Roosevelt High School - Bwana Yearbook (St Louis, MO)
- Class of 1925
Page 1 of 256
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 256 of the 1925 volume:
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BWENH ROOSEVELT S CHILDHOOD n N Theodore Roosevelt youth never d1ed Teedle as he was called lj was an rnterestxng and lmagrnatlve chlld Although he had ast ma 1 and suffered a great deal he was always full of energy and constantly entertalnmg hrs younger brother and s1ster by telhng them the most fascl natlng storles 'naklng them up as he went along They would be contxnued for weeks sometlmes months A thmk whxch meant a great deal to the life of Teedle and h1s brother and slsters was the most ardent devotron of the most lovlng father and moth er also that of thelr Aunt Anna Bullock who took much of the care of the chlldren as her responsmbxllty smce the mother was never very strong The mother was a southern glrl of the most dellghtful personality The father was from northern people energetlc charltable always cheerful and ready for fun after the day s work He was a wonderful companion to hrs chlldren Unfortunately he was called away to the C1V1l War but would not enl1st as a soldier because of the dlfference 1n the v1ews between hum and hrs wrfe This dliference m op1n1on made no dlfference 1n the devotlon of the young couple but made lt rather hard for them Several summers were spent by the Roosevelt family at Madlson New Jersey where the chxldren had wonderfully free out of door life Theodore Roosevelt ln later llfe carried out the prmclple w1th hrs chlldren that a free llfe for some period 1n the year dld a great deal to stlmulate the lmaglnatlon of the chlld At the age of mne and a half years whxle on a vlslt to Savannah Tee die wrote to hls famlly letters the vocabulary of whrch would scarcely be used by an average twelve year old chlld The other chlldren also wrote astomshmgly good letters whrch IS a proof of the tramlng they recelved from thelr cultured parents In a letter to h1s father Teedle wrrtes about the loss of one of hrs pet mlce One of my mxce got crushed It was the mouse I llked best though It was a common mouse Its name was Brownle It was characterxstxc of Roosevelt to show great frlendshrp for the common place thrngs He always enjoyed most hrs assoclatlon with the plam people to whom he gave hrs most loyal devotlon In May 1869 the famlly saxled for Europe much to the regret of the children who loved the summer months spent on the Hudson They were dreadfully homeslck rn Europe and longed to get back Teedre corre sponded with a little nelghbor frlend of his srsters Her name was Edlth Kermlt Carow Her letters always made hrm feel stlll more homeslck Llttle dld they then reahze that some day thls same Teedle would become Presx dent of the Unlted States and Ednth the mxstress of the Whlte House On Teedne s blrthday the famxly decided that they must do everythmg they could to dxstract hls attennon from has longxng for home The parents I nr s ' at - uv 1 U ' V ' !- . . A I... . ,Qt I . h .4. . p - 1-wurq .- v b , . ., . , . . . . H . ,, . n 1 H U 7 1 , . . . 9 , . ' ! , . ' ' . . . . . it s 9 . ,, . . , . s I ' ' sa - u ' ' 1 . . U . . . . ,, , . . J - V Y Q , . ' ' Cl ' ,Y . . . . . . , . . . . U . ,, . Ib ' Y 1? ' ' ' ' .U EUJEINE were ordered by the blrthday chlld to appear 1n full dress for the dmner party after whlch the presents were brought ln to each ch1ld was grven a wrxtmg desk wlth hls name on It Then Teedle was grven h1s presents Thls lllustrates how strong the famlly was 1n then' devotlon to each other The father and mother both were the closest compan1ons of thexr chxldren and always commanded thelr respect One beautxful day durlng the1r sojourn 1n Rome the chrldren were play mg leap frog on the Pmcxan H111 when word was bemg passed that the Pope was coming Teedle whlspered to the llttle group of American chlldren that he dldn t beheve 1n popes that no real Amer1can would and they all felt lt was due to the stars and strlpes that they should share hrs attltude of d1s tant dlsapproval Then the crowd parted and the lxttle chlldren cranmg thexr necks to catch a ghmpse of this queer person saw the Pope who was carrled m a sedan chaxr He seemg the eager faces of the chlldren leaned over hold1ng out hrs hand to them and Teedle who couldn t reslst the frlendly smlle of the k1ndly gray halred old gentleman came over knelt and k1SQ6d hrs hand Whlle spendlng a few weeks ln the Swlss Mountalns 1'eed1e showed hls pluck and endurance whlch was such a Stflklllg part of h1s character One day he had a severe attack of asthma and all nlght h1s mother sat by he was hlkmg wrth hrs brother H1s mother wr1tes Teedle and Elhe have walked today thxrteen mlles and are very proud of then' performance In deed Teedle has been further several txmes Although th1s year abroad was one filled W1th del1ghtfu1 memories happler chxldren could scarcely be found than those of the Roosevelt famlly when they arrrved home 1n the Sprmg of 1870 One day the mother called her eleven year old son to her s1de and sald Theodore you have the mmd but you have not the body and wlthout the help of the body the mmd cannot go as far as lt should You must make your body It IS hard drudgery to make ones