Thus all about the school one hears remarks on our new society, Theta Chi. .Xbashed Freshmen, noisy Sophs, proud juniors and dignified Seniors, all are talking about Theta. Theta Chi was just organized this semester. VVe are young but we have glimpsed a promising future. Opportunities have not been many as yet to demonstrate to the High School Theta's ability. Yet we hope that during the coming year, we shall be able to carry out our plans. Under the very able leadership of Beatrice Prior, we are sure we can attain our hopes. BIiss Dear- ing and Ivliss Parsons of the faculty are both an honor and an inspiration to our society, and both have the initiative to make Theta that which we are all hoping it will be. OFFICERS Pl'l'SfllIl'llf ...,. . .REATRICE I'R1oR Vim' 1Jl't'SI'll7Ullf. . ...... Guxnvs HUMM .S'm'rf'Ifzry .,... , . . KIARY JANE RoUsE TI'l'lIXZH'l'l' ......,... ,,.. I NEZ RUBHART l.4't'er Cl0l'7'USfJtIIItIl!'llf. . . . .IEOLDIIE IVARREN 81 ...alia ' ,fgghbiky ii , A Omega Literary Society g The Omega girls have had a really worth while year, even though, owing to the regulation of the different societies, active work was not possible until November. Since that time, events have followed in rapid succession, until the close of the year finds the calendar finished on time. The initiation at Lavely's was a brilliant event of November. The Omega car in the Terror day parade was one of the loveliest, although all were especially attractive. Mother's Day was another attractive event during the first semester and was very much enjoyed by the girls and their mothers. January 13th, the Omega and Alpha Open House was the feature of the social calendar. In compliment to the pledges, Omega gave a delightful tea at the Elizabeth Inn, February 24. The pleasure of the occasion was increased by a programme, after which jeweled pins were given to the two supervisors, Miss Sproul and Miss Avery. The Labor Day of the commercial department was contributed to by Omega. A generous sum was raised from a candy sale conducted by members of the society. A jolly St. Patricks party was the feature for March. It was given at the home of Marian Truby. Also a donation to the associated charities was made in March. The Omega girls, as always, have been at the front in all school activities'- it is C. S. H. S. first, then Omega. FIRST SEMEsTER OFFICERS MARGARET KNOWI.ES .... . ..,. President. . . BERNICE BAYLIS ..,, MILDRED SANsoN. . . MARY PATTERsoN. . . LUELLA KIER ....,. MARIE AwEs .... Miss Miss SPROUL 83 Vice-P1'esi11'e1zt ..,, . . ....... Secretary ...... . . Treasurer ....... . . . . . . ,Letter Correspomient. . . . . . .Sergeant-Qf-.Vlrms. . , , i SUPERVISORS TAYLOR Miss SECOND SEMESTER . . .MARY PATTERSON , , . .IRENE SELECMAN .,.....MELVA SHADY Ii.-XTHERYNE GWILLYM , , . . .BERNICE BAY1.1s . . GLIADYS THEOBOLD AVERY Miss SPROUL 84 y Aleflppian OFFICERS 1921 1922 E. PIAGUS .... ..,. I 'rcsideazt ....,.. ..,. R . HEMBREY R. ORMES ...... . . . I'z'fv-President . . . .K. DAVIDSON H. NEWSOME ,,,.4 ...,,... . Smrretary .,.,., .... I J. BROOKS G. WHITE ....,. ..,4.,.. Y 'rcasznw' ........ . . ,M. RYAN K. DAVIDSON ..., ,,.. L ever Correspandcnt. , . ,.,.. C. FRITTs A. KROFCHECK. . . . , .Sergeant-at-glrmx .... .... G . GUTHRIE SUPERVISORS MR. SHUTTS ...... ,,.....II.........., ...... 1X 1 R. SHUTTs MR. PECKHAM .... .............,... .... M R . PECKHAM MEMBERS K. Davidson P. Brooks lvl. Ryan VV. Dawson M. Conners G. White J. Leften A. Drennan F. Sparkman A. Krofcheck B. Foster M. Lackey R. Hembrey B. Duniway G. Baggs L. Lehman C. Fritts H. VVilson W. Malsbury O. Fry A. Waldron E. McCaughey G. Guthrie H. Robb H. Newsome E. Harmon C. Ebert R. Ormes F. Hull P. Haun L. Taber W. Lamberson H. Williams L. Windolph G. Louderback L. Shepard Alethian is just finishing its most successful year. The Hrst semester, with Ed. Hagus as president, was filled with snappy meetings and good times. The salient event of the term was the Ufussing partym to the Burns and then to McRae's. The second semester, under the leadership of Ray Hembrey, has surpassed all previous ones. An unusual amount of pep and enthusiasm has been evi- dent in the starting of new enterprises. An all-Alethian orchestra has been formed. Elaborate preparations were made for the Alethian open-house given April 21, which was the biggest event in the history of the society, and the most successful. During the year, the literary side of the activities has by no means been neglected. There has been a debate at almost every meeting, and many interesting speeches have been made, both by tlIe members and supervisors. Along with all the activities in the society, Alethian has supported all school activities with true Terror spirit. Alethian has great plans for tl1e future, and its remarkable progress of the past year is sure to continue. 85 Delphian Literary Society The Delphian Literary Society, an offspring of Delphi, the oldest boys' society in school, was founded in 1909. It was organized foi the purpose of furthering literary activities, debating, high scholarship and all other forms of activities benehcial to the school. It is with pride that we may truthfully say that all these high standards have been upheld, and the society continues a real factor in the life of the school. The society as a whole has supported every school activity, while its individual members have held many positions of importance in the school. This year more than half of the football and basketball teams were Delphians, as were the student managers of most branches of athletics. The presidents of the senior and junior classes as well as the president of the school council, and a president of the honor society were all Delphians. These are only a few of the numerous activities participated in by Delphians. The first semester proved to be a very active one for the society under the leadership of the following ofiicers: President, BoB NEWMAN, Vice-President, CHUB RYAN, Secretary, MALCOMB PUTTYQ Treasurer, CLARE THOMAS, Lever Correspondent, BoB SPURGEON. During the fall, the members of the society, with their girl friends, enjoyed a hike up,Bear Creek Canon. Later came a stage party and an Alumni dance, both of which affairs contributed greatly toward making the first semester an overwhelming success. With the coming of the second semester, the following ofiicers were chosen: President, CLARE 'IQHOMASQ Vice-President, BoB SPURoEoNg Secretary, MALCOMB PUTTY, Treasurer, ED AULD, Lever Correspondent C.FR1TcH1,E. Under their guidance Delphian finished what is undoubtedly the most successful year of its history. For several years it has been the custom of the society to extend an invitation to the whole school to attend its annual open house, an event which has become a tradition in the school. This year's open house took the form of a vaudeville, with refreshments served in a most unique style, to cap the climax. All that need be said of the affair is that it was a typical Delphian affair, and one of the best open houses ever staged in Colo- rado Springs High School. One of the most exciting events of the year, not only to the society, but also to the school at large, is the annual Senate-Delphian debate. This year the subject chosen was, Resolved: That the closed shop is justifiable. Del- phian upheld the affirmative. After the debate both societies enjoyed hikes-A Delphian going to Bruin Inn. ' As a fitting climax to the most successful year the society has ever had, the annual Delphian banquet was held and the choice of officers for the ensuing year made. FACULTY MEMBERS Cecil Graves R. M. Grindle Floyd Maxwell i MEMBERS . Anderson, L. Gilmore, D. Oldfield, C. Sharp, A. Auld, E. Hastings, D. Otis, T. Spurgeon, R. Beck, R. Hupp, L. Philips, R. Strain, O. Brown, C. Jamieson, N. Preston, J. Stockdale, H. Bryant, M. jones, R. Putty, M. Thomas, C. Dern, G. Lindas, J. Rader, L. Walden, A. Dick, L. Mathis, L. Rhodes, T. Walton, R. Estill, T. Murray, J. Ryan, C. Wells, W. Fritchle, C. Newcomb, T. Ryan, G. White, H. Gerety, A. Newman, R. Ryan, R. Zieger, C. 87 FIRST SEMESTER Ross KEYTE ....... FRANK STRACHAN. . . MAURICE MosELEv. EUGENE BRovLEs. . . NICHOLAS KING. . , ALBERT BROWN. . . Senate History OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER . ........P1'es'ident. . . .. . . . . .DANIEL WARNER . . . . ViC6-P1'6Sit1'4'Ill. . . . . . . . . . .JACK YATES . , . . .ALBERT BROWN . , .EUGENE BROYLES . . . .NICHOLAS KING . . . .FORREST PHELPS . . .... Secretary .,... . . ......Treasz1rer....... . . . .Lever C0rr'e.s'p0ndent. . . . .....Sergeant-at-.fl1'ms. . .. SUPERVISORS H. C. REHM R. E. LEE W. R. WILLIS L. M. HUNT MEMBERS A Allen, E. Hymas, M. Phelps, F. Warner, D. Beven, A. jackson, M. Phelps, F. Warner, F. Brown, A. King, N. Pfost, J. Wheeler, C. Broyles, G. Mahncke, W. Remington, H. Winters, H. Dennis, VV. Metzler, C. Russell, C. Yates, F. Goss, S. Miller, J. Speer, E. Yates, J. Holland, J. Moseley, R. Strachan, F. Hopkins, J. Neff, J. Topping, C. Honnen, H. Peyser, W. Waldron, A. The Senate Literary Society was Organized by W. C. McCoy in the fall of 1909 with the object of encouraging debating, oratory, and parliamentary drill. During its thirteen years of existence, it has accomplished great things, and has become an important institution in C. S. H. S. The annual debate between the Senate and the Delphian Literary Society has become one of the most famous traditions of school lifeg in these debates the Senate has won eight times and the Delphian three times. As usual the Senate is represented in every phase of student activities this year, and the old Senate traditions and spirit have bloomed even more brilliantly than in the past. The three captains of Terror major athletics-foot ball, basketball, and trackgwere chosen from the Senate. The manager of basketball, the president of C Club, the two presidents of Terror Tribe,and the leading man of the junior Farce were Senators. Turning to the literary side we find Senators as the editor of the weekly Lever and assistant editor of the annual Lever. When this page went to piint, the Senate was preparing for the twelfth annual debate with the Delphiang and undoubtedly the Boys' Declamation Contest will also be well represented from the society. Among the social events of note the annual Senate Open House, held February the 4th, deserves special mention. It was a memorable event on the Terror 1922 social calendar. This is but a brief history of Senate. As for the excellent meetings, the fellowship, and the inspiring Senate spirit-the best parts of Senate- they can not be expressed on paper. We only hope that the future of Senate will be as brilliant as her past-her symbol standing always for the highest and best. N. H. K. 89 1 School Council FACULTY MEMBERS MR. W. S. ROE MIss LILLIAN JOHNSON MR. L. D. VoTAw MR. W. R. WILLIS OFFICERS President ....... ........... . . .ROBERT SPURGEON Vice-President ,... .... B EATRICE PRIOR Secretary ............ .... H ARRIET BRADY Lever Correspondent .... . . .VIVIAN JOHNSON Clothilda Mraz Margaret Osborne g Hazel Guley Dan Warner Elizabeth Thayer Frank Layton Lowell Clark Nora Lisenby Robert Ormes William Poley The School Council has closed its second year of existence very success- fully. For three years the Colorado Springs High School had no form of the student government whatever, but under Mr. Roe's supervision a Council composed of a few of the faculty and the students was organized and student participation in school government was established. A new holiday, C. S. H. S's. very own, was created by the council under the title of King Terror's Day, which was celebrated by an enormous and successful parade in honor of the returned football squad from Salt Lake City and King Terror, the reigning spirit of our High School. Another noteworthy achievement was the formation of the Terror Tribe. With the Council as a nucleus the real citizens or Terrors were collected in one group which assumed the foremost place among the school organizations. Third, a School Calendar for the year was completed. It proved to be an ellicient medium for eliminating conflicting meetings and crowded events. With the joint aid of the Senior and junior Class Councils, the annual class scrap was satisfactorily settled by the School Council. The faculty's co-operation has been more than hearty, and the students have also showed their spirit in a commendable way. The Council has become a recognized body in the school, and many difficulties have been solved through its efforts. The sole purpose to which the School Council has given its entire support is to work for a Bigger and Better School. 91 K The Terror C Club The Terror C Club was organized in the month of December in the year of 1920. The purpose of this organization is to promote co-operation, team work and good fellowship among the athletes and to interest others to come out and take part in the athletics of the school. Every day the members of the C Club are showing more interest and helping others along. The main purpose of the organization has just been stated, but each member takes part in the meetings. This does not let anyone escape the literary part. Every member has a good scholastic standing and has to main- tain this if he wants to remain an active member. Wherever you go you always see a C Club member, they are partici- pating in every activity of the school. They are not spending all their time on athletics. The C Club ventured into social life more this year than last, because they were better organized. Outside of several Hsmokelessn smokers the C Club had two real functions. On December 20, a banquet was held in the Cafeteria for the business men of the city and C Club members. The next big function was a hay ride down to Rock Creek Canon. A very excellent meal was served and every one enjoyed himself to the fullest extent. The C Club has made big progress in the years 1921 and 1922 and is now one of the leading organizations in C. S. H. S. HAROLD WINTER. . OFFICERS Fmsr SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER D. WARNER ........ . . .President .... ....,.... A . BROWN A. BROWN. . . . . . Vice-President. . . . . .G. RYAN E. BROYLES .... N. JAMESON. . . M. MOSLEY .... F. PHELPS. . . 93 ...Secretary . .. ,....TreaSurer.,... Lever Correspondent. . . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms. . . .E. BRovLEs . . .N. JAMESON . ,H. WINTER . . .C. RYAN Honor Society Two years ago, in the fall of 1920, an Honor Society was organized in C. S. H. S. Formerly, the members of this society consisted of juniors and Seniors who had made more A's than B's in their studies with 2 C's allowedg since then the requirements for membership have been changed so that now upperclassmen with an equal number of A's and Bls and no C's are eligible as well. True to its purpose, the Honor Society has done a great deal in elevating the standards of scholarship in the school. Especially has the tutoring been commendable. Many students who would otherwise have failed have been able to make their grades with the help of some member of the society. The Honoi students were also the first to be granted the privilege of voluntary study hall attendance. The meetings have been interesting and enjoyable. Miss Woodworth told us some charming fairy stories at one meeting. The pledging and initia- tion of the new members was carried out very well. Finally there was the big banquet at the Elizabeth Inn, an appropriate ending for such a successful year. Throughout the entire school term, the Honor Society has constantly upheld its motto Noblesse Oblige, supporting the school in all activities and giving help in every way possible until it is already an indispensable organization in the school. OFFICERS FIRST SEMEsTER SECOND SEMESTER ROBERT ORMES ....... ..... P resident. . , . . .HERBERT STOCKDALE KATHERINE PAULY .... .... I 'ice-President. . . , . .MARGARET OSBORNE 'S t.i,., o EHARRSON MARGARET OSBORNE ..,. . . . are an ARI RI 1 lTreasurer ....... .... F LORENCE GRIFFITH RUBY WII4T. . . . . .Lever Correspondent .... ...... H AZEL GULEY CABINET MEMBERS CHR1sT1NA CRANE VERDA MQCLEARY MARJORIE HARRISON RUBY WILT FACULTY Miss JACQUES Miss TAYLOR 95 N 1 , , La Tertulia Espanofa Another year has passed, and La Tertulia Espanola is very proud of the success it has had. At the program meetings there have been Spanish dances, plays, music, talks and readings. Mrs. Bartlett, the enthusiastic organizer, has given very interesting talks on the dillerent phases of the South- west, with which she is thoroughly familiar. The second semester proved even more interesting than the nrst fif that were possibleffor the conversation meetings were installed. These meetings have been enjoyed by all and have brought about a deeper, better understand- ing of the Spanish languagef fthe most musieal in the world. Also during the second term Miss Trovinger became a supervisor, and she has done much to increase interest in the club. We are all encouraged by the support and interest which has been given us. VVe are sure that if this spirit continues La Tertulia Espanola is assured many sueeessful years in the future. Adios, amigos mios, hasta el ano gue vicne. OFFICERS F1RsT S1sMEs'r1:R S-iicoxn SEM12sTER XVRAY CEARDNER ..... ..., I Jresffiwzf, .... .,...,.., I ,UELLA KIER LUELLA KIER ,.,. . . I'1'f'w Prwifiezzl, . . . . IIERBERT STOCKIDALE HELEN SEXVELL. . .... .S'm'vlizry. . , ......,. JANIE LoVE NIARIAN 'FRUBY ...,. .,.... Y 'waszuw' ....., ,,.... ' lloM RHopEs IELEANUR 'liIIUIVIPSON. . . .1.cz'w' Carr:-.vpoziflvzzt. . . . . KIADGI2 llonnms SUPERYISORS Mizs. Froiziaxcra B.xRTx,ET'r Miss Y.iN1T.x 'l'Rovixo15R 97 1 1 1 1 1 Y 1 9 8 1 ,i- Vx Le Cerele Francais Le Cercle Francais is a new High School organization that promises to be of no little importance in the future activities of the school. This year marks tl1e beginning of this society, and like every other up and coming organization, it has bigger things in view for next year. The sole purpose of this club is to enlarge the knowledge of its members of the French language, people and cus- toms. It seems to be a pretentious aim for beginning French students, but it is found at the end of the year that much has been attained toward this end. The regular meetings are held every two weeks and consist of business and programs pertaining to France. One meeting was devoted to the study of French cathedrals and other famous buildings. Dialogues and plays in native costume have been given, while stories, songs, and games have varied the monotonv. In the King Terror Day Parade, Le Cercle Francais was duly represented on the language Hoat by characters dressed in typical French costumes. This club ranks next to the Honor Society in the scholastic standing of the school, which is of no little importance. Le Ccrcle Francais has many interesting plans for the future which will undoubtedly be carried out next year. FIRST SEirEsT12R BURDINE IECKE ..... CoR1NNE BAUM. ,. BERNIQE B.xYLIs. . . HAZEL GULEY. ,. XVRAY GXXRIDNER .,.. CH.xRLEs ,FOPPINCL . 99 OFFICERS . . . . . l'rf'sz'1l'c'11l. . . . , . Vi4'f'-I'res'z'de'11t. . . . , , . . , , ,.S'w1'e!ary. . . . . . . l.e'i'w' C'01'1'c'sp0Jzdwzl'. . . . . . . . . . T1'vasura'1'. . . , . . . .Sl'l'gUt1lIf-tlli-,ll'HI.V, . . FACULTY SLTPERX' ISC JR Miss TAv1.oR Srieoxn SmrEsTER . . . . . .ELs1E BR1'rToN .NIARJORIE HARRISON . . .Gr,.xnYs 'FHEOBALD ,Is.inoRE B1.ixcKLocK KATHERYNE CEVVILLYM .ELrz.xisETH S'1'ARRETT SECOND SEMESTER The Commercial Club The Commercial Club, organized during the second semester of last year, has proven to be one of the most active and instructive organizations in the school. Its object is to bring the commercial students into closer touch with the business world through lectures and club Work. Membership is limited to commercial students of high standing. The club is a booster not only of the welfare of the school, but also of the community. It has taken a stand to help in the protection of the natural resources of the region. During Thanksgiving Week, the club undertook the collection of Thanksgiving contributions in the High School. A large amount of money and provisions were collected and given to the Associated Charities for distribution among the needy of the city. The organization has promoted all school activities throughout the year. It has encouraged better spelling in the school by holding a spelling contest and giving a five dollar prize to the winner. The Club also sponsored the Labor Day campaign which originated in the commercial department. The programs of the year have been especially interesting to the members. Prominent business men of the city have spoken at the meetings. Their talks were very beneficial as well as entertaining to the commercial students. The Commercial Club of C. S. H. S. was one of the Iirst clubs of its kind to be formed in the state. A great deal of interest has been taken in it because of the amount of real work it has accomplished, and it has been instrumental in establishing such clubs in other schools, by correspondence with their com- mercial departments. Following are the officers: FIRST SEMEsTER RUTH GREENBERG .... . . LEES ARMIT ....., FREDA RAWLEY. . lVlARGARET Tvsorv .... . . EUGENE BRovLEs. ALLEN GUNNELL .... , . Faculty Supervisor. 1 01 . .President. . . . Vice-President. . . ....Secretary. . .. . . Treasurer ..... . DONALD HARRISON . .LEONA ,FOMPKINS HARRY BROADBENT . .... CLINTON ZEIGER Lever Correspovzdelzt. . . .... LOWELL CLARK . Sergeant-at-.Al rms. SAM WILLIAMS A ' JAMES LovE . . , .MIss TURNER I o ' Q39 Ill IIIDL 'f 55155 5, I . ggztiih -1: 1 ggig' l s' 5 ills!!! oooo llama Q? ,,,,,,g Qllll . 