Pontiac Senior High School - Quiver Yearbook (Pontiac, MI)
- Class of 1907
Page 1 of 92
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 92 of the 1907 volume:
“
-A Au.-n..,.. V s NNI. ul - x I THE CLASS OF '07 X I5JH'1!J'kIll5ll!!Ll9'I1FiM - IWIILHHWH - - 1 xx ...vi PRESENT TO THE PUBLIC THE I ER c w cw 11 9 AN ANNUAL ISSUED BY THE GRADUATING CLASS OF THE PONTIAC HIGH SCHOOL I uimmmumiilnn , , Y,,.. ,, ,., s. , .L-, .. , A, ,V .on.rD.n: A n :. . . f ' H . 1 w ru.-,n..1 wh. LLlIIlIL..,'l L i I M DEDICATED TO THE ALUMI Students, Teachers and Friends of of the Pontiac High School ,,,..-- -O ai QM S ,xg FX Pontiac High School AJS.. M.. Lil. A-A-if-Sf., QUIVER BOARD Florence L. Seeley ------. -.---- E ditor-in-Chief ArtI1ur W. Selden ' - l V Business Manager BOARD OF ASSOCIATES Irene Allison ------- --------- L iterary Editor George A. Cram . - - - fldvertising Editor Gladys F. Brondige - - ---- Art Editor Irene DeConicIq - - . - Circulation Editor Standish Sibley - I - - - Organizations Hilda B. Corey - - . - . fake Editor High School Yell Say it softly, say it slow I One, two, three, nom let her goI Vedo, vida, vedo, Dido, vumI Boom I get a rat trap, boom I get a cat trap I Cannibal I Cannibal! Zis I Boom! Bala! Pontiac High School! RaI1I RaI.rI RaI1I Colors: Orange and Black S N ltllt.+XrfN r ' 1 W, ,+,, L up I I' , Wlfx Vllfnfng Q Y lr It :NIM X I vial L-9 f ' J. ,- f K if x. .1 1 , Xx fx!! W VE Q , X -XXXXRM ri I f , fr X N Q Q ffizliillmu gf 4 4 4 fff ffisfiiiwwiwiwimfiiiiff 1 ,f f' I ,A X . if KL! K 4. ! 'Z7f, mwWW,1SVL - f ' TZ- 'J 5 X W ' xx , f ff X f' 'gf 1 1 X X ' ,ff 1.1' ' ,L . - , wk Y xx X .-'R 1VfV'I'ANl' f?Il 3 5 W A vo JWQWWAA X W H' Kwik! , ' f A2 T ll -4 WF! Hx 'xx Y -!l,,-AW . ' c -ein k X u. x lS1 k!OJyfUW! A V' Y Q Th I?7fA'qXX,f'f',fv ,ff gif xw,wwmw wWW b,wM-3Wqw.W XMW wwWwMww f .5 I, k -P' fl sl' T Md.: -Quan.. K- 17 r g ' ,Jrw ,, fe' 1 gain, U7 1 1,11 ,f ,ff 4, 41', All LV- L, ' ' '1 . fgl vlftby -M , ' K W kiftiifafff. ' 'K TWIN ' . . , Y' ,. :ff , is -nm 4 V 1, .. ,,, 154, ' , f r, V ,A fr: mfvtl AQ WJ .F wif i '- tif if-:: 1 -Q Q' + r 'f'r.-22-Q gm- g- t , m nan ,'-, .1 'Q 2 -4 L- . . ' f ' 1 ' -'-ff g mf' 'Hair X ' 'W.? it E V' all 'ligx-14 ' L: P' i, rw -'ff if- s ' v s, 1' 'Z H X' 4' 'Q' ,.J. W ' ' i .Q . me K F,-ani? P. Buck . - - Superintendent Henry Richmond - - ----4---------- 'Principat, Latin Sarah Mccarroll - - - - Vice-Principal, English Literature, French, English Uerna E, Williams - - ------.---- Geometry, Trigonometry Rose M. Whitney - - - - History, German 3 Sarah E. LeRoy - - - - Algebra, English ' Blanche flvery - ----4-- English Olive 'Pepper- - - - - - - Physiography, Botany William C. Gould - - - - Physics, Arithmetic, Chemistry Gertrude fennings - - ....... English, Latin Ejie Godfrey - - - - - Ancient History, Algebra Susan Mills 4 . ..........,........... Music Emma Z. Warn - - - Mechanical Drawing, History o Art, Free Hand Drawin 9 . S 1 Rosg M. K .Blanch 1 nlmam Gertrude J 5 'nfendenf ah Latin , English 'gonomefry , Carman ru, English English hy, BOYUHU fhemishy ff nglish, LUUV' ary, Algfbm hfusif ,-I and Drawing 1311111111 7 VV S J' arn 1531211 ,Mccarroll Oihnh P. Buck B . W? Pepper 9l1Jamm B. Gould B I nm .n..Inlm.. L 1 s 'Q ll T'7.'L,.lll'llll14'LQi:!lll1EU5Ll2lW35I u- lWlW - 1 i ..,f ,,..- ...xo ,- The President's Address Marquis Emmett Shattuck F-ff, -y HEN we have completed fi' y ii some tasks or attained 'QA :ii the object of some ambi- tion for which we have labored long, there coines ' ' to us something' of that same satisfaction which we experience on reaching the top of a mountain, and on glancing back to view the Way by which we rose: and then, looking up, we behold higher and lottier summits stretching on before us. Then comes the turning point in our jour- ney. Then comes the question, fellow- classmen of 1907, shall we stop and glory in our first achievement or shall we press on in new and greater conquests with all their hardships '? Many of us, in our earlier years, set our mark to '41907, and have worked steadily on until at last we have reached our goal. Milestone after milestone has been passed and now as memory takes us back in review we see many hard battles fought and victories won. But the Way ha's not all been hard for we have had many pleasant memories of social in- tercourse, of athletic contests, and of friendships formed that will be a stimu- lus to us in our onward march toward our still higher mark. We have completed our four years of High School study, and although we see more clearly, yet We do not fully realize the true value of education. If a man should step up to you today and ask for what amount you would sell your education and all the training' and pleas- ures that have accompanied the earning' ot it. what price would you name? The radical evolution in business meth- ods. the long strides in civilization and the multiplication of the inventions and discoveries, along' all lines, which the past century has witnessed, necessitates an intinitely broader and better training for men and women in every walk of life than was required twenty years ago, 'l'he watch-word ot the twentieth century is Excelsior, ln the world of today Ile who thinks. conquersfl and only those who are the best prepared to think and grasp the problems of life will iind a toot- ing' in the business thoroughtares of to- morrow. VVhatever you do, determine that you will keep out of ruts. No matter what your standard of success may be, remember, that we get from life just what we put into life. And in closing, my classmates, let me say that true great- ness consists in sustained enthusiasm. VVe do not judge the runner by his speed at the beginning' of the race: it is the home stretch that counts. To know how to bring' victory from deteat, and to make stepping' stones ot our stumbling' blocks is the t1'ue secret of success. Then, while striving' toward the highest ideals ot American citizenship, let us keep in mind that, 'tlllany a time Victor from vanquished issues at the last, And overthrows from being overthrown. 4 li l nt m..uml.uuuu..mml 1 . A W 'vm' ' ' ' 'W---f-v-V-N -wng Y ,Mm Vnrrfp c , Q A l, M tn 'W' - .t .. . 1 nrists of high lieayen, smiling langnit,tly tlo th pile of Sain ttiorgio to the sonth with its all grat'efnl lines, t-nvelolwtl, as is all else. in l I 'l'lllC HQIVIVERM NAME .tt --..., -f If - , 7X- --, 5liJ- l te-.,.k i .t lt A ffm N'mW r R lt XD! JT lat! l t 1, O -A v Nxt X 2 01 0 5 L -f ,ig- ,,,,f1g it ,, 4 . th ' -' l - '.' 'T f tttylt' N -if v' f f 5 if ici 1 ' ' 4- 7535279-01 gpgad' ' - ,..t'5ig...2'fgveZw.Mz it ' Vent,-tinn nioonl l wonder. gentle it-atlt-r. if thost- two little wortls lIll'2Nl .night to yon. I wonder if, when you sit lmek in your easy t-hair, in the soft gray of a snnnner's twilight, at that glorious lltu tl1 ight, and the nioon, just tipping the ht lvashfnl relnt'tant'e,f-I wontlvr. I HHN. if when you tflose your eyes for :1 nionient you van, as l van, pit-ture to yourself at 1-rt-at silvery glohe snspendetl in the hlnt- that ltagoon, front whose tlepths rises in stzttelv j1'l'iIlItl9lll'. the tltirlt Sllllllllttttvtl tletfper night: or to the north, where tht txtlnisite tlonie of the lisiltite enrves its the niysterions opal haze whitth lentls to this whole tlreani ttity the air of a veri- t lllllt fairylantl. lint. we are apprelientlingl ltet ns turn lmek for a spam- ot' a. few honrs. It is lint the time of tht- setting sun. 'l'he stil'- lin pistxzzt, :Intl ont- may now, in ease :intl toinfort, stroll wht-re he will. Shall wt-, tht-n, talte :t pt-ep at that won- tlerfnl oltl mass of inosaittites and previous nntrlrles :tt the l'tIl't.llPl' t-ntl ot tht- SKIIIPIVP. What, is it .' Why St. Marks of r-onrse nr when all the world is lll'2lt'Pl:lll. when e snn lingers at nionient in his westwartl nrixon, hesitates for a lirief spam- in wn at her own fave lniried so deep in e lvlaelt still waters of tht- l.:1goon,- fntlt-r vantpanile losing itst-lf in the g heat waves halve liftetl front the t'onie lt-t ns enter hefore the darkness steals npon ns and wraps all the beauties of the oltl t'l1lll'l'll in its purple mantle. 'l'i-eatl lightly. for here we are in the sant'tiiary of Art. A delicate gray per- vtidt-s the whole interior, softening all its volors to an almost neutral tone and en- veloping the whole in its mysterious veil. lint. there. see! The sun thro the windows of the tlonie has entered for his evening devotions. Slowly his tiery rays steal earessingly over the golden niosaitlues. I feel they have eat-h one eonie to life. so strongly do they piilsate with the joy of their lreanty. Down the niellowed walls, for zu lirief instant, steal the sun sprites. Now they have reztelietl the tioor and eaeh tiny fragment of wondrous stone and nlo- saitlnt- reveives their good night kiss. lint the oltl worltl lags tin, The S1111 has other loves. Antl so. lingeringly, the hosts of golden sprites retraee their steps, back over the niellowed niarhle. Now they have rt-at'hed the tlonie. XVhat a sight it is! It tlares and flashes and now hreaks forth into a tlanie of purest, gold, that tlazzles one. It lights up the dark re- vesst-s of the ant-ient eathedral. It drags forth for one hrief nioinent before our stnpetietl eyes all the hidden beauties of this most heantifnl of ehurehes. It calls to life its ric-hest t-olors, its reds, richer than the -ritthest 'Vnscan winesg its yellowed ivoi-ies, toned to the niost unattainable tints, thro their extreme age: its restful Ll'l'f1YS: its t-ool, refreshing greens, and all PA. N C X 1.5-,g1.:Lt,m.'s,l ,H ..., ' 4519!'12Uxawaw. .........:, I 1 lilwrmmmu- 1 , - ' ig SL Jw . 1, . w n.H'Kllu, M' Mmm, ' UUIEIUV, W H1 :LF UWB' W PU'H:uY'1q, W H11 ,., q !1w1,,W, Vf1HYl1,.m ' P , N Wh111 'Y mn ,mx . , X., v . .l1w,qXW.N X ln' fu ttf, M il: mv M My li Y ,. .X 'H Vf-ww MM, F' vm Nyrm. ' Pl l 1lm1, NIHIII' mul hw ui In kk. 1 H Q Tlw 51111 MN nu, vii' ah-ps. lam iv Ihv hm 'SQ 2 NNW Ihry 11 ml Yhnt ll sight ul unw brezlk- 11151 gold. Il K, 1115 dnrk edrul. I1 111 ent Inefwwf len hex 1 fl lmhei. T CI' I em nh 111111111 n N 9 fleeub 1 1'9- .Hug 4 alll' '95 of 5 L+ illl x elhm en al . -,' fy! 'L- Tax xfiziff .' ' Q Eg 11-I ni? ' 45. 197 ' 7 fm xv WQ'U-.. ' N' if if iff A M 'ixikx'-.sTA' 1 5535 ,w , V HMT f 'W ' ff NW YR f f' wk W NX Wu w Q XX wax Mmwfz, ,x um N, , l Il W - 1 M V. W ,E-Ja'-Lit-5-SX X:- I N , Qfkiy, g V W u W W wf' , - - V5.1 lie 'ip-gl-xv y ' Q25-5 3'Q.,,fQ. ' f f f 5' Vi? H f ff ' X f X ,QA , , 5 ,If , 1 312 ,, ' A QjQfr.5,,-Q4 5l5Q ! l'Vf,j J A 7- x g-O-164, M 14 , W U K. ff, Gym W5C-iiismaciwacgsxieaau L W W UI-mlm in Q. m,,w.1..m.mm nh. Q 2 L , 1111 . A I NH 1 ,Q its .1 1 I cl 4 'st 1112 ' 'fe , 21,02 iti 1' M13 'J' Q , V A 1-1 ., ze ul ' -f f--QQ : L U'uv1 'f-- - , ,, YY. i ir-'vu ii -,U nv!-i aux! N11 111111 10, H Yulxhxlx .11111:111,111wl XX!-111-my L1 ,. lx 1111119 A 1 1 ll. x11wmu 11111111.,,lN Nm 111-1 111, ' .113 11 MMI lwm 1' VW1 1 1 111 1' 1111 I . 11!1111.mV X '1 111111 H XE W VAL, W ' 1 11 11111111111 11 M' rm EN- W .1211-1 ' 1 '11 111.. ,,, 1-Q, ,W 11 '1,,1 U' 1 l ',. 1'11w1, .11'1,r- f1H1,,! 11--11111111 11.1 2 11-11 11 1 'N 111! Ilr 11. ' 11111l 11111N11u 111111511111- 1- 111111111 1-1 I11l'1IT. 111 v fI'1'1' 11111111 U w V11 111' 1'11111'e 11 1 Fill' 11111 1 111-11111. 1 1111 11 is -11'1111ur H111 v Ht In H111 1111111 11. It jg 111111' lll 1 iIlll11':1l'Hlll'9 X 411,11 11111'z11'1 ' 111 1Iiu1111y HY 'U 1 1,1 slee 111 if W 5, ENDING TQZWX M19 SSQW Wgmw ' A115 IW' 1- 11111 UP! , 131 y'Lfu-S7 Sl M1 -111119 .WIT 1 111 the 5111115 U ,f l 1 'l'llE HQUIVER7' l11l'e1l 11111111-9 111: the Dogesu 1111 0119 side, 111111 the 11111'ie11t lll11'2ll'Y 1111 the other: 1111- 11111- the tw11 great re11 IIl2ll'1llG pillars be- tween whose 1111ses the eXe1'111io11s of State we1'e w1111t t11 take pl111fe i11 the days NV1lt1Il the 11111 RGPlll1ll1,' l1el1l full sway. S11 1111t. 11111111 the Riva, 111111. lD1'l'12l1,1 prome- 1111116 :1l1111u' the 111't1lIl11 C111111l. llere is the g'11111l11l11 st11tio11 of St. 1112ll'1ilS 111111 here fllll' g'11111111lie1' 2lXVH11'S. 5111111111 11sl1-ep l1e is, 1'111'lO11 1113 1111 the 1'11111f111't11l1le 1'11sl1i1111s of l1is l11'111'f, H1161 lt Isikes tl1e 1'11111l1i11e1l sl11111ti11g' of 11ll l1is 1'1lllfl'l'1'QS 111 l11'i11g1' 111111 s111li1'ie11tly to l1is s1-11s1-s t11 realize tl1:1t the HSlL1'llHl'lll are w11iti11g'. 13111 he is il g'11111l lltly, All- gelo. A Il0l'1:G1'1' type of the g'11l1l111ll9l'. l111tl1e1- short, sle1111e1'. 11111 witl1 21 1leep. l11'11111l eliest, 211111 l1ll1S1'11l2ll' Sll1llll111'l'S. 1l11l1it1-11 all i11 g'list1111i11g white, with 111s re11 831511 111111 tie 1'e11e1'ti1111' the l11111pligl1t. l1is SXV2ll'11ly. 1'i1-h, yellow 10111-e is l11'1111g'ht 1111t i11 st1'111111'. striking' relief. He11tly 111111 11111151 politely. l1e helps 11S t11 11111. 1'11Elll'S, 111111 wl111se l11X11ri1111s 1'11sl1i1111s we 'sink with never El 1'111'e i11 the w111'l1lg for, if 1111e is s11 lllllllvliy 11s t11 l1e l1111'1le11e1l with S11f'11, 111113 s111111 1!11l'LQ'L'1S tl1e111 11111le1' The spell 1Vllll'1l llilS 111-1111 1111- 111111s1'i1111sly tl11'11w11 over llllll. H111 XVllll'l1 f111'Cf,'1l1Ill 'sh11ll it. ple11se the sig'11111'i 111 go, if the sig1'11111'i will permit 11110 t11 ask! Which XVEIY? To the SC1'L'll2I11l?, l1y 1111 1l1C2ll1S.H 11111 tl11-1-11 i11 the center of the CPIHPI1, l'l41lllj.f ,u'1-111'elf11lly 11t 11111'l1111', 11116 may l1US1'l'y the 1':11'y lines of il l1e1111t,i1'11l shi11- lllpl' white y5ll'llt, the lblilytlllllgf of HH AIlll'l'l1'ill1 llll1ll1lI1illl'f!. 1'1111111' its lee lies il l1111'g'e, 111111111111 witl1 Illillly va1'i-1'ol11re1l J1111 111111111-11s,11111l 1'1'11w11e1l with 11 small 111'1'l11+st,1'11 111111 j.L'I'11lIP 111' S111-11111111e1'g, 11111111111 the 1Hll'Q'I3, 1'l1IS1L'l'f'11 like 111yria1ls of Hr11tlies, 111111 211111 jolt the g'1l1lC10l3,S, the g1'11111111lie1's I'1'S11Ilg' 1111 their 11111's, 1l1'i11ki11g i11 witl1 purest joy tl1e strains of the 0111 1t11li1111 folk-songs 111111 bzillacls HS they 111131 1111t 1117011 the night 11ir from under the music 111111311 1J2ll'QI8. We stop and liste11. The 1111117111 is 0VOl'11Q3C1 now, and I am Slll'i? she's list,e11i11,q too. But the broad L11g111111 is s11 tempting that we stay not l1111g' i11 the thrall of the music. Over there, there 11re 1111 hoats, no people: just the 111111111 111111 the 1l111'k, still waters. And so A11g'el11 1l0l1L1S t11 his oar yet once 11u'11i11. 111111 we g'li1le out from the bevy 11,15 111111ts, of v11i1-es. 111111 gently ste11l away 111'1'11ss the 1111111-efiil l111so111 of the Canal. .lust l1e'f111-e 118 the glistening' p11thw11y of 11111111-11 silver writhes 111111 1'11pers on the waiter. NVhy sl11111l1l we 1111t 1'i11e 1111t 11111111 tl1is 1'11y11l 1llQ'1lXVi1y of tl1e night? We S111111111, 111111 so A11,Q'el11 deftly g'11i11es 11S tliither. 0111. 41111. i11t11 the 111111111 L11- Q111111 we 1l1'ift. Deeper and deeper i11to F?1ll'y1ElllC1 1111 we pe11et1'11te. 'l'l1e music 1111s 111111311641 A11g'el11's soul 111111 he 1111Il1S l'11Il1L'1l1'Qt11Y t11 himself 11s he plies his 1lEl1'. Ill the 111111 11ist11111 e. softly 'si1ho11ette1l i11 the p11le 111111111lig'ht, like ph1111to111 2111- gels with their wings l1Ilf11l'lC1, going' witl1 the ti1le. is 21 Heet of Chioggia fish- ing' l11111ts, we111li11g' their slow w11y home- 1V2l1'41 f1'11111 21 1l11y's lll2ll'1iG1'1HQ' in the eity. Why S111111111 11ll these 1'o111m1111pl11ee tl1i1111's SGQIII s11 r111111111ti1- 111111 C1I'621H11l1i6 11l'l'1'? NV11y 1111es 1111e wisl1 he were gifted witl1 the 1liyi11e 'SD2ll'1i of poetry when he sees il simple fishing' Heet bathecl in the 1-11111, silvery l1e11111s of the moon? YVhy? lllll s111'e 1 1l1111't liIl0XV, but so it is, 111111 I for 11110 11111 g'l1111 th11.t it is so. We 111'ift 11l1111g', thoro11g'hly 111'11nk now with the 11111'eal 11t111osphe1'e 1111301112 11s, i11t11xi1-11te11 with the rays of the moon, the 111111111 who sits so high above us in 11ll her pure, p11le beauty, gazing always y.. .5 1 fr' W. J. I la-L, ,. Q 1a1l--1-iil'--- 1 ' - - 111 1 hw f1h11VP I . .11 Thu AM 1 . N 11g Nm' fll ' Y 1111 yuulw 11 41111 Nm . 11 1, M I 111 1, I11111,DW W P 111 Uv '1v,. NM 1111111,lY! Q, X. YXHQHZK x -11' -, W' 11 11. 1 1 1 an . -H 1 1111 V V V '11 H, 11 W' Im' 11,1 V 1111 1111111 Q 111- 11f,,, , H11 411111 ' U' 1111111111111 NA. 1111f111'l1I, 315113 -f l'l111,1111M L., 111111 11111 111,111 Till! 111 tl1H1'1'j1' 1 1'11111111111111l11111 111111 1l1'1f1111111l11 11 1111111 p11et1'1' 11111111111 HT 11111111111 111 1111 ' WI11' 1 1111 11111 119 111111111 , 1 1111 S11 it 11.111111 iQ sn. uuhly 1l1'1111k 111111 111111111 115- 1pl11?1'1' 111111 1 .f 11111111 - ' 11 - 11s ill 1' 11axin!HlWF'5 2 Q EJ O1 i, ,t THE HQITIVFZRT' Milla.. NL . , at Class History of 07 l' Mum il.-img WVe, the class of '07, entered the Pon- good share of the candidates were cho- Iiivfuf, tiac High School in September, 1903, sen from our class. Four gn-ls and four Wkm According to general rule We were boys represented the class in the -IHIIIUF W, Ex. and the program was pronounced limi green' yea' Very green' At the Fresh- K eelii 'lv interestii f' bv the 'ludienre Mm' A e,e rig. ..i1,L'--1. ', V - man Reception we ueie mauled about Om, Hmll ..mlm,ge-, Hcmrrell at the Fe- llbirlil - ' and made to realize that we were only m,l,t5,,,, U, The ge,,i,,,.S- It was in the MILA' an excuse for a general revelry of thc form of a seven o'clock spread at the 1' 'rw ' . . W , three upper classes and were treated as home of llnth Jacobs. Mr. llarris was such. During the first uneventful year toastmaster and toasts were given by the N we had for our president Levi Colvin. Juniors and responded to by the Seniors Our social experience comprised two class and l+'aculty. ln return we were enter- parties. tained by the Seniors. During our Sophomore year we first As Seniors, we leave the Quiver as proceeded to impress the Freshmen with the best monument of our record. XVe l ill' a sense of our superiority and then took have encountered many diflim-ulties and active steps toward awakening from our have overcome them. lVe have believed i, its 'stupor and became interested in school enterprises. Levi Colvin was again of- fered the presidency and continued his office. Three class parties were enjoyed and the class took considerable part in athletics. Arthur Selden was chosen president of our class during the third year. During this year we took an active part in the Oratorical Association and also the Lit- erary Society. In the school election a that unity above all is essential, and we have had unity. Wie have believed in hearty class spirit and we have displayed such. Wle have endeavored to stand for what is right and best and we leave you to judge of our ace4rmplishments. As for us, we have enjoyed each year more than the former. We have worked, we have endeavored, but, pleasantest of all 'WVe have been jolly, good fellows to- getherf' Class We, the Class of '07, being in a per- fectly sane and healthy state of mind, and having been forewarned by certain signs of giddiness about the heart and by frequent attacks of stage fright Clike unto agueh that our days upon this earth are numberedg and inasmuch as we have the desire that there shall be no contention and feelings of malice after our departure from the life of this 19 fff--- ff- .Y ,. ,-.,....,.,,-.,x, Will sphere, we do hereby bequeath and make final disposition of all of our possessions and chattels, and do hereby make this our last will and testament. To our dearly beloved friends, the Ju- niors, we do hereby bequeath sole and undisputed right of molesting the Fresh- men in any convenient way whatsoever. And be it known that we desire most earnestly that they do make use of their i ta it time ut l lmnulauummm 1 'l'llE HQVIVER prerogative and exact from the afore- said l4'reshmen the full measure of tri- bute and respect due to those who shall from now until June in the year of our Lord IENDS, occupy our present exalted position. Vt'e do hereby bequeath unto the afore- said -luniors the dignity, rights of pres- tige. and social leadership heretofore possessed by us of 'tlT. As our special heritage do we will the privilege of retiring' to the paternal domicile when in the course of scholastic pursuits the labors of the day have been completed. Also the privilege of leading in whatsoever demonstrations of appre- ciation of sundry witticisms which may be uttered from the dias of the assembly room. It is our special request that aforesaid brothers, the -luniors, do come together in general merry maliingg' known as the Senior llop, and likewise further that they shall exercise their wits in the pro- duction of a Senior Annual to be known as the ttQniver. XVQ do exhort them that they respect, and honor these our last requests and execute to the best of their ability the cliarges herein prom-lainied. 'l'o our friends. the Sophomores, do we leave the privilege of looking: wise upon all occasions. We do also bestow upon one Sophomore maiden who shall be cho- sen by common assembly the right of at- tempting' to alienate the affections of all Senior boys whatsoever who have such desires tincluding the President.l She shall also have the right to butt in on all occasions, both public and private. liast, but by no meansl east, do We de- sire ot' the Freshmen that they shall be obedient and 'subservient at all times un- to their elders and betteres. urging upon them also the necessity of being ever in readiness to occupy reserved seats at the front of the session room. As an eS- peeial heritage bequeath we unto them the prerogative to write false reports, which shall be inserted in the Press, of whatsoever penances may be exaeted from them by the aforesaid elders and betters. To the Faculty. who have guarded and directed so long' and patiently our foot- steps, we bequeath a peace which passeth all understanding, to go into effect upon the twenty-tirst day of June, in the year of our Lord, 1907. XVe, the Seniors of the Pontiac High School, do hereby attix our seal to this our last will and testament on this twenty- tirst day of June. in the year of our Lord, 15107, in all good faith, and conclusions unhased upon prejudice, with malice t0- ward none and good will for all. SENOR CLASS 'O7. Ettftg. L 5 A - W l Iittliiitiifvfr h- il gl? .3 20 Z I. ' e . u f ' F lit- E - Q ,. L! , f 1 , gl 1 'illttH4gE tw 'A-tfuiittit-m -tllll tiviuklg. HP llll' illlll ,. llhen the M,- Illmai' ullet X-ll xwlx ., iv. fl . i., All W'll1l 'l ' X lflll uf al mul Y all law W 'mf seq HIT il, HU Li' vrivzmg T- 'lil in il, he Nlml Q. all Inna ml, llllllll url' 'wil' vw lr v' J. W until lla jaw wi ,f iiw' lilvw ' Y lir 9211 - v ug .