body but I know you w1l1 do lt At thls the boy threw back h1s head and rephed I11 make my body From thls tlme on Theodore made a most lmportant promlse to hlmself whxch he carrled out and finally fulfilled so that when he was a man he had overcome the dreadful asthma The father ever ready w1th rdeas beneficial to the health and happ1ness of h1s chlldren changed one of the second story rooms of thexr home xnto an open air gymnasrum 1n whlch he mstalled every xmagmable swmg bar and seesaw Here It was that Teedxe started to strengthen hrs body In the Autumn of 1872 the Roosevelt fam1ly made another trlp to Europe agam to the regret of the chlldren After spendlng some tlrne 1n England they spent three months on the N11e where a great part of the txme was spent ln v1s1t1ng the pyramlds Elhot Teedxes younger brother writes Teedxe and I won t mmd the N1le very much now that we have Nil ' ' ' L! 1 I! ' . 1 , i , U. ' 1 . . . . . M . ,, . . Y 9 ' . H . ,, . . . . , . . I . . , 5 1 Y ' 7 9 . . A . ,, , . ' h - 9 ' l 1 v 1 1 . Q . . . . . ,, 7 , . his side telling him stories of when she was a girl. Yet two days later . . . i . . 1 ,, K , . 1 - ' 6 ' 0 ' Y! ' 7 - - . . ' G6 ' ' Y 7 , . . , . ' 77 ' ' ' ss 9 ' 9 7 9 ,, . . . . . , . 7 Y , . 5 A U - . L. . . . . . . V y . ,L . ,, . I , . . . . . . . . . . . . M . , ,, ' Y Y ' AA n ' ' Y ' ' , . BVJZHH a boat to row ln perhaps It won t be so bad after all what w1th rowmg box mv and Chrxstmas and playmg 1n between lessons and the rums Roo evelt s love for huntmg showed early ln llfe In Egypt he and h father would Cro out and shoot game Much to hrs delight h1s father gaxe h1m a breech loader for Chrlstmas He was now so full of energy that he would even rather exhaust hrs energeuc father by gomg farther and farther seek ng more game Teed1e wrxtes to h1S Aunt Anna I have had great enjoyment 1n the shoo 1n here as I have procured between one and two hundred skxns I expect to procure some more m Syrxa As you are probably aware Fathe presented me on Chrlstmas Wlth a double barrelled breech loadlng shotgun whxch I never move on shore w1thout exceptmg on Sundays The largest b1rd I hare vet k1lled 15 a Crane whlch I shot as It rose from a lagoon near Thebes On the homeward trlp from Egypt the sa1lors were qulte enthused over l1ttle Teed1e and caught numerous spec1mens for h1m whlch he stuffed on deck to the amusement and mterest of a large aud1ence Although a phys1cally weak ch1ld Theodore Roosevelt showed the strength of character to work hard even though It caused h1m much pam to overcome h1s weakne s and he garned the strong body Wh1Ch he 1S known to have had 1n later l1fe It was character1st1c of Roosex elt to strlve for a th1ng and not stop unt1l he had reached hls goal EMILY BAUSCH V Q 'wr f' 5 1 -If Q I . . ' ' ' l .- . , , 5, . . r . . . . ,, U. . , - , . . . .A S . 1: b . , . . .' l . . AA ' 71 ' ' sk ' ' , 1 +. . , t g , . . , I' - y - D 1 , . . 7 . . Q . . 7! 7 ' an I ' vw ' ' ' ' a , . . A 1 , , . S , l . . . . 7 . ,wvfg X X v- , R ' x I . y 1 Q 1 - - W g' Q 5 - - , 5 xx- Q 138.75136 ROOSEVELT IN THE BAD LANDS HE tram came to a stop and a slender young man of average height Rf! is wxth a moustache and glasses descended the steps Then the tram limi went on havmg accomplnshed nts mlsslon whxch was to deposit a New York dude pol1t1c1an and would be hunter named Theodore Roosevelt xn the Bad Lands of Dakota He had just recovered from an attack of cholera morbus and though he had wrltten hrs mother from Chicago that he was already feelmg hke a fightmg cock the marks of hns lllness were stlll on his face Besldes he wore glasses whrch were consldered nn the Bad Lands as a slgn of defectrve moral character He was not however a sxght to awaken plty m the eyes of the mhabltants of Lrttle Mlssourl Roosevelt had wanted to shoot buffalo whlle there were stlll some left and at the suggestlon of a frnend came to Little M1ssour1 Thrs gateway to the Bad Lands was the headquarters for guldes and hunters who took portsmen mto the heart of the savage country The regxon was very noted for game The gurde Roosevelt found for hrs buffalo hunt was oe Ferns a short stocky young fellow of about Roosevelt s age wlth a droopmg mous tache He declded that the camp of Gregor Lang fifty mlles up the rlver was the best headquarters for the hunt So they nmmedlately set out and were greeted heartily by Lang at thelr arrival Lang was well educated and he and Roosevelt found many mterests rn common They talked txll mrdmght but next mormnfr Roosevelt was as resh as joe who had gone to bed after supper It ramed contlnuously for a week and every mormng Joe would suggest staymg m but Roosevelt would overrule htm and they hunted but wlth no success The weather cleared but st1ll thelr luck dxd not change More than once joe looked at Roosevelt wondermg when the pleasant four eyed tenderfoot would begm to worry about gettxng a cold and admxt at last that the game was too much for hxm But the tenderfoot had a dogged streak and would not qult Thelr persrstence was finally rewarded and Roosevelt kllled a buffalo accomplxsh 1ng hls mlsslon Roosevelt had become mterested m Western lxfe and decxded to buy a ranch He hired Sylvanus Ferrls Joes brother and B111 Merrifield two of hrs new acquaintances to take charge of the cattle He went back East at thus tnme to a campalgn for a thxrd term nn the New York Leg1slature Hrs famlly thought his cattle venture foolhardy but Roosevelt was un daunted He was re elected to this offxce but just at this ttme a great sor row came mto his lxfe Hls mother and wlfe dxed wlthm sxx hours of each other He was stunned wlth grlef and at a letter asking hlm to come to Dakota to mspect hrs cattle Roosevelt returned west Roosevelt was well llked on the ranch by all of hls men but he stood for no dlshonesty or laziness He could rlde as well as most of hls men ll! F 241 .' ' ' gxf L . - , . If ' .Wy . . . . . . . r 1,4 X y Q Q s ' 9 9 1 1 U . . . ,, . . . Y - 9 s ' as ' r as - - v 9 . . . . U . . . ,, 1 . . H . . . ,, . 