'oo I ,OOOOW :::: 3!It:. fr ' 04904 Masque and Sandal Early in the fall, a new Dramatic society, known as the Masque and Sandal, came into existence in the High School, and in a very short time became one of the leading organizations. The purpose of the society is to cultivate in its members a more refined taste for dramatic art. Several farces were produced during the year, in which the vari- ous members had an equal opportunity to display their talents. The meetings were held every second Wednes- day, at which excellent programs were presented. The members are distinguished from other ordinary folks by the wearing of an enameled masque attached to a gold sandal by a delicate gold chain. Never, in the history of C. S. H. S., has there been such a successful dramatic organization, bringing forth so many excellent productions. The club has created ifii .Q 5 Dx :V X 'D CQEPQE HN' Q '00, 1 ' 'trees I 'tai Qiff I' A4 J, nal .1:'r'5 - ' WF. : .. ':-sw ,xzzzmz fo. ' f ' , ' to nothing but favorable comment and during its first year has been undoubtedly prosperous. It affords an education which is given in such an agreeable manner that it is enjoyable to everyone. Among the more important productions presented to the public during the year were: 'fThe Florist Shop, given in behalf of the Terrorville Follies in the H. S. Auditorium and repeat- ed once at the Washington School for the benefit of their Parent-Teachers' Association and once for the Disabled Veterans at their school in the DeGrafi' Building, a one-act skit for the First Christian church, 'LKurzy of the Sea and XVearin' O' the Green, given by the club in its own behalf, together with many small skits given for the entertainment of other organizations. From the proceeds of the plays, the club presented to the Library 325 for Dramatic Literature, and to the school 325 for the purchase of a ceiling for the stage, also purchasing a membership for each of its members in the Community Players' Workshop. The work of Masque and Sandal has been very successful this year, and it is hoped that 1922-23 will continue this success by establishing a larger and better club, adding more and better equipment for the study of the drama. The officers for the year were as follows: FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER ROBERT BECK ........ ..... P resident. . . ....... RoBERT BECK BURDTNE ECKE .... ..... I 'irc-President. . . ..... BURDINE ECKE 'ISRUMAN ST. CLAIR. . . .... Secretary-Trezzsurer ..,. . , .TRUMAN ST. CLAIR RUBY YVILT ....... . . .Lmw Ci07'1'6'SP0IZll7611f .... ...... P HYLLIS TARR 103 BURDINE ECKE. 104 ljwrlnrrwg ffy wrwkvarrwfrrg r l V i I 2 , i , -' ' f r wrnrrr Ii M G ri W I Z 5 Z 4 y 2 fl, 7 1 7 . fan.. , Q ' 2 5' 4' 1 f W W A rfilr-i'4. Qroeeaeeas in I . A M,n1rWrmMnm,...n In the fall of 1921, a new society was founded in Colorado Springs High School, a society which was to mean much to the school in which it was founded. Feeling the need of combined efforts to produce more and better art, a group of art students met and organized what was later called the Greenwich Villagers. Membership was then limited to twenty-five, and the charter members initiated themselves by wearing their adopted costume, green tams with orange G. V. monogram and orange necktie. Membership in this society is based on merit alone. Work is presented and the society votes as to whether the applicant will be accepted. The Greenwich Villagers have been very prominent through- out the school year. The society feels proud that Miss Eva Clark, a G. V., tied for first prize in a trade mark contest, sponsored by the Colorado Springs Light, Heat and Power Company. In this same contest, Muriel Lagergren won second place. Miss Helen Sewell, the society president, carried off first place in the Chevrolet Ad Contest by virtue of her art training. In February, the society, with the aid of Masque and Sandal, presented the Terrorville Follies. The Follies were considered a great success. The money earned in the Follies was used for extra cuts in this annual. The society has been complimented on its high grade of work. The highest honor that the society could receive was given when the Broadmoor Art Academy extended the invitation to the Greenwich Villagers to become junior members of that Academy. The members are: Gertrude Brewington, Elizabeth Mortimer, Genevieve Huber, Alice Reinking, Melva Shady, Louise Danks, Muriel Lagergren, Eva Clark, Evelyn Sheetz, Charles Brice, William Dennis, Frank Layton, Leroy Robertson, Dorothy Williamson, Raymond Hembrey, Hazel Edwards, Charles Hopkins, Laurine Allen, Miss Pansy Dawes, and Mrs. Florence Bartlett. OFFICERS President ..,... .,.,........ ........ H E LEN SEWELL Vice-President ...... . . .MAURICE MCMASTERS Treasurer-Serretary. . . ....... DAVIS 'TAYLOR Lever Correspondent. . . . . .MADGE DOBBIN 105 V The Weekly Lever Editor-in-Chief ..... .A............... C HARLES 'FOPPING Associate Editors .........., .... B URDINE ECKE, NICHOLAS KING Business Manager ..,....,.,. ....,........... E UOENE BROYLES Assistant Business Manager .... .....,....... J AMES PRESTON News Editor ,............... .... G EORGE DUNNINO Assistant News Editor ...... .......,, R UTH ATNIP Athletic Editor ......... ..... R OBERT SPUROEON Mirror .......,....... ................. C ARLITA WETHERELI. Literary Department .... ......,..........,..... V IVIAN JOHNSON Exchanges .......,...... .... E LIZABETH MORTIMER, HAZEL GULEY Side Issues ................ ..,. M ARJORIE HARRISON, EDITH PERKINS Boys' and Girls' Societies .... .....,.,.......,....... R OBERT ORMES Organizations ..,......,.. .......,... ..,..... C O RINNE BAUM FACULTY Manager and General Supervisor ............ ........., L . D. VOTAW Instructor in Journalism ....... ..., R UBY M. PATTERSON Instructor in Printing ..... ........ E . L. FOWLER The Weekly Lever Staff, this year, was first organized into a compact efiicient group that could standardize the publication of the Terror's ofhcial paper. Previous experiments in the method of collecting material had been unsatisfactory. The system adopted this year was a class of seventeen that met the second period every day, first in the administration building because of lack of room, and then in the main building. In this Way it was much easier to organize material and discuss plans. The class was a substitution for the regular senior English, the literature being condensed, and studied in the remaining time. It had long been felt that The Lever had outgrown its size, and especially was this noticed this year with the ever increasing material in the news depart- ment Up to Christmas a twelve page sheet was put out. At the beginning of the new year a larger roller type press was acquired with last year's earnings, and with this was printed a four-page, five column, twenty inch weekly. The spirit of the whole paper progressed with the size, resembling more and more a professional sheet. Because of the efficiency of the class system several extras were put out on short notice. King Terror's Day Extra was the most important while a number of special editions were possible. Among these were the Football Special, one for the Commercial Club drive, a Basketball Special and a Vanity Edition. Four of the editors were sent to the journalism Convention under the auspices of the University of Colorado. This was the first of the annual con- ferences for the furtherance of better high school papers in Colorado. A review of the Lever's accomplishments shows greatly increased activity and ability. It is generally considered that the paper is improving faster than ever before and that it now ranks as one of the best in the state, as shown by the congratulations of numerous exchanges. B 107 s 1 The Colorado Springs High School Band Dirvftor ..........,.......,,.... . . . . . . . . .FRED G. FINK Manager and Presiderzl ..... , . .WARREN WELLS Serrclary and Treasurer. . . . . .DEXTER HASTINGS Lever Correspondent ..., .... C LIFFORD BROWN The Colorado Springs High School Band was organized in 1917 under the directorship of Mr. Stillman, at that time a teacher in the High School. The following year the school board appointed Mr. Fink as director, a position which he has held ever since. The band is very proud to have a director like Mr. Fink. This, the fifth year of the band's existence, has been the most successful in the history of the organization. This year the band played at all of the football and basketball games, a number of which were out of town, including games at Longmont, Denver and Pueblo. During the first semester, the band played at a great number of places besides the football and basketball games. These places included the Easton- ville potato bake, the Pueblo State Fair, the,Colorado Springs Auto Show, the Armistice day program at the Burns Theater, and Manitou. The second semester the band gave a minstrel show in the High School auditorium at which time the money needed to pay the expenses of the organ- ization was received. Other important events which took place during the second semester were the playing at the Modern Vlfoodman Sanatorium, the Union Printers Home, the band contest at Denver in May, and the concert in North Park. The year was ended with the annual banquet, held at the McRae Restaurant, and the election of officers for the coming year. The following are members of the band: Armstrong, D. Ascough, L. Bouslog, D. Boyce, H. Briggs, M. Broadbent, H. Brown, C. Burnett, F. Burt, M. Carmen, L. Church, G. Ebbert, C. Edstrom, D. Fink, J. Fleckenstein, C. Fritts, C. Fry, O. Gardner, Haigler, XV. Harbord, H. Harper, Z. Hastings, D. Hathaway, C. Heckenlively, H. Hull, B. jencks, C. Kemp, R. Kibler, F. McMasters, M. Marquis, F. Marquis, H. hlarquis, W Rector, F. Rector, R. Ritchy, B. Scholtz, J. Sturdivant, C. Sunderlin, C. Taylor, D. VValdon, A. VValdon, E. VVarner, H. Wells, W. Zieger, C. Ziman, S. . 109 The Orchestra . OFFICERS X A ljzrrwhu' ....,.,,,, ,..,.,,....., .......... F R Elm CL PINK ljreszklczzt .......... . . . . . , . AUDREY SeHooNM.xKER Sl'!il'l'ftII'YVAT7'l?dSZlI'l'1'. , . ..,,. DOROTHY XVELLS ,llamzgvr ,..................,.......,...........,..,.. CLARK SUNDERLIN l.1'2'z'r clUI'I'6Sf70lld8lIf .,.......,...,.............,..,....... MARIfXN TRUBY The Orchestra is one of the bright lights in the Colorado Springs High School. It has been prominent at most of the school functions, and has been very much in demand at outside entertainments. Although this is only the fourth year of its existence. it is an important and necessary factor in the school. From its original fourteen members it has increased to its present membership of thirty-tive. It has not only given two concerts, but also played at many of the churches of this city, at several pep-meetings, for the Terrorville Follies, 'LKurzy of the Seal' and the 'LVVearin' o' the Green, and the entire musical score for HThe Garden of Dreams given at the Burns Theater. It gave a most successful concert at Pueblo along with several other minor engagements. PERSONNEL Pir11z0fAudrey Schoonmaker. l'foli1zsfRuth Underhill, Ruth Penrose, Rebecca Orzevsky, Rose Kline- burg, Yetta Fisen, Lillian Crump, Gail Dein, Hazel Guley, Verona Church, Dudley Elkins, Stella jones, Dorothy Hodgkinson, Fanny Spiezer, Pauline Cole, W'infred Haigler, Paul Haun, VVray Craul, Mary Schaefer, Marian Truby. 131155 Vialinw Ora Fry. f.'0I'Ilt'fS'FI'2lIlClS Heill, Henry VVilliams. 1 !ntvfRussel Mason. l I'l'IIl'll Ilorzzflfred Rector. Tmmbmze-ffNVarrer1 VVells. C111ri1zetsfLyndon Carmon, Clark Sunderlin, David Edstrom. 