-LW. gg uv-1 i wi. WY . L Hfll' lim li , . r,-,QV im l. tl. lliv in ihf Y ll.,1,mi' ll..l ,,,1,.g,,:i.i vi lim TWH ia11 'li mLii mul 'i 'i'iU wiili iniilf fill' ilii. - R CLASS 'll rx. i. . xl P. 53,11 e en wr s 1 'E ,,':?q' I -,sf -f I - ! ' ,25 Y I0 1. 7 'VT' - I 2 ,iii ii fl. 0 rn r Ii- N l '59 '?:-if-5 '-ff n -'JH 'hfif 3:1 4i!'fi'.3 M5 T P .532 YL ,' ,,' f x , '5 , . 4521 . W K . vi I Q 5' 4 V E J- Q A QE. Q 4 :UA 'J A F A , QI T k.:,:':4 x ,Q f - ,-1- J., . Q, x Z k . L . GEORGE CRAM: ciAFg'l1Hl6Dt sprouted with him And twiukled in his eyeg He lay and calmly debated When the average babies cr'y.' HARRY YOUNG: Let me 'sing and die. VVINNIFRED JENNIXC S 'LMy cake is dougl - ...M ifmTfffiiff N MW Ill A md I nu r 'PHE HQVTVICR , I HI, 'XDYS BTU NDIGE- MALR NILV1 'l'l1Qm-41 tu the fiUllHllS 1 SARAH PINK: IIN 5 . 1lHl1'I'Sq lYUl'l'ill1.1'1'. IIE ' IIILDA ,L'0RIfIY: Mmlvxi Ellltl s I if z slluf' nu 4n..1mu um lunllmlulnu 1 E 'LQVIVER 1'll.Xlll,lCS M1-KIISHIN: Wm-curing' ull that weigh STANIJISII SIBLEY: An1l uf his port ns meek HS il nmiml. EDI'l'll POLE: A lllilllllfll. never lwlil uf Spirit. Sn still :xml :niet that hm' mo- I timn lmluslles alt itself. MYH'l'I.E HHOXV: H ,. . . . A hm' UXTPVIHI' IN n SllQIll rec 01111111-11ml:1tim1. TRENIC ALLISON: Huw vast, sulrstallltizll smile. lt'ill'lllllLf ligrhtlv, llilco Rl ll0XVCl'.ll tof Z fl wk M lx nl NW, tl lfr' Ml will fll1ll H MN: I wgllt T74 71 'I'llE QI HER HIJCNNIFI ISRONIDIHIC: lint thvn her fm-Q. So lovely, yet So :uw-ll, so fnll ol' mirth. The ove1'Howi1'1g4' of an innownt l1ez11't. Bl,XlUhXHl'f'l' BIIUNDIHE: flood Il2ltll1't' :und gooal svnsv lI1llSt vvex' ijoinfl .Xll'l'lll'R SHIAIJICN: l'A11n,l when il lznly's in tho wmv. Yon know ull othvr things ww- plan-ef ELEANOR KNIHIIT: Ullow nmny lIl92lSlll'0il YVHl'llS znlore The lnxnriant synnnetry Ui' thy Hoatilnr gl'l'2l1'0flllll9SS IClez111o1'e. MAE COLTAARD: Thy smile and thy frown arc not aloof from one illlU'fll0l'.H A AIM llL.llllIllA UL QI 'Ivm lII l'II .Lwmasz l 'Wlmul l12Illll'0- ing! BIYIKA IIODHE: lvllilt a bless- Ilv1- an-ts are mmlcst zuul her wnwls 4llSl'l'0t'f.H ll.XllllY FI'l.l.l'Ill- Fifi, what il spemltl11'ii't he is ul' his lllll llt Q xv A -HCSSIH IMHXICY Never was slu- imlle till she slvptf' MAY MUlllllS: l gn, I guy lmmli lmw I go! f r W I In QVIVER 1 sm IIHFI N Al APD. xxx , , 4 , S wvst Sinlczm XF! AUX D. .. I w an ' ' x mix 'C 'l'IIlfl Ql'IVER VY -llili The Oratorical Association r v llle- illlllllill 1-mm-sf of H141 Plbllfiill' llw-In N-Inml 1,l'iITlPl'l4'2ll ,XHSm'lZlflUll was I14-l4l ill HH- ,Xssvnllnly Hmnn uf the Court Ilullm' on l xl'i1I2Ij'. Alill'l'll lst. 'l'he1'e werv tin- l'lIIlfI?Nt2lIl1N :md :ull five haul exvvl- If-nt ul'2lTi4bllS. 'I'lw tirst plzuve was grivsm In Ilaxrry Xmnm' mul The Sl?t'1Illd fu 1:1'Hl'Q'fA 4'1'2Illl. Young' l'v111'vsvr1T04l thu High S+-Iuml in the Mivlnigaun High Swluml 4,l'2lf1Il'i4'ill lmzlglw 111 Mt. P10111- 1-Hs on Hanwlx 221111. i'1':1m !'1'I5l'l'SGIlf01l V, . . ilw Ilwh Nvlllllbl 111 H141 I,l'lllllNlll'Il' UV110 , . 1 1 - rwznl Iw:1g'111- :lt lxallamumm till Many 10th. l'1'l'l'iXillQ' S1-vmlrl plzwv. .XHll2't'Hl0l' H10 f,l.l11llil'ill .XSStIl'i2l1iUll IIIIHII' :1 guml Sll1rWi Inu' thus yn-:nz IKXIIIDICIC 'UT. 28 TL. W IH' Wlxx Mr- lui! Iiuymm IMI' Vw M1 Vl'vn1'4l vlalwx .M YIM: ram W. HIM lax Wupk' 'I'lll4I Ql'lVl'llli Class of '08 The Class of 'IDS t'lllti'l'Ptl the l'n11ti:lv lligh Svlimil in St-pte-nilier. llltl-L with the names of ailmnt. ninety pupils nn the enrullnwnt list. Dm- to tlitl'm-rent ren- sons unly between forty :intl fifty remziineil. ln our first year we ell-etetl XVillis Pamela ns mn' l,l'1'Sl1lt'lll1 mn' Slllllltlllltlllt. Donald l'atte1'sn11 was chuseng nnml this, mn' -Innitn' year, we have Ilan-nlel Stiwk for President. Altlinugrll we are not il slow 1-hiss we lmve haul nn siwiall events this year. 'llhe rec-wird of the SlililllllllQ.fS ef mn' vlnss hens fully t-qiiulleil that of the preeetling' classes and eight received -lnnitn' nppnintnients. As to athletics mn' class is representetl lmth in timt hull zunml lmsltvt lmll. :intl great interest has been shown in these spnrts, Alsn we were l'l'lll'0Nl'llll'll in the Oratorieal Contest. We, as the Class of 'il8, hupe tu euntinne mn' g-mul ref-m'd llll'0llLfll our next and last year and leave the Pontiac Iligl1Svlimil with nmny gum! results fi-uni mn' Work. RUTH ITA LL, '05 29 , ' 'PHE HQITIVER7' ,fn-ffvr ' f' Y - l f sf f Y 'SS fi-.-, I ,. -511 T , N X ,A ,J t'-'L--3 I MTN f f tr Xt J' l y, :j. ' i5,jQ, f 5' o r txjmw. I if X W ' .ii its xfb, .. f z 9- dvhf T' SX fi f'liai'lc's Axforel Iieata liillitll' Stuart Baker llarry Hassett Floyd lfilalcm-slvc Edna lirowii XVillial11 Carliart Ruth cl?ll'll2Il'l Nettie Chapman Florcm-e Frawford May Belle llerragoii Eugene Dcrragon Vera. Donaldson Vllilliam Farrell Mary ifidfliiigs licmiie lleazlet Clilllll lillill llall lilltfllil llerrimaii lvaltoii llHQ.l'llC liulii Ilolser llarolil lluglu-s Clarence -lay Gladys li, -leiiiiey liela M. Kiiiglit Mary liymlli lioretia liillis Malicl Maxwell Grace Nlll'tl1l'llI'b Donald l'attei'son Emma Peters Xxvllllllilllltl llc-4-il t'atli1-riiic Sanford Junior Exhibition llic -Tumor luxliiliilioii took place oii ,, . , the evening of April Ltitli, at the Meth- 7 i odist Church. The prograiimie rendered S was as follows 1. Song' ,,......,. lligli School t'lioriis 'J -. Invocation ...,, Nev. H. NV. .Im-iiiiiiigs fl lo 3. Vocal Solon.. ....... Miss licriiliarml 11 4. Essay-'I'l1e A1114-ricaii Pulpit... .................Malwl Maxwell 12 5. ESSELNQIill-0l'iltlll'C iii American Political llevolopiiiuiit ' U 13 liiiella llerrimau . Essay-'l'l1e Position of Ameri- 14 30 lldmunfl Sanford Sattcrlve Sawyer Vlyde Scott Hattie Scott Hazel Seeley Fharles Shearer Effie Stearns llarold Stock Della Struthers George Sutton Hay Sutton XVilliam Tidliall Gladys Turner Ci'harles Van Auken Vecil XVarren Ethel lVebster ca's Musicians.Florence Crawford Song. ,. ........ High School Chorus Essay--lournalisni in the United States .,...... . ...... Hattie Scott lissay-Poetry in America. . .............,.. Emma Peters Duct ..... Miss Beriiliard, Miss Mills 01-ation-Aniericaii Science and Invention ......... XValton Hogue Essay-An1e1'ica's Noted Artists ...... . . . . .Grace M. Northrup Uratioii-The Influence of Am- ei-it-an Oratory. .Donald Patterson Vocal Solo .......... Miss Bernhard ,. 1, l'1'.11vf1-F1 g.l1,.11' lllllf X 7hvl'U11r1l . mf' 111111 1 wh' ll 1 V , , 1. l'1'111111 lllll 11: . ml ll WK .1 111 Jill 11lll1111 W , ,1 ,lrlill ly bl' y,,ptlu11P 'Y HI ,llll I null l'g1YlPlIsll1l lliss B11-HW 'l'IlE QlllVER Class of '09 gxlllllll two years HLIH il lill'Q4', hrighl- llllrlilllu' 'I'lDllP ul' l'l'USlllIll'll Ellllllll Cl hiv 1 g r- ' - H . Ill all, 0lll1GI'6Ll lllllbll l,llL'll' High S1-l11111I 1'2ll'l?G1'. Wv wen: lluzlrlily wclvmnnefl hy the lL'Zll,'llK'l'S Zlllll lllblltll' 4'l1lSSlI1Cll. Axfll'l' the 21111111211 I'l1'6Slllll?lI1 l'W'L11Wll1lll we ll-I1 as tl1011g'l1 we 1'1'2llly l1el1111g'v4l tu ihv Iytlllllilf' Iligh Svlmul, At the heg:i1111i11g of 41111' Supl1u111111'u yum' 0111 1-lass haul. if z111ytl1il1:4'. il lill'51'Ql' 8lll'1lllIU6lll, than llll1'll11.l' um' l'll'CSlllll2lll year. NVQ havo 1?l141s1-11 fm- l'UlI'll'S light lDlllQ and blaclc. All.l11lllQ'll our Class has not grained 21. very p1'o111i11e11t place in S4N'lill life, there are llllllUlllllQLlly IlllIlllJL'I'4,'1l Zllllibllg 11s some V0l'y br'illi11nt SUl1Ol2l,l'S. EVA CRAVVFORD, 'OSL 31 fa v I Q .f , . ir, I i QUWFP ergiefizeige Ima. B. B'il'e1' Alpha BQ-mdett Hazil M. Blair Y iXi'in Boivn Fred Bowers Floyd Bowles Glenn Bowles Marian XV. Brace Ewa C 1 1wford He en ll. Crill Lenian Cl'lllL'9 Nlareia Davis Rose Dawson Lenore Draper VVai'd Eagle Ernest Farrell C6l'tI'1Id6 Iohnson Leon Keith Hazel Knapp 1 1'-ue Kyle Florence Looney Iohn 3l'l1'tlI1 NI'll'j Mia 'her Arthur 'XIoll NI-irjorie Nelson Harry Newl-ind Beulah 1 ariner Virena Ialnier Ina Richmond Gertrude Robinson Goodloe Rogers Cecelia Smith B rk Fisliei' Lucile llarris George Ileitsell Muriel llodges Fred llogle Charles llulxlmard Florenve llulmlrard 32 Frank Tanner Mamie Tllonipson Minnie 'l'l1oinpson Nellie XV00llKVH1'd I,aVerne lvl'Cll Harry NVinliley Nornian NVoodry Q 'I'llE Ql7IVEli Class History of '10 'l'lw flaws uf 'lil e11tm-V4-nl lligll Svllnul in S4-ptemlwr, lfllbfi. with an 0Ill'1lHIllt?lIt uf zllmut, sixty. Septemhel' 27th the 4-lass met mul elet-ted ofiieers as fulluws: xvilliillll lI2It2llNt'l', p1'esi1lv11t: llilrlrwl Stw-veils, vit-e-presirlelltg Flossie Wiek- wzm-, see1'etzu'yg 1':llg'43llC Wixldiate. treas- urer. In FGlll'llPIl'j', 1907, they :lppnintml Esmu IIm'g'e1' as sem:1'et:1l'y. to fill the plan-e of Flussie xViC'kXV2ll'0, who was pru- llllbtvl-I to the Snplmnlwe vhrss. The Freshmen were given ei ret-eptinm on the 111th of Uetulmel' by the llpplll' PIHSSIIICSH. Om' elass haul two parties dll1'ill,Q' the year, one at the home of Esmzl Hargrer, near Pine Lake, and the nthel' Ht D. B. Elwuods '1'hus ended the events of the year. IIAIZGICII, '10, 33 . 'll HR 1 1 1 1 1 fi A A 4 H9 ' :,,.4l9J1x, Xgffqun f 1 7 ri F? fy ,?0o1:YuKi'M I, 1 1, ff, , ' ' jk, 'Am-1-5 1 . ff . ,, ,K ',4ff,C41, ,,.,..1 f , U 4, 1.-1 . . - ' ,L . ', 1 ' 7,41 -,Y - -,4- -T-S 1 1,7 ,E , .,f k Y llllu QI ffl 1-44 -ix 1 1 .,,.,-V ,L f '11 n 1 , . ' 1 11 f 1 I f I . , 1 ' . 1 ' 1 , , 1-,, 1 ,V 11,5411 - W1 1, , , ,,. ,, 11,1 - ,,g-pau' 4, 1-1 1, 1' 'Y A -' 1 ff' AL---V gr .,.,.,, p ., ,,,-.ew . ,f A ,,s,. ,1 U., em - Q ,gmt ie E -ir 'fi pr' 'Jax ' Z' f -i- -gs.: 1 ay-Q , -' V 1 ' X, rl ig' - , 1 Xff X Y 'sw ,,. .xrr Q Q UR 011011111112 RESHMEN. '111' A Verdi-mt Tale 'Y, .., ,.. ' . 1, ' .1 '11 l X 111 1.1 . v. v1 -'11 . El - - 1-.,1 . ' 1 . v V 1 1'1 J 1' . , 1 .. l I . . '.,, , . 1, J., 1.L1 il. 1. 1 ' ' . . 1 1'- .' - ,: 1 4 1 . s. .1 N. Q ' ' l v 1 1,1 ' - 11 1 -1 1 .' . Ig 1 .ug -. . A1111 ' 2' 'A 1 ' '- ' 1 1- 1k-11' - 1 1- 1--11 U' ' 1' - ' 1' h H ALT. , 1 ,,, ,Z ala. 4.1 1: 1 11,3 --1 1-'-.' -' 4' - , 1.1 1.1, 1 J... I . . .1 - 1 1 . 11, I1 .1 2112.11 . , ' E., ll -1 ' 1 - -1 - 1, 2..1 1'SI.'. 1 -1 ' s '1 Q' 'a' '- '11 ' - - . L' :1'1.'.'-: 1 - 1' 1 1 1. 1 .1.. ,. ,.',, 1 P, 1 , . . . - 1 - - New Freshmen v 1 1 -1-s llllill 1- 1 cs 1'1 1-11t1-1-1-1 ll - '1 - ',' 111l'c11'111 11. 1 .- 1 1'1 -ft' -1115 ' 111vcv1-11 my l1111'1- 1-l111se11 1-' -1.'.+ ' 213 11s f1l11 1 1, '- 111' T, --- S1111 1 'z v11-e-p1'es1- 1 11 we j: s -1- 'e 111'y, 1111 '1 'VJ-'g 'ees'1-'.1.'l ll 111. ..' Pi., ., 2 -' . N A 'lo 1 1 A 1 XVZI ' 1 ' A1 1A 1 1 1-1 '1 . ' '-Aus' . . I .' 1- -1 Ill Hill' 1 - 1 1 ' 1 1 1 '- .'-ev , 'glli 1 inth Grade 1 - ' -11-qw1 1' -- I11-11111 -' 1' I3 '11 ' M1l1l1'1-1l B111-11111-r l 10 H111'-1 y ' 111 1' -' Yilllllll s 1-1 1- 11111111 11111 B , 1112111112 1 1 111- fllillll 101' 11111 . ,ZL1 V.: 1. .,, 1 . 1 , II1111' 1-1'1-11 1111- l1l111l1-s 111' Q11-1-111-si grass l1111k1-11 1:111'11111sIy 111 11111' l l'l,'Slllll1lII 1-lass. ' - '11 Hams- , IS1-ssiv l31'11w11 N111-1-ne l41'11w11 34 14 l1z11l1etl1 ifutley l-31-1111111 Cole lf'1'1111ces C11lp11s X 111111 f Hull! l ll:1111'1f llzrttllfll M1-X:1111l1 11-11111 ll D111111 ll llzm-l EH' F11-ll lvl Erhvl F11 1111 -11-1 ,1f.11:,1 FX 111 1111 1111-1 11,11 1 l1'!'1'1-'1' ll' 11.11111 1.1 1111511 111111 111-11111 nf I1l1Il 111,115 Y l1'llH!lvl1 111-1111lv 11,11 1.. '111 xllllrx 1:1111 111' 111, l'l11-1' 3:11111 III1-1 1,,,uIH lllv-11 11. W 11.1111111111 U llll-l111,.l1x HN Fwllll ' ' 1 Nil' m'llN1Illl1l1111 Nllllllg uf lllr-IH' MMI I lfl'11111, full ll-' '-1v11l, 1, 11111111111 1 lllf Rmb ki H llg S um' 111? hmm V 'tn , 1,-1 X S ll' XIITII Ullolllel IXIIII 110101011 Ruth llofamt fllll II e IJ.llllIlwll Mltthelx Dflllfllll XIGXAIIIIBI IJICIQC Ilelllf IIOIIIIL Dfllll Ii I Ilxulllc llflfll Eno Fled I OI flllsml Fthel l4l0IlI l'Ill'l1l1I!'L ll ll I l L 'I1 if1Lu1,:L'f - .U...,lll'l1lla',Ql.ll3I!If3l1!LHWiM 1 W ' 1' A V i I --Q 1 l TIF OIITVTIR .x lllm. lilllll .10 4 91 ll I1 f llllll. P111 lllll .lll I. lu Ifllll II.llllxll llllllll l .1 fll IN Ilaxulll me l 3 l.l II IIIL Mlrabeau 1 I- IIII4 x I fl IOIIl JN HX: xX X1 lll III!! ll Ill U l Ix xsl Dellvered hy George A Cram at Penmsular League Contest at Ixalama7oo L L SLIII l x I , . x xxlls .1 1.1 ,. lclltlllx ll uplltl pm fllllv Ilfll Nllfflllll III l hll II fllll . lelllts ui lil veflph LI A 'IIN fl Slhll 71118 1110 flllll lllslll . -' lllllllellt ldfl llttl IL well wh llelllllllded Thl IL LS IJ ISIIIIIIIII ll htltls I-ellLlllI lllll l Il IL llulll l Il ll IL llllu IL c flss IL 1111 LN . N I 1 Q Q 1 SOIIUIII' Illt tha l1llIlIl 1111 l LI dll fused tu slt III CUIIIIIIHII IXIIII IIILIII ll l dlllllltld thuu llltlls INIILIIN It tllelllsllus the Nfl lIlllflI XSSEIIIIIIN of IG FILINII Xrlt101l lUl1S1,ltIltl1lll s lllf' ll tle HIIQQ UILIGIS ALIIIILSNLL :H 41111 .flllll on IL lllll ulllllllfllllllll 1 lt an olden 'fu SGPAIAIC 1110 nobles ll1llI llll' N iollmled but the deplltles of the pcupll IQIYMUIIGKI seated 111 SIICIICL lhe 'Xllllqllls de Bleu IQtl1Y'116LI .fund lepefltell the Iilllg s oldel 'lheu CfLlll6 the ADSVILI IIOHI the mlm who was to sway klflg and as 110 Img LLC Alec 110 l f L lLsllIXQlI to f :S IU :lx L l L f I lll :I l f N Itlflx sl: rll 1 4 I X 1 II UN 1 xx INN SSIHIIN Ut f 111g 1 1 PIIN II K Illl N1 IIINlIIIlI I ' 1 ll 1 l Nlelltn NSI II 111 hz 111 I IN 1111' , 111 ll ll l LI l1IIl llq :SN fllll x I l I he ellpll . 1I1tIlIN hxed lewIxl Ill l tl 4 of thc 5tdtCS NN 1Il l I I ld .II IIlllU.l Ill rw A ll L 4 71 P , ' Ml' IU' 'III IIIIII II:ll'g'4'l' A ' l 'gli Hal 'J I l'lI I.l'll IIl'e'll:lll , T- , Fl' ,I H XIII Illll-Iwey M- ' Ill'l lI1,I I' ' 'Ill I'lltIll'l'illn' III gif' ' l I ' ' , V I' ' 1' M1 'gl t ' Hugh' : ' ' F'll'I Ill IICII I'cl'l'I II II l ly i 1 'IIB' Will ' X 31' III!-' IIllII V'Iy 'l ' 'I ' I FI IIllg'Ie Illlllllllll IIllIlInll'lI Nj - Fx . II- 'llcs Hy' il IIII ull ' ',' .' Rl 'LI Vhl 'Ivs IIIIQIIQN X u I' Ah' II: l'1mel' IIIIIIIIIIIIIII .lzllf Ins K Mal ',:' tl ? f'.g'1l'2IIlI I'sll '. IIz 'MCI' Lol -Ivllllillgs ' - .-X',zI': 'IIQ ,'I11' I'zlllI' ' II2Il'L1'L'I' IIQI 'll 'A' .'.' 'II en l ' v 4 W W , 'l'h 1 SIIIJVQIIIJ llllllllvllf uf Fl'l'lll'Il his- J' I lj: Vu 'fell ylblll' IlI'lSf4?I' th'lt ww' 2lI'l? tlbl'-' .' 't I'IltI. 'l'lll'llll 'Il I'l1IITIII'j' zlf- IIQI hy th' 1lrlwl'l' of the Frelll-ll pl-ll1wIl' ' 191' - fda' 'Q' IIl4lIliII'l IIIi'2lI VCI' 'lllI lllltllillg' IIIII lhl' 1lllwl'l' elif Ilzuyll 'ts ' 1:11. .Q - 1 g 'U' I, I I z SIA 'Ii of frcle- sh' II Il'ivl' IIS 'lYY2Iy, ' dm ' I IiIll'l'ty I'ly1 slllllIcIul'illg1' ill thl' 'I'Illl.' lIl1I Mi1'zlIll'zull, the u 'z 'ut ut' tex- ' ' I - ',' I 1' 1 1. IIIIQIA' Ill XVII lll'l ui' I'II lIl!'P, IIIVIINI hilllslflf IIIIIIII th' '- ' th-t ,' ' 'Ig I 'ut ' t H' 1, Mi i'lI 1lllI lil' Iifl' of his I'4IllIlII'y. IIl'l'l' vans lllll' I' I 1 ,wwf I' , fzllIl'cI 'l'Iy. 'III 4 lll'l , wh so lllillll w'ls illHzlllll'lI, 'I ul' II '-I 1 1 ' - ' -'ffl I I'.' ' I 1121. '. .' rv zll'llllsl'4I, llgulillst thl' ' .'I'f l'- 4' the ' l 1: ' 1 ' I 2 f II 1 . Ia- til .' 1lI'fIll'4lIlI IIl1lll2II'l'IIj'. Ill 'll uf IIIIIIIU tio f tI ' 'II 1 'I' .'.', tI J tl ' ',l '.'t'l1l'. IHI1'1III2lL1'0, uf thl' ilIlI'IOIlI ll. of Ili- ff 'IIIIGI' ,YIIIIISLI Ill LIllllIlIc l 1ll'1selltzlIl1lll Illll ', Ill' lllIll'l'itc1I IIll'II' tl'll:ll'i4llls spirit. thgf ,- P- ,I - 'sg I 'I1'g'yI'L'- Illl1 'I IIIIIL' il lll zlgzlill Ivy lllwlvl' uf de ' If ' - Y' , , N t his fl IIIlIl', ul' of Thl- lIl's1mtil' g'1lvel'llllll'llf, 1 mg, ,,,, . Q ,L-, 1191 1' l 'l-I:ll'l'll Ill' grow ll1l tll Ililfl' lh'lt llesp tislll wIlil'h l,Wx,,1 1 ,ll vi, A'-1' - , ,' ' II , t'l'llSIlPtI the Fl'l'll 'Il 1ll'l ple. YI Il' mm -, . ' .1111 -All ' ' zlLIu1l1 zl l'zlII l l1lll' 1'lll' the Sf2lIl'NII1'llL'1'2lI Ill' 4lII'l'l'l'lI ,!'111,1W,1111'r' ' l' , 'II I I' IMI' ' I 2 ' yzI hil ' tsl the lllllllvs nf I'l'm'l'lll'l-, I t Hmm ,-itf' - f .1 , ' , ' '.', ' .','+I XV'l.' l'l'y'T,l'lI. 'l'Illls l'xl'Ill1Il'4I I I'HIll Ihl' V I 'M11 th , ' 1 '1t gg ' ' ' ' ,I lu' 1 ll I' Il' lIl'sel'Vl'lI, Ill' 1Il'tl'l'lllilll'1I In l'l'- I 'v xl. - ,- - -- 1 , , .' ' ' ,:'j l' 'I. V1 V' ,.' Vl'Ilg'l'EIIIl'L' ZIQHIIIISI I Isl' 'v '!',. ' f 1 ' ' .' ' ' , 1 Wh j 'vte I' . Il0Il1l'l1l'tI lu the ll ' IlIIu 'm2,1, - -' , ,- ' , ' '+. l ' ' 'q cI'l.'.' ' I ullterull thl' .XCSHIIII Iy, ll-1lltv Il 'iml -gl -, ' ' ' ' - ' of I 17 + flwllll M:ll'sciIIl's 'lIllI Aig. '1111lI1'VIiv . JU I 2 w U , A 1, U., 1, -1, -1, ,ll V1 1 JH .VMI HI. ImIIlI1'IIl, A I ' ' '.'- Hall ' l 1 I' ' 'I a li lel' slllill' Hll lIlI 'I A Vw 1',,I1ll1a 35 Y THE Q1'1VER 11is 1111s, 11l' 111'1111 1110 f111'11i11111111 1'11111is :11111 11s111111111111 111 1110 111111111 1'1'11l11 11'1111111'11 1111 I1 ' 11 7 ' 11'11s 111 S1l2l1i0 1110 1111-111111. 11115 1 1111111111 1'1 111 Sf'111'11 111 11111 1 111l1'1 111 X O1'S11l111'S. 11111 1ll1l1,H 11s 1111 11'11s 1+11111111, 11'z1s 2111 11111111111 ,, 1 - 1. 1111111's llf 11'111111111' 1'111'is 11'1a1'0 1-l11s1111 111:11i11s1 11i111, 11111 110 11'1111111 11111 11s11 11211' 111111 1111' 11111 s1111111 111' 111111 1111i011. '111lEl1 11'11s 11111 M111111111111. ,X1 11111 111011111111 111 1 1 1 ' 11 '1 , 21111 1l1'1'l' 11111111111 111 1111111111 111111111 1 111 110 11s111111, 11111 111 2181i 1P1lI'f1l11l.H S111'1l 11'11s 11111 lllllll 11'1111 1111111111 111 111113' 1 11111'111' 111: 11111 M1111111'1'11 111 11'1'11111111. 11 1111 1 11'11s 111? 11'1111 11111111111111111 1111' 11'1111111'1111'111 111 111 11 11'111111s 11'11i1111 111111111111111111 1110 Ass11111- 1111', As 1111 s11111i0 111' 1111s11'111'1111 111s 11111111- 1111111s. 11is 11'111111s 1'111s111111 111111: 11'i111 1111' 111ig'111 111: 11is11l1111111?11110,11s 11'i111 11 1llZlgL'l11'1, 1111 11111111' 1111 111 11i111s111f 111111 11'111'11'1101111011 11is f1111s. 1C111'i011 111' 11111s11 11135 g'1'0111 1111111 1l1Il1S131f, 1111 11'11s 111g1,111s011 111' 11111111 111 s11111'111 1111111111111111 11 1111 11 ' 111111111112 lgllt 110 112111 1111 11:11'11' 111111 1111s11'1111 11111111. .x1111l13. 1s1111111111 111 1111 X 1 1 ss111111111', 1'Q1j'11lQ' 11111111 11is 1111'11 1111iIi11'. 1111 1111s1111101,1 11111 111 1111111111 111211 1111s11111is111 111! 11'11s 1101111'111i111111 111 111-s11'111'. 1'11'2i1ll'1' 11'11s 111' 111is 111116 111 1111'11111i1. 111111111111 11111 11111111111 11Slll1' 1 ' -11 1' 1' -1 ,'11g'11111s11I10 . . . , 1 1-111-11 1111111111111 11x1s111111111 11s1111. Iu111'11 111111' 11 1111110111 111111iIi11', I'1111, 11l111111s11111,1, 1111111111- 11111111111 11s 1111 1111s0 i11111 1'111'111', 11X111'11111 his 11is1'1111l1i11g' 1111-4111k'l1l'1J lI1D11ll 11111 2l11'112l11j' 111111111111li11g' f?l1'111lIlH. 15111, like El 11151111 1'1l1'1i, 21111111 11 1111'1111111111. s1-11, 111l1'2l1J11E11l 1'11- 111111111111 111'111. 11'111111 111111111111 111111 1111151111 :1 SPE 1 1 111 S11'l1l' 1lt'1XYl111ll 11111111111' 111111 11111111111. 11111 218111211 l'1ll'1f 1'1'2Il'S i1s 11111111 11ig'11 1111111'11 1111- 11111111111 11111111 s11 11111 911111111 111111111111111 H 1 ' ' . 1-1 1 11I i11lI'2l1H'ill1 11111111 111111 1JIl' 1111111'0 1119 1-11111111'.1'1111111 :11111 g'111'11 111111 11111 11111111111 111 1 . , . . s111'11 1'1'JI1l1'l' 11111111 1'lll2lll1'liI1 1'11111. '111l2I1 griin s11111111'11 111: 112I11k1'11I11l'J' 1111111111011 111'111' 11111 1111111 111 11111 11111111'11'11111'1' . ,,, . 1 111-11111' 111'111111s111l illl 1-x11111si1'11 11111111 1,1113 Ass1:111111y 1111si11111111, 1111Iil1111'111111l. Mim- 1101111 1111111111111011 1110 1'ig:11t 111 speak. In s1i1'1'i11g' 1v111'11s he 1'1111'11'11ye11 the 1er'1'11r's 211111 11is11'11ss 111111 11'11i1111 1119 1111111 W1111111 1111 1111'1111'11. 110 111111s011, 1110 Assen1111y 1111- 1111111111111, 111111111011 1116 1'111111111siti1111. By T116 111111'01' 111 11is 11'111'11s 110 112111 11'1111. N11110 1lt11Gl' 11'1111111 110 1111111111111 111 s111:h 21 s11'11ke: I111111' 11'i11111111 1110 1'G1l'S1lll 111111 1116 1111ssi1111s 111 il l1i1'1111111111. 1111 11111 1111'11s1111111 111' 1'01'111111i1111 he s1111111, s11'11u'g'1i11g' 1114'11i11s1 11111 f111'1'es t11111 s1111g1111 111 S121lIl11 11111 111112 ,i11s1i11e, 111111 1i11- 1?I'1Y. 1111 1101111111 11111 1-11111'1 s11'i1'i111z' 111 116- s111111' 11111 Nfltiffllill .Xss01111111' 111' 1'e-e11:11- 111111. W111111 11111 y1111. 11111 c1e111111i11s llf 1110 1111111110, 1l111'1l1llt' il N111i1111111 Assem- 1111' . ' 1Vi111 rising' i11111g'11111i1111 1116 1101111- 1i11s 1ll'2ll'11 1110 11110s1i1111. Ill s1i1'1'i111g' 11'111'11s f1'1llll 11111 g'1'11111 s111111s1111111 11111110 11111 1'e111y: On 111111 11111' 11'11011 11111 1111111-s 11'01'0 u111s6111 11u'11i11s1 1'1111, 1'1111 1100111111111 1'111111s011'0s 11111 N111i1111111 .Xss111111111' 11f 1110 FP0111-11 N111i1111. 1111 111111 11111' 1'1111 i111'19s11111 y11111'se11'0s with 111211 s111'111'11iQ'11 111111'111' 11'11i1111 is 11is111110111, 171111 11x11111-111111 1eg'111 11111111. 11llt 1'1111 s111'e11 1 1'11111-11. 111 1110 11211116 111 111H1 s111110 jus- 1i110 111111 1i11111'1y. 11011111'111'1011 1111111'0ssi1'0 11111ig'1'111i1111 11111's. 11 s111111 21 11111' 11'111'0 1111ss011 B1i1'1111111111 s11'111'0 111 11is11110y i1. 110 112111 11111111111 1j'I'1lllIlY 111111 11'1111111 1111111111110 111 1111 s11, 131' 11is 011111111111011 110 s11'111'1111 1110 Ass11111111y, 111' his 0111111101100 110 11'1111 1110 112112 '1'1111 1111111-1-ssi1'0 11111' 11'11s 111111 11si110. 11111111 S12ll111S 11111 H1'0E1t lllilll i11 11110 111112111 111: 11is g'1111'y. 11111 1111s111111'01' of 111'is- 1111-1'111i11 111111 1111s11111i11 111111'01'. As 11111i1' 1'111111111i1111. 1111 1101111111111111 for 11is 1'1lllllt1'j'- 1111111, 1i11111'11' 111. 111111s11i0111111. 11001111111 of S1D111'1'1l. 11' it 11'11s 11111111 111111 1'01'111111i1111 N111lll111 1-1111111, 110 111. 11111s1, 111111 1111111011111 11111111 211111 Q'11l1'y. 110 110111 111e tI'llSt, the 11s11111111, 11111 1-1111111101100 of his f0111111' 111011. B111 11111' 111' 112137 1'e1'111111,i011 steadily 1111- 1'11111-011, 11111111yi11,Q' F1111111111 111 111111 1'ei1r11 of 11011111111 111111 was 111 c11111e. Without the XX .f If 11111111111 F 11111111111 1 111101 'W' W 111. 11111111 11111111111 11 111.1 11111111 11111111119 '1' 111! 1111 J111 1111111 1151 ' 11-11111 11111 1, 11:11. 3'f 'i ,.1111.111. 111 111 :111111 111-5111111 111111 111' '111 111' '111 11111' 1' 1111'J1'11'11'1 :I :11111111 11 111111' 111:11 1111 3111111111 111 1-1.11131 wifi-. 