Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)

 - Class of 1915

Page 1 of 142

 

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 142 of the 1915 volume:

s . -0 OREWOR D f 12: 53 A :gg I il QP 'Where bath passeh atnap a glory from tbr earth. I'I'Il the purpose of retaining :tml keeping fresh the memory of this glory, the glory of our high school days, this issue has been pub- Iisheml. If it do this, the compilers will feel that their work, full of imperfevtions as it is, will nevertheless have been successful. COMPILATION C0lVlMI'I I'EE Russell Farrell Kenneth Burke Nlury Adeline McKiI1bin Norman Godfrey .I 1':1ri Kirk Williz iixi L. Scott FINANCIAL COMMI'I I'EE Nor lxlzill Botsfortl .Iucob Davis Frm-w Scott U0 llzi Icl Harrison Louis Cllupmun 'EA -as-F THE PE BQDY -S29- f TSP:- , ., - Our Principal DAVID R. SUn1s'l'INr:, D. C L, ul: P BQDY IIUTIIER Ml:Nm:N1rAl.1., Jn. I,udy With Honor Class President Literary Society J . HAnon.n A Lmsox 01.124 S. Axmznsox L11.1.IAx Dono'r1rY APPLEBTEIN Chubby Dramatic Club Debating Cluh Hnnv Txrvs Asr1NwAx.1, Vx Q' 1' -xg Tru-2 PEABQDY wt, -1.1 .. -4... . V- JOHN FOUNTAIN BAnNE'r'm Chink Dramatic Club Track Team MARTHA ELAINE BEASLEY Debating Club Chorus JOHN ANDREW' DE WITT Br:A'r'rn: Chorus RALPH BEATTX' MARY ELIZABETH BECHTTI. Camera Club ffl ' At- 'Cn '-'- ECT, up ,IJ Tl'lE PEABQDY Q:.s .1,,,, ,. - - NLT FRAKIJN Hiram-nm' l5r:cKFIEl,D Becky Swimming Team-Captain Dramatic Club LUCILLA IKEIIAN htskilivi Dramatic Club NIIRIAMI BELL Art Club Dramatic Club Orchestra JAMES F. Brznnmxo With Honor Literary Soriety Truck Team Lonmu: BERKEY Susie Art Club 6 THE FEQXBQDY G lx - JEssIE V. BLAIR QXDA MAE BLOCK lSL0gger7! Dramatic Club EDWARD BLUE Dramatic Club Tennis Team Class SecretaryJTreasurer BERTHA ISAHEL Bonn: Red', Debating Club Chorus I.oU1s1': WINSTON Bornum Squeege Chorus Dramatic Club 'E' owen nr. PEABQDY 'wid , - Q,-95. - ' , KA Nomms HLTSI-'ORD Nifty Manager of The Peabody 'l'ruc'lc Tc-:un Swimming Tcmn llruumtic' Clulm '1'vm'lmic'ul Club Fl.olu:Ncl-: K. l5ou'M.xr: With Honor' Czunc-rn Club literary Socic-ty' Social Couuuiltee Drauuutic Club M,uz::,uu:'r Bmxxn ttl,cgg3v NVith Honor Literary Society lis'rm:n Ixmsn Un,xxKx.m' Dramatic' Clulm Join: llU'ru-:non ISREDIN VVith Honor -.- 'e4 al' ki W G HE F QXBQDY -li11 ,.,.,-, 1-1, 3 fm A BESSIE FLORENCE BROWN With Honor KENNETH D. BURKE Literary Society Debating Club LonE'r'rA P. BYHNE Dramatic Club MARGARET CAMPBE EL Mnmuan Moons CAMPBELL Chorus v 1 'mx ELMA M'uss CANNING With Honor Chorus CLAUDIA CHAMBERS Chorus Louis RoUNszvu.1.z CHAPMAN The Peabody Cartoonist Dramatic Club MINNII: DELILA Cmmcn Jour: FULTON COLLINS, Jn. Chorus zgg' A-F 'f THE rumen 9 GQ? W of jigillk THE PEQXBQDY Xxx - MV' JENN11: OLIVE Coon Jane Literary Society Art Club Bmuco G. C. Coscm Rich Technical Club Debating Club DAvm DIALCOLDI COWLEY VVith Honor Debating Club-President Literary Society ALICE FAmu:I.L CRAIG With Honor Art Club Mmuox Cnosm! Dramatic Club THE PEZTBQDY 11 JU.xNx'r,x Mmm: CURTIS With Honor ALICE Mum: Dixul-'rzx Litfsrary Som-iety Chorus JACOB D.xv1s J ake ' With Honorf' Debating Team-Captain Literary Soviety Dclmting Cluh-Vice President CHARLES Dmumsr D1:r.P1rY, Jn. Drzunntic' Club Social Committee llrzivrnlcs FORTUNA Da MA'r'rY Billy Dramatic Club ! 11414 mg ' L 'i 'L'-L 12 I'lE PEABQDY ALm:a'r WILLIARI DEMMLEH With Honor Orchestra EARL LE ROY IZBTWBILER 6aDet!y' .rx 1 f :L,,L.ff 9-1 wwf .L HENRY BRUCE DISQUE Discus Chorus R. MAE DonLA JOSEPH Bum' DRAKE C4DuCky1v EX 1 Dramatic Club Debating Club X' ' X Aifyb L0 scrr f -7 jif- N ,:'- ?-i- uf -l-fl' fr' -Vs? IHEFEADQDY 1- 'Abc x21 -..,-l-1 q-,i..-ii- - IN-f' Gu.m:n'r DUNCAN uGib9! ANNA Mum: DUNN Camera Club Dramatic Club Literary Society Hzsnzn Louisa DYE With Honor News Editor of The Peabody Chorus MARTHA WILMA Ennnuz Gslrrnunm ROSAMOND Ecxu-:s Chorus 14 HE PEMQDY we , .3 5 A - imma- 144554 EDGAR CHARLES ECKlI,XR'f 6bEck7! Dramatic Club Track Team RAYMOND S. EACKLES Nuts DODTALD W. :EDSALL CEDOHYQ CHARLES HAROI.D ELLIS HARRY L. Ewnwo Q- +-- 2-1 --- -3,5 THE PEQXBQDY V iii-l ,nm 1 --ll---'H 5 'Iam J Iivssnu. FAmw1.L With High Honor Editor of The Peabody Valedictoriun I nr:umucx A LDEN FAvu.u: Fritz Football Team Draunutic' Club Chorus llEl.l.E l3RYSON F1Nm,r:x' Rice KATIIRYN L. FrrzvA'nucK Literary Sock-ty Camera Club Dramatic Club Chorus JEAN c1l.GA FLANAGAN With High Honor Sulututorian Dramatic Club Chorus M. li HE P BQDY 'Kkb EUBANA G. FLANIGAN With High Honor Literary Society Debating Club Dramatic Club Camera Club G1.AnYs Rovoxn FLEMING Mlunmn FLOYD With Honor Literary Society Dramatic Club Stall' Artist Art Club DOBOTHEA ELIZABETII FREDERICK Chorus GRACE FUHER Chorus N 5 if' A-or o- THE PEABQDY YZ, -...........V U ...L-.i..- . ' 4,4 MAnuAul:'r GAlm:n Dramatic Club liiuu, Jon N GE1TDIAN Dutch Dramatic Club Technical Club EMMA Ax'rolx1:'r'rr: Gn.u:r.ANn Tony Ilmfzx H vxnzn Gnmsox Nouns Gonrmav With Honor Literary Society-Vice President Athletirs Editor of The Peabody Chorus ' 'Q' '1-557, 18 I'lE FEQXBQDY W'-ik, .,,,- -:gag -. . ' 'xi BELLE GOLDBERG With Honor Debating Club Literary Society DAvm RICHARD GoLDs1E1N I Goldie With Honor Literary 'Society Debating Club Track Team HARRY Goanozf LESTER GERALD GRAHAM Pester HELEN GnAvEn J .wi '- THE PEZXBQDY NIARY li. GRIl'l'IN With Honor Literary Society Debating Club Drzuuutil' Club Hzua N llonmou. GBIl Fl'1'II Chorus FLORENCE R. Guunsnr Chorus C1mnx.zs K1:NNr:'rn GUMM1msoN Gummy With Honor Track Team Football Team REGINA HAoa1-:n'rY With Honor A 5 -'U I Kiwi 20 THE P MQDY k S M AUDI: Ciuxsoy HAINER Social Committee Dramatic Club Tennis Team Chorus MARY HADIILTON With Honor Literary Society Chorus EDWIN P. HARNACK Hayrack DONALD INGIIAM Hmuusoy Mooney Football Team ANNETTE ELIZABETH HARTMAN Camera Club Chorus of Air' Q '-'-'- in Tl'lE FEABQDY 21 M AnGAlu:'r ILKSTIN GS With Honor Literary Society Debating Club 'FIIOINIAS C. HENRY Chorus MARTIIA A. Hznnur Dramatic Club Camera Club Literary Society Fnnmcnxcx Y. HERBON Camera Club Clmnnl-:s E. Hnvwoon N wo 'KU - THE PEABQDY MARGARET ELLEN HOLLAR 6iPeggy!9 Dramatic Club Chorus HENRETTA SARA Hou' Literary Society CHARLES HOWARD HooK Debating Club Camera Club RUTH HAUSER Camera Club Literary Society THOMAS DAVIS HUDSON i lCHuddy7, l Dramatic Club Football Team Yi C Tm: P BQDY I - Gmrrnvm: JACKSON With Honor Camera Club Chorus Gmrmvnm ELIZABETII JENKINS Gert President of Art Club Dramatic Club Wnnmzn Tuxmzrr C. Jm-1'rscH Jinx With Honor S1'mwAn'r Muznr Jox-rxsox Doc Dramatic Club DONAI.D Moons KING With Honor Literary Society Debating Club if me Q X' . , u .xg 24 cg' 'SRT ', 'f?l , ,. , ,, Nfl: NEWIJ LI. KING Newts Moon HENRY KLEIN Skygack With Honorn BERNICI: J. Knucmz Literary Society MARION EL1zAma'rH LANE ANNA LANGDON With Honor 152' - mill THE PEQXDQDY 2 20 xi- ......-1 .r...j...-if K MARGARE1' I,,uu-E VAUN Wu.nu:n LA mm JAMES Josmur I.Awl.I-in Harp Dramatic Club Technical Club Czuneru. Club MARY M1l.L1cr:N'r I,m:uoN Merry Sunshine With Honor Literary Society CuAm,l:s BAUM LESLIE SiLeSs,I Dramatic Club Track Team 1531- A' 1' '- 26 'Q l'lE PEQXBQDY CHARLES W.-urrmn LINEPENSEL f-Fatty Dramatic Club MARY L. LININGER Skinny Dramatic Club Chorus Gnnmtmn B. Locum Gertie Dramatic Club Chorus HANs Euan IIOHSTOETEB AADDISON ALVIN MANKEL UA.-177 With Honor Technical Club 7 :ggi ' A 3-2521 THE rmBQDY K 5 tit Mmuox Hmmzs BYIANSFIELD Camera Club Chorus Cnxrronn Br: NJAMIN MARSIIAI.I. Hmm-:N E. NIARSIIALL Debating Club Chorus DAvm Enwum MARTIN, Jn. ESTIIER Murrm MESS!! Chorus 'B B 54-4 1-1 Vfk 'fins 'XX4 fir' 5' 'C :5Q, HE PDADQDY r GRACE MARTIN Chorus Euxon E. MELLON With Honor Literary Society Chorus RHEA E. Mmrrs SYLVIA CHAPMAX MILLAR Chorus GENEVIEVE KATHLEEN MILLER Chorus I :hx 45-1 - -'-- in '--- -ximian . , -.- ws 'Lf' f'f-'.- THE PEQXBQDY fbi! ......... N. ...l...1-W- 'ik JEAN S'roU1' Mn.1.r:n Literary Society JOHN C. NIILLIGAN Baseball Team SARA N. M1Tc1Im. Kxrm Moxnsnr Chorus Jossmr E. MONTEl'liRDE Monty Draxnutiv Club-President Debating Chorus Debating Team Club 1 30 THE PEQXBQDY H- -if - 'sta Su 2 - g 4 0 v I r , CHESTER Monmsox Simoli Football Team Baseball Team Dramatic Club CHARLES E. MUN N Chic Editor Melting Pot of The Peabody MARH2 A. MURPHY With High Honor Dramatic Club Debating Club Literary Society MARGARET HELEN Munro GGPeg!7 Social Committee MABGAEE1' NIA!! MCCABTHY 5SPeg!! Dramatic Club Debating Club Debating Team rves ilk YES' + ' '- 'ffllil THE FEQXBQDY U tabs: 'W- VVADE CLARKE McCl..uu N Red Truck Team NIARGABET Mclrvrosu Basketball Team YVILLIALI HENRY MCKI-:Lvl-:Y MARY ADELINE Mclimnzs With High Honor Literary Society Judge Art Club Literary Editor of The Peabody YVXLLIAM GEORGE MCLABEN Mac Dramatic Club Football Team-Captain Truck-Captain Basketball-Captain Swimming President of Athletic Association U M -'F 32 HE P BQD rw' K' N ELEANOR PHYLLIS MCMARLIN Phil Alumni Editor of The Peabody Basketball Team Social Committee Dramatic Club NIARIE MCNEAL Sookey Dramatic Club VIRGINIA M. MCQUISTON Ginner With Honor Literary Society Minus Rrm MCSWIGAN Art Club-Secretary and Treasurer Gmvmumz IRENE NEEL Dramatic Club - - -4- -i.. , ,N ..- ..... U i:Z ' 517, THE FEABQDY U17 ly? . -,-J I, I . How: S. NEWEl.I, 'lv- Buff Dramatic Club-Secretary Debating Club Swimming Team l,zosA Nlcuons Chorus Guca EMILY NIEBAUM Literary Society Dramatic Club I,AunA E. Nmmun With Honor Chorus M,umAnz'r ISABEI. Noxuns Art Club J Qgfv' ' Q? THE PEQXBQDY - - - r , of 4912 TF fef: H, fri? , f L, ,V of gfyufyii CQ MICHAEL JOHN NNon Jack Football Team Track Team Chorus Basketball Team E. Howmm PAH: NBACH bGPaEyH With Honor Isuzu. PALMER Chorus Accompanist WA1.'r1:n XV. Pumm Lz'rrrrA PAYNE PAnnY C5Tish79 A Dramatic Club ur: P BQDY in- lh:ur:ccA A NNA PEN N Becky Dramatic Club Debating Club Louisa Mn? Pmrznrwlfrr Tully Camera Club Chorus Art Club Mmm: ANN Ponrza W. J. Vmnxza Quroun Bmnnu Comm RAUII S6BertD With High Honor M. 'J vi-Li?-1 , N . Eg '- ' 3.9. ru: rl-zmaolw xti NELLIE KINKEAD Rmurzns Renny With Honor Literary Society Camera Club Tennis Team KATHRYN DEAN Rica Tiff With Honor Orchestra ALVIN RILEY Spuds Class Vice President Dramatic Club Debating Team HARRY DUPLEIX Ross Literary Society Athletic Association-Senior Representative Football Team Track Team WII,I.A ALVINA Ronsusn Dramatic Club N 'I ZITA l'lUHl. Zeets Camera Club Auzxzmmzn Cuuol-r'rox Rvxxzrrz UGogs9D Baseball Team Haus RUSH With High Honor Literary Society Mann! Vxncxnm Russznn Dononnzlx SANDBHA !!D0t!I A' 3-:ii THE PEABQDY ll- RUTH SAT'1'ERFn1:Ln With Honor Literary Sooiety Debating Club MAHY HELEN SAUPP - Toots MARY BROWNING SCANLON Orchestra PAULINE SCANLON Paulus With Honor Literary Society Chorus MAB:-:L G1-:onus SCHAEDLE Chorus CII, - ' 1 may if 4- 4, J as THE ramen Joins' Fnzw Sco'r'r Advertising Manager of The Peabody Wn.l.nM IIIVINGSTONE Scorr Scotty Camera Club-President Staff Photographer of The Peabody Naturalist Club Art Club Wn.soN ARCHIBALD Scorr Debating Club Chorus T nomrsox DALE Snorrs .hcon Slusrnn Orchestra Debating Club Debating Club Debating Team Reserves 415 , J gigilf. 41 0 I -l...,i- ,gf .li ,!., ' J 521. -HE F MQD HAROLD GBANT Srnnx Dramatic Club Cheer Leader MABEL Pos'r SHoLx.An Debating Club Literary Society Es'n:r.u: Munoz: Snnucns Chorus CONSTANCE Snmlxv Giconnyn Debating Club Art Club D0no'rHY SIEBERT 6LDee!l Art Club . , 4,7,.1.. ,N V-lil HE P BQDY I,l:oNAlm SIDNEY SIGN!-11' Basketball Team Literury Society Debating Club f Curr: Ov- ptr. I af by C Qrfffv, ff., ,. . fl rl, If fy, . f Rznmccil Sxvrrlcn Camera Club Gmc: Sxzzs Mnrmx Hmmxsox Smrrn Literary Society Camera Club 'fs Viv' ' in 'l- 42 THE rumour wh- - D 1 If iw BERTHA SOHVAI. Chorus BEDELL SP1-:En KATHERINE SPRING Katie With High Honor Literary Club Debating Club HELEN Mmm S'n:INEn'r I Igna.tz With High Honor Camera Club Debating Club Literary Society EDITH IAJCILLE Sr-Unwcx llspurn Chorus Dramatic Club THE P BQDY IQDITII Sfnmm Dramatic Club Chorus JI-:Ax Sranrr Jane Chorusi , . f ,lf Lf ff... ! 3 X ' f CLARA MAE 'l'AYl.on Basketball Team HAZEL HALL Tlzxrza Haze Debating Club Dramatic Club Basketball Team Tennis Team Athletics Editor of The Peabody MARY Eu-:ANon TIICIMAS Chorus lp' - r-'W -ggi 44 THE PEMQDY '-v1 ---1---- JL. ,,...........-vv- M4 LOUISE RANKIN Tuoivulsox With High Honor Chorus Literary Society Mun' TIPPER 6LTip!! Chorus Dramatic Club RUTH Tonlno Camera Club ELLA CLAHE TnxPx.:'1'1' Debating Club SAL1.m TnrP1.E'r'r ibsalii Debating Club Chorus '- ' in '- - mg THE PEABQDY W 5 Gzonux WALLACI: XYAIL Art Club Dramatic Club Helix F. Vocmsoxc Donornv NVAGNER HIl.DA Omvz WALLACE Cul-'rolm wAI.TEBS Clifl ' Art Club Chorus ' ' 'QP no viii. 46 THE rlitxfsonwr v' - - -Lu: , 1 KA A NNE L. WATERHOUSE Nancy With Honor Literary Society Dramatic Club Art Club ETHEL MAncAnr:'r WEICHMAN MHA WII.I.IAMS Skinnay With Honor Literary Society-Treasurer BURNE111-: HAMILTON WILSON , Orchestra JANET WILSON Literary Society fp- gif- 2-'W -1- THE PEABQDY 47 x 5 lk Slum M. Wouc Debating Club-Recording Sevretary Mmzcm, Zrzmxn Frenc'hy Camera Club-Vice President Art Club Debating Club Technical Club Chorus A ,QV -1? ,rt i-- .Ili-K 48 THE PEABQDY 'c':A , it Y . 5. Glass iBuzm TILL THE JOURNEY BE ENDED With the harbor smiling behind you, and a wind that blows from the land With every white sail stretched, you are moving out from the strand. Out from the harbor you knew so long to the sea that is never still, With the free winds blowing about you, to trim your course at your will. The young bird has a home nest, and the wolf-cub has his den, But the broad sea gives no shelter to you, till you come to harbor again. And of those brave ships that weigh anchor with yours, and gaily go sailing forth, Many a one will be cast away on the rocks of the ice-bound North. And many a flower decked vessel will rot in the languorous South, Or with the helmsman asleep at the stern, be lost at the whirlpool's mouth And when the last calm port is reached, few ships will ride there at ease, And many of those will be empty, and rocking in the breeze, But a few will be laden with the trade of all the seven seas. And when the northern storm clouds, and the parched simoons are past, The quiet of the harbor waits for them at last. Out from your sheltered homestead, from the place of your first abode, You are tramping bravely forward, to follow the dusty road, Where it winds between broken hedges eastward over the hills, Then drops beyond to the desolate plain, where the wolf pack makes its kills And each of you has his burden and must not dally or stop, Some will stand to their loads like men, and some will let them drop. Some will follow the upland road, where the air is fresh and crisp, And some will wander in ilowing swamps, to follow the will'o-the-wisp. There is dead-dull level country beyond, with many a mile to go, And one last hill that must be climbed ere you drop to the valley below. And if you have 'stood to your burden, and struggled along with your load Till the last dun mile is travelled, peace waits at the end of the road. Malcolm Cowley. ff F r1i2 THE PEQXBQDY mb' 'K WW 'f'?fiV.1T1f,L'Ri f f fi?-, if I if, -T W? f 'L wwf x- -x ay, -. ,- wi' 'v-Q. 4 . -,L . q,a,.- -E ,TT-,P PEABODY SCENES AT LUNCH HOUR and to elect the right subjects for our course. But again we settled down 50 1115 PEABQDY KSA , A gg, - 'MA Ztaistnrp nf the Glass of 1915 In September 1911 the curtain rose upon the Class of 1915. Now the final curtain is slowly but surely lowering, and after the last steady descent, the Class of 1915 will have disappeared into the Past. To record all of the incidents both of tragedy and of comedy that have occurred during these past four years would be a well-nigh impossible achievement. It is, 1 hope, needless to say that these incidents in our play have been united fdramatically speakingj by business,-the business of work. Four years ago the curtain rose on the first act. The scene of the entire four acts is laid in Peabody High School. We, the Dramatis Personae were Freshmen, perhaps afflicted with stage fright, but still awed. Gradually we became accustomed to our new regime. With pleasure we remember many things of our first year: chapel mornings, and the celebration of holidays. Football held us breathless with interest,-especially the Shadyside game,- altho this sad finale, of the football season was somewhat hard to bear. It was harder to bear than the gentle atmosphere of suppressed superiority which was created when, by chance or mischance, we stood in the presence of Pea- body's only higher class-Sophomores. Very keenly indeed did we feel this on the last day of school in June when we stood with longing eyes and yearning feet watching the fortunate Sophomores enjoy the first, last and only dance of the year. Evidently our first performance had pleased our small and exclusive audience of faculty, for when the curtain rose the following September we appeared as Sophomores, a little less in awe of the Juniors, but taking extreme delight in exhibiting smiling contempt and sundry bits of superior knowledge to the new class of wondering, verdant Freshmen. Many changes had taken place both in and out of the building, and in the courses. Old partitions had been torn down and new ones erected. The Study Hall and the Lecture Hall had been converted into class rooms. Greatest change of all was the addition of-what shall 1 call them-Dhives, chicken coops, shacks, bungalows, portables? You may call them and their connecting link-the Young Arcade or Tin Alley, what you will, any one will know what you are alluding to. These structures were necessary to accomodate the increased attendance at Peabody. The new system of courses had been established and we were all in a state of bewilderment and confusion in our efforts to arrange schedules to the routine of daily life, and at the end of the first semester rewarded with a Junior-Sophomore dance. Oh! the ecstatic bliss allowed to mingle as social equals with the Upper Classmen. This to its credit the establishment of the Athenian Literary Society initial publication of The Peabody. Our school no longer had we were of being year has and the any con- nection with other city high schools, and now stood on its own feet,-and sturdy feet they were, too, for our Athletic teams were causing other teams to usit up and take notice, even tho we did lose the basketball championship to Central. THE PEABQDY 51 .