'fellas-M Dorothy Wells, Enid Orris. Saxojalzv11e.s'fRalpl1 Rector, Davis Taylor. Drums amz' Y'n1p.vfRussell Kemp, Hal Harboard. 110 General Music Report Musically, this school year has been more successful than any previous year. The Course of Music inaugurated in the High School last year by our present Director of Music in the Public Schools, Miss Clara B. Hoffmire, has caused music to be placed in its proper sphere in the list of school activities and school spirit as well as a solid school study receiving full credit. There have been several new classes instituted in the music department of the High School during the past year and they are all proving to be great successes. Throughout the year, music has been the life of the school with the High School Band at the games, and the Orchestras, Choruses and Glee Clubs at the assemblies. One of the most important events was the Garden of Dreams written by Miss Klara Jennings, which was put on at the Burns Theatre with a cast of over two hundred and fifty members of the various musical organiza- tions. Those who missed seeing it missed a real treat. Then there was ourannual concert which was a great success. This concert is given by all of the music students of the High School every year and forms one of the most prominent and delightful events of the annual May Festival of Music. OFFICERS OF HIGH CHORUS President ,...... .....,., E DWIN AULD Vice-President .....,. . . .KENNETH BURCHAM Secretary-Treasurer .... .... E UGENE BROYLES Accompanist .,...., .............................. M ILDRED JOHNSON Librarians .... .... L OWELL CLARK, HORACE KRAMER, DAVIS ,PAYLOR OFFICERS OF LOW CHORUS President ....... . . .CLARENCE RYAN Vice-President ..... .... F OREST PHELPS Secretary- Treasurer .... . . .CONNETT RUSSELL Lever Correspondent .... . .FIELD PHELPS Accompanist ........................................... DoRoTHv WELLS Librarians ..,..,.. WALTER BERNHARDT, THOMAS GRAHAM, LYNDON CARMAN 1 1 1 Y n 1 l-ligh School Girls' Glee Club The Girls' Glee Club has at last been made one of the permanent organi- zations of the High School, having had its beginning in the Fall of 1920 when Miss Clara B. Hoifmire became Director of Music in the Public Schools. The Glee Club has taken a very active part in community as well as in High School affairs having appeared at several churches and before civic organizations and clubs. During Christmas week a very beautiful Christmas Carol Service was held in the Colorado Springs High School. On january 11th all of the music classes united and gave a very spectacular pageant at the Burns Theatre, which proved a great success. ' The Girls' Glee Club gave the cantata The Garden of Flowers by Denzo, before the Colorado Springs Musical Club. On this occasion Miss Hoffmire presented several promising young soloists in the leading roles and the work of the chorus was exceptionally good. OFFICERS President ...... ......,...... .... H . ARRIET BRADY Vice-President ....... ..... X YELTA JANUARY Secretary-Treasurer ....,...........,.................,.. :XRLINE LEGGETT Librarians, ........... HARR1ET VVHEELER, HELEN CURTIS, CLARA EDGERLY Lever Corrcspornderz! ..,.........,..........,,....... DOROTHY WILLIAMSON Aceornparrist ...... . . .VIVIAN BROADBENT 113 114 Boys' Glee Club In the past year the Boy's Glee Club has accomplished a great deal. In addition to the spirit of fellowship created when boys 'lget together, there has been a realization that music is indeed a great factor in an ideal education. The first appearance of the club was at the Freshman-Sophomore Re- ception at the Y. M. C. A., where several selections were given. Later they sang at a Parent-Teacher's meeting at one of the local schools. On High School night at the Christian Church the club appeared and created much favorable comment. Probably the best music of the year was produced in the Christmas Carol Service, when a double quartette sang HS-ilent Night. The listeners were attracted by the perfect harmony and expression which were punt into the carol. On Miss Clara B. Hoffmire, teacher and supervisor of the club, the burden of the success of the club has fallen. Only her unusual knowledge of music and her ability to teach it has made it possible for such a club to exist. President ..,.. Vice-President .... Secretary- Treasurer. . . Lever Correspondent. . . . Pzanrst . . ....... . . Librarians .... 115 Arnett, Malcolm Blaine, Robert Bocock, Merton Colglazier, Dwight Dawson, William Diveley, Harry Hastings, Dexter Hymas, Melvin OFFICERS ......-IOHNINIURRAY . . ,HARLEY REMINGTON . . . . . .JACK MILLER . . . .HARRY DIVELEY ....................NIERTON Bococx . , . .KENNETH KOHI.ER, INIALCOLM ARNETT MEMBERS Kohler, Kenneth Lindas, John Long, Maurice Miller, jack McMasters, Maurice Murray, John Pratt, Guy Remington, Harley Stamard, Earl Springer, Milton Zieger, Clinton Q Shivers, George Pfost, John Wilson, Harold 116 C. S. l-l. S. Amateur Wireless Association Shortly after the close of the war, the Wireless Club was reorganized with Mr. Steele as supervisor. At that time, the school board installed a good sending and receiving set at a cost of about four hundred dollars. This year a radio-telephone set and some extra receiving apparatus was added, making a very complete sending and receiving outfit, consisting of a one kilowatt spark transmitting set, a fifteen watt telephone transmitter, and a two stage audion amplifier receiving set with honeycomb and regenerative tuners. An improved aerial was constructed this fall, mainly thru the efforts of James Gowdy, who was president of the Club during the first semester. Mr. Gowdy has moved to Pueblo, where he has set up a station which we have been able to reach with our telephone set. The club entered a float and a radio-controlled car in the King Terror Day parade that attracted much attention. In the second semester, with Fred Wilgus as president, the club has accom- plished much. The telephone set was not working well at first, but, through the efforts of Roy Russell, it is now doing all that can be expected of it. A concert was given by the Wireless Club at the First Presbyterian Church on Christmas Eve. Christmas carols, songs by the Temple Quartette, and Dr. Garvin's Christmas message were made audible to all present. An open house for the faculty and another for the science classes were given by the club. The programs consisted of talks by ten members, reception of different types of messages, time and weather reports from Denver, followed by a short telephone concert transmitted from the home of Mr. Aldrich. The club is very grateful to Mr: Aldrich for his readiness to give telephone concerts and for his hea ty co-operation in all the club's enterprises. The club has had a very successful year and with the greatly increasing interest in Radio-com- munication, should be able to accomplish even more in the years to come. President .......... Vice-President .............. . Secretary-Treasurer. . . . A dvisory .ff dvisory Advisory A dvisory Lever Correspondent .... Faculty Supervisor ..... 117 Kenneth Baily Curtis Burkes Irving Christopher Raymond Derby Elden Dillingham Edgar Drumeller Norman Essich Karl Gudger Glen Guthrie OFFICERS Member of Executive Council. . . jllember of Executive Council. . . Member of Executive Council. . . Member of Executive Council .... MEMBERS Curtis Haupt Francis Hull Charles Hathaway Gilford Henderson Merle jones Byron Kingsolver Allan Kinsman Carlton Magruder Robert Moses . . .FRED WILGUS . . .Coz1NE STRANG . . . . .LAWSON SUMNER . .HAROLD NEwsoME . . . . .GLEN GUTHRIE . .WILI.IAM NAssoUR ......LOREN TABER . .HAROLD NEwsoME ....WM. H. STEELE William Nassour Harold Newsome Bruce Poundstone Willis Strachan ' Lawson Sumner Leo Windolph Fred Wilgus Howard Warner HONORARY AND ASSOCIATE MEMBERS C. F. Aldrich Barton Hoag W. S. Sheppard Wm. Dewdney james Gowdy W. D. Reynolds Mr. Johnston W. A. Hiller Roy Russell Mk 0 ff llmllIlllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllW I' . c i 79 qlllll Vllllf ihlffg E l Nl' L It l X il'f 'llll fs The Y Clubs The Y. W. C. A. Student Club of last year grew to such proportions that it seemed best to divide it into four individual clubs-the divisions follow- ing the four classes of High Schoolfwhich are called Pasinapee or Senior Club, the Ifea or junior Club, the CO-Ed Terrors Or Sophomore Club, and the Aquilla Or Freshman Club. All of these divisions are full of peppy girls Who take a live interest in all of the activities of the school as Well as of their club. The cabinet members of each of the clubs are as follows: PASINAPEE President, ELOISE VAN DIEST1 Viee-President, MARY PATTERSONg.S'eeretary, EVA CLARK, Treasurer, ELIZABETH MQRTIMER, Leiter Correspondent, GLADYS THEOBALD, Chairman of Soeial Committee, LUELLA KIER, Chairman of Pubtieity Committee, HELEN SEWELL1 Chairman of Membership Committee, ELIZABETH MORTIMER. IFCA President, HELEN MORRISY Viee-President, MARY CLARKg Secretary,VIOLET ROSE, Treasurer, ELIZABETH STARRETTg Chairman of Sofia! Committee, NIARY- VERN JOHNSON, Chairman of Publicity Cl7mmift66,VIRGINIA MANNING Chairman ry' Membership Committee, GRACE BERKLEY, Chairman of Program Committee, MARY CLARK, Chairman inf Service Committee, HELEN LOVELAND. CO-ED TERRORS President, ROSE 'fYRREL, Vice-President, WINONA RAWLEY, Secretary, MARY WOODWORTH, Treasurer, MARGARET WOOIDWORTHQ Chairman of Jlenz- bership Cornrnittee, LOINE HIAYNESQ Chairman of Program Committee, HELENE HEINICKE. AQUILLA President, MARY BEESON, Vice-President, EDNA TINDALLQ Secretary, ANITA DICKENSON, Treasurer, MARY VIRGINIA MANNING, Chairman of Social Com- mittee, HARRIET EYERQ Chairman of Program Committee, LOUISE LYONS. 