Redwood Falls High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Redwood Falls, MN)
- Class of 1915
Page 1 of 100
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1915 volume:
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A -XOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVO000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOx ' REDVJGDD Q Hear iHnnk X Q, 'x Ehitvh aah Iguhliahrh bg Thr Svninr Gllafm illeilmnnh Efllalla Gigi! Sfrhnnl A, O PRESS OF REDWOOD GAZETTE CO. C C C C C K 1 ' G 5 O O 'N KN O O O O 0 ' o ' A O X N C O O 4' Q , 0 A 'N M X 3 5OQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO900000000005QOC'0O43'Q1JQv-Jwva 4-.1-.2 1- -l 2 o O o O O O O O O O O O o o o o o o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 0 O gQ09990000O9000000900000000000900000O00OO0009000OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO o 0 o O 1 o 2 E 0 o 0 O 9 o O 0 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o O o O o 0 o 0 o 0 o O o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o O o o 0 o 0 o 0 0 o o ' o o o o o o o o o o O O O O O 0 0 O O O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 o 0 o 0 o 9 VII '. X 0 o 0 o 2 o Q Z 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o 1 O + O 0 Z 0 o 0 o O o 1 3 0 3 0 0 I 0 o I O - O O 2 o lA,' Puvu O onoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQQOQOQQQQQQQQQQQQ f m,CrC'VO.5QQo. ,QQQV l TO HAROLD L. JORDAN Our Principal, Our Instructor, and Our Friend who has exerted his in- fluence to make our High School days pleasant and our after lives a success, the Red- wood is thankfully dedicated. PAGE FIVE ' K w '-fwfp.sf..'..-.ce ', sm,-A..,.tAfxfsi-,f-4. xfxfwmfxfyofw , mir fy 1 x Pxx OCOCI-.P .2 5 5000000000OCf0Off OfPOQOOO rcchngs z, Led on by the success attained by former boards and determined to do our very best in depicting faithfully both the serious and joyous 'sides of High School life, we present this, The Redwood. It is through the aid of the stu- dents, teachers and Alumni who have PAGE SIX 2 possible that this book has been ar ranged, But it is through you, Kind Friends, who are numbered among our advertisers and whose names are placed upon our subscribers list, that this book can be published. so willingly given us all assistance x M'-,.,aQQ0Qp,0 O O O O O O O O O O O 1 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O V X O O 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O 0 O O O Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O C O C C 0oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQoooooooooooooooo OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 0000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000O000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOO QQ O O 0 O 0 0 Q 0 O O 0 4? 0 4? 4? 4? O 0 C 4? 4? O 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 40 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4 o V4? 4? 4? 4? -4? 4? 4 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO PAGE SEVEN . OOOOO'OQOOWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00000000030000494 09900009000 x, v O O A O J 0 v O O X? O v O V O O O O O O O O O R? Q O O O v Q O O O O O O O 0 v O O O O O O O O O 0 D O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q V O 0 V O O O v Q V O O O O ' O 1 O 5 V O O O O O O O V w f, ft PALrE EIGHT 500'P00'50O'P' MH000660009000oooooooooooofwoooffwfwfwfm -Nvoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooof:-+.f x O V A .P O O O O O O O O O O O O O f O 0 O 6 A O Q fr O O O O V O Q O U O O V O Q O Q V J Q O O O v O O o O O O O O O O O O V O O O O V Q V V 3 O O O Q J O Q , Q V O 1 s O O O O O A O O 0 O O O O Q, Q O 'S fx O O A :may WINE O O 0 o K, X X X 'N x V O KN O O 'S J O O O O O O O O O C V O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o o O o 0 o o o 0 o 0 O o o 0 o 0 o o V 0 o o o o 0 o ' o Q o o o V J o o Q 0 0 'S o o O 6 ' V 0 o o 9 o 0 fn 'N ' Q . f - - wuw wwwo Q ' - Q 94: 9 O O ' - ' O 4 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O O O 0 O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O Q9 0 ' O 0 O O O 0 O O O O 0 O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O If O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O 0 O O O O Q O 0 o O O 0 o 0 A O O Q W 0 Q Q 4, o O 0 Q o 0 o 0 s O I O D O 9 O O O O 0 PAGE TEN Q 1 . QV Q0 O20 Wallace Stewart. . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief Wilma Ashford Ingolf Stensvad Josephine Lutz. Harold Jordan. Frieda Page... Roberta Rogers Nan Hunter .... Albert Mielke . . Bernard Rice .. .. Julian Stensvad ...... Alice Hosmer . . . . .Associate Editor Business Manager Literary and Art Athletics . . . . Dramatic Music . . . ....... . . Social Humor . . . . .Associate Business Manager ..Associate Business Manager .. .. Class Adviser High Srhnul Cllnlnrn RED AND WHITE Gllaza Glnlnrn MAROON AND GOLD Qllaan Mlnttn Bl Glass illlnum' AMERICAN BEAUTY ROSE i' I AGE ELEVEN 'suse' ArmuAiSboARn,1915 suse' ',.'Oif 0000 XJJOOO OOvOvO-OOJOOOOOOOOOOOO OCOOOOOJ Tn. , ' Y O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O x fu O O A O Q K. C'- J I O . .,,,, W Q O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 3 v O O 0 O O O Q O O Q O 0 O X? O O O O O O 49 O O O O O O O O O O O O PAGE TWELVE ,,.,.,, 1 2 ,ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooocmw, QQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O 000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOO O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o 0 O O O O 0 O 0 O 5 0 o 0 0 o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o 0 0 o o o o o o o o 0 0 0 o o o o o o o o o 0 o o o 0 x3 o o V 0 V X, J 'Qvvv9QO4.P'J'-90-JO .'OOQOO4?OOOO 3000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00 1,3 'V 7 V, f -d. , 7, L , -. ve- ,- 5 'j - Jr 3 , 45,1 'ff , I f Q PAGE THIRTEEN ' in OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO1 13 O Q: O f 0 -o 3 o x F O .Q F A X O A X-cvgxxx X M: W f 9 XX 'X ':,1'I N X O Q x X , O sh Y - F-f XXNSAN X X xxx NX 'O X f .-- N xx xi. w X O N :X Xxxxx x O .Ji ff-xy: '71 I x O xxQX,x5xXX4, an-P ,nv K, x 0 x X 14: mf A 2 xx X 'K x X 1, W X 0 W, ' .1 1 'k ,X A 3 K Q jim? .O V x H' - , ...3 ' O . O O 0 O 0 0 O O O 4, 43 0 0 O O O O 0 O O O O O O OO0000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000000 ' 29000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOQOOQOi,w,'-.2 PAGE FOURTEEN OLIVER STEELE President, Senior Class, Football, De- bate, Class play. A good talker, shines in Public spealf- ing and beams in private teUe-a- tetes ROBERTA ROGERS Vice-President, Senior Class, Glee Club, Class Play, Annual Stall. What can say more than this praise? That you alone are you INGOLF STENSVAD Treasurer, Senior, Class, Football, Glee Club, Annual Staff. When I am grown to man's estate I shall be very proud and great. WALLACE STEWART Editor Annual, Class Play, Glee Club, Football. I could kill time a hundred and fifty ways , J-JA. COOOOO4-,f O'IH.1C'f'.1 '3 ' C.. 4 'A ' 1 4 GEN EVIEVE HUSCHKE Class Play, Clague Contest. May your friends be as true to you as you are to them ALBERT MIELKE Annual Staff, Clague Contest. Encyclopedia of Ladies Home Jour- nal jokes--and others RUTH BUNCE Glee Club. How pretty her blushing was and how she blushed again, T'was Friday JOHN HUSTAD Football, Class Play, Glee Club. True worth is in being, not seeming PAGE FIFTEEN -JIQQQ--Lb-Q00OvQf5f J ' V PAGE SIXTEEN NAN HUNTER Glee Club, Double Quartette, Class Play, Annual Staff. And when she has passed it seemed like the ceasing of exquisite music BERNARD RICE Annual Staff, Class Play, Glee Club. Hang! Kill 'eml GRAYCE McALLISTER The daintiest last to make the end more sweet PAUL LINDEMAN Football Class Play He has the four comforts of life- Love liberty, health and a con- tented mind , . as ' 5 ,A .'.fxwwvs'x'af-of-'-wmv- ' r' ROGER DOLLIFF Football, Class Play., Glee Club. A chief ingredient of my composition is just pure bluff EVA HENZE Double Quartette, Class Play, Glee Club, Clague Contest, Sometimes I set and think and some- times I just set. FLOYD CHAPMAN Class Play, Werie silen-,e golden I d be a million- aire LOUISE GRASS Glee Club, A maiden n ver bold PAGE SEVLNTDEN , 1 Q I. ' 4 fn fl A A A fa f. A fx 0 A X A 0 Q-, .5 fy l .5 .im 1 X f 1 PAGE EIGHTEEN T . WILMA ASHFORD Valedictorian, Class Play, Glee Club, Double Quartette, Annual Staff. Clazug Contest. Ile is a fool who thinks by force or skill To turn the current of-a woman's will LEONARD LARSON Class Play, Glee Club. lt's such a serious matter to be a funny man MAYME LA UTERBACH Double Quartett-e, Class Play, Glee Club. A radiating focus of good will FRIEDA PAGE Glee Club, Class Play, Annual Staff. A free holder in happy land untaxed and unmortgaged. OOOOOOQOCO-GOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ANNA KNUTSON Virtue for a guide, fortune for an at- tendent ARLIE CASTLE Love lo one, friendship to a few, and good will to all O O 6 O O O Q O O O O O A O O O O O O V O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o O O O O 6 6 6 O EDWARD CUMMINS Like Alla-s he appears to be-ar the A weight of the world upon his shouldere V ALMA PAYNE Her gravest mood could scarce con- ceal the dimples V, N Q. Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O KH O O O O O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O 6 O O 5 V f I O J 1 K, O PAGE NINl2:'rmmN O ,QQOOOO-L2OOGOf 000000000 OOOOOCOOOOOQ-'OQQCHV-ovOOCrQvQq0c5Q0 I N.fl'V-vf-JQ0OOOOOOVOOOOOOOOOOQQOO v Nw PAGE TWENTY l W l fb!1f5'2OOO00Of'WO4 OOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOOO -Q LYDIA BOPES Class Play, A merry heart doeth good like medi- cine BURNNAM SPARKS Class Play, The world. delights in a man who plays his own part LILLIAN COLLINS Calm as a summer sea, is she IDA DUEL Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep l 1 f ef -1- -'Q 0 Q Q .Q gg, 4, 0 Q Q .3 lj, l LULA BOPES She smiles and while she smiles oth- ers smile EMMA KNUTSON Glee Club. ' She hath a pleasant, smile, a gentle way JAMES DARRELL Glee Club, Quartette, Class Play. He loves to hear of his power, but has an extreme distaste to be told his duty A MABEL KUENZLI Glee Club. I slept and dreamed that life was beauty But, woke and found that life was duty PAGE TVVENTY-ONE ' I 1 .L 2 B I x 'f7fPOO v ' p f? : i'T'f? 5 'f 1 '? P P 50150000006-'QOO il 0 eooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooff-yooows-J.. PAGE TWFNTY TWO EUNICE VALE Glee Club, Double Quartette, I'l1 put a girdle round the earth-' in forty seconds IRVIN ZWEMKE f I love tranquil solitude ALICE WILSON She giggles at all things Great and small things ETHEL McKAY Heres to tho- e who love me And heres to those who don A smile for those who are willing to And a tear for those who woxi't 9 W 0 7 1 H at . LS . -.l ,, . U - - fe, .f . . . ., , q, V fp cp A Q Q lgz. 4, Q of Q .- .,l ' ' -' V ' -'W 5 f V ' ' ' ' .,.f,,.v -,,V, .,,,. ,r 4,r,,.x9Q,V,vQx ,O . .. ,, A,.x,,,c O JOSEPHINE LUTZ Class Play, Glee Club, Annual Staff. Josephine needs no introduction, she speaks for herself JULIAN STENSVAD ' Football, Annual Staff. The best men are the men of few A words AMANDA LATHROP I m the most reasonable woman IT' the world when Im treated prop er y IREN E GERSTMANN Txs better to be brief than tedious, Short, but sweet I Al F TWFNTY THRFE , . 1 , . . . l . .' 14 A - , . vQ'k.'Q'Q-fHf'iN'Q' C'-Z' ?'f'f'tQ'xfHQrQw'N-Q, -jr.305,009-34j,Q,jv50.fws5904709900000 'vvVQ1QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQQOVQSPOQ , vw-Q'w f' - vv',. -. , tru -V , PAGE TWENTY FOUR - MARTHA SIMONDET Not much talk, a sweet silence EDWARD KUESTER Rich in saving sense, And as the greatest are In his simplicity sublime NANCY KEIRGAARD A woman good without pretense, Blessed with plain reason and com- mon ense J ESSIE LEAVENS Nobody would suppose it, but Pm naturally bashful S. L ' ' 0 Q: iv, Q Q Q ix' lr fr Q O 43 iff .3 ff C7 C' O 13 'fp O Q W Q 1 1 v' fx 4 f v i .xvQ00O00OQQQOQ00000000000O0OOOQOOOOOOOOQOOOO00000000Q BERNA LYMAN Class Play, Glee Club. Love is like'a dizziness, It winna let a poor body Gang about his biziness. JEANIE McKAY She always has in her possession the power to please ELIZABETH WESTER Glee Club In splte of all the learned have saul, I stlll my own opmlon ke p MYRTLE SPALSBURY May he never change except m name ALMA MURSET At plcmcs sh ns sure to take And wlns many a frxend wlth angel cake PAGE TWENTY FIVE . . - w . . . . e . . Xa . - ' A ' 1. Q. . To -, if- . vC C' G00 WC . GOOOOOOCVOOOOOOOO 0 x bv ' Nl' 'N ?O'3AO 'N 'x 'F WO0'VOC'OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOO V' X. Q f . Q, l 1, it ' Z ,TG ' . , A X' 1 I 14 '5 1 Z1 Sf, I' ,P . iP l.Di gs, ff?