111 111111111-' 11 1'1'l1111' 11111111 111111' 111 111, 111111111 111111 1111U.11'11' 1111' 11111 11111 11111111111 1111 11111111. '1111 111.111 1 111 11111111111 111111111 1-1.1 11. '11'2111l 1111111, 11'111111111,,1 W11 '111 11111 1111' 111111' 111'- 1 ., '11 11.1111-11 111111111 11.1119 111igl111, I 8111111111 1' 1.111115 111 11 111111, 1, S . PI 111 11111 11111111. e lt lii liiimk 'lll1l lit, llhly MM . lty gm. ' Xlilii li WY... lwiiiiiy 'atm l. 1 , my 'MQ li' iz' ..: .lsr- if it i 11 'ill ll H wiwy- ,i ll .Ll VY ' V, .ii'1il'r'l 7 , lp ltivl. l' . li1l'i'- l iiiziii lli il' ' ', I W!.,,1'iii- it ait i X, hi, aiiiiilli' 1 fl, .,.. lui. 1 lixlt i'rl 'll'Wi ' ir , 1 'lrlllf ln' ' Jr tit llllil' . gli H, figllotl lllxlk .ii sialllll A A. 1 ' V, it i tlmt lwnthr Wirlwut 'PHE Qrivmnu country were her exiled nobles arousing rulers of Europe to action against a land where aristocracy and class distinction were being o'erthrown. YVithin, were the frenzied people, struggling for they knew not what. throwing France into ever-in- creasing' confusion. Among such eontiict- ing elements, Mirabeau might well see the entire dissolution of the state. l'ursued from above by the nobles with llarpy-like furyg from below by the t'himera of so- cialism, breathing forth the smoke and tire of anarchy and destructiong he ap- pealed to the king. In the eyes of poster- ity this action stands condemned. But the great statesman did not sell himselfg lllirabean and his principles were insep- arable. It was not as a man cowed by fear that he threw his intlnence with the throne. lle did so to restore order and check radical revolution. llis object was to protect and make secure what had al- ready been won, a strong representative body of the people. To this Mirabean would have added a strong executive, a king. But such a monarchy the great ora- tor was doomed not to see. Before he reached that goal came sickness and death. The man who could resist and defeat the attacks of nobles and people. who never yet had yielded, was conquered by death alone. lle had enjoyed his last triumphs. lle left the Assembly, to re- turn no more. As that grand character lay sick, the machinery of state stopped: all France awaited the outcome. All her hopes were centered in him. But as a mighty oak, which has withstood the storms and tempests of years, finally yields to a feeble tire, set by the hand of man, so Mirabeau succumbed to the fire, set by the excesses of his youth. Like a tower, shaken by an earthquake, the great statesman reeled, tottcrcd, and fell at the call ot the grim rcaper. All Fraiicc mourned: from t'aIais to Toulouse, from Brest. to Marseilles. the sad news Hics, filling the hearts of loyal Frenclimcn with griel' and despair. 'l'he great orator was no more. l'lach order paid its tri- bute: warriors, scholars, statcsmen l'ol- lowed him to his last resting place. More honor and respect was paid to him than is to kings. t't'ould Klirabeau have lived Init an' other year. are the words of Thomas t'arlyle, the history of France, yea. ot' the whole world would have been dit'l'cr- ent. lt is not for man to say whether he would have sanctioned that Reign of 'l'error which has stained the pages ol' French history, or whether hc would have created a constitutional monarchy for the nineteenth century. lint Mira- beau had lived his life. had run his course. A creature in the hands of l'rovi- dence. he bent to her will. And with his death perished the house of Blirabcau. tif others we do not hear. ttf others we do not need to hear. The career of the one great member of the family has secured honor and glory enough for all. liy divine will the greatest was the last. lle left none to blemish the name he had ex- alted. l're-eminent among the statcsmen of the world, he stands respected for his greatness, his faults overlooked. Every nation has and honors her great states- meng England, her Gladstone: tlermany, her Bismarckg Austria, her Mctternichg but there, standing alone, where the Light of Fame shall ever surround him with her brilliancyq there, on the highest pinnacle of glory, stands the greatest statesman of Franceit'ount de Mirabeau. ' FT 'rim HQITIVER merican Influence Delivered by Harry Young in the Michigan High School League Contest at Mt. Clemens As the liand of man has wrought with einniing' for his greater eonlfl n'T and eonvenienee, so Through The ages his mind has striven persistently to Lfillll for him ,instiee and liherty. ln every age, in every land. he met the 4 PITINPS Torres of old and long' estahlishesl sys- Tems, Against These his progress was slow and the struggle hard. until The darkness of an unknown sea was piereed and Anieriea hreathed her inspiration To his soul. From The heginning' the intinenee of Anieriea has stood Tor Treedom z ind het Ter eonditions for man. ller earliest aehievement was To inspire the minds of The oppressed with hope that on tlns vn' gin soil They niigrht hnild their Temple To personal liherty. Soon she awakened The estahlished empires To new 1 iossihili Ties of reform within themselves. And now we see ,Xmeriea leading' The nations as one hy one they Tall into line Tor the mareh toward universal peaee. illowing' The Tliseovery of Aineriva. Spain heeame mistress of The Atlan ' hut Franee and llngrlaml were 'fast rising' in power, and They did not long' negleet This opportunity To add To Then' prestiife A eentnry ot hloody wars had hnt lately elosed and ear-h eonntry possessed her l'nll share of idle warriors. 'llhese ea 'fel lx ,,, , eame to Ameriea with hope of new ad- ventures and possihly wealth. ,X little 4 later religions and politieal oppress drove many ot the hrie'hTesT minds ol The T r- ' land Trom Then' homes, 'l'o snrh as These Ty llere ,Xmeriea olliered hope ol' safe was The promise ol long'-sought llherly in a land Tree lirom eslahlished svslte ms, a land whose very air was charged with l'reedom. 'l'o This refuge eame The hrightest of every nation, fired with The Zeal that should work out the desire of hearts op- pressed. llither eame the hold adven- Tnrer To win a name, the statesman To prove his laws. The preaeher To spread his flof-trines. The hlending of these diTTerent elasses tended To form a fear- less hut edneated and devout people, well adapted To withstand the trials they were destined To hear as champions of e:n'th's hondmen. ln the eonrse of events Three powerful nations must needs eontend for this fair prize and in The snhseqnent struggle for snpreniai-y the stronger, more sturdy people gained vietory after vietory until ultimately Enggland ohtained eontrol of all the eastern portion of the eontinent. Thus did The Anglo-Saxon here Tight his way To The front, and proliting hy the negleet of the mother country he here grew in strength until he eonld sueeess- fully resent any interferenee with his cherished rights. 'l'hns developed by Ntl'll2'2'lP and nourished hy the air of freedom. These negrleeted eolonies grew until the lleelaration of lndependenee Toltl To The world that Freedomls cause had Tonnd her ehampion. 'l'he standard had now heen raised and The vit-tory won, hut as yet the new nation was not reeoggnized as a power. ller every move was watehed that on some pretext a foreign king' might seize her realm. 'l'hrone'h seeret plot and open Nllirht she hore her eross until in 1812 she proved her st,ren,u'Th and showed To The world that a hanner thus nobly raised 38 .1 T intel W oi Tlr lid! Toll rl :ll lr-TTrr'1H 'l' ll'l1t'?W .teiiytli .lll in liglfli iw ful' lllillrlm ,,,' ill Wi UT' Tile liJ ' imply. Tl' Tlp ml Tr f nur, -T' 'li .TW'll' IW Tiifliill W,,,5-3' Mp. inn, fln- s olllwe rl T iiiiwi-li2i':' .Itlllrf ll rl ' in iw' ,, :, .em oo Tlwt Il linu- Till in we Tv1 ir':TTr,TT.T lltxni. ..i1. will mt - 'llllll rxslop lll'lllWl1i'e Tilllri' it , .ilmy slim, my Tlriseltiiwm -llllleil pl , holly W !'e pt Item hw- llll' rgnm HI. i'T1TTI.T,. In A ill? l'l'T'aiT-TT H , . Tlr 1151. Nl- Q lnlly wlwlll ll - 4 l El ll' otlm. ll'll 'l' 'hiulil Iwi' V . ll To ,hx Slllllmt lllelly l EDS t,t --M it 1--, Mitt t t t t tttlt tt' lf'-tv--t t , .,,pt1,.t IM,t,,pt l'l .,,,ltttu w l ltt-t-lt . t't'l lllli tl t-lltll .t ilttilll plttl ttlltl til 111 lil. ht ntltl uttltll' Ht- itil . it l ' l T' PHI' ti' tsl Ht itll ti-rt llril tt'-L I tit gflt' ,,pt'l. l elif l t ln' , ,ed 'l'lllC 'tQl'IYl'Ill nnist never he re-fnrletl, l 'l'lllll this tinit- on tht- history of Anterit-at is hnt :I rt-- t-ortl of giant stritlt-s. t-vt-1' townrtl tht- ht-ttt-rnient of innnltintl. VVlit-iicvt-1' tlit-rt- hats ht-t-n ai 1i'i:tl til' sti't-ngth Aint-Vit-at hats ht-t-n l'onntl rt-zttly, to hztt-li ht-1' wortls with tlt-t-tls. :intl tight, for lll'tlg'l'0SS. For t-t-ntni-it-s tht- t-onnnt-rttte of all nations was hzn'i':isst-tl hy pii':ttt-s of the .lgtll'lltll'f' Stnttls. who tlt-tit-tl tht- powt-rs of lthiropc. So t-xorhitttnt wt-t't- tht- tltnnnntls of tht-so thnt .Xntt-Vit-ti rt-- fnsetl to hny tht-it' fztvoi' ztntl, tlt-t-lznint: war, soon fort-Qtl tht-in to rt-linttnish tht-ir kret-tly grasp on tht- t'-oinnit-rt-ta of t-vt-ry nation. 'l'ht- t-lost-tl gzttt-s of -lillttlll wt-rt- thrown open to tht- worltl hy t'onnnotlot-t- Perry, thns starting' that pt-oplt- on tht-it' t-tnn'se of XYttlltlt1l'lilll tlt-vt-lopint-nt. 'l'ht- inon:n't-hit-:il znnhitions of tht- lloly Al- liant-t- inet tin eH't-t-tivo t-ht-t-lc, in tht- Klon- roe llot-ti'int-. whit-h prest-t'x't-tl this t-onti- ntlnt free front l':lll'tlIDt'2lll oppi-t-ssion, that at hzivt-n of rtafnge ntigght ht- opt-n to all in nec-tl. In tht- 1nnintt-tmnt-t- of this print-iple, sht- fonntl it nt-ttt-sszn-y to tlrivt- Mzixintiliztn front the throne otf illGXit'o, :intl ltlttll' to rt-st:nt- Vnlm tfront t-rushing opprt-ssion. 'l'hns tlitl Ann-rit-a t-Xt-rt llttl' int'lnQnt'-e hoth to tlevelop tho ht-st in otht-1' nations, :intl to pi-t-st-rve on ht-r short-s tht- fret-tloin llGt'PSS2ll'y to the fnll tle-velopment of mznikintl. Atltletl to this t-hiss of pi-t-ventivtl nt-- tions were positive Sllg'f1't1HllUllS for hettt-11 ment- Aineritwt wus tht- tirst to pi-t-st-nt the twtnst- of tn'hitrz1tion in at ninnnei' nt-- ceptnhlfg to otllt-l' nations. Not only tlitl she prezttrli 2l1'l5ltl'iIl'itlll lint she inzttle nt' tivtl use of it. Ilexnovt-tl from tht- Ven'- ions worltl t-ontiit-ts it was possible for hei' to offer t'-oinpt-oinises that no otht-r powt-r could Sl1gl'gl'CSf, :intl when htlrself at party to tlispntt-s she was ever ready to snlnnit nit-thotls of peat-e. It was zihnost wholly tln-onglt tht- t-ltorts ol' .Xllll'l'lt'tI that tht- Vt-nt-xnt-l:tn tvonlrlt- was st-ttlt-tl tht' intt-grity ol' t'hin:l prt-st-rvt-tl, :intl tht t'tllllt'l't'llt't' ot powt-Vs :tt xl 'lt'l'Y lmront-'lit to :I SIlt't't'SNl.lll ttlost-. .Xtltlt-tl to tht-st zn'lnt-Vt-int'-nts t-rownint-' tht-nt llltlt-t-tl is tht- work ot' ont' l'i't-sitlt-nt. who ltrings to 5-l'4tlllt'l' tht- t-nvovs of two XX'2lI'l'lllL1' nsltions that llU2lt't'lII2lj't1llll tht- lnlootl-slit-tl. Hrt-:tt ns ltztvt- ht-t-n tht-so trinntphs in wut- ttntl tliplontztt-y, it is not ht-t't- thzlt ont' intln- t-nt-t- hats lit-t-n niost witlt-ly ft-lt. .hlll4'l' it-:I s worli is prt--t-nnnt-ntly t-tnist1'nt-t1vt- Sht- tt-tn's tlown, only for tht- lntiltling' ol soint- inort- stzttt-ly strnt-ttn't-. .Xs this lztntl ot' l'l't-t-tlont has givt-n wt-l- t-on1t- t't-fng't- to zttttivt- ntintls of t-vt-ry nat tion. so fi-ont lll'l' hulls :intl shops hatvt ttontt- tht- git-ntt'-st sliztrt- ol' t-pot-lt-nntlcing thonuhts ttntl invt-ntions. 'l'hong'h wt honst of tht- intlnstriztl :tt-hit-Vt-int-nts til tht- pztst t-t-ntnry, wt- t'2llIlltlt iwtlixt- tltt-it fnll signilit-:nn-t-. tlin' fsttht-Vs l't'llllllllllt'l tht- tstllow-tlip, tht- ox-t-:n't. ztntl tht- post hoy, ns things ot' yt-stt-rtlnyg wt- st-t- tht t-lt-t'tl'it' light. tht- znttontoliilt-. tht- tt-lt-- grzuplt, with st'zn-t-t-ly at thought ot tht-it git-:ttnt-ss. NVt- t':1il to i-t-:tlixt- thnt tht-5 nrt- the thlllllllillillll rt-snlts tal' trlll' nzttionzll tlt-Vt-lopnit-nt. It wats :ln .Knit-rittzni who lirst snt-t-t-ss fnlly ztpplit-tl stt-:nn to trnvt-l. ntztlqinu' tht t't-ntt-rs of trntlt- t-Xpztntl nntil lont-ly plznns wt-i't- tlottt-tl with t'ltlttS, tln tht Ilntlson Ilivt-V, liolnt-rt lfttlton ntattlt- tht tirst IIl'2lt'llt'Ell nppllt-:ation ot stt-:nn to nn- Vlgfiltlttll :tntl lnitl tht- tonntlzttion for at t'tb1lllllt'l't'lEll tmtlt- thztt givt-s ns at tort-- niost plznttt- znnong tht- nntions. lt' wats i11 1xlll6l'll'2l thnt tht- stt-t-l plow, the t-ot- ton grin, tht- reatpt-r, tht- st-wing lll2ll'llllll1 :intl kintlrt-tl tlevit-t-s nnttlt- at lst-trinnintg' in the st-1'vit't- of innnliintl, lit-twt-t-n Flutltlc- lin and Etlison halve tfontt- nntny invt-n- tors, hnt. none more truly git-att than 'PHE UQUIVER- Samuel Morse, tl1e i11ve11tor of the elee- trie telegraph. 'l'his was soo11 developed llltfl the Oeean Fable, making: possible sueh a, brotherhood of peoples as eoulfl never have existed lllllltlf' the old eondi- tions. The world had 11ow ber-onie So litlllllll together that it was no longer pos- sible for a disaster like the Battle of New Orleans to oeeur while the news of pear? was 011 its way. Ameriean produets enter almost every home i11 the eivilized world, to lllillill brigliter the pathway of labor. ldeas here developed are passed o11 to all man- kind. Inventions here perfected draw the whole world together until we have but to express the wish and we are i11 toueh with ll61' utmost provinee. NVith this 1-loser eoniinunion eomes better 1111- ll6l'SiHllLliI1g1', sweeping' away the old sus- pieions, opening' the road to a higher eiv- ilization. And we are leading' this inareh of progress. The fearless fraiiiing' of the Deelara- tion, by Jefferson, and the matehless leadership of Washington. followed by the Doctrine of Monroe, made it possible, in the irresistible advance of freedom, for a liineoln to stand forth at the call of the oppressed and make America in fact what she had been in' name, The Land of the Free, and the Home of the Brave. Finally. McKinley eontinues the struggle for tree government for all America, lead- ing us forth into the arena of VVorld In- Huenee. Here our marvellous strides ill the mareh of events enables our Roose- velt to ask what he 111ay ill the name of Aineriea, a11d the world aets with him. Under these eonditions. and with such leadership, the people of this land may elevate the toreh of Liberty so high that it will enlighten the whole world. And i11 tht' f11ture this IIIIIST be our mission. Let IIS raise ourselves to the highest ideal of Anieric-an citizenship, that in her full strengtli a11d power. America shall lNil1l't'l1 on, leading' nations Elllll people to a. higher a11d truer life- . H Fill the war-drums throb no longer, And the battle-tlags are furl'd, In the Parliainent of Man, The Federation of the NVorld. Establishment of Mexican Railway System By E. Harold Pou Mexico, with its Latin-Anieriean people, its faseinatiiig' history. its pieturesoue mountains and c-ities, attords so mueh ma- terial for the one who would Write that I, the same as many others, illll ill a. quan- dary as to what my story shall be about. Many of tl1e eurrent niagfazines PI'iIlf stories monthly, whose plots are laid i11 HSun11y Mexieo, illlll often tl1e musieal Spanish title eanses even the rapid reader to pry into the depths of the XVOI1Kl6l'lilll tale. nd, Class of '05 My ohjeet here will be to tell something of the work involved i11 establishing a railroad aeross SUIIIG ofthe IlO1'fllE'l'I1 states of our sister republie, rather tl1a11 to re- late so111e taneiful native story, and to brietly llllillll9 the workiiies of tl1e Camp, with its Anierieans and natives. Diirango eity is the eapital of the Mexi- ean state that hears the same name. It has beeome quite widely known through the rieh inining' istriets which lie in the surrounding mountains. Straight, in a X U-ggttfbi one lllludr 111111111111 l raulrf 111 1'llllll'i ll0u zilllllllld' ln ltllf l nal 1 l'll ni ill-1 if .11 llgizam. it loillirwl plfllii. l l mins :wail 1 gfUrrl'lll! 5 1111111111111i1-11? 1mIrl'I1 llf lmlli- l'. zhv 11111-1 +1 'lie H111 lei ima It 11 nw. lrl'll1ll.HI1111 llllllilllfhlff HEFIN, lhji p1'eli111111z11'1' l'tl1Jll1'll 1-11 Tl111l.1I11 il' this x111'1'o' iviuu f11I111't ll Wwiiltl l11'111v's in-p, 'lll the lim Hiller mu the I111.-pm, Iallllx, like 1 Ureut, llllll. The ElI'111md' th l't l111s it Iiniqll 21 Dr l't111'x, Wim 11-ax 1-11111pl lll - X- lt 15 Wnlllil he k The Mu Mill rout ,R ll't'l14i.,m. lt ill .ii ll ll lar 'lla lm lc Him 1. .TP XA' ' r . Tasit JJ l' l' il, wildl- lla I, t gtxivx ' N lbs. 4 V lllv i ystem ml ,alllrili i- Mliiisllillf X ,his mtliu ll N lrl' Illzlll ll' Y' l l .iarV llll .. cl' Ill' 'T' 'tives 'lill ul lllt lm' 1, 'llllt YIM' , t l 'ie liimvll lm in 1 IH' ll ll? 1 , .p Qliiigll' T 'fm 41 'run L- westerly direction from Durango, some one hundred and forty miles, the city of Mazatlan lies on the Pacific coast. The reader may have heard of this port in connection with its excellent harbor pos- sibilities. In 1892 the Mexican International rail- road completed their line to Durango. Vllith this done the officials cast their eyes on Mazatlan. There, on the Pat-itic coast. it loomed up: surely a fitting' terminal point. To pierce the Slierre llladre moun- tains and reach this goal would be an en- gineering feat. Then, too, it would give coinnninication to the Pacific and the western Mexican states. Uollis P. lluntington, known as one of the most successful railroad magnates of the era before llarriman and llill came into prominence, was president of the In- 18518 Huntington had one of his noted engi- ternational road at that time. ln neers, Major Killebrew. make a crude preliminary survey over the rough, unde- veloped country between the two cities. The data which Killebrew obtained from this survey omened anything but a prom- ising future for the road. It would be interesting to have Kille- brew 's report of the country and his ideas on the line. All the way to Mazatlan either rough, rocky ridges, which form the backbone of the Sierre Madre moun- tains, rose to test his engineering skill. or great, yawning canyons confronted him. The one seemed too high to get around, the other, too deep to cross. Perhaps he never lost hope of making the road a practical thing. but after two years, when the location by a Mr. Vaughn was completed, he is credited with say- ing, Hlt is not a practical lineg the cost would he enormous. The Mazatlan extension, as the pro- posed route had become known, was then I ---- -..-......-..t..... -....-.-- xh , - 4 ...,- ,-.N . ',- . . 'JJ QITIVER dropped for two years. ln 1902 Mr. Rankin -lohnson, chief engineer, set about to try another line to the harbor city on the coast. Killebrew had already found where the line would be compelled lu go if the mountains were ever crossed In other words the objective points wcre found. lt may be well to state some of these objective points. lt was evident that the only available place to cross the summit, or the highest divide, would be at a place called lla t'uidad. The end of a divi- sion had to be here. so ground for yards and shops were an essential thing. A thousand foot bridge being' out of all rea- son a canyon named Arrayo Salton had to be headed. At a ranch called t'ruz de l'icdra, a certain ridge must be fol- lowed. for on either side canyons of an almost inconceivable depth occurred. Then again the line must go around the valley of the Las llIimbris river and thence to 'tRio Chico, which demanded an enormous bridge at best and only the most advantageous point for it remained to be found. Mr. Johnson possessed all these facts. Ile knew where the nature of the country compelled the line to go, lle at once set about to approach these points by a dif- ferent rate of ascent and descent than did his predecessor. fl. -1. Varroll, now chief engineer, was given the work of locating the new line from Durango to lla, tlui- dadf' and F, NV. Andros that of getting' down from the summit to the coast city, Mazatlan. Mr. Andros decided to leave lllr. Kille- brew's line entirely alone. lle proceeded to run his own preliminary line. Ile faced practically the same obstacles as the tirst, engineer. He had approximately 125 miles of mountain country as bad as ever a rail- 1 'I'111u -1 1 1 111.111 s111'1'1-1' NY1'1l1 l111'11ll!ll lll1'V W1'1 ' N01 ,.y,.H 1,-mls, 111- 1-1111111111-11 11ll1l111'1'l1N 111 1111111'1-s 111111 11111 Il1Il1lIll 1-1s1- 11111 1-111 111111' 11111 11'111111-111 V1-L:'1'12l1l'1ll H1111 l 1l11s1 111 1111111'11v1s1-11 11 111 l'111l1'1' 11111111 111111 l'1l11 . 1 '11 11111Q111- 1111 s11-1-11 111111111111111 N1l111N. N11 1111111--' 111! 1-1-1-111111111ss11111-1: 111- 111111111 11 111-1-1-ss-11'x' 111 111' 111 1l11W11 1'1111s 11l1111l4l1lN 1.1 111' JI 111111' 311111 I1Il111'l1 1111 111' 1111- NIIII1 1111-1111111, 11111-11 111Ill'N 111S111 1111 was 11 111' 11111 1111- s:11111- 11 1V, 111 11111- 1'11111'1111 111 s111v1-11 1111'1-1- 1111ys. 11111 1Xl1l 1-1111'11111u' 11 1 1 1111111s1- 111- 111s UAIHZI1.. 1s1-1'1'111111. W1111 11 111111111-11 111 1111111111111 1111 11111 1111111111 1111- 1111111- 11-s1 s111111-111111g'111111111-11 111 11 511111 111- 111- 11-11 111 1111' 111111--'1-1'1111s I11iI1'11 11-111 wan' 111111'11 1111- 1-1111s1 1118 11111- 1111 111111 111' 111-111'1v ,111 1ll111'S 1111111 1111- 111'1--1 Il 11 1-111111-. '1'111- l'111llI111'11' 11111' 1'111' 111s 111 s11111 s1111ws ll11il1'1f' I'12'111y 11111111-Is. 111 11111- 11111111- 1111-1'1- :11'1- 1-11-V1-11 111 s1-V1-11 111111N 1111 1111- l11'111111s1-11 1I'1l1'1i. 111 1111l1'l' l11i11'lN 11 IS El 1'f11ll1ll1lllllN N1'1'll'N 111 111'1111-'1-s 211111 1Il1I1l1'1N, 1111- 111111 g111111-' 11'11111 11111' 111111 1111 1111ll11' 211111 11111 '1--'11111 111111' 111 1'1-111-111 1111 1 -. . , , Nl11l,1' 11111121 1111- 1-111 1111-'1'1111111l 111 1111111 1 Nllllll 1111-1: 211111 1111 1111s Ill 1l1'I1I'4'NN1l11lN 111 111111'-' 1111- 11111- 111 1111- 111-1-1-ss111'v --'1'11111 1111 1lllll'1111111H. llllll' 111'-v1-111111111-111 i1'1'lllY W1111 11111111 11'111-11 11 1s1i1111Wl1111 , . 2 11 111 11111- I112I1'l' 1111- 11111' 1'111'1'1-s 211111 1w1s1s 1111 1w1-1111 I11'1- 11111115 :11'11111111 1Il11llll12IllIH 111111 1'1111y1111s 111 1111111111 il 111s111111'1- 1-1111111 111 11 s11 111-'111 11114 1 -11 111 111111-1- 11ll1l'S. '1'111 1111151 s11111- 1-111'x'1- IN 1x11-11s1V1-ly I1S1'll, 11s W1-11 11s 1'111'V1-s 111, 111--11 1l1'Q'1'l'l'. 211111 1111- 1111111 NXNl1'11l 111. 1-11 1111111' 1ll11llll1iIlIIN IN :11s11 1-111111111111 1111 l11IN 1111'1s11111. 1'1'111111-111s1-111111111111-11 111' 1 11-1-11Il ,1lN11 111 111s X1'l1l'1C 1'1'11111 111111111211 111 IA l 111111, '1'111- X'iI11l'VN111 1111- 11Yl'1'N M . H . 1 1 11111 'Yi I11I 11111 1111111111 1111111 111-111' 1111- 11111' 11I11l'1' 1111111- il 111'111- 1- 11'11s 11 1-1111s11'111-11-11 11'11 111 11111':111g11. 111111 111 111- 1'1'11.iSl'1l. ,Xl 1111- 111.111111-11 11'1111'11 11141 11111'1- 111-1-11 1111- 1l1L1'll 111 'IVE11 1-st 111 1111- XV11l'lfli'l'55 fee-1. Its length w1111111 111- 111111111 1211111 11-111 111111 1116 esti- 1111111-11 1-11s1 was 13111111 11-11,11111,000 to 5141, 51111111111. R11-X11-1111 1-111'1'1-111-y, 111' in gold 111111' 111111 2l1l11llllIl. ,X11111he1' 111s11 very 111211 111'1l1Q'4' was 1111111111-11 111 1119 river N1-V1-1'1:1. '1'111- 111'211l1llL1' 111 1116 C-any1'111 111: 1,11s K1i111111'1s 111s11 was 11111s1 1111111-1111 211111 1111- 11S111ll2l1PI1 1-11s1 111' 1-1111s11'11c-11011 Vl'1'y 111211. 