118 Our Y. W. clubs have splendid leaders who have entered into our good times and have helped greatly in making the clubs a success. Miss Dagmar Holm is the leader of Pasinapee, Miss Elizabeth Johnston the leader of Ifca, Miss Alice Allen of Co-Ed Terrors, and Miss Albertine james of Aquilla. These leaders are always ready to advise the girls and do anything they can to for- ward the usefulness of the clubs. We owe the organization of our clubs to Miss Weeta Watts, who built them up from the beginning and was the Girls' Work Secretary of the Y. W. C. A. for about two years. When she resigned in December to return to her home in Georgia, we all felt that we had lost one of our best friends and wondered how we could carry on without her. How- ever, we have found in Mrs. Eleonore Groff Adams an able successor whose inspirational plans and original ideas are already bearing fruit and whom we are pledged to follow to the last. Miss Edna jacques, as chairman of the Y. W. C. A. Girls, Work Committee, has been of great help to our girls. Every once in a while, the clubs have a joint social meeting so that they may all get acquainted with each other and lend inspiration to one another. One of our joint meetings was a tea given for Miss Vance, at which time we pledged to give her E50 for her work in China. Another joint affair was a Kid party held on December 16. The juniors and Seniors were the big sisters and each brought a Freshman or Sophomore as her little sister. It was a huge success. At Christmas time all the Clubs sang Christmas carols in the Cafeteria at the Y. W. C. A. It was planned to hold a joint monthly meeting of the clubs from January to June taking the form of an imaginary hike. This group of meetings was called Mountain Trail Meditations. The most important and biggest events of the year have been the con- ferences which have been held with other cities and especially that at Estes Park. Last summer 16 of our girls attended the conference at Estes Park. They were: Luella Kier, Mary Patterson, Helen Loveland, Maryvern john- son, Margaret Knowles, Gertrude Hamilton, Isabelle Stroup, Evelyn Sheetz, Helena Heinike, Rose Tyrrel, Katherine Keplinger, Mary Clark, Helen Morris, Genevieve Vanderhoof, Elizabeth Starrett, Violet Rose. Mary Patterson re- ceived individual honors in tennis at this conference. Everyone in attendance at the Conference not only thoroughly enjoyed the good times of camp, but found other really worth while experiences and friendships which enabled them to to bring back to the High School club activities of this year much real inspiration. The girls who are members of these clubs feel they are very much worth while, and should be glad to have others in High School join them in follow- ing their motto, which is wonderfully expressed in a song which gained popu- larity at the conferences: FOLLOW THE GLEAMH To the knight in the days of old, Keeping watch on the mountain heights Came a vision of Holy Grail, And a voice through the waiting night, Follow, follow, follow the gleam Banners unfurled o'er all the world. Follow, follow, follow the gleam, Of the Chalice that is the Grail, And we who would serve the king Keeping vigil along life's way In the consecrate silence know That the challenge still holds today. Follow, follow, follow the gleam Standards of worth o'er all the earth Follow, follow, follow the gleam Of the light that shall bring the dawn. 119 120 The Hi-Y Club OFFICERS President ,......., ,.......... ....,....,.. E l m. AULD Vice-President ...... . . .VVILLIAM TNIALSBURY Secretary-Treasurer ..... ..,.,....., C LARE 'TQHOMAS Lever Correspondent ..4. ................ .... M i AURICE MCMASTERS SUPERVISORS REV. A. W. LUCE J. L. LAWSON E. B. SIMMONS H. H. MAXWELL The need of a club to promote physical and religious education is met by the Hi-Y Club, consisting of high school boys and sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. The club meets every Tuesday evening at six o'clock in the Y. M. C. A. building. There a dinner is served, the cost to each member being only Hfteen cents. Immediately after dinner, a short time is spent in discussing the Bible. Whenever possible, a speaker is secured to address the club, and many very interesting talks have been given during the past year. The High School gym class is also on Tuesday evening and follows the Hi-Y meeting. The club is not a local affair, for Wherever there is a Y. M. C. A., there is a Hi-Y club, and that means all over the world. Surely no club could have a nobler purpose, that of bringing boys together and making them realize that faith in God is everything, and that their duty is not only to have a sound mind but to have na clean, strong body. The purpose of the Hi-Y Club is to create, maintain and extend through- out the school and community, high standards of Christian Character. M. M. 121 xi, - M34 - 7 'f ,, ,A M fi .L ww 7 ,Q gf 2. 1 1 15 ? 5 1 H , if Q v jfflg A 6 mf' Q4 ff , ny, Qxz'4+g,: -. Q Terror Tribe The history of the Terror Tribe is not very extensive as the society was organized in February. However, the fact that the society is a very recent organization of C. S. H. S. does not prove that it is none the less an important one. It started out very prosperously and already has become one of the shining lights of this school. The purpose of the tribe is to boost all school activities and to help the school council to carry out its plans and policies. There are about two hundred members in the club. Those eligible are students having at least ten points. High grades, membership in literary societies, athletic co-operation, and Lever subscription are the requirements for eligibility points. The success of the tribe is due to our peppy president, Dan Warner, and to our supervisor, Mr. Willis. OFFICERS President ..... ............ ..,. D A N WARNER Vice-President ....... . . .EUGENE BRoYLEs Secretary-Treasurer .... . . .MARGARET KNOWLES Lever Correspondent .... . , .MARJORIE HARRISON 123 TERRIBLE , jf ,X . TE nnvns ' G+, f - 43? vw 'Hz X 'emu 56 iii' f 'W.,f9 7 ' 7 2 ? 'lf wi 7 jing DADDY WW Q W gurl' Fmmgn Bfzowrv X PAPA 7? E K 5 H Wpczf ,gf Q Tn W Qu Th K f 9 Y 3 fff X' 'ra N l if rv K' osef jf 1 ,Q 1 f fny fum: 11:1h,f77 4,5 fluffy 1 W? 13 I W .95 C 'ifm 1 '91- ...J 14 The Delph an Dehalfr f ' I , X X: N . Q' - ,X X 3 if f' f ,ff V ' ff' D X IS Q . u an V- 4 K U-ll C In U, J? ,wIlL . 4f0Vf' W 4 ,fry I X 7X - X 5 N .QS D dl! 1 u fx ' 'f N , Y X Q . ,Y ,fyfjyl W! VV! . . ! 7 f QQ I 5ff?7 ff 'I' QW 124 High School Labor Day A unique event was instituted at C. S. H. S. this year when the Com mercial department, aided by the rest of the school, contributed one of the most successful and novel enterprises in the history of the institution-the Labor Day campaign, the second week in February. The purpose was to raise funds with which to send representatives to the district and state meets of the Annual Commercial Contest. For several weeks preceding the event Labor Day tags were very much in evidence in the high school and on the streets. Early in the year the commercial students faced the possibility of not being represented in the meets, because there were no funds available for this purpose. After the teachers had considered various ways of raising the needed cash, Mrs. Pratt suggested the plan of asking each and every loyal 'ATerror to do his part toward earning money during that week and turning it into the fund. Miss Turner, department chairman at the time, announced the plan to the school and never has more whole-hearted co-operation on the part of towns- people, faculty, societies and individual students been shown than in this. I Omega and Zeta held candy sales, the Honor society a sandwich sale, Alpha, Sigma and Theta popcorn and candy sales. Alethian sold refreshments at a basketball game, and Senate sponsored a play in the Aud. which reflected real credit on the society and coach, Miss Lillian johnson. The Delphians put on a most exciting Hauction one session period, to which various local firms donated articles. There was much laughter when girls received boy's necktiesg boys coupons for roses, and faculty members, sacks of corn meal and students' 9096 paper. Typists contributed what they were given for several pieces of outside work, and many individuals earned money in dozens of different ways. Then on Saturday, February 18, f'ofI'icial Labor Day, boys and girls of the Commercial Club presided at booths downtown, for which articles had been contributed by High School students and local business houses, our girls sold Telegraphs and a special Commercial edition of the Lever on the streets, and Mr. Fink and the band gave a concert on the Busy Corner, when an oppor- tunity was given to townspeople in general to contribute to the cause.'l In the Pueblo meet C. S. H. S. was competing with four other schools. Students who won a place there will journey to Greeley, May 5, for the State DISTRICT MEET, PUEBLO, APRIL 21 ADVANCED BooKKEEPING meet. l. Edlyn Vlihitcraft 3. Helen Roberson ADVANCED SHORTHAND ' I. Pearl Shook 3. Goldie Warren - BEGINNING SHORTHAND 2. Dorothy Miller 3. Edlyn Whitcraft .ADVANCED TYPEWRITING 2. Lola May Gossard BEGINNING TYPEVVRITING 3. Harry Broadbent RAPID CALCULATION 3. Laurene Sheesley PENMANSHIP 3. Marie Worley SPELLING 3. Edlyri Whitcraft 125 me E5 'EJ I Bobby Tarver, C Masters as 010 ge R orris L miral Grice. M 'U 4 CE... wi o m N s- 2 N 4.4 E -3 L. 2 U uf if 'm rn U U'-. 25' m V. W 1: o Ill cm E o .: I-4 1. o z: N 'U gui . L1 U -E 4 :J -C DD ': O .. a 2 E E B4 5.5 :ati WU! mE m mx ,Y E S m 11 E zu P-u P: cu E E .Te 1. v CD u Q ou I- O U o U cn GS VI o IZ E us -C no C m KZ 51 U .: E? 2 nu Qi Z3 E W 5 v: N .E N -cm Ja U I-1 U .Q 51 U I 'cs : o E A 'U ou -I w N N 4-1 U 112 fm Ns: auf'-5, :vm b va TJ... Nba!!! EE. . S Nos ls CU P1 L' O1 un m 2 O u- .9 B U- mlh :E WE .-C.-C u GJ .D 03 4: N sz: 'Krl U .C 1-1 ,N an o E aa U o s- Ul z um an zz w U2 4 U .2 ea .E U -E vu N m 6 L. 12: Ulu .M Es W U I 32 u In 12 04 C .5 O D '6 s- CU he Os IHS D1 'U as f-I m cu N L. KU ID E L. O Z D. N 'C .9 TJ O v1 N :A 2 m KZ N hi GJ Z E E cc ,, 3 o L. 'U r: o U GJ U1 L- .vu C O E TJ n.. u .C 4- 5 N .2 'C sc U K --s EE . 3 R 3 C, a O 54 an Fc E if o Ji C KU E 3 . 1-1 ci Q.. cc J: U2 'J .E .- L. 4 .i E s. 4 ua fn aa A .ri L. Q In C cu -C O CZ 'ci I 2 'Ez' I C .C C P1 2 U .JC U KT ..1 -o .. Q L .. .c CD ': C .. c: 2 E C C V 3 O .. 'U .'.: .:: I-1 ri 5 1. E-' E O L. CU IL' .ui U 2 Je U E DJ 'U L. c 1: R1 I .- af : 5- c .Q M O .1 su n. N UU L. 5 .J w .2 Q C cu 5 ru .2 2 Kd of P O A w I: m U ob .E L. -C E I 55 Lil ri lv E .5 E U :f vu s. DD s. Q2 OT: E-'rn af 5 ..x 128 Senate-Delpbian Debate The twelfth annual Senate-Delphian debate, held Friday evening, March 28, on the question, Resolved: That the closed shop is justifiable went to the Senate team by a vote of 3-2. The Senate upheld the negative side of the question. The winning team was composed of Walter Mahncke, Charles Topping and Stanford Goss, with Clarke Metzler, alternate. The Delphians were represented by Clare Thomas, Robert Spurgeon, Robert Newman and Clifford Brown, alternate. The debate was closely contested and the vote probably represents the margin of victory. The team spent more than' a month collecting and organ- izing material, and the result was a clever case by both teams, very well de- livered and skillfully arranged. This year's victory made the ninth for the Senate out of 12 debates held, the first being given in the auditorium in 1910. It also was the third suc- cessive victory since 1919, no debate being held in 1920. Next year, it is anticipated, the annual debate will be held in the fall semester, and the High School will re-enter the state debating league, holding debates here and away from home with Centennial, Central, East Denver and other schools in trian- angular talk-fests. Judges for this year's debate are Norman M. Campbell, the Rev. Floyd A. Bash, George M. Irwin, the Rev. C. K. Powell and Prof. Guy H. Albright of Colorado college. Ben Wendelken, who debated for the Delphians in 1918, coached the affirmative team. Frank Frawley, Paige Benbow and James Flaherty, the first debater for the Senate teams of 1918-19, and the last two in 1921, assisted the Senate. The alternates of the two teams are the only speakers back for 1923, but the societies will no doubt be represented next year by good teams. 