9 n ' S . . . . J , , . . v 1 ' . G . . - 1 1 . , b I . . f 1 , . Y . . 1 9 ' , . - .l vy - 1 s 4 ' . . , . . ' 1 V Y , . , - ' ' s 1 s ' ' V U . . - 1 fl 1, I BWEHH and often helped m roundmg up cattle Sooner or later most men looked upon h1m as an equal ln Splte of hls toothbrush and habxt of shaving and stopped callmg h1m a tenderfoot Roosevelt who had been weak 1n body and subject to rllness had m three years developed a robust constltutlon He had come close to the heart of the plain American He loved the companions of hrs Joys and labors and they m turn regarded htm with an admlratlon and devotlon whlch was deeper because of the amazmg fact that he had come from the ranks of the dudes When Roosevelt was Presldent all hxs frrends from the Bad Lands had to come and see h1m Occasionally some had dlfflculty 1n gettmg past the guard It took Sylvanus Ferris two days to convlnce the door keeper that Roosevelt wanted to see h1m Roosevelt was lndlgnant and told Sylvanus to shoot through the wlndow the next trme he couldnt get 1n Roosevelt never forgot these frlends and always remembered hls llfe rn the Bad Lands Cl AIRE WEILER ROOSEVELTS ROUGH RIDERS HE Presldent deslres to raxse volunteers m your Terrltory to form ! 5 part of a regiment of mounted r1F1emen to be commanded by Leonard H951 Wood Colonel Theodore Roosevelt Lleutenant Colonel He desires that the men selected be young sound good shots and good riders and that you expedlte by all means nn your power the enrollment of these men R A ALGER Secretary of War The last sentence of thls telegram recelved by the governors of four Western Terrltorles glves a falr descrlptlon of the Rough Rlders as thas reglment was promptly nlcknamed It was just such a command as Roose velt had long dreamed of takmg Why was he not Colonel then? Secretary Alger a frxend of hls offered h1m the post but Roosevelt thought he had not suFE1c1ent mllxtary experlence for lt He knew of Leonard Wood an army surgeon who had seen actnve field experlence xn Indlan campaigns and 'elt that here was an xdeal man w1th whom he could serve Then why don t you take the colonelcy and I w1ll appoint Wood l1eu tenant colonel? asked Secretary Alger No replled Roosex elt bluntly I feel that I would be cllmblng to preferment upon another man s shoulders The response to the message was 1mmed1ate Men came pourmg 1nto San Antonio the recrultmg ground ln droves Wlth two or three tlmes as many appllcatxons as vacancles the regxment was recrulted rn record time wxth all anxlous to lxck them Spamards Xu: 1 , 1 - v 1 s s 9 sm n 1 . . , . 1 . 3 .J . . . . . r'- ,' Nfx' L . . VG ' Ctr' - . . f ' - ' 1 1 1 ' s v v 4. sv . . , . 9 . . . . . . U . ,, . 9 s v - v r v ' 1 1 A ss 1 . - - - 1 1 ' as as sy ' y as ' - 9 9 ' 9 11 1 1 - v ' ' so ' ' as 4 C EUJHNE There were cowbovs from Dakota and Texas ranchrnen irorn the Roc les prospecto s from the coast bronco busters two un nnen herrffs and other oftxcers of the law rubblncf elbows w1th amblers and bad men Alongslde of these were a bunch of Easterners some pollcemen from New York to serve the1r Chlef agaln football baseball tenms polo and olt players nd athletes of every type It was a motley and xx elrd assortment lndeed But the men had one common bond they could rxde and fi ht they were afraxd of nothlng and they adored Roosevelt Roosevelt rode up facmg the reglment whxch had been carefully selected and sard Gent'emen you are now about to take oatls and be rrustered IHIO t e serv1ce of your country If any of you dont mean bt sxness let lnm IU I shall depend on you to see xt through Of course not a man Flxnched Every one of them was behlnd the1 leader and wanted to st1ck lt out At last they dxsembarl ed ln Cuba the refuge ot the1r enemy The revlments 1mmed1ately proceeded to advance to meet the foe Under the swelter1ng hot sun throu h the tall burnt grass and wlth no SIRI! of the shghtest breeze they went on They shovx ed the1r mlght 1n the battle of Las Guaslmas after whxch Wood was made Brlffadler General Roosevelt succeedlng hmm as Colonel W1th Roosevelt IH command the Ulor1ous battles of El Caney San juan and Santlago were fought and made famous because of the Rough Rxders How ever thls IS all hlstory but It can not adequately brxncf to lvght the courage and bravery of the Rough R1ders Through the Flery Furnace they rode 1nc1ted and encouraged by the heat of the1r leader and Uu1de H15 own undymg and powerful xalor and audaclty was comrnunxcated to h1S Rough R1ders And so wxll the name of Rough R1ders be glorrfied and renowned through all our wonderful h1story 1-IA ROLD MILLFR 1.11 4. . l, . . A .A ZX' ' 2 r 2 'Z -g . 