- - 1 ls.: itil- The first thing noticeable in the third act was the attitude towards the other classes. Being now Upper Classmen, we mingled with a spirit of gay comradeship with the Seniors. We considered the Sophomores not half bad, and gazed with tolerant amusement at the fresh and youthful appearance of the Hrst-year pupils. The first glowing event of this year was the Peabody-Central football game-since we shall never forget it, it is needless for me to describe it. In January we had our first class meeting. Then followed election of officers, and later we exhibited our rings and pins to the admiring public. We were allowed to attend socials and dances and were permitted, if averages allowed, entrance into into the Literary Society. In the beginning of the year, the whole school was interested in the new Study Hall, and later great interest was shown in the first annual play given by the Dramatic Club,- Caste, and in the First Commencement. Again the curtain descended, but it went up again as briskly and brightly as ever on the last year of our high school career. Now we treat the Juniors with the highest degree of friendship, look upon the Sophomores as necessary evils and show elder brotherly and sisterly affection towards the Freshman. The latter was demonstrated at the Senior-Freshman Girls' reception. How full this year has been! For the second time we tied Central for the football championship, and for the second time did we see the basket- ball championship slip from us by a narrow margin. But even so, we were consoled by knowing that there is more to a victory or a defeat than the final score indicates. We are justly proud of the nine cups in our case, for Peabody is but four years old. We have to our credit victories that should not be considered as trivial. Two years has our Debating Club won the Debating Title, and this year saw us victors over Wilkinsburg in a Literary Contest. Our other organizations, of which we have several are doing active work along the lines they represent. Among the most important of these are the Debating Club, Athenian Literary Society, Dramatic Club, Art Club, Naturalist Club, Technical Club, Camera Club, Chorus and Orchestra, and the Athletic Association. The latter supports teams in basketball for both boys and girls, football, baseball, track, swimming and fencing. We are the first class to spend four years in Peabody, which has grown wonderfully since its establishment at our coming, the enrollment having increased from six hundred sixty-eight to fifteen hundred fifty, the faculty from twenty-two to fifty-seven. Of the two hundred seventeen members of the Senior Class twenty-two come from Osceola, fourteen from Fifth Avenue and three from Central. From Washington D. C. we have one, from Atlantic City, one, and from Cleveland, one. As the curtain goes down on this life of happy school days, another one rises before us, showing a path leading to Life, and we wonder how we shall find the end. As we turn with half reluctant feet from the old to the new, the first vibrant echo of the words of a previous historian come to our ears: Peabody is the largest and best school in the city of Pittsburgh. Anne Waterhouse. THE F BQDY The Red ami Gram' 4p,q4Q4341f1QQ aggfg 4 f QEHQTLML L M EF Qgfg 45fHE1?L,421jasf44JQf mufgmwffffamffm b 1:5415 H m ' f1fi'J'IWI9 I H9535 EPFHQPEY ffl? 915 E'LQ'fQi5B'?Ef2IJE F1gEf g gl f-E591 H259 PIE X . 1 . . ! Ill ll IZI l b -- ll I 1 -'I 1 I S- PII.--1-I-132212111 lr XD-l.lFI11 l Ill' U as I l livin: l'l -I ans! - v ll I ' , ull , ll ll. ' .. , QI , I . I ll Eli!! I su I H ' ,Y , 1 'll Q .AI Q ' Tl'lE PDABQDY - , lit-1 .IN ...iii I . rg.: QM 'fa 5-'f Cs... .JA .v - . .4 LN Au, QL! it., .. ..-ll. 'If THE RED AND GRAY Jeannette C. Shirk, '16 'I Peabody High, 'tis of thee we sing! The school of the Red and Gray! Loud in our voices shall loyalty ring, Peabody, ever and aye. High shall our colors unfurl on the air, For The always with pride and with honor will emblem of Peabody High, The emblem of Peabody High! Chorus: Hail to the colors of Hail to the Red, the A standard of vict'ry Peabody High! Red and Gray! those colors shall fly Forever and for aye. lied The lied Red Red A nd The The II. is the hue of the glowing sun, color of hearts that are pure, is the rose that with suuuner is done, is the strength to endure. is the symbol of faith, hope and love, proudly our colors shall fly high above, emblem of Peabody High, emblem of Peabody High! III. Gray is the morn in the flush of dawn, The clouds that are hid from the sun, Gray is the twilight when sunset is gone, VVhcn the day's labor is done. Gray is a mem'ry to everyone dear gray is our color, come, give it a cheer- 'l'he emblem of Peabody High, The emblem of Peabody High ! And IV. Peabody High, 'tis of thee we sing! School of the Red and Gray! Loud in our voices shall loyalty ring, Peabody, ever and aye. High shall our colors unfurl on the air, For always with pride and with honor will flare, The emblem of Peabody High, The emblem of Peabody High! Hare '-F an '- jlil 54 THE PEQXBQDY 'BA -A -gage, - -A Q FAREWEL1. SONG. ' GEO.WALLAOEVAlL. Ja A 6 4,1 46, 5 ,J Edffs f er - HU J- . -A Q x J JJ ' WF X V In: Vf F' P CLASS SONG J infra- lz liilq lin lm : ' sf Sq . ' - .. .. .. V' Ii I 7 l v 'I X E51 ' r r ' Y -- A -f' l,. I I . lllll . 41:1 vuqrga KY 0 1' , ,gl g T I' WV ' wa A .Q I gif f f I .ga .,a gg 1 :gl -l 4- ' l 1- J I- PA 'll-:EI :sul 2 i M . iU.:zs:aa:f::.f'.: J Ui 'U 4 J , : Li! 'l:IllH S ' 7 S an' -! , -Q: all-- V V g I- Q 'I F 'HBFF x THE rumour ' 11 -1-1 u. - i.-L-l- -- ' lk A '15 FAREWELL SONG Farewell to school life, leaving so fast, Farewell to school life, now nearly past- Soon but in memory we shall live All these bright dreams of life which it can give. Now all our school-life's but a flower- Carefrce we press it in life's book. Some day in sadness or proud power, At what a withered thought we then shall look! We have lived school life, thinking alone Of the Great School Life soon to come, When we shall taste the yet unknowng Bitter for many of us, sweet for some. But when our school life's long ago, Be what it may the life we know, When in our dark moods we are sad, We shall recall the school life we have had. CLASS SONG OF NINETEEN FIFTEEN Luther Mendenhall We are the class of nineteen fifteen, And to our High School we'll bring fame. The gold and white-shall ever stand for The wondrous glory of our name. Peabody High School we are leaving, And at the end of four long years We go our various many courses Throughout a world of hopes and fears. Sweet memories-of nineteen fifteen, Of our good school and faculty, Of days gone by of happy hours Spent in the halls of Peabody, Shall ever cling-down in our sad hearts So that we never shall forget The fine true friends we've made at High School And the great times that aren't gone yet. So let us give-a cheer for fifteen, And then a yell for Peabody. 'l'he gold and white-we cannot leave out. So let us all shout lustily. And now farewell-our good old High School, For we shall cherish you for aye, And of the time we've spent in learning, We never shall regret a day. ' EBSQ H -'I-4 4 fu HE PEMQDY Wt'-'.:Jk , ., K .Jam Y , Alf? ':i'?Fl...L 'i'? HERE AND THERE WITH ATHLETIC TEAMS if THE rmbsn I gk :WI '42 5' L2 , . 4 :wg 2,:'.e2- - -.jg L:-' ' -- .3 ff: I W, ., , , , .NA ,.. 1. mvm:w,,4uw'w:avAavfxn-:en.fn .X ' FIELD ON THE ff? ' T- in 'ii-' T 1,0251 58 THE PEABQDY Y ,Lu lille Qcbnul Gwrganigatiuns THE ATHENIAN LITERARY SOCIETY The closing year has been a most successful one for the Athenian Literary Society, a year of increase in numbers, in interest and in general influence upon the school's activities. The aim of this society has always been to develope the love for and appreciation of good literature and to furnish an outlet for literary ability. To this end it has presented a series of interesting and instructive programs: debates on the war question, biographies of famous men, histories of the nation's songs, readings from great authors, recitations, presentations of scenes from Dickens, music, and discussions of many problems of present day lnterest. That the Society has prospered has been due largely to the variety and interest of the programs arranged by an eilicient committee composed of Alexander Buchanan, Marie Schrawder, and Katherine Spring. The officers, too, by their faithfulness to duty have helped make the past year so rich. For the first semester those holding office were: Luther Mendenhall, President, Donald Anderson, Vice President, Mary Adeline McKibbin, Recording Secretary, James Sheers, Corresponding Secretary, Virginia McQuis- ton, Treasurer, Pauline Siedle and Eulalia Schram, Marshals, and Jacob Davis, Kenneth Burke, and Louise Thompson, Judges of Debate. During the second semester, the Juniors held a more prominent place, the oilicers being: Donald Anderson, President, Norman Godfrey, Vice President, Elizabeth Wilson, Recording Secretary, Eulalia Schram, Corresponding Secretary, Myra Williams, Treasurer, Diana Igel, Francis Reamer, and Goodstone, Marshals, and Eurana Flannigan, Helen Steinert, and Mary Adeline McKibbin, Judges of Debate. Since the Juniors have proved their ability as executives, it is with little fear that the Seniors pass the Athenian Literary Society into their hands, only hoping that the next year may be even brighter than the last. Mary McKibben. 'K' 'X' 'B' THE PEABODY ART CLUB The newest club at Peabody is the Art Club. It was organized, Novem- ber 13, 1914, by a few eager art students who desired to have presented fairly and ably to the school, the different phrases of Art. Its programs have been planned to meet this aim. During the year, clay modeling and casting, magazine structure and the art of illustration, cartooning, commercial art and scene painting, civic art, and the art of the poster have been delightfully presented to the Club by capable speakers, many of whom hold a prominent place in Pittsburgh's ever widening field of art. Although organized so late in the fall the Art Club numbers about forty-five and promises to become one of the strongest and most influential of Peabody's organizations. That they may help it to speedily fulfill this promise is the wish of 1915 to the succeeding classes. Mary Adeline McKibben. U! 'va ' Mix? THE PEMQDY Q9 vis ,.'- ' N' -E121 SOME OTHERS 5 is 60 THE rumour vi: Y L... . 1- A THE PEABODY DRAMATIC CLUB During the past school year the Dramatic Club has upheld its reputation of being one of the most popular and active organizations of the Peabody High School. The club opened its activities with a humorous farcical comedy entitled 'gThe Proposal Under Difficulties, and this production demonstrated to the students that a high quality of dramatic work would be given them throughout the term. The Teeth of the Gift-Horse soon followed and furnished wholesome amusement to the many students who thronged the Study Hall. The Day That Lincoln Died, was a pleasing comedy given near Lin- coln's birthday, and was indeed a splendid fore-runner to '6The Magistrate which was presented at the Schenley Theatre to a full house, and culminated the work of the club. It was a pleasing climax to a successful, instructive, and entertaining year in the study and interpretation of a great art, the drama. The Dramatic Club wishes to take this opportunity of expressing to Mrs. Yeamans, its appreciation of her faithful and invaluable efforts through which the success of the club was insured. The officers for the season were, 1914 1915 President George F. Meredith Joseph Momeverde Vice President Florence Bowman George Meredith Secretary Eurana Flanagan Howe Newell Treasurer Leonard Dahlin James Lawler Critic Jacob Davis Francis Hogan Faculty Advisor Mrs. Virginia 'X' 'X' 'X' THE DEBATING CLUB Yeamans If success is to be measured by results and honor by big things accom- plished-then, hats off, everybody to the Debating Club. It is only two years old but its record is one of big victories and good times, and its outlook for the future is sparkling. The success of the club is due first and above all to its splendidly use- ful and cultural ideals. To take the raw student, halting, blundering and self- conscious in speech and make him fluent, able, unafraid-this is the work of the club. The meeting are held every two weeks in the Study Hall, and it is here that the chance for expression is given. Debates are held, extempore talks, arguments, discussions, on all matters ranging from current events to philosophy. The club can show results, for beyond doubt its members are the ablest speakers of the school. In no other place in Peabody is correct English to be heard so generally. It is interesting to know that every member of Peabody's two debating teams has also been a member of the club. Peabody is proud of its debaters as champions of one year and tied with the other teams for the lead in the second year. The team won in the big literary contest with ...IW :Sw ' lil H7 'if' THE FEABQDY 61 wi- -1- .M T.......,- HV' Wilkinsburg, while the reserves, representing the Debating club, won all of their eight contests. In the University of Pittsburgh Interscholastic Literary Contest, Peabody captured four first places out of a possible six, with rep- resentatives of fourteen schools competing. As fine a record is yet to be made by any other school in the Pittsburgh district. To celebrate the last meeting of the year it is the custom to hold a banquet. The second annual was held this year on April 29 and was a success. Letters were presented to the members of the team, speeches made and a general fine time enjoyed. Peabody's Debating Club deserves to be well patronized by the school. The greatest complaint against any literary group is superciliousness. This club has none of it. There is no exclusiveness about the organization, there- fore the good spirit. If the school would once look into the meetings and listen to the good times, and observe its superiority over mere fun, Peabody's debating club would double in membership. There is much in store for the members of the Debating Club. A Jacob Davis. OE' 'Xa GX' THE CAMERA CLUB The Peabody Camera Club has just closed its most successful year. Started in 1911, and supported by the proceeds from taking class pictures, it has grown by great strides to a position where it is second in equipment to no club of any other high school in this section of Pennsylvania or Ohio. The officers elected to serve the year were: W. L. Scott, presidentg Marcel Zeller, vice president and buyerg Ed Thompson, darkroom manager, Cedric Braun, secretary, John Gibalofsky, treasurer and Fred Herron, chemist. During the year instructive talks were given by able photographers, and members of the club in those fields in which they have specialized. The club also entertained the school one evening by interesting moving pictures shown by the Bell Telephone Company. A large showcase was constructed and used to exhibit the prize photo- graphs of the members after each contest every month. This case hangs in the hall and has been the center of interest to the hurrying students as showing the quality and workmanship of club photography. Under leadership of W. L. Scott special classes were formed in the operations of lantern slide work, under Zeller a class in enlarging and toning photographs. Such interest has been shown by new members and such numerous applications for memberships have been made that we are sure of a real future for the club and feel confident of the ability of 1916 to carly on the work begun so earnestly and with so much labor and difficulty by 1915. Marcel Zeller. s e -are ef-at 62 1115 PEMQDY R545 , . - ,Egan f ASL! THE TECHNICAL CLUB The Tech Club has finished its second year with the accomplishment of several things. The active members were very faithful in their work. Those interested in electrical work put in working conditions the telephones which connect the oflice with the laboratory. Others kept up a miniature weather bureau, and under the supervision of Mr. Sherill installed a wireless apparatus, the operation of which occupied more than one interesting afternoon. One of the chief accomplishments of the year was the construction and installation of an electrical sign. The plan of the sign was entirely original, evolved from the brains of the workers. The mechanism was arranged chiefly by Mr. Keller, the framework by Mr. Flaherty. The sign is a good advertisement for the club. It shows that the organization practical and capable of engaging in technical work. Besides the various instruments and equipment which the club mem- bers made, lectures by authorities in technical subjects added to the interest of the meetings. Among those who spoke are W. P. Powers from Carnegie Tech, R. J. Watson, of the Westinghouse, Professors Dunning, Cunningham, Remaley, and Wolfe, of Peabody, together with a few members of the club. This is the ideal body for those students who are interested in tech- nical rather than in literary work. The seniors who leave it now, urge the other classes to bring the club to a larger and more flourishing condition next year. The organization is too good to be lost. Jacob Keller. 'F '73l!Q T1-ui P QDY W - . ' I-my , HR QARRH' ' A Cach - ' .9 . 0 v PEABODYAS 6 BASKET BALL 'rr:A'n RR N, Usfb- gear ' if WW? M 3 . 1 f' If 49- Q--Q-- nf: ---1 ,L y 64 THE PEABQDY 5 Xl Zlutngrapijs ' 9ZLVJ7fzfz.?2g 25 f 71 xx' A 1 'V' .. 1 e --r. A 4 guy So HX ' P157 i . X . 2 x NJXXJ Q 3 ' ' Sk s Ckfffffk '57 x L Wa X ff- -f fzufaf , ' W , f gf fb yX:j:ff1'N,4'! l,L,L'Q U X X A it 777, 5 cv x f Q, ,f 8 X! ffv ff QQ , mcg - W f N - . tj! AV ,L N U A ,L-P TI'lE PEABQDY I . f Q 1. l f I I .K ' 0 ' f 4 x 4,9 - LL444 , .L ,x l Jim .-1. - Qutngrapbs Rfk 0 , QMS E X Y f 341 M Q M uf 4, C L D k u 4 x , ' ff ' , ' 7, Zlf 43166 x5 .. R f , I 1 f V1 nf, 5' JU 2 mM,,,-H' g ' l R. ,E L,fv:QL'- ! I f xf,:j,SJ! fyfl ,igxle-H-l.o .l H 4 ' A .1 - ,Z 5 , '7 AL ju, N if in Qg1M. , 454 v f ia . few 'fQ,.f!Qf L 7! 