129 s 130 'E r'0 X ,IL mm lllllllllln illln M IEW I ' blob! Qi Oy 3 . 7 D ' wx K . , .g - . I I ' I AATVIIIH e E I YM I i fn.,. A Look at the MIRROR when feelin blue And a smiling face looks back at you. FROSH'S DICTIONARY lightning-' One of the current events in heaven. ApplausefA 'KHail Storm hand made. Gossipf.-X merry-go-round operated by a mouth organ. Thirst -Baked Adam's apple. SOME QITALIFICATU JN Bossffuhlr. Neff, have you had any previous experience as a packer? gl. Nff- Yes sir. I was an usher in the C. S. H. Auditorium for four years. THREE DAYS GRACE Maggie's sweetheart, a proverbially tight-listed Scot, had taken her out for the afternoon, and that was about all. They rode some distance on the trolley, turned around and rode home again. Never was mention made of food or entertainment. Back within her own gateway, Maggie, who had keenly felt the neglect, sarcastically proffered Sandy a dime. For carfare you spent on me, she said meaningly. Ulfloots, Toots, woman, returned Sandy, pocketing the coin, there was nae hurry. Saturday wad hae been time enough. A BIODERN EVENING GUXYN A bit of tulle, A yard of silk, A little skin As white as milk. A little strap-- How dare she breathe A little cough Good evening- -Eve. Teacherfff So you don't know which letter comes next to II? lfrosh-- No'm. Teacherf VVhat have I on each side of my nose? Fresh-'tI,ooks like powder, BIa'am, from here. Two little niggers On a bridge a sittin' Two little dice Back and forth a flittin' One little hole XVhere a knot was missin' Paradise Lost! Even when a man takes a day oll' to attend a funeral in the morning, his wife wants to spoil it all by taking him call- ing with her in the afternoon. HXYhat was the excitement down the street. Uh, a man in a reverie ran into a woman in a tantrum. 'fXYere the machines badly damaged? P.vrRoNiZi5 Licvrzk Anviikusifas 2 THE LEVER ANNUAL lN1lRROR AND ADVERTISER PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS . THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 133 55555555555555555555555555555555555 I 55555 5 Q5 5 Q5 - 5 2 5 Q5 L65 SSH-1 W 2 O-1 CE Og' Q-DE' 2.2, of 55 I-fi 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 555555 55555 5555 5 Colorado College INEXPENSIVE EXCELLENT EQUIPMENT I-I I CI-I SCI-IGLAST I C STANDARDS 55555 555555 5 Study at Home- 5 5 , 5 QE Many of the promment QE, EE and successhalrnen and EE E women in Colorado E Springs are graduates of Coloradg Colorado College 555 555 5 ::: 5 E c:Oueg?l . E EE The Way to Service and Success EE 5 5 55555555555555555555555555555555555 PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS P14 Ca-D 'P H m U1 r In 4 m W 3' z z c :D F' 55 an o va 3' 2 U ii' 2 51 so 1 P-1 U7 m as 55555535555-1 EE .EE ET'-11 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE SE EE EE 5 5 EE 5 SE EE EE 5 EE SE 5 EE EE EE Fifa 5 Hi BE EE 555555555555 555555 E555 55 H 57' fb E 77 FD Us 'U CD 93 77 555 5555555 CI CD CT 9 5555555 C5 5 Consolidated Ei'-Ti EE EE Miners of The Largest Local EE EE the Best Grade of Industry, Employing gi-Fil' EE Lignite in from zoo to 300 SE EE this District Men the Year gi 95 'Round QE EUS, EE 551 EE EE EE 555555555555 -I D' CD CP. F' 2 'U CD SBD W' cn O 5 2. EL SJ 3 CJ.. 555555555555 C PACITY 0 TONS D 3500 000 00 ANNU P N ITURES EE 'U C Q. CU o B 'O sa: :s K4 EE 55555 555555 125 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE E555 55551555 5 55 5 5 5 EE5555555555555EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEUQEEEEEEEEEHZFUEBEEE5555555555 PATRoN1ZE LEVER ADVERTISERS - ,,. 'fl-IE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 135 L-E355555355555EESEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE555351-I-1 C. S. H. S. D0N'T F AIL 55555555 5525555 BOYS GIRLS To see us bfjbre buying your EEE EE Your car will travel further if equipped with Uaynp Elq,u1'p7nent. UQ, Ca7.'.y 5 EE S a full and complete Hue Qj' QE H1'k2'ug and Outing Supplies EE EE You will have more power when you install a - ,I V, t I QE for both men and umuen. QE 5 WESTINGHOUSE m5 5 E BATTERY 5 5 SE SQ . 5 E O. L. G1lb6ft,S gg, if Hll.l.ER TIRE 81 BATTERY C0. Army and Navy Stores E EE lWM' A' H'LLERl 106 East Pike? Pc-aktAve. EE EE 1 Block south of C. s. H. s. Colorado Springs' Lolo' EE EE l k h of Post Ohice Manitou, C01 , C 0. QE ' Jppos' Y , 1029 lftli St. QE gg 1 FELLO ' BUILDING CM' 4 . EE EE EE 5 R R R R 5 5 EE HE EE 'E 555555 E-ESEEE E C tt 2 W H NJ P-1 il-1 L L-1 L HP E 5555555 Q.. R233 ,-,FD 5'2 TD HQ.. 'gm ni SD-z 9.15. is CDI E TTI 55555555 E-H5555 5555 , , fNfLABAfS IO the full, the high Criterion at our of absolute reliability which li +G .ei CD T77 Q induces in your mind com- COMp'NY E E plete confidence, complete rest, ii ii7i T Mg E complete satisfaction, every E EE mile you travel in the Cadillac. EE E5 5 HE 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 55 'U 9 -x nv o 2 N m I rn 4 rn an IP U 4 :ri nv Z1 U7 P1 va YD Dreams enieriunns Nw mob. THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 19921 Q H922 N fd? FEBRUARY , - , 1' t , fy Bguskcibdl' S N l T R w T: F R 5 X 5 1 ' 4 X4 eason beconww +77 ' 1 W W Y 5 1 L K 7X, ix real mlercstinq. .2 5 8 gy I 9 4' if V75 Va 191749. 27. ' QD Q 1 ' x lx: 1 QENA H 1 L R X? Q 3 1 5 ' Fl A R C l 1 L ' 5 S 5 E P T E M BE R K-GJU 'Lg F Mg,. Q Fooirban sm- C4 man tank-ruff, x son officnully opens. PWWU VHLWY- I 50,000 black eyes,, 1 PA I ' A Que brunaes, and 2 . Charley-horses result X is 'Q w A P FRP L- 0 C TO B E R ,,.,'- N k i X Wyomlnq funer-at held K- ui Washburn Fudd- ! No QWOVVEYS- Cr l Q 'fr .1-sy fb K , X WX M U Y? H X UQ! J 'Q 5: Q! 5 A N ov E M B E R Q Win qame x cmd Skafe Champ- ionshlp from HHIQ V P Lonqmoni lil ff if , JX -ar. .J JANUARY Qu 4 5 ' Garden Of R X 2f 52? ,1 --7 nfl, ,f,A Annual ukldu and Tqcky day rlppsnq succes-S. In prize awarded +0 T Roark for mos! tacky uulfnf MAY Us 3 X974 J If ll fl 21:1 Y , 5:43 N xv'-'ua 3 :'l ' I I- I Cylas? Scrap and HMM! ends wllh fha .Tumors com- lnq in stcond Q- X Q. . fx V Q- Senlar Way qrQO+ Sucaesw, as usual wdlw Hu clues Q1 '22 JUNE .QV ,R D dj R11 Qu f Wig A1 hm' -Au Ag if JR ovcr bm HR Dlllkllikii Z 'ff 2 -'WTS' M PATRONIZE LE VER ADVERTISERS THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 137 E555E55555555 ERAY E. DAVIS E 5 5 E D. W. SMITH E EE STYLE AND FAMILY EE '55 5 E R V 1 C E 55 E QBQQEJL E gi Q Phone Main 151 E EEE 7 1 7 North Weber Street 5 .- 5 5 5 g You will get th Best on the Market t th Lowest Prices. 5 5 E Z8East Kiowa Street M E COLORADO SPRINGS 25 Years in Colorado Springs 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 E wfiiigggzi, -:E mwsigigi-4 EE E 'a E E llliurmpliments uf E Q Ciba E. jf. lam Qliumpanp E EE D. F. LAW G. W. RIPPEV 5 EE ARD YES . . L QE gg Q, . ff' ',... , Q il,f.ii 5 5 5 5 5 5 E E E E 5 5 PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS L , 138 THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS T1-nc LEVIQR ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 139 EEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEE STUDHD 5 E 5 . , 5 E 5 EEE EEE 5 5 E FULTS E E 3 A as el of E E Burns Theatre Building E E I Colorado Springs EEE 5 ' ' PHONE 3328J gi 55 E EEEEEEEEEE 555 E555 SITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT 55 Portraits of Quality Exclusive Styles PRICES JUST RIGHT Quality the Best Eg E E 5 5 E PORTRAIT FRAMING E EEE Copying and Enlarging-Finished in Oil and Natural Colors 5 E 5555 5555 5555 U2 FF cn 0 W 2. E C I: w CD FP C 5 O fn oo cn cs sf IQX in U5 -1 O :D Q- 2 an 'F T' O W P 5 UQ- 2 na fl! 5555 555 E 5 5 5 H 55 Sli 5 E 5 E 5 E E 5 E 5 5 E H E E E 5 E 5 E E E E E E E 555 ... U Q -x E E P4 N .. . rn 'I :rl we 3' 2 :ri x -1 5 rn 7: f 140 THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER EEEEEEEEEE555555 E E Q HOTEL sa' S Ei z cv 16 lsr EEEEEEEE EEEEEEEE 5555 5555 5 5 5 E J. W. ATKINSQN, President and Manager 5 5 55 EE EEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEE Let Us Conserve Your Clothes MARKET CD. E .I W Cfsf.'1.fgi5:i E QE Phone is 129 North T ' n st. HE Manufacture to Order, Finish and Repair EE N All Kinds of Furniture EE EEEEEE EEEEEE Lieberman 81 Kapsch Lieberman M. Kapsch UPHOLSTERY and EE S C CABINET WORK EE 5 E ' I E Telephone Main 1153 gg 322-324 N. Tejon, Colorado Springs E EEEEEEEEEEEEE PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS TI-IE 1.EVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 141 5555555555555ESSEX?EEEEEEEQEEEQSEEEEEEEEEEHWDSEEEEEEEEESEEEE55555555 Hi 5 EE , . . . EE EE lt s our prime ambition aa E EE EE to be known as the Young lVIen's store---where EE College and High School fellows feel that we 5 appreciate their business. ggi HE We are continually on the lookout for dis- EE tinctive style in Young lVien's wearing apparel EE ---never forgetting dependable serviceability. EE EE EE EE EE E THE PERKINS-SHEARER Q 20 N. Tejon St. EE H3 Exclusive but not Expensive HE . 'EE E5 Vh' ' 'Q P '-11 5 g I I cn 1t ZA romnfr g IUEE Q '- Good as :Made ' EE EE fi. I EE Fine Box Goods 5 :SE E a Specialty 'PHE R 0 MPT 555555 E555 gi WALLACE CAN DY CO. ggi QE PRINCESS THEATRE P Rl N T E R Y EE EE C Q 55 HE ' 'SE EEE B. 12 and 14 East KiovvaStreet -. QE SOUVENIRS B k , V' d sr ' . g E i,..:f::.i.':i...fx::1:23i. I L Q fo E 5 I d' Curios. EE EE HE EE HE E 117 hast Pikes Peak Avenue D. S. GILBIORE, - - PRESIDENT gi EE COLORADO SPRINGS, -:- COLORADO E- J- ROESCH, ' ' SECRETARY EE E 55 EEEEHEHEEEEEEEEEEMEEEEEWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHEEEEEMEEEEEEEEJEBEWJIEEBEEEE PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS P14 -P 'XJ H I rn I' 5 :1 z: CJ' Z Z f: 9 E H x E E a 71 U 3' Q 9 2 U3 K1 x E555 5 E 5 E E 5 5 E 5 E E 55 5 5 5 5 E E 5 E 5 5 5 5 E 5 E E E E E E E EE u Hibbarel 82 Company gg QE A V fi Depafgijent Sire gli E f J ,QE 5555 E E , I ,Y Q ' is EE as fgg ig' l 5 5 f fe 1 5 EEEEEEE EEEEEEE Both are well pleased by tin' :any we relzmz tlzeu' xlzlris, slzzrtwuzxfx, collars, and oflzer work well wzzxlmz' and 1:l'07Il'fI. I l l ZH I 0 you IIN' not a mu y one Q ' our mu i ur ff Q f f f plezzse' I ae'.s'1zgge.9ltl1zzf wuz . I wlur next bumllf' tn 1110 ftlllfllllfj' thu! deans fluflzes rlglzi. The E 5 5 Pead Laundry 5 55 CFM-wmffy 'haf USfS1v0'y50f1P 17-19 SQVTH TEJON S'1'RI2E'1' 55 EE J!!!-331 .Yortlz Te'-jon, Stred 5 EE Plmnes .Vain 1085-1086 QE EE EE 555555 O W Z W W w F 5 5 FU Z -A W m 5 O M T1 N W 555555 EEE EEE 5555555 EEF 5555555 EE 55 E55 M W A N 5 M EEE EEE E E E E E Ei E E E EE E 5 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE E45 55 HE HE BE EE EE Em EE EE 55 EE E5 HERE 5 -1 E E ,.. N 1 :ri 4 IT1 71 D' 2 F1 73 P-I 7 'L DECKER XXFJID SKDFJ THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 143 E555EEEEEEEEE E A Score of Years I 0 Ifkx QE 5 of Achievement S ur . . E EE I A 'l,19024t J t' ' , if 3 h Q gg of 3. l55'LS,?IiQ, Ot 65 lx E E Company store were thrown open to U' the public. EE 55 EE gi rphe moment signalized a march of p 5 EE progression that has had no equal in , I the annuals of departmental store- 5 QE' keeping. EE EE From that one store has grown 312 SCGIFS to LIS, what young fellows EE 5 sloresg a total business the first year Want In Qlothes 15 not only depend' QE HE of approximately S29,000hasexpancled able SQYYICEI but as Welli Q dlstlnc' QE EE' U, 546,641,9281aSt year. tiveness in pattern and fabric. EE 5 This wonderful growth, born of And, We think that our belief i5 Era E keeping faith with a generous public, is Sustained. by the Success of our EE 5 but a forerunner of greater achieve- ClCthe5 with these young fellows' QE QE ments to come, t Trade wzth the Boys QE QE I11 the coming Summer and Fall we EE IEE shall add more than 50 new stores to E our ever-lengthening chain. 