2 s ' . , b g ' H . A . ' .. ' vs ' A - g U . . . M. . t, 3 a . ' ' . . G . U . . D , bf ' D . , A , 1 A h - 'f . ' 1 . Q, ' say so now. An hour from now it will be too late to back out. Once you're ' , 4 1 - 'vs . V . .r ' b l O' O' T . , ,D , .3 ' Y ' 7 . . . . . .D . Q . . U . ,, . . v 1 b - . Y . . U , . b . A . . ' 7 A6 ' 13 ' . ' b . EWHHH INTIMATE VIEW OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT V OST presldents have made a declded 1mpress1on on the hearts of the Tai, people one definlte outstandmg characterxstlc has become assoc1 ated wlth each When we thlnk of Washmgton ,ve thlnk of h1s d1g n1ty when Lmcoln IS mentloned we see a kmdly man Uaunt of figure and frlendly to all but when Theodore Roosevelt IS spoken of we lmmedlately thmk of the broadness of h1s character the many sxded aspects of the man We see hlm as the great chlef beloved of all we see hlm as the jovial com panlon and humor1st and we see hlm as the brllllant statesman and patr1ot1c c1t1zen The followmg IS an extractlon from the b1ography wrrtten by hxs sxster wmch 1llLl'StI'3t6S the ch1ld1sh lnnocence of the Colonel s pranks One luncheon durmg the tlme that my brother was governor stands out clearly 1n my mind 0W1I1g to an amuslng 1nc1dent connected wlth lt My d1n1ng room at 422 Mad1son Avenue was small and fourteen people were the actual l1m1t that lt could hold One day he hav1ng told me that he was brmglng ten people to lunch and reallzmg his hospitable mcllnatxons I had the table set for the l1m1t of fourteen We were already thlrteen when the door bell rang and looklrg out of the wmdow he turned to me with a troubled expresslon and Sald I thlnk I see two people comlng up the front and sa1d Theodore I have not places for fifteen you sa1d there would be only ten I am dellghted to have fourteen but you w1ll have to tell one of those people that he w1ll have to go somewhere else for lunch He went out lnto the hall and ln a moment returned wlth one of h1s beloved Rough Rlders and an axr of trxumph cn hrs face I whlspered Were there really two and who was the other and what has happened to h1m9 He whlspered back like a chrld who has had a successful result 1n s0me game Yes there were two the other was the president of the Umverslty of I told them they had to toss up and the Rough Rlder won' th1s w1th a chuckle of dehght' Another mcxdent of the prxvate hfe of the xllustrmous presldent IS related by hls mece who upon recelvlnv an 1nv1tat1on for a v1s1t at the Whlte House realized the wonderful opportunltles of llstenlng to the great men of the world at the Roosevelt mformal luncheons It was decxded that Cor1nne would be seated between the presldent and john Burroughs the great natu ral1st Dxsappolnted to find that the conversatxon would not center on poh tlcs Cormne prepared to hear some marvelous ormthologlcal tales Imaglne her amazement when she heard the followmg conversatlon as Mr Roosevelt leaned across to Mr Burroughs john thls mornlng I heard a chlppy spar row and he sang twee twee r1ght1n my ear Mr Presxdent you must be mistaken It was not a chxppy sparrow lf It sang twee twee The note of the chxppy sparrow IS twee twee twee From that moment the great cont1nental affaxrs the mternatlcnal crlses of all kmds were utterly forgotten II cu FUI ,W - . . . . .- J- , ' . 3 . . . , . v b Q . . . . . . y - . D 1 i . I ' . q . . . V . . . , 1 H . . . . A . . y . 9 9 - v . A . , . . . , . . 1 3 steps, and that will make fifteenf I suddenly decided to be unusually firm, l 1 K , I l ' 9 ' 1 . , . ! 3 ' . . . , 1 7 9 . , . . , x ' W ' 7, . . y v . . D . . . . . . y , . . , . H . . . . . , ' K 3 ' ' YI K6 ' J 7 7 ' ' 5 , . . . i , ' ' L 7 1, 1 1 ' y . . S cz' QQ BUJZJNH while the presldent of the Unlted States and h1s esteemed guest the xllus trlous naturalist discussed wlth a great deal of asperlty whether that chxppy sparrow had saxd twee twee or twee twee twee Theodore Roosevelt was a model of perseverence and patlence That thls IS a well known fact ns shown by an extract from a Phlladelphla paper An arncle appeared slgned by that 1n1m1table humorlst the brxlllant phxloso pher Peter Dunne alxas Mr Dooley whlch ran llke thxs Tlddy Rosenfeldt came to the Conventlon ln h1s Rough Rider suit and h1s sombrero hat and h1s khakx clothes trymg to look as mconsplchous as posslble and as soon as he got there Platt Ell on h1s chlst and Odell sat on h1s stummlck and they trled to crush hlm and squeeze the llfe out of hlm And they thmk they have done xt and perhaps they have but Hennessey they neednt be quite so sure for Txddy Rosenfeldt wlll get somewhere no matter what happens even though the path l1es through the cxmltery just an mstance of Roosevelts unselfish patrxotlc attltude and h1s breadth of soul IS the following letter ln reply to Mr Hoyt who had sug gested the erectlon of a monument to Quentln Roosevelt the war hero My Dear Mr Hoyt That IS a very n1ce letter of yours but I do not thmk It would be advlsable for us to try to put up a monument to Quentln Of course 1nd1v1dually our loss IS xrreparable but to the country he IS slmply one among many gallant boys who gave thelr lxves for the great cause