'NYXffI'b't 'x- ' K Mah - - 'Aw Lnfvl A' W U 7 , 27 75-6f1fzVw.f76L,.,-L-do ff 'E M fl f' ZQZ Vlwwi in Q f?f!f7' ff 7, JP C ac 1c, 5g,,, fT'fM4f' . K w .ffl v fm! I 2 , HE PEABQDY Qia- J. 1755 we I Qlil. .- T111-3 PEQXBQDY bf z. ft, nf' ii ifX:.j,.Ny ff W ff n 0,3 f Q X. 4'-, is-Y f G? , . p ,., C. + A DITO A I J ' 5 X i ,X ' ' . .,,,,.f-.A w N' s g 2 - it - I , .11 Q' 1 - 1- . 'A i ' I- ,. ff H ' we - t ' x ., Q i -- -t ' iv- SL . Xl N - - f - . 3 ir 0 11 . ' E' ' -I Es H-'.:...e .. nil' art .LQ 'S Q3-I-'FF:.m Published throughout the school year by the pupils of Peabody High School, Pittsburgh, Pa. Subscription price, 50 cents the yearg by mail, 75 centsg single copies, 10 cents. VOL. III. JUNE, 1915 No. 7 THE PICAIIOIIY STAFF NORMAN BOTSFORD. MYER SAUL ,.... .. . RUSS!-lllli FARRELII ..,....... Editor MARY ADELINE MCKIBBIN Literary Editor RUTH FLANIGAN .......... Assistant CHARLES MUNN. .Editor Melting Pot FRANCIS HOGAN ...... . .... Assistant IIESTER DYE ...... . .... News Editor HOWARD OPIE ............ Assistant MARIE SIIRAWDER .... .. . .Assistant JEAN KIRK ......... Chuckles Editor .IOSEPIIINE Mr-QUISTON .... Assistant NORMAN GODFREY Boys' Athletics Editor . . . . . . .Manager . ...... Assistant HAZEL TENER.GiI'1S' FRANCIS REAMERN Athletics Editor .. . . . . .Assistant .Alumni Editor PHYLLIS MCMARLIN. GEORGE VARDY .... Exchange Editor MILDRED FLOYD.. ,..... .Art Editor LOUIS CHAPMAN ......... Cartoonist ROBERT SCHMERTZ ....... Assistant WILLIAM SCOTT ....... Photographer FREW SCOTT .... Advertising Manager JAMES SHEERS ..... . ...... Assistant PHILIP SCHOENECK Circulation M'g'r JOSEPH MIHM ......... .. . .Assistant EXIT SENIOR. The Senior has reached the acme of his importance in school life. This is perfectly proper. About it we do not intend to rebuke him at all, inasmuch as we ourself are a senior and consequently share in that importance. The thing unto the destruction of which we wield our mighty weapon is not the prominence itself, but a feature of it, namely the intimidation of the senior. This intimidation is not brought about by bricks or illly other corporeal weapon of offense, nor is it directed against any single tangible object. It is the arousing of fear in the senior concerning the future by repeated remarks about the dangers that lie in wait out in the had, bad, world, the cares and troubles that are sure to come, and the sad partings that fate necessitates when school-days come to an end. ' if .5351 68 THE PEMQDY This is absurd nonsense. To be sure there are dangers in the world of business and pleasure, but the days of boyhood are not without their dangers, and he who has been able to avoid them bids fair to conquer the temptations of manhood. And if the boy's carefree existence is at an end, a more positive happiness will come to him along with the cares and troubles. As for sad partings, such do not ordinarily take place at graduation. The senior leaves behind him only that which was forced on him, whether it were studies or acquaintances. The friendships, the knowledge, and the experience which he has won at school, he takes along with him. The past he cannot enjoy longer, but the future is full of promise. Let us say farewell to the graduate with all best wishes. May he win fortune, happiness, and fame, and in their enjoyment may he still remember Peabody High. -:QI-P v . o ...ik x THE PEQXBQDY 69 s HESTER DYE, Editor HOWARD OPIE, Assistant MARIE SHRAWDER, Assistant COMMENCEMENT The Commencement exercises of the first class that has spent its entire four years in Peabody will be held in Carnegie Music Hall on the night of june 22. The program will be impressive though short, with music furnished hy the Senior chorus and the Peabody orchestra. The address will be made hy N. R. Criss, of the Board of Education. The diplomas will be presented by Dr. Wm. M. Davidson, Superintendent of Schools. The valedictory, the salutatory, and an essay will be given by the first, second, and third honor pupils. 'P 'P 'X' SENIOR LU NCHEON Un the 16th of ,lune the girls of the Senior Class gave a luncheon at McCreery's. Myra Williams was chairman of the refreshment committee and Marion Smith had charge of the program. Mrs. Yeamans was the chaperon, and it is needless to say that the girls had an enjoyable afternoon. The com- mittee arranged for the following program: Address ------ Mrs. Yeamans T0 Peabody - Mildred Floyd To 1915 - Pauline Scanlon Piano Solo - - - Sara Wolk As Uthers See Us Margaret McCarthy Recitation - - - .lffllll 'Kirk Piano S010 - Isabel Pallllel' To the Athletes Nellie Reniers Piano Solo - - Miriam Bell To the Mite-O'-Bins Gertrude Jenkins Vocal S010 - - Bernice Kruger Jingles ----- - Myra WllliHHlS ,lean Flanagan will act as Toast-mistress. TN, ' fo I'lE FEABQDY 1 -' ,,,- 'Tags 7 - f y X Z2 Uk xi 'FHE LHST CHR. 2 230 GIN- ktllllwy Q Ngwt- X .Zqv f in ff- . ' -qglil' ' Q x K Q- x - X . '25 f Q 47 1 A -ig f - E 15-1. , ' GRN 4 NJ!! as X X QEEQ' we FHTHL P'-UNQE S .V g X X I L --gave -f gif? N fY' KX Q 'Refi gf, N Y J 'ex YT L ' f Q f K , ' J SooN WE 'LL Ei ,BE FHHOUS5 4 qpfgg 1-HE FQUR YEHRS, WRR. 4 1 kqxa Q I :Eend Nah r e - ' f ' 5 1' . 2 isp? 'a r - -Q f f -ffi. 'J J :::i-- x Y ' ,wx f ljlj I, Y I , iii 'GSU 5 Yedf 4' Q 52216 It - and The wouT ISTQT R Camel Q9 'Y QA -,-f' I A , Gone, A carflonkf 6 N si xxx h I D in ! if -' X HNOTHER CUP. 'Q-' - THE PEABQDY H RL! . 3. - - 'Irw- SENIOR CLASS NIGHT The original Class Night given last year was an inspiration for 1915 and the Senior Class Night this year will differ in the fact that only one play, A Tanglen written by Louis R. Chapman, will be presented by the class. A trio of love affairs, five changed names, and fifty thousand dollars, combined with an enticing farm, cause A Tanglew which will be untangled to the satisfaction of all. This will be a novel Class Night in that everyone in the class will appear on the stage at some time during the play and have the opportunity to show his talent in the Mandolin Club, the Cheering, the Fencing, the Glee Club, the Choruses, or the Dancing. After the play Narda, the clairvoyant, will tell What Everybody Wants to Know and songs, com- posed by members of the class will close the program. The following comprise the dramatis pvrsonav: Ralph Boring - Edward Colchester Tubby Smith - Belle Wetherton - Grace Jones - Phyllis - - Dickay - Mr. Boring Mrs. Boring ' Mr. Wetherton - Mrs. Wetherton - Lena, the Hired Man Lucille Canning - Narda, clairvoyant Servant - - - Maids - Luther Mendenhall Louis Chapman - Alvin Riley Helen, Vogelsong Margaret' McCarthy - Clare Triplett Malcolm Cowley - Howe Newell - Marie Murphy - John Collins Esther Brankley - Charles Munn Florence Bowman Beatrice De Matty - Henrico Coscia Marie McSwigan Margaret Campbell Ruth Houser 'Y' '3' 'Z' SENIOR DANCE A dance was held at the Rittenhouse by the Senior Class to celebrate the last day of school before their vacation. Everything was planned on a most elaborate scale. The music and the catering left nothing to be desired. Terpsiehore reigned supreme and all her devotees were there to trip the light fantastic. 'ii' 'I' 'K' SENIOR GIRLS' PICNIC . The Senior Girls' picnic, which took place on May 8th at the Colfax School, was not well attended. Those who went, however, had a most en- joyable time picking violets for the West Penn Hospital and the Home for Crippled Children. 72 'GQ' vw. THE PEQXBQDY Wil, - - :wg T2 H-www!!! SUMM ER , Jo YS CHEER UPI ji QQ XNV X P ' ' .J ea X 9 IT WOULL . have cos? You Kthearslhg f 7 N T MORE. TBM 'r--'The WZ! 4- Bvrs 44- Sealey K, - Z I I TO SEE: ' A 5 H' X V 'I W AN OTHER N X if X '7-1Aqos'r-RA'r9f' V X 5 J V fx: X Lsummm Queeg X 5 f- x - Q9 Q 'Q aaoaBY, A9 AT 'W- ' ,.., ' I LATIN undo ' Q-w ' Hn , C0 I 7 Q' M, J y Ly I V fum V , 1 X X S5-'7 Jf L' f' KI! P Th PAaIjNcfs ARE Qamzvous 6 'Nl 417 A 5 xqub Vfj .. 'J f 1 X X, ' v -nk Juruor, f ml! mn be amve! , llfli 419 ,wx vvfvv 'I 0: X 4 ' ' I ,H 535 :H- 1: IIE: ISSJ' we rnmu. THAT 2 Stmor dlaS5 COMES DNGE N I1 wrul' PCT 'C' A LIFETQME 'Q Q .. .S N 1 H Rscom l 511.9 19, THejJ1aTe To I e ave. THn5 SPRCE GPEN roRsuqqEsTnoNs REM WSE OURITHINKTRNKSK THE an fr-mr DVQMYSYUVY BRE WORN ouT. Q -THRNKS- fl , fef ' P , ,W xi' 'I ff X , 4 M E-X QJQX- 'N The 5Wl.mU1il1gTCRm ns orgdnizeg. U ' M ir' X F . THE PEQADQDY U THE MAGISTRATE The phenomenal sale of seats on the opening of the box office was not a false prophecy of the success of Peabody High School's second annual pro- duction held at the Schenley Theatre. In fact, the ticket agent reported that he had enough calls for seats after the house had been sold to fill the house for another night of The Magistrate. So much for the crowd. Enthusiasm was in proportion. Flowers were presented to all of the dainty actresses between the acts as well as to Mrs. Yeamans, the coach. But the caste,-nothing but praise can be uttered. Charles Delphey as the doughty old Magistrate won many rounds of applause for his excellent interpretation. Mr. Bullamy in the person of Joe Monteverde provoked numerous ripples of laughter with his jujubesg Francis Hogan, as Col. Lukin, a brusque, excitable, retired amiy oflicer, was a brilliant spot in the evening's performance, Al Riley as Cis Farrington, was another bright spot, but could anything else but brightness be expected from a nineteen-year-old youth trying to pass off for fourteen? Virginia Siedle as Agatha Poskett, the wife of the Magistrate, and Mildred Floyd, her sister, with her craving for food, both deserve the highest commendationg of Florence Bowman, a veteran from Caste, as Beattie Tomlinson, a young music teacher, nothing more com- plimentary can be said than that she was even better than in Caste Mar- garet McCarthy as Popham, a maid, was all that could be desired in the maid line. Cie Farrington will bear witness. But to mention individually the merits of the whole caste would take up too much space, and so it can be said of George Merideth as Capt. Horace Vale, Meyer Saul as Achille Blond, proprietor of the Hotel Des Princes, George McLaren as Isadore, a waiter at the Hotelg George Vardy as Mr. Wonnington, Chief Clerk at Mulberry Street Police Courtg Howe Newell, Raymond Hecht, and James Lawler as protectors of the peace, and Newell King as Wyke, a butler at the Magistrate's, that they all did their share in a most praiseworthy manner to make the production run as smoothly as a play fresh from a hundred nights in New York. The Peabody Orchestra furnished the music and cheers were given between the acts. The excellence of the production was best summed up in five words by an alumnus,-it was better than Caste 'K X Z' P. A. C. On Friday, May 7, members of the Art Club were addressed by Mr. McSwigan on The Possibilities of a Student's Earning a Living while in School, which gave those present an insight into student life that they had not realized nor appreciated before. His talk, which dealt with the com- mercial side of illustrative advertising, was followed by an unusual talk by Mr. Kurtz on scenery painting. He gave some interesting incidents from various dramatic productions, and outlined methods of procedure in the work 74 HE P ABQDY of scenery painting. The vote of thanks rendered by the Club expressed their appreciation of the two talks. The first year's work of the Club was brought to a successful close by an open Social held in the Gymnasium on Friday evening, May 21. The guests of the Club fof which there were nearly seventyj were shown the Art and Crafts exhibit, after which the Mandolin Club played and Mr. Woodruff and Mr. Kennedy gave an illustrated lecture on Poster Making. Mr. Wood- ruflws posters were certainly original and striking. The Social closed with refreshments and dancing. It is hoped that in future years the Art Club may give such highly entertaining and instructive programmes as they have oH'ered this year, and that even more may be accomplished along artistic lines. UE' 'Z' 'is ATHENIAN LITERARY SOCIETY At the last meeting of the Literary Society on Tuesday afternoon., April twenty-seventh, a program, such as entertained the literary enthusiasts of the nineteenth century, was presented, much to the enjoyment of the audience on account of its unique and extraordinary style of presentation. E Program Q Mrs. Caudle's Umbrella Lecture - Florence Bowman Song- Listen to my Tale of WoAe - Katherine Spring - - Diana lgel DeWitt Beattie Ortrud Weber Eulalia Schramm, . Widow Bedott - - - Duet- Reuben and Rachel - Mrs. Corney's Tea Party - George F. ,Meredith Marie Schrawder Violin Solo -------- Zareh Yardum Luther Mendenhall--Interpreter I 'K' 'Z' 'X' ' SENIOR CALENDAR FOR JUNE June 11-Commencement Dance-Rittenhouse. June 15-Last Class Meeting. H .lune 16-Girls' Luncheon-McCreery's. June 18-Class Night-Schenley Theatre. N June 22-Commencement-Carnegie Music Hall. is fi' is , NEWSMONGER Dr. H. B. Davis, Principal of the Teachers' Training School, addressed all applicants for the Teachers' training course on June lst. Next year, owing to the completion of the Dilworth and Rogers schools, the entire Margaretta Building will be used for high school purposes, and Peabody will have an ample and worthy home of which the student body and allunni may well feel proud. , 'FEBBkrr.v 1 JJ P. arf- - '1 -li? THE PE mmf 1 u' Vu! V - J- 353:1- I. W UNEXPECTED, KNSUSPECTED 76 Tru-1 PEQTBQDY J lk EXCHANGES M.p,5,.J Frou GEORGE VARDY, Editor TIT FOR TAT: WHAT OUR EXCHANGES THINK OF US The Exchange editor has endeavored in one form or another to voice his opinion of his esteemed contemporaries, and he is now prepared to step aside and devote his columns to presenting other papers' opinions of the Peabody, which they have expressed in their Exchange columns during the current year. They say: The Peabody's Senior number H9141 is at hand and is surely a model of all that one should be. It contains ninty-four pages and twenty are ad- vertising, which do not, however, intrude on the important departments in any way. The Senior Class certainly has a fine number and which they will be glad to keep. The Erasonianf' The Peabody -Your stories this issue are better than ever, for, although humorous and entertaining, there is a moral running through each. Your cartoons, too, cannot be excelled. g'Bulletin 5'The Peabody -Always contains some new cuts which add much to the attractiveness of the paper. Butler Magnet. If the advertisements were not sprinkled in among the literary material we should like the arrangement of your paper very much. The Magpie. According to the Forge the only thing the Peabody lacks is a table of contents. ' - -lf' THE QQBQDY W The Peabody. The fine appearance and the literary ability displayed within your paper places it among the best of our exchanges. Your effort put forth in your commencement number certainly has been crowned with success. K0ramos. The numerous comic cuts add much to an already attractive paper. High School Record. The Peabody is a new one on our exchange list. It is a fine paper. But why scatter the ads. through the reading material? High School Omnibus. The Peabody contains several stories of an entirely original and inter- esting type. The Record. The Peabody is as near perfection as anything we have ever seen in high school papers. From cover to cover it is filled with interesting material splendidly written and well arranged. The Bulletin. The poem A Memory is very good, and Do You Remember? very effective. Your cuts are well drawn. The Magpie. Peabocly -We place you among the best exchanges which we receive. The Bulletin. The well-drawn cuts in the '5Peabody,' exceed those of' all our exchanges. They do more to make the paper interesting and attractive than anything else. The athletic department is interestingly written. The Erasmianf' I 'W 78 THE rlimfssnr was . se..- 151- I MGI! I ' I fu i Q Y V ,f I p Y 'E JM ,r. . B s w l N U p W U I 2 , A , ul X5 ? . ' I ,yr ' ill no 2 V Zi' ' I I KI i 1 t I I ' -1 bf. , '-K l l E 3 B A I , I H 2 E ,- A gov: , 'fl I , , Y x Q lla-ed 'MJ PHYLLIS MCMARLIN, Editor CERTIFICATE PRIVILEGES AND SCHOLARSHIPS Peabody enjoys full certificate privileges at all colleges and technical schools that have opened their doors to high school students without examina- tion. One of the most exclusive New England colleges for women has recently accorded Peabody full certificate rights. The Harvard and Princeton examinations, too, seem to have no terrors for Peabody graduates, for our students have entered both institutions with distinction. Certain colleges and universities offer valuable scholarships to Pea- body graduates on the basis of scholastic attainment and general merit. The following scholarships have been olfered this year and accepted by members of the present Senior class: University of Pittsburgh, oneg Allegheny College, one, Syracuse University, one, Pennsylvania College for Women, two half- scholarships fone still openlg Bucknell University, one fjust offered and still openj. 