111-1'1,- 1111? w111'1c 1-1111s1s1e11 of 1ll2l1i11l2' 111111- 1'll1'S 111 s111111 1'111'k 211111 1111' 11111112 1111 111: 1111'g'1- i11'1'Ily1IS 111' f111'11111111111s 1-111 1111' '11'1111-1' 1111111111. ,X1'11'l' 1111- 1111-1111-11 111112 was 1'111Np1919l1 P1 1-1-11111-1111-11 11111- was 11111111-1111116-15' s1111'1e11. 11 is 11111 l1I11'1f' WI111-11 is 11111111112 1111s sm'- v1-y 111111 1 I111v1- 111-1-11 111111 F111' s11111G 1111111111s, Ill L51-111-1'111 1111- YVl1l'1i 1-1111s1s1s 111. 2lV1'1'2I!'111Q' 1111 1111- 111-1-1-ss111'y 1-111 111111 1111 111 1111111111 11141 2111111-, ,X1s11 1111 Sl1!'U9S1141I1S 111 11111- 111-111-1-1111-111 111111 :111- w111-111-11 1111 111 1111' l11.11l'PS 2l1'1' 11111 111111 111'111'111-1- S11 111111 1111- 1-11s1 111: 1-1111s11'111-111111 lllkly 119 1'1-11111-911 11s 11111' 11s 1111ss1111O. 11111' 111512111112 of this will 111' 111 11111 l'1111-11, XYll0l'1? 1116 V11-1111'11T911 11111' 1-1'11ss1-s tlll 21 111'111g'1- 11111y 211111 f961 111211. KY11l'1'11 Tlll' 1111-1111-11 11111- 111-1-1-ss111111-11 11111 V1-1-y 111:11 11110 1111-111111111-11 111,'1'l1l'E. '1'111s 1ll'111'11' 111111111 11111 110 1-11111111010 11111111111s111111-1111-11111111 111' 1111- 1-1111111. f111' 1111 :111 1111-w111-I: 1111- 1111-1111111 111 K'11l11ll11'l11l2' 1111' 111111- 1-z111v11s 1-115' 1111s 111-1-11 illllllgl 1119 s111111- l111l'N. '1'111- 1111111'1-s 111'1- 111,111 1111912 1-s1111Q'. 11 is 1111111-1111 111 sny :11111111 11'11i1-11 11-111 1-1-1111-1-s 1111- 11111s1 11111-1-1-st 211111 111-1s 11s 1110 111111 l:lI1' 11111 ll2l1lj' Q'l'1ll11 111! XV111'1'i. 13111111 11111111 111: 1111111111111 11 is 1111- 11111111-, 11111 1111- 111111112 llxllt, l1Y1'll 111 11111- 1-X11'1111111y of 111111111 g'1'11ll1l1lS, is s111'1-ly il 1'111sP s1-1'111111. .Ks 111 1111181 SllI'X'1'j'1llQ' 111' 1-1111s11'111-111111 1-1111111s, il s111111-111111g' l121l1l111I1S 111 11110 1-111'1y l1lllI'll111Q' 111111 11111111-s 11111- 11s1- s11'1111g' 1111- .11'1'11Y1'N, 11: 111- 111- 11111111-11-11 111 1111111 1111111t. 111 1l1is 11111' 11 is El 1111 111111 1111111111911 fu- 42 -, 11 1f11 'l.' l' W 111. ' ,1-1 .M f , .1 1,11 W 11- 11 C1119 ' Www 1111: 111-W ,U sf N, 1 111111 '1- 1,1111 K 1' 1 -1 1 11,11 1. 1 11-1. 11, . 1,,, 11 ,F X1-1 '1r'1'l'N 51'-' ,111 1x 2111,-11111 ' 114115, 1:11--1 1 4' 1 11111111 '111' l l1'l1 11111 1- 1 111111 1 1 1H'1l'111111 .11111111 f 111 11,1 Wul- ll1'1' '1111' , 111111-1-1 W. 111111 muy. 111 me' it Im y, H,,,M x . ww ,lb M1 .M . ,, , .,. ww, X 1 Q H W , A,-11 WN .A :Q N U MFI! M 1: NN X Wwk, mm' MI ' W.-1mU ual' P WIIINH , in Ihr' 1 qmlll' M ,waivi- .H,111nlN 'VINE QI'IX'l'llI riously by il Uhillillllilll 211141 semns to say. 'Ktlet l'P,lIll1'!'Y Vp, 01' if yull lmplwn to he sleeping' lightly :I lbw minutvs Iw- fure H10 ringing ynu might' lm-.mw vn- tirely ENVEIIIGIIPJ by CHIISU of :111 2ll1ill1il14'41 cmlverszltiml. whivh starts usually smm-v thing' like this, uAllL1'llNTill0, luring' up :1 Inwkei of water. YVHI1 words in rnphl sum-essimm you hom' Thv zmswvr. fQ1ui1-11 Snlw. SGIIOY! Yu un lmlmln Inlglvsf' Pwr'- 1121115 it will lwvp up fm' tw llliIllITUN. 'l'I1u- person using' English is il nzliivv nf Eng'- land who prefers tu 1:0011 his 11:1'riv4- f0llg1'llG in usv while tho HHICI' is 1110 wnnp servant, who says he dues um talk Elm'- lish but usually lmstles for Thu first thing' 110 sons. 'l'h01'G sm- usmmlly oighf A1111-V11-1111s in 1110 PHHIIT, 'l'lw llllllllltll' is vmxstzlnfly vhzlngillgr, llmvvvvr. Many of 1111- vngi- l100l's and uthel' lwuple who 1-mmf into T111- lNUllllt?lillS c':1mmT Imevmm' nw-llsimuwl tu the ahsnluto lnvk of HIIIIISPIIIUIIT :mal :11'1m' T110 mnvvlty of lwing' in an l'lbllL1'h I'Illlll1I'Y wears QW, Q'Gll9l'2l:y lvzlvv. 'l'1w fullmving' is sm QXHIIIPIG nf hmv the-y gn, 1,110 lmml- ing H Vtldlllilll, :I mzm fu!ly S35 yn-:Irs wld. 11821111 that il pzwk train wmlhl start fm' Town that day. 11111111-4li:l10ly lm pm-kvcl his blankefs and vluthvs. The 1'Il2'illl'l'I' in C'l1Hl'Q'Q saw the prep:n1':11'im1s :md nskwl The reason. 'l'h0 answer wus, I um gjtbillg' tn town. HI Uillluf IM you gn XVifllUllt any 1mtir'e, l'l'SlJUll4lPll tlw Cl1L1'iIl4'I'l'. VVitl1 21 fave that tulml uf EIIIIIHST- hmiily pain the l'1lfhN2ll1 said, All T ask yum is to have 9110113111 lwnrt Tu put my l1a1g'g':1g'v on a mule and I'll walk, llc Ivft that 1l10l'lliHQI and rmle a 1111110 nlsu. About forty natives find 4-nnplnynlent in the work, They comme and MH- EWVY pay day 'sees the I1llDl'OllliSil1Q' H1105 314' illlfl others picked up. YQ11, some make MUUJ XIHN1 lvl' Tllvlll ill'1'y4m11l1g' IIIUIII 'I'I1p UI4Ig-gf frm- :ul lll'4'N4'Hf is :alumni sixiy. With :1 lIlill lU1l' wrnlml wall' uvvv' Ilix Viuhi vw- illlll his wlrnwlx l'HlIII14'llIIllf't'. um- wmlld tzllw him Ilan' am nhl wI4Ii1-1-wlw Ililtl ll!!- fll'l'Q'HIll' lIllll'l1 IIZIVIISIIIID, :xml NIIPII 1,4 ilu- wlsv. Fm' yvzurs llv fmlglli Hn- Ynqui IH, !li5llISill1ll4'S1il1l'U1: IHXYQIA 'l'l14- YIDIIIIUUS1 IS illlllllf is-11. llls mum- IN -lulm, :mul il l'2lTlI1'l' lH'iL1'lI1 1110' llv is. Tun. llv :xml Ihv ulsl Illilll I:4'iAllZi4l :uw TI11- 2'l'1'5l1l'Hf ul' 4'lllllllS. NVIIH41 :lt wurk sm ilu, lilw ilu-y SIIZIV4' Ill:-il' lwams :xml www vnks-s :ls fau- 1ll1'l'2IlI11 sun. NViil1 Vzlrvly lI1Ul't'Tll2lIl :I y'1-sllwrfsvlalml :Incl in must wxsvs llsuwlly IClltlXYiIl1l' what an svllmml is. if is rllliif- wmlwlcvflll huw :nv- f'l11':rts'- ilu-V lwwnllv 111 ilw work. llwv mln :ull Tha- Vllillllllljl' Hlltl lllilllf' IHWUHII' 1-Y- 1iviv11T l'lIllNlPll. In zlllnust :Ill vznsws iT is :11'tv1' sa buy .atzurts wurli in ilu- VEIIIIII Tllslf 111- IUQIVIIN 14x lllillil' Tlw 4'2lI'lllIl2Il ll1llII1'l'ilIS. Ally flny :mv vnu sw- smnw lIm'1llaie- wlm has lrlzmtm-nw-1l tlw nrt. if suvh it may ln- f-nllwl, uf lllilkilll' Hu- fiu'u1'4-s. slwwinu' smnv yHllIl11'l'!' lmy zmfl thus passing' till 1114- lmmx'Ivmlg'v lllzlt HIZIICUN 1110111 IIIIIV1' Yillllillllv in 'rllv wfmrli. 'l'I1vil' llrvss is IPi4'1lll'l'Nlllll', 'l'l11- lligfh smlulnlm-ru, lllillli' vliln-1' ui' Tm-I1 ur straw. plzuys illl illllilllfilllt pzlrt in Hllxil' mlliit. 'l'lw W1-ll ICIIUXYII sllurt ,jzwlcn-T. H111 tiullf Iiilingr 1I'IiIlSUI'N :md ilu- lezlfllvr' salmlznls Jll'l' nlsw I'llEll'2I1'1l'l'iNfi1'. 'l'Il4-11 in Tlw wmlvl' purliulls ni' thv 4l2ly mul :lt night 1l1vy1w1'n11g-hm-Tlxan l11g'lnlyvulu1'wl Irlallllu-f. whivh ilu-y wrzlp Ellllblli 1l1vm :is mu' lu- 4li2lllS mln, In HHIIIU ul' the lmys il mlm-sire grmvs in :ulupt H111 ,xlIll'I'il'ilIl sfylv of mlrvss, Hmwrzully :I pail' nf Imp-nzlilwl hunts IS 1110 hrst 2ll'fll'l0 SIHIQIII1. Un Img' mlny Hll'l'l' is 2'Q llUl'il1ly rguitv il liltlv Imr- gzxining' :mal UIIP has IIN 4liHia-lllty in svll- W - and Stay. gevm-al have bean 'lin' years ing' all wld vlutllilmgz HIQIZIIIIIIIIII, in the employment of the l'0II'l1HlI1y. l'e1'hnps smml 1llGlllliCl' ui the vlzlss nt Dlllllldvd in 43 2. N K 'V 0 'Y' V' 'T'F f --- .- ,fx .h , 1 - Al THE ttQl'IVER NHT who studies engineei'inu'. for surelv in this 1-onsti'uvtive 4-ra some of the hoys will go into that liue of WHl'li- HWY find himself upon the :uttual 1-ousti'uetion of this rozul. lt' suvh shouhl he the vase lwl' haps the Quivey' of the future may have another artir-le on this subject and I sin- eerely trust that his experienees be as pleasant and instruc-tive to look back upon as mine have heen. Class Alphabet A is for Allison. hriin full of smiles. B is for liroiuligefwe have tlnw- styles. l' is to1't'ollal'1l, VVIIIII, t'ole aiul 4'ore5'. To tell of their feats woulfl he a long' story. D is for lJel'oni4-k, llouglas antl Dewey, XVhose favorite song' is 'tllleet Ale in St. Louis. li is for l4lvei'yone iu this wlass. 'I'he niemoi-5' of whivh will forevs-1' last. F is for Fink-two quiet folk- Also for Fuller. who's always tleaul hroke H is for Herman and also Grow, 'l'houg'h they are portly. tliey'l'e not so slow. ll is for llunawill, llotlge. llotliuan anal lleitsvll, Four of oui' stutlious little mites. I is for Interest we take in our work And though it he haul we IIQVGI shirk. J is for -lm-nnings, and -lavohs, too, AVho intromluee styles somewhat new. K is tor' Knight, the little girl VVith eyes ol' hlsu-k aml hail' iu f'lll'l li is for Looney-Y-so stuclious is she l'l:u'h rlay slu-'s as husy as husy 1-an luv. is for Morris, Alelleury, llvliihhiu 'l'Iu-y'i'e the one-s we IIUVUI' 1-ateh Hfihhin ' . is tor Notlungg that, we-'tl tlo il' we 1-ouhl, Hut then tht- l :u-ultv woulml vull us no good. U is for Uratoi-, this Glass has its share, l'1l tell you their names but it wouhln't he fair. l' is for Partlee, who is never amazed, liut in reading Iu1vile might he- eome somewhat clazecl. Q is for Questions-we get our share: Hut tlunks in this 1-lass have always heeu hare. ll is for Rest-fwefll get it in -lnne, Alas. alas, it 1-onies none too soon. S is for Sliattuvk and Sihley too, Seeley and Selden-the ones who do. 'l' is for Time-we have none to spare- lf we had just a little, do you think we 'tl vare? l' is for l'nef ualed, and that means l ttusvvv For we clo things and make no fuss. Y is for Yin-tory, that will some to each one, If the tasks that we meet are eheer- fully clone. XV is for Av2l1'IllIIQI that to F1-eslnnen, Sophoniores and Juniors we Call, Make eavh tlay 's lesson the hest of all l X is for X-rays 1-equiretl to see A lat-k of aiuhitiou in such as we. Y is for Young, so 4-alm and so tall, lu athh-ties he shines, specially has- kvt hall. Z is for Zeal that we all plainly show ln tinmling out things we do not know. Anml now, my t'riends, my lines are fltlllfl, I pray you 1-ritieize not 0116. MAE COLLARD, 'O7. I'E,,,il ll lluf Hit. rlwlf' th 'f 'Hr P ll qlli 'w iii! 'wi lim 'ill i s 'Mig llfcn iw, li A i. Tl, ll' llillllniilx x 4'lh'r'ul lllllllvnl in lil -'lllw ll' llllr' mul llllllql Nh Ahnl the llll- llltf l lrlwfgqt wi l'l'tSl1mQ lmllmlly 1 Uh, the ns lllel- TU Ht' ,V ull P , I I I,vz:,1.:L11'c'11...,urux4u,,gmu11gqg,1uww i m i - Charge of the SCHIOFS mn the hm mllmg of the Bus nm IIIII the noon half the umm Half the noon Outqde The XGSIIIJIIIK NX .uted the bumns IOIII Iheu name the I'lt'NIlIll4 Il mat lrllltllll' 11 mul' tlu stlee lheu NX ltclloo to meet I 1 the Iume NQIIIUISI thex 1111110 on lu 411 In mann the P1esI11m11 NN olunmd and xxfutul I41 Ib tlu Iufue SGIIIHIN .flulgex ueued lu tu I NNOIIIIGIQCI lf tllex ml Iuttu Demmed It ue-1e Inttu w Imam Ilttle F1 ESIIIIILIII 1 1 SdXfl,,L XXII 1 dllt IIUXNII .nd not Im mat Il pn thy pum 141 'NIIIIICIII un IAHIGQI tlu Imhms luul Ill Dmxn mme the IIIGSIIDIQII Iml s muh could Ire Iufnnl mu lv m s O1 the Imam 5LIl1ll1NI muhs tu 1110 IIUIII ui tum RIIIINJHS to thy ILII of TI16111 Ilfmpms 111 Im11'f of tum SIAIILQIQLI and fall WXIIIILLIGCI wx 1th Iuts ni 11.111 tldtlllgl about 111 an IVA tllele fl ulmh une then One muld not MII Tun shall IIILII Imx du And the ulld IIISII the-x 11111110 Oh the b1c1XG FCIIIUISI Gleat was the wleclx thex left Freshmen of han beleft Loudly bewalled the theit Oh the b1ave b011101SI ..,...N I Q IX I II Strange Cant s ll Ill 1- ml X 1 sm 1 II ll . ull f Xtbll I, I fx ul 1 lu ' mm I 111. 1 . Il I all 1 nm I0 1 Illfl ill r I' I lllf ultll rl xt tl I ml gg .I Vfll If Ill N1 un mm I III f Alt Xtlll ur wah 11.1-w ul 1 mm uni st.1's ul 1 1 s Ag, LI ll w 0 38 mn I Who Is It 9 41 SIIU u I4 1 1 if f 1 Im x 1 Il I IIII I1.ue m . 111 m 1 I I tm fu an I 1101 um .lx N fu I Nlmt Ill xx N st 1 I . 1 H PS 1 U L L m IILI 1 I lxt' lfl x NVQ I slwuld mu lg fa can of Ifblllrl UL IIN IUIIOIII Mm nm S1 I 'Iho Fates haw deueed that I shall not Ho to the Semm Hop' I al II u..Iulvh.. .Ln I Q - ' W - 0 ., LL 'IT Y 43 I7 I- ., 7-.W Wai--V4-'H - - - ,, MII Imw wmux, - . , MI 'HI.r, M INV QII1 I Q -1 ' ' -.'I 11.7 YI 1 v:m'1 I'lll'P ax lmm with an Imlmm-r, 2 . , - Yr vmft XV0l,,'I1 an QVEIIII with :1 QVHIIIIIIJI 1'. ' ' Ms- smilie ViII1' ' 'Iwt A I I I I . I . . , , - , ' Igll I flawks wltll an 11m-kvt, ' ' ' A N1 'g':l'rlw1'upf-l'11ns with EI vIzlmm'. ,7. ' 'J ' .. 1. '. lv I .. Q Y 4 m't pi:-Ii lwks with il pivklm-. ly., ,- . .1 . , A, , t ' vmft cure tlw sivk with zu .-ivl'IQ. ,N A ,, .i u ' I'I1u'Ii Hgs tl El IILIIIIPIII, f ' i ' ' DI' '- pigs with El pig' Int. ' II- ' - ' Nu- 'IIQL yum' wwtvlx tif-k with an 1' 'I'Ie. ,X IIII ,' . tl mv. YI v'111't 'I' an IIHIIO with yum' 'ten 5. M - 3 .. 1 '- I. , . Ye 1-'m'T get 2 c-mtv IAVHIII Il f-1':lte1', , y , , , ,,- , -I, Vzltvh nles n mnlzlr, I Q v I M V , . U ISA IH 1' IIs wifI an l'flIIGl'. I I' Q' I l . ' H I f Y. 'AN -ev v- 'f fy, H vm.-I-. , Y. ,. . , V , I. , W1 I ' I ' J' Q'H-- Y4 c':111'I 4-maps with El mul por. - I I, 1 ' ' - 1 1- A- 1 Yf 1-'m't sh- '1 I' 1' I-lmps with il vlmp- , X I 1 . - , . , I 1 '. IS' - ' tI n ll','Q91', . YI1 '-- TI ' 't' rw 1 ' ' z-' f ' H . , IIl1ll 1111- LI thi 5ll1 1'.' I ' V . , I. Xvi! PU 19 Ll' I li' Nm N - pol II1 qmst wltlx an JUIllll'l', ll, ,W I V- .H v -2 t, - f- ' I W f ,A ' I' C'1'1 --, V -' X'11 Of A , ' ' 'Lu . ' .. . D ,, .D D0 Y X , k 1 .ks IIIII . IU. A I AA Y 77 , U I 1, I, III-Il stty. na V , , , x ' ,, ,H M1- ,3., Sl I V U , f , 1 .km NN II NI1 III Xu III? IDIIILIIII I ,, ,A 11 - ,, It tlvklml mc so my. I IIvIlu 'I' vin. .,.fT,1v,. C K. .' , ' 1, II1l1.' I'1 illl ' , Iv - 1 Imt's ' ' sm 1 fum! I 1's guru- 'tn lu I'!'I'-W - I, ' f. ' V1 I vl l't'Il.H 111IIH!'-IIf : ff ,. . . . ', . I Imr ' it. Isl I ' 111yL ' In -T ' ' ' .. - ' - . l1I'I' W L - . ,- - I, f Sj'-we I1' I lll4lI'6 fllll Ill ' ms- Fl . ' ,. ' triitv I'.'. II- 'I' .' t 'Ii-.'.' ' W , , I , , , , .lj New ', .mu 111ll.' gflve ZIIUIIIIHII In p'n'f 'II I 1'IIIH , 1, tivul-11'.', The llll.'Ij of you -me :III g'1fI1-!' :mul M' 1 1 I tq ..-1, I .21 'Y -- IIIIIIYIIII A' ' . , , VI VH , t, . f ,'- M fA 11. ' Vw, but I I I' tI't I'l1I, I IIIIVSIIHW 'I I ' -' ' If A H I' ll' 'I ' 'u.v!H I e'l1H11uI 7 - .. V 'f ' Ig f-Y -t .- . t- IS! , W 1. I l ' I 'Y Y . UL V ' X H L ' ' ,V 7 n ' IDX' IIIIFI III I I . lx. D i , , II , 1 KV1 In V , I ' 3 as I 1 A 1 4- . I - 'tfllll 10, , 1 - ,,. D. . K1 . In I. MRD' 45 5, 1 M- ..-V - . ...h,m,. Ay , Lk II I . W-Tl 'I'lll1l iQI'1VER For Revenge 1'111111s. 1l1ss1111l1111. 1 l1l'1'li1l'1'11'1'2.111111 111-gg 1 111111111 111111111' 8111211 III1 S11'1l Sl 1'I'11'1l'l' 11s 11111 llill' !'ll'1 21111 1111111 11111111 1111s lll l1lN l1v11l1 1-1111111 with y11'. 111111111. H1111 11111 A111111 1'11llx',11111111l 1111' 111l1l'N1 S11l'Yi1ll1'S 111 ll1ss 1i1l'lly.H l111111'1l111g' s1-l11111l. l'1'lW'11 111 SII111' 111111111111111111111sly l1111'111'11 sl111 8111111111 11111sl1 1S11l'l'NN1llil' 1l1'1' '1111111111s. 11s s1111 1111111111 11. 1'l1ll1'l1l'l11llLl' '111111 A11?I'111ll. 111'l' 111111111111111 w11s 11111 111111 111111s1111. 111111111 1'11y- 11111. 'l11111's 1'1111111-11111111, ,Ks il l'l11l'. .X111111 lH1llv w-1s ZI IIIIDH1 2111111 l111111111'111l. l1lf'2lS1lI111 1 1111111111111111111111g' 11111 s111'v11111. 111111 111111 lll1Q'1l1 wish 111 s1111, 11111 S1111 111111111 11111 1111- 111111111111111111111,l11111g'l11y111111111111's111 111121. 111111111 1,1'V11l1l 111111 ll1'2ll'1l 11111 11111 11111- 1l1'l'1l 111111' 's 111'111111s 1111 1111s Sllll,11'1'1 N11 x'111'y 11111111. 111111 sl111 1111111 1111 11111-11111111 111 XV112I1' 1111s 111'lllQ' SZII41. .111111 1'11lly. 1111w11vc11'. 1111111111111 111' 11111 s1l11111111 111 11111' 11111l111111111. 1f11111111111111 111111 1111111111 XV21l'lll11l. She 1'111l1s S1113 illll llllQ'1l1j' 111111 w11l11111111s11'1s11- lll sli11111s 111 l1111'11, illl 11111 111' 111ss111 111 11111' ll1'ill1. Plllq 11111-1-H l1111'11 sl111 l11'111c11 1111' s111l1l1111ly, 1'Xl'lJ1IIlllllQ', 1,1111' s11li11s. XY1lil1 Ellll 11111 112Il' 1-11111111' 117111111111 llfilll. 111 11111 1l111'l111Xl 11111111111 El 1'll1l1, 1111' 1'll 11111 111111 11111 l1lll1'lff, 1111 W11111 111111111' 1iIl11NX' 1111111 S1l'll1'li 111111111 I . . 1 . . .11 ,111111 1l111YS 1ll'N1 1'l2I1'll1iI1l11ll 111 s111111111s11. 111'1l'11 llilll Q'lilll1'l'1l 1111 1l'11lII lll'l' 11'111'1i. .X111'11ss 11111 l'1l1IlI1, 1lI 11111 Sllllllj' 111111' 111111111113 1111111111 1111l111'111l w111111111 was s111111l1111: 111 il 11111s1 l11'1l1g'1'l'1'll1 111111111111 llY1'1' 11111 l111x 111111l11111111u' 'l11111's 111111 11111, 151-111111. il l111'g11 s1111li11, XYll1l'1l S1l1'1'1l1'l'lS1l1'11 I'11111ll-1' l111111111s11 1111 112111 11111111 s11111 111 11111' 1'I'H1ll 111111 11111 111111111 111 S112l1ll. 1111111 111111-I1 llllll, 1111111 1'11ll.1', 11l1111s1- 111111111 11l'l1'll 1'1'11111 11111. 1liIl'11llQ1' 1l1'1'1l.iN 1111 11111111 111 11111 11111 l111l,1's s11l11, 111111 11'llil1l'Yl'l' 111s11 -Yllll 1111, 11111111 11111 Miss K11'l1y 11l2l1' '111111 1l?1S 111111. She n111s1 not 1ill1lX1' 111211 1111 is h111'1,1. hyfbll see 'Rita l11v11s 111111 111'2ll'1y. 111111 Slll' w1111l11 111116 1l1'11111ll'11l1y 111 h11V11 111 gin- 111111 1111. ll11l1! S1111 11111 S1111l'E' El 11111115' r111el A 11111111111 11111 11le s1111lc11 21111 El 11111111' ebcry- lllllly 11ls11, '1111111111' y11's111 21111 he1'se'1. 1'11111'1 C'l11'1s111111-111:11-11 sh111'e Zllll 11111. ,xllll 111111 1l111s11 XVlll'41S ,X11111 Polly SWG1111 1llZl,111S111'El11y 11111 111: the 111111111. 111-l1-11. 1111111' 11111 1-1111111111 w111111111 111111 g-111111. S11Ill11 L1'2IX1Il2' 1111XV11 111 1'1E'fl1711. A ray 111. 1111- 111121111 511118111116 111111111111 11ver his S1'illy l12l1'1i, lll2l1i1Ilj1' 111111 21111161 11111s1 s11l1-1111111151 111s 111111-11l11s1111 eyes. 111111 11151 21111111111 l1s1l1-ssuess 111111111 111111 11p11e111' lIl11S1 u'1'111111. 11111s1 11111'111l11ss, 13111. when 1111 1111111111111 11w111'11 111 111J1k'll1S 1'11'ese1111e, 1h11s11 11y11s 1111e111111. 111111 2111 evil 311611111 s1111111111l 111 sh11111 1'1'11111 11l1'llI. the 111111111111 l1s1l11ss llllfly 1111111111 slowly 111111 El 31111612 1 Ill! IIIEINN. 11111 11111111 l1e1'1111111 111'e111. 111111 21 111112, NYll'1il'11 11111g1111 was 11l1'llS1 11111 111 11111' 1l11'1111111111, 1411111111 11sl111111, 111111 13ep1111 ilNVil1il', 1l1'1N111llg' with 1111g'111'. were txvll 1l111'111'11111 1'1llIlQ'S, 111-11111 11111 111s l111x. with il 11111111 111' 111111111111 XVhy, sl111 knew 11111. '111111 112111 g-111111 11111 11111' El walk, EIIIK1 1111' ilXY1ll11' 111111111 s111 lIlllS1llQ' 1111 the 11111 11111- 11l'111l l2l1lj N W111'11s, 1'11111' 'Ritglf' 5119 511111 s11111y 111 h111's11l1'. Hlllilllj' 1161111111 s11111'11 .111111 l'11lly's 111111121115 211111111 y1111. even 1111111211 tlllzx' Ilill'L' 11111 eX111111ss 11111111se1ves 11s l'111111ly 11s sl111. 1'e1111l11 tlllllli l1e111111se 'X'11lll' 1'i111l1'l' 1s Zlll Alll1'l'11'illl, 111211 y1111, 11111, sl11111l1l I11- 111111. 'l'l111y 1111-g'1-1 111111 111 your 1'11111s, 11s 111 y11111' lIlll1llUl'1S, l'llll'S the 11111011 111' 51121111811 1-11y11lty, 111111 111111 1101-1111se of 1l11s y1111 111'11 w11111 y1111 il1'1-HH - lll'l1'1l,N 1ll1111l6I' 211111 Cl1111'1es B1e1't11n, 'l11111's 1111111113 111111 Ql'l'llXVll 1111 t0g'etl1e1' 111 lS11s11111, 111111 111111se1111e111,1y their c1111dre11, 46 1' 1.11 11111111111 -11111 ,1,1,. 111111111 11, .W 11111111,.,,1N '111l1!11l115' 111111111 N11 13111111111 l1'1l'1 ll 11,. 111111 11,111 ll 1111 I 111111 Ullllv 11111 1l11'l11, if H 111111'm 111 11111 1. 11111111111 1 X x Nw K' Els i wi 1 ifll 1. s A 1 iv llClltlSllll3 im 1 mn vi xi. s .1 L L 1 xi i immii 1 1 . ii 1 1 in aim lmli-ss x ii w. ii 1 i e 1 1 mul i X .i T Sp ii 1 1 1 l i A , I ,, 1 N Tllll e hm i . i 1 1 1 cl lxlll NN ll X sxiilvs rlllt ii xi-us lllll f 1.11 nes f -' i s Ami 1 -1 Xi l ' All is . . 1 i . X 1 l ll 1 limi mimic s x .s i 1 , s imi L iii is iii Nlhiii 1 1 1 1 1 G11 lll I Hill ft 1 , X , ,I , i IGI was s in vii 4 1 and mheil suchleiilx iris eu . mx im -f ' iii 4ltUI1SlXCS . .s . icinheieil iis lmimi im 1 1 0 N r f l ll l mi ii 1 1 flimlxe in 1 IIN ll ifiii 1 ii i 1,441 lf shine u XHILII 1 1111 f 1-ll ' NI 114:11 iisium I iii wiv .1114 hiisin ' W N 'H fl x ich lin 1 llweii ii 4 es ii Ill mi mi A .mm IQ in i 1 mi 1 ment if not lifippiiwss xi fi nn the cuiiti :iv iexi iii 118118 1 ie ies mint ii iii 1 191 Xiiieiic iiu teacheis held hex 111 hchool to hei inns 1. i1:.i.wv,u ..., iii'i:4i,'.xmui1aiiiuww It lllll 1 V U 1 QUIK im 1 1 H i l 1 ll IN! 1 ' 4 I s nllll ll Nl l 1 I Nl! l D 1 A IIIHS ll lf NUI N I 1 x ' 1 s N U SN mx ri si 1 I I p x NX 1 N I 1 I 4 sw siiil U 5 Q 1 ISXXK ll ull 4 f 1 :S ALII 1 A ug H 1 rxl. 11 x in K s Ll 1 ,, iiiuxi 1 s ii in pi, L 1 L. .mil ML.iiiIiu...l.1L . g ' XX 'l'lllC 'F '+R' iii aiftci' yi-ii'.'. 1-1111-wi-ml thv nhl 1'ii :i Iviirilvii, Fin' hi-i' I':i1Iii-i s liii-iliyilziw f .' ' . Fri llll' Th ', if slit ll-ll llll luvv, lull shi limgi-al 14, gil ilmm th f llil-i hml lezii'ii1-il lin ' th- yiniiin' Inu-li in Iwi- mullii-i-'s laiml. thi- luimw ul' W -RM mill' 'L. Vllzirles Al1l'fllll. li'i1l. 1llll'lIlLl' lll'l' wliililliuml. lli-li-in lciivw this we-ll. .iilil lim-I il tlllll' of Pl lwrpi, ww ll' l si' T' i' 'lliiai IIPYPI' tin-il nl' spi-nlcing ul' tliv Ulf- int S1 'lil. :ml wh'l thlw hv IICT. vain--I i'm'v ilziys shi- lmil siwnt' i-iiiiipiiiu' in 5. W, A in D. 'mil won, um of thv must In-A iiti- thi'ulivi-in-1-lim-ils,ui-iiiklwi'miI.si-i-Imli-fl :UVA xiyyr Y, liil 41 .' z i liziiulsuilm wuimii. I i- Hui- wsillcs iii thc viii:-yziiwl. Ul r1ii shi- sp Ici- 4 ,W UNYI jv izritz' 1Xl'll'.j'Ll'li2l, 1'4lllNlll in thc QIIUUII uf nl' thi- slurics Thi- iilsl slii-plwrrl, .I ip y Il-lil mmm il: I Tli - l livzircl hm' im Thci' lell lulsll hir. zliiil ul' llln- viiriuiis trays ln- hail M21 WIN! 1h'iT lu' luiirtseii j'lill'S. flllEll'll'N Nlmrtmi wh tile-il mil ful' hm-V. .Xfiur sill. whu vmilil ' 1 li-il l ' l hli.-af Ill' linppy iii tliv lziml nl' vxpn-wi ihv girl til l'm'u'1:t Thv Iliuiisniiil his l1l:1 ilil1'iiig'tlmsv l' 2 his Thiiils that h'i4l inmlv lifl llll'2l.'2Illl iii ll ll fm' -' fi'ivmls :mil vmiip-iiiimis. his haul im S1 2 ' I lm 'lull iii' ' l'L'l2lt- ' l10'll'll llHtlllll,' fiwmiii lim. .Xt This puiiit iii hm' llmiiglils. 'llifzu iw-- ll' '1 ' ll lil his siiprf ' lizippiiiiess. lim SLlIlll'll in iiiriii-il lll'lllll lim-I' wsllli. Im iwlizili-ly uh- hri 'I 'iilgirlg li.' ii'i1ix'0l'iii1l.:iiil :il p-ii'- 4'l'llNS1'll lhu iwimn siiiil lneuzui 11+ fiimlli- ' Gllfl-' 'zl 'L l Ullly fin-tl1vl'i1i4,l nl' his illlllllr lli-ppm with th- 1111q- fw -1.Y.,5I,,.sN HW. ' ' . might IINL' iii liziiulliiiu' zu lviiwl. .Xs nl '- llf Vi' llzil ' sc VAL' inf in lu ?llXV'lj'.' his lwiif uvvi' him. sh- iiiiii'1iiili'wl wi mls ill' 3 1 PN '1 ' puri' . Fail' ' l-.' iliflk--1 lily. ' 1 l'lllli'2ll'IIll'l1t, IW'll'i'lj' in l i1g'lisli.lmli1 .ily I1 4: --.. i Thi l'fTl- mlziiiglitvi' vzillvfl ilili1I,2llfll lllL iii Sym ish, llvli-ii, iuitvliiiiu' Iivr. lllll si Aly iiinllici' that she was sziiil Tu iw-sviiililc. Sll'2IIl!'l' thrill of llilill' l'llll iw:-i' hi-i'. :mil ev ' 'hililh l. hfil si'a1'r'vly iw-'ivlimeil svziwm-ly lm 'ing' Vlmt sh- lllvillll til ilu , 1.,, -,ly , hii' tvilfth yvl '. thv huiiitifiil wilv :mil ui' sly, shv spulu,-4glii1'l'ly to 'lli1:i, SIl.VllI2'2 mill ' 'x' .'t 'li with ai fzileil fini' l ilwift think lliiiigs slimilil gn im -in mig,.5,3. - ' .' Tlivy lizivf- luevii. vI1ilil.fI im-:iii iii l'UQ'2ll'4l V A ,,,.,, It V- s th th-it The sm l' luml Ulf in I-Si-mm,fin-ifilm-sii'tsw-i11,iii.'1' l'lLl'lll til ,Nm Spa' ,Tow St1'2lllg'Ulj' ll2ll'li iii VI: 'lcs lim-li him lie-me wilh Ill' lli .',' Kil'l+y's ylql units. Hi' if 'mil it w'i.' Ilicli Tlril lic lui 'lvilgwx Siiliii.