Wlth very hearty thanks Fanthfully yours The above are gllmpses mto the prlvate l1fe the character and the very heart of the lllustrlous Theodore Roosevelt Let us see now what others have sald of hlm It was after the first whlspermgs of war that 1n response to Guy Emerson Thomas A Edison wrote of Colonel Roosevelt as follows My dear Sxr Answermg your questlon as to my vlews of Colonel Roosevelt for our next president I would say that I belleve he IS absolutely the only man to be consldered at th1s crucxal moment He has more real statesmanshlp a better grasp of the most zmportant needs of h1s country and greater executlve ablhty to handle the blg mternatxonal problems that will arxse at the close of this war than all the other proposed candidates put together Hrs energy capablhty and vast experience tn large affa1rs of state and natxon for many years together w1th h1s great patriotism and h1s mtense Amerxcamsm and h1s great knowledge ln all the lmes of human endeavor make hmm decxdedly the most strlkmg figure m Amerxcan lxfe The youth twenty three years of age as an assemblyman at Albany had come to h1s natlve cnty to make hxs malden address on that theme so near h1s heart Amerlcamsm and the man whose life work replete wlth patrxotlsm was drawmg to a close sent the same fervent message ln h1s last appeal to bxs fellow countrymen All h1s life long he had been for those fellow countrymen what Senator Warren G Hardlng named hlm ln his trlbute to the great chxef the patrlotlc sentmel pacmg the parapet of the Republic alert to danger and every menace 1n love wlth duty and servlce and always Unaffald MARY BELLE JAMIESON I L I , - 1 1 ' as 11 sc 11 1 1 1 1 ' ' - . ,K ,, . . . . 1 1 ' 1 - U . . . . . . 1 1 1 1 1 , . 1 1 1 1 , . . . 1 . . . H . , . . . . 1 1 . , - U , lc , . . . , 1 1 1 1 - 11 , . 1 1 ' 1 , . . N . l . . . 1 1 1 ' 1 , 1 9 1 1 . . . . . . . ,, 1 - 1 1 . H f - ,Q - . 1 Y 1 , 1 4 . , . H . . . ' . 1 y 1 1 ' 11 I 1' Tl' ffffffl ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL ENGLISH HISTORY AND SOCIAL ART EUGENE FACULTY ArmandR Mrller Prmclpal Maynard M Hart Assxstant Prmcmpal Gertrude Blodgett Dean SCIENCE Anxta T Battle J H Castleman Sarah A Connor Margaret C Docltery Helen E Duffett Blanche Flanrgan Charlty Grace Ernest G Hoffsten Kathleen Nrcholson Lrdmrla A Nerud Hrlma C Peterson N E Rrley 7' Florence L Runge Eudora Sm1th Eva C Thresen Early G Tyler Beatrrce Wade Helen Whltelaw FORFIGN LANGUAGES Gertrude S Bennett Elorse Brrstol Marlan C Comfort Georges Lamy De la Edward C Kammerer J james Lewrs Mar aret O Leary Loulse S Barbee Margaretta G Brown Margaret T Lynch Anna L Place GIHGYS L Cfalg MANUAL TRAINING Flora E Henke Irenej Kavanagh julre Koch Jas L MacKay Hxldah Ne1bert Mrlerna Schlutrus Esther R Slmon MATHEMATICS Charles Ammerman JCSSIG R Barrmger M A Comack August Grossman Lyda Long Annabel Remnrtz Susannah W11l1ams H C Zexs Edward F Card Neal C Davls Delbert L Flnley Ernest G Reynolds Frank P Rohrer Peter B Ruch julrus E Tarlmg !DOMESTIC SCIENCE enme W Grlmore Meta E Mler IVIUSIC B1rd1e E Hrlb H B Magrnn OFFICE Roche COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS Bessw M Carney C Jos Eppels V Alma A Hermann CCCIIIH L Hospes Rachel R Lawton Geo C Lrndsay Marle Rothman GYMNASIUM M1m1 H Garesche R C Lewls Walther Lorenzen Marxan K Varlan Fred C Voss Ann O Watt I L W Beers Lee R Carlson Edna Crowder Relta Coryell Edrth M Hewrtt R M Inbody Ed1th M Johnston S C Smrth Laura B Solfronk Leo Sophlr A E Spauldmg M B Stone Jennre A Whltbeck Herbert Whxtehouse Effie C Ramsay Maude Rule SCIENCE Clrfford Crosby Lou Ewers lf Walter Gammeter W H Grocott Harold S Katterhenry Edw Loughlm W A Ludwxg L M Parrott Katherme Pfelfer Martm C Wllson - v - Q cr . l . cr ' l o ,, I 'Yzff'f.a.'r: 331 lliI!ll I!3!llI3illl'! xxxxxxxx Ililll FYffFfH FACULTY BWENH QED THE ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL HE lot on which the Roosevelt Hlgh School IS located has a frontage RP! is on Hartford Street of 106 feet 512 mches on Loulslana Avenue of 1051 912 feet 9141 inches on Wyommg Street of 606 feet 1 inch and on Compton Avenue of 513 feet 534 mches The site slopes gradually toward Wyoming Street on the south The bu1ld1ng sets back from Hartford Street 100 feet sufficient to insure 1ts full archltectural effect when seen from that street Its extreme distance from Louisiana Avenue IS 96 feet 23A mches and from Compton Avenue is 196 feet 23A mches To the south of the build mg extending to Wyoming Street IS the campus approximately 600 by 300 eet On this site the building rises to a helght of 87 feet 6 mches above the level of Hartford Street The first floor is 20 feet above this level The front age of the building IS 414 feet and its extreme depth is 421 feet It IS beau t1fu1 and majestic and challenges the admlratlon of the beholder Its central tower and mam entrance lend great dignity to the facade and its extended wings suggest the completeness of a quadrangle to one who views the build mg at a point opposite the main entrance It has a total floor space of 300 000 square feet or approximately seven acres On passing through the entrance the broad corridor with its frequent arches and great length is very impresslve and this first impression is deep ened as you pass from