'S' 'if' 03 PEABODY,S FIRST CLASS PRESENTS MEMORIAL The Class of 1914 has inaugurated a custom at Peabody which each succeeding graduating class may well adopt. A class memorial is intended not merely to express in a tangible way the loyalty of its members to their Alma Mater, but should constitute in itself an inspiration to the hundreds of students who view it daily. In this the Memorial Committee of the class succeeded admirably. Caesar Macarri's masterpiece, 'cCicero's First Investive against Catiline, reproduced in sepia and handsomely framed, occupies the place of honor in Peabody's halls. The scene depicts the most dramatic moment in the career of Rome's greatest orator, who through the suppression of the Catilinarian conspiracy, won the proud distinction of Saviour of the Republic. Plutarch, his Greek biographer, says: Cicero was the one man above all others who made the Romans feel how great a charm eloquence -S-5 as THE FEQXBQDY 79 lends to what is good, and how invincihle justice is if it is well spoken, and that it is necessary for him who would dexteriously govern a commonwealth always to prefer that which is honest before that which is popular. The presentation was made at a special meeting of the class, April 26, to which the Faculty and the Senior class were invited. Mr. Jerome Levy, Secretary-Treasurer of the class, presided. The program was as follows: Piano Solo ------ Isabel Palmer, '15 Recitation ------ Samuel Armtsrong, '14 Debate: Resolved, that the United States should work for an International Tribunal with Police Powers. Affirmative-Frances Reamer, '16, Harry Saul, 'l6. Negativef-George Lamb, ,14, Arthur Kornhauser, '14. The debate was won by the affirmative. Recitation ------ Florence Bowman, '15 Presentation of Memorial ---- Ellen Crowe, '14 The Memorial Committee was as follows: Mabel Swisher, chairman, Grace Vohr, Arthur Kornhauser, Ellen Crowe, Jerome Levy. if HX' UZ' WHO'S WHO AND WHERE IN THE ALUMNI WORLD Note: In order to give honor to whom honor is due, Qand to shift the crown of responsibility to other heads! we wish our readers to know that the statements within quotation marks were made by ALUMNI. Note: Like the wise men of Gotham: if the replies to our post cards had been more numerous, our story had been more humorous. Colgate Stanton Stimmel-Member of Musical Club. Harvard Hartley Anderson- Love to Peabody. Ohio State Myers Brothers-Phi Gamma Fraternity. Pitt Sam Armstrong--Cap and Gown Club, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Cecil Boyd- Once so shy, now becoming popular with the less deadly sex. Neal Dodds-Glee Club. Leonard Hilty-Freshman Foot Ball Team. Arthur Kornhauser-Debating Team. Jerome Levy-Sec'y Pitt Menorah Club, special mention as ad-solicitor for The Owl, the Pitt year-book. Brenda Wright- One of the most popular girls at Pitt. Grace Vohr-Capt. Basket Ball Team, the Girls' team at Pitt closed a most successful season, winning every game in the schedule. 5154- i- .ru l-- 80 HE PEQXBQDY Tech Philip Marshall-Foot Ball Team. Charles Matthews- On the job again after a severe illnessf' 'aHap', Slater- Scrub on Varsity Basket Ball Team. Shop Gang, Shilliday Brothers and Auerbach-g'Still on the go. Lafayette Charles Siebert-Member Journal Board. Wilson Marion Fleeson-Winner of Literary Society Contest. Training School ,lean Fagan-President Junior Class. On the Farm Franklin Maroney- May go to Penn State next yearf' In the City Paul Merrick-uln town leading a luxurious life, but upon what no one knows. Possibly a light diet. Nancy Beal-Mrs. J. P. Beal has announced the engagement of her daughter Narcissa to Mr. W. Robert Cameron. The wedding will take place in October. The Peabody extends best wishes and congratulations. fir' '-'- 'H '-'- THE PEQXBQDY 81 THE HELTIND FIIT CHARLES MUNN, Editor FRANCIS HOGAN, ASSiStEtI1t The Squirrels' granary is full.-Keats. UU-HUM How can a chap be expected to work Amid such annoying distractions? The disturbance about us is at sucll a pitch That study is figured in fractions. l'm no sooner settled to thumbin' Ill books Y Than a scent wanders in from the kitchen Transferring n1y mind to the pantry at home And setting my main hatch-way itchin'. Again l am back to the first couple lines That l've translated ten times already, lint the girls in the gym start to pound out a tune And my thoughts whirl oil' in an eddy. 'llhc buzz-saw hums merrily out in the shop Our chemists are blowing up bubbles. The bell rings! No work done! The season's to blame Inertia is causing my troubles. C. M. an -is fs YVhcn a pupil is a little ll, Uh, how he dreads Geometry! But when he doth a Soph become, He thinks that work has just begun. THE PEABQDY n The Junior year seems for the best, With social joys and dances hlestg But when the Senior year is o'er, He wishes he could have four more. vi' 'X' 'SX' POETRY SIMPLIFIED 'Twas spring time up in good old Maine When first I met my Mary Jane. Her name was Sue, it wasn't Jane!- But ,lane is used to rhyme with Maine. She was the village ranchman's daughter And lived in a cottage near the water. She didn't live near any water- But water rhyme's first-rate with daughter. 'Twas in the orchard shelling corn I met her first on April morn. 'Twas afternoon, it wasn't morn But morn's just used to rhyme with corn. I sat there nibbling at a pear When from the woods there rushed a bear. 'Twas an angry hull and not a hear But bear is there to rhyme with pear. Poem-making now you see Is as simple as can be. This way takes all the mystery From composing poetry. N. G. 'X EfvXQ AN AXIDENT IN INK Ink, just Ink. Beautiful blue-black Ink Since I came here to think I seem fairly to shrink From Ink, just Ink. Hazel 'I' You may fiing, you may spatter the ink where you will But the stain and the color you never can kill Of Ink, just Ink. Horrid old blue-black Ink. Anne W. - 1 me--F s -M f 5 THE F BQDY HIS NAME She ransacked every novel, And dictionary, too, But nothing ever printed For her baby's name would do. She hunted appellations From the present and the past And this is what she called him When they christened him at last: Julian, Harold Egbert Ulysses Victor Paul Algernon Marcus Cecil Sylvestor George McFall. But after all the trouble She'd taken for his sake, His father called him Fatty, And his schoolmates called him, Jake. Regina W. 'iii '? Have you ever gone to bed, All weary, tired and blue, And hoped for sleep to come To ease your pain? Have you ever gone to bed With a feeling just like that- -And wept? Have you ever gone to bed, All happy, free, and gay, And hoped the morn would come And bring more joys. Have you ever gone to bed With a feeling just like that- -And slept? Have you ever gone to school, All dreamy, deep in love And wished each bell would bring Release to you? Have you ever gone to school With a feeling just like that- -And dreamt? Anne W + '- 84 l'lE FEZXBQDY - T0 AN ENGLISH MUSTACHE With apoligies to William Wesley Martinj Have you ever seen that mustache On his face, on his face? That little English mustache On his face? The strainer of the Ceylon That at evening we do sup on, Does remind.me of that mustache On his face. It's a beauty, is that mustache On his face, on his face? That tiny English mustache Un his face? Small pink whiskers 'mong the blond, Each in place where it belongs, It's a work of art, that mustache On his face. Have you felt that dowuy mustache On his face, on his face? That downy English mustache On his face? It's a pleasure fit for queens Or for those just in their teens, On their cheek to feel that mustache On his face. E 'X' 'X' is BASE WRETCH I ENVY YOU The pussy-cat arose And he spread his furry toes, And he smugly smiled, and blinked- MRefreshing sleep. Then-'4My duty as a cat Is to now pursue the rat. Well a duty is a troublef, dozed again, 6'And troubles keep. Now the man who has not hurled All his force against the world Is no better than that brute. I trumpet that. But betwixt just you and me, I believe we'll both agree That it must feel mighty fine To be a cat. Francis H ,,-.- e---- 2-1 -ig .QQ I THE re nsnr 85 THE CONSTANT How clever Ingenuity! How ready to devise! How willing to invent a change! In color, shape or size. Exit parted hair-cut- They brush it rearward nowg Goggled glasses take our eyes- We can't see why or how. Exit sedate neck-tie- You've lived your day and diedg Enter your successor, Colored, striped and pied. Exit dear old-fashioned clothes, The closer cuts are here, Exposing loose and lanky bones And dire contortions queer. Exit plain, old collar, Extremely out of date, Competition's drowned you out- You've disappeared of late. But Ingenuity is balked And Nature interferes For we, ourselves are recognized When met in after years. C. M. l l X' AHME Now is the serious season spring When sanity sinks from sight, And silly simpletons simper and sing In sentimental flight, And highly mechanical Ultra-botanical City-park songs indite. And the poet recalling the poems he's read, Develops a marvelous passiong And tells all ages for so he hopesj Of the beauty of her for whom he mopes fAnd while he's at it the girl elopesj In a highly original fashion. One eye's an ocean, another's a star, A third is a diamond bright, What other eyes she may happen to have Are Her Her Her She She various kinds of light. ears are shells. Her tears are dew. voice is silver and liquid too. cheek's a rose. Her teeth are pearls. has marble brow. And golden curls. is really a wonderful sight. Francis H. Gr- s '- '--as-,551 86 THE PEABQDY ws. - g - as ibn I LITERARY nmgau. 'y.- X MARY ADELINE MCKIBBIN, Editor RIITH FLANIGAN,VAssista.nt THE TREAD OF GOLIATI-I jacob Davis, '15 Three thousand men were leaning forward, breathing heavily. Every- one from the stolid quiet Americans in the front to the mud-flecked Italians behind was tense and nervous. Above a big beetle was whizzing around, making a loud noise. The windows were open to let the hot, poisonous air out. There was a confused shuffling of feet, then a heavy thump as someone fainted and fell on the floor. One fellow got impatient, Where's Cullen, he cried, send Cullen out, we want Cullen. All over the hall like echoes first on one side then another you could hear a nervous- Yes, where is he? Send him out, send Cullen out. A giant man stood on the platform. The buzzing noises quieted as he got up. They all stared at him, breathing quickly again. You couldnot blame their hearts for tensing. After all, he was their only hope. He raised his hand, a massive thing, to quiet them. He stood with it upraised, waiting. Gradually the shulflings quieted and his hand fell. Men, he started, 'Tm ready to speak to you now, then a pause. I haven't got any oratory to use tonight, and I'm glad I haven't. A week ago yesterday the strike was ong three days ago, you told me, one of your own men, not some loud-mouthed agitator, you wanted me to be spokesman, and now tonight, weire at a meeting of coal miners and steel workers. I don't know where to start at. I'm no speechmakerg I never studied books. I started to work before I learned to read, and Iive been at it ever since. I know more about rolling iron bars than making speeches, or being spokesman, so don't be disappointed if I don't talk flowery language. I went to see the big bosses the other day. They took me to headquarters, in the top of the Federal Building. Way up there, there were marble floors in the halls, and in the office were fancy rugs and red colored desks, and pictures on the walls. They were all setting around in the big chairs. I stopped to look at them at the door as I came in, just to see who was there, EQ,- .- , THE rsassn S7 and to show them I wasn't at their command. But they told me to walk right in, and as I heard the door shut behind me, I felt as though I was locked up. I sat down. There was Thompson of the steel mills andl- And as he spoke, gradually the men felt the whole place change. The beetle quit buzzing, the heavy rasping breathing quieted. They all heard the smooth elank of the elevator, felt the coolness of the marble hall, and walked into the big directors' room to see the conflict of men. f i 1' Q I' Q 'I' f Q 'l 'I' l Come on right in, Mr. Cullen, this is the room ,.... You may just hang your hat thereg that is it.', Big John Cullen turned about himself awkwardly and looked for a chair. He sat back in the corner and calmly looked over the men staring at him. At the desk Morrison, the big boss, sat, squinting out of the top of his eyes. It was he who had talked Grst. Then was Morewood and Hamilton of the coal mines, and Thompson and Brokan of the steel mills, all of them heavy, rich men, with clean, pinkish faces and steel-hard eyes. Cullen cro sed his legs and calmly took out a stogie and lit it. He made his motion's provokingly slow. The bosses looked on and scowled as he quietly filliped the dead match across the desk. Well what have you got to say? Morrison broke in, We've no time to lose. Pm glad you say that, Mr. Morrisonf' came back slowly, that's why I'm here. There might as well be something done now as anytime. There's no use beating around anyg it might as well come right out. I'm not going to sit here and tell you the old story all over again. I'm not going to wail a lotg the paid agitators can do that. You know it all too well, you don't need me to magnify. You know how the men are livingg you know they can't live any better on the money they get. Now I'm not going to waste time. My message is to tell you that we men are out for a flat 10W increase in wages. We'll work the same time, but we want the increase, and we're ready to fight for it. The room was quiet. Morrison puffed at his cigar, Thompson grunted and slipped down in his chair. Nothing was said. Then Hamilton growled, a flat IOW, huh-I see, I see. He kept quiet a moment, then flared out, Well, where do we come in? Don't you men ever think of us? Don't you think it costs money to run mills? Don't you think it costs money to put up bath houses and washhouses and playgrounds and reading rooms? It's time enough for you men to thing a little bit of us. Yes, we're willing to thing of you. It's because we do that we strike. l'm yard foreman at Tube Mill Number 10, and I know as well as you do, how much it costs for every ton of material in that place to be made. The men don't-they can't. But I know, and I know we're not asking a thing too much for ourselves. Now just a second Mr. Cullen, let us not rush too fast, came from Morrison. He had the habit of slowing men up in their speeches. You want a 1011 increase. You want us to pay for it. You don't offer a single thing in return. Not increased efficiency, because you don't know you'll get it. iff' 'w' ' F 88 THE rumour Not increased time,-absolutel nothin , and we're to a 1000 more. Have Y g P Y I got it right? Exactly, Mr. Morrison. Well, Mr. Cullen, it's an imposition. I know you and you've been rn good man. That's why you can tell us figures we don't know about tubing. They told me at the mill that you, are in line for the superintendent job. They call you Honest John, and because of it we're willing to listen to you. But don't fool yourself, Mr. Cullen. You know as I do that the men aren't worth a 10? raise. You know they can't earn it for us, that we can get any number of other men at the same price. We make the profit on the stuff, but do you have to pay for railroads and steamships? Do you have to fight for your lives at every session of the court, or do we? Do you have to hire an office full of lawyers? Do you pay the disabilities? Do you run a hospital? Do you pay for doctors or do we? Its we who pay, retorted Cullen, 'Sand we pay heavily too. I never showed you my left hand, did I. I have one finger left on it. I was in your hospital, your doctor cut the others off, I got five dollars for them. Yes, you paid, but didn't I? You paid the expenses of sewing up Mathew McLowrey last week when he was chopped almost to pieces, but does it help him any. It cost him a whole lot more than it does you. You've heard it often enough. You've seen what the men look like after they get thru a day's work. You used to be a puddler, Mr. Morrison. You've felt what it is to put in a double heat. You've felt your lungs burn till you thought they would burst. You've felt your shoulders grow so heavy you couldn't walk, you know what it is to feel the heat suck every last drop of muscle out of you and leave you weak as a mess of jelly. Then you ask if it's worth the two dollars we get for it. You ought to know better than that, Mr. Morrison. The men looked at each other significantly. They felt the conference would drift to this, the old story of the injustice of capital and the wrongs of the masses. It seems they always do. Well, Mr. Cullen, you've told us your side, we've told you ours. You refuse to believe that we can't afford the raise. You still insist that our profits are large enough. If we can't convince you that way, we'll have to use another. I told you before I could get men at the same price you are working for. I can get them by the thousands. This paper, in my hand, calls for three thousand men to report for work at twenty-four hours notice. lf you men are not living well, others are starving, and if you toy violence, remember the police are behind us. If you want to strike, Mr. Cullen, strike, strike till you are sick of it. We own the stores of this town, the groceries, the butcher shops, the clothing stores, every last one of them, and if you strike, you'll suffer, not we. It will be your who'll have hungry wives and wailing children hounding you around, you-not we. Its you who'll go with empty bellies and staring eyes, you, not we. We've got the cash, not you. The mills are ours, the mines are ours, the stores are ours, and we'll keep them. We've ended with you. If you want to starve us, just try it. But remember its you, not we who are doing it. Thats all, Mr. Cullenf, fp- gi- s-'Y 1-1 -.Sirk THE FEQABQDY 59 Mn Morrison, do you think you can scare us that way? We can stand it as long as you can. Don't you know those men'Il suffer hell before they'll give into you. We'll stand it as long as you do. All right then, stand it. But just remember the Colorado strike. If you want to see your children die from hunger like poisoned rats, just do it. If you want to walk the streets looking for jobs do it. You can't hurt us. Smash the buildings, they are insured, and you'll be arrested, not we. Burn them, blow them to pieces. See what fun it is to be cracked on the head with a police mallet, or to have your home fired at by a squad of rifle- men. Why ten thousand of you couldn t touch us. We laugh at you. And don't you think there's any way we can get you? We'll get you thru the courts, we're bound to get you if there's any justice in the world, we'll get you. Well and good, just go about your work, carry out your plans. We've got you so that you can't move. We have the life and happiness of three thousand men in our hands. We offer everything back, as you have it now. If you refuse, you won't get another chance. Mr. Cullen, you know what a strike is even at the best, and we have you at the worst. It'll be your fault if men are killed, your crime if children are crushed to death, if houses are burned, laws are broken, and everything turned into a hell. Now do as you