-'rig' liv sliiiilil liziriri MHMM run ' lf' ' ' 1' liw e :xml lfrir- ills. sul iv mini. what wiillil ymi iluf lh yiiii Mmm !,!N 5. 'iiiml l vu for hiw irifiiw llii il, wli .l is l'im 3 hzuic siivh ei stiwiiimc Fi-i-ling' thwl VIN.-Nb, sti' gg' in The l wi-VT ill l'VUl'j.' .Xili1i'ii ii1, lhlppu is g'1llllg'l4r2'U1 yuii-iiiln iiwuilmlie, l ' ' ' ' 1 we iiiure iii his. YVIH l .' H10 wiul ih'it ymi XVlllIl4l li-T limi luv si-nl hm-lg l l'l'ill'l: l' gli-'. he 12 1'ly sniiglit thi- l:I'll'l lly lu Spain, right sunny. ml3l'N1lM! ,' 1' s f J +'i'zl.. V Y t L I V' . Vwyilrl wly 'lllitalu pilisl I lli-ppm lmvlc 1.1 l filly, -is timc xwiit. im, il hs mt hi. him lwliiii- shl lIl'lfl4' anis 'li-, ilniiuliliiwwlw A 6- lil his nhl plwvi- ' .' ity, WI-' ilu you lllzii' lil-ppl, su! W 't 1lizill ll'i llll' - l .ful hinisilf iii lllf'lIlL.'S zil'f'ii's, you ev-1' iiiimlwsiziiiil th'if wh-ii lili-pim lllillllllimug Vhx , 1 M '1 tq- ptll ' l -f 'J hu ll'l,' lm- iivimlc tu give up his lmismi, hi 'xiii-Ili Inlimig hql F. i 14, 141111111 . llc f lil L- 11111- is nu lUll,'L1' llElll2'UI' iis. I llt'V1'l' f'iil lu M ij -1iiiXl Q -- . ' m'il'1 him hiss his mit iipim ai stil,-lc, IJ1-ir . ly-t., J . --, -A t gy 1 I wylg,-5 ulil -lusi l'?lll,'llt im- th-11' trim-li lung' ug-ii, lily llr1'l ll' it tl I V. ,t - rl ' -1 l - 1 '- llis fzilxlil' 'incl filill0l'iS fzitliiei' hi-f iw him l'Ig'Il0I'Hf . , - ' . j. 3 - '-,' l' 1 ' t. But tll'll is l1z1'lly1' thi- inf, heir uhilil' - 47 X N '1., i.,A L- .,.,V H 'l'llE Ql'IVER is it .' You want lieppo to he sent home heeause you tear him, and I like to keep him heeause he is the only thing I have from mv old home. It looks as though we shall have to compromise. lJo you know. I shall he perfectly satisfied if you let me keep Ifleppo another week. to send him away. Only let me keep him until the tlratorieal tdontest is past. Ilelen, feeling that 'she had spoken too hastily. espeeially as she had no grounds l'or her fears. said gently. Keep him as long as you like. dear. NVithout doulit my fears are foolish ones. 'Ilita's head went up with a little toss, No, indeed. I shall not keep him longer than the com- ing week, for I rather faney the idea of 'sending Beppo to the old home in Spain. to spread the glad tidings that I have won out. in this Oratorieal Vontest. over that Mexican eatl'7 A world of seorn. contempt and hatred was i11 the last words. f'on1e. come. my little spit-tire, Iles len said almost reprovingly. You should never forget that a little courtesy is due i your opponent. even though she he your enemy. VVhy you should eonsider her V your enemy is more than I ean really nn- Ql derstand. Valeria Mortella. even though , a Mexican. scarcely deserves the hatred you hear her. 'l'rne, her gramlfather shot your mother's only hrother years ago in a quarrel, hut the ehild is no more re- sponsilrle for that aet than you. yourself. I can not say that I like the spirit of re- venge which has caused you to enter the eontest against her, Supposing that you do not win. what then. ' ' lint I shall win. 'llita said deter- nunedly. Never fear! Hut then there is always a possihility that you may t'ail, so don't he too eonli- dent. I certainly wish that you would eornpete with a ditterent spirit, however. Itevenge is always wrong-at least that is what we Americans believe. I am not an American. 'Rita re- torted, and I care nothing for American theories. It is sufficient for me. that we of Spanish blood believe revenge is right. XVhat matters it, though my uncle was killed many years ago? Does not the crime remain the same? Do you Am- erieans helieve that years can make a sin less terrihle .' Bah! It is only for the sake of revenge that I compete against the Mexican. What care I for the prize? She has set her heart upon it. therefore I in- tend to wrest, it from her. If I failiwell, then I shall seek revenge in another di- rection. and patting Beppo's head, she went on softly, Hlieppo is a Spaniard. Ile can understand. Perhaps he may help me. 'l'he look in her eyes was not good to see. 'l'he week passed swiftly. and the even- ing for the Uratorical Contest arrived al- most. hefore Ilelen or 'Rita realized it. Ilong as Ilelen lived she never could fora get that evening, the crowded hall. the hrilliant lights, and the contest itself. lVhy, we shall soon learn. Miss Kirhy had prepared a splendid program, which was gone through with and g'l't'Eltly enjoyed hy the audience, hut it was in the contest that the people were the most interested. The tirst to speak was Valeria Moi-tella. the Mexican. ller plain face, and dark gray dress, simply made, did not make her a very attractive ligure, hut when she spoke, all that was forgotten. ller clear voice rang through the great hall, and her words, especially these closing ones, struck deep in the hearts of her American listeners, I am proud of this land, of her success, and of her people, and, above all, I am glad that she is t1'ue to the God who has given all D things. I am proud, yes, very proud, of -li' Wifst -in lrr' 'ivtvfi ltr ll lxizxt' tw rlsifl ' , ,- mm tml it ,W 3- V int 't P it ilk' ..,, ,:,,,,,.., stat 'YM '.t rl :iw it' lla ltr Wt-its ithltiili ilftizit. i he it lhrllw I' r., i,,q hilt, lN t'i it Wlin I alien U tiatm1 ltitlmhi I lleryl- lm V ll lN sltzlll 'lullll' Init lllt' glmllml l llltllie H ll l '1 at titru tif Th Nlllll. In hl ntl the mi tuna ,M ull the tai lllllel N' W ii 141 limi iii 'll .lllwlv X , K, 3' 'li?lT iq, iw v, , . ,X l v,,- l i:if Y U ui l, x i', xi, x i x l fm. Fl' ' -' ilwl ln, -ii' ir'- tl il ylwvllil' Ihr-will fl iiiiiliflw 9 Iwllfllf W' Ei'-I 3 'lm' Mfgii-iii. ll'1 .lm-. Slllllll ffl' nIii'W' :ill Ilml lil' 'mu Imiiiiuu 15 Npwlillll r1-- ' A MI, ml Ili -' a IFUVD' f lllld U iw? I ' am Slad that 'has Ellen Bu erv Pr0Ud1 of 'VUE the land of my znluptinii. lliko Ruth nf olnl, I Say to yon. thy peuplo shall he my people. :ind Thy Haul. my Nucl. NVhvn she fll1l'Sll0ll speaking' tho rmnn rung' with applziuse. The wuuls of thv l'1vi'1-igiivi' hznl iiidewl sfruclc lnnne 'fu thc ln,-:iris ol' thn- listeners I The next 'fo speak was, of vniirsv, 'llil:1. NVlmt ei stir her :livin-:li-:limi 1'illlSWl. what ripples of zuliiiimlimi rain ww-1' the lninsl-Y Chnl i11 Q1'lUXVl1lg1' roll, whivh svl nil' hm' dzirk hair and threw zu wzirin i-uso-likc tint uver the L-loan' ulivm- 1-niiiplvximi. she wars inmlcml ai pivfnrv fm' znlinirzitinn. XVhen she spuliu pcnplv ll'2llH'tl llwwzii-al in 'tlleil' souls, so as nut lu miss 21 wurwl ul' the speevll. for 2111 wow intensvly infor- estecl in 1110 pin-tty S1lEllll2ll'll,H as xho was called. Spain was tho tnpiv uf her oiwitioii, and shv put heart zinfl Stllll into her every wnrcl. .Xml hr-1' f'ltl',4lllj.1' words llI'1lllQl'lll llUl' zipplznise. tim, grunt applause. for they rung' mit vlvzirly, :nnl mleliznitlyz Spain has grmvii nhl, znnl in her old ago she has lG2ll'Ill'1l that pezwo is better than wan: livery nzitinn pmfcssos to believe this. yet they treat hm- svmui- fully, saying: shc is nhl, she is fvehlc. she is cowardly! Slnnne nn The inntimis, tlwy who premrli LltN'fl'l11CS uf pezlvv, yet not obeying' their own teen-liiiigs. lnngli at the one nation that dues strive tu llll nhenlient to them! So lung' as This is true, I shall never be proud of aiiutliei' lznnl, hut zil- ways shall I he loyal to that peavofnl, 'sunny land of my bi1'tl1fSpz1inl Amid the applause, the judges lnistened away to make 21 decision. Helen, as she sat waitillg' fm' the re- turn of the judges to render their devi- sion, let her eyes wander idly to the tzihle on the platform, where the twn contes- tants sat at either end. Between thein, on the table, lay the box cmmtziinilig the prize. N0 one knew just what was the QVIVERU prima. annul shi- snlilwl :ns shv llI1lll2'lll', of fhv many Slll'lIllSl'H lhv girlsul'1In-svlnml hzul lllilll1', :ls in whnl tha- lmx l'UIliJIlll1'll Sunwliuw :ls slim' l4Nllfl'1l :lt il, ilw lmx sfwni in hulk 4llllA4'l'l'llllj' 'fhznn il hurl in H10 innrning' wlivn shv haul iiisywvlwil if ivilh thi- Ulllf'l'.'l. lt sf-1-iiwfl lHl'LL'Pl', :mil 3 Llc-1'lw1', zinml was lllllvtl YI rlw-pm' Qrvf-n, l ,XS shv lmvliwl, slw saw thi- vnvvl' lrf-inlule vinlvntly ns llllbllill :nlmnt To give waxy in smiw l'm-1-11 l'i'mn within. Shri saw .,, . l?Ill'llll?l', 1h:ll liitzu s vyvs ws-rv npun The lwx, ffm, sam' hm' ln-un uwi' :mil tap thv mwi' uw-ntly. nnlil it vi-am-il to nmvf- r 1 - lhvn in zu llzlsh shv lliislwstnml, tho lmx was nul Thv prim lmx,-if wus llvpplfsl Vnlfl with lvzur. Nha salt in ln-1' wail. Try- ing' 'fu plain Hlll' swim- t'1Dlll'Nl uf' zlvtinii. A rlrm-:uni ui' lhv Iwi-viniis IllL1'lll' vaxnw Yivirlly ln-fum hm-V, ln thv 1ll'l'2llIl. 'llitzl hurl llilllllllfl hvi' zu lnlln-li ul' mst-s, lllll as she? hull lwni lu inlizilv llivii' l'l'ElLl'l'Ellll'G. Thr-y haul snmhlvnly VEllllNll4'1l, zlnll in llllqll' S11-ml, shv hzul vlzlspml lhv wvilhing' lnmly of llviipu, as lim' XVfIllllll hinisvlf ailmnl hm' nwlq. hissing' his imixniiuils lll'l12Illl into ln-I' fzwv. Shi- knew. now, flint all hm' cliw-:nn wnnhl swan ln- vnzn-tml lwfniv hm' Pyf-s, in tmugif- Vllilllly, lint tho vivtiin wnnlcl lw, nui In-rsvlf. lint XYZl.ll1l'lH Mm'- 'f0ll:i. The llexivziii. 'llllLll't' was nntliing' fm- llelvn to chi, as yGt, lini Nil silvnlly in hm' Semi. znwaiitilig the jinlgvs' dw-isimi, fin' sho knew in- stinvtively that if 'llith wmi. nothing' would ll2l1llP9ll. llllt otln-iwvisl--slie shiul- mlerecl as she lllHllL1'llt what might happen. il3ef0i'e her eyes tlimw- rush ai vision of 'llila as she hanl lmilccwl thc night they had C'Ell'l'lGil on their spiritl-ml walivemzi- tion over Beppu's lmx. znnl mive again 'she seenwml to liven' hm' say, 'll shall Hook PCVGIIQJQQ in znnvtliei' mlii'evl'im1f' and, l3eppn is ei Spzuiiarcl. Ile c-:nn under- stand. Perlizlps he will help nie. 49 111211111 5' 11111 r 1 - 'PHE HQUIVFIRY' lll1' 1111lg'1-s 1-1111-1'1-11. 111111 11'itl1 11111115 1'1l1ll'1l'1lllN, 1ii111ll5' 11'111-11s. 1111-5' 111'11is1-1 '11i111's s111-1-1-h. It 11'11s well 1leli1'1-1'1-1l. ,. they s11i1l, l1111. 11111'111'1111111112l5'. it. 11'11s 11111 I 11is1111'i1-11l15' ll'11Q. 'l'l11-1-1-11111. 1111- 111'iXQ 11'11s 1111'111'1l111l 111 Miss V11l1-1-111 l111l'lUll2l.l7 N11 s1111111-1' 11'11s 1111- 1l1-1-isi1111 1-1-111l1'1'1'11 1112111 111-11-11 s1111' 111111 1'is1' t'1'11111 1lCl' s1-111 s1111' 111,-1' 111l1'11111-Q 21 s11-11 t1111'111-1l the 111111-'vs 'llltl he111'1l 1l1l1' s115', 111 ll1'1' 11111sL ,.,1 W11191-1lli11g' 11111Qs: ll1111111'11l1l1- jll1l1l'l'S. 1 1111 1111- 1'11111- 1'11ll1'11'1ll1'4 11'111'1ls. llllt 111 s11111- 111 1110111 1 l1111'1- 11 1'ilV1l1' 111 ask, .,.v ..v . 1 111111 l 1-111111stl5 111.15 111111 51111 111115' 'l'2l11i' 11. 111-1 1II1', 1 zlslc, h111'1- the 11l1:11s111'1e 111 11111111-' 111 Miss 3111111-1111, the 111iz1- 1111 ss 5 11'l1i1-h 11'1- 1111111 11ilV11 st1'11u':'l1-1l,7' N11l1l1- 1-hil1ll 111111' l111'el5'l 1'2lll 11'11111 1 ' - - 2 '2lI'11 11113 11'111-1ls, 1113111 1111. 151111 111111111 111 - ' 111 1110111111-1's1li1l 11111 111-I1-11 11111l11st111111 1111 11111. 11 11'11s time 1111' 111-1' 111 111-11 111 1111 11111-1s 11111s1-1111-1l 111 1 81-111-1-1-15' 111 - ,' 4' - 'l.S 1-1'-11111-st, S1'211'1'1'lj' 111111 the 111-ix1- lltlx 111l1f'1ll1ll '11i111's 1l?1111l, 111111 1-1'1- the 111-1111lc 111'11is1- 111111 1111111i1'11ti1111 for her' noble s11e1-1-11, 11'111-11 e1'1-1-5'1111e was st111'tle1l by se-1-11115 il white 1-11111111 1'lQ1ll!'13 coniiug with 11111111 s11111-1,1 111111'11 the CGIYCFEI1 aisle of the l2ll'LL'1' 111111, 211111 11s the 111-ople s11t, half st111'111-11 115' the 111111111-iti1111, they saw He- 1911 1'115'11111. 1111' it 11'11s she, n11'1u11t the 11111tf111'111, s1111t1-11 the 111'iz0 f1'11111 Rit11'S 112ll1llS, 211111 11111'li111r it higrh 11b111'e her 11GH1l, SL'll1l 11, 1,'1'21Sl111l2' t11 the II1kl1'lJlC 1111111- 110111-11th 111-1' feet. XVi1l1 i1111ig'111111t 111-1111-sts thef 1161111111 1'11s1? t'1'11111 thvii' s1-11ts Elllll siirge-11 f111'11'11I'11. XV11s it ,i1-11l1111s5' 111111 111111 1-11115911 Helen 1'1-5't1111 111 111118 s1111il the 1-hil1l,s 11111116 i111- 1111lsef 'lllll'11' 11111-sti1111i11g's 1-911se1l Slllltlell- l5', 111111'1-1'e1'. when 1111-5' s1111' lJef111'e them, 11111 El l11'111i1-11 gift. il s1111i1e1l 1'e11'111'1l,-11111 the 11111l5' 111 El 1111g'1- SIl2l1i0. st1'e11-111-11 1111t 1111 1111' 111111-11111 1111111-, stitt 111 111-11111. As they 11111111-11, il Q11-11111 11-11111 11110 of tho lights s11'1-111 111'1-1' 1111- s1-11l5' g'l'Gt'll 1,1111-li. 111111 1l1l1'C 111111'1-. lll 1le11th. 11s i11 lifu, 136111111 81111110 1'1ll'1l1 111 glitte1'i11g'. 1111111-liless s11l1-11- 1'Q1:111'1-1'1-11 1f1'1l1I1 1I1Ill'lllll1'l11L1' 11'111'1ls 111' 11111'1 3111131115 1J1'11111A11ON, '08 Some Heart eats 11 A 11111 with 1li111' 111C 11111 l1l111-lc hue. 'l'11 El 11111 111' HC-sh, 111111 lltlt of W111111: l1l'2lIl1'4l, 11s 111' 11'11s 11l'11,-11 11'1111t 111 1111, IV 5'1111 1-1-111l5' 111111111 11'h11t 5'1111 just 11111 1111-1' 1115 1'2I1ll11l' s 11-111-1-, 1Vlll1'll s 111011 Ill 11 g'11111l 11111 111-1111111181 ll1'l2'1ll111l'll11111l hllll 1I?lZlllj.1' 111111 21 11111i1l's 111111-li 1-5' UN 111- 111-111'1-11 s111111- 111-111'5', l1111g'-1l1'1111'11 sigihs, 1 'llll1'll, l11111'i11g' his lll'2l1l, 111- s11'11ig'l1111'115' s1111l11-, tI'II 11-ll 5'11l1, 1'll11l'1'1l1'1-, illlll 1 1111 II111 5111111-, 'l'h111. 11'l11-11 5'11111' I1111l1s 1111 1111- 111'1- 1-11st, l'i1,ti-1111111-1' I11-111s 111-Y lI1'2ll'l 1111111 l'z1s1.l flllltlll 1111- lll s111111l1 1 11111 1'1-11111-11, 11s s111- 11-lt. 'she s115', I'll 11111 5'1111 il s1-1-1-111 11'it111111t 11el115'- 11'111', 11'1111 11s I live, 11111111 oft, 1111 13011, 315' lll12l1'1 1:1111s 1111t1e1- P11111-1'-s1111l' H A 111111111-1111-, 1'll2ll1l'1IlM 111 1111ss that 11'115', 1111 l11-111'i11g- 1ll1'll' 11'111-11s, 11111 g1'11H'ly say, Wl11-11 il 11111i1l's 11e111't. l1e11t.s like that, 5'11ll k111111', . S111111 111 1111- 11111113 sh1-'s 1111111111 t11 15111 A1111 1111-11, 5'11111111 f1'ie111l, I tell you 111113, 315' 1102111 1111' you will go 'pity P11t!' Z 1111111113111 ' 1. 111111 11-ff, 1115- 'W f11'11'11 ' 1111111 l 'l!-' 11-11 111111,1l llvllvh ' 1. 11'111j-'1- 11l'fll'. 11-,.1-,1 411-'R 1'11l11111'1'm ,1 ll?-11 '11 'fl 111 l'1-q1l1,'1- 1,1111 11111 11111111111 11' 11 11.11 l111Y 111'1 1l' 111111111-11 115111 .1ll11-' 111--'1111' 11' 11111111 i111 1111111 1 'Illl 11111. 11'1'1l1:1l111- 1111: 11 1,. 1111111111111 1111111111111 511111111 11 ll1llfl1lrlI'4 1111- 111 112111-11111111 N11 115 11' 1 Nllml 11111 111111114 1 'll11'111.1, 1131111111 11 fm' l1l'111 111 S111-11, hm 111111 111111 1. 111 1 11191 r ll' 'li' M illllll Intl l 'll' 1iel.l,. illllwl lv? 'Ulla ltill tl ' i lil 4 ilhll- ,Q l till. liilg l viii' Hi, iii-'in il, 'elri llilzo rli it 1, ,Y ,R :lo Qtp ol ' ,,j ins. pi wr, to A wi lla., ,,'....:i, 4 lf 1 Li i'l'llllll 'tl lnl llt l rw l' 4, IH ml. . ful. HRH yall 'lv' -, lgl. THE NQITIVERH A Summer Scotland. England. lfranee. llelgium, llolland, Germany. Switzerland, ltaly and Sieily were the eountries visited on tllis summer trip, so that the expression jerked through Europe tits the ease most perfeetly. We really saw more than we eould properly digest, NVhen the three of us,-- the .luilg'e, as everyone ealleil my father. and the twins, as we girls were uiekuame1l,- were af-tually on hoard the good ship t'olunihia. in New York harhor, we had to literally pineh ourselves in order to realize that we were really and truly going' ahroad, and one of our fondest dreains was to he 1'G2lliZl'4l. It was an interesting sight when the hig' ocean liner pulled out. 'l'he pier was erowded with people waving' lflnglish and American tlags-some weeping' eo- piously at parting with their l'riends anil others there out of idle euriosity. lVhen the hugle sounded whieh meant All Ahoai-tl, one's feelings were imle- seribahle-one simply eouldu't. help shed- ding a few tears at leaving one's native land, and we girls looked at. eaeh other sheepishly to see if the other notieell the actual weeping-then hoth attemptetl laughter. The tirst thing' after settling one's sttflterooin, stowing' everything' shipshape so as to put one 's hands on anything' de- sired ilnmediately, is to seeure seats at table. We did not try to get plares alt the Captain's tahle, as many do, hut ehose a small table nearest the exits tstair-wayl for obvious reasons. Of Course We were all sea-sick, and to our disgust the very first morning outg but we kept on deek and tried to Walk and finally conquered it. VVe envied those few on board who 51 in Europe positively gloried in it when the sea was the roughest. 'l'he only things that were seen. hesnle water, were an oeeasional ieeherg. whale, or porpoise, so that, after eight, days. everyone was greatly exeitenl to see the eoast ol' lrelantli 'l'he seenery along the lrish eoast was very lovelv. and although many passen- gers lel't the ship at lionmlonnlerry anfl some tried to persuade us to ilu likewise, so as to see the tliant's t'auseway. we kept on tu tllasgow. tln aeeount ol' the eoinlition ol' things----the things heing the . , 4 tnle and the river tlyfle-we aetually lauded at a small town, where after ile- elariug' to the enstoins ottieer that we had no pert'inne. we hoarnletl our tirst Iiuro- pean train tor ttlaseow. lt seemed like heing in 'l'oylan4l- l'unny little stone houses with tiower-pots For elumnevsl And the train ltselt- -we tairlv sereamefl over it. 'l'he engine looketl so tiny' and the whistle sounded like a toy' liornl NVe reaehed the hotel tired, hut interested. in the ln-ats who ran the litt. and in the maids, who wore eaps with long' streamers and skirts with trains. livery one in Seotlantl seemed possessed with the one idea of heing eleanfeverything looked so inunaeulate. NVe visited the 'l'rosaehs. Heott 's eountryg Ayr, l'ull of llohhy llurns, Init sueh 'l pretty plaee, and l'ltlinlnu'gh. the lioston of Seotlainl. Mary, Queen ol' Seots. .lnl111 Knox, and ll, li. Stevenson seemed to possess the eity. tlur first eastle was lovely old Stirling. with its glorious view, ineluding the hattle lield ol' liannoek- hurn, and, immediately heneath us, as we stood on the rail, even the pleasure grounds used for the entertainment, of Queen Mary and others. It was so satis- It 'l'llE Q rw . f ' ' l'ying'f'the moat. draw-bi'idg'e. walls, and 4lung't-oiisfeyt-i'ything' a well-ordered ' eastle should haye. X Un to Hng'lamlY liiverpool we l'i'ankly disliked, but liondon we admired. NVest.- ininster Abbey looked too r'l'HW4ll'll fm eolllfolt 'l'he guide tried to make it V impressive, until one almost felt one had made a most grievous mistake not to have been born an l'lng'lish noble in order to have had the pleasure ol linying' b buried in the .Xbbeyl NVe felt quite proud when we found elntaplis to some l ot' our poets, l'atriotism ind inlinite fa tigue are two things one is sure to de- velop during' a trip like We gazed with due awe upon the eoro nation ehairs used by King' Edward and Queen ,tlexandra-one eontaining' under- ., neath the famous stone of Seone. brouulit K to England from Seotland, and supposed to have been the identieal one used tor 'i pillow by -laeob when he dreamed of th angels, tlld liondon Tower. with its i rv - v 4 '1 ' lrzutoi- s t-ate, trown lewel s. the room ,ff where the two little l'i'inees were impris- oned. and another one eontainig' all sorts of instruments ol' torture. beheading' stones, exevutioners, ete, Also the guards ff or funny lieef-eaters. .3 NVindsor t'astle was lovely. and the M quaint tlld t'iu'iosity Shop still standiu so many. many things in liondon town' Une man asked his friend who had iust returm-d from l'lng'land, what he liked ' .nw best: he said: lhe munnnies in tl1e liiit 5 . F ish Museum. lle eonsulered it little short of wonderful that a wom: .. stay dried up so long. in eoulxl l NVe l'eIt so thankl'ul that the King' i was in resiilenee, and many ol' the people ' were still in town. lVe eonsidered our- selves Iortunate in seeing' llis Majesty me and Queen ,Xlexandra ilriyingz botn f-' bowf -' td ymiy Q.,IcltlHllSlX to the elieering, lx .a . VIVERH erowd. Her' beauty struck one very for- eibly, although she was dressed in very simple blaek. The eoaelnnan and groom in the royal Csearletj livery wore a black baml on the left arm. One little incident pleased us-we wre i11 London on the Fourth ot' July tand so. by the way, were Bryan Elllfl Mrs. Longwortlll, and at dinner that evening the iees brought in to us had tiny Anieriean flags stuck in the top, XVe found the English people extremely kind, and dreaded leaving for the t'ontinent. We erossed the English Vhannel by the shortest route, Dover-Calais, and escaped 'sea-siekness. lVe had to go through the Freueh custom and boarded the train for Paris. XVe blundered into,a compart- ment marked 'tDames Settles. and one woman and ehild were our fellow passen- gers. The eonduetor eame along, saying' politely. Uliillets, s'il yous plaitf' and then talked French volubly to father and pointed to the sig'ns, Father did not un- derstand. Ile returned two or three times. waxing' warmer eaeh time. until fi- ually he brought a man who told my fa- ther, in English, that the eompartmenl was reserved for ladies. and he must leave-Awhieh he did humbly, while We were ehuekliug' inwardly. NYlien we reached the tlare St. Lazare, in Paris. and the portiers crowded around talking' Freneh like magpies, we felt bewildered and managed to stam- mer voiture. and to our relief the HIlUl'll0l'H addressed conducted us to a eab. No one eould make me believe then that Pontiae llig'h Sebool French was not going' to be understood in Paris. I had reason to ehange my mind laterg but T blamed the eabbies, who seemed so stupid. Sometimes it 'seemed to be a ease of sit- ting' on the curb over night, unless one 52 X 4-all liHll ll' lie U1 Mali! .Drill .il ' ii'l1vt ' Zn it. iwiriiv l Fir ibm ' i-iiiiiisig lb-1'e V l'rlli'tt, llilllge nz llluxny llbllrs lllr Iam ltzulrnh ,. they .',- nk. laik.: l fl se- lie mn rliniliiug l'a1'llir vliinh th lllg Ell'9n't H Yigw U XX P a .U ,I Wll la. .W if. 'lllll .luiivia .4 1. W ' l-ll l ,i . :rp .titlim llllll wi tl al- .' . l im ,., l,.. Nx y E . 1 My ll wg .ll 'iv-Mi, ' l F sw .,,,,j wi. i Yiitiv. ' u ,, pi, ,.,v lp-nl lit l-' 'i xv Q i in i.. I 1,4..f V ,,...l i. ,. V- 4i'l:1.f I' li4i,l .W SI el il Y llltll i ,Jril ai.. l irt l ,Ar g..