-, . -- . 'Au' ' A id , -' I 'ITPYYQ f JI Q tiisyii'-5' Nfffaly' . ff f ,f , ' 2-hfqf W 'IvA1 1hr!1JVHn Q-Rh 'EL , v.vr-- f ' PAGE TVVENTY- SIX -qfmf,f,f-'AwkA-f,H mfmoQfwofvsooco 9 ooofmff-ff-1-:Nh ,-. '-V1 o QQQQOOQQQQQQQQooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQ......O ' O06OOQOOOQQOOQOOQOOOOOOOOO690066000600660000000000000 O . 4 f o O O o 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O 0 0 O O O O O 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O O O 0 O O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O 0 O O O 0 O O 0 O O 0 O O 0 0 0 O O 0 O O O O 0 O O O O 0 O 0 0 0 Q2 Q2 ' O 0 O 0 O 0 O O O 0 O 0 O O O O O 0 O O O 0 O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O 0 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O O O 0 0 O 0 O O O O 0 O O O Q Q O O O O Q Q Q , o o 0 O , O 0 0 O y O O 0 3 JLM011 CLASS 2 0 O O O O O Q VA4 I I-I 'I'XY ICNTY -SIGN' ICN ' O O O O0600609669OQ9966Q0000900000000OOOOOQOOOOGGQOQOQO9006QQGQQGQQQQGOQ pew-Qoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo THE GHROMIGLEQ Of' THE GHILDREIM Of' ERUDITIOM 1. Now in the ninth month of the year one thousand nine hundred and eleven, there came in a great body to the land of Redwood a people who were called young, 2. And the people who dwelt already in the land. of Redwood called this new people the children of Innocence fwhich being interpreted, Fresh- men.l ' 3. And lo, there ruled over the land of Redwood a council, which was called Faculty, 4. Now it came to pass in about the second month after the children of Innocence had come to dwell in the land of Redwood, the chief of the council who was called Street., rose up in the midst thereof and saith unto the children of Innocence. 5. Behold, I am come to help you choose from among your numbers, advisers who shall rule over you. 6. And so the children of Innocence choose three advisers to rule over them, 7. And the name of the chief was Andyg of the next in power, Polly, and he who was to keep the moneys of the children of Innocence, Coxy. 8. And the day came when the children of Innocence held a council in the synagogue' 9 And the chief 3dVlS r whose name was Andy rose up ln the syn agogue and spoke unto them saying 10 Now let u go unto the hall of the Knlghts and make unto all the children of Innocence a dance of Valentines 11 And behold the door of the synagogue opened and the chief of the council who was called Street entered and spoke unto the children of Innocence saying 12 Lo it is not in accordance with the laws of the land of Redwood that ye shouldst dance at thy party 13 Make a card party unto you that ye may make merry, all of ye at the same time 1 14 And so it came to pas that the children of Innocence made me ry 15 And they did eat of frult salad and of cake and of sandwiches and of pickles and did drink of the cocoa which was made by the cook, Jane, 16 And after the feast while the childr-n of Innocence did give toasts and did lift up their voices in song, 17 The maiden called Iolly went secrrtly unto the kitchen and did wash all the dishes 18 And the youth called Moose and one of the chief counselors, Behler dld help her to wash the dishes 19 And then the children of Innocence went to their dwellings and slept untll the next day PAGE TWENTY EIGHT ' . :Q in the hall of the knights and held their feast there, ., ' U . A. y f. , .I+ . c 4, . , 90000 1 OO00000000000-9000000000000OOOOOOO ,OOOOO 900 Ai 3O'J'OO'Ol?OC27OC'5f 2 Chapter II. 1. Now when the children of Innocence came the second year to dwell in the land of Redwood they wer-e called the children of Brilliance, because they sought Learning. 2. And it came to pass that they assembled again in the synagogue to choose new advisers to rule over them. ' 3. But, hehold, they again choose Andy, and Polly and Coxy and they chose no new ones, - 4. And the children of Brilliance made unto themselves a feast, and they made merry and held their feast in the forest at the top of a high mountain, 5. And they builded them a great fire and did roast wieners and eat sandwiches, 6. And there were divers opinions among the people how to make the coffee without water. 7. When, lo, a youth called Smithers, came into the midst of the peopleg and they saw that he did carry a pail of cold water, 8. The cook Murfin lifted up her voice and saidg. 9. My son, give me the water, that I may make coffee to save this multitude from thirst. 10. And the youth gave the cold water to the cook Murfin and she took a 'bag of coffee and poured the coffee upon the cold water. 11. And they set the pail in the midst of the fire and the water did heat 12. And the coffee being made thus was drunk by the people who thirsted and it saved their lives. 13. When the feast was finished a man s voice was heard speaking out of the darkness, saying' 14. Thou shalt not kindle a fire in this forest, The sparks from thy re will kindle the forest and it will burn. 15. Neither shalt thou use the government cordwood for thy fire. Thou wilt be put in chains in the dungeon if thou doest. 16. Then did the chief of the council, Jordan, speak unto the voiceg Take Se k 17. Thy forest shalt receive no harm. Thou needst not fear own path grumptious Bill thy business is not with this people. thy home. 18 And the man went his way and was seen no more by any of the least of them to whom he spoke, Chapter III 1. And in the same year when Spring was come, the next to tl-e est people of the land of Redwood made unto the highest people a reception. Z. But the children of Brilliance nor the children of Fxtreme youth 'vere not invited, neither could they feast with the others. T' TWLNTY-NINF 7 . . ! X ! , ! H 7 H . th e y 7 ! . . I , ,- l 1 f .U I ' I n ' u oo o ooooooooooo -' o o o o ooooooo fw koooooooooo f0-OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000420 3. S0 the chiefs of these two peoples did plan and did collect talents make merry in spite of the laws and the upper peoples. 4. And the people went to the hall of the Knights, and did dance and make merry inspite of the laws and the upper peoples, . Thus endeth the second year of the life of the children of Brilliance in the land of Redwood. Chapter IV 1. The children of Brilliance came back a third time to the land of Redwood to dwell there and pursue learning. And now they were called the children of Erudition. 2. And they assembled again in the synagogue and spoke among them- 3. And they chose for their chief advisers Artg and another whose name was Grace' and another whose name was Mabel. 4. Then Art rose up in the synagogue and spoke unto them 5. Behold, the maidens of this people do say, Soon we must go forth into the forest to celebrate and make merry. 6. And the people all spoke in favor of a feast. 7. So it came to pass in about the ninth month the children of Erudi- tion went forth unto the house builded of oaken logs and beams and did feast. 5 . selves saying, Let us choose new advisers who shall rule over us, Y S 8. Th-en after the feast the children of Erudition lifted up their voices in song and were glad. of the feast. 9. Then again about thirty days after, they again went forth to the log house to make merry. 10. And, behold, the forest resounded with their merriment and the people were filled with rejoicing. 11. Now it came to pass that the snow fell and covered up all the ground. 12. And the children of Erudition did take a snow chariot and a team of horses and did have a sleigh ride. 13. And the number of the children of Erudition who rode Within that snow chariot was three and twenty. 14. Then they went into the house of Gem and did. eat thereg and each of the people had to give an Hfth of a talent of silver for the oysters which he did eat. 15. Thu-s endeth all that the children of Erudition have done. 16. But, behold, on the sixteenth day of the fourth month of this year, the children of Erudition will make merry and will hold a feast to the chil- dren of All-Wisdom and to the council of the land of Redwood. 17. Yea, verily, I say unto you, this feast will be better, even, than any other feast. Amen. PAGE THIRTY so oooofweeoooooooooooo o oooooe ooooooooo o DQ li MJ.. ,I WWI WWW PAGE THIRTY-ONE A L, O 0 0 0 0 , Q V x 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 A 0 A 0 0 'P 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 O 0 O A O A V O 0 0 J 0 0 v O 0 0 0 00000000000 0000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000-1 f 4 CW?-1-GOOC'C'OQOO-'POOOOOOOCCCOC-OOOO0O bO'. O4JOfJ fOOOOOOQCPCC-000 ooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo 000000000000 v 1 N x u X. PAGE THIRTY-TVVO O Cf' l f V O O O C O O O O O O O v O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O if O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O O O O X o SOPHOMORE CLASS o o 0ooo0ooo0o00o0ooo00000000Oooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooo o O O O 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O A O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O A N A x O C V O O O Q O C EES THE EOPHOMOREI CLAEZQ 211113 We can well remember when, on S'eptember seventh, we first made our appearance at ther High School. We were a very confused and white faced set. cf would-be's, to be sure, but, after the registration and a few more or less serious blunders on our part, we became more accustomed to our fate, Conditions did not seem so.bad, however, as the year gradually passed, The monotony of our existence was broken in the fall, by a picnic in Ramsey Park, after which nothing of much importance happened until the reception in the K. P. Hall. First we had a short program, then we played games, and lastly but not least, came the refreshments. Another interesting event in our Freshman year was when our superiors attempted to take off our ties and tie them around our arms. We minded it not in the least, in fact, it was a great joy to us to come into public light return as Freshmen. Our Sophomore year has been marked by a great improvement of the material with which the patient teachers have to work. Every one seemed to go to work with a will and things were not half as bad as we expected Our usual picnic was held at the log cabin, We took two ieachers with us as chaperones and afterwards the rest of the faculty came down, some in Aune's car, others in Mr. Finley's famous runabout, Some of the more serious minded of our classmates think that their aim was a 'tfeed but it is hard to tell, as they heartily denied such a supposition. At any rate, they were minus the refreshments for those had disappeared long before they came. We also had a sleigh ride in the winter, Most of the Sophomores turned out, as thy usually do, and we had three sleighs full. During this enjoyable ride, the apparatus of one of these seighs become excited and consequently we had to take the dear old boat home to be fixed. While this was being done, its occupants were generously treated to a dish pan full of popcorn and as we laboriously chewed away on it, we were delightfully entertained by duets, rendered by Miss Koblitz and Mr, Jordan. At nine-fifteen we headed for the Gem restaurant where each one had an oyster stew, After a few speeches and cheers for the class, we broke up the gathering and made our way home. The class of 1917 is an ordinary high Fchool class. It is extraordinary, however, in that it never lays claim to those great deeds of prowess over which most class historians since the days of Adam and Fve, have wildly raved' but it admitq that, seriously spcaring it considers itself an average 'Sophomore class for a high school of our sive, We intend to live up to our standard of honor and loyalty 'md make our class one of the best that has' ever graduated from this high school. PACE TI-Il RTY-THRI F O 9900090000000 0 o o o o o o o o 0 o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o O e o o o o o 0 o 0 o for the time being. At the end of May we left school, most of us never to 3 o o o o o o o o - o o o Q O o O o o o o o o o o O O O o o o o o o o o o o o o O v O O O 1 , ' A c 7 2 R Y X I -, O y 1 1 O s 1 Q O ,g 4 1 O O O O O 0 A A v O x r W O 1' Uh O OOOOG0009000OO42-'OOOOOOOOOOOOOO000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0 o O Pc o Ig o - o F1 o , o 'E Q I1 - 0 2 o e o 54 Q -mx o 'rj X o o Z' X 0 :G , '- 2 EW O H ' 0 O W. o 35 fr O A QQ S A 0 Un 1 3 O Y f f . O 1 4 0 1 x o . 1 KX 0 I I I yu, I X 0 fmgf , K 2 :jj :if f N 2 I X 0 . H 2 1' :J Q fl O . -W xg ,Q 2 I-T1 ,A 0 .' e 0 f o rx If ag, ff 3 K' ,f X o X 2 f O . , 0 W f o ' o 0 O o o o o o o o o o o O 0000000000OO0OOOO000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00OOOOOOOOOOOOOO0000OO000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0 0000000vOO0O00OQQQQQQo0g93mg00v'O 0000000330000039000030-Ov vo 000000000000 . 