please, we're ready for you. Cullen turned in his chair. The fat pink faces of the men were turned into the iron grins of machines, with no ilinching of the eye, no twitching of the lips, no hesitation. It was as if a colossal man of steel stood before them, girt with unfailing power, aimed at him. He saw the uselessness of it all. He remembered the other strikes, and his heart sank. But when he felt the soft chair underneath him, and saw the pretty pictures and red desks, labor's ancient halt came over him, he jumped from his chair. You're ready, yes, I know you're ready. You're ready to grind us down to powder. You've got a body hold, and you know it. Use it, damn you, till you're glutted with money, till you eat money, till you spit money, till money sticks out of your ears like slimy snakes, and when you have, don't look to us, we'll tramp on you as you do to us, and laugh at you. Then you'll feel the hell that labor has felt for a thousand years. You've got us beaten before you start, by God, you'll get yours, and we'll give it to you, before Cod we will. The door crashed shut, the glass shattered as Cullen left the room. l 'lf H Q Y I I' Q H l' Q l ...... And that's why I am here again so soon, to talk to you. The men were quiet now, wondering what he was going to say. You want me to tell you what you ought to do. I swear men I wish you had picked some machine made of iron to talk to you now. I can't. I've been with you men since I can remember, I've worked with all of you. Don't I know you all by your first names. Haven't I breathed in the same stinking holes that you have, and eaten the same rotten food. I've gone thru one big e i 'ifi1iT. 90 THE PEADQDY 'Y' Y V sex J V 1 ka' strike where there was at least a little hope., but I donit wan't to do it again. Didn't I see my brother's face hacked into mince meat, his eye gouged out, by a strike-breaker who was paid four dollars a day for-doing it. I've felt strikes worse than you have, and I'd rather go back to breath that rotten air and eat that rotten stuff than to see my wife sick with no food, and to find my place smashed in a police fight. I know you want me to tell you to strike, I know it. You want to beat them dogs, you want to smash their factories into dust. I'd like to do it, but that won't help. You've got me crying men, but before God I donit care. They've got the grub, not weg they've got the cash, not weg and if you ask me what to do, I say, for Godis sake go back, it's no use. , As he spoke, he dropped his hands, his sobs could be heard far back. The men were astounded. There was a great cruel groan, as if each of their hearts had been punched with a great weight. They jumped from their chairs, they began to shout. Damn you, Cullen, you're a traitor. Others joined ing they jumped on the platform, they fought, the hall was turned into a mob of them, howling, kicking, mauling, a mass of fists and heels and broken faces. The police came with their clubs, but too late, for before that the men had beaten to a pulp, the biggest man of them all--John Cullen, the man who told them to go back. 'X' 'X' 'R' THE MARRYING OF JIMMIE Wilson A. Scott, '15 To the professors he was R. Jenkins, Jr., but to the fellows he was just plain Jimmie Jenk, jolly, easy-going Jimmie. Jimmie he would have been until Death wrote Finis, had not a certain girl come into his life and made him Mr. James Rutherford Jenkins, a true son of his father, who had begun his business career by carrying the hod and brick, away back in the early eighties, and who had climbed the ladder of success, until now he was president and largest stockholder of The Phoenix Steel Corporation, with its several subsidiary companies. Now to begin the tale: It was during his last year at college that Jimmie, instead of eating the evening meal in the school's grubbery, hied himself to the Savoy, a restaurant presided over by Miss Stimson, a middle-aged woman with more than a hundred pounds of superfluous flesh, a triple chin, and a large wart on the very tip of her shiny red nose. Realizing her own unattractiveness, and realizing how the college fellows would flock to her place if waited on by attractive girls, she had secured a very attractive, if not efficient, corps of waitresses, and had succeeded in making hers the most popular beanery in town. V Jimmie always made it a point to sit at table No. 11, for that was the table waited on by the apple of his eye, a certain Harriet Johnson. She THE PE BQD 91 was a fair eo-ed, working her way thru college, and to' her Jimmie told his various escapades and troubles. On the night this story begins he was in particularly serious trouble, and was just aching to tell her so. She sensed this, and asked, 'Strouble, Jimmie?', Then he poured forth his tale of woe. Hang it all, Harry, what would you do if you had to marry some old stick-in-the-mud your father had picked out for you,-a girl you had never seen before, and whose only recommendation was that she is the daughter of an old business friend of mine, and a very nice, sensible girl? What would you do? Don't know as I would marry a girl, Jimmie. V Oh, be sensible, can't you, Harry? Here is the situation. I graduate next Friday, and then go home, to meet my dearly beloved future wife. Thank goodness, I don't have to marry her for six months yet. If I marry her, I get a third of Dad's stocks and bondsg if I don't, I get nothing. I don't want to marry the thingg I don't know her name, even. But I bet a thousand dollars against a jitney, it won't be Mrs. James R. Jenkins. Well, if that is the way you feel about it, I don't believe conjugal felicity would be the result if she did become Mrs. James R. Jenkins. 'Conjugal felicity.' What the Sam Hill does 'conjugal felicity' mean? Well, Jimmie, it means the state of being happily married, forever and ever, Amen. Oh, shucks, there ain't no such thing ...... Whoa, there, wait a minute, I take it all back. Sure there is. How soon do you leave for the dormitory? Ten minutes? All right. See you outside. It was half an hour later when Harriet came out. She, like others of her sex, thought it a good thing to keep a fellow waiting. Oh, you really came, did you? I believe we were speaking of con- jugal felicity. I have a pretty good education, and plenty of nerve. I have two or three hundred in the bank left out of my monthly allowances from Dad, and I can get a job in a week or two. I like, yes, I love you, Harriet. Will you marry me? Please say 'Yesf I know we shall have conjugal felicity if you do. What do you say, Harry? Me marry you? Never! Why, Mr. Jenkins, should I marry a trifler like you, who shoots pool or goes joy-riding when he ought to be studying? You haven't the least idea of how to make a living. If your father were to cut off your allowance, you would be penniless inside of a month. If you succeed in making a man of yourself within the next year, I might look upon you with more favorg but until you do, never mention the words conjugal felicity to me. Here we are at the dormitory. Good night. Jimmie mumbled Good night, and slowly walked toward his suite of three elaborately furnished rooms at the hotel. He characterized living at the boys' dormitory as too stuffy. A small stone lay in his path. He kicked it viciously. 0uch, darn it, he said. No wonder Harry wouldn't have me. 92 HE FEABQDY Graduation day came, and with it Jimmie's departure from the little college town. Now since I have told Dad I won't marry the girl he picked for me, and he has refused to consider me his son any longer, I might :is well get out of here and get to workf, However, getting work was not so easy as he had thought. Jimmie had thought his college chum's father would give him a good position as soon as he presented his card, but he 6'didn't have anything just at present, and so it went with his other friends. At the end of the second week he was rather badly bent, and at the end of the third week he was completely broken. G'Well, I guess Harry was about right. I am penniless inside of fl month. I wonder if she knew I had only twenty dollars in the bank when I proposed to her. The bluff didn't work that timef' - He was sitting on a park bench as these thoughts came, and had not noticed an old, prosperous-looking man at the other end of the bench. 4'What is the trouble, my boy? he asked. '6You're entirely too young and healthy to be having any real troubles. Well, this is real trouble, believe me, sir. I have been thrown on my own resources for the first time in twenty-two years,-and failed. No- body seems to be hiring men. Oh, if I could only get a chance, I would show some of those fellows who refused to hire me the good thing they have been passing up. That's the spirit, my boy, that's the spirit. Here's my card. There is a position as night janitor open, at nine dollars a week, which I think you are fitted for. You may start in at 5:30 to-night. Good-bye. Jimmie was speechless. month ago he would have knocked down any person who would have suggested such a thing. Me, James R. Jenkins, Jr., son of the President of the great Phoenix Steel Corporation, am offered a position as night janitor in one of its subsidiary companies. Some joke, I would say. Will I take it? Will a drowning man be rescued? Will a child refuse candy? You can just bet your class ring I will be down there mopping up floors at 5:30. I wonit be doing that very long, tho. No, sireef' Naturally Jimmie wanted to make a good impression, so he got his bucket of suds fno, these were soap sudsj and mop, and started in to mop the halls. Now who should happen upon this scene of humble toil but al certain stenographer, Harriet Johnson by name? He was so intent upon his new and first job that he would not have noticed her, had she not given a little scream. She turned around and was going out by another way when Jimmie straightened up and tried to run after her, but his feet got twisted up with the mop, and he fell, upsetting the bucket of water and arousing the ire of the manager when he saw the water coming in under his door. He came out raving mad, and said he would discharge him, only he was afraid that if he did, the police would lock him up for letting loose a menace to the community. Jimmie apoligetically said, Yes, sir. Then after the manager had gone in he thought, 5'Blame it, if I colud only have seen Harry and explained ,g-,- -i1 .m -1i- .1-it . THE PEQXBQDY that this was just a temporary job until the presidency of this concern was vacant I might have bluffed her into believing that I was doing this just for a joke. Oh, shucksf' The company was working overtime a few days later in the packing department to get a special shipment out on time. Jimmie went up to the foreman and said, What's the use of making these fellows work overtime? You have to give them half again as much for it, and they are too tired to work right. With the addition of a good packer like myself the over- time would be cut down appreciablyf' Probably it was the last word which made the foreman think Jimmie knew what he was talking about. Be that as it may, he started in there the next day at twelve dollars a week. A raise of 33 IXSW in one week isn't so worse, he mused. Then he turned to one of the packers and said, Say, Mac, will you give me a few pointers on this kind of packing. The foreman doesn't know that the kind I am familiar with is the ice pack a fellow uses on his head the morning after the night before. Jimmie went to night school and took up Office Practice and in a few months was billing clerk at fifteen dollars a week. He was now able to see Harriet quite often, and one evening as she was leaving, he finally got a chance to speak to her and ask if he was making a man of himself. She answered, I believe you are trying to, Mr. Jenkins, but until you have reached the standard I have set for you, please do not mention what you are about to. I take this Sunnyside carg I believe you go in the other direction, do you not? After he had seen her on her car, Jimmie said to himself, She must have seen conjugal in one eye and Hfelicityn in the other. That girl ought to be a clairvoyant. No she shouldn't, either. She should be Mrs. James R. Jenkins, and doggone it, she will be. He continued to be promoted, and when, about two years later, the manager died of heart-failure, super-induced by anger such as he had dis- played when Jimmie had upset the bucket of water, Jimmie was made manager. 'ilf some fellow were to spill a bucket of water now, he mused as he sat in the manager's office, I would take him out and give him the best feed any man ever got, just for the coincidence of the thing, you know . . . . . . . I wonder if Harry considers me a man yet. That evening when she congratulated him upon his promotion, he asked, Well, am I a man yet? No, she smilingly answered. When I say, 'Hello, Jimmie' you will know I consider you a man. However, if you have an umbrella, you may take me to the car now. L'0h, the dickens with the poky old cars ..... Central, give me Low 681 X. Hello, send a taxi up to Equitable Fittings Company right away ..... Yes, you will go home in a taxi, and I will go along to see that you don't faint or somethingf, '- ' in '- 94 1 15 1' E WU At the next annual meeting of the stockholders Jimmie made himself solid with them, with the result that he was elected treasurer, a certain stock- holder who held 4021 of the stock voting by proxy for him. As 5:30 drew near, Jimmie watched and watched for Harriet to go out. I-Ie put on his hat and coat when he saw her leaving, and caught up with her in the hall. Good evening, Harriet. Good evening, Mr. Jenkins. I want to congratulate you upon your promotion. Oh, so you still call me Mr. Jenkins? 5'Yes, Mr. Jenkins. He went home in a street car that evening. Several months later the president retired from active business, and this time Jimmie was elected President of the Equitable Fittings Company, the person who by proxy held 40? of the stock turning the votes in his favor. That noon as Harriet went out to lunch, she dropped a sheet of paper with two words on it on his desk. The first thing which Jimmie saw upon coming back from lunch was this sheet of paper with Hello, Jimmie on it. He jumped up, did a few buck and wing steps, and turning to his private secretary said, Notify all employees of this company that if any of them decide to get married the same day I do there will be a wedding present of three month's pay and two weeks vacation coming to them. I don't think old man Ford could do any better than that. That evening he called at Harriet's house to fix the date of the beginning of our conjugal felicity, as he put it. After the time was set, he said, Harry, do you know I have treated dear old Dad very shabbily? I want to go up and apologize to him to-night, and I want you to go along so that I can introduce him to the girl of my choice. Will you come? All right, let's go now. If Jimmie was expecting a cool reception from his father, he was agreeably disappointed. When Jimmie introduced the future Mrs. Jenkins, the senior Jenkins even went so far as to wink at her, and she smilingly reciprocated. What's up, Dad? Well, Jimmie, my boy, I believe I have met your choice once before. Yes, Jimmie, I have met your father at least once, and possibly a few dozen times. 'SYes, my son, I-ha, ha, ha, oh me, oh my, ha, ha, ha! The joke is certainly on you. Say, folks, let me in on this, won't you? I enjoy a good joke, too. Well this is a good one, and it's all on you, sonny Jim. '4Shoot, Dad, shoot, don't keep me in suspense like this. What is it? '4Do you really believe Harriet to be the girl of your choice? Surest thing you know. Well, he isn't. 1 jg ' '-'il 1-7 -l-'Q -.Q-it 1 THE PEQXDQDY 90 was .1-1 -?..-- - - . - '5What! Easy now, easy, my boy. Harriet is the very girl you refused absolutely to marry. Is that the straight goods? It surely is. Her father was the best friend I ever had., and when he died, shortly after his business failure, I promised him I would do what I could for her. She had always admired you, and I wanted so much to have you two marry that I tried to bring about the marriage without telling you who the girl was, or even sending her picture. I am mighty glad he stuck up for the girl he wanted, for it has surely made a man of him, hasn't it, Mr. Jenkins? It surely has. I suppose you thought I had lost all trace of you, didn't you, Jimmie? Well I hadn't. It was I who told your chmn's father not to employ you, and I did the same thing at all the other places where I thought you would apply. I wanted you to get down to the very bottom and work up. It was I who sent that old man out to the park to give you your job as janitor. We were passing the park in my limousine and saw you there. I persuaded him to get out at the next corner, and go up to you to play his part. The manager did not die of heart failure. That was merely a bluff to give you his place, he was transferred to another of my subsidiary companies. The man who voted 4011 of the stock by proxy was acting for me. Harriet was carrying out my instructions all the time. Oh, you are a good business man, Jimmie: but your old Dad put one over on you, didn't he? I guess yes. Well, I'll be hanged. No you won't. Not as long as I am Mrs. James R. Jenkins, Jr. si' 'B' 'X' THE BEST STORY OF THE YEAR Malcolm Cowley, '15 Bob lived alone with his father in an old brick house in a mouldy residential section. Bob's father was a failure. Once he had possessed the ambition to make a living with his pen, but he had made no progress. His ambition now was to make Bob an author. So while the father gave violin lessons to the bored children of the midde class, Bob would lie on his stomach in the study, and read Kipling and Stevenson and O. Henry. Of course, when Bob entered high school, his father expected him to contribute to the school paper. l'he father, in his day, had been editor of this same monthly. Bob felt that he must write something, but what he should write, he did not know. He made several vain attempts, and tried to hatch some abortive plots. But he lacked ideas, and his paragraphs re- fused to join well, and there was something radically wrong with his sentences. He was enough of a critic to realize that what he wrote was not woerth burning. But he must write something. In this extremity he had his big idea. ff vas. 96 THE PEABQDY X-:A . us, , , ftp. He knew how he could get a story written. So he went to see Granville Phillips. Even the freshmen knew about Granville Phillips. He was the most unpopular boy in school. He knew this himself. In fact, he even boasted about it. Once the Black Cat had published one of his tales. Since then he had demanded pay for all his literary work, so the school monthly went ungraced with his stories. Bob visited his home one evening, and found him in his room, reading a Russian novel. After the greetings, Bob came directly to business. I want you to write me a story, he said point blank. What for?,' asked Phillips. I want to send it in to the school paper. Oh, I see. Under your own name, I suppose. Bob nodded and felt relieved. So you're one of those people who think you are famous as soon as you have something published in your school monthly, he ran on. Well, how much will you give me for it? V Bob hesitated. A dollar and a half. NOP Two dollars, but not a cent more. . All right. Pay me now, and I'1l give you the story Monday. But Bob had some ideas of business. I'll give you a dollar now and a dollar when you finish the story. All right. Give me the dollar. Phillips began to fill his pipe. Then he turned to Bob again. HI suppose you want something sentimental. Anything, said Bob, just so long as it'will be published. There was a long pause, while Phillips struck two or three matches ineffectually. Then the senior began to make conversation. You're a fresh- man, aren't you? he asked. Bob nodded. 