floor to floor ascending the double staxrways on either clal features of the bulldmg whlch make it unique would require a long arti cle A brief reference to some of them must suffice The floors of the corrx dors and rooms are covered with cork carpet which makes the building quiet and free from distractmg nerve jarring sounds the auditorium with nts gothic wmdows small panes and slightly tmted glass has a wonderfully quietmg restful effect the large shops each able to accommodate as many as thirty pupils amply provide for the various kmds of work m wood and iron joinery cabinet making pattern making moulding forging machm mg and auto mechanics the exceptionally attractive and completely equ1pped sewing and cooking rooms together with the model suite for teaching house keepmg make the Home Economics group ideal the chemistry group con sistxng of laboratory balance room demonstration rooms and store room affords ample equipment for elementary qualitative and quantitative work in chemistry the library and its connectmg class rooms the music room the gymnasia and large swimming pool the lunch room having a capacity of fourteen hundred and the administrative offices arranged to facilitate the work of the principal the dean of glrls the doctor and the assistant principal all deserve detailed description but must be passed with only a mention Str 'ni .Q . . . 'gkf ll , . . . l 1,4 I I l X . 1 ! f . 1 ' - , . , - side of the auditorium next to the transverse corridors. To describe the spe- . . ' - 3 . . ' . . ! I ' , : , . , . . T. 1 1 1 9 . v . ' - 5 . . . . , . . . - U 1 3 9 ' . 9 9 V , . I y . , . , . . ffm! WY JW fwz ,ff 1 Ib. fri fa W A , ey ff '7 -ww L L- 4 'X f wif . .i'f:ff.wfw'za +R fw-.f-4 N 5 - . Q N w W - - L A - f xffj W 1 -, xi. 3. Syn. g -:Y , , - 3:.:1 1.,gx-if: fi if I Q - N, QQESXQST , 4 w . N N 5 . - it f Nj, YNl5,Q+ N, , ' , ,N , Q, Y Q ' ' ' A A, 'I 7- N ' ' flaw - -1 W Q ,. ' ' 5? , , 'im N, N Q-. AUDITORIUM BKUENH No one who has not had a share ln the desrgnmg and equlppmg of a Great hlgh school such as the Roosevelt can have an adequate conceptlon of the 1nfin1te detalls to be thought out and embodxed The Instructlon De partment and the Bulldmg Department workmg 1n close co operatlon spared nelther t1me nor thought nor effort to make th1s school complete and perfect 1n every part adapted to the varxous kmds of work to be done so that ro youth who attended the school mlght fall to profit to the fullest extent Sug gest1ons were SOllC1tCd from the teachers of the varlous hlgh schools and the sclentxfic equlpment of all kmds was selected by a representatlve commlttee chosen from the teachers of the varlous departments of the hugh schools whose experfence would enable them to choose wlsely the apparatus and suppnes most lxkely to contribute to the effectlveness of the teachmg At first It was thought that the school buxldmg could be fimshed and opened for use on the first day of the school year of 1924 25 but th1s was found 1mpract1cable and the openmg necessarlly was deferred untll the be glnnmg of the second half year Then the entlre McK1nley Hlgh School together wlth such part of the Cleveland Hlgh School as had not been m that school more than two years and hved north of Potomac Street and east of Grand Boulevard as sembled m the new bulldlng and the hlstory of the Roosevelt Hlgh School began It should not for one moment be forgotten that a great school IS not a maternal structure however splend1d the archltecture ln deslgn and exe cutxon lt IS created by the sp1r1t and achxevement of 1ts pupils under the guxdance and 1nsp1rat1on of xts prmclpal and teachers will fit them for useful satlsfactory 11ves of SCFVICC m whlch they w1ll reahze the poss1b1l1t1es and slgnlficance of thelr being They wxll know the truth and the truth shall make them free that they may have llfe and have It more abundantly not sordxd narrow selfish life but worthv r1ghteous frult ful l1fe llfe mn th1s democracy where each cltxzen 1S pledged to l1ve for all and all for each conscxously and wxth purposeful mtent workmg out th1s greatest of human experlments thls plan of self government thls government of the people by the people and for the people whlch each cxtxzen IS solemnly obl1gated to defend and exhalt to the full measure of 1ts grandeur and to transmlt to future generatxons m perpetulty not only ummpaxred but stlll further aovanced toward perfectxon It w1ll be mterestmg to trace the steps m the procedure of the Board of Educatlon that led up to bulldmg and namlnv of the Roosevelt Hwh School On january 10 1922 Mr Stephen M Wagner submltted to the Board of Educatlon the followmg report on behalf of the joint Committee on In structlon and Fmance 11 H b i I 1 ' ' , . . Thousands will receive in the Roosevelt High School the education that v Y U . . . . b .Oi D-'EI Q2 LJ n.x.I gi IO LL! EVJZIHH The joint Committee on Instruction and Finance has had under con- s1derat1on the most lmmedlate needs for school burldmgs and has determ1ned to recommend 1n heu of any PFCVIOLS report that a new semor hlgh school be erected on the parcel of land bounded on the north by Hartford Street on the south by Wyomlng .street on the east by Compton avenue on the west by Louxsmana Avenue Gentlemen : It 1S further