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 o o 0 Q o - o o o o o o , o O 1 0 o ' o 0 ' o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o , o o 1 o o o o o 0 o o 3 0 0 Q o o 0 o ' o o o o o 0 o o Q o o o o o o o o o o o o A o 0 0 o o O i 0 o o 0 1 o o g 0 o - o o 1 o o 1 o o ' o 0 0 0 0 o o o o 0 o o , o 0 1 o o Q o o i 0 0 o o f o 0 I o O i o o o o o o 1 o o , o o ' o o o o . o o o o o o I o o I o 0 ' o o o o o o A o o o o o o -a 0 o ' o o 4 o o ' o o o o o o o o 0 v o o o o o O P 0 o 0 Q Y 0 0 N 0 0 ,Q o o ', o O gp 0 o o 0 o o Q 0 0 U 0 o - o o ii o o o o , Y o Q BRESHMAN CLASS o o o 0 o 0 Iuxfzlc THIRTY-FIVE o o o 00 0 00 0000 0000000 00000000000000000000 000000 00000 ' ' S 0000 000 00000000000000000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO '--. .H W 1 . Qu- 11 I 'bn P . o K : 'T 5 - , fi 'R'f21',aEqi -7 , M X A Q WWKMV !mM.hu . X Qi I! J ,, X' . ff FfU. WfJT - ' ,W 14? 5' .f7.'gl'- ,L K 1 .W 'H M L , r . jgh nmlw w M '1 1, W LJ, mu- qu. Lg f xi ij , 'lfriywg-I-J uv, -A 'MW-WNg? : 1 -' 1V1T,'g:Q'5,yEQ,d-,wif515.1, y . .w.- Y 'S V Here lies the Ambition of the freshman Class 'S' PAGE THIRTY-SIX sooooooooooooooooooooooo000OOOO0G60oooooooooooooooooooooooooovoa 009900000090000000OOO0Q00QQ0OOQQmw0OQ9O9QxWQ FITHL I PAGE TI-IIRTY-SEVEN OOOOQOOOOOOOQoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooob Q , x Q Q 1 4 -3 Q, O Q O O Q Q O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O o o 0 o o o o Q o o o o 0 Q V o o o ' o o 0 o o 0 o o Q o o o o Q Q o V o o o o o o o o 0 o , , Q N X 4 Q 0 x'?'? k'fOA'7A90OOOOO'500f5O00'5 7'5GfW0'5'5f5'NO-4A'Nf56'5'5O 66000 OA FOOT BALL TEAM PAGE THIRTY-EIGHT ' 54906 -EES ATHLETICA EES Th, past year has again witne'sed to the success of athletics in the Redwood Falls high school. The value of this branch of student activity has become apparent to those who are prejudiced, A strong r class loyalty has been stimulated and has produced a resultant aler ,awake and boosting school spirit. To athletics must be attributed to some degree a higher standard of, scholarship. Last fall for instance so keen was the interest in football that throughout the season only five boys were kept out of games by reason of poor grad-es. Again our athletic teams, in in- terscholastic contests have brought a creditable honor to the high school -'nd to the community due to the clean sportsmanship and hard fighting the boys have alwayi displayed, That the town has appreciated the athletic sportsof the high school, was shown in the enthusiastic support given at games the contribution of athletic mackinaws to members of the football squad by the business firms and a banquet tendered the team by business men at the close of the season last fill. These evidences mark to some de- gree the success of the past years athletics. V Inter-high school baseball last spring was imited to three games in which Redwood won from Cottonwood and Marshall and lost to Dawson. A series of inter-class game to determine the championship of the school was begun but because of bad weather, could not be finished before the close of school, This year under the continued direction of Mr. Minne, and under the captaincy of Paul Lindemann, a large number of baseball en- thusiasts are trying to build up a strong high school team. Track work was first introduced last spring.. With Mr, Finley as coach, considerable interest was shown and a large number of boys trained for the various track and field events. The Manual Training department made a set of hurdles and jumping standards, and other necessary equipment, as vaulting pole, discus, shot and hammer were purchased. In the latter part of May a successful dual meet was held with the old track stars of the town, who demonstrated by a comfortable margin their ability to come back. This year more emphasis is being laid upon track work, in the hope that more boys may be drawn into active participation of a branch of athletics, and again that this school may be represented at the state tourna- ment at Northfield the latter part of May. The plan is to hold a series of tryouts for this tournament, culminating in an inter-cla-ss meet, Classes already have an incentive. Supt. Brainard this spring presented to the high school, a beautiful trophy cup, with the stipulation that the class- win- ning the meet should have its name and the date of its victory engraved on the cup. The cup will be the bone of contention each year and any class who can win the honors three successive years will -secure permanent pos- sessionlof the trophy, it, howewerl, to remain in the school as a relic, The- major sport of the year was, of course, football. With the gradua- tion of Captain Rogers and some of his team mates the previous year, the odds seemed turned against the 1914 teamg but when school opened in Sep- tember, it was evident that the interest already created and the enthusiasm developed through the summer could overcome the odds and put out a win- kv. oof o o oo o o oo ooo oooooo o oo o ooo ioooooooo 9 B I 'Y l D 7 ! 7 I D U y 0 v s , a 7 7 S I Q 7 v PACE THUITY-NINE Qvvvooovv'vvovvvvvvvvvvvvvvOvvQvvvvvoOvHvit:L+ O' Q O000000000000000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQQOOOOOJOCOOQ-Ov v0 ning team. The first call for volunteers brought out about 25 boys and throughout the season an average of 20 appeared at regular practice. The season opened rather prematurely after but one week's practise, with a game at Willmar and from that time on until the phenomenal con- test at Thanksgiving had climaxed the football history of 1914, the team battered through a stiff game every week, Eleven games in all were played., seven on the local grounds, A stati-stical review records that in the eleven games, two resulted in tie score, two in defeats, and seven in decisive victories, in the latter of which Redwood's lowest score totaled 20, and the highest 89, with opponents drawing blanks. Two games in which the superb team work and scrapiness of the Red- wood boys showed to best advantage occurred with Windom and Macalester. Windom, quite content in its victory of the preceding year tried to forfeit the honors this year by all sorts of diplomatc tactics and Redwood was forced out of a self-respecting determination of winning to invade the southern territory. A couple of hours before the game there, our possible triumph was dimmed when eight of the regulars passed through the hazard- ing excitement of tipping over into a river with the auto in which they were riding. This accident finally did not only daunt the cripples, it seemed to have fired the whole team. One of the interested fans along the side- lines, declared the winners capable of whipping anything in the state .if they played with the same sort of spirit they showed n the Windom game. The game with Macalester was a world beater, locally speaking, When all hopes seemed lost for a Thanksgiving game, negotiations were made with Macalester to send out a team, The pick-up aggregation of the Pres- byterian college, included ten of McGovern's regular proteges, who had been out of the season's work just a week. Before the whistle blew to start the game this team had conceded a victory to itself by a score of 50 to 0, and in fact, local fans granted the visitors a victory by a large score. It has been said that nothing like the fight of that game has ever been seen on the local gridiron. Redwood was outweighed and out-experi- enced, but not out-gamed. Football seasons may come and go and it will still be interesting history to recall the plunging drive of the high school team through Macalester's beef and brawn for over fifty yards, and to re- member that the attack of the college men was held for four straight downs on Redwood's three yard line, every down resulting in a loss. This game ended in a scoreless tie. Just a word of the season for the coming school year, The team itself will be without many of the old guard and therein seriously weakened. Captain Steele, whose fighting spirit and strong leadership was the inspira- tion of the 1914 team, played his last high school game last fall. Along with him there will be graduated this spring several of the team's strongest players, as the Stensvad brothers, Dolliff, Stewart, Lindemann and Hustad. Their places will be filled with difficulty. What bigger things the 1915 team now in its enbryonic stage of development, can achieve, will be left, not to prophecies, for they may fail, but to the coming events themselves. The leadership has been Well provided for in the election to the captaincy of John Mason, and a mere glance at the material on hand is at least Sug- gestive of bright prospects. Besides the captain, last year's squad con- tributes Luscher, Reynolds, Fuller, Stevens, Lamberton, Welch, Corcoran, Baldwin, Hill, Glassco, Grapp, Winter, Nord-stroma, McKay, Kenney, Kumm and Alberts, Other boys who may be persuaded to join the squad and who I PAGE FORTY ,j-ly rj'-jrfw'X-,-4VCffXv ' 'JOOOC''OOQC-0000000000000C'4'5OOOOOOOOOOC'C O . 64600400000400000QQ00O6006OQQOOQOOQOQOOQOOOOQQOQQO O o o o o o 0 o o o o o o 0 0 o o o o O o O 0 o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o 0 o O 0 0 o o o o o 0 o 0 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 o o o 0 o 6 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O Qu O O O O O O O O O ooboooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooofoooooooooo'OQ00ooooooooooooooo0 O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O 0 0 Q 63 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 47 O O O O O O O O O I API F ORTY-ONU1.. o o O O o o o o O o O Q Q o 0 o c c c c c c o O c c c 0ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo0O9O0O000O0O90006 Q o o 2 2 promise good material are Eber Sparks, George Mansfeldt, Lawrence Wellcs, fi' James Thompson, Edward Fenske, Melvin Daskam, Will Glassco, Douglas v Warner, Neil Sarchet, Henry Jensen and Budd Geroy. Mr, Finley, as manager, is already at work trying to secure a schedule 2 of strong games, which shall offer inspiration in abundance' to next year's Z aggregation. The strong Faribault team, which won the game last fall, will be on the list, and it is to be hoped that at least one of the Twin City Q, schools can be secured. Above all oth-er comers, however, is the team of our keenest rival, Madison, the anticipation of which game is fire to foot- 2 ball blood. In the grind of the coming -season, painful charley-horses, stiffend cj and aching muscles will be soothed and relieved in the eagerness to Maul Q5 Madison. o o 2 In conclusion: considering that athletics are essential student activities, 2 it has been the aim and will be to make these sports as broadly inclusive as possible. Athletics fail in their purpose if restricted to only a few. For 2 that reason, as suggested, inter,class baseball and track work were introduced last year and have been further stimulated this year, and for that reason 3 it is desirable to keep a large football squad at regular practise. Unfor- o tunately there are no winter athletics, as basket ball and calisthenics, for it 2 is in the mid year season that students are shut-in and particularly need 3 athletic activity, The new addition to the high school does not consider O the bodily needs of the pupils, the regular physical training they should have. It is to be further regretted that attention to organized athletics for 2 the girls has been impossible. An effort begun last year with a class of A girls organized for calisthenic work, was necessarily discontinued this year O O O O O O O O O O O O O C' O O O O O O O O O O O on account of lack of room. Systematic physical training for girls is as important as for boys. This spring a tennis court is being made on the grade school grounds -especially for high school girls, To work out a policy whereby girls may have an opportunity in athletic sports, and to provide permanently that athletics shall be for the many and not for the few is the effort now being made. HAROLD L. JORDAN. PAGE FORTY- TWO i O v O O O 0 'B Xi O C 4 .ifvO'fvOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOO9 uwvOOO4xQ4fP41OOO0O00OOOO'UOQQOOOOS C 00000000 ooobQQQ8oo: oooqooooooooooo0600650004?o000GooOOOO0OOOOOOO O Y O Y O fi 3 5' O Z 0 O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 2 0 O O O O 0 o O O O 2 0 O O O O O 2 0 O 2 O Q O o j 2 2 o Q 0 9 0 o ' 0 0 O O O 0 3 2 Q O O Q O O 0 2 . 