4'Did you ever notice, the other rattled on, Hwhat is the big thing about each year in high school? For example, the big thing about the freshman year is Ignorance. No, you needn't be offended. Pm not speaking of you. The sophomore's are just as ignorant, but they don,t know it. The big thing about the sophomore year is Conceit. 'You can't pin the junior year down to any one thing. Some of the fellows are learning how to dance and be gentlemen. Some others are picking up all sorts of bad habits so that they can be fashionable. And then some study a little. But the senior year is differentf, His pipe had gone out, and he stopped to light it. The big thing about the senior year is Falling in Love. When you're a senior, you'll have to do that, by all means. Fall in love two or three times, and then you can write poetry about it. He paused a moment thoughtfully, and then remarked absent-mindedly, I'll have to set all this down in my notebook and put it in my next story. And Phillips took out his notebook and began writing. A minute later some of his friends dropped in to visit him. Phillips introduced Bob around, and then forgot about him entirely. He was too busy talking in a loud voice, chiefly about himself. While Bob sat there, the tobacco smoke grew so thick that it gave him a headache. The others Tru: PEABQDY were busy deriding all the authors he knew, and praising authors he had never heard of. At last he slipped olf and went home to bed. That night Phillips and his crowd went up street and spent Bob's dollar and two or three others. Phillips had no real intention of ever writing the story. He rather laughed at Bob, and looked on the dollar as manna dropped from heaven. A few days later he saw a necktie he wanted. He had no moneyg so to get the dollar, he sat down and dashed oil' a story for Bob. In a burst of benevolence, he went to the Literary Editor and told her of a freshman who had written a good story. Then he gave Bob the manuscript to copy. The Literary Editor hated Phillips so much that she had long ago decided to reject anything he recommended, but when she read the story, she found it really good, and accepted it. It was a happy day for Bob when the story was published. He fancied his teachers looked on him with more respect. His father was overjoyed. That night he took Bob out with him, and they watched a play from the gallery, and ate ice cream, and talked literature. Bob enjoyed himself very much, but he felt extremely cheap. When material was due for the next number, he tried again to write something himself. But he failed as dismally as before, and was forced to go back to Phillips. The months after that, he made no struggle against temptation, and paid his money for Phillips' work. It was always hard to raise two dollars out of an income of next to nothing a week, but when Bob saw how delighted his father was with him, he felt that it was worth the money. Une day the father and he were passing a dusty pawnshop, when Bob saw a violin in the window and took a fancy to it. They went into the store and both of them played the instrument, but when they asked the price, they found this far above the ordinary means of a poor music teacher. Bob was a happy boy when his father offered him the violin-on condition that one of his stories was published every month that year. In a moment of satisfaction with all the world, Bob told the good news to Phillips. The senior listened attentively. He had a commercial mind. Phillips had begun to patronize Bob and to make much of his ac- quaintance. He taught the freshman how to play billiards, and obligingly allowed him to pay for the games. He took him to the moving pictures, and let him pay the admission. All this was hard on Bob, but he never whimpered. He was feeling very happy. He heard people talking about the new freshman author, who would surely be editor some day. Stories under his name were appearing monthly. Of course he always copied them over in his own hand before submitting them. At first he admired Phillips' clear, quick style too much to change a single word of it, but later he grew bolder and changed words and even whole sentences. Once he left out a whole paragraph be- cause he thought it too talky, and substituted one of his own. When material was due for the big June number, Bob felt there was something wrong. Phillips, who was always needing money, usually was vcry prompt with his storiesg but this time he delayed and delayed and kept 49' s 'QPR is H13 e ,,.,. 98 HE F ABQDY l promising Bob to have the story ready the next day. Finally, on the night before material was due, Bob, who was much wrought up over the affair, was asked to Phillips' room. When Bob camg in, the great man was at his desk, leaning his head in his hands. The portable lamp was turned so as to illuminate the imposing row of books, and the framed portrait above it-Oscar Shaw, or some other such fellow, Bob remembered. The senior lifted his head and smiled wanly. Did you ever notice, he began, how little difference there is between being in love and having a stomach-ache? and best him Pay You But Bob was there for business. What about my story? He was excited and a little angry. Oh yes, your story, said Phillips languidly. He reached in his desk took out some manuscript. Here it is, already typewritten. It is the story I have written for you away. Just wait a minute. me ten dollars in cash. I needn't fire up so. A violin yet. Bob reached for it. Phillips waved You can have the story as soon as you have to buy Margaret a birthday present. is worth ten dollars. Bob looked at him helplessly. 'SHOW can I get the money? 660h you can pawn your watch or something. You have till tomorrow afternoon. Bob stood there a moment speechless. Phillips reached for his humidor. Did you ever notice,', he remarked casually, 'ghow much similarity there is between falling in love and getting drunk? But Bob had flung himself out of the room and down the stairs. After his first helpless rage had passed, he saw that he would have to give in, and began to meditate how to get the money. Maybe he could wheedle a dollar or so out of his father. He could pawn his old gold watch, but that would hardly bring much. He could sell his skates. He could borrow perhaps a dollar at school. He let all these figures run through his brain a long time, till he saw the uselessness of it all. Then he decided in a last rage to write a story himself, and hurried up to his room. Half the night, he wrote and copied at white heat. Now here is the only strange thing about the whole affair. At the beginning of the year, Bob's literary style would not have satisfied the dis- criminating taste of a child in kindergarten. But all that year he had been copying Phillips' stories, till the other's clear style had become a part of him. At the beginning of the year, he could not get ideas for a story. But his present situation furnished him with a plot that would satisfy anybody. And so the story that he wrote became popular, more popular than any that Phillips had ever written for him. For while the other, who was intellectual, tried to write literature, Bob, who thought nothing about all this, tried only to write a good story, and succeeded in writing a good story, a very good story, the best story of the year. fir' 'iii 'f 11 THE PEABQDY 99 THE SPANIARD Norman Godfrey, '15 The sun rose out of the Mediterranean, and pointed its slender, trembling finger across the water at Don Pietro. Palamos was asleep, and the Plaza was deserted except for this solitary figure which paced to and fro along the balcony stretching out over the sea. His cheeks were colored by two spots of red, and his sunken eyes were bleary and bloodshot. He could not sleep. Indeed, he had almost forgotten how to sleep, and, to give more freedom to his thoughts, he had dressed and come out into the cheerless gray morning. His thoughts always took him back to the same place-The Royal Arena. Don Pietro was a bull-fighter, a matador, and the idol of Palamos. His chest expanded, and his vanity smiled as he thought of it-but that day his thrust had missed. As the bull charged, his sword wavered and did not touch the heart. Instantly Don Pietro felt that the bull's attack was not checked, and he straightened up and closed his eyes. The bull caught him on its horns, and rushed half way around the arena with him, then, with its last ounce of strength, tossed him over the low railing into the audience. His white trousers and gold trimmings were stained with the blood of the animal, but he was unharmed. The bull's horn had slipped between his girdle and his shirt. He fell at the feet of a senorita, and for a moment he lay still. She leaned over him, and kissed him. He opened his eyes, and fell in love. A death-like hush had fallen over the arena, but, as he jumped to his feet, and saw that the bull lay dying not ten yards from him, the place went mad. Flowers, hats, fans, and straw seats showered about him, while he stood smiling and bowing among them. He smiled again as he thought of how he and Inez had planned for their wedding. They had selected their cottage, planted their gardens, and named their children until-the smile left Don Pietro's face, and his eyes were burning again as if reflecting a fire that was consuming his soul-an Italian alchemist, Francesco, had come to Palamos, and had built a laboratory near the Plaza. He was a handsome fellow, this Francesco, a devil's darling, and he loved Inez. He fascinated her innocent mind with his manners and his riches, and he married her. Don Pietro's hands clenched, and his lips moved silently as he glared at the white walls of the laboratory showing through the trees. He remembered the times he had stopped to see Inez, and had found her silently weeping. He never asked her why, and she never told him. He remembered the day their child was born. It was weak little thing, and it lived only three days. Two weeks later the mother died also. Here events became confused in Don Pietro's mind. He had given himself over to planning revenge, and to rejecting his plans as impractical. He had thought of the knife, but that was too bloody. He had given up his plan of shooting the Italian. That was too easily detected, and too merciful. His mind had dwelt longest on poison, but he had given that up also, and had devoted his time to hating his enemy, and to cultivating his friendship, thinking that he might some time need this friendship to work his revenge. ga- -1- .n ,iii 100 HE PE BQDY He sat down, and tried feverishly to roll a cigarette. After several attempts he succeeded, and his nerves became calmer. As he unconsciously glanced over the newspaper on the table beside him, a news item caught his eye, and he' read it through. He sat up suddenly, took the cigarette from his lips, and read it again. He sat for a time, staring over the water, until his cigarette burned his fingers. Carefully he cut the piece from the paper, and hastily left the Plaza. Palamos had not yet awakened when Don Pietro boarded the train for Paris. His six month's absence caused little comment, and it was generally accepted that he had taken the trip for his health. He returned to Palamos. The smouldering fire, still burned in his sunken eyes, and his colorless lips occasionally drew back from his teeth in a sneering smile. The soft Mediterranean breeze, that springs up with the night, was whispering and swinging the lanterns of the Plaza. The ritas in their bright colored costumes were singing and dancing to the throbbing music of their guitars, and the fragrant smoke of perfumed cigarettes pervaded the air. Obliv- ious to all their merriment, at an isolated table hidden from view by a fountain and an arbor, sat Don Pietro. The lantern-light, flickering through the fountain and the arbor, played fantastically over his drawn, colorless features. He-held a worn newspaper clipping in his fingers, and his imagination was conjuring up strange pictures in the fountain. He was standing in the Royal Arena, and the thousands about him were clamoring his name. He felt the warm kiss on his forehead. He heard Inez's merry laugh as they built houses and made gardens in the sand of the sea-shore. He saw her tear-stained face and the lifeless baby in her arms. She stretched out her hand to him, and merged again into the spray. Don Pietro rose to his feet, and leaned against the table for support. A clammy sweat had come out on his body, and his knees trembled beneath him. He looked at his watch. Eleven o'clock he said to himself. Not too early. I shall have it over by midnight. He slipped silently through the bushes, and a few minutes later he rang the sonorous, old fashioned bell of the laboratory. The door opened, and he responded shortly to the effusive greeting of the Italian. I have something to tell you, Francesco, he added in a cool voice, and we must be alone. We are quite alone, his host assured him, 'SI pray you be seated. The men sat on opposite sides of the table, and looked into each others eyes. Francesco took his pipe and his tobacco pouch from his pocket. He half opened his pouch, and sat as if waiting for Don Pietro to continue. Five minutes passed, and neither man moved or spoke. Ten minutes-A stupid stare had come into Francesco's eyes, and his mouth hung half open. Don Pietro had risen from his chair, and was leaning across the table. His face was flushed, and his eyes were burning with an indescribable flame. His breath whistled through his teeth. Francescois pipe rattled to the floor. Francesco, he snarled in his ear drink this. He picked up an empty glass, and put it in the other man's hand. Francesco touched it to his lips. Francesco, he said slowly, pausing on each word,- You have drunk 15 'W new THE PEABQD 101 two grains of potassium cyanide-two grains of potassium cyanide. The Italian started from his chair, and staggered toward the door. A feeble sound came from his throat, half shriek and half groan. He clutched his throat, his eyes rolled back in his head, and he fell. Hours passed, but Don Pietro did not realize it. Dawn came, and the gray morning light outlined the distorted features of the dead man. Don Pietro shivered and slowly pulled himself to his feet. From his pocket he drew an old envelope, and took a photograph, worn almost past recognition, from it. He put it to his lips, and kissed it, and went out. The sun rose out of the Mediterranean, and pointed its slender, trem- bling finger across the water at Don Pietro. Palamos was asleep, and the plaza was deserted except for this solitary figure which paced to and fro along the balcony stretching out over the sea. 'l l I' LOVE Bedell H. Speer, '15 Out upon the sparkling water, Silvered by a crescent moon, Softly glides a silent shadow, Mingling with the darker gloom. And as softly, there are wafted To the notes of sad guitar, Sweetest love songs o'er the water Borne on breezes from afar. All the stars of heaven brighten, All the rustling trees are stilledg Nature seems to wait and listen To the heavens-music filled. Nesting birds are gently wakened, Sleepy twitterings are heard, Feathered mother softly singing, Comforting each tiny bird. Then her mate, heart bubbling over, Sends his song up to the sky, And the angels, filled with wonder, Turn and listen from on high. I -I '-'- 102 THE PEQXBQDY R28 agua - ' 'tv' THE EVENING STAR Mary Adeline McKibben, ,15 While the gorgeous blue and crimson of the sunset sky blended to form lavender, while the lavender, streaked with gold, dulled to a blue-gray and gray-green, Suzan stood leaning against the high ivy-covered wall that en- closed the close-clipped, velvety lawn of her cozy, little bungalow-hers and .Iack's. When all the color left the sky, and the hushed trees and fragrant lilacs became only blurred, black masses, she still stood there waiting, eager and expectant. Simultaneously and as tho they, too, were a part of the Universal plan that can not fail the electric arc lights popped on, flooding with their white light the girls radiant, upturned face. The shadow of a frown flitted across it, and she drew back into the deep shade of a clump of syringa bushes. Even as she did so, a voice from the house called her name. She sank farther into the leafy hiding place, wrapping her gauzy white dress tighter about her. There were steps on the porch, then a low whistle, and, '6Oh, I say, Sue., where are you? As if directed by Fate the man was nearing the wall and the cluster of bushes. Whew-eel what under the sun are you doing here? ' A deep flush flooded the girl's face, but she laughed lightly, It isn't under the sun, ,I ack, and I'm just waiting for--. Oh, I can't tell, but, please, leave me here-just for tonight. The color rose in her cheeks, and she dropped her eyes guiltily to the ground. But, Sue, he remonstrated-all the fun had left his face, I think I deserve to know why you are here. I-. It's nothing, Jack. I'm only waiting till-. Oh, please, please, go and leave me. I must be alone. His jaw squared. Susan, he said, I forbid your staying here alone. He turned and walked slowly to the house. I forbid your staying here alone.' The words rang in the girl's ears. Her blood boiled. I will stay, she murmured. He doesn't know what he's talking about. 