-lil fl-rprll l'1ll'lF- l lzltfl fmetl Sl p U ,asa ml lllll lo e lalillf i . ,i init pw. ll' iltlll' livf llli H, In li 'lr lllill ins Htl I hd . lint l n slllllld' al 5ll' HSS UUE THE Gould manage 0ne's pronunciation a little better. YVe did Paris in ten days. Grant Allen said eahnly that a MONTH at least would be 'needed for the liouvre alone. WE thought the Venus de Milo beautiful. Brussels, with its numerous laee shops, and the battle field of IVaterloo within speaking distanee. did not detain us long, and we entered Holland. with its dikes. Dutehnien. windmills. Edain eheeses, wooden shoes, and Rembrandt. But The Hague. with its lovely palaee in the wood. and Sehevenginen, the fashionable Dnteh watering'-plaee, eontained the buildinu' where the Peaee Conference was held. Anisterdain, the so-ealled vulgar Veniee. and from there the trip on the Znyder Zee to the quaint and interesting' island of Markera. One little Duteh youngster eame up to me and reeited t'Yanl:ee Doodle through in pretty good English. Clever beggars they were! In tlermany, thrift and substautiality talso beerl were in evidenee. C'oloe'ue. with its Cathedral, and the exquisite painting' of Queen Louise by Iiiehter. were viewed. then down the Rhine to Ma- yenee. Heidelberg proved extremely in- teresting, and duellingg still goes on iner- rily. In order to wear a deeoration badge eaeh student niust fight at least two-as many more after that as he wishes. Handsome nien wear proudly the most hideous sears. After a day i11 Baden, we pushed on to Switzerland! the scenery was grand indeed-and Inter- laken seemed so delightfully eool after the extreme heat in tlermany. Mountain climbing' was the mania here, and we heard it was every GGl'l1l3I17S ambition to climb the difficult -Iungrau some day in his life. I must confess my ambitions a.ren't aimed so high. Of course, the View of the Jungfrau from Interlaken, QVIVER together with the eliniate, were the at- traetions for tourists. and eertainly one never tired of the ever-eliaiigirig, snow- eapped inouutaiu. It was niost beautiful tllow. liueerue was faseinating in the height ot the season and tnll to overflow- ing' of Anierieans when we reaehed it. Naturally. we saw the fainous lion hiin- self, all earved out ol' the solid rot-lc, but also earved out of wood and even ehoeo- late in the eandy shops. Sllt'll a pity it is the poor lion is dead and eannot appre- eiate the Hattery in these iinitations of hiin. XVe did not asf-end the lligiand Pi- latus, hut we were on the lialce of Iiu- eerne. and the old eovered bridge. YVe saw XYillian1 'l'ell's nionnnient at .Xltdorf. ereeted on the spot where he was sup- posed to have stood when he ainied at the apple. XVe did not oniit talcinu' the line .Xxeustrasse drive before we left for Italy, Milan, with the inost beautiful eathe- dral in the worhl, and the l'iIllllbllS paint- ing' of 'l'he liast Supper, eanie tirst. NYe were also interested in the ruins of the tire at the Milan Exposition. In Flo- renee we stayed at lovelv old Villa 'l'rol , ,M I . lote. where tleoree Eliot wrote Roniola and Ilandy Tess, Miehael Angelo, of neeessity. lills all Florenre. 'l'he l'l'izzi and l'itti galleries eontain, I suppose. niore olml niasterpieees than any other galleries in Europe. Next l'isa, with its leaning' tower. Flverytliing' seeined so old to ns, and the lduropeans seelned to reverenee antiquity. 'l'hey also seemed ra- ther serions over these tliing'seliaven't the sense of lnunor the Ainerieaus have. Veniee, the horseless eity. with its ea- nals and Dog'e's Palaee. eaine next, and we seeined to eateh the spirit ol? the Vene- tians as we were rowed in one of the Hblaek maria to tl1e hotel. In the even- 53 just after sunset, in the so-ealled Alpine 1, 111 'l'IllC 111,11'1vn11 1 1 1 1 oe r r ing. xvUllll'11 is lll1lSt 1'11l1'2lll1'll11.1', the lights l,Z1lFl1'0S 1115 the CEl6SH1I'S. We elimbed the 1111 1110 1111111-11. tllll 11111111111 111' the g'l1ll11Uli1S. l,l111'l2lll hill for the View and were well 1 W11-11 111911. 2-1-,,,.1,f111 Q-11111111li11rs. the 11111si1 r1-11:1i11. 1Vhen we reached Naples we 1 l.l'l1lll 1111- lIll1Sll'l2lllH s1:11111111-11 111 the 1':1- 11z11s :11 llll1'1'V21lS. 111111111 111111 1:0141 fl1'l'illlly l 111111 1-,,111,111111-, 41111- N1'U1llll 11111 111- s111- 11'ise1l to s1-11 :1 -11111111 'Sl1'1l 11111 1111 l1l'l' 11:11 1 1 1 . I 1 I 11, '- 1-11111' 111 111111 111 1111- 11111 1111l.111sl l'l1llll St.. llnrlfs s1111:11'e. wi1h its I'Illllllll'SS 11' u'e11ns. 1111e 01111111111 Sll'l'l'lN only s11x'1-11 ll'l'1 w11,1e---sidewzillcs 11llll1'iIl'4l 1111 111111 11:1V1 ' ments used :1l111g'e1l11-1'. 1 11411110 we 111111111 111 111- :1 very 111111l111'11 l 1-i1Y. 11:11111s11n113 l1l1ll1lll1g'S. street l'2ll'S. .lust fillltj' lloine wi1l1 s1 l'l'11l 1'ill'S. NVlll'l'P we llilll 1111:1g'i11e1l l11llll1' :Ill l'1l1llSl We sam' the 1111115011111 111's1 hy 111111111l11:l11-- ' Nl4f1?1?l44l insi1l11 211111 111111l1l :1l11111st 1lIlZl2'llll' li1111s 11111111113 11111 ol' the SlliHl1INVN 111 1l1Ill1ll'C 11111111 11111 1111111' lIIill'lyl'S. We snw 1.11, 111 the Sl1l11'l lllllf' We w1-r1- tliere, SI. l'1-- 1 , . 1 1 1 1 1 ters. llll' 1z1111':111, 1l11- l'll1llS 1111 lllL' A1 1,1 1 1 1 1 ,, 1111111 xvily, Il41llCll1ll'lN 111' Nl'l'1l, 211111 11111 1111sitively refused to even look at the ex- l'Pl'll1l' of :1 111111111-1111111 1111 museum of any kind. NVQ 11111 1'1l1'1flGS1'E'llL1 to gaze upon the 1Il1'1lll11Hll'2ll1lQ hay 111111 Vesuvius, look- ing' so 11111111-ent 111111 Sllltllilllg lazily. 11Ve 1011111111 Naples s11 dirty that it actually 1111111911 to its E1t111'ilI'llV1'll6SS. Pompeii we 1'll,11lyl?1l, 11111 wl1e11 we l11111rded our good sl1ip at Naples for l10lllP we were a tired 11111111113 trio, XVe spent. two or three sim- ply i1111z1l days in the Mediterranean- 111119 llOVPI'-111-116-f01'g'1111011 day in Palermo, S11-ily-then passed 1l1l11'e1l1z11' and entered the .Xtl11nti1-. The 11111 111-ean evidently 111111 QI Q'l'll1lg1'0, as we had rather had wea- ther 111111 1'Il1'11ll1116l'1?1l the end of a hurri- l'El111', lhe 1-a111t:1in s11i1l. 1Ve were glad to 1'1-111111 New York. 11111 hope some day to l'U11ll'll, ns we 111111111 1l11 things hetter next time. The Freshman Rush :111 111 1 O11 Nl1Y1'llllIQl' 27, lll1'l'4,' 1l1'1'1ll'1'Qll he- ,K 11. 1 , il foretl1e1l11111-s11f1l11- l'11111iz11' llig1l1S1-1111111 -1 :1 ll1l1Sl' l1l11111lv 111111tl11-1. Un the l'Vl'lllll' 111-f111'1? lliltl 11111111 11:1ll1-11 il g'1':1Y1' nssenihly of 51121111111 11111i1le11s 111 1lis1'11ss the llllllll- H1 1l1?lll'C 111111 N1'll:-2lSNl'l'1U1llll'SS 11l' the femi- l 1 nine t'l1lll1lIIj1'l1Ill 111: 1111- l resl1111z1n 1l:1ss, Glllll 111 11111111111 11l:111s lllbl' 12X2l1'11llL1' l'I'1il1l 11111111 the s11l1s1-1'Vi11111-1- 1l111- 111 their elders ' F1111 11111 l'll'1'Hlllll3l1l Insses 111111 111'l?Y1111lSly , 111l'1:111l1-1l 11111 S1111i111's, ll:111 they 11111 for 1l:1ys 2l1l1l1'ill'1'll Wi1l1 tresses 1111111111411 high lf! ll111lll 1l11- I11-1111, y1-11,1-111111 lllgjllltl' 1111111 that -. 111' 1l11- S1-11i111's. 'l'I11-1'11l'111'1-, i1 wus 111111111 , .1 111:11 1l111.1' Nllfllllll 1111 l111111l1l111l. 1.1 1 .Xs il I'4'Sllll 111' 1l11- 1lNN4'lIIllly :111111':1r111l 1 1 3111 ll111Ill 1l11-l111:1r1l Ihis i11s1'1'i11111111, 'll111 511 1'1l 11i111's 1l11 ll1'l'1'lP.Y 1111111111:1111l 111:11 1111- l1ll'l'Nll 11- lllilll girls :111111'111' 11111 lIlHl'l'1lNV, N11v1-111111 11,1 11- 111 22, 151011, A, ll.. with llll'll' l1:1i1' in l1r:1i1ls. 1111 All signs 111' i11s111'111-11111111 will 111- 111111- '111 1sl1121l.'7 'l'l11-11 the l'll'L'Nlllllilll lusses were Slllllllllllllxll, No 111111-11 was spoken, only the 1V2ll'lllllg' 111111111111 to, llowls of rage 211111 1111111ti111'z1ti11n 211'11se f1-11111 the Fresh- 1111111 ranks. llll1Gll they 1191121l'16L1. ln the lll1bl'11lllj1' there 21111102ll'P1l Fresh- l'llGll. Some wore their 'fresess 111 braids. S1111111 11111 11111. The feniinine Seniors z1g'z1i11 l'2llll6 tog'et11er. l1el1ellio11 must be 1l1lIl1SllUtl. 211111 it was 1111111811911 A1 11111111 there Q2l1llUl'9l1 outside the x'estil111le the Seniors, They were waiting for 1l11- l'll'0Nlllll9I1. They 1-anne. 1Vhen they z1111111:111e11 they were ushered to the I11111-I1-111111111. Miglity struggles ensued. llilll'111llS 111111 1'11111l1s fell rattling to the ll1111r. S1'l'ill1'll0S l21llll9ll on Senior coun- 11111:1111'es. NGYGl'1llUlGSS eoiffnres de- N1'0lIll01l. 'l'l111t 11,l'1 e1-11111111 there appeared El Fresh- lllilll 1-lass after the nnnnier of a kinder- 11'E1l'1Gll. 'l'he Seniors we1'e satished. They 111111 lllllllljled the Freslllnen. 3 111.1-111 1111111- 111131111 11111111111 ll 11111111-I 1111.111 11.1-R11-I '111 111 l1'?1l1 l1'll ll1' 111111111 ll11l1l 111117111-111 111.. 1.1: .,1 1. 11. 11 lll1llll'1' 1111111 l1r1' l1lll 11111. ll11xr'l1111l 'l11I he 1111 llwj 1111111 1111 111111111 1 l1111 1111111 1 1 lll' ll11111' 111111111 llllt 111 111111111 111 llle 111111 111 l1l111 1.111 been 2111 l1' 'lllllll 11111111111 and ll11111 llllliml the lwi-,I my Xtllllpg We :il Ib, FRA lllll ul M Yllltlljmg llllllx, lioii. lzuilr, XY, ff o-...H ' M . llfllllirii yr W Ll any sm 'Pl'r 11 Tim ll.I'of ug. i,.v-W., ,Y . t.. ...- mlhmmt lllhl fifty- ra oitleiitiy r-' hall lim' 7 ui ii hiri- r IL-all l elm' tlzwf Z' 'rrfffl lffif .I-iileii, will ,writ ol HI' H1 illr l:l f'l' Heil, pvzllrll vlrlflli gss ll. l'l liT iuiuv WI' llrih W' liel , Jimwhd -warwmw rglllltl llli l In '5l1Pl'l'l ll Q Hamill, F 7 1' , .Maile A . is rulilmlf ll lm. ii 5e111 llllde s'rvlllllllll d a Flesh' 1:82117 'indep ,ifil , rsutlillgd' Thi' H, rliITE nnQITIXvF:-Ra: Records Ilere are the reeords of six members of the class of 1907: Harry Young: Track-'03, '04, '05, '06. Foot-ball-'03, '04, '05, '07, Basket-ball-'05, '06, '07. Oratory-'05, '06, '07, Marquis E. Shattuek: Track- 'O6. Foot-ball-'05, '06, '07, Basket-ball-'07. Arthur Selden: Foot-llall-Hai, 00, IH, I Base-ball-'05 '06 '07 --s ,- l?aske1-ball- 00, 01. IIa.rry Fuller: v'- V Q-- Base-ball-0u. 06, 07, I3asket-ball-'00 Iieon German: Base-balli'05. '06, 'l'raek- 05, '06, George Cram: Uratory4'07. The Frat's Rosebud Oh, no, impossible, -Iaek, I will not,- I can not do it, replied llal Flayton, as he strode hastily toward the door. Hllold on there, llal l ex:-laiined .lark Vllinthrop, liurriedly rising from his chair and taking llal by the arm. IYait a minute, what ails you. why ean't you take her? She will not go with anyone but you, and we must have the frat's Rosebud at our party. VVhy, man, it would not be complete without her. It's no use arguing with me, Jaek, I know my mind. You know when I say a thing, I mean it ! said llal angrily. But Ilal, listen, began Jaek, but with a So long, -Iaek! llal slammed the door behind him and dashed down the steps into the street below. The above conversation occurred be- tween the two ehums, fellow-members of the Phi Gamma fraternity of the Lake View High School. Ilal Clayton, a Se- nior, captain of the football team, had been going with Irene Kinsmore, a pret- ty Junior girl, until lately when they quarrelled, and now neither spoke. Dark and handsome, Hal was a prince among the Iligh Sr-hool girls, but he eared only for Irene. Irene Kinsniore, rightly ealled the frat's rosebud, and the favorite of the lligh Sehool. was ret-lining in a large ehair in the library of her beautiful home, making a pretty pieture as she lay with her golden head resting on the crimson eushions of the ehair, lazily reading' the Quiver. A whistle broke the stillness of the room and a shadow eame into her blue eyes. llurriedly tossing her book to the Hoor, she walked hastily to the window, and, drawing back the curtains. gazed into the lighted street below. She stood there a few moments, when the whistle was repeated and a figure eanie into view. As it passed under the street lamp she reeognized -laek lVinthrop, who was coming to the house. llastening into the hall, she opened the door and waited for him. Good evening, Irene, are you going to be busy tonight? said Jaek, as he came up the steps. No, Jaek, eome in. I was wishing you would come over. Ilave you seen 11 '11 '1'1114: --Q1'I1'n1: 511. 1- 11, ll lf Ilalf Is lue still 2lll2'l'y.l'i aslwd lrmio li all in 11110 lllljiltll, as sho hal tho way to l thc lllll'2ll'y, where a hlaxiiig' grate hiv 1 llf?t'lil1lltAtl to tliem, Iroiul, after takiiig' 1 her visito1 s hat and l1Yt'l't'112lI, pivlwil her 1 hook from the tloor, wlwre sho had thrown it ill lltxl' haste-, and 11l:11'1'11l it on l the tahlo, saying: NYoll, -Iavli. what did Ilal say .' YYill lio talw 111v. ' I told llllll Il'ttIlt' hut lic 1'1-l'11s1-1l point, lllilllli. It 's no uso. NVo11't you 11'o , witl1 lllf' . ' 1 1 uv . . No, I will go XVllll llal or stay .lt 1 home. Yvs, I know I will miss a food 1 timo, Illlfl it'syo11r last llIIl'lY,ll and lrono si Qliod. Say, Il'lAllt?,7l llOQ'tlll -lar-li, 'gwhat was ls the trouhltf lnetweoii yoil and Ilal.' l van- 11ot li111l out 11110 thillu' :1l1o1lt it. Z1 N1evo1' lllllltl, 'I2ll'li,H l'l'lllll'4l Il'l1ll4'. I will toll ytlll alter thi- partyw-No, I will fl tell you IIHXV. Fil' You l't'lIlOlllll0l' the party at l'IV2llj'lllN and how attontive lloh Sparliiig' was fu 11111, tllltl l1ow l1P lioliiliuly put l1is ring' till ,H n1y li11g'o1'!'l Wlli t'YPs, said -Iavlc, HI 1'111114'-111l11-1'.'l UNV1-ll, a woiiple of days froin than I rel-mfivofl a Slllilll jowvloifs hox, tllwiiiiig it I ftllllltl to 111y lllll5lXt'lllI'llt, i111l11-4ld1-tl upon a piwt- ol votton, a hrass l'lllLL' svt I with 2Ij1l'l1t1ll stonc, Zlllll attai-luld was tl . ' 1-ard witl1 this 111oss:1g'v: 'NVitl1 host ' wisln-s for the fllllII'tl.fllill.7 I was 111- 1, digiianl illltl angry, I loolivil 111o1'1- 1-losply iii at tho writing' and lilllllltl it was 'Slll'UlN ,J,1vf llal ls. ,, t l'l11- 111-Xt day, I 1111-t llal at svhool A and lllillllivll l11111 lo1' his 1-'1tt llv asli 1111- U'll2ll l was talking' Ellltllll. Vlltllilllg' tho 1,-i hox out ol' 111y povlu-t, l asltt-1l him il' lie Wil had sl-nt it.. llv 1h-11i1-il it, 'ls11't thatyo111'w1-i1i11g'?' ffl' l,oolci11g'at it, lio said it was, 'hut' on llly honor, Irene, I did not. send it. l I1 11' W A1 HI1 211 angrily said he did. and he cried, 'All 1-ig-ht, I1'r1ne, if that is all the faith you have i11 me. it had hetter be quitsl' and with Illilt he raised his hat and walked away, Of wourse I was angry and would not r-all him hat-li. Next day I met him at sr-hool a11d he just llll l't'ly spoke a11d that is the way he has lawn Over SlIlt't'.H Siloiu-11 reigned attvr Irene's 'calf' and hoth starod i11to thu fire. Il'Pllt', I don't ln-livve IIal would do a thing' lilo: that. said -Iack, hreaking the siloiive. t'IIe is not that kind of fel- low. I will find out who did that and 111'o1'0 to you that lui is a prin1'e. Uh -lark, I wish yllll would, and tell Ilal I Zllll sorry. All right. Nino o'1'lo1'lcl IYhy, I did not ltnow it was tl1at late! 1-riod -Iauk, as ln- rose to go. Hlltllllt worry, Irene. I will tix it up for you. iulllltlllli you. -Iam-li. g'4111ll night. Htlootl night. Irene. Noxt day Ilal mot Irviio at svllool an-l wallued down tho strt-ct with her, illltl thoy wort- quite I'ri1-nelly. The iliiarrel was pzitwliwl up illltl the sun shone l11'ig'htly onvo lllt1l'U. for Irvin- was going' to the lil'2IllS party with Ilal. Vlllll' night of tho l'l'2lI'S arty arrive-d and l'Yt'l'j'Illlll2' was i11 order. The great hall was lltlillllllilllly 1lv1'o1'z1tP1l. l'1'9ttily 1l1'1-ssoil girls, manly looking' young fel- IHWN. stood i11 2'l'llllllS. lilllgflllllgl' and talk- ing, waiting' for tho tirst strains of the tll't'lll'Nll'2l to hegin their lirst dance. All wow tl1111'o hut IFCIIQ Ellltl llal, which fact Nt'l'llll'tl to plcaso one grirl, for she said to hor I'lllllIlZ Irene isn't POIHIIIQ, and we 1-an daiu-11 with Ilal, for he said he cer- tainly was c1'1n1ing. t'0l1, don 't brag, Mary, it is not too late yet, for, see, there she c-onies now, 56 1 111111K --1111. 11,1','v1l 1- -I ll'IIN 'lf l111l'w 'Wt IW 111 2111! l, -ilk li ll! 1 l111:1' I ll 'ill-ll'l Hill Ilif will 1111 .l11x11111 'llia 111 lla.: N111l1,,1l Yolll' 1l11v 1,, We 11, ll'1111,1: l'1.11 1 iirll ln- lllllupl Ill 1, Nlllfg hlmg PX 1'-1F llleud R 1 i lltlll faith M nite' ,M l iulllq..,5 tlllll WUIM nol mul LP lll' lr-,Y l X lull. W l llielllll - 'fr..E:::, hlll-l ot j., ll il..l' q,' 'ire ll, .llzll 'P im. i iw ' I rw-l1.ig vo'-Ii I--I. A :jf N in f.q1.' .l t l l , v if ,. il li-l .H l'1+f?1l H yi-llll! 1' 'I' v.ll i, , .-lil tl.. 1. ll. .H s N llllll al lla! i.-,' lll:ll '- HA wlll M' sllt' Flllkl ' he 5:1 f ll l' M lfollltl N -N lrlllll' l ll : ind ll' Ullllff ' , III lm ' all Sunil id if ffl 'PHE UQIIIVERY' and with Hal, too. Oh, how heautiful she looksll' N510 the ring alicair didn't work. I might have known she would Hnd it out, muttered Mary. 'tIVhat did you say? asked Graee. Oh, nothing, replied Mary. as she moved away. As soon as Irene entered the room, she was the eenter of a erowd of Frat nlein- hers. eaeh anxious for a danee. Irene was gowned in a, heautiful dress of pale hlue and gold, the Frat's colors. loking very lovely and happy. llanee after danee was glided through and a joyful evening drew to a, close. Soon, alniost too soon. the last danee was over and everyone rushed to the eloak rooni and then to their eahs. Irene and llal were the last to reaeh their eah, tired lint happy, and again the hest of friends, Irene, proud of In-ing the l7rat's Rosebud, and Ilal, happy that he and Irene were friends onee more. IIAZEL 'l'lBBAI,S, 'lfJ. Queries Answered by Quiveria Ii-e-l: NYe will send the song, Not Beeause Your llair is t'urly. it you will enelose a quarter in stamps. :xz .3 G. A. C.. 'tlT: 'l'he initials on the signet ring probably will not show in a group pit-ture. Anxious. WIT: 'l'here is no train lmaek to Ann Arhor at 11:30 Sunday night. Sl: IX: Soolionioresz Your laek of som-ial anihition niay he due to over-studiousness. XVe would ad- vise you to eonsnlt your physieian. :Ye il: Irene: You did right in answering when spo- ken to, although it eost you a. trip to the office. :ya sz se Mr. President: flj The part of little Eva on the stage is usually taken by a person with blue eyes and blaek hair. Si Pl? IX: C25 We cannot eonseientiously recom- mend anything' warrzinted to stimulate the growth of llllll0l'SlZ0ll Sophoniore and l4'reslnnan maidens. H, .i-. l.-l, 'll8: No, i,l1'2llIllIllllg' is not a satisfaetorv iuethod of preparing lessons. as :x: 2:-1: Inquisitive: NVe eannot tell you why there have lieen no iuore llhetorieals sinee the tirst. Perliaps you eould olitain the desired in- l'orniation hy elurrespondenee with the SI'lltltll Igtlill'll. I l'esl1le: No, the tlowers in the grove are not to he harvested exeept by nienihers of the lflaeulty. It is not permissible to use the llower-heds For hurdles. 441 Ik C. S., TIS: XVe would advise niore walking as a ineans of inereasing your height. Pl? ilil 511 Blue Eyes: Yes. the laee eurtains and extension table in the luneh room were kindly fur- nished hy the Sehool Board. Pill 23 Artist. '07: The hest sehool for studying Art is near Florence. 2 A11 Ill PM ,,11T 111111 W Pr1i1'Yf '1 H bmi 'im M11 mp We pre T . ' vb 511 I1 VI H1111 W B111 1-T' H Wpv ll MP if 3 131111: F 1119111 HU 11111111 W pmwl 111 .-11.115 H Thr WT ' T111 Nfl had 5111111 SIIFIV1? T11 SQHSUH UI The I1 l'I'!llll1ZE lllive P l'11z1vl1 an 1':1p111111. Ullvv gm same I11 Ulllyillg iflf nfl fea1t111g 3111111 WY 111 'WIQ4111 1111-rry Team 1 to the THE HQITIVERY' P. H. S. Foot At the opening of the school year of 1906, our prospects for a. good foot ball team looked very well. But even before practice had begun, some of the material had droppd out. This particular ele- ment happened to be the weight which we were to a great degree relying upon, so it left us in a crippled condition in that respect. But bravely and courageously did we, a mere handful of candidates, strive to make it a successful season. Headed by Captain Shattuck, practice was held each night on the athletic field, but enthu- siasm began to lag when we were de- prived of the services of a competent coach. llowever, we kept at it and made the best we could of the situation. The schedule had something strove to make season on our home grounds, October 6, having been arranged, we to look forward to, and a record. Vile started the Ball Team, '06 with the Oxford lligli School, and the rest of the 'schedule was as follows: Oct. lilfhlt. f'leniens, at Mt. Clemens. Oct. 21-Port lluron, at Pontiac. Oct. 27fl'ontiac, at Oxford. Nov. 3fl'ontiac, at Port Huron. Nov. 10-Pontiac at Fenton. Nov. 174lllt, Clemens, at Pontiac. Nov. 2-1-Pontiac at Detroit VV. ll. S. Nov. 20--Alumni at Pontiac. The one, we did well to end the season, losing 'schedule being an unusually hard six games and playing three to a tie. The sason, although unsucessful on the field, was not so unfortunate from a. financial standpoint. At the close of the season, each player was awarded a sweater vest as a. compensation for service rendered in behalf of the school. The season also closed leaving the financial situation un- marred by debt. ll. li. FITTLFIR, Manager, '07. Girls' Basket Ball Team, '07 The Girls' Basket Ball team of '07 was organized October, 1906, choosing Miss Olive Pepper, chaperon, Myrtle GYOW, coach and manager, and Bessie Stevens. captain. We commenced practicing at once and were able to put up a good game before the public, the first team playing against the second team the even- ing of December 7th, the second team de- feating the first by a score of 19 to 21. Soon We received a challenge from Cass City and accepted it. On December 15. one on the P. O. Sa N. train could hear the merry voices of the Girls' Basket Ball Team on their Way to Cass City. Owing to the small gym and the misfortune of having to leave our second forward, Nettie Chapman, at home, we were not at all able to put up a fair game and lost by a score of 32 to 18. , XVQ were entcrtaincd at an oyster sup- per after the game and the 'next after- dance was given in our honor, noon, a which was enjoyed by all. lVe returned home in the evening, very tired but happy. The second important game was played with South Lyon, in Pontiac, January 11th, leading them to dcfeat by a score of 31 to 8. An oyster supper was given in their honor after the game. They re- turned home the next morning, the home 59 ti ii.i.it...iiu. ui 'ul mmwmmum 1 WMU Lu fi W 3 nm' N. 'n H :V 4 HHN. M .KW . ,N- M' 'EW . y,, VC' , 1 N ,NW . ,Q .X ,vu , w Mix' wh ' YQHIIIN H quiwkly V l'l':u-ti.