0 0 O 2 o O O 0 O 0 0 OO00000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO X XXxh1!X , H 12' ' o o o 0 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o Q 0 o K o o o o o OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO M V-'lHx o o o o v o o o o o O 0 o o o o o O O O o o o o o l'x.l1, vulclw ' lwcm Q o ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo new ., w-C-.F V A 1 .ff .nr W1 W' 'wi W J A -. F W, I '54 a if X Y K is E 'E' W' DOMESTIC SCIENCE CLASS PAGE FORTY-FOUR O O o O o o o o o o o o o o o 4 O o o o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o .f o o 1 o o o 2 o o o o o o o o M o o o ' o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0'OO 4 O' O Q -'S CI' C, 0 O O 0 O O Q. O O O O O O O O O O O O Q, O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 0 0 0 O O O O 0 0 O O O O O O O NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 41 O O o O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 5X si O O O O O O O O O O O O fb 'N f r O O O O O O C O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOO0000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 000000000000 -EES' DOMEQTIG ECONOMY SEQ It is a mere commonplace that woman's sphere is the household, and yet how many of the women of today are there who enter upon its duties without any real idea of their significance. That housekeeping is a pro- fession and should require previous training is a subject which is at pres- sent occupying a great deal of attention, In the public school cooking classes, the girls are taught that the first principle to master is cleanli- ness, and the second one, economy. The work of the class is conducted along practical lines which give the child knowledge that can be applied to the preparation of the food usually found in her own home. The purpose of this course is to give knowledge of the food-stuffs that will lead to in- telligent selection, combination and preparation of food in the average home. The subject is taken up along such lines as: What constitutes a food classification, digestion, the specihc value of food materials of various kinds, cost of food, principles of cooking foods, and the actual preparation of cook- ing. The course in cooking takes a double period daily throughout the year, the time being divided as is needed between the food study and laboratory work. Luncheons are prepared and served outside of the school hours. The course in sewing covers a double period daily throughout the year, the first semester being devoted to making articles by hand and by machine. and the second to making waists, dresses, etc., the work being suited to the individual needs, The aim of the work is to teach the fundamentals of sewing and their application, to develop -skill in the handling of materials, and in the application of the fundamentall principles. ADA PEICK. YQ PAGE FORTY-FIVE O60042100OOOOOCOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000043 O O O O O O O O O O O O V O O 0 O O O O O O O O C A 000000000000 0009066006066 0 2 O 7,447 Q O O O O O O O O 0 0 2 O 0 0 0 O X O 9 0 0 2 O O O 0 0 O O Q 0 0 0 O 2 0 0 O O O 0 0 O O O O O 2 O 0 O O O O O O 0 O 0 0 2 0 O 0 ' 2 O 0 0 O O O 2 0 Q O O O 0 O 0 O O 2 O O O 0 0 O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O o 0 0 0 0 0 o o 0 o 0 O o O 0 O o O 0 O o 0 0 o 0 o O O O O O O 0 O O PAGE FORTY SIX o 0 0 0 0 0 o O 0 0 o 0 o 0 2 0 W 0 W o o 2 o 4? 2 2 MANUAL TRAINING CLASS 3 0 , 0 , ' 0 0009900660099 ' QWPQQQ?QQA3FQ'G'Q?'9'Q'4?G494S4957QP4'7Qi94949WC'5'Q?'604999040 ' , ' 1 A O x X. OOO0000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO6OOO00OO00OO6OOOOOOO6O6OOOOQQOOOOQQQQQQO O O O 0 A r K fx x 0 x 4. Q x O v x v O O O O O O O A ,- A x x O A A O 'x O A C O O O O O O O Q A Q O O O O X C 1 o 6 O 0 0 x 0 0 IN 0 Q c Q 0 A 0 o o 0 0 0 Q f , A O A 'X I' 0 A . fx PAGE FORTY-SEVEN 'QOOOOOQOOOOOCQOO ooooooQoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo v 3. I. O ,X O Q 0 A . K KX 4' xx K., V! 300000O0000000000000000000000000000000O0000O0O0000 00 0000000000003 O O if O X o is Z 0 O 0 0 3 'SEE' MANUAL TRAINING EES' 3 E 0 0 2 Furniture making requires a great deal of skill and careful calculation 2 2 in order to produce an articlle which will stand the wear and tear of the 2 2 household. A drawing of each article is made before actual construction is 2 0 begun. Lumber is then selected with great care and is dressed and sized. 0 2 Each piece is next finished according to dimensions from the working draw- 2 Z ing. After all parts are finally made and assembled the article is then 2 2 stained, filled and fini-shed. o Q The work of the Joinery classes for the year consisted of cabinet Work, 3 2 upholstery and interior finishing and decoration. 2 2 Mechanical Drawing was this year made a requirement of every stu- 3 o dent taking Manual Training, The work began with geometrical drawing o and lettering and proceeded to the making of working drawings and ended 2 2 with house planning. 2 A lathe was installed last year but no regular work was done until this 2 o year, The work was begun with a series of spindle exercises followed by o 2 face plate and chuck work. The list of articles made includes: Hammer 2 2 handles, Mallets, Mirrors, Picture- frames, Shaving sets, Smoking sets, Nut 3 2 bowls, Pedestals, Library tables and many more articles of use. The last 3 0 two articles of the yearls work are to be made of different kinds of wood Q 2 joined together. The course appealed so strongly to the boys that the one 2 3 machine was kept in use from early in the day until late in the evening and 2 9 even on Saturdays, Lathe work is a forerunner of pattern work and decora- o tive cabinet making. 3 2 I . '1't'is with joy that we know that in the near future our quarters are to 2 3 X. , ' be enlarged and our courses extended so we may take up some of the higher 2 5, N Vocational work and thus get the encouragement needed to develop individ- Q 2 ual talents and tendencies, 2 Z GLENN LUKENS. Z 2 o o fi o o o o ? 6 ,y O E o 0 41 o Q o 2 PAGE FORTY-EIGHT 6 . Bo oooooooo-000000 00000 oooo ooo oooooooooooooooo ooooooooooog oo ooooooooooooooooooo0ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o congressional district. Sev-eral weeks later Montevedio, Champion of the 7th district, forfeited to us, thus leaving us in control of two districts. On March 18 we started for Caledonia, state champions for the past two years. After a tedious ride ovcr Southern Minnesota we pulled into Caledonia Friday P. M, From appearances their whole High School met us and showed much curiosity to see their adversaries. Here, debating on the Affirmative, which required entirely new speeches, the judges again dc- cided two to one. But we received the lone vote and Caledonia the two. The debate was hotly contested throughout, Redwood Falls having a shade in arguments while Caledonia excelled by a wide margin in delivery. Prof. Peterson of Rochester and Supts, McCarthy and J, E. Moore of Spring Valley and Preston acted as judges for our fourth and last debate. Caledonia thinks of nothing but debate, the members who composed their team being idolized. They have a very strong team and will in all probability win first honors for the third consecutive time in which event they may retain the Journal Cup. We took our defeat as we did our victories and feel amply repayed for the work done. It gave us an intimate knowledge of one of the foremost questions of todayg government ownership. Prof. Jordan and Supt, Brainard coached the team. To our coaches is due the major portion of our success for they performed work that only we can duly realize and appreciate. MAX STEVENS. X, fix 9 T. en-Tn f ' 'XX 4 Y' V' s oi-'o 'P 'Bon 1E35s!,.-E.5!15gi! 1 E Fl l 'l'Y-THIUCE Q O O 000000000OO00000OO-'70QO0000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOO' O O O .7 ts O O O Q O O O O O X. O O O O O O fb O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q 9 O O O O O O O O 1 O O O 0 A 0 9 x 1' f O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O V O 4, A 0 v O x O O O A v DN .Q OOC' 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 0000000000 6 O 'rx If o ,. 0 4 o Q O , Q Q 0 O 0 0 2 X o 0 0 0 Nh- Y o 0 0 4, ffm o , o .3 1 2 2 ' 0 ' 3 o r o . 0 o . . 0 o 3 fi SX X 0 A N O A 5 E o N' Q Q o 0 s g ss ,J Y 7? 0 2 2 6 xx N O 0 ,KX X 3 A H . O 4, 0 o XX 2 f' o 3 , x O A' , H' X 3 ' N I' ' O C ? qx ' X 3 Q 'I ,' ' gi-'21 x 41, ' wg 2 8 'Q' Q xt , 1, N O ' ' ' 6 ' 5 V I '- N I 3 A ' ' XX X 0 Y w m Rx ' 0 4- ' VX- Q C xx X S73 O ' 353' J Q ! 3 ' ' vr X 0 0 ' , 0 0 ' 0 3 ' x 1 X o f I X I o 1 o f N H Q f i , 2 4- , .5 1 0 2 X 0 + W 2 f 0 f 0 ' ,,w x - V 0 .5 X . ,e Q 0 tl X 0 A 1 . ' O .3 : r 0 Q f a Q .. N 'f 0 f + is W .5 3 Q X X My 1 3 Q, f 71 0 - 2 f 1 if 3 .gf 0 Q- 0 .f O 1 0 A O 0 si 0 .-, O 5' 0 f 0 .5 O I 0 ,. 0 O I 0 x' PAC Fl FIFTY-FOUR 2 fb fe ' 2i50 0 0 0 O O - F 0 0 0 O O C' O C O X O 'X O 'X 0 1 O O O . O -2 O Q' O -'J Q O LSVO JO SSVTO VTJ oooooooo X Q1 O O O x O Q O .3 Q ix 0000000000009Ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooovooooooovv. 0 o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o O J O .2 O 2 o 1 O 12 Q Q o o O O 0 O O 0 Q O O O O 0 O O 0 0 O O V V Q. 0 O O O O O O 'Q O O O O O 0 O O IAf F FII' TY FIVF O 0 O O O O O O O O O Cf O O O Q- 0 O O O O O O O O xv- O v 0 , , O 0 v O Q O v V Q O O O O O O 0 O O O O . , Q ' 1 L 1 - .1 :- O V 2 060006OGWGOOQOGQQQGQQQQQGQQGQQ 00 W09V ,QW vvvvvvvvQOVOQOOOOO000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000000 00000000000 -21513 AARON BJOGGc5,f'REe'5Hl'lAM -EES' On the opening day of a small co-educational college in the Middle West a congenial group of students are assembled on the historic college fence, Prominent among the number are Beau Carter, one of the big men of the college and Pepper Jervis, who came to school to learn repose, After some good-natured chafling Happy Jimmie Jamieson, the most popular boy in college arrives. He announces his intention of becoming a grind and replying to the jests of the crowd, says that he is to be married as soon as he leaves school. Jimmie, however, is noted for his affair d'amour and soon is busily engaged fiirting with a homesick little Freshman from Dayton, Ohio. Miss Cherry Carruthers fthe little Freshmanj is also engaged to a man back home, but is very glad to receive the attentions from the gallant Jimmie nevertheless, Quite a crowd of students and co-eds. are assembled by the fence when Mr. Epenetus P. Boggs arrives bringing his son Aaron to cdllege, The students have Mr. Boggs make a speech and promise to give Aaron a warm welcome, Mr. Boggs departs for his native village of Splinterville and Aaron is left to the tender mercies of the upper classmen, who immediately proceed to haze the Freshman. The heroine of the play, Mis-s Elyzabethe Maudelia Feeny, a very ladylike waitress, is also from Splinterville, where she was known as Lizzie Feeny, She encounters Aaron and by a clever subterfuge saves him from a ducking in the lake and causes the hazers to duck one of their own number, whom they mistake in the dark for Aaron. Aaron has procured rooms at Mrs. Chubb's select boarding-house for students and is snubbed by the more aristocratic set until Beau Carter re- ceives a telegram informing him that Aaron is the grandson of Stephen Boggs, an eccentric multi-millionaire. He immediately becomes the lion of the school and is -shown marked favors by Miss Newcomb, the coillege queen, His old sweetheart, Lizzie Maud, is forgotten in his newly acquired popularity and he is invited to become a candidate for president of the Freshman class. The love affair of Jimmie and Miss Carruthers progresses rapidly and Lizzie Maud despairs as she realizes that Aaron is entirely removed from her horizon, Aaron is elected president of the Freshman class, but the boys discover that the telegram was a hoax and that he is no relation to the multi-millionaire. They immediately give him the cold shoulder and Aaron at last finds his true place in the college worild and finds a faithful Lizzie Maud waiting for him. Cast of Characters, Aaron Boggs ........... ................ A Freshman from Splinterville Roger Dolliff Happy Jimmie Jamieson ............................. A Susceptible Junior Oliver Steele Beau Carter.,.. . . .................. .... A Prominent Senior Bernard Rice PAGIUFIFTY-SIX Aff-f'if'f 0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0000000000-0000000000000000 0000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000000OVO-.V vxevx Pepper Jervis .... .................. S tudying Repose at College James Darrell Epenetus P. Boggs .... ...................... A Pillar of Splinterville - Floyd Chapman Mr. Chubb ........ ..................... .......... B o rn Tired Paul Lindemann Casey Jones ....... ........................... A -College Politician Wallace Stewart Second-Hand Abey ........................... Who does his Friends Good Albert Mielke Miss Elyzabethe Maudelia Feeny ............ A Waitress, but a perfect lady Wilma Ashford Mrs. Chubb .... ................... A Boarding House Keeper Frieda Page Mrs. Pickens .................................... ...... L ikewise Genevieve Huschke Miss Evelyn Newcomb ........................ ...A College Belle Nan Hunter Lois Hunter ............ ................................ A Girls Friend Mayme Lauterbach Cherry Carruthers ............................. With a Changeable Heart Eva Henze Miss Dollie De Cliffe, Chubb .......................... A Vaudeville Queen Lydia Bopes Students .... .......... I ngolf Stensvad and John Hustad Co-eds ...... ........ R oberta Rogers and Berna Lyman Professors .... .... M orris Baker and Berham Sparks lm ion ml PAGE FIFTY-SEVEN OOOOOOOOO00000430QO-OOOJDOOOOOOOOGOOO00000000000000000410-PO K 2' . 4 00000000000OO00000000OOO00000000000000000000000000OOO 0000000000000 o 0 O 0 O 0 O 0 O 0 O O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 0 O O O 0 O 0 O Q O .Q O 0 O 9 O 0 O 0 O 0 O 0 0 0 O 0 0 O O 0 O 0 0 O O O O 0 O O 0 0 0 0 O o o O o 0 o O O 0 O 0 O O o C O Q O 0 O 0 0 o o o E5 o A o o 41 o 2 U O Q . 2 5' 0 o O X o I o o O o o U2 o o o 0 Z Q o 4 o o ' E 0 o Q o o o o M 0 o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Q PAC: la FIFT Y-EIGHT Q o QQQ5'OOOOOO0Q0000OOO0000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO V00 000050000Q01-300OOOQGOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOO'OOOOOOOOvOx, sine' A ROMA 661-IOOL suse This play was given by the Latin Department February 24, at the New Dream. Many people believe that the Latin' language never was and never will be'a very usable language, but nevertheless it was at one time the language of the greatest of ancient peoples4the Romans. They used it for ordinary conversation, for speeches of statement, as Cicero's 0rations against Catilinef' it is the language of the greatest masterpieces of litera- ture, as Virgil-s Aeneid, and lastly, it is the language from which most of our own words are derived, The scene ofthe play was laid in a Roman school and opened with the pupils playing ball and various other games, before their teacher, the Magister arrives. The pupils bore the names of the distinguished Roman men and the teacher was an educated Greek slave. After the day's lessons the pupils recited their favorite verses, the Mother Goose rhymes in Latin. One was the well known Joannes, Joannes, tibicine, natus or Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son. With the help of the English to produce the rhyme, the ditty about Jack Horner became, Jacobolus Horner Sedebat in corner Edens Saturnaliclum le, Inseruit thumb Extraxit plum Claulaus quam acer puer sum I Then the pupils sang llM1llt6S Christiam Bello pergite better known as Onward Christian Soldiers After this there was a contest between the two famous men, Caesar and Cicero Each reads from his scroll an essay concerning his own personal ambition After the decision of the Judges a pupil recited, with gestlculatons a poem part English and part Latin, with the title 'Poem of a Possum The pupils wore white togas made of a piece of goods fifteen feet wide and twenty feet long, draped about them The Judges wore the same togas as the pupils except that they had a strip of purple over one shoulder as a mark of distinction The master and the slaves wore togas of a dark ma- terial to show their servitude The audience was furnished with programs which contained the dramatized form of the play translated into English, Cast of Characters Magister Fred Kumm Servl Palmer Knutson Will Kenney, Douglas Warner Aulus Licmius Archxas, Judge Frieda Page . Y p . ,, L. i . .. . . . . ,, . Y Y H ' ' ' 77 ' . y , . . . . , . . . . , y ,, .......-.-.-.--....-.- , ' Paedagogus........................ ............ . ........ Lawrence Wells PAGE FIFTY-NINE v -iw 1. -' .- - -. 4 +3-1 ir 1. in -c :moe ,, , 4 +5099 Q, v A090 fl Cl'-04340004 WOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00000000OOQO W F Publius Licinius Crassus, Judge. . . . Gains Licinius Crassus, adulescens. Disciplli, Marcus Tullius Cicero. .. Quintus Tullius Cicero... Lucius Sergius Catilina... Marcus Antonius ...... Gaius Qulius Caesar ..... Appius Claudius Caecus. .. Gnaeus .................. Publius Clodius Pulcher... Marcus Qunius Brutus ....... Quintus Hortensius Hortalus.. Lucius Licinius Lucullus .... Gaius Claudius Marcellus. .. Marcus Claudius Marcellus... R 1 1' E Q A s PAGE SIXTY . . .Grace Whittel. . . . .Eunice Vale . . .James Darrell . .Willis Wiggins ...Johnson Petrie . . . . .Norris Darrel .Arthur Corcoran . . .Pauline Peterson Raymond Colville .Mabel Anderson ..Wilma Ashford . . .Arthur Kumm . . .Jennie Blake ..Leon Luscher ...Roger Dolliff '- fwvcoocoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo OOOC OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO QMSXQJ ' ' gi' cf N0 O 3 -9 A N Q o 0 o o 0 o 3 X o o f V o 9 0 o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o 0 o Q o o o o N 0 Y o o X o o o o o 0 o W- xv and X fx XIX Q X -5 PAGE SIXTY-ONE O O O O 0 Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q KN O O 5 X, N O V X Q 5 5, 15 Q Q 0 0 0 0 Q Q Q, 0 Q 0 Q 0 rp my 1, Q 'D Q 4, cy Q Q 0 Q 0 Q XJ fx- 4, ky 0 my cj: 11 fj., Q -if xg 0 Q -Q., Q Q- Q .,- QQ- lj 41,042 0 0 0 Q- ooooo oo 4 4 4 4 4 4 o oo o oo o o ooo o o ooo oooooooooo 3 0 A O O Q O U O A A C 'X O O O O 0 O 0 C' O O O X A 'D 'S 'B 'S 6 A 'S 6 J O A J O O O A O O O f O O O '5 A O 0 6 fl A 0 O O O O O O if O O 0 O A 6 O A 0 O O 0 O O fr 0 O O O O O O O O O Q V v O O O O O O N GIRLS' GLEE CLUB I 'Al IIC S l XTV-TYVO 0OOOOOvwOQO0wQOvvOvO0vvvvuvvvxOv00vQvvuvvvvvvOvvOO0Ov 9 15 Q, fy A X f, 5, 9 A, .3 .w I else l music else The music department of the R. F. H, S. has been a great success the past year, under the capable instruction of Miss Koblitz, This department consists of a Girls' Glee Club, girls' double quartetteg a Boys' Glee Club and a Boys' quartette, all of which have furnished music for various school functions during the year. The most important of these was a concert given in the armory in May, This was given by the girls' and boys' Glee Clubs assisted by the Girls' double quart-ette and Boys' quartette. Music is taught in school as one of the elective subjects. There is also an outside class in instrumental music, which receives school credit, The requirements of this class are two lessons and ten hours' practise a week The Members of the Eunice Vale Irene Aune Eva Henze Berna Lyman Roberta Rogers Mary Evans Esther Ziemer Mable Whyte Lucile Luscher Florence Budrow Nan Hunter Rose Lauterbach Elsie Gaedy L.ona Johnson Agnes McGetrick Girls' Glee Club are: Alma Schmeckel A Mildred Lobdell Marjorie Baldwin Beryl Darrell Ruby Kuenzli Florence Wolff Violet Cain Francis Grass Frieda Page Ed-na King Nettie Barber Josephine Lutz Helen Cain Margarette Chapman Wilma Ashford The Girls Double Quartette consists : Eunice Vale Eva Henze Nan Hunter The members James Darrell Robert Fuller Max Stevens Roger Dolliff Wallace Stewart Elry Conrad Fred Kumm Chauncey Welch of thc The Boys Quartette Mr Jordan Lucile Luscher Nettie Barber Ellen Horr Boys Glee Club are: Mr Jordan Leonard Larson John Glassco Ingolf Stensvad Bernard R1ce John Murset Mr Lukens Walter Hill consists of John Glassco James Darrell Chauncey Welch PAGE SIXTY THREE Mayme Lauterbach Thelma Pease Betty Hunter Anna Lutz Marjorie Lutz Florence Porter Gertrude Roberts Helen Spalsbury Ida Kuenzli Ellen Horr Ethel Whyte Crystal Shoemaker Augusta Johnson Miss Smith Miss Hosmer , Mavme Lauterbach Wilma Ashford John Hustad Budd Geroy Raymond Kuenzli Arthur Reynolds Andy Luscher James Smithers D Y of . Y . ' i . ,, , 7 ' e . rN,r.,,,,,,,Wrqr,.., ,,,,,,.,. ,Ma OO00000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O O O O 444w- O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o O O O O O 0 O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O 0 0 0 O O O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 0 O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O C' O O O O O O O O O O 44, O O O O , O 0 BOYS' GLEE CLUB o O O O O 0 l'.-XGE SIXTY- FOUR O O O O00000OO0000'OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00'OOOO0' 00O'OOO00OOOOOO O 0 0 O O O 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 O O O 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 O O O 0 0 O O O 0 0 0 0 0 O O 0 0 0 0 43, O 0 O O 0 0 QUARTET GIRLS' DOUBLE W W 1 PAGE SIXTY-FIVE wooooo-'vooo900000000Oooooooooooooooooooooov '90 30 700000 O O O O O O 0 O Q v V O O O O Q Q V O 5 Q Q O O ga X N 00090900000000000-9000013000-7000000090090000BID N 'S 5,303 H 1, gri. ',lZ'fL ' V I ,-,,, - 'x-f '- 95 ,5 f- 1 , if - -X Q . , i fm - , ,v A ,. I 717' 1- M' VNV V 'f VVI, I L' .I I V 5' My Q - , -L 'L-fg., 1,7 X M f '1'f'4'l ff' , ,' A 'jd - ,- 5 ii -uvQMp fi? I ,...f' - J z ' IV, , , ! ,v Z-,iii V QXA1 1 f 1 3' 4 0 V V J O O V K, 9 x '5 ,, O 52 V V O 0 0 6 f, O 'X O J O O , V O 0 O O O O . O .7 O Q ' O Q 0 0 O X. Q X f 'B O 0 Y jflxi ff X Q My! fa ,, ,I .N 1' B 5 -1 S 'Q 'Hifi 1.42: ii? , fffi' 3 Off, If gm, 'ja 2 . l 0 0 Q X W 'X Q. O O O O O O O O O O ' PAGE SIXTY-SIX O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o O O O O O O Q O O O O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O Zi O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O O Q O O O O O O Q . O O O O O 0 O Q O J 0 QQQQQI - .ooooooooooovvooooq-Qooooo,of7f7Qovo70oooQooo9oo9oo-QQ oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo legal legal At the ringing of the bell, for the passing of the classes ofthe eighth period, the members of the English Three Class proceed slowly down the dimly-lit hall to the class-room. Doubt and perplexity are written upon the faces of many, for they fear that perchance some stray knowledge concern- ing the day's lesson has accidentally found lodgment in an undiscovered crevice of the brain, which being produced, might shock a patient teacher, while others are serenely happy, confident that they know nothing. As they enter, they appear to be an intelligent-looking body of students, testifying to the truth of the familiar saying, Looks are often deceiving. ' The whole class being finally seated, the teacher begins the day's recita- tion by asking, Raymond, will you tell us under what circumstances the Work, we have been studying was written, and at the same time give us ri short sketch concerning its author. Raymond, having first made a desperate attempt to look at the interior of his book, rises and begins by saying, We are studying Lost Paradise. It was written by Jack Milton, who used to help the King of London carry: on some sort of a graft, but then he became blind and so, as a last resort, he tried to write poetry. I guess he thought that he had lost Paradise, but as far as I can see, all that he lost was his senses. Having delivered this lengthy speech, he sits down amid the admiring glances of his fellow students. Reluctantly admitting that the criticism was at least original, Miss Anderson proceeds, I fear that this class does not appreciate the impressive description in which Milton has pictured Hades to us. Note, for example, this passage, A dungeon horrible, on all sides round, as one great furnace, fiamed: Can you imagine anything more ter- rible? John Lamberton offers an answer, Yes, ma'am. Having school all the year 'round, At this point Robert Fuller, excitedly raises his hand. At Miss Ander- son's nod, he rises and with tremendous carnestness inquires, Do you sup- pose that Milton was educated enough to imagine this pictiiro or had he seen the original? Confused by the sudden burst of laughter and by the hopeless, despairing expression on his instructor's face, Moose sits down. However, as he tries to control his quivering lips, he consoles himself with the thought that all great men have been misunderstood. , , .. . Ignoring Robert'-s question, Miss Anderson continues the lesson by ask- ing, John Mason, will you explain the passage What though the field be lost, All is not lost, by giving us a concrete example ? John gazes at the passage in question with a blank, amazed expression upon his face, which is however suddenly lit up as a bright thought crosses his mind, Why, suppose the other fellow beats you in a game of football, you would lose the field, but all would not be lost, for you could get him alone in some dark alley and express your feelings upon him. PAGE SIXTY-SEVEN 