'I' I I 'I Q i Y I' Q l 'I' 'I' Within the cottage a miserable figure paced, puffing feverishly at a cigar. His hands were thrust with mad force into his trousers' pockets, and his face was drawn and pale. At times the thoughts thronging his teeming brain formed themselves into words, and he spoke, half aloud, half to him- self. No, she hasn't been herself lately-dreamy-absent-minded-I won- der-Oh,-How she blushed. A long pause, then, If I knew who the fellow was, by Jove, I'd pound his brains out-Yes, she is waiting for-who? who? who? Good Lord! who? There was a light step on the porch, and he turned to find himself face to face with his wife. She had evidently forgotten the unpleasant ex- eff' F is -F HE FEABQDY perience of the early evening, for her dark eyes gleamed, and her whole face was suffused with a glow of excitement. ln love, ,lack choked the words in his throat. Time and again during their courtship he had seen that strange look come into her eyes, that expectant flush to her cheeks. Flinging aside the silken scarf that covered her bare shoulders, she sprang lightly up the stairs. He heard her footsteps above him, started as a door bounded shut, and then sank dejectedly into a chair to devise plans for disposing of his rival. It was late, very late when he finally finished his last cigar, switched off the lights, and tramped dully up to bed. On Suzan's writing desk lay a dog-eared volume of Shelley and half a ream of gift-edged, lavendar-scented note paper. The waste basket held in its concealing depths the other half ream. So had as that, he whispered, eyeing the innocent book from which a sheet of tinted paper protruded. Still his honor forbade his unfolding that tell-tale sheet. Q I Q l I' Q f fl I l' I' I' The next morning the correctness of ,lack's suspicions was further sus- tained. Suzan spoke only in disconnected monosyllables during the morning meal. She who was usually so eager to hear the first war news, so quick to sympathize with the sufferers, listened without a change of color or expression to the tale of the Lusitania's sad fate. She, usually so lovable, half drew away from his parting kiss, and, instead of skipping joyfully at his side to the stone wall, left him at the door, explaining that she had to finish a letter that she had begun the night before. As he left the house, he ground his teeth. After a wretched day at the office, sick in heart and body he returned to his preoccupied wife, who innocently confessed that she was just wild for twilight to fall. Yes, he answered dryly, lt's so romantic. But she did not seem to hear. The expression of last evening had come upon her face, and her eyes were dreamy. He spent the evening in agony very much like that of the preceding night, only more intense, conscious that his wife was alone in the dusk waiting for-? That was the question he was again pondering when she brushed by him on her way to her room. Another hour of misery and then he heard sobbing above. With a mighty oath he jumped to his feet, and, hurling curses upon himself for his negligence, bounded up the steps three at a leap. Breathless he burst open the door. There, in a limp heap on the floor, sat Suzan. At his noisy entrance she raised a tear-stained face. Oh, Jack, she sobbed, 'cl simply can't find another word to rhyme with Heaven. l don't want seven or eleven and-. But she got no farther. With a heavy thud he had dropped upon the floor beside her, his great shoulders shaking convulsively. ff? ' E I I ' 'lil THE FEQXBQDY m-. , ,l tl,-W ,ik-3, Sue, he gasped when at length he had caught his breath. als that all? She eyed him wonderingly. What is it? Obediently she handed him the tinted sheet. A poem, he mumbled between gasps. To the evening sta-. His voice broke into wildest hilarity. Instantly she grew indignant. Pm sorry I showed it to you. I knew you would just make fun of it. That's why I wouldnit let you know anything about it, but-I really did feel inspired last night when the sunset was so beautiful and-I that, like a real poet, I would like to watch the little stars come out, but when I saw you I knew you would tease me and-well I did feel a little bit ashamed of my- self-but-O you needn't laugh so now-you were horrid and suspicious and jealous-jealous of a star, Jack, for I was just waiting for-the dreaming star. '! 'X'vX' FOUR PEABODY TRACK MEN X s ' 2 '- - F get , THE PEQXBQDY 100 YS,-5 . -ig -. iv- ilijeradlyw NORMAN GODFREY, Editor HAZEL TENER, Editor FRANCIS REAMER, Assistant PEABODY WINS DUAL MEET FROM WILKINSBURG In the dual meet held at D. C. and A. C. Park, Peabody led Wilkiiisburg by 8 points. lt was closely contested throughout, and the mile relay was the deciding event. The summaries: 100-yd. dash-First, Stewart, Peabody, second, Funk, Wilkilisburg, third, White, Peabody. Time 10 3,!5 seconds. All-Class relay-First, Wilkiilsburg, second, Peabody. Tillie 2:24. llalf Mile-First, Eckhardt, Peabody, second, Finley, Wilkilisburg, third, liardcs, Wilkiilsburgg fourth, Davis, Wilkinsburg. l00-yd. high hurdles-First, Horigan, Peabody, second, Funk, Wilkiiisburg, third, Stevens, Wilkinsburg, fourth, Gummcrson, Peabody. Time 15 seconds. 220-yd. dash-First, Stewart, Peabody, second, Goodwin, Peabody, third., Till- hrook, Wilkilislmurg, fourth, Harvey, Wilkilisburg. Time 25 2X5 seconds. viii-0-yxl. dash-First, Eckhardt, Peabody, second, Barnetti, Peabody, third, Hagenhuck, Wilkinsburg, fourth, Funk, Wilkiilsbiirg. Tillie 56 seconds. 220-yd. low hurdles-First, Ege, Wilkixisburg, second, Stevens, Wilkiiisbiirg, third, Leslie, Peabody, fourth, Funk, WilkiIlBbUfg. Time 29 U5 seconds. One mile run-First, Richards, Wilkinsburg, second, Thomas, Peabody, third, Davis, Wilkinsburg, fourth, Bardes, Wilkinsburg. Time 521. Une mile relay-First, Peabody, second, WilkiIlSbufg. High jump-First, McDowell, Wilkinslmurg, second, W'ylie, Wilkirlsburg, third, Kinkcad, Peabody, fourth, Leslie, Peabody. Height 5 ft. 3 in. Shot Put-First, Ege, Wilkiiisburg, second, Emery, Peabody, third, O'Connor, Peabody, fourth, McCrory, Wilkirisburg. Distance 39 ft. 416 in. ,lavelin--First, lVlcClarin, Peabody, second, McCrory, Wilkilxsburg, third, Allen, Wilkinsburg, fourth, Horigan, Peabody. Distance 124 ft. 4 in. HE PEMQDY wick. .. igmgg fha 1 4 1 I 1 i x , , I r fir ' gfgsig THE PEABQDY I 107 K 2, --11 , it , --- ' t A Discus--First, O Connor, Peabodyg second, Ege, Wilkinsburgg third, Pryor, Wilkinsburgg fourth, Emery, Peabody. Distance 86 ft. 7 in. , Broad jump--First, Wellings, Peabody, second, Funk, Wilkinsburgg third, Wightmn, Peabody, fourth, Emery, Peabody. Distance 18 ft. 5 in. Pole Vault-First, Wightman, Peabody, second, Sands, Wilkinsburgg third, Wellings, Peabody, fourth, Horigan, Peabody and McDowell, Wilkins- burg tied. Height 10 ft. Peabody-79W points, Wilkinsburg-7115 points. '! P'l' THE TECH-ALLEGHENY MEET Although Peabody took second in the Tech-Allegheny Meet, they did not show their usual form. Shaw High school's delegation of four men, who won first with 29 points, were the pace makers, and they set a fast pace. Peabody was handicapped by its lack of weight men, but as usual they won the mile relay. Summary of points:-Shaw, 29, Peabody, 16 2f7:, Kiski, 163 Shadyside, 14 U73 Central, 11, Monongehela, 103 Sewickley, 85 Greensburg, 'I 9f14:, Lisbon, 72, New Castle 5, Johnstown, 4 1f2g Wilkinsburg, 3 13f14-3 McKees- port, 3g Edgewood, 3, Fifth, 35 Brushton, 1f2. 'Z' 'Z' 'Z' PEABODY TAKES CHAMPIONSHIP Peabody's track team won the championship of Western Pennsylvania, Eastern Ohio, and Northern West Virginia in the W. and J. meet at Washing- ton, Pa., May 15. Fifteen schools were competing, and there were 118 entries. This was Peabody's big meet of the year, because all of the Pittsburgh schools were entered, as well as Greensburg, Kiski, and other old rivals. Peabody led with 49 points, and Greensburg followed with 31 112. The victory was due to the speed shown in the dashes and the medium distance runs. Stewart and Smucher got first and second in the 100-yd. dash, and first and third in the 220. Barnett took the 440, Eekhardt, the half mile, and Thomas, the mile. Horigan captured second in the 220 and 120 hurdles, and placed in the hammer-throw, Wellings and Wightman tied for fourth place in the pole-vault. Berardino and Jamison divided honors at 20 ft. 6 in. for the broad jump, but Berardino won the toss and the first medal. Peabodyis two relay teams, the first composed of White, Eckhardt, Barnett and Berardino, and the second of Horigan, Robb, Kinnear, and Goodwin, won first and second places in the mile relay. 'P 'S' 'E' PEABODY WINS MORE SWIMMING HONORS Peabody took off another first in the Swimming meet, held at the Irwin Avenue Industrial School. Peabody, Ralston, Allegheny, Central, and Fifth Avenue competed, and finished in the order named. Hugh, Foster, and Beckfield held up the speed end for Peabody, and of course Buff Newell won the plunge. I fl H - -1 ' THE FQQBQW PEABODY BASEBALL TEAM 153' L '- THE F IND 109 BASEBALL Peabody has one of the best teams in its history this year. Out of fourteen games thus far this season, we have won twelve. The team is com- posed of players who are consistent fielders and reliable in the pinches. ln a game featured by the heavy hitting of Peabody, the PITT FRESHIES were humbled by a score of 12-7. Silberstein secured 4 hits, while Adam, Weddell, and Morrison each had 3. Peabody travelled to McKeesport in April 24 and defeated McKEES- PORT HIGH 9-6. Adam was heavy man of the day, with 3 hits. McKeesport did not start things soon enough and was unable to overtake Peabody's early lead. Peabody opened its league season by defeating ALLECHENY, 1914 champions, 11-5. Allegheny secured a 3-run lead in the first and with Titzel pitching, things looked bad. But our boys soon started and slammed the ball at a merry clip. Wright fanned eleven. Diamond and Runnette batted well. In one of the hardest fought games of the season, BRUSHTON was beaten 4-3. The enemy got 3 runs in the beginning. Peabody soon tied it up, then the fight began. In the ninth, Diamond walked, stole second and third, and scored the winning run on a throw to second, intended to catch Runnette stealing. Grunagle played well for Brushton. On May 18, at Morningside Field, BRUSHTON again failed to fetch, by a score 10-2. The feature of the game was the hitting of Morrison, who had 2 homers and 2 singles. Wright and Runnette each had 3 hits. Waddell played a nice fielding game. ln a short affair, stopped by rain in the fifth, SOUTH fell 2-1. South secured l in the first on a homer. Adams was on the job, knocking in both of our runs with a single and a double. Wright fanned 10. Several of SOUTH'S players were inelegible and they were forced to forfeit the second game to Peabody, 9-0. Peabody then defeated the regular South team in a practice game, 8-4, in five innings. Peabody defeated WILKINSBURG at D. C. 81 A. C. Park, by a score of 6-5. Wilkinsburg was never able to overtake our lead, although they made bold threats in the ninth. Diamond wielded the sledge for Peabody, getting 3 bingles. George was handy man for Wilkinsburg, sending one over the fence for a homer. In the field, the opposing shortstops, Patton and Ege, starred. 'S' i X 'fist rue: P QXBQDY On May 25, WILKINSBURG again proved rather easy picking, and fell 10-4. Wright was on the job, knocking in four runs and scoring one him- self. Weddell and Waddell also played well. Waddell secured 4 walks out of 4 trips to the plate. Pfifer was Wilkinsburg's best man. In a game featured by loose fielding, Peabody hung it on CENTRAL 4-2. Weddell started the pitching for Peabody, but gave way to Wright in the fifth, when Central scored 2 runs on 2 hits and an error. As Peabody was ahead when Weddell went out of the box, deserves credit for the victory. Adam scored 2 of the 4 runs. V Due to two errors in the ninth inning, FIFTH got the better of a hotly contested game at Flinn Park, 3-2. 'The team was weakened by the absence of Silberstein, who was taken out in the third, because of an injured ankle. Waddell took Silberstein's place at third and played well. Peabody had several chances to put the game on ice, but lacked the necessary punch. fl' 'lv 'I' THE SOPH-FRESH TEAM Peabody's baseball material is not confined alone to the Varsity, for we have the best Soph-Fresh team in the city. Out of 7 games played they have won all, some by large scores. They are not world-heaters, but are a team of hard working, consistent players. The scores of their games are as follows:-Peabody 10, Woolslair 6, Peabody 6, Brushton 3g Peabody 7, Ralston 4g Peabody 11, Central 15 Pe abody 14, Woolslair 0g Peabody 13, Brushton 2, Peabody 17, Central 0. In the hardest fought game of the year, FIFTH fell by a score of 7-6. Both teams played their hardest from beginning to end. Fifth drew first blood, sending 1 across in the third. Peabody, however came back strong in the fourth, and grabbed four. With two on, Runnette singled, scoring both. The other two were gained on singles by Morrison, Patton, and Weddell. Fifth was on its toes and scored 2 in the fifth. In the first of the seventh, Fifth tied things up by scoring another run. The tie was short lived, for Peabody tallied thrice in the last of the seventh. This was due to Diamond's slashing triple with two on, followed by another triple by Wright. This ended Peabody's scoring. Fifth, however scored one in both the eighth and ninth, but not enough to win. Peabody's whole team batted well. Waddell, Weddell, and Adams starred in the field. Tovey starred for Fifth, getting four bingles. 'E' fi' UZ' PEABODY ON THE COURTS Peabody is well represented o-n the courts this year by practically the same team that played last year. In matches with other schools, Peabody will be represented in Singles by Miss Reniers, Miss Friesell, Mohn and Wright. The Doubles team will consist of Miss Tener and Miss Hainerg and Hoeveler and Blue. ef- --'- --- '-55351, THE PEQXBQDY 111 vm! . -gg, -1141-4 GIRLS' TENNIS TEAM Wriglxt, who won thc boys' Singles and the Doubles last year, is Captain of the team, and Miss Reniers is Manager. She defeated Miss Tener in the finals last year. She and Miss Friesell won the girlls Doubles. Mohn anal Blue also played for Peabody last year, and Hoeveler has played well in the school tournaments. Edgewood High men defeated Peabody men at Edgewood, two matches to one. Garland of Edgewood defeated Mohn in the Singles 6-2, 6-0, and Hoeveler defeated Smith of Edgewood 6-4, 7-5. Garland and Smith won the Doubles, defeating Hoeveler and Mohn 8-6, 6-3. -1- 4- 4- POT SHOTS If Shaw High School, of Cleveland can win a meet like the Tech- Allegheny meet with four men, what could they do with their whole team? Allegheny, last year's baseball champs with their old team practically intact have rather upset the dope by making such a poor showing. Peabody has put a new wrinkle into relay racing by taking first and second in the mile relay, at the Tri-State championship meet. ,fl '- '- V f:'. 'T H2 THE FEQABQDY vi. - .- . Y I L2 The pitcher of The Fresh-Soph team, Moffet, has been making a record for himself hy striking out 91 men in 52 innings, and allowing but 20 hits. If you think that you could never amount to anything in track, con- sider that Shaw High School's champion high jumper has only one leg. The men who have played for the varsity this year are Morrison, Wright, Adam fcaptainj, Diamond, Patton, Silberstein, Waddell, Weddell, Runnette, Flynn, Signet and Reamer:-and for the Fresh-Soph team,-Moffatt, Bowman, Lorenz, Hagar, Lissfelt, Provost, Campbell, Beach, Gallegher, Brown, Flinn, and Hornberger. . wi FN1: T5 - of n f fy- -l-- 2-1 --1-- .13 THE PEQXBQDY fils .tl Q, 1,-,-M .f.',3, con: mann ss: 'rut Aavea-nsznnnrs MH rDEl:fI'RANCE BIG SHOW UN Q ,A-X hx rdex CJ 4-'K' ,Al rp - '- M--A-W lf: ---- E ,X-il H5 F5 595 -2- -2- -2- -2- -2- VALUE ESTABLISHED 1860 QUALITY STCEBENER MAN WITH THE SHOES E 6227 Penn 6222 Frankstown EAST END WE GIVE SAVINGS CHECKS -2- -2- -2- -2- -2- The McFarland Company Arrival of New Spring Goods Each department is well completed and we are prepared to supply your needs in the newest goods lor- Spring and Summer Wear The McFarland Company 6015 Penn Ave.. East End He-as E -ef We- our E' -:fp sEA,e+ E, E, E I. Said Sam, 2'In dis hyear Europe wah Mah country keeps neutrality. Ah d0n't know ,what the word may mean, But Ah can very easy see What attitude the country takes, An' den ah won't make no mistakes. Ah'm neutral. -2- -2- -2- -2- -2- Putronl Peubody Advertisers WD .V+ V -:- -c- c '-:- -e - - - Peabody Students Like Good Stuff- - - SIELING'S DRUG STORE Highland and Hoeveler GOOD SUNDAES GOOD CANDY GOOD LUNCHES Headquarters for the Peabody Bunch 'L 'Q' '31 'Q' 'D' BOYS and GIRLS hen you are in need ol gloves, sweaters, hosiery or Underwear or any fancy article-TRY MANSMANNS 5911-I5 Penn Avenue Prices always right 'Q' 'Q' 'I' 22 li' Nearly half of the students of PEABODY HIGH Are watching a picture, shown Each week, about a Diamond that fell from the lky. It's to be seen at the CAMERAPHONE. 'I' 4' 4' 4- 4' Patronlne Peabody Advertiser: 116 THE PEQXBQDY '21 . . . A - - ' N3- EAI- 'Q' '31 'Cl '21 'P -0- -:- -:- A -:- -Q- W. W. WARRICK . '. Jeweler of the East Ena' 6109 PENN AVENUE The name Warrick on the box adds nothing to the cost, it :imply guarantees the quality. 