recommended that the Comm1ss1oner of School Bulldmgs be dxrected to prepare and submlt to the Board prehmmary sketch plans at the earl1est opportumty Respectfully submltted Stephen M Wagner Ben P Stromberg Rlchard Murphy C W johnson l ,f !W MANUAL TRAINING SHOP I JI BVJEHH Kr' as XX Ns MODEL KITCHEN On recommendatlon of Mr Wagner seconded by Mr Murphy the re port was approved and the recommendatxons contamed therem were adopted On the same date Mr R M Mxlhgan Commlssxoner of School Bulld mgs submltted prehmmary drawxngs and descrxptlon of a semor hxgh school as dzrected by Jomt Committee on Instructlon and Fmance On motlon of Mr Rosskopf seconded by Mr joerlng the report was approved and the recommendations submltted were adopted On September 5 1922 a special meetmg of the Board of Education was held at whlch the Comnussloner of School Bulldmgs submltted a report of b1ds sol1c1ted for the erect1on and completlon of the new South Slde h1gh school bulldlng, and recommended the awardmg of contracts and the ap proval of plans and speclfncatxons for the bulldxng Thls report was 1a1d over for one month. On September 12, 1922, the report land over on September Sth was agam lald over to be consxdered at a recessed meet1ng of the Board to be held Tuesday, September 19, 1922, at 3 00 P M , and xt was then approved and the recommendatlons adopted. The total of contracts awarded was S1,265,680, fwmtg one EWEHH exclusxve of contract for heating and ventllatlon on whlch all b1ds were re Jected Later October 10 1922 contracts were awarded for plumbmg S68 535 and for heatmg and ventllatlon S5124 987 makmg a grand total of Sl 459 202 On September 12 1922 1n Sectlon II of the Superlntendents Monthly Report lt was recommended that the new hwh school be known as the Theo dore Roosevelt Hugh School Under the requlrements of the rules of the Board of Educatxon thls sec t1on of the report was lard over untll the next regular meetmv On October 10 1923 on motlon of Mrs Bush seconded by Mr Wagner t e name of Theodore Roosevelt Hlgh School was adopted unan1mously for t e new school On October 10 1922 Mr Stephen M Wagner submltted the followlng resolutlon Whereas the Board of Educatxon of the C1ty of St Louxs has approved contracts for the constructlon of a new hlgh school to be located on the south sxde of Hartford Boulevard between Compton Avenue and Louxsrana Avenue and Whereas the Board of Educatlon has by 1ts actlon th1S evemng offi crally named this hlgh school the Theodore Roosevelt Hlgh School ID honor and memory of the late Presldent of the United States and Whereas the late Presldent Roosevelt havmg been such a lover of ch1l dren lt IS felt no hlgher trlbute could be pald hmm than has been pald by the Boards actron th1s evening and no greater mcentxve gxven to the chlldren who wlll later attend thls school than w1ll come from the study of the hfe and character of the man for whom thexr school was named therefore Be 11 Resolved That the Secretary and Treasurer be d1rected to have a suxtable paxntlng of the proposed new school made and together wlth an engrossed copy of thms resolutron sent to the W1dOW of the late Theodore Roosevelt On motlon of Mr Wagner seconded by Mr Stromberg the above resolution was unan1mously adopted January 9 1923 a letter from Mrs Edlth Kermxt Roosevelt wldow of Theodore Roosevelt was read to the Board of EdUC3t10H by the Secretary ln acknowledgment of the recelpt of the plcture of the Roosevelt Hrgh School and the resolutlon wlth reference to the namlng of the school On March 13 1923 there was referred to the Commxttee on Instructlon a letter from F Worden Commander and Albert F Kammann Adjutant f Quentln Roosevelt Post No 1 addressed to the officers of the Board of Educatlon mformlng them that the American Leglon w1th a membershlp of a proxxmately sur hundred and Ffty ey servlce men and women was deslrous of arranvm wxth the Board for ceremonles of the laylng of the corner stone of the Roosevelt Hlgh School and suggestlng that Apr1l 22 be the date of the ceremonles 1f that arrangement met wlth the approval of the Board I I I ' - ' 1 Y Y V 3 Y 9 Y I 1 . - , . . . , . Q V b - 5 . b. 7 9 ' V ' V , , . . , . Y , 5 v - Q I l , - y ' Y , . 7 7 3 . , . , l Y ' ' Q , . . J, , , . , 0 - v , . p . I -' v O' za b , . frm: V- :uw OYSTE R BAV LONG IBLAND.N.Y hM7,C..,,.. 721, MMM. !4ffQ7 ffefu, h47j,,.M,g.7,,,,,,f.,J,4M Zfzzuqf ffy,ff,f..,z,.,,1x 5 ' Zzazqzfafmg 25 'Lew fn? 4L,oo l fffwfffffff f-if .mAMfc,L Afdcf fm! -922. ,cf-L2 Q1 r ff 114,- 16... L . X , f f7 E f K , M' Z' I 4f6f 'WK f'fCfc4,A M,-5-Xb ,E 6.9-7 4,4-'eff I Lcfvva f if BWZHH On the same date the commxttee to wh1ch thxs communxcatlon was re ferred made the followxng report Your commxttee has carefully consxdered a commumcatlon addressed to the officers of the Board dated March 6 1923 s1gned by F J Worden Commander and Alfred F Kammann Adjutant of the Quentin Roosevelt Post No 1 of the American Leglon Your cornmxttee recommends that Quen tm Roosevelt Post No 1 of the Amerlcan Legxon be mformed that such an arrangement w1l1 meet wlth the approval of the Board of Educatlon Respectfully submitted W Palmer Clarkson Rachel Stix Mlchael H F Fahrenkrog WWW if tiles SWIMMING POOL In thls connectron Mr Clarkson moved that a commlttee of five