60000000000OOO00000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000 OOOOOOO00000000OOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOfLifrOOO4' That certainly is a concrete example, John, with which we are all famil- iar. Fred Kumm, describe Satan as Milton has imagined him. Surprised by the 'sudden question, Fred stumbles to his feet. Satan had massive, well-formed limbs and-he was larger than the average man and-well, I guess he must have looked like Freddie Welsh. Freddie Welsh! scornfully exclaimls Arthur Corcoran, awakening sud- denly from a pleasant doze. Why you poor simpleton, Freddie Welsh is the light weight champion of the world. Satan wasn't a light-weight. May I ask, Art, where you have gained your intimate knowledge of that gentleman, rejoins Fred. Miss Anderson ends this heated argument by rapping sharply upon her desk and exclaiming, Boys, this is getting too far away from our subject. We speak of Milton as having a Puritan training and that his works show the influence of Puritanism. Who were the Puritans, Lester ? Lester does not know, but in his desire to say something, calmly re- plies, The Puritans were the Pure Food inspectors, forgetting to his dis- grace that Milton's day could not boast of Pure Food inspectors. Several hands are raised in vehement protest and Dewey is allowed to give his opinion, which he briefly expresses Puritans were men who wisely, did not want the women to vote, Dewey Lindemannf' angrily exclaims Pauline Peterson, If you say another word against womans' suffrage you will soon wish that you were keeping Satan from getting lonesome. Dewey immediately callopses under the infiuence of this dire threat, Howard Hall offers him the comforting advice in the whispered reproachful words, How many times do I have to tell you to let womans' suffrage alone when any of the fair sex are around? The attention of the class is suddenly drawn from this interesting dia- logue by Miss Anderson's voice -saying, Senter Baldwin, give us a short quotation from Paradise Lost. Now, Milton's Paradise Lost has been as far from Senter'-s thoughts. during the recitation, as one geographical pole is from the other. For being one of those fortunate mortals who occupy seats at the back of the room, Senter has been profitably employing his time in studying gemetry. He has failed in stating a theorem and he must repeat it after school for the benefit of his teacher in mathematics. Now he is confident that he can give it back- wards if necessary and therefore commences, Two triangles having an angle of one equal to an angle of another are to each other as-- Senter, you may leave the room. Wondering vaguely whether after all, he did not state the theorem cor- rectly, Senter makes his exit as Miss Anderson asks Edward Fenske to de- fine the word ignominy and employ it in a sentence. Quite cooly Edward answers, Ask Floyd Grapp. He looked that one up. I counted them and I thought the next one was mine. Edward, I am ashamed of you. Floyd, what do you hope such recita- tions will bring you? H PAGE SIXTY-EIGHT O000900OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCJO000000OOOOVGCM ' J v The close of this period ma'am, is Floyd's polite rejoinder. Miss Anderson represses a smile as she commands, Johnson Petrie, define the word ignominy and employ it in a sentence. This unexpected honor embarasses Johnson, but he is equal to the oc- casion. I don't know what it means, but I can use it in a sentence. For example, I intend to study ignominy and biology at college. The sound of the last bell rescues Johnson from a severe lecture. The class excused and the students return to the assembly hall, pondering the lesson which has been under consideration, However the majority have in mind only one question, What was it about ? EEE- THE GIRL Of' MY DREIAM6 -EES Why do I dream of her every night, Why do I work for her every day, What is there about that wonderful smile What is there about her charming ways? Why do I look in those eyes of blue To see the love light streaming through, Why do I take her hand in mine To hold the feeling of that touch divine? Why do I kiss- those quivering lips As she raises those angel eyes to mine. Why does she cry as I kiss her good-bye Why do I promise to write every day? 'Tis because she is the girl of my dreams And as I think of her it almost seems, As if I were in heaven, for I will adore The girl of my dreams for evermore. y KXX , All g rf gy up 4? Y PAGE SIXTY- NINE oooo - oooo ooooooooooooooooooooooo oo 4 0 - oo o SENIOR KIDS' PARTY O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 o O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O PANIC SEVICNTY O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O o O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O A O O O O O O O O 4 0' 0ooo00ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo 0000000000000 D 7 s 7 N I f 1 . 4 A H1 Of!900000955'700900'2000OOO'90000OO09000O0 090000090006 D019000000OO0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00000000000 'SEG GOOD TIMEZS Of' 1915 21513 In the future when the class of 1915 is scattered some- here some there all over the universeg when we see no more the dear familiar faces' of our classmates of days spent in Redwood Highg when some of us are in the far west seeking gold some seeking fame across the water, in Italy and France, some cranky school teachers and others singing sweet lullabys to innocent infants' then as seasons 'roll by in ceaseless succession, spring will bring fond memories to the mind of each in his or her separate clime, Memo- ries of care free days and good times spent during our Senior year at Red- wood High, First, our thoughts will wander to the picnics held in the fall when the leaves were turning red, Then comes the strenuous football season with mass meetings, afternoon games and evening receptions. It surley was fun for the Senior girls preparing that feed which we served in pretty style to the Canby boys. The toasts formed a pleasant addition to the ice cream and cake, When the snow season came it brought with it skiing and sleigh ride ever, the skiing was accomplished by the boys, while the girls made a stealthy retreat to town as the snow was very deep. Once we dignified Seniors returned to childhood days. The girls donned short dresses and wore their hair in curls, while the boys appeared in bloomers and buster brown collars. Suitable refreshments were served consisting of animal cookies and milk. Many were the nights spent at class play practise. Naturally there was very much workg nevertheless, there were trips to Mike and Joe ' and refreshing car rides between acts, and some times we went to the New Dream after practise- and saw the last show. The one big event of the year was the Junior-Senior reception, Of course, it was our second reception as we gave the Seniors of 1914' a rei- ception. From beginning to end the 1915 reception was one grand suc- cess. We, the Seniors surely appreciate the efforts of the Juniors, The armory was beautifully decorated and a snappy little program was given consisting of the following numbers: Piano duet ....... Robert Fuller and Eva Henze Reading ..... .................. M iss Anderson Vocal Solo. .. .... Mr, Jordan Whistling .... Ellen Horr The dining room was decorated most exquisitely in maize and blue, the Junior clas' colors. The dinnenr which was served in very neat.style could hardly be surpassed. The evening war brought to a close with toasts. We were all glad to receive our diplomas yet mingled with the con- gratulations, flowers and smiles were many sad regrets, PACF SFVFNTY-ONE parties. The girls once joined in with the boys on a skiing party. How- Is! ! -.10vvvOOOOOQOOOOOVOOOOOOOAOO000000000000OOO0QOO0f.POv-OOO Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O C C O O 0 O O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O 0 O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O O O O 'J 0 O O O x .7 Cx O O 0 O O . !! M 5 .1 q i 4 f G AB ff! ff fy f n Fly 'N , I Xi ' ' fW ' ' 'K f M ly ff Milf I6 , I ' U ,gg i 2 'I ' ian. UO FJHL. EE' . I A1 ff! BFVF' N1 Y-TWO , .1 .J J . OOOQOOOOOOGO'00000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOQQ oof.oooAoooQQQQgoooQQooQ f O x x x O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O 0 0 O O O O O O O O O 0 O 0 0 O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 3 O O lo 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 'ZX O O 5 O O . NORMAL TRAINING CLASS V mwz sF'xFgNTv.'rHH E , X K 5 2 O 0 Q 'lf , E 0 Q60 0 o N ,. X v N J 2 'N X Q 0 A Q o o o o 0 o 0 0 6 V o o o o V o o o o V o 0 o X5 o Q! 0 o Q o o O o o o Qooooooioooooo'--oo'o-ooQooooQoS-2+oooooowooooooooooo oooooooooooooooo O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O v O O O O O O O O O O O O x, O O KJ O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O 9 O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O 'J O O O O O O O Q O O O O v O r O O O O O O O O O O O '7 O O O O O O O O PAG IC SEVENTY-FOUR ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQOOOOOOOQOOOOQOQQ 0999909999009999999909OQOQQOOOOOOOOOOO999999999099000 O O O O O O O O O O v O O O O O O O O O O O O C O O Q3 O O O O 0 O Q C1 0 O O O O O C' Q: O O O O O O O O 0 0 O 0 O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O W O , O ' O O O O O O C O O L V O O O O O O O O O 0 oeooooooooooooooooooeooooeoooooooooooooooo oooo GRADE FACULTY W Mg, firm-znrflmmcs THE I Wal At the beginning of the year, most of the normal students were strang- ers to the faculty of the grade building, so in order to have a stand in with them, we decided to give them a time, It is said a person's heart may be found through his stomach, and such was the case here. Lula Bopes usually has had an extraordinary hard time with every teacher, she has come in contact with, and in order to give her the upper hand of the class it was decided to have the fete at her home on Novembes 24. The night could not have been more exquisite, and all made the most of its loveliness, The teachers came at an early hour and started to try their hand at a progressive peanut game, Miss Koblitz winning the head prize and Nellie Kiergaard the booby prize, The teachers' fortunes, on papers, were told, and some proved to be very interesting. At a late hour, dainty refreshments were served and the teachers 'departed having spent a lovely evening as our guests. At Crow Creek School. One bright, sunny afternoon, Miss Hart decided we needed a little ex-- ercise and we found that our doom was sealed when she said it would be a nice day to walk to Crow Creek School which is only about four miles from town. At one 0 clock we started out with our lunch pails under our arms. We had gone but a short distance when we were fortunate to be asked to rid . Eight of us were piled in, mostly in tiers and the rest walked, After we ll reached the school about two oclock we observed the work being done under Miss Hodges instructions, About three oclock we decided to start home. We came to a shady spot near a fence by the road and sat down to eat our lunch. We ate so heartily we had to rest before starting on ou: boineward journey. Finally getting up speed we started at a gait of about forty miles an hour. We reached home in safety, feeling relieved and satisfied with our journey. QX-fr azz , 4 . 1 1 3 K 1 I' ,U 4 1 1 1 1 1 , . n 1 1 . 