'C' 'Q' 'C' 'P 4' II. And this is how he proved it. Pete called Jim a burglar, And Jim called Pete a thief, And both appealed to Salnbo, An' Sam's reply was brief. Ah do not cah to be uncouthg When folks begin to tell the truth Ah m neutral. 'I' 'C' 'G' 'I' '2- P. LUDEBUEHL and SON SHOES and HOSIERY PENN and FRANKSTOWN A GOOD FIT is the first point in shoes.-IT'S OURS-We've Fitted Feet for over Forty Years-. but great as it is, it's only one. d Here you have the selection of the best makes at their res pective grades in the world. We believe we have the mos complete line of Men's Qxfords in Greater Pittsburgh 53.50 to 510.00 the Pair 'S' 'S' 'Q' 'I' 'Q' I'utrunl I ubu1Iy Adu-rthwru THE PQZQBQDY W3 'D' 'Q' 4' 'C' JI' + -Q' 'D' -U' 'C' -5' 'Q' -C' 4' Pntronlze Peabody Ad tlsers GM - ----e--ee- eh -55:1 THE PEQXBQDY Nb, -i--Veer. ,.,,.,.,..,....-Ye-, ' '. A 'C' 'C' 'I' 'C' i'i me NICHOLSON You can taStC the purity For that commencement entertainment let us suggest-fruit-your favorite beverage-and a NICHOLSON CAKE The Nicholson Company East Liberty, 5704 Penn Ave., Hiland 6460 Retail Stores: Devonshire Market, Penn and Hiland Down Town 412 Wood St. -2- N iii NWN WEN Nl-A -5- Commencement Bouquets and Corsages Flowers give the finishing touch. No matter the time, the place or nature of the occasion, We know and serve these app- ropriate flowers in the correct Why. Randolph 8: Mcflements w. F. STEINMACHER PM , 5936 Penn Avenue Kodak and Photo Supplies H1 d 129 s. Highland Ave. 'lea' lan DEVELOPING and PRINTING -:- N e -:- Putronl Peabody Advurtlnern 40' -s 'r in '---' THE r non 'C' 4' 52' 4' ll' THE GYPSYN2The Newest Style in Bathing Caps We show the leading style lor the 1915 season. Fautless Bathing Caps of every hue and pattern. Some plain: others lancyg all beautllul and practlcal. Select your new Bathing Cap lrom our complete assortment: we have styles to suit every taste-to match every costume. 25c. 500, 75e, 81.00, 51.50. WICKS DRUG STORE Bryant and St. Clair Streets 49436 P. sr A. 81 EAST BELL 19437 l HILAND 5 'C' 'Q' '5' 'C' 'I' COOL coM FORTABLE P A 3 doorsnlflltestvctitlllilfighland l P. M. to 10:30 P. M. Showing Exclusively in East Liberty The Famous Paramount and The Great Metro Pictures including Famous Plays and Famous Players Travel Scenes Educational Animated Cartoons Clean Comedies Program changed three times weekly MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY Students Tickets may be secured on application at Box Olllce COURTESY REFINFMENT 4' Q'7'+EAf,, 12- ff? 15-525 if IF III. Then Pete took oli' his collar And glared at .lim with hate. And .lim took off his necktie, And Sambo called out, '5Wait! Befoh you staht youah little tight Ah wants youall to get this right Ah'm neutral. 'Q' -Q' 4' . 45' 'Z' Pltrollse Peabody Advertisers 120 THE FEABQDY vt.-S , 3-g F- ,357 - P '21 'C' 'Q' 'C' 'U' 'D- + -U' 'D' -D' You Cannot Start a BANK ACCOUNT Too Soon K -u- DO IT NOW -n- IN + THE PARK BANK + IT'S THE YOUNG PEOPLE'S BANK 6 1 06 Penn Avenue 'U' -D' 'G' 'O' 'D' 'Cl 'I' Pntronlle Peabody Advertisers QW- 41- in -1--- .ggi THE FEQXBQDY 19 NSA Y , ' Y 'MA Ji' 'C' 4' ':' 'C' The Yak? xl iw 1- , 2 0. L 12Ani!Iass fLfdW5 i jQ.AWON A m 7 il lu! 'Q' -2- 'Q' 'Cl 'I' Pntronlze Peabody Advertlsers 122 9 ak: '7 THE PEMQDY -:- -:- -:- -ci -:-one ' ReaI Estate Investments MORTGAG ES SURETY BONDS FIRE INSURANCE Invest your money in REAL ESTATE FOR SALE-14 Houses paying I075 Interest FOR SALE-4 Houses paying 8070 Interest Lot of good investments: See us about them -1 -l fc- HUGH R. SCOTT Union Bank BUIIQII Pittsburgh, Pa. Hg 4' ,W FOURTH AVE, at woon ST. 'C' 'I' 'Q' 'Q' 'I' ASK FOR THE GREEN FOLDER Passenger i T Baggage S 1 E . Express , t F relghl Onveco Unequalled Service PITTSBURGH TERMINAL Penn Ave. and Stanwix St. BUTLER TERMINAL 'F' Nixon I'IoteI BuiIcIing Visit Alameda Park, Butler -I' -2- 'G' 'C' 'G' Pntronl Peabody Advert! Bef! 'D' 4 123 sf e---- fo --f- -.QL THE F WD 'G' I -5- 12- 4- 4' MANICURING Cl-IILDREN'S HAIR CUTTING Hiland Building Barber Shop ROOMS 525526 Frank De Luca, Proprietor SANITARY SERVICE Hours Phone Hiland 4386-J 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Saturdays 10:30 P. M 4- in -ef-f i- --4 'A I-:re -:- Why do the Police ride HARLELDAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES .......i. ASK THEN! S. C. HAMILTON Allegheny County Distributor 4 5817 PENN AVENUE, E. E. +- 4' 'I' 'G' '5- IV. 4' Then Pete took off his coat and vest. And Jim, he did the same. And as they started in to fight, They heard young Sam exclaim, + Both foh mah own an' public good Ah wants it fully understood Ah'm neutralf' A A -:- + 'I' 'Q' .- 'C' Patron! 'Penbodyn Advertisers - -' 'sew 124 HE P QXBQDY -5- -5- -5- -5- 5- I 'U' The Leading Bryant Street Grocer ii BEST VALUE . For your money or your money refunded if you y don't find it so. 0 Phoneszffggdj 2.11-5 fHigh1and ID' -5- -5- -5- -5- -5- , I I I Q an Pierpont, Slviler 81 00. 4 ENGHRAVERS CKIXOCOLATES P R H N T E R S an f' I ' Special Attention Given To AL l , ry - 1 School and College Publications, -D. 0 -:M W Catalogues and Programmes Goon TASTE Theuppearance shows it Om- The Candy proves it ' TENT ll9 SHADY AVENUE Q, 6022 Penn Avenue -Q- 237-239 Filth Avenue EAST END -5- -5- -5- -5- -5- + C. A. Forcey C6 Son + 500 N. Highland Avenue Cigars, Tobacco, Confectionery -5- -G- Ice Creams, Fruits and Hot Drinks. LUNCHES SERVED -5- -2- -5- -5- ' -5- Patronlle Peabody Advertisers BQD A .W. SMITH COMPANY 'KEENAN BLDG. Florlsts PITTSBURGH l All Departments Largest in America 'Q' 'Cl 'C' -2- 'I' V. And while they fought young Samho watched, And danced around them yelling. He called them both all sorts of names And never left off telling, You both ah thugs. You know that's,true. Ah'm working hahd 'gainst both of you. Ah'm neutral. 'Q' 'G' 4' 'S' 4' E. S. STAVEIR 426 N. Highland Avenue THE HOME BAKERY The Only Lunch Room Near Peabody. 'D' 'C' -C' -0- 4- Pntro nlze Peabody Al tis:-rs J.- V. A. 5 V - fill 5551 126 THE PEQXBQDY 1 e 'S' H f 'C' 'S' I-C' 'Ci J. l.', l'-.' Z! sf 4 , . rf' 11.-FCEDFIL-21.'v. i ...u if Lfnhf? ' I1-xflyg: G .1 1 u 1, ' 0: 'l -,IQ QI! '. 'Qu In I . -u- .+f'f12.?.s :ft- 3 fiifiiigiiiff ,- ':1f:'I' f' C LASSAER QQ-T2j?q'! 'Q' . -2. ' f 1 .I 1 .I - 'ffr 14.--1 ,J . -' :Iv-' Q ns N ffl,-...f!4 ..-..i','.:-1' x, XM 2 04. , rr. ---314, 2,111 --fx gf X 2 6 '-L'-:-.41 , 1 'J '.,'1,,1 G 2 4 N .J-:l..: ' . S 'I . L E -'4 23,25 1-X-1,43 X O S' 3 QP -Q .,7.l..h: -Uv -,rj 1 f::Qf,? OJ Q- 71 A ' '2i :i c. '9f:'.i ':: ,, -2, E 'L P 5-Ziezfx '7- if St in .-.'Yi'.i-F 'fy-'os I' - p- -.. Im 5.1-Q ... ,S u Agni - 5 I v',,9's ln- QQ-2'-IZ .4 QL?-Ji. xgff-:ff-'-', ffllffllllflfllfflffff HDUIIHHDDYDU p3Y.2l ,3' -::.1': 'Prf -'ft ',.f 1' v fl-.- ig 4- f-.:i?f Q R E 2 xfftf? ' 5 '- -'lv 0 1'5 1 'lflffov ' .55 4 5 Y gf 'J Q55 ' f.. 9 1 i ... 'Q Q 4 g 2- 1' .-.pu--: ' an A -,- f 1 .I JW! 5 K 9 ' iff: 122,771 . 003 : QQ ' . 'fs' V' YU. . f':ff'-vt '94 E5 9 -f I f-- . ' . . ,,2' - 0 f' ' ,:5:.::1:Aq?'. l sv fir, -:Rh . a -Y, ':' f.'- If-I faq. ' + f,:,75,.a1L.,. ,-Q' v . ygflsls Uv' 'C' '.'-22:51-L1 1 -.-. --.. :. f-rg-fr- I 'Wi AQ 1 1-' if 'ci' ' :ZA-'ii- ' 'WJ f'f'f.'- -.Fld fJ fl.: inf A :,g I 5 -'aybagjvv 7 if . 'I i?i,.31f.:J-P. :anis :W . 5,135 . I --.-.... ,ug , .:,.. Q 'Iii-Zf:,.-,E m' - MR. NOYES, Teacher Editor-in-Chief Advertising Manager Highest Honor Three Track Men One Base Ball Man Cheer Leader Business Manager Editor Melting Pot Lowest Honor One Football Man Three Girl Basket Ball Players Two Members Social Committee 4- -Q- Patronize 'Z' 4' 4' Peabody Advertisers 1 jf - 1- ---E' '-'W -A--M' s H THE FEABQDY 12' X Z. -1.--l re. .-..-... ..1- ' 'L 4 'Q' 'C' 'D' H 4 4' North Highland Quick Shoe Repairing Shop 502 N. HIGHLAND AVE. 'D' 'U' Repairing done while you wait. Guaranteed in fifteen minutes WHITE OAK LEATHER USED ul- Bell Phone Highland 9017 4' 4' E 'QV 73' 'E 'T' 'U' The problem oi correctly und economically clothing the growing 4- boy or girl is one that is easily solved at this growing store 4' We cater The to young folks 5 young Q trade H N S store 4' Penn and Collins, East Liberty 4' 4' 7 ev 'Q' f 'Q' is lf - Duii's College -Un 'D' ln Pictures 'D' Ready lor Distrihution Send lOl' OIle 'It'S Ffee 'U' rc. Let us show you what a first- 'U' class Commercial school should 'ook 'ike' N0 VACATION CUMPLETE 4 'U' .ct Without a A KO D A K 9 7 Duff s College SIXQIEEXFIYAPFIEIS 'ul h S EET . opp. vm ieatre + PENN AVE gf 5t TR JJ' The Best Place in Town Pmsburgh' Pa' For Developiag Films 4- ll 4-or H+ ae- owe- ee Pu tru I P eubodyn Ad tlsern Then Sam gave Pete a half a brick, A lead pipe to his brother. And then he hollered, '4Aint it sad How men will hurt each other. Ah help you both, but heah mah cry, 'Ah don't cah ef you both should die. Ahylll neutral., 'C' '3' 'C' 'C' '2- Served Afternoon and Evenings KUHN'S TEA ROOM Vanilla. .... . ....... . Fresh Strawberry. . . Chocolate .......... Bisque ............. Frozen Custard ..... Nesselrode Pudding . Strawberry ........ Maple Nut... . Chocolate . . . . Pineapple . . . . Raisin .... . Cherry ........ . . . . Caramel ...... . .... . Rittenhouse CREAMS AND ICES . . .100 Raspberry Ice... . ...15o ...10c ...10c ...10o ...20c ...150 ...15c ...100 ...10c ...15c ...15c ...10c SUNDAES Pineapple Ice .... Orange Ice ..... Lemon Ice .... Cherry Ice .... Fruit Salad ..... Tango .......... Devi1's Delight... Pineapple Delight... . .. Banana Split. . . Banana a la Royal ..... Pittsburgh Special ..... 100 10c 100 100 100 150 200 200 200 150 200 200 Coupe St. Jacque. ...... 200 Golden Fruit... ...... . .250 PARFAIT Cafe .. . ........ ....20c Chocolate ....20c Strawberry . . .... 200 Cupid ..... . . . .2Uc ' DRINKS Buttermilk ............ 10c Orangeade ............ 10c Concord Grape Juice. . .10c Grape Rickey. . . .. 150 Ginger Ale. .. ......... 100 Catawba Grape Juice. .100 Lemonade ........ . .... 10c Fruit Lemonade ........ 150 -5- -2- 'C' 'I' -C- SSA ational Institution N Browning, King 8x Co CLOTHING, HATS and FURNISHINGS 'FR 'G' 'ff' 'C' 'Q' Patronlze Peabody Advertisers TI'lE PEQXBQDY 12 2. . . - E - 1 ga s 'Q' . 'S' 'G' 'S' 'Q' H ZATEKZAEATMORS THE MILK CHOCOLATE THAT BUILDS YOU UP CW PENNSYLVANIA CHOCOLATE CO. Pittsburdh, U. S. A. -:- -:- -:- -:- -:- Excelsior Motorcycles Miami Bicycles Motorcycle, Bicycle Supplies and Parts Repairind a specialty C. A. HOWARD e 6112 STATION ST. I Phone nuana 3257 -12' 'I' 'C' - 'I' 'Q' VII. And then Pete's brick slipped from his hand, And ,lim let fly the lead, ' And each went wild and hit poor Sam Upon his ivory head. And Sam cried, What you mean by this? Remember, when you staht to miss, - Ah'm neutral. 'G' 'C' 'I' 'G' 'Q' Mc Pherson Specialty lvl C P H E R S O N and Corsetiure Shop Hiland 1701-J 512-15 Highland Building Pittsburgh, Pa. GOODWIN CORSETS ORDERS TAKEN FOR GOWNS PATTERN CUT TO MEASURE SCHOOL 0F INSTRUCTIVE DRESSMAKINH AND MILLINERY 'ri-is oNLv ESTABLISHMENT or ITS KIND IN PITTSBURGH We offer scientific courses in practical dressmaking. Both theplain and simple methods for women and girls who wish to make or directthe making of their Igarments. Daily and evening classes. Direction of Miss M. X. McComb. Your app l nvited. 512-15 Highland Building Phone 1701-J 1-liland. Pittsburgh, Pa. 'I' 'G' 'Q' 'G' 'G' Pntronl Peabody Advertiser! or A 'ygart 130 THE PEQXBQDY 12.5 , .- -A flj. 'I' 4' 'C' 'C' , 4' MATHEW C. GABBEL SPECIAL Successor to Chas. Bell: Agent ior .9iaeyc1e for 4' BICYCLE -4 551.00 59f?4 Baum Boulevard All kmds igfilglgate Bicycle We will engrave 50 cards .Q- with your name and the plate L will be yours. Y Highest Grade Work Only Graff Brotllers, lnc. .1- rlsr END-s RELIABLE HARDWARE and STOVE HOUSE ' 5910 Pm Aw A. W. Mccloy CO. .- 642-44 LIBERTY AVENUE 'I' 'C' 'I' 'G' 'C' - - -U' Quick, thorough couryes m Shorthand and Buszhess Trazmng SUCCESS ASSURED 'U' PENN AND SHADY AVENUES 4' 'G' +0 'C' 'O' ' Bell 178 7 Hiland P. Sl A. 631 Y East Daniel H. Seruset EAST END DYE HOUSE Receiving Office, 6124- Centre Ave. General Office and Works, 635-637 639 Paulson Avenue E. E., PITTSBURGH, PA. Ladle's and Gentlemen's Garments Cleaned, Dyed, and Repnired. -U' -ll' ae- ae- -:- -0- -:- Putruul Peabody Advertisers o W 'Q' 'C' 'C' 'G' 'S' Makes Agandy yenwcation The eight weelcs, commenceing July 6th spent at the Silver Lalce Naval School, Perry, N. Y. Rowing, Sailing, Swimming, Cutter Drill, Signalling and other Na vy Drills taught hy U. S. Naval Officers Illustrated descriptive hoolclet may he had hy writing SILVER LAKE NAVAL SCHOOL Colonel James E. Dunn, Superintendent PERRY, N. Y. or Division Passenger Agent BUFFALO, ROCHESTER 6: PITTSBURGH RAILWAY 'G' 'C' A 'I' 4' 'Q' FOR Breakfast ancl Dinner USE WRIGHT'S BLENDED COFFEE 3 Pounds for SL00 C. A. WRIGHT 428 N. Highland Ave-, Pittsburgh, Pa. 'C' 'Q' 'U' 'Q' 4' VIII. ' Then Sam he got a battle ax. He shook it in the air. He cried, Ef this should chop you both Ah really wouldn't cah. Ah play no favrites in dis game. Ah'll end you both, or so,Ah aim. Ah'm neutral. 'Q' 4' 'Q' 'I' 4' i Palro Ile Peabody Al tllerl fir - '- 0 --- 132 THE PEABQDY wk! . Egg. Y -L, 'D' 'C' +L 'C' 'I' 4. lu- THE PEABODY PRINTED HERE PARK PRINTING FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 1 . J w Q P OHN RAWFQRD PARK OB AND MMERCIAL RINTING 20 W. STOCKTON AVENUE North Side Pittsburgh, Pa. 'U' -u- SCHOOL, CLASS and YEAR BOOKS A SPECIALTY 4' -u- 4' 4- 'G' 'I' 15- 'C' 'G' Patronlz Peabody Ad tlse-rs THE PE-ZCBQDY 'Q' 'S' 'P 'Q' 4' THE MARTIN SCHOOL Bessemer Building, Pittsburgh THOROUGH, PRACTICAL, RELIABLE A Shorthand and Commercial School thot- meets the demands ol the limes 'S' 'C' '21 4' 'G' Highland News Stand 503 N. Highland Avenue CIGARS and CONFECTIONERY PEABODY LUNCH ROOM , 'FQ' 'G' 4' 'S' 'G' Bell Phones 497-498 Highland P. 8: A. Phone 2671-X G. J. ECKSTEIN Meats, Poultry, Delicatessen 637 MARYLAND AVENUE E. E., Pittsburgh, Pa. 'Q' 'G' 'S' 'S' 'G' IX. Then Pete and Jim got mighty scared. They saw that Sam was vicious. Ah don't know how they saved themselves, But still Ah am suspicious- Tho, Sam cried, uStop! You cau't smash me, Foh while you two do not agree Ah'm neutral. 'Q' -il -3- 'I' 'S' Pntro I Pc-uh0fly Ad rtlnel-A FG? ' S i is 'UW' or -new THE PEABQDY 'Q' 'C' ':' '5' ':' R J N N E Jeweler and Optician ' ' Watches, Diamonds, Repairing a Specialty 6018 Ceutre Ave., V Pittsburge, Pa. ':' 'F 'C' ':' '5' 'Q' Phono 5065 Highland A. G. SCHMIDT H. F. McK. PAYNE The Motorcy'cle Exchange Sole Distrlbuters for INDIAN MOTORCYCLES REPAIRS, ACCESSORIES, and PARTS 5908 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 'C' 'C' -2' s A 'Q' -C' CAMP or SUMMER HOME ORDERS If you are going away for the summer let us ship your Groceries, We yvill pay the Freight. You will find Soups, Canned Goods convenient andleconomical. CLARK BROS. 8: CO. 6110 Penn Avenue, 5710 Hiland -2' '31 '5' -2- -G' University ol Pittsburgh SAMUEL BLACK MCCORMICK, Chancellor The College School of Engineering School of lines School ol Education School ot Economics Graduate School School of Astronomy tAllegheny Observatoryj School ot Medicine School ot Law School of Dentistry School ot Pharmacy Mellon Institute New buildings inthe new location in Oakland are now occupied by the College, Schools ol Education, Economics, Engineering, Mines, Medicine and Dentistry. New Gymnasium and Athletic Field For catalog or other imtormation, address S. B. LINHART. Secretary, University of Pittsburgh, Grant Boulevard, Pittsburgh, Pa, so 'S' s 'C' - 'I' 'S' 'G' Patronlze Peabody Advertisers ' fir' 'Q'-fe '-181 THE PE DQD 135 Ei' 'Q' 4- 4- 'D' A ALHAMBRA THEATRE OII3 and I5 PENN AVENUE 'U' We show only the best pictures obtainable and make our selections ' from both the Licensed and Mutual Programmes. The Licensed Program consists of the,following makes: Biograph, Vltagraph, Kalem, Lubin, Essanay, , and Edison: the Mutual of Reliance, Majestic, Thanhouser, KayBee, Broncho and the famous Keystone comedies, of which we show three a week on ' Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. A 4' 'C' 'C' 'Cl 'G' Bell Phone I-liland 1266 , Miss Conley's School of Shorthand 0 Highland Building, E. E. Pittsburgh, Pa. This School is unique, being the only private business school for girls in Pittsburgh. 'D' Sendfor Catalogue School open sllSummer -IL -5- -2' -3' -D- + BOYS? 'i SEE US FOR YOUR GRADUATION OUTF ITS igatruniy -qi Beahnhp FINKHELORS , it Penn Ave. . QUUBITIKBFS EAST LIBERTY OPEN EVENINGS 'C' E+ il- E E -3- -G- Pntro I e Peabody Advertisers EQPHETIEQE QDY 'Q' 'G' 'S' '21 'S' .HENDERSON MOTORCYCLES Bicycle Repairing , HARRY D. IPXMELSQ BRO. PC1111 AVSIIU -2- -3- 'C' 'S' 'C' 'D' 'D' -D' -D' Complimentary 'LD' -U- '5' 'I' 'Z' -2' 'G' Patroulze Peabody Advertiser: 'D' 6 THE PIZQBQDY 6 'G' 'Q' 'Q' -2' -2' Oswald Werner K Sons Co. CLEANERS and DYERS TELEPHONE 1138 HILAND Rugs, Carpets, Furniture PORTIERS, CURTAINS. BLANKETS, SILKS, LACES, VELVETS, LADIES' DRES5ES, ol ull descriptions, PLU1'IES and FANCY FEATHERS, KID GLOVES, GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHING, Etc. 4' 4' -2- -'C' 4' Boyd Business School of Shorthand and Typewriting SPECIAL SUMMER INDUCEMENTS Specialists in Stenography Students Qraduate in from 30 to 60 Days Schools located in many cities, namely United States, Canada, England and Austrilia Phone 2 411 Bessemer Bldg. Call Ol' FOI' Llttratufe opp. Alvin Theatre Write i court 4484 'Q' 'O' 4' 4' 'O' Qbur Qcknntnlehgment We wish to express our appreciation of those who have advertised in 'The Peabody during the past year, and who have shown favor to this, the Senior Number. We recommend our advertisers to all readers of The Peabody in the hope that our slogan, Patronize Peabody Advertisers will be observed. 'D' 'U' -Q' 'Q' -0- 'Q' 4' Pntronlle Peabody Advertisers ,CN X Q Awww Qi Jr! ' iw 1 5 X . Ania 1 M, WW MT , If fM M . A f X J!! . . X5 QQ? gi 1 gina 7? . - .T.i


Suggestions in the Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) collection:

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Peabody High School - Peabody Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925


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