- IvVYav:1T zunlmu U .X nu:-lvw l i l f A THE HQITIVEHH team accompanying them to Orchard Lake. , VVe played South Lyon a return game in the city of South Lyon, January 25th. Vile played a double game, as the Pontiac High School boys played South Lyon High School boys. The P. ll. S. boys won by a score of 9 to 8. Owing to the partial decisions ot' the referee, we were unable to agree and refused to finish the game. A delicious supper was served af- ter the game. The P. Il. S. girls spent the night at the Hotel, and it was a night that will be remeinbered pleasantly ill by all. The next morning we returned home in good spirits. March the Sth, Cass City played us a return game. VVe played two fifteen- niinute halves, the score at the end of the tirst half stood 9 to -1 in Pontiac's favor. At the end the Pontiac girls had won the game, 21 to 12. A preliminary game was played that evening between Pontiac Business College and Pontiac Hig'l1 School team. The P. H. S. boys won by a score of 18 to 7, After the game the visiting team was entertained at a molasses and taffy pull at the home of Mildred Stevens, assistant center. Saturday afternoon. a dancing party was given at the Armory in their honor. No serious accidents occurred to mar any of the games. and the alertness and enthusiasm of every member of the team made success inevitable under favorable circumstances. The Cass t'ity game was the last of this year's series and we have all been more than pleased over the enthusiasm dis- played hy the members of the Pontiac High School, as well as the people of Pon- tiac. 1Ve kindly thank all who have as- sisted us in being successful. MYRTIiE V. HHOXV, Mgr., 'rJ7. 3? 15? rl? LINE Pl' OF l1Etil'l.Alt TEAM. Bessie Stevens ........i.......,.. iVillH,1'tl Edythe Mcllenry. . . ..... Guard Emma Peters .... ,,,..... C Tenter Mildred Stevens. . . . .Ass't Center Sarah Fink ..... .. . . ...... Basket Nettie t'hapman ......,..... Ass't Basket SI'BS'l'I'l'l l'ES. Hazel NVickware ................. Center Lennie llaxelitt. . , ........ Basket Lucile 1loft'man, , . .... Ass't Center Flo Nisbet ...... ..,......... t 'luard Manager .... . . .Myrtle C. Grow Base Ball Team Early in March, the Athletic Associa- tion named its ottieers Arthur Selden and Goodloe Rogers, manager and cap- tain, respectively. These two almost im- mediately set to work and a schedule of games with nearby High Schools was quickly prepared. Practice was first held immediately af- ter vacation, by the twenty-tive aspirants. A nucleus of seven seasoned players were among the number, and with the addition of two new-eomers of experience a team has been gathered that looks good for the championship of 0akland's lligh Schools. Practice games with M. M. A and D. l' S. resulted in close defeats, but the eX- perienee gained ought to stand the boys in good stead. The players this year will probably be as follows: Outfieldglfuller, Martin, Hubbard. Infield - Bowers, Sawyer, Sanford, 61 S VX, .W F w1 ' Wh I .Xm.1if!: V ml. I'HHf.m', M, 1l'1iw1iL Hizumg -mmv. Pain 'I'HE HQUIVER7' 'l'heta-Flint High School, Flint, Mieh. Iota-Morris Ileights High School, New York my, N. Y. Kappa-llarvard Iliuh School, Los An-- geles, Call. Lillllllllil-l'Hl't Huron Hig.:'h Srhool, Port llnron. Mieh. 1IllfEH1'EliH High School, Eureka. Cal. Nu-llaekensack High School, Hacken- savk, N. J. Omif'i'oi1-l':1sadeiin High Sehool, Pasa- dena, Cal. ,. . , , , 7 l ieslligh N-hool, liniialo, 3.1. Hlio-llorzn'e Mann High School, New York, N. Y. Sigina-St, Punl, Minn. 27? PX: 221 Honorary Members. Han'ry Coleman Edward A. Christian Albert R. VVelf:h Alumni Members. Fred 0. Thoinpson, '98 Bruce G, Broad, '99 'l'rac'y S. Smith, '99 G. Herbert Pound, '99 Clarence 'l'. Starker, '99 E. Deland Smith, '99 Robert J. Dawson, '99 Alfred L. Smith, '91 Arthur C. Pound, '91 Howard Osborn, '91 llwigrht NV. Smith, '92 Ferris N. Smith, '92 J. Prir-e Hill, 92 NVilli:nn J. Pnllaw, '92 Arthur VVallar'e, '92 George B. Smith, '92 William C. Sandford, '93 Frank Milward, '93 Charles Smith, '93 L, Sterne Stevens, '94 Morris W. Smith, '94 'l'homas H. Corwin, '94 Bert J. Smiih, '94 lra S. Hoe, '94 Mason VV, Gray, '94 Charles l'. VVebs1vr, '95 'l'nlbo1, 'l'. Smith, '95 A. Brnve Knight, '95 'l'homas J. 'l'nrk, '95 66 Elmore B. Gray, '95 Harry A. McBride, '05 E. Harold Pound, '05 C. Earl Dawson, '96 H. Roy Williams, '06 Willis Pack, '08 Hunt C. Hill, '08 L. Laverne Ureh, '08 Henry Hill, '10 Active Chapter. Edmund P. Sanford, '08 Donald S. Patterson, '08 VVilliam J. Tidball, '08 Alpha. Beaudette, '08 Satter-lee Sawyer,' 08 Edward Moseman, '09 Leo Beaudette, '10 Pledged. Charles Hubbard, '09 Charles Mnnroe, '96 Sorority of Kappa Alpha 1 Established Dec. 1, 1898 Honorary Members Ann R. Coleman E. A. Christian Mrs. D. J. Moreland XV. Smith H. Perry . C. VVisner Mrs. R. Stockwell Alumni Members. Blanche Avery, '00 ' i Lueile Avery. '01 Mae Bacon, '01 Georgia Bacon, '96 Maml Colvin, '92 Ruth Colvi11, '06 Lela Callow, '94 Ni1n1 Crnive, '93 Lila Carhart, '05 Enlalia Dickinson, '91 Mrs. Lneile Sawyer Drake Lena Feneley, '96 ' Isabel Hull, '99 Joyce Hodges, '09 Mae Hitchcock, '91 Lola Jennings, '01 Carrie Linabury, '02 Mae Linabury, '04 'Mrs Mrs. Mrs, S. 5? Mrs. S. Mrs. H v a Phi I SN 'Q 3.3. g 'VUE HQITIVER7' Flurvllvc lA1Il?ll1lll'Y. '05 Isabelle Heitsch, '07 Frnm-es Mitl-hell. '03 Alice Harper, '10 Effie Pavk, '03 Mary Ilill, '08 Mrs, Daisy Uzlllwm Pllelps, '02 Muriel Hodges, 10 Kate Sawyer, '02 Florence Ilubbard, 10 illemw Smith. '01 Gladys Jenny, '08 Ina Sllllfll, '01 Lola Knight, '08 Mzmll Xvllltlllilfll, '01 Virena, Palmer, '09 Mmg-1191-ite Wisnvr. '06 Catherine Sanford, '08 jury lwyllmll' OH' Ruth VlJl1I'l18l'S, '10 f'l1m'tc1' 1lCllllNf1'S Chapter R011 190f'0f1Sv1l M9l'lll9 H AlI1llEl+POIltlHC Higlh School Active Members. Beta-Throope Polytechmc II1St1tlltC P1 lll?ll'lilI1 lirave. '00 sadena. Cal. Edmx lrirmvn, '08 Halnnla-Detroit Central H1 h School Ruth Cz11'l1zu't, '08 DL't1'Oit, Migh, Q4 Xl! 0 T FF? . og I 2h 'll 'iw 'lf' 3 x X Z N . '. ix 1 7 , 4: -v-- .115 A 9? 5aMM,A 'ffw PK .4 , ' x. X l EVENTS 'ummumunm THE ' ' QUIVER ' ' Freshman Reception. The Animal Reception to the Freshmen was given in October at the Library Hall, by the three upper classes. At the begining of the evening an ad- dress of welcome was given by President Shattuck, of the Seniors. Following this there was a short response from Presi- dent Haeuser, in behalf of the Freshmen. Mrs. Coleman read two selections and then dancing began. Ice cream and cake were served during the evening. Except for the fact that the Upper Classmen be- came possessed of a varied collection of scalp-locks from Freshman heads, no demonstrations of class antagonism were displayed. ln this respect, well as in every other, it was the most successful reception held in some years. . Senior-Junior Reception to Superinten- dent Harris. . The Senior and Junior classes united in giving a farewell reception to Mr. Harris, which was held at the Assembly Room of the Court House. The occasion, owing to the general feeling of sadness which existed at the coming departure of one so loved and re- spected by all, it was necessarily lacking in festivity. However, it is one which will be remembered for the words that were spoken by the guest of the evening upon his farewell. He spoke strongly against the mob spirit which is responsible for insurrection in 'school life. He urged the cultivation of strength of character, which shall enable an individual to be firm for the right, in spite of popular tendency to the contrary. After the refreshnients were served, all departed with sincere wishes for Mr. Har- ris' success in his new undertaking. 70 Seniors at J a.cobs'. On the evening of February 15th, the Seniors and Faculty were very pleasantly entertained by Ruth Jacobs and Miss Wil- liams, at a Valentine party. The house was decorated with festoons of re-.l hearts, and the whole affair was in har- mony with St. Valentine and his customs. Original valentines sent to any chosen guest and favorite love poems' were two forms of entertainment that caused no end of amusement. Partners for lunch were found by matching literary charac- ters whose names were written on red paper hearts. Refreshments consisted of heart-shaped sandwiches, salad, olives, cake and chocolate, with an after course of candy kisses and hearts with mottoes. Seniors at A11ison's. One of the prettiest parties of the year was that given the Seniors by Irene Alli- son, in honor of NVashington's birthday. The house was elaborately decorated with red, white and blue bunting and flags, and those invited came attired in colonial costumes. Some of the gowns excited much fun and were novel, to say the least. The evening was spent with games suitable for the occasion, includ- ing George and Martha NVasl1ington, played to the tune of Rachel and Ja- cobf, A planchette board occasioned much sport by telling tales on the innocent Se- niors which were unknown before, and by revealing dark mysteries of the fu- ture. Sandwiches, chocolate, salad and char- lotte russe were served and tiny hatohets given as favors. Every one spent an en- joyable evening. X ilu FV if tli8 lf lllrll' Hull' golllllfi' l Fwplp .ll Wert' lllf mg, whit mg flirll ,mjvhoffil ,mpliwn .iftvf l Iris, Lili! 'he l111PPf mains up-ii nm The 51 tlia lliel Nlll'Pf'F A ,intl Allllll, vllli so Il The pr fll- IH ill? ll lt ls ol ture .lf l Nlilull as ljlllillv S. illlllltllpi llilll Q91 zlllrl plipi llellzule Hs xii Vol' fm. llvllll F92 llraml i , . t, lion tl, S llls D N zitlmmd llw 'll suse i hill- llle ilragamh, llixgwn lil? linux? ' of W1 HS In har, 'i Mui: an vlwseu WPI-9 iilu we it fir luulgh WY rlihrzug. 'll U11 I-pd Hllsliied of kid. olirggl libel' 1-trim ,Ili marines. 5. Hi Kiln' WT ' ilrllr .illi- 'a lllilllialf 5 llwI':llwl vllllllllg Hai e ullilrll lll A the Mui Wygi. Iu xiii . ,pail with ,W uizlud- Vasllillfillll-U 'lllrl ilutl iii' eiollrll Hlllih iiium-all Sf' before and of T119 tu' ad and VW' iiuv lliffhm spent HH eu' 19 THE ' ' QITIVER Senior Hop. On Friday night, April 19, was given at the Library Hall the first annual Se- nior Hop, by the class of '07. About fifty couples, including a number of U. of M. people and guests from outside the city. were present. The music for the danc- ing, which was freely participated in, was furnished by Cloonanis three-piece orchestra, consisting of piano, violin and saxaphone. After twenty-five dances and tive ex- tras, augmented by three encores each, the happy crowd dispersed, unanimously agreeing to forget to look at the clock upon arrival home. The Seniors congratulate themselves that the first Senior Hop was a Hhowling success' and earnestly hope that the sec- ond annual may be as gratifying in re- sult as they feel the first to have been. The proceeds of the affair were donated to the Quiver. Freshmen at Harger's. iVe, the Freshmen, have had two class parties. The first was at the home of Esma. llarger, at Pine Lake. We took the car to Edge VVater, where they met us with a wagon. We had ridden half a mile when we were upset. The accident resulted in the uneonseiousness of one of the girls, and the ehaperon sustained a. broken nose. After the injured were cared for, the rest of us proceeded on our way. We were too late to return on the car, so we spent the night. We reached our homes about nine o'c-lock the next morning, the latest we had ever been at a party. Freshmen at E11wood's. The second Freshman party was given as a surprise on Boardman Ellwood. The evening was spent in playing games and various other amusements. On the way home a number of Seniors were encoun- tered, but nothing resulted. EDITORIAL It is our wish to comment on the depar- ture of Mr. Harris, who resigned his po- sition as superintendent of the Pontiac Public Schools to accept a better one in Minneapolis. His decision was received with genuine regret by both teachers and pupils, and, in fact, by all with whom he had ever come in contact. His sunny disposition, energetic endea- vor for the right, and his enthusiasm with regard to all school enterprises, en- deared him to all. It is not an exaggera- . ' 1 t'on to say that no one who evei occupiei 1 his position was as generally loved and admired as was Prof. Harris. m all manner ld of Work. We, as a school, wish hi of success in his new fie The Quiver board wishes to express its gratitude to Mr. Mn-Coy for the trouble he has taken in preparing the half-tones used in this book, and to the Electric City Engraving Co, for their work in making the sameg also to Miss Warn for aiding us in obtaining many of the drawings. We feel indebted to Mr. Weatherhead, of the Michigan Printing Co., for the general excellence of the work put on this year's annual. And most of all, we thank our advertisers, who have made the publication of the book a linaneial possibility. This yearis prize story was written by May Belle Derragon, and is entitled 71 .Ll im u....mlul.l UL THE HQUIVERH For Revenge. The Frat's Rosebud, written by llazel Tibbals. received second place. Charles E. Ilubbard made the prize drawiiig and Clarence Jay second. The cover design which apears on the magazine was made by Sarah Fink. The record of the past year in athlet- ics is an advance over recent years i11 al- most every line, save track. Our foot- ball team was good. but played against cruel fate in various forms, and so can- not show the victories of former years. But tl1e stick-to-it spirit displayed by thc boys this year is certainly a step or two ahead. The basket-ball team of the boys was the best that ever played o11 the gym floor, which is shown by the fact that no otl1er team played a complete schedule of games with outside teams, The victory over D. Il. S. is one of the bright spots of the year. Also, the girls distinguislied themselves remarkably by flefcating the grils' team from South Lyon and Cass City before packed houses. NEED OF A COACH. With the passing of the past year in athletics, it becomes very evident that de- spite hard work little can be accomplished without proper coaching and control. Of this, the '06 football team is as good an illustration as one could Wish. Never before have the boys Worked harder, but they didn 't know how to best direct their efforts. Trying to have a football team or any other team in a high school With- out an instructor is like running an en- gine without oil. Next year great things are expected of our new principal, Mr. Bishop, but it must be remembered that Mr. Bishop is not hired to coach athletics and probably wonlt have much time to spare in that line. The only way for athletic success in the Pontiac High School is a competent coach, hired for that purpose. A univer- sity graduate in all probability can be secured to teach morning classes and put his afternoon work upon athletics. lVe have the material, b11t it is in the rough, and for good results must be han- dled by skilled hands. 72 :Z x year in that 119, nuplishewl mlrni. Of Qfmfl ,111 Xvwr rder, bu! rw! their hull IFHIH nm! mth- 19 an en- Put things vipal, Mr. Med IDBI 1 a1l1IeIw h mme to mf-vess in ,.,,mprIvHT A uuiwr' Q' will bfu QS ml pui Iivs. , i. m Ihr N lm hllll' The EMF init is nr mir WW, is mul? md WVU ollt of Ixizllltr. Q 3 press- mruiiull ,Huis Will goin? lo vi .ghgrles zhf Hell' el ll THE HQVIVEIT It was in the luneh room. An oiiieer of the new Freshman elass was discussing the subject of class colors with several Seniors. VVhat are the -Iunior eolors V' interro- gated the Freshman. Gold and white, answered a Senior. And the Sophomore P Turquoise and blark '? t'Yours are- K' Cherry and white. And what have the advaneed Fresh- men? Lavendar and white? Well, sighed the Freshman, I guess all there is left for ns is green and white. And the Seniors all giggled. 7? rlts Miss MaeCarroll treading Maehethl- '4Oh, horror, horror, horror! tMiss Snowdon opens the door.l sg: :xi Miss VVhitney Cas I. Defloniek and Il. Douglas step to the hoard in l'. S. llist.2 -'LI don't know whether there will he room for both of yon on that hoard or not. Mabel Maxwell, 'OS Ctranslatingjg Whose silence were you able to hear? il? 15? ' G. Turner Clflreneh I.l-HI used to wasf' fl? :XI M. Collard CArithl-H231 enpid inches in a. yard. 2? Fl? Miss Mae- Leon, why was Burns not living when this was written? L. G. '07- Because he diedfl M. Grow, '07-l'VVe have met the enemy and they are ours. 'l'wo ships. two brigs, one schooner and one seoop C'sloop.j Pl? SW is Shearer- The enthusiasm of Burns after death. 241 SF Gould CPhysiesj-HVVhat. change will I make when I go to the moon Z Miss lXI?lf'+HhfVll2ll. do we eall sheep when it is in the market ? ' Van Auken-'tVeaI. :Xi 9? M. llffflifi' iflieerol- Do not think this former gentleness ot' mine will en- dure forever. :jg :xg sg Miss Mae Ito girl leaving Freneli HQ- Mi'ss Kyle, you left your pad on the seat. .W .W ., Peter Voorheis4 'l'he llenaissanee was a re-lnrth of the aneientsf' elif rl? Miss IVl1itney-UNow let us get so- lykll-.77 3: rg: NV. -Iennings- She went over to the goose Ciiuisel side. :Ki all 13-F Miss Mae Cto Graf-e Kylel-Hflraee. you ought to read tt'hilde lIarold.' 231 :HS Il? Miss IVhitney- IVhat is meant hy the Vernaeular 3 tl. lleitseh4 Men who lived during the middle ages. se :je . ,. Mae tlollard Cspeaking of music'- Say, girls, ean't any of you sing besides me? :lk 'H Holdie Smith Hlerinan IIJAHI have a lrright idea. All the pupils on the front 'seat turn around in great surprise. :Xe sg gr: Morris fin f'he1nistryl-t l'o get an atom, did you divide a. moleeule again and again V, 1'ionldg I donltg I never did it, you know. - 221 :iff it: Honld lf'hemistryl-4'IVhat is the po- lite name for sntfoeation tasphixiationl F Fuller- Suicide. 77 Pl? X' FX: Q Miss Mae. fling. Lit.l-George, who was Flora fl' George C.- A flower. THE HQUIVER tl, Smith tfilerman II.l-'tlle rose him- self. Gould tChe1nistryjh Vilhat is KOH used in V7 Fuller- In the fine arts. Gould- Name an instance. Fuller- In the manufacture of soap. Gould-'tWhy does the smoke come out of a man's pipe in circles? R. .l.-ttllow do I knowli' ik it if President Shattuck, of the Seniors, waxeth poetic as follows: Little boys should love their sisters, But I so good have grown, 'l'hat I love someone else's sisters As well as I do my ownf' NOTE: As Brother Shattuck hath no sister we are at a loss to know the exact degree of the love hereby proclaimed. :XI 2341 iff However, I knew not what to think, VVhen I beheld it there in inkg My muttering lips gave forth no sound, For 'tExcellent is what I found. fl? 1241 ii Miss Mac. 6-Iun. Engl-'tYou can learn more through observation than text-books. There was once a famous teacher who, believing this, gave one of his pupils a fish to study, and he kept him on that same fish for several weeks, I believe. Mabel Derragon Cto Emma Peters, a rod awayl- Say, but it must have been stale. eq: :pg ,ig There, remarked the industrious Feesliman as he rose from his seat and placed his Algebra on the desk, 'tshe ean't say I didnlt spend an hour on this consummate lesson today. Htl iff il? Miss Maef'arrolI lin Eng. Iiit.l to Flo- rence Seeley-- What would you think if doomsday were near? F. Seeley, '07-t l'hat something was going to happen. 76 Harriet Douglas, '07, Cdefining wakej - A wake is after a person is dead they 'sit up- :lk :li Pl? Irene Allison, talking to Harry Young, said: Harry, don 't let your youthful in- clinations run away with me. :XI fl? 411 Miss Whitney-t'Yes, that's the class I've just been holdingfi Voice from the rear- She must have had her arms fullf' it fl? 'lil Harry Fuller Ctranslating Germani- t'Today, only today, am I so beautiful. iff if P? VVe are informed that some of the Freshmen have enlisted in the infantry. Irene DeConick CEng. Lit.J- Oh, that this too, too, solid tlesh would melt. A man was arrested this morning for striking a Freshman. Wliat was the charge '? c'Cruelty to animals. Miss VVhitney-HVVhat other mineral products were brought from England? V. Bocie- VVool. 3? X :YF Grace Northrup Ctranslatingl - I should judge that Cataline ought to be killed by death. PX' 16 iii Miss Whitney-t'Now we come to the Arabic numeral 'H' if QF Sli Harry Bassett CJun. Engl- When Orpheus died he was buried in grease. :Rf Sk IK Mr. Vivian Boice- He hit him right between the nose. 99 'll :lt Freshman Beaudett, when getting into a. hack to go to a party, was rather as- tonished to hear the hackman call to lnm, in a deep voice, Where to, Braee's? X Frey. Lgllll ll lillllill H gyhliill lul:PU4 l ll' ll ptlflliizfl We Tllr lieiwn' E4 Dell lb We To Bm The .lui lint lilv lla lilii 'Til lllss W Mill and They They Tlivy Oh. h Ther film!! ful ii.. P vlass i have ian , itifiil of Iliff mry, Jli. that li, lillllf fill' niiiienl and I U 1 - l ht it be mi it the ,H When arfiiw. liilll Wm mn! im I-glllfl' 35' U Call to ihfff lu' THE 'K Freshman Arnold- I knew all about Latin before now. Pl? if IK Gould Cto VanAuken, who was making a whistling noise with his tongue?-'gVan Auken, put that new plaything: up! SF if flif VV. P. Gould KChen1istryl- NVhy, Miss DeConiek, y0u're all right. fXf :lk fr? Miss MaeCarroll lin Eng: III.l-t'VVliat was the ancient idea of the path to -- heaven il ' ' E Dlrragon lhe 'XI ll l XX t . L -1 - . i iv 'av. it :Xe SF Poor Charlie llubbaril VVent to the Cupboard, To get his history and bone: But when he got there. The Cupboard was bare, And so poor Charlie Got done 'lf if 52 If I were Donald Patterson. I know what I would do- I'd Hunk in all my studies 'Till Floreuee's a Junior too. 3? if :Ik Miss VVhitney-'KYou may pass to the board and write orally that deelensionf' 27? file 5? LATIN. They are all dead that wrote it: They are all dead that spoke it: They must all die that learn it- Oh, happy death! they earn it. QVIVER We nngrht have pnlilisln-il thi in and regulations ot the l'onti ll Ilii li School, but spare won't permit FX: 25? Miss Maet'arroll Hun. li . ,H this elass have evidently torgottin t rules for spelling, This ought 1 to Now I got my old spelling lioo th o lllwlit and looked these rules up Moral: liven a tearlier somrt Q e t . IDF 241 Miss IVliitn1-y Clooking for an im ieet tense in a Herman boo Mel anyway. 1t's in your appendix ig: eg: In llliysiograpliy, one girl slipiei pieee of ehalk into a dish of X ite no taining' a pie:-e of marble. utes later Miss Pepper, ni 1 whiteness ofthe water, exelainn d x girls, just look how that marble seems be melting! IYliat can be the n it ' 311 fl? Sophomores saw sonietliing' true, They tlioneht it was the Firshn vlass, But when to it they nearer ll in ln They saw it was a look' e- 1 liast night I stole a kiss, Today my l'4lllSK'l6lll'P hurts r w - ' 1 - lonight I think I ll take it l lllt' SH l And put it where I got it frm ni 77 n 'X X'+X X X+'X'401'-101''Z I Z-+Z X'-X0X'+I' 'Zvi' 601' 'X+'!' 'X' 'Kai' 401' 'Z' 'X+'Z'+! X X' '! !'+X' 'X' 'Z ! X I ! !0Z'+Z'+X' 'Xf'Z'+X' 'X0!-+X'+X X X+'! X'+X X X I 3 X X' 4 4 o 4 'Z' -X' 5' A p 'g' i 32 Q 6 Q 5 .sz 3 3. A BUSINILSS CARDS. gli L5 54 6 44 ff. 55.62-web-fb-Gr-Q-QPDQ-14:-eiD-6w412sGRDGRDf3R0GRuGw6b-GvvGvv6R'6w6D-6Rv6:'6RvG2A6:-6206206223 2 .3. A A-- A. A A H I? 