5- B -n E Bfffnp WOO at Q' EE C. Penney Co. -afar QE E E Ei H W Cl' E EEEEMQ CJ ar S E G O 0 5 EE E Barber Shop E 55 Ei Cleaning - Presoing - Repairing 5-E! 10 East Bijou Street QE Phone 667 gg TOYS DOLLS EE The only Exclusive Toy Store in I- r 1 L EE the .Siam of Colorado 5 E ToYLAN E 4 QE Toys the Year .lrounrd g G. KRAMER 19 EAST BIJOU STREET ag 20812 fgggoilic Acacia Pafiglone M 950 COLORADO SPRINGS 5EEEEEEEEEEEE PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS PHE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS THE LEVER :XNNUAL LIIRROR AND ADVERTISER 145 '.:I-15555555555555552553555EEEEEEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEWJEHE THE EMERY STUDIO 55555552-E5 55555555555 EE IS much gratified to have pleased so many EFI QE students with their Photographic Work QE EE EE for The 'AANNUALH and for the many ex- UE HE Em EE pressions of satisfaction. lt has been a pleas- EE ure to render this efficient service. GRADUATION is the next important event gi and a fitting occasion for a nice Photograph. gi EE I rn -i c: UU Z up X m 3 'Tl o PU -4 o C EE EE E EE EE M - 55 EE IELEPHONE, MAIN CORNER CASCADE AVENUE EE gi 41 W AND KIOVVA STREET QE EE HE E angvgon-F f P lt d NI Y TKT I 4-V T T TT TE E VVuri'h0uSes 5 Thank ou all for our . Y .Y E Main 97--- patronage cluring E the Ba ave Phone the term Just QE gg za . QE e n cl in g 55 i::i'.i3i evr:2,f:f:fi :ru ' T 555 QE idenvv to your lll'Sil1liitiUIl.A I - V QE EE EE HE 2 up Z U rn r- r' Z lTl 3? l-' 'sf 'EE 22 - E 5 L'3?Mm 52 LOYQQ-IQSF,-R , THE FLORIST E STORAGE CO, EE U- . I-23 E A A. A. IXIICHAEL PHONETBIAIN 6-1'-I 5555 'EEE BE ' I The Royal Hai Works EE Cleaners, Blockers and Dyers QE QUALITY and SERVICE of All Kinds of Hats - QE lg 224 E. PIKES PEAK AVENUE Opligiili Gas Colfiljoiiipifings' E EE555.5555535555555555555EEEEEEEEQEHEEEEEEEEEEEEESEEESEHEBEEEEEEEE PATRONIZE LEVER ADvERTisERs 146 'PHE LEVER ANNUAL M1RRoR AND ADVERTISER H-155555555555555555535555555555EEEEEEEEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHEEEEEQEEE High School Boys If It's a Puncture EEE 5555 55 EE E GET Blcslglsaglgxgglc IN ALL 01' Bl0WO11t E Call E EE AT x H5 JACK DBBOER TIRE SHOP EEE 12 southm-jon street SEASTKIOWA E E-EEEEEEE 555553553 gg ' B znning June 0111, 922. Two lem fxix EE QE Skaggs Buslness College ks each. Studenls attending our S zmer 5 BE S .S ,hnol willjind when lheir fall work be s fha! EE l l I 'r task is cu! one half intwo. Able chefs i l , d' . EE A list Qf prizes giwenfnr efficiency nmiled am P Mmm suwmm ings BE EE upon requesf. Rates, SIS-OO Terln EE 5555155 55555 aaaaaaaaa P-I D' CD DP S FT QD 5 at e aaaaaaaa Camera Shop E 5fo?m9gLI,5g, .SIIDRIXGS Khorrs Market Q Q Company gg ISE 123 North Tejon shea 55 E Pictures I E ISE 3 03 5. 5 nm 55 EE ' ' ' SE Hi Glff Novelues The Best there Is, SE E K0dakS is hone too E cm o o 0: afgaaaa -I 5' CD to D O ff O CU 'S Q3 :P UD D O 'U U O E af 2 5' 2. 31 aaaaaataa 5555551 aa I I I North Tejoh Street Plmmxv 2602-2603 H-IBEEEEEEEEEEQEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEIE-EEEEEEEEEEEFIEEEEEEEEEISEL-E PATRoN1zE LEVER ADVERTISERS 'l'1IE LEVER ANNUAL NIIRROR .mn ADVERTISER 14 7 335555555sagem55555Qagagaeagaeagegagamgagamaagaafagagagsgsaag EE 5 E E E IIIIIIHllHHHIllllIMIIHIIIHIIIWHIIIIHIIHHIIIIlIIHIIlIKTIIIHIIIlllllIIIIIIIIWHIIHHIHIHIHlllIlllllIllIIII'IillIiIlIWHIlIHIHIHI9HHIII!IlII g EE i + . ' 55 E M fewarf Bros Enqlavmq Co. E E SXJF Piifelzs' gf Good S E E C'o,ope1'19Gf'of1e.2af1afZl2rc'Hcifhys E EE 1:1 ' Of' r: QE E Colege am!69yl.S'c-Aoo!,4f1f11fa!s EE E 2515 Co'2L71'Zff.Zr'h'5s.-rigi E E IHIIIHWIIIHIHIHIHIIIIIHIIIWIIIlIlHllJIHH4lHWIiHHHIIHJIIIHHHHWIHH!H!III!lMHlHI! E 55 V HE EE gg 55 EE HE as 55 EE '55 HE 55 EE 5 EE 55 EE 55 , EE 55 -if---E '? 5 E 5 3? E E ii U 1 W D E 55 EE E PRI N TI N G fr' E STATIONEE Co. Q E 9-il Pikes Peak Ave. E EE E E 55 EE 55 EE 55 EE E 5 engasaefeigagi55555555555easagsaigawaaeawjgaaagagaeamagagaii PATRUNIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS 5 E h B C I' e usy orner 5 EE Liggett's Chocolates EE Kodaks QE ORE people pass this cornerfmeet other Qtationery QE peopleftreat each othersthan in any K EVE other place or location in the Pikes Peak Perfumes gg Region, Toilet Goods E Strangers know that if they Ustick around QE the f'Busy Corner long enough they will meet 5 ' everyone they know. EE It's the convenient place to meet and enjoy delicious refreshment at our art fountain. 5 H5 . E Robinson Drug Co. Ei THE BUSY E Z CQRNER I EIL 5 K ' 'Ti W ag 55,11 'vm HE ut oor E 1 if w if Wx X E Outfitters i 4 5 To everyone who has attended C.S. H.S. 2 A- Y E or lived in Colorado Springs, this big store is LU? known for its Outdoor Outfits. Q E?-5 From a few flies for fishing to any ath- Am ER School QIHYS YOU gg letic paraphernalia or a complete camp Us outfit, people know we have the things which mum, WC have many hun, EE Blake good. dreds of customers all. the EE Earl lNIac'l'avish is manager with special WHY fffilfl th? Atlamlc to QE supervision over athletic equipment. fgihlixlhc' keep In touch 5 5 C l d S ' gg o ora o porting Goods E C OTIS E Nl l'NlTYRll P ' 55 EARL 1y1aQiAvIsH, iiigiis 107-109 N. TEJON STREET I C73 PE zz: F1 r' 4 rn av IJ' 2 2 f: :P F' V P-'H ao ao o au :Q z cs IJ' U 4 rn av 3 U7 IT1 vs 5 E 5 5 5 E 55 5 5 5 5 M5 5 E E E E E E E E E E E E E 5 E EE EE E5 EEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E EE EE E EE EE HE EE EE 55 EE EE 55 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE E EEEEEEEEEEEEE 'IU 93 -1 rv o 2 ,. N rn r' ni 4 5 3' cn 4 rn :U v-1 V-4 U7 rn va U7 THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRRKJR AND ADVERTISER 149 EEEEEEEEEEEIEEEEBEMEEHEEEEEHEEFIBZEEEEEEEEEEEEEEETEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHE 555155555 P4 O C O Q3 5 cm CD :S CD 1 Qi 1? C. o. fm CD C ? 23 CD UD C f Q3 5 Q. no 'S .CL Qaaaaaaawj of 3 store by the merchandise it sells EFIEE 5355 E What, then, is your verdict of a shop like ours that offers E EE '.'A'A'A'L' merchandise of the quality ex- gg E LAL pressed by such famous l1nes EE E l Q as Manhattan Shirts, Dobbs gl E . A .::A. and Henry Heath Hats and 55 Eg ljV rgjagpi Emi Claps Fashkn1l3ark and Eg 5, ' s ' B 1 h EE ZL ociety rand C ot es EE EE ' 3 I, s We sell these as well as every other BE gg T 2 I Yliiflvl high type article of mens Wear QE 5 Villgi Easii- X 5 E53 f all fc Eg gi QQJ Eight and Ten Souih Tejon 5 5 BE D , E 1 f 104 N th EE 5 fveryfbzng in ofwers Te 105 Ei. I5 I' fi' I' 1376 fy W if 555555555 53555555353 PHONE lNIAIlX 6 - l f 1 I Oo aaaaaaaaa '-U 3 . :I Cf. :s UQ F C Z W FU 7? Uv aaaaaasaa EEE E555 l' 555555 5 Z L 2 51:-' PT 5 4 0520 E'oQ P is: 2 Sw' ,Q-5 1 EEE. C Gai O Elfiu 5-:Z 'U UEQTJ : '75 E 515 : QP Z , Z cz Q no Q22 55 ca. 'FZ rs Gam ww 'QN Q,,u-1. ws CD in EEE H5355 Is ihc l'IlNI'jJI17 U,bI6 COIH1NIIll'U'I1 of r1Ch1'e2,'c1nPr1l.s C l 1-ELQ,,,,gN,Q QM. East Pikes Peak 555555555.551355E5EEEEQE5EliE5EEFi5E5E5Ef5Q5E5EFmEFi5EEE5E'59555525 PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS W, H, W ,.- .. 1.. G o H In :11 F' rr: 4 rn w 3' z z c: so F' E :U o no so E D' U 4 rn rv 'Lx U7 rn m 55559555 5 EE EE SE EE EE EE EE EE EEE BE EE EE EE 55 EE EE 5 EE EE EE EE EE EE LFE EER EE EE EE EE E EE .5 5555555525 55555555 Q M N 'N Sl. Cb SS Q, SG N C N . O Cb 55555555 55355 555355 ls embraced in procuring merchandise fell-E of the best quality and distinctive style, E E approved by our high standards, and E E offering it at prices consistently mod- E gg? erate-concentrating our efforts upon E QE giving the utmost in value every day E E of the year. QE 55555 555553 '11 R L Q 5. QQ gig such 'well knofwn lines as ga Hart Schafner 5 Marx Clollies EE EE M unsing Underwear gg EE EE EE Holeproof Hosiery EE EE Stetson Hats EE Emery Shirts 5 EE EE EE EE X Q EE E of E Established 1885 Tojoo Bc Colorado Avo. EI-15555555555 EE EE 5 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE E EE EEE EE Eh EE 5 EE EE 5 EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EEE EE EE EE EE 'J-1555555555 F P '-1 va o 2 P4 N :ra T' rn 4 in av P c 4 in vw E T rn w U1 H E :ri I E AAA z UP z z c: 2 5 bv 7: o x b Z cf 3' c S AAI va Hx F-4 w 1:1 21 G 5555. M 5 5 5 E E E 5 E E 5 E 5 E 5 E 5 5 5 E 5 E E E 5 5 E E 5 E E E E 55 55 Ofwufse HOU wfll Get this SLOGAN E EE Enter FRESIIMY1 N NICX T FALL' gm: But who! about the livponxe of flu' EE 5? Junior and Senior Years? Q EE Let an Educational Policy ln lhc New 6 5 England .Mutual Lift' Insnrrlnce Corn- E E pony of Boston do if for YUU. EE l- FR OM 5555 I 5555 MHP c. K. Powett Head fo F001 Phone M 1948 and let him fell yon abou! il. gg? Cleaning, Dyeing, Hat Blocking EE Shoe Repairing EE E 5 EE ' I iii EE 55 E Laundry ' E E and Cleaning Co. Ef!19 ?42 EEE 117ifrQj5Q,.sf. Plizlog 15'QQneMa'n 5 W5 E E EE I h ' ll EE E s your ouse systematica y E an 3 - ati 5 . . . . 5551 EE It is a technical question, but a practical one, too. Proper EE gi lighting is an asset to health and happiness. ga EE And the light company, thru Prof. R. R.Tileston of Colorado EE EE College offers you just such information. In building a new QE house, in remodeling an old one, at home or in your store you gg gg want lighting that is technically right. -VL' 5 Prof. Tileston is at your service without cost to you. It is EE one of the scores of things yourlight company offers you as a ser- 4 E. fb rf :r sw rr on o FD U7 E. P+ :- r'+ :- fb FD .. FD 0 PP 3. Q. FP K4 ra :f Q. r'f :- FD UQ sm: U7 sc E U' : K4 E555 5555 ease H 5- W Q 2. o PS no Q o Un to 5 . 