be appomted of whlch the Presldent should be chalrman to confer with the Quentxn Roosevelt Post relatlve to the character of the program for these exerclses and as to the maklng of all other arrangements This motlon was econded by Mr Fahrenkrog and unanxmously adopted by the Board I Y-.L nh fl CORRIDOR MAIN FLOOR EJQUEHE On March 13 1923 Mr Stephen M Wagner offered the followmff reso 1ut1on Whereas the Board by 1tS actlon tomght has approved a sect1on of the report of the Comrn1ttee on School Bu1ld1ngs covermg a communxcatlon from the uentm Roosevelt Post No 1 of the Amerlcan Leglon and Whereas th1s comrnunlcatlon pertalns to the laymg of the corner stone of the Theodore Roosevelt Hlgh Schol on Sunday Apr1l 22 1923 and Whereas lt IS the mtentlon of Theodore Roosevelt Assxstant Secre tary of the Navy and son of the late Theodore Roosevelt to be present at sald corner stone laymg and Whereas lt 1S the deslre to make th1s occasxon a memorxal dav to the ate Theodore Roosevelt therefore Be It Resolved That the proper offxcers of the Board extend an 1nv1ta tlon to Hon Arthur M Hyde Governor of the State of M1ssour1 and Hon Henry W K1el Mayor of the C1ty of St Louxs to be present and part1c1pate m the ceremomes On motlon of Mr Wagner seconded by Mr Tobm the above resclutlon vsas adopted On Apr1l 10 1923 there was referred to the Commlttee on School Buxld followmg commlttee to confer w1th the uent1n Roosevelt Post No 1 of the Amerlcan Le 1on 1n connect1on w1th the corner stone lavlng of the Theodore Roosevelt H1 h School sald comm1ttee l1E1V1I'1U been appomted ln accordance Wlth the acnon of the Board on March 13th H A Rosskcpf Cha1rrnan Stephen M Waoner john C Tobxn J J Maddox R M Mllhgan It would Le 1I1tCl'CSt1'1g to describe the ceremonxes of the lay1n of the corner stone and to pr1nt mn full the words uttered by the varxous speakers on th1s rnemorable occas1on whose reat slgnlficance could hardly be con CC1V6d or expres ed W J S BRYAN 7 1 1 I I ' v b - Q - ' ' . . ' U V V 1 - ' 5 7 3 v Y , . A . . - , . s V . . - ings a communication from Mr. H. A. Rosskopf, President, appointing the . U. . . . - . D ' - D V b - 5 . . g ,Q A U -. g Q. A . x W - TIM' sfj. igsmx NROQBEVE LTN-LUNCHROOM EVJEIHH PAUL CORNOYER HE excellent and costly Oll pamtmg presented to the Roosevelt H1gh if! 53 School by the Old Planters Hotel of St Louls IS mdeed smcerely ap Ymi preclated Its worth and merlt are wlthout doubt reallzed and not less deserved because of xts hangmg 1n the Old Planters Hotel for so many years whlch rather adds to lts mestlmable value The pamter of thls work of art ought therefore recelve some recogmtlon of hrs ab1l1ty at thns tlme By the brush of Paul Cornoyer was thxs wonderful pamtmg produced Hrs work cannot be truthfully descrxbed by mere words but must be ob served ln order to realxze 1ts actual beauty But thls IS only one of the many pamtmgs of thls renowned artxst He was born 1n St Louis Mo ln 1864 and lxved here durmg hls earller lxfe Whrle Cornoyer was 1n St Lours after a trxp abroad there came to htm a man a brother pamter who through h1s mterest m and advlce to hlm miluenced hxs lnfe work greatly That man the late Wllham M Chase already of world fame saxd to hxm Come to New York I know you w11l do well there Cornoyer modest and not a llttle uncertam of h1s ablhty to survrve m cr1t1ca1 cold New York wavered But not for long Upon Chases op1n1on he could rely he would and d1d And so here opens up the Held which made Cornoyer known throughout Amerlca and Europe H left St Lou1s to test New York and conquered the whole country Paul Cornoyer was a lover of the outdoors He enjoyed portraylng out s1de l1fe 1n country and 1n c1ty 1n all sorts of weather He pamted 1n sun llght in ram ln snow and moonllght and xt took hlm but a few years to develop mto one of the greatest palnters of street scenes we ever had The great Chase who never faxled to show hrs apprecratxon of younger pamters watched Cornoyers work One day he saw a canvas that gave hnm great Joy and he promptly purchased lt This trlbute from a fellow pamter gave Cornoyer keen pleasure He had sold many canvases before but for a Chase to buy a Cornoyer was beyond anythmg he had ever expected Artlsts were not buymg each others work m those days for they could hardly afford It But Chase s actxon put the unquahhed approval of a great pamter on the work of a younger man backed up by the one thmg the public can under stand ready money' That sale put Paul Cornoyer on the easy road to success Chase had helped the young St Loulslan over the stomest part of h1s Journey Pre vxous to the txme of obtammg thxs assxstance Cornoyer had received an edu catxon ln Europe As an artlst on the St Louxs Repubhc he scraped together sufficient money to go to Pans for mstructlon m pamtmg He worked under Louxs Blanc Benjamin Constant and jules Lefevre When hrs funds gave out he returned and endeavored to make a llvellhood nn St Louls as an artlst Then fortune came 1n the shape of Chase whose frxendly ald was not wasted 1n the least 7 uh ru I A- . . . . .. BN' K . . . . A 1 . ' Aff - . . . . '. . , , . y - ' v -s 9 ' - y s ' , Q . , . , . . I U . , . . . ,, . . . . . ' Y Y 9 1 ' ' , . . . . , . s s ' ' Q s 1 9 9 , . , . ' Y . , . 9 . , . . . . 1. . , - . . , 1 s ' 