'E' DR. H. c. GUILLOT, lvl. D. GEO. F. BRONDIGE, ,. 2? Omce, Beaudett Block- Fire Insiillianceialegbfgracts and g 5, . ., , . U ea s a . Y Residence, .lb FQIFUTOVQ Ave. Office, New Turk Block' if 32 .QI 3 uf HOMER H. COLVIN, 'I+ ff: Attorney-at-Law, W' H' LEHMAN' D' D' S' 5: 5: Office, Treadway Block, Over Weed's Drug Store. 'IQ 4 -2. Jas. H. Lynch. Aaron Perry ' 5. Z' LYNCH G. PERRY, J. F. SPRING, D. D. S. 2 ,ff Attorneys, , , v 4. -if Rooms S and 9, Dawson Block, Natlonal Block' 'X' Ii: Carl H. Pelton. Clinton McGee. 7 31 Ii: PELTQN 3, NVGEEY C. S. BUTTOLPH, D. D. S. If: sg. Attorneys-at-Law, l . , 4. Stockwell Block. DAVIS Block' Q. f f - Q. Q CHARLES s. MATTHEWS, J. E. SAWYER, 21 Q1 Aff0I'H9YAz1t-Law. Insurance and Real Estate, Ig 3+ Over Pontiac Savings Bank C1-Qfoot Blgck, 3: 3. -.- H ee - -1- DR. ELMER CHARLES, sg. Turk Block. Both phones, DR- L- R- LUMBV- .g. ' H 9'. .t5. .'db ' 5: Om' fl aygpofntmgngl dn y Office, Crofoot block. Both phones. is ff 23 f H. S. CHAPMAN, M. D. M. W. GRAY, M. D. +I' ,fl lu of M. 'sm qu. of MJ Y 3: Oflice, Masonic Temple. Pontiac, Mich. 51 ,,g,,4m4,,x4.4nu.4n, W W M- 4 5 . . . + ' M. F. Llllls. E. E. Hymers. DRS. AVERY G, LOSEE f - , fi :.n.l.us .1 HYMERS, Physicians and Surgeons. -1. if Rooms 8-9, Turk Block. No. 11 N. Saginaw St. fi K if 1 .f.,. . . Y. - ,W YW. ,.,..,.,, M., YW, fx, xy., +I' 3' Isabel Heltsch- Mi-. Gould, how do Miss Avery lEnglish II.l - The 2 .ff nodes look? Thames runs east and west. v, ff' MF- G0l1lf1-'WVhY. Hwy dou't look. Boice, '09- Does it run both ways? Q 5' :ls 4. sg 4, vi: M. Derragon ltrying to read an es- Gould lin Physics!- What makes 3' sayl- Ha, ha, ho, ho, hee, hee, hi, hi, that sound. Mr. Sibley? :Z 33: ha, ha! 4 44 A Sibley, '07- The holes vibrating. 4, ' ' 214 PEG 'lf ,XO Miss McCarroll- What is a siren? Miss Avery fto Freshman classb- If M. S.- An animal. Wait until I turn on the light, so 4. ' Miss McCa1-roll- What kind of you can see to talk. ,Q animal. 4' 4' -1' ,v M. S.- ln this case a girl. :lf lil :lf Miss Parkins, what is love? Helen-''lnmaginationf' Mrs. Coleman CAncient History IBD - Miss Porter, your map is fine, it doesn't look a bit like the one in the book, 'X+'!++'X X+'X X X X X X X X !'4 ! X''! X+'!'-X X+'X X X X+-!+'X''X'+! X+'X ! X X'+X ! X+'X'+X !+'I X-+X+'!+'I X+'!''! X !0I'4 X M+4-'!+'! !-'X+'! I X1 E wi -e--sf-:--x--m--a--n--a--:--n--:.-+-n-++-a.-++++-1--s--m--a-++-s-+-n-+4-+++-s-+++-1--e-+-n--1.-1-.5..,,+ se--n--e--x-+1--4--A--z--c-+ 1-+ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 5-fini' EQ I 3-1- 4- -1- l 'Q-55 S IDS The -4,,. ,ul U- makes ning-.1 usil' nt. 50 .,. 151 ine, 'I in we -1f'l !01 ! I''I'4'-!-4f+i-4+'I'+'l ! ! P+P'P'!+'P4 P-P'!'4 P4 P'X !'-! l X X !'-! X ! !0X'-Z !-'X X !''X ! I X'4+'X !-'! X'+'X !'M'X ! ! K' 54 v v'o 0.4 4. - 25' u Standish Sibley ftranslatinf: Frenchl -2- a U - He wiped his brow with his linen I , l mustache, ,f, i af va an .?. Miss Whitney- VVhen I want, a 3: Certain township I simply name over -I4 one row and they all come to me. as vs se ,P 4' .lust before Tell shot the apple 12: i Quoth the worm within it hi-l: 5. 4. Here is where I do some praying g' ,P That the arrow hits the kid. 'I' sf at ar -X4 E There wus at young lady named Iii Corey, 'ff M N ' S Qxhose own pulrtieular glory 0,4 as mn ting a it .' 3: In Mac's English Lit., 5 I By telling time Ywhgole of the story. ,f. Z Miss Whitney tEng. HiSt.i- Who fi' was Lord Darnley that Mary, Queen .fi Z? of Scots, nmrried'? 'Q' 1 Goldiefhl don't know, but he was -1. foolish. 5. :ic ak fp There wus an young lady named Hodge, -5' 2 XVh0 never zittenipted to dodgeg ff 4. BOTH PHONES 106, But studied all day 5 'I' Without any plays 'Q' 3: That wonderful lady, Miss Hodge. 'I+ -if 'X' 'ij 12 'f C ' 2 Roses, arnatlons , , 3 E Whitfield cf: Young 55 -P . . Z Special Floral Designs for any 2 OCCBSIOH made an C IVCIC E promptly. AND GROCERIES. E 'X' 2 ut o town i 0 I 'P . . 121 2 orders wlll recelve the best ggg -1- . . Q51 :Xi of attentlon, Compliments of 3? if M ' 2 ' Fl IC My S f ontlac ora o., 3 Drug Store. Both Phones. if Orchard Lake Avenue, 5: PONTIAC. 35 S ?..g..1.-x..x--x'-x'-x-'x-xf'x'-x.-x-'x--x-x-'x-'x--10:--:swfef'x--x-fx-+++'x-xf-x--x+-:-fx--x--x-+-:-fx0xw:0x--x-'x+'x-'x--x--x- .0x-4-'z+fx--x--:wx-fx-4+-x+fx-.se-xii: ' u 5,4 9 'v + 4 4 4 4 4 4 9 4 + + 33 + + 4 4 4 'Z' -xl ?' fi- 23 li 4 + + 4 4 4 'Z' 4 + 4 4 4 E + 4 4 4 4 Z S? MF4Hi4 444444444444444444444444444444444444g 4444444444444444444.444444444 .444444444444 Q444444 3' 5 m Z 25 3, Q . 3 cv g m g: QE E: '11 Eg. Eg1 ::I:: - g F. Q ., tx, C C:J cn -Q c:::, vu. :',,. an w Cn: O QD' Q 9 0 G Nl Sm :1lgcn P S UU- Q N53 LU' 2 :bus 'Q r Oil U1 D3 . so Ee to Qu Q- W H12 2' -- 'em Q Cb 3 in-I T 'S , N Q it -.R cu H Nico l'1 Q -. Q- 4 c:, : CI, 95 :3 3-,ig g M ' -'Q l'l'l mf- ' Q g O U7 -I P af .B ' cz.: 5' E SD 2. S UNI '-1 Q g zum 5 Rom 2 C3 'ws rf-1' Q Q 53' 5 Am U1 nv 53, ing U1 T Q 5, rn U -5 .-. FU Z C5 4 o V' mn q' st' rn C ul QB gn m W Q E in Q m :rg 'ff' '-1'-1 2. U :' '05 '40 M. Q E QU W g-F 3 6 U3 -, 4 sa QQ GET fn 3- -5 ' in rn 2'-93 52 4 O -. 9 n.': ul M ' ig m 0 Q fn P: Q :: :I ,, D- Ln : u C:D n. UQ CQ Q, QQ Vg 9 Q C .1 'V' . Q. I o 4444 ,444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444q THE BEST LEWIS Sf, URUFUUT v v 50. 54 E+ 4 .54 ,F u.4vX4vX0X4vX4 010244+41444 4X0X4+:nX4 402010414 apex.-X4 QQ uzwxozoxuxnxv 4:4 gal. offv:oX0:0Xo:oXooXoQ4u!w5eI4q4+z4 +94 W 'f' u I' or '5'lwJ,+,1. 6 01. on 111111 S. llge' hgglm- 4.4.4.4.4..4.' 4.4.4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4. 4.4.4. 4.4. 4.4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4.4. 4.4. 4.4. 4. .9 4. 'X' 'X' 4. 4. 4. 'I' 4. 'I+ 'Q Ii. 4. 4. ,Io 4. mln 4. 4. 'F 4. axe 4. 4. 4. 4. 'I' 4. 4. .Iv 4. 0:4 4. axe 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .Xe 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. bl. 4. 'I' 4. 4. 'I' 'F 4. 4. +I. 4. 4. 'F 4. 4. 'X' 4. 4. -1. 'X' 'X' . 3 4. ox. 4. 'E' 'A' fi is . is -1 4. Ponfiac Public Schools igh School. Fine11y 1-1111111111-11 11111111111111-11-s-1111ysi1'111, 1'111-11111111 1:1111 1111111-gic'111. A Corps 111' 1t'ill'111'l'S w1111 111'1- S111-ciulisls i11 1111-11' 1'1-s1111C11v1- l11'1'211'11l11'111S, T11111-- 011211 Courses ill 1C111:1is11, 1.111i11, A1211111fI11i11CS, SC'11'1lL'l' 1:1111 H1S11l1'X', 1'11vc-1'i11g 111111' y1-1115 i11 1,-111011 1l1'111lC11. TW11 j't'S1l'Si l'011l'S4' i11 11'1'1-111-11, G1-11111111 '11111 1111-1-11 CO11I'Sk'S 21l'l'i111,LQl'11 1111 1111- 1'1L C11YL1 s1's11111, 11111111'i11g 1fl1' 11111 Y2l1'j'11lH 111111111111.s 111111 1115108 of 1119 i1111Lx'i1111111 11111-i1s1 111'1-11111'i11g 1111111 1'111' 1111- 1'111Yf'1'S11j' 111111 1'111' 11111 i1111111-- 11i111e11111iuS 01' 111:-. S11l'C'1ll1 11111-11111111 Zin-n 111 1111111ic S111-111ii11g 111111 1'111-111111-111 w111'11. G1'11111l:11es of 1111- eig'11111 !1'2ll1U of 11111 11is11'ic'1 sc-11111115 11111111111-11 wi111o111 1'111'111l'1' 9x11111i11111io11. C'1'e11i1 given 1111' w111'1i i11 11-11111 111111 1111-V1-11111 L11'il11l' sc-11o111s, 1'2v1-ry 111' cility OITL-1'e11 111111-1'1-si11e111 111111115 lhlll' C11l'1'j'1I1Lf 1111 111k'1l' w111'11 W111117111 111-1-1111 111- loss of 1i111e. Tuition: High School, Per Semester, 51510. Grammar and Primar Grades. 111111111211 '1'1'211111ll9f in 1111- 11151 six g1'1111e-5, 1111-11111i11g YYl'2IV11IPL, S1-wing, 1111x111-1. lllllliiflg, wood-wo1'1i 111111 bent i1'o11-11'o1'1i. P11111s 1111- .11s11 1111111-1' 1-111151111-1'111i1111 1'o1' 1-x- te-1111i11g this work 1,111'1111,211 1111- 5tfYL'I1111 111111 viyllfll F1'2'f1l'H- 11115 will 111'HYi111' UUIIIUS- lic Science 1.11111 A11 for 1116 girls, 111111 S11U1l'NV1l1'1i 1111- 1111- boys, IGX1,-14111-111 1l1S11'l1f'11111l ill 111'11wi11E5-511001111 1111111111011 11Li1llQ giv1-11 to 111'11XY1I1QS 1111111 1111- 111111 Il111ll1'E', I11 origi- nal designs 11n11 1o 111oc-1111nic111 111'11wi11Lgs. Music, 1ii11111-11g111-11-11. '1'11111-1111g11 i11s11'11c-111111 in the 655911111115-A1'1111lllt't1C, 1it'il111I1g,, Wrilinz. L11-11x1'21l1111' 111111 1iiS'UI'1'. Announcement, Course of Study. C10-1 VVFUC UP FRANK P. BUCK, Superintendent of Schools. vvvvvvvovvv, oggvvvvvovvvvvovvvo 'Quo 4 ovnvnvsvnvn-ooofoevnvqvovs. p v v v v +14 , Q .7 v v v '.,'.,'..'.v'.4.14.0,040'.+', . . '4 4'504'4 4 A A a 41 o A 4 4 A e 0 A o 4 4' 4 . 4 4 4 0' , 1 Jf.J.v. n...f4.v, , . 4 4 o 4 4 A . ,',4'vvX4vXfv1+'. I X A'4 X x x 'x X'4'o A 4 A A 0 4. 9.4 .1 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. in 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. QI. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 1. 4. 4. 4. 4. .4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 'F 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .Io 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. in 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4.4. 44.44. 4.4 4.4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4 4. 44.44. 4.4.4.4.4.4. 4 4. 4.4.4 4. 4. 4.44.44.4. 4. 4.4.4. 4.4.4.44.4.4.44.4.4.44.4.4.44.:X+g. . Iii 3:- 14 4' EQ Lf I ,I I Q For The Latest Q14 0 0 J Y Y V Y Y V Y YV H7777 V Y - 'A' 4. E 4 E. -E ---E E..- -.-s.i -1. 4. N E I ff' ISI 4 I 22 ,., 1 4. JEWELER... 4 4 I -if 4. Y 4. I ' +5 4:4 W 'A' 4. I I '? 4. W ff 4 rr:1 I y I I I ICI .. I Ice Cream oda J. I 'A' WILL SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS EOR I , . 'Z' . . 'f' Drlnks 'f 2' RELIABLE OOOOS IN 3. 4. . 'X' 4. fg- 4. +4 4. 'F 4 fren 6 4 ,., 4. .3. 4 QVQ 'A' 4 + . .,. 'I' JEWELRY G0 To '? ' -14 4 'I+ 4. 'I- ,I, 4. .IQ 'P 4. 9 -5- ,XQ 0:4 , '34 V 1 1:1 35 SAGINAW ST. NORTH. E ff. 4 4 4. 4. 4. 4. aj. 'I+ , . Iii 1 4 232 -2+ XUU SHOULD RIDI1 IN 2' 4 0 N 1 .ff 'A' 4 ' 4 J. f .,, '16, - , fl' -i if 4: 'I' 4. I I I ,V 4. 4. l ' V. Q X 4. 4. gf '. . 4. ' 'I I I X t b V h l ' Iii ' Q I M CS CFD IHCS UI' C IC CS. 232 'I' 'I lVfs11Kf ,f 'X' 4. Anzgzx, -2 lo ' -5 4 4 .. 4. 4 4 4. 4. 4- I E hz' W I MW? msg: 1. f :iz . L.-- , I-- Q - ml Q fiyj f A ,d. . 5 4 J ? , ,...L- A, ,--,. 132 ' I 5 .X , E- , I U N 7: dh . tif, 5, I fi: 1 -.l...,...L,L.1.,., L..-...A 4 X, ' HX5, . ff, 5 I f -1 II n I v .. - 4 A' 3 ' ' I 1 ' , ' 4 I, ,I f I I. 1 I . 3. 4. If A I , '-xhgy, 4 If Q.-4 hwy Ig, 'I+ s.L.1 'f Wise.-BEM Ll, Q PX' 4 '. 44 '4' ' 'w Made Only by J 45 fs. 0 Ontlac uggy Ompa y ff H 4. 9 b'4 4. PONTIAC, MICH. .. vvvvvvvvvvvvvvovvvv vvvvp vvvv vovo vvvvov . 4444444444444444444444444444,444444444444444444444444444444444444 'X' 'X' WI fl' f 6 4' -9 +I 4 ,I 4' 4' 4' 'Z' G '. 'I' 4. 9 fi' 4. 'I' 9 'P + 'I' I5 4' 4' 1' + -1' 15 4' 4. .5 'P ,I 4. 4. + 'P 6 'Y h , :I 3 A 'I' 'I' + .lvl 4. In : e -r 15 ll I I 'F + + 4. 'P I I 4. : , . 1- fl 'I' 'P 1 g. I3 Z5 f' x + 'Q -1- 1 4. L 'Z' X3 I? lrsn Mm Im' 4' 1' 'lf I 1' HIIII' WLIS + R10 J, Con. 'I- Z Ilwyv 'I' i' 4' fiilmi ,F hm I 21 + -I 'N l l-'IN .g. , Q 4 ' Q . :!1 X ! !-'I !'-X++Z'-!0!+'!+-X-'!+'X !':X-'!-'X-'2++X''Z'-2--101'-X024X-Z'! X X'-X-'X-'! ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . ' ' ' ' , 1 I f Q ', 20:09 'II 'I a. . EI EIIP ru H1 P . . rut ers .1 'H ig I E 571 ' P H S t W. 35' cQ C 1 if Oo 'I+ s .g. -1- 'X' '-'T Z .5. Z5 CAMERAS ,ff l'a I -Q and if -li , fi 'lla V ' 5, FULL LIN E O F -4 1 . .v. PHOTOGRAPHIC Iii ' 4' UPPLIE f G cl M 1. ' 1 00 erc andlse 3 5 now an a d ll 1 h ' -y f e tlme. 4- 5.' 5:4 ,g7nuth 84 'L.lP15e11r111g. .g. . .il ,,,. fi Je ' ' A , , 1 'Wm Va . 4, , .f. 121 'gl Mu HQ 'K E LJ ','g'U, 1fI:' lg Q W .g. A 1 6 A, xl l Lu, ' ,,x4 Q , km I . , 5. I? .5 X C'-ig, zl'ffaQQmlpfffffhm6' 2 3' ' - ' I .ffr '7 , . V- f ' 1 ' ,P ' 'Q' waQA Xl N l 1, I ,bf ff: 3: 'F , W, W f 4. ll -J, ll - .:. g 1,1-,, . X N14-1, +L, , ff . 5 . :A li H l ' fQ 1:f- 'J' ,I 5 f :X Q, :iz J W - if 'ii if Y X A' A V ll 5 ,11 4. ,F iinlg X ,X .lair ll 'Yi l 1' all -1 ,N -si J , if - .5. 5: I ,V gsm J lx Q, mir , Q ,- A 1 1 . 1 W. C-77 1 ,f f fi -.L 1' f 1 -2. l..fl 1 ff 1 f' , -5 . ff f T, ww - ' A C ,A .fx I -3, LV V. 71, A., -K 5 lin I eg: If ,ffdgg v Ig 'if JH Km yr' rll'11u,Hm' I U lim 5. 53 Q 'I 1 llMlwllllllllllllllwf Q .iq , Li- ' . 'uvonnu-r 5. 'X' . . . . 3' ,v 15 spcefllly lAll1llGIl if 11's nut czlwelullly th '5 :iz laumlererl, Nu nmtler whe-1he1' Ytvll S e way to keep Warm If ,QI Day' QU C9nt.s 01' SSJJIH. znpiujcc for Xlllll' But tlje- way to kqep cool is 1 4. shuts, they ll he spoxlell lll slmrl ul- ve-ry much d1lle1'e-nt and just as pleasant. a 11' der, unless skill is exwrcisml in ilu,-11 1 ,Sf washing, starching null ironing. We Place G Gas Range ,I ff' do laundry Work intelligclltly :lu l . 4 k. - 4. 1' conscientiously is our only Clqnim In Yom lfflgm ml YOUV house will be C001 'Q' Q. laside from fzlil' pricesj for your lull- fm you WIN be IMPPY- 'X' ' g . .'. Z Iona Q . Sold on Easy Payments. '2- ,qi Pontiac Steam Laundry, 'QI g D. 1. OLIVER, Prop. PONTIAC LIGHT COMPANY. I A. ' ' 4 14-v'4v'4 b'Q0'Q h'Qv'Q n' ' ' ' V V V V ' Y Y Y U' . . . . . . . . . . . .'-v.+'. .'-.f-.--.+-M.-M.-g..g..g..g..g.,g..g..g..g..g..'. ,X 4010! '+X 1 1' '1 1 1+'1' '1 1 'r'1 1'4 1 1 1 1 '1' '1' '1' '101' 101' '1' '10 . 4 4 .4 4 4. 4. 4. 1I.+j.1j..!.+:.4. 3 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4 4. 4.4.4. 4.4. 4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4. 4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.-1.4-+1--? .. .. .. . 4. 4. 4. Q 4. O 4 4 4. 4. 4. 4. - - - ----f -f -' 4. 4. 4. . . 'X' XY111-11 y1111 1111v1- 1-11111 11011111 Y11111' High S13110111 f'11111's1's, C1111111 you 'X' 4. 1 4. -I+ 1111 11 111.11111 l11111Q 1111111 s111J1111 1: few 1110111115 111' s1111ly :1l ll 2111111 Cf1111- +I. . . 31 1111-1111111 Sf'11flf11A7 A 11111l'I11lL511 k11r1w11111u'e of Hflfllilifdlr' 1i11g', 1111511111115 13: 2 2 Ig: 1'111'1'11s111111111111-1-, 1'11111111111'r'i:11 Lxnw, S11fll'f11IlIll1, '1'y1,11w1'i1111u, PTC, 111- . . 'I' e1-11111 with 1111. 111111iT.v 111 W1-ite 21 111.111, l'1l11f1, 1Qgi11111 1111sin1:ss h:11111, 'I' 4. 4. 4. 111-1-11 11111 1111-11115 111 wi1111i11g 1I11Yi111f'4'll11'1l1, 111 ll 1111si111-sas: wny. F111' 1111111- 4. . . '24 s111111:s 111' v111111: 1111-11 :11111 w111111-11. This e:f'11r1ol 0111-VH V1111 11'11Cti1:z11, 'S' 4. . 4. 'I' t11111'1111g11 11111111112 111 s11o1'111:11111 111111 t4v11ew1'1finQf 111111 :111 0111111111411-1:11 'X' 4. 4. -I+ H1111,j1-CIS, +54 ' . , 1 . . 1 'Q 3: 11' 11l1L'1'4'S11'11 111 11111' w1'11'k, w1'111J, 111111, 111' 1111111114 1111' 1111f11'11111111111. 4. . 111111 1111111111 31211, 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. Y 4. eta ' s'0 4. 4. . ,. C31 o 0 42 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. Y V 3: BEAUDETT BLOCK. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. .. .. 1 .. .. '5' ' C 21116116 4. 0 M Y 4. 4. , ' 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. t' a . g 54. Pamts, Olls, Varmshes, Coal -5' 4. ,. , 1 . ' 31 1 Wood, Coke, Brlck, Cement Q21 4. ' . ' .3 4. 54, 1 Llme, Plaster-Board, Wood 4. 1 mwmnm, . 3. . . . . . . P, ., B. S0 I 6 an 3 if ' '- W ' UI11I11PIUIP- ' 1 P-11 Etc 1 T1 cl If! , . . . , 111111 1 S P. 4, ,iq . X CWCI' lpe. 4. ,., . , . , ., , 1 , 1 1111911 I 5 1 2' A' 64 .. ' 4 fx- 4. 4. 4 I 4, jg g We make a specialty of 'Q' . .. 4. . . . 2 4. . . furmshmg BUlLDER'S estx- 31 ,Q P1ease call and see the dam! new lft 3 4 . . . . 54 3- . . . mates on anythmg ln bulld- 4. 3' hooks IU leather and other fancy hmdmgs. We . , . -1. fzj . , er s material. '? Q, have many that are parllcularly appropriate for .Q . 4. commencement glfts. SATISFACTORV PRICES- Z ' v Ig: counrsous TREATMENT. 14:1 44 Q 3, '24 ,Q Q ,Ez 1.1 1 Q 1 1- 1 'A ,Har 1115 11111' nn 1. urr , , , 4 .. 3, 4. 4, 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4.4.4. 4.4. 4. 4.4. 4.4. 4.4. J'1 'f 4' 4. ,Q 'F 1' 1 41 ,. 4. 1 1. 1' 1' Pr Coa 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . . ,. . Z 4'I .. 4. 4. 'Z' 4. 'I' qv 'B 'P Q. Q1 'I' 'e 1 . 1 121 , ,V 1., '1111 1 '1 1 11 S 1 111 I, 111: 111 11111 1111 1-1+-1 Coal ment ood and ty of CSU- uild- ENT. '. 'Z ! ! X ! ! X ! I X'-X4-I--I -,..1..g..,..g..g..g .g..g..g..g..g....,..........,..,. .1 ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,. .. ...,....,.... .... ... ... .......,.. .Q v vp! v 1 vovvvvvvvgovvvvvvvvooovvvv vv ,Q ' ' 4 1-+1 'A ... . .Z+..'ZI'!!'X'!XZ'!' 1. Y '51 0 233 Y . QC l2lIIlOI1d 'fi 3. 3 'C .. nf .f. -5: .g. 5 t . , 'X' . 5: are rump ln the Fall and Wmter. 31 . . 1 . . , I 4 I By fllllng your bm early you will score every Q51 . 6 . . u'4 -5. posszble pomt. .. ., 3. .1 if .32 1 1 ff 04 'Q 1 P ' Q 1' 1 - 3: l'lC8, lla l , I'CpilI'a l0Il all HPC ll C IVBI' 5' 1 t P t d C f l D l . .4 1 2' th F' H' h 3' are e lve 1 ar s. 1 . 5. 3 3- -1 1. .' 3. -. -2- 3- -'Q I 1 .,. fr 4, O .1. -1- -5 6,4 4 3 1 3: C001 Coke Ice 32 4, .5. , .. .,. 'Q t +13 , . . .g. H. Dottglus, 07'-U.-Xllfllllllg lllll sil- lrlflllilltl P11t.4l llllllf' '+' .Q 1 - 11 . . -X' 5 ver dull11r l11lls. 4, ' -v :1 . .f. ' ' M1111 C.- I wus su 111c11'tifir-11tir111erl. 'I' -5- Le-11111 Butter 1 HQIIGQII AI:1tl1il1l:1',1 3: 31 5Ul1ll01'lPl'S welll 1111011 UH UPI' H1111 S1114 A Frut. n1e111l1e1'- XX'1111t home with 'ff .f. was turcetl to lveztre the ct11111t1'y. H1111 Pllllt-'l'Stlll this 1111t1:1. H1'1tl Huh- 5: 1 'Z' 'k l1111'1l sq1111sh, 11l'l'llj' soft. Alzulf- mt- .f. 3, L, I rch-- Too l1ll1Cll leztruitig is tl sic-lt, -X- . ,, . .51 flHl'1gGl'OllS thing. 5: 3: 21: Fuller bought ll tif-lit-t to il l111sh1-t E+ ,f, Miss Ave1'yY Ill11s'tt'11te l1y some i11- l111ll HIIIIIU, what do you lc1111w 11l1011t 'Z' 43: cirlent the meaning of the word lllll- tl111t'. ' 'ff Zi. n111neness.' 5+ .g. Fl'9SlllE'-HOIICG il l111ly fllllllll il IPUOI' I he-111' ll sc111111l of 111111111li11: t'1-et, ft: 5: little frozen dog and she took it 111 to Iiut 1111t il Clue lllj' eyt- tluth utet-tg .iQ 3, the house- to get warm 111111 givt- it F01-s1111tl1 it 111u1l1lletl1 111111111 lllj' l11-111l- :gf 4+ soniethirig to ent. It must he spoolqs 1-use t'1'11111 the 1le111l .f. Ig' Miss AVk'l'Y-UYOII had l1ettt,-1' saty it W -5+ 3: 'half-f1'0zen. ' It is l'E1lll2ll'liFil 111' il l11-ipgl11 I1'1'esl1 'Q 'i' '51 1111111 thatt tht- Se11i1'1r Clxtss shouhl l1t- .f. :Q Mr. Gould tin Physical-t'Wl1icl1 txXC'tr't'tlillKlj' Swt-1-t this yu111' l111c-1111s1- 2' . , . .. .f. travels faster, he11t or cold? 111 llbi H1u111w1ll, 3, Senioi'- He-att. It is easy t-11t1ugl1 it it -5- , to catch cold. Miss Wl11t110y t11ftt11' ll lllllg sessiuu ft: 3. :ii :lt 11 t1f 01111-lllH2llit1HSl'HGt'4'Il'gt', you Illilj' f. Lf: Gould, who was uH5uCCGSSfH11t- 11-y. writt- 1111 the l10111'tl the c'1111j11:'11ti1111 11' 5' .f. mg to get PIII electric shock froui 111111 the ve1'I1 'tu go 111 sI+1e11,' 5, of tl1e n111chines, l'911'l2ll'k9dZ HTl1is is -- 5. not, 21 very shoclcing ex11e1'i111e11t. ti X. A., UN- A lllilll coul1l11't w11lI1 :Q 3: K 21 111 stztutliilg' erect' 1111 :1 11-vel sith-w11llt Q. 5 E na B1'owr1- 'I'1't1th truthl YVll4'l'U l1ec'1111se his feet w1111l1l 1411 11l1ez11l 111111 Y 4, have I heard that word betore? 1111 w11ul1l11 t. ,Z , .5. . 'Z ! ! Z X X !'4 ! X+'X-'! X X X X X X1401--X03-.14-1..g..g..g..g..g..g g.g.3 g. 3. 1.3 5.3 g. 1 .g .g..g..g. g. g .31.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.,g.2 ,o 5,4 .g. 5 I-'I-'I'-I-'ZW I fin? 'I-'Kei-'X-+! X+'Z' 'IMI''X+'Z'+!+'X !--X X X'+! X++X I X+'!+'! F 'XMI' fZ-'X+f! X- -X-'IW -X+'!'+!+'Z !-fI X-'!+'!'+Z+4!' 'X'+X Z'-!+'X ! X'+X+'X-'X' ., , 0 Q 1 p an .9 ef 5 Weed s Drug Store Golng to Bul d. 3, 3. -if 3, Will be pleased to serve you .L 3. -x- ,f, when you want Je 4. Li: F J POOLE 5' PRESCRIPTIONS. DRUGS. CHEM- ' ' 9 4. ., 4. ICALSTOILETARTICLES, CANDY He Sells -gf CICARS, ICE CREAM SODA, SODA sg FOUNTAIN LUNCHES. 2 Q4 t .g. Je ' We carry only the purest and fresh- Lf- 'g' est goods, in every department, A L S O fi: 31 .i. 3, that money can buy. 4. WOOD and COAL. 4. sfo -5+ .'. 4. .f. -1. 4' Z ' 'DZ 4' .5. A I Q0 -5: I IIM fu- V- WX rg. 5p,BflYJAI F Z Yards, Oakland Avenue :g . + 3. Pontiac, Michigan. Near P. O. 86 N. Ry. 1 4. 4. 4- 'if -2- A A 4+ 'S' Miss XVa1'n- G11'Is! 3: jf Clarence .Iny- Yes'm. ,xg 'S :z: as . . . . 'I' The world was made up in Just six 'A gg COMMERCIAL BA K fi... 55 3: PONTIAC, MICH. The way that some -have reckonedg -:Q 3, But I can put up quite a bluff 3. 5. Capital, SlO0,000.00. In less than half a second, 2 . - . 4, Q. :ff Surplus and U d ded P of't5' Miss VVa1'n lin drawing clnssl- EIA Z: -5+ s40,00Q,OQ, sie, your nose is too fan' forward. 3: no rg. 21: ze .fr Scott lin Cuesarl- When they ap- If 'Q' proached the town all the boys and 'I' 3: women stood with handouts stretched 'I' 5. CHAS. IVI. CROFOOT, from the wnllf' ff' oi' Lewis Q Crofoot. W tl 2 3: A' A. CORWIN' Miss Pepper 1pliysiograpliyI- Miss ' .? Lumber :md CUM' Hodges, rise and explain why the 3, WM' H. DAWSON. SEZQIEHIS .1 nays tounrl so close to the ' Vice-President I ' ,k 'E' C4 G- FNEIQMAN, Sl1Gill'9I'+'lDllI you heal' about the A 4. I 'lUCG4 collision nt BIl'I'lIIIIgI1ilI'lI? 5' ABIRAM PARKICH, No, what about it? ,ff I'I'PSIfll'IIl. Sh9lIl'Gl'-MCUIiIl'l'l'l run into con- fb fx- SIIIIIllIl0I1 and k'llerl n man. 4. JOHN H. PATTERSON, I .Q 'Y' ' 1 V . O .f. AHU111' I' Miss lW2ICCiII'l'0lI- lVIl'. VanAuken, ,f, if CHAS. IC. WAIIDO, give the life ol' Johnson. 5: 3: Cashier. C. V. A.- He was horn when he - 5. I , wus very young. Tumult. .f. Four per cent. paid on deposits. Jo 'i'! ! X X X ! I X I' 'X X X X X Z !+'Z' 'X''X''!+'! X''!+'X+'X''X''Z'-X''lvl''! ! X X X X X+'Z ! X !'4 X X X X+'X+4 X X X X+'! P'X P'!+4 !'+4+'! b'X X' L LIC .EV III- MII Ar... I Ilisl IIIP .hw III'- COII' IIIEII. I If LX -t--t--t--:--e--t--I--!--v--l--t'-l--:--l--i--1--:--1--r-.--.- E+-V-I-'2-++-1--1-fl-4-+-1-4-vi--1-+++++++-2--1--r-r -I--l--l-+-2-++-1--I--I--r--2--x-+ -U--S-++-I--1-++-s--x--l-4-++++-Ix--a-+-z--e--I--t--r--f--l--e-4--l--:--s--s--z--:- -I- 1-fx.-xf-x.-xv:-Z -1- Z -1- 5:4 -z- -x. -z- is -x. -z- -x- 15' -I- sz- aio az. ala 252 C 'XI 5' 4. oz. -a '52 'Z '!++'I X .+'! ! ! ! ! I+' Candies. Cigars. ' FRED R.GRAVES, + nuacwru. 'Zvi'-IMX' . X !+'Z !+ 'Z+'! X X+'!'4 Z !0Z+'Z X'4 !+'Z+ 'Z' Davis Blk, I4 Huron St. West, PONTIAC. MICH. -z--z--x--x--xv:--:Q-xl-:Q-xw' 'XHX' . as cn na LZ.- ' cn 20 3 na ca cb 2 E' 3 Drugs. Medicines. J. '! ! X X X'i X Z X'-X-'! X X-4' HARDWARE, PLUMB- 'I' ING, HEATING, TIN- NING, GUNS, AMMU- fxf NITION AND FISHING TACKLE. 4. 4. 4. 4. sf. 'X'-! X'-!0X F'X'-! X ! I'-X021 'X+n +.'0X X'+! X+'Z' 'X' 'I' ,XI I 'X' E 'X' 'X' 4' 'Z' .B -if 'Z' s 4. wee '2 2. exe 'r 'A' 'X' I? 2 'A II: 4. . 'e' 4. s 'e' .,. .5 .,. 4. 31 . 4. iv . 4. 4. 51 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan' 4.4.4. 4.4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. . THE BEST JEWELRY THE BEST WORK WWE' 'Q' John T. Eddington, QM? PONTIAC, MICH. v 4. . When Wanting Good Clothes REMEMBER: That's the Specialty of The Good Clothes Store, Poor makes or inferior goods we do not have. Hammond cf: Judd. 5. v 4. v 4. 4 v 4. .'. 4.4.4.4.4. 4.. 4. Q S z F E 3 K i I 1
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