5 are ffl E on D' fr I CD an FT tiara 555 EEE ancl Power Company Thane main 2400 meaaaaaaaeaaeaerefaaeagereaeaeaeaeaaaaaaeaaeamfiaaeaeaaaeaeaaaaaam ' PixTRoN1zE LEVER ADVERTISERS Z YQ 'H : F' 3 4 111 ws D' z z c P ? P'i we :J c w Q 2 IJ' 'C' 4 E UT E an 5 I5 5 Q55 35 CD5 55 55 54,5 C1355 5 5 O5 5-55 Q95 2.53 :jj W5 55 5 55 5 5 5 5 an I5 rr 5 5 555 555 55 PRESSING and 55 EE WIC CARRY Tlllf MOST EE EE eox1eLETE LINE or DYEING BE 55 oRoCER1Es, , , X , 55 1011 1 s a ma er O 631111101 55 Q Wl t tt f Ll ,, 55 QE lvl E AT S, VECJETA B L ES Dyeing or Pressing, then Coutures EE AND FRUITQ can give expert serviee. QE CITY no 55 EE We buy in large quantities, at good discounts Hundreds Of Tel'l'0l'S bring US EE EH! and our customers get the advantage their work. They know it is EE QE Thirty years in business under this name and always done right EE at these street numbers 5555 5555 960 55 l l3-l I5 South Tejon Street Q5 IZOI N. Weber Street The House of lDI'OlfTlPt Sef'VlCC. French Cleaners and Dyers 5 . A 55 Q55 Everything for the E gg Complete Cutfit- 55 rg tmg of the E gg School Girl 55 The definite p1zr1711selQf5lzis Sore TS in 0 er on ' 111' rex EE qhalily, high-clit ruling and bmi QE 555555 555555 sf'r1'1'1'z'. Every Sale nzadff muxf, abow all, salitify the buyer. To appear to be youthful IS the earnest desire of every E Woman today. School girls pos- gg 5 sessing this enviable charm EE should cherish and keep it and QE Wear Peggy Paige Dresses to EE E enhance it. E 55555555 55555555 They are charming in their youthful lines and they cost no more than ordinary Dresses. Sold only at this slow, ill C'uIarad0 Sprffzqs 5 QH5D'11S,2,feefw00D P P E 5 5 EIIIIIINES BRIIS E H-1555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555E5555555555El-1 PATRONIZIQ LEVER ADVERTISERS THE LEVER ANNUAL TVIIRROR AND ADVERTISER 153 5 EEEEEEEEEE THE SIGN OF THIS VVILD GRAY GOOSE WILLS SAINTE CLAIRE 5555 5555 g The AMO-lfjb-ll?!l-ll7IL flur. ' ' P 1 , 7 E The JOHN MeooWAN Emb0d'me1 jfjogig E 5 CORPORATION Q gg EE 2 East KiowafCorner Cascade Avenue and GRALE QE Telephone, Main 2408 and ENDURANCE EE 5 5 EEEEEEE EEEEEEE n ' ' u--- Springtime --ee! Is Bicycle and Motorcycle Time EE And just in line we will say we are the Real DOCTOR gl on Bikes and can 'tDiognose and cure their every rnalady E gg 'Let Us Tell You the Kind QE Our stock of the leading makes--Emblem and Iver Johnson EE in bikes, and King Harley in motors, is Qonvineing Egof 5 QE that we look to your interest by stocking only the BEST QE E E '1hf'WQTe i11NSport Cloodsl' EEEEEEHEEEEEBEEEEEEEEEHE -l 'S' cv 2 E E C Q. o Q SD fo Q Cn 'U O 1 N Q. F 5 cm E CU Q' O e- 0 ji Q. Q. on 3 O O 5 'U no I3 L4 EEEEEHEEEEFUEEEEWEEEEEEE Specialists io Rudolph I-leyse Young Men s Tailoring Young nu-n especially like our tailoring, been I-I A R D X A R E lid, Y. Price Sr Co. know how to put that ' into clothes that young fellows 1 lx 5 rwwfyizow- Tin, Sheet Iron and HE ' f .Q N 'few' '11 EE else?-,,zz,1 me new EE EE Roo fly' 1111111165 Mb 5 33 113 East Pikes Peak Avenue 28 N' Tejm' S' Phone 552 L-I-1EEEEEEVSEEEEEBEEEYEEEEEPEBEEEQESQHEEEEEHEEEEEEBEEEEELEEEEEEEEEEEEHE PATRONIZE LEVER ADvERT1si:Rs 154 THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 55555555555555555555555555555555555 CITY 55555 55555 CITY CoAL MINES 5 C O ga , A . S A I. 5 gg adjom Colorado Sprmgs 1tSelf, gg EE ' ' ' ' f'-325' EE gwmg a dlrect and qulck de- Nfl was 5 A A 5 Eg hVeryci'afuelthat 5 Supen Eg 5 ior by every test ........ I5 555555 555555 OWNED and OPERATED BY C t Y C G 31 M H Q S GENERAL OFFICES EE SE P V 5 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE QE FOLNDER5 OF CITY Phones, Main 3-2 67 and IZO EE 5 5 5 Th 5 5 55 6 5 5 J. C. ST. JOHN 5 5 . . 5 QE THE SELDUMRIDGE Plumbmg and I-leatmg 5 E Incorproraled EE Eg GRATN FLOUR. FEED EE EE EQAENS Phone Main 48 226 X. Tejon St. 5 BULBS SALT 5 HE CALFQMEAL EE Incubators Brooders QE Poultry Supplies Poultry Feeds LET US SERVE YOU BE EE Bee Supplies Dog Bread QE 5 mwchnmlafzigy 5 QE 108 Souflz Tejon SZ. 'A op HE 555555 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 555555 ... U Lv f-1 va o 71 ,.. N rn r ' m 4 rn :U D' U 4 rn 75 -x ... UT 111 we M mm CANDIES , ,,,,,A THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER 155 EEEEEEE EEEEEEE -XYTHORIZFD EE Y0u,re Surg EASTMAN gg gl:-Tl f,,V We AGENCY QE EE Theyre Pure Send Film E gig Rolls by gi E safaris?5i::DL1::zfhsfhS:ag33 Mail E t th , 1 ll '- ' d d ' 5 iiatiffs Sl'LS1Zi'iti2?Ein3?tuEaii FoR DEvELoP1No AND gg kind IS uniformly exclelent. EE PRINTING EE g I I Having our own developing and printing lVI05t D6l1C1OuS COHC6 department, we naturally take especial pains QE F . to get the most possible from every Picture QE EE or the Outing Lunch We finish for you, SE 5 Our films are always fresh because we sell 5 You can depend upon Ten More so many rolls. QE Cups 'to the Poundmibetter coffee, . E Eg QQEQQFQEFNGOOD FRESHLYI OASP French Perhnnes and Todet Goods Eg EF' ' ' f 1' EE as Dern s 'W ll Q 5 55 26 S- TEJON ST- Telephones '90 and 750 EE 5 Corner Opposite Postoffice QE 5 5 EE5555 EEEEEE IVIILLER BRGTHERS Where Musif is Sweetest ' The EW EDISQN The Phortograph with a Soul QE Every I nxtrumeuf ll Musical Master- piece Every Re-creation an Encore Qf the A rtis! 5 E 15 NORTH TEJON STEET E 5 E E E Telephone Main 936 we Q Miss Ell1ziEll.C grnlimerman Hotel Vgrest E QE DESIGN 1425 East Pikes Peak Avenue EE E CHINA DECORATION COMMERCIAL HOTEL gg E WATER COLORS EE Studio ZZ East Bijou Street iff xxlffil 5 COLOIQADO SIJRINGS C0t0?'tlltU Spftllgh CUZO. QE 5 i 5 5EEEEEEEEEEEE P.iTRoN1z1: LEVER ADVERTISERS 156 THE LEVER ANNUAL MIRROR AND ADVERTISER H-TEEEEEEEEEEESEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEBEEEQEHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEBEEEEEHEHE BUICK EEEEEEEEEEEE 5EE5'E'5'.5EEE 4659 -... L 5 EE E 1i?3dDbTHiNff The Strang Garage E 5 among them Z1I1'1 s Al EE - o' the wheat B d And this actually i h 167-26 ONIQGIHZEIQLE .Yorah Nevada Bread you can b EE EE QE Zinfs are EE EE the Better D U EE Baked Things N AKING OMPAN 51 T B C WHITE 5 EE EE EE 5 I ,Y V E S T 17.0 U R S A V I N G S I ,V it 7 Per Cent. F Ilrst Mortgage Loans E .PE-'EE E-'HSE AMOUNTS 3250 UP 4 - v 5555555555555 5 5 E? E H 'v-' D' 55 'D 55' O r-NI 2. 33 o 1 an Q.- A O ll-4 D 4: rn 59, B' rn Ei 2 Nl 2 ? ' an H IF' E11 '4 E 0 Z S3 Us PU R11 H '-I 55552-555555555 551 S'EaY1Cl1Cy--- Photographer X 224 North Tejon Street W if 5 CAMERA ART PICTURES A THE TYPEWRITER QE QE of Pikos Peak Region and Colorado MAN QE QE Color:-Iggwfiiizgr -A Sr Color ewri -b e I- FEEL! - Any Time -Any Place Hand Coloring Enlarging Commercial Work 125 N - Tej on Ph-one M- 95 V L-I-1355555SEQRESEEEEEEEEIQEEEBEBEEEEEEEEEEEHFIEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQEEEEEEEE PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS THE LEVER ANNUAL BIIRROR AND Am'I3RT1sER 157 EEEEEEEEEE 5555 E 5 BE Q , 55 Q c50vC .1 , - .. E 5 SHOE COMPANY EE EEEEEEEEEEEE W CD CD Q. ICU 5 UQ m EEEEEEEEEEEE FINE SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN EEE 555 Burns Theatre Building 5 1 - -y -x The Nlahan Jewelry Company EE EE 6 wants to take this occasion to EE EE congratulate the Terrors on EE EE fm. Afternoon thi accomplishments of an- QE EE Evening and O er bear' ' EEE Sports Wear Terror spirit, Terror co-oper- EE E5 ' lf ation, and Terror pluck al ways 5 gi Win. HE 5 E as M is 5 E ' Catering Especially to Mahan EE HIGH SCHOOL and W Y EE EE CQLLEGE jEWELRY COMPANY BE E , E 5 E 55 A Matter of Economy Womans Exchange, Inc. 55 EE . . 105 Tcjon Street, North EE EE qIBy pfessing a suit often, and E EE mflzilxsigi Tea Rm and Gift Shop QE c A . - , igfaftgfy Service tg ygu. Bl't'tl12Lf-tlSli, LZHZIIZCOII EE Em .iljtvrnoon Tca 55' J Ph H f ' E fui3.lV22g E EE Ge IIOme'n1udc Cakes, Cll7lfllll'.Y, Iva Cream 5 I5 .llailz 523 I7 E. BU014 St. Pimic Lunf-lm EE EE 5 E E 5 E 5 5 5 E 5 E 5 E E E E 5 E E E E E E E E E E E E EE E E E EE .... U aa -1 nd C 7 N xi T' :ri 4. m W 3' 2 in av f-i F11 U3 rn no IIT 158 THE LEVER ANNUAL NIIRROR .wo :XDVISRTISER H-1EEEEEEEEEEEEHQEEEEEEBEEEEEEEEEEBEEESEEEMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHEEEEEEE E ga Q' , EE EE N101 - ldv S f EE WW W1 ll 6 305 Y E E rl 992 R 5 'W Www Cm' E QE 1.:,A I, OF oUR CUSTOMERS with Su QQ E M1HIm1M1 gg a,imQdSL,ts E 55 Ulm I M MM is 351525520 Qi ' f E ft mf 251 55 'EE Where FOOTWEAR FASHIONS lahi10gL?sCllu1y I' l h tfl' lr d 5 QE are always NEW? ' olens. One f,l ll D g 5 E Where Styles are Exclusi d you, Your suit h th 55 EH V DIFFERENT: ,itranparlts if yor: likoiof 5 1, d QE EE Wh?feT5:IoEl13ELlLT are Correctly as sun. Nl F SED. EE EE , 55 E Wiki 5 EE SHOES THAT SATISFY , i1fO0ZfN MINS EE EE 22 groom st 124 East Pikes Peak EE 5 EE EE EE QE EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL GUWS 5741767-Tfellli T576-Y g Carlisle Rope-Cord Tires as . gi E 55 The Colorado . SE E Colorado Sprmgs E Electric CQ SESS SEER Tire 8: Service E QJST? l ll St2ltlOIl E QE I 1'.vtzlres, .elppliances and In- QE EE terior lViri1zg E EE 9 E. KIOWA STREET EE' EE .. HE EE 12 E. BIJOU St. gg EE E555 5555 r: 55155-E '-Z 5 F' Q rn I-4 'U O E if 2 r-1 2 sl 1 3 A w ZC7 1 QFD E if Z 'UJE O ..- m WE F-'J-3 '4- '-E T' DP cs nf 3 'D H N N N w me S L:- 5 Go ? so H GQ F v T F' F' m sv L-EEE EEE EEE EE 5 EE SE EE HE EE EE EE HE EE 5 EE EE SE EE E Ei 'SE 55 EE 55 EE EE EE EE EE EE H-TSE 'C Q -1 W O Z N ru T m 4: :1 :U D' U 4 rn W -1 P-4 U7 111 W V2 au- Tl-nt LEVER ANNUAL Mikkok AND Anv131:'r1si3R 159 EEE Sp 0 r t m a n s pp Supply Home E L,, WL H 5 il' .EZA V QE ., .pii - ... J- -. :-A N l E , zzz . ,,,,,,.:: ,,..: I ,:E,:, A In Vzzzl ,::::5::. ,:..,...'VV::.:,: I .,,.A ,,,.,:5::, ZZV. ,35:55:13,1:: 1 1 EE M E EE Better EE E Equipment for Eg gg Athletics 55 5 Hkmg 5 EE Swimming gg lg Camping E Q Hunting AD AQ Fishing EE EE E Yeti will and at QE THE SPQRT SHOP EE 5 THE TERRURS WIN BY WQRK 55 QE K HEN you c-onio to work in the niorning in sc-liool, oiuofficfe oi' X E EE shop don't start the clay liy killing time :intl vxwcisiiig your 5 EE yop 'bout juzzin' bees and Lovely Things with Li-gs and honiv- niziilo Gin-t'liic-ken Fights and Poker Pots and tlio time that you gg ggi got in. Thercfs nothing to it Egbert, oi' Tom, Bill, .lov oi' Jiin, you EE clon't get paid for lvcturin' nor the wliiskors on your c-liin, or tolling QE wlivro you wentlast night and all the i-lizinge you spent, or Whvtlivr Q5 you clzuvnoocl the liitclion Sink witli Lui-y oi' 'tDui'ky'l Hent. The nionoy you get is for working on wlizitvvoi' may lJOYUl1l'.l0lJ, wlietlivi' selling silk hose to tlii- lffskimos oi' sinking a pick in tlic- socl. So no E5 55 7-3 gli nuittvi' XVl10tl1t'l' you'l'v rll0I'1'01', boss. stuilont oi' just plziin clerk. get glgll EE tliort-oii tilncxsziy Cloocln1o1'n1ngFolks, :intl pic-k up your tools :intl EE 555 E55 f WQRK 4 The Gut West Tent and Awning Co. li3i2tiftiiil'l'cju1i Street Mlqhe Sport Shop., 11234. EEEEEEEEEEEEEE55 Il-x'i'noNizis LEVER .VXDVIQRTXSERS 5 o H w D' z z c Q 7' P? - we va o w Q 2 U' U fr rm m -1 Y: E 555 5 as an tai QE Em QE are QE an QE QE ea 55 HE QE Q5 QE 55 aa QE ea gl 5 55 I5 55 ea 5 555 PAINT 5555555555555 4 EEEEEESEEEEEHEEEEEEE A LITTLE CI-IEAPER A LITTLE BETTER EE EE gags 'U 33. Z H Cf? C 'U 'U V' rf CU Q mm EE EE BE EE 5 XYHULIQSALE . . gg E mn, 113-115 East BIJOU Street E E as BE 1 EE E T I 4' c,o2 ooAI.. gig The EE Colorado Springs Fuel 5 5555555555555 5555555555555 EEE I fb 'PU fb D3 2- 'Q S' -1 3 S '4 F11 E SE UQ fb 5 C5 'C '-I IJ' na Company Il, lf HA IUIIIJY. f,I'C'Sif1l'7!f 120 EETP'k P TEXT E EIS I CS C8 VCIIUC E-In 551 , 2 H, vhl' h h , . ' V ' , . . EE gggimcbzkc-Tgorlgool Tio?cl1mf5cggtxllcigrialliqagfus QE EE light is ulwnys ready for au. emergency. gg EE Carry one wsllth -you ann hfifchrtl when QE gg need 1t. BL sure 11 IS .1 EE ILE W I N C H E S T E R lf, fi. 11.4 Y, flwnwzl Jfllllflfffl' ME mf :A 55 The Lowell-Meservey Hardware Co. 'AGUOQljERVICELiYS 5 5 Phono 307 106 S. Tejon St. Phone 327 EE EE EE L-E5555555555555EEEEEEEEEMEEEEEEEEBEESEEESEEEEEEEEEEEEEHE PATRONIZE LEVER ADVERTISERS limi
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