1 , 1 i i t . .4 t L1 it 'PACE SEVENTY-FIVE JOOOOOOOCHTPOOOOOOOO O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCIOOOOO 00909474-7' Os0'0OO QQOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000-iff' 4 51513 OUR NORMAL PARTY SER On March 10, Miss Carney, State Normal Supervisor, visited our de- partment and so with the aid of Miss Hart, the Normal Students decided to give her a little spread. It was just a week from St, Patrick's day, so we decorated everything in green, We had pennants huig all around the room and everything was ready at the appointed time. Our luncheon was ready at four o'clock, but we enjoyed the Grafanola so immensely, we did not serve the refreshments until six o'clock. There were no lights in the rooms so we watched the stars and moon appear and imagined we lived in Africa and were working By the Light of the Jungle Moon. We piled the dishes up and washed them and cleaned up the next morning. With the aid of chafing dishes, we ate fudge and drank cocoa to our heart's content. Our last wish was Oh, if Miss Carney only came oftenerf' e V Mr. Minne- Can you give an illus- tration of the use of hot air, Vocabulaum Bovis. Rabbit: A short tail ftale.J See Bud. Girls: Something like mosquitoes, Andy ? they live on you. Andy-fMakes a long incoherent reci- A Walk: A cause for late hours, tation.J . Rules: Some kind of glass. They are easily broken. Love: A little tickle on the inside of the heart that cannot be scratched. Kiss: A fiower with four pressed leaves, an elliptical fa-lip-ticklel shape and very hard to analyze. Sweetheart: Coxey's favorite word. Coach: A master of languages. Bell: An early bird. It gets up be- fore Bub does, Note: A thing for which we are all agents, and which finds a ready market at Mr. .Iordan's deck. Movie: A miser, It would take Stiff's last dime. Stair Stumbling Club. Florence Budroe, Max Stevens. Jimmie Smithers. Clarence Simondet. Pauline Peterson. P, V. Finley. PACE SEVENTY-SIX Mr. Minne- Yes, Andy that recita- tion is a very good example. When Roger had his seat changedg Roger D. O yes, my Love, I am sorry, 'Tis pitiful thus to part: I'm sure if I were the tcocher, I'd surely have more Heart, Grace Whittet. O sad are my thots, friend Roger, Heavy my eyelids with tearsg My loneliness when you are gone Will be worse than I've felt in years. Roger D. I can write no more about you, My heart is smote in twaing You no more I see beside me For my tears they fall as rain. Leonard Larson: May I speak, Miss Anderson ? Miss Anderson: No. tLaterj What f'Cf'? fw,'-ZMJCDOOOCHDQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC 0000000000000ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo LETTER TO A ci-BON IN NORMAL TRAINING 'anal lass' My Dear Son:- Hlere is a check for seventy-five dollars instead of two hundred, You see it is this way: I did not sell that mule team and old man Brown who runs that dairy up at Locust's Corner came down last night and told me he could not use that red heifer. So make this run you as it is hard to sell a gold dollar for ninety cents this year. If you need the Normal Instructor and School Education, go ahead and buy them. Do not throw away your bowling or croquet suits, as Maw and I can use them around the chicken houses. You know I used to wear your old track suit for underwear. I hope you have enough money for your initiation fee into the Y, M. C, A., and you must have had a sumsious time at that spread for your State Supervisorg I expect there were some big fellows thereg I saw in the Saturday Evening Razor a name like one of those fellows you sent me. The picture of the young lady you met at church that kind of a girl, but I suppose girls are different in way son, I was talking to Old Lawyer Jones the other heaps of you. I'll tell you his gal is a good strong lass get as fat as Molly. Then Old Jones gets a hundred or does not look like large cities. Any- day and he thinks all rite. She won't so from his Justice of Peace job and he is getting old now. Gee! the village folks would think you were doing well-you all ought to send her a pretty box of peppermint candy or some red artificial flowers, Your old dad is a pretty fair judge of a good Jersey cow, though he may not dress like those baby-finger city chaps. Old Zeke Edwards struck gas in his old orchard last week and has lights all over the farm now. His hens are working over-time. I reckon we won't hire a hand this summer as I think your Jim work will toughen you up. If I sell that heifer, I'll send you twenty dollars to get that set of Rural School Management books as I want you to be a sick discipliner' of a teacher. By the way, Ole Preacher Simpkins stopped at the post oiiice the other day and says to me to get you to make a little talk when you come home about them big preachers up there, All we fellers got to do now is to play checkers- and whitle ax-handles. Your Maw says to take care of yourself and watch out for elevators as she read of a fellow getting his leg smashed once, . Keep well, my boy, and Maw says wear those red iiannels. YOUR OLD DAD. PAGE SEVENTYSEVEN ,+awQ0m0nmAoon6ooooo'a4Q.ooboooooooooooooccsz'covff V Q O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O 0 0 0 O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O 0 O O O O O O O CLASS CULTURAL I AGR OOOOOOO00OO0QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO E PA SEVENTY-EIGHT oooooooooo0oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.ooooooooooooooooooo O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O O 47 O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O 0 O O O 0 O O O O O O 0 O O 0 O O O O O O O O O O O6 Qoooooooo oooooo ooooo o oo oooooooooo oooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo 0 Q Qs V '1 , C 4 3 9 ll .5 If 3 5 Q o . 0 If O , 0 O O X O X o O o o O o A o 6 '1 o X' O 3 O o O 2 o O 0 O 2? 0 o O o O . - Ku f O O 0 o 0 0 o 0 0 o O 9 V o Q X O C 4 5 A o A A 0 J o A 3 , W N ' O V O - fx - A 1 PAGE SEVENTY-NINE ' R! . -50 'T1-Awk-QGQf''ffOO -QOOOOOOv90000000000OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOCIO-5000000041Ov ff Q'-I I , s x O '- Q O O 0 O O O O O x .-J O 1 x 4 .7 6 ' Q O x O - .x y fx V Q Q f f x ,J x N JJ a42f.'vvOOC1Q-QJOOOOC OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000009 2 J -Redwood Hi'gl1!'Redw00d.Hi'36l Who: .Rah , l:ia'6,'.Ra6, 'Redwood i'ii'Q5l l Who -Rah ,Rah ,'Rah, Reawood H1361 Smash 'emi Bus? emi Thats our cu stem Flea wood High! lilac , all 5,-55 ee'lWrxfQ MASS MEETINGS. A great deal of credit is due the pupils of the High School for the glor- ious Football season of 1914. The student body was behind the team and helpeduthem wonderfully by their enthusiasm and their loyal support. On the Friday previous to a game the faculty very kindly allowed the students to express their feelings and develop their lungs in a rousing Mass Meeting. Short speeches were made by the players and then they were cheered. A rivalry was started between the east and west side of the as- sembly room to see which could put the more fight into the players. Mr. Jordan would bring out the importance of the morrows victory and the chances the team had against their rivals who were usually heavier and larger than the Redwood team, The night before the Faribault game a parade was formed down town and a great deal of enthusiasm was created. Cheers were given on every corner and the people of the town realized that the student body was alive. These mass meetings made each player feel that it was his individual duty to work with his team mates and newer give up until the whistle blew and it was this spirit that brought last fall's fooball season to a glorious close in the Thanksgiving Macalester game, IACE EIGHTY 9 2 O Q OJ O0 2 0000229 O O69 Of'O0f'3-lf,-A ' Qtqfqy Q oo V C a E, i, soot , QQ g , OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0000000000 -EES OUR BJOYQ' GLUE: -EES' The Boys Club was organized in the Redwood Falls High School by Mr. Coffin of the State Y, M. C. A. work. lt includes the boys of the Junior and Senior classes and others voted in from the two lower classes. The object of this club is to better the conditions of ourselves and in our High School, Ofliceis are elected by the members every three months and the President is Chairman over the weekly meetings held every Monday night. On each night some special topic is discussed in which all are requested to take part or an outside speaker is obtained to talk on one of the problems that come before ts in our work. . Last year three members were sent as delegates to the State Y. M. C. A, Convention which was held at Northfield and they brought home good re- ports. Such splendid results were bt-ought about by the influence of this convention that three members were sent to the big convention held in Geneva in June. This convention was attended by seven hundred delegates from all over the United States and the most prominent speakers of the day were present, and gave excellent advice pretaining to High School and College- boy problems. This year the club was renewed after football season and its main work has been its work for a new High School building. A great deal of boost- ing and some advertising has been done and the members got the opinion of the prominent business men and showed the need of a new High School and Gymnasium. One big event of the year was the Father and Son banquet held at the Kahler House on March 15, Mr. Paulson of St. Paul was present and gave a. very interesting talk. All members saw the need of a new school and all reported a fine time. A class in Bible study has been started and is being taken up by the older fellows and will be worked into the regular meeting of the Club. The club has done a great work to better the conditions in Redwood Falls Schools and has helped to encourage the right kind of living. It has a great field for work and a big future. JV PAGE EIGHTY-TWO O O O O O O O C, A J O Q v O O O O O O A O O O O V O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O A O O O O O 4. O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 O O O O C O O .1 O O O O O O O O O O A A x N x. o v Q f 4 f 6 86Q-300QOC'00000000000000000000000OOOOOOOOQOQOQOCHQY 000004.-'-.1-.2 US ff' If 1 fy -J-Y' ' 'C'Q'1LfQOOOOOOO 0000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO4. OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOC' v- ' 'W W J :B PAGE EIGHTY-THREE 00900000000O0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO?-fxfiw -'N fa-, oCfvOvO-.QOQQOOOue- 'il K: , ie' . ,L All I Xb V? V 1 l.. . X fl H i 'i l I X I ' f f ff lp f Z X f I by 9 -i f 1 , f' ffl I jfjy f, W I ff,?, X Q , ,Z A ,V , K ff'- fiw Q ,V 'YW' ' 'I o. ,X Dil . T'rh. .. SONNET T0 LULA'S HAIR. O thing of beauty, O joy divineg O charming shade, O tendrils fine What hours of care thy beauty shows, What gentle light in thy masses glowsg Thou gleam of pearliest sheen. Absent mindedness is said to be a terrible diseaseg but awful that when Amanda addresses even her business letters back to herself . Her case is beyond medical assistance and needs an operation. How about it, John? Burnham forgets on recital, and Miss H. is rather slow at prompting. Burnham Qimpatientlyj Oh, turn to page 3. Oh, murder! Help, the switch is OE, Put out the signals red O, No, my friends, 'tis bad enough, It's off Miss Jennye's head. Nellie Kiergaard, post-graduate in normal class, submits II Pensei-ose as one of Wordworth's well-known poems. How about Casey Jones, Nellie? PAGE EIGHTY-FOUR ff-:fC'OQI4,'-Q' 5 ' Qvx'-fvk Miss Wester fin Geography classj Johnny, tell me to which country you would like to go, and what you would like to bring back. Johnny-Oh, I'd like to go to Paris, the home of tunics and slit-skirts, and bring you home a new dress. Miss Knutson: Jens, tell me one thing that has new life at Easter time. Jens: A cat: It has nine lives, Miss Koblitz Qmusic teacher to classj Susie, can you tell me where Mr. Do is? Susie: Oh, yes. It's in mama's break mixer. Miss Bunce fin language classj Johnny, what would you like to be when you grow up? Johnny: Oh, I'd like to be a hay-seed. Miss Gerstman fin language classl I want all of you to draw a picture of what you would like to be when you grew up? fOne little girl looked very much perplexed at her paper.l Teach-er: Well, Marjorie, can't you think what you would like to be? Marjorie: Oh, yes, I'd like to be married, but I can't think how to draw it. AXIOMS. Recitation is a science of bluffing. Zero added to zero--the result is Hunk. Zeros are always equal, though they never coincide. A teacher is a many sided poygon and equal to anything. A proposition is a general term for that which confronts a senior at the end of the year. Wallace: fOver the telephonej Hello, Ellen? Ellen: Yes. Wallace: I called up to see if you didn't want to go for a ride to- night. Ellen: Not to-night, I'm busy. Wallace: All right good-bye. Art Corcoran: Qcalling upj Hello, El- len, I'll be up there for you at half past seven, Ellen: Why I don't know who you are. Art: Don't you? Well, this is Art Corcoran. I just saw Wallace get turned down so I thought I'd try. Ellen: Nothing doing, Wallace first any old day. Boy fapplying for a jobj- Have you an opening for me, sir? Boss- Yes, behind you: close it please as you go out. u PAGE EIGHTY-FIVE Note found in a teacher's book, I wish you'd keep Raymond C. af- ter school. He's been trying to start something in class to-day, Be sure and scare him pretty bad. Biggest Bluffer in class: Bernard Rice. Ancient Mariner freading window placardj Rooms for light house keeping. Sufferin' whales, what fool'd want to keep a lighthouse in his room. The below for men only: 'punom blood oqq uanq uxeqq go Aueux moq qoqum GSU? Sl'-I4 9A9!I9q 1,1109 U05 JI 'sfewgua snoimo qsoui aqq axe uauxom Little spots of knowledge Little puffs of wit, Make the simple Freshman Think the Seniors It. OQQQQOOOQQC x5 We will print any Senior theme for one dollar to pay for loss of subscribers. If we start home from Belview at 11:15, what time will we get home? Ask Art Corcoran if any visitor is allowed on Ziemer's porch. If it takes a four-months-old wood- pecker with a rubber bill nine months and thirteen days to peck a hole through a cypress log that is big enough to make 117 shingles, and it takes 165 shingles to make a bundle worth 93 cents, how long will it take I1 cross-eyed grasshoppcr with a cork leg to kick all the seeds cut of a dill pickle. Oh, beautiful, rolling waves! apostrophised the young lady passen- gcr: on thy bosom I can scarcely contain myself. HI can't, said her companion, as he rushed for the rail. The teacher of a Sunday School class of boys became desperate. Turn- ing to the little Dutchman whose knowledge of English was very much of a minus quantity he said:- Gustave, do you love Jesus? Yes sir, was the prompt reply. I love Edam cheeses and Roquefort cheeses. Father, Father, come quick, called Mrs. Cohen to the proprietor of the corner grocery. Ikey and Jake are in der cellar throwin' dem fresh coun- try eggis at each oder. In his haste to reach the scene of confiict Mr Cohen ran against a nail tearing Mr. Cohen ran against a nail tearing a huge rent in his trousers Mein Gott! he exclaimed. Ikey und Jake down stairs throwin away all d-er brofit und me up stairs tearln all der brofit out my breechesf' Miss Anders-on- Show how the word plenty' is used incorrectly Needy Senior- I have plenty of m ey, that's incorrect PAGE EIGHTY-SIX f A A K Do not holler do not cry, If you're slammed up to the sky, Dry your eyes and do not weep, Mocking's easy, talk is cheap. Do not curse and rave and swear Ilip this book or tear your hair, Just you ponder, think it o'er, Then you'll not be quite so sore. Of all the sad words of tongue or pen The saddest are Exams again. Oh the meanness of a Junior When he's mean! Oh the leanness of a Senior When he's lean! But the leanness of the leanest Or the meanness of the mean-est, is not in it with the Freshman When he's greenp What Would Happen? If Max Stevens cleaned out his desk. If Leonard Larson failed to amuse the class. If Nan got to school on time, If Martha Simondet would smile. If Mr. Minne failed to give a weekly quiz, If a body see a body Flunking in a quiz And a body help a body Is it Miss Anderson's biz? Mabel Whytea- I simply can't do Latin. Senior- Oh, that's easy-all you re- quire is a little pony sense, Arthuris Father- How is Arthur getting along in school? Mr Jordan Hes half back on the football team and all the way back in his studies Max Hav you commenced to write your essay for the Clague Con te t yet Albert M Yes, I have 5000 words M X: Oh mercy Albert- I've taken the first 5000 in the dictionary Ill arrange them later ' ' , as 1 - . 1 - - v ' ' . . . ,, H 9, 'L . . , ' - . -i Rua a -.su H H . . , 0l'1- . , ' H Q! .mf-.. .jxg m 44 .a-.',.5,'. .' -M A - . -A .. vvp-QQ00170VOOOOGOOOOOOOOOO000000000OOOOO0O0OOOQOVO4?v4.2 OOOO 59'N PAGE EIGHTY-SEVEN OO OOOOOOO'J'fb0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O-'JO000 f-fvvvvvvvvQQQJOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVQVOOQQ av PAGE EIGHTY- EIGHT BGOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 'O'3'fD1'5C'O fHP X AHC-'DOOO0'3'5OOf'C' OOOO O'3C fX ' '5'0 0'f A'f C A f 'vvx-v - Qvvcvfi' BovvoibvQfOOOOOv'.fvQOOQQQOOQQU JvX..M.'-- John Glassco-- I think I'1l drop Pab- lic Speaking-I've got all funda- mentalsf' Mr. Jordan- Yes, you've got all the fun but not all de mentalsf' Mr. Minnie- How are matches made? Buh- Matches are made in heaven. I don't know how. Mr. Minne: fIn Physics classj Al- hzrt Barber, you may tell us the unite of power. Bert: The what? fW:xttJ Mr. Minne: That's right. Frieda Page- Have you ever been in n 1norgue? Smith- No, thank you. Zi Lament of Charles Lamberton I sent my son Jack to high school A-lack, a-lack, a-lack, I spent five-hundred dollars And got a Quarter Back. Dewy Lindeman: fLooking at sev- crnl maps of Minnesotal If m-m-nm. Mercle Williams: What are you look- ing for, Dewy? Dcwy: Oh, I was just vscndering if North Redwood could have moved during the last ten years. dir? you want Leonard? Leonard: I only wanted to tell you there was a man in thc hall car- rying oif your umbrella. JBL. he ilvuill... PAGE EIGI-ITY-NINE oooooooo oooooo oo oc-oo oooooooooo ooooo ooo 0000000000000 0000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 000 000000000000000000000000000 O 00 00000000 00 0 00000 MEMORIES OF SCI-IQOL DAYS BRING YGU BACK . . TO . . Mike 69' Joe 's x Giving all we can for what we get INSTEAD OF Getting all we can for what we give Largest distributors of Ladies' Ready- to-Wear in Southwestern Minn. 000 000 000000000000 000 000000000000000000000000000 0003 , . Owf'QfOQ0000000000000000000000004 TO-NIGHT NEW DREAM THEATRE I I A O ALWA YS GOOD THE CADIIIAC EIGHT CYLINDER THE SWEETEST RUNNING CAR IN THE WORLD THE Cadillac Eight has sup- piied the Iast necessary Iink in the chain of causes which con- stitute the things caIIecI Iuxury, quaIity and durability. THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD RUD. STENSVAD The Particular Place for Particular People THE GRA D PICTURE HOUSE The Home of The Universal Program A change of pictures every night with a weII selected pro- gram of Dramas, Comedy, West- erns, Educationals and Multiple Reel Features. Our music is the best. Our pro jection our stock in trade. 10c Will Convince You , - , , , I r ', ,. xr, yn, , , x 3, A Q' .',QQ.gf,f3fj, sf, I ,f,'vfj.-- 5 kQ6 I-I llIIIIIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIYIIIIIIIllllllllIllllllltlllllllll wI'HOROUGHLY SATISFACTORY SERVICE SUPERB QUALITY OF I:INGRAVINGSa COURTEOUS C0-0PERA- TION AND IMMENSE IDEAS is the typical expression of Business Managers and Editors we have served Write for our Big 1916 Plan-get your name on our Mailing List' BUREAU OF ENGRAVING lu rpor cl MINNEAPOLIS - - MINNESOTA . . . . . . - 7 eo at lllllllllllIIIllIIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIllIllIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll S By Making Drawing for National- Advertlser. Our faculty tramecl him. Millions of dollars spent for Commercial Designs. Com'l Designing mastered at home by our practical Correspondence Method Takes only part of your time. Increase your Income Book entitled Your Future and Folio of Commercial Illustratlons FEDERAL SCHOOL or mated hee' COMMERCIAL DESIGNING, MINNEAPBLIS, MINN. 170 Wa ner Bldg KEEP - .QOL f is L W, 0 - A Q 'al' 'Z W2lO5f.E:'. H fdifar 'W ti Don't fret. Forget the weather and avoid ther- mometers ancl the sun. Live one clay at a time. Eat little and drink moderately of water not too cold. Avoid heavy meats, be a vegetarian. if you can. But above all, dress in cool clothes, and have them fit. Uncomfortable clothes, though thin, are worse than heavy clothes when comfortable. Our lines of cool Palm Beach, Serge and Flannel Suits, or our Crash, Duck and Flannel Trousers, our Thin Coats, Soft Shirts, Summer Neckwear, Straw Hats and other accessories, one and all are at your ' C32 offer you comfort at modest prices. HUBBARD-DAVIS 8 CO. CLOTHIERS WE SUPPLY Corner Meat YOU WITH THE Market Best Groceries ALL KINDS OF FRESH AND CURED MEATS AND HOME MADE SAUSAGES . A SPECIALTY Fresh Fruit 1 Oysters and Fish in Phone Season l Schmid 8: Graminske Ao So Proprietors 00000 35' For everything in Music go to the Mu i tore Kimball, Bush, Girts and Thompson Pianos EDI ON and VICTGR PHONOGRAPHS The Edison Disc Phonographs 1 I n 9 Plays all makes of Disc Records 97 per cent perfectg others are about 40 per cent. Don't forget we are agents for the inger Sewing Machine We also sell all makes of Sewing Machine Needles -, 2000000 OOO-OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOO WW Ffffed lgzyueag , ..,. W ji ggi -..-,,. 1p1!aHtIi ,ll -if , RIGHT GLASSES ..BY.. H. M. Hitchcock Optometrist and Optician Overland Redwood falls Automobiles Steam Farm Laundry Machinery Pianos aeziisaiessgas CARITY 8: HOUlf Proprietors W. T. Wilcox .Aq.f.. , 00 woooooooooooooooooAccomm. ,.,.. U 0000006666666 I Don't forget Us WHEN IN NEED OF ANY- THING IN THE LINE OF Portraits wvvvfAAwwwvv- The New Season, IGROCERIES ggi 1335-finds New Ideal Portraits We carry a fuII Iine of Cameo goffitvfflfillyaliihfulfst MEMORY FADES BUT GOOD PORTRAITS NEVER DO 0 T ' I W'Il C - , ne 5351-fYlu on Roberts 81 Henschke THE SCENIC PHONE 78 LITY STUDIO I If you want good footwear the Walk- 1 I Over shoe stands 'th I Restaurant W' ou' 2' pee' is the place to go for m'i ,i ' Good Meals I I ' 531 as Dainty Lunches A , .. --'----4., Banquets Party Lunches a Spegialty See our display windows Mrs. G. w. Gibson I1. I. HEIIMAN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , ,,I. - , D OOO OOO STA TE BA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS 365 000 00 I P COOPER Vice President J. D. MCLEAN Asst.CasI1ier , o W. H. GOLD, President R. A. COOPER, Casiier Let Us Examine Your EYES Immediate attention to failing eyes means comfort in the future I will examine the eyes and sup- ply you with comfortable and proper fitting glasses if you need them Every pair guaranteed or money refunded Dr. A. ASLESON OPTOMETRIST Redwood Falls, - Minn. . efrmmsm N .cf in . A 'V ,yy . '- o X ,. U .-3 x . fi-i gil. N Il 'G' 'ill f' 1. .' - . . A . F5335 , wif' z 'T ii i I limi il, fr-. w, Q,, ,u,'4i.ficv ...'I I?1'Ej.lef1i1Tif't ' 'S 1' ff rf. .de X IXQQIFE . ATF P5395 ,tml-IWW 'Q Mifflin Gs wg- ',gfg'lmgf. ,,hNHmA .Mfr 1 J, A f 5,,-'.1n7f' WMO fl it H :Ziff ii Ri I F v'i'f gum,-is , Q f HY f ff I' .ll ii 'S i .- T, w, I i X . A X A X SX Lfkiqf 'yy' ' i!4'Al.,I' -1 ,IL eii N V79 ' .gl .. I A 1 ' Pg., fl -X FULLY EQUIPPED FOR THE PRODUCTION OF HIGH GRADE COMMERCIAL AND BOOK PRINTING The Redwood Gazette Company ,I .Mx-+ nz-,of-,a.'w5O6rwA0f-.xnxxr.. . . OQOOOQQQOQQQQ,Qooooooooaoooooooooooooooovoo Oyvvvfvv A , MX ,WW f I 1 RI II I K ' It You CAN 7 I WM it I sENDYouRBoY f 12:3is5i5:::5N Wf f IN THE BANK NAAAAAA .,. 7 W 7 W A BAN K- BooK is THE BEST SCHOOL BOOK3 FOR IT CONTAINS A PRACTICAL AND USEFUL EDUCATION. y Youn MONEY is A SURE FRIEND I PUT rr IN oun BANK Q W FIRST NATIONAL BANK, REDWOOD FALLS Get the BEST At the Right Plate K uenzli LQ Luscher DEALERS IN Fancy Groceries, Can Goods, Fruit, Fresh Vegetables Crockery, Glassware and China Meats, Hams, Bacon, Dried Beef, Boiled Ham, Summer 'Sausage CHEESE, FANCY CREAM, BRICK, LIMBURGER Call up phone 40 Kuenzli 81 luscher Bakery 81 Restaurant Home of GOOD Things to EAT 5 Buns, Doughnuts, Rolls, Fruits, Macaroons, ., Kisses, Wafers A large variety of Cakes, Pies, g and Cookies Special attention given to -1- Picnic Lunches Gallea Bros. A Phone 18 1, I fi,w0,awuQQoQoooooooooooe5 owocwooooG+ow'4e QQQOQQQQQQQQQ - O 2 Everything in the Lunch Line Q-I.-q lF IT S NOT AN I THE ' HOCKETT The Eastman ,played an important palit ' A ln producl lg the pictures in this book. I ., ' ' 4' JAEHNING BROS. ' I Have a Fine Complete Line . Q 4 af f' 4'f , . Annnunni . . The arrival and display of the most complete and up-to-date assortment of summer dress goods, ladies' ready-to-wear garments, novelties and shoes in the latest and most up-to-date styles and fashions of the summer season. We especially invite your most critical inspec- tion of the exclusive modes we show in sum- mer dresses, both for women and children. Our Shoe Department yen., , 3' is complete in the season's newest novelties W for Ladies, Misses and Children T213-I HAZ - Tllll 'lf EASTNIA YOUR LATEST PORTRAIT YOUR NEW COSTUME IIN OUR NEW MOUNTINOS YOUR FRIENDS EXPECT IT I Fora Wrigh clean everything from baby's shoes to Papa's hat. SQUARE DEAL in that Suit. come ancl see IHC, HS l Can SHVC yOU UIOHCY. French Dry Cleaning and Steam Pressing. LADIES' WORK GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION. - - PHONE 314 t, Your Tailor and Cleaner We We We We We We We We netoes repair Storage Batteries recharge Storage Batteries store Cars sell U. S. Tires ancl Tubes overhaul your Cars right sell all kinds of broken parts Vulcanize Tires ancl Tubes remagnetize and overhaul mag- Lobdell's Garage PHONE 317 I , . , . rj. I 5 Q Q. .5 Q' 'Lf Q, as 5, Q, 4, qw 0 Q 0 qt Q- Q Q Q, .fy ig, A ., 5-E ww.-, L . , E - -- ' lT'i:MAN'-V 'Q f- -fl px A 25435 1741 H ,I .-ng.. - , 4 , R I 15' :l-.'z'.l'I'lZ:.A1.E f' 1 AAA' .af Q 1-A+ +A a fs. if ,Af - -Aff.. .. 55? --- f'1r g 'S 5 . 'fi f f V- ! -'3 'QA 'f M 1.i'.1:51-E,fE'?iA 1' 57 fi 1 W 23 T 'ffwiff' 'fP5 2T.fff 31i13',A..Aa, - A-17 '- ' ' 'A - --af.. .Af , 1 Ag 'T' W' -if' if-A 3 i f ' if-22 ,QA 4 1.1-'mf' 'Y-vw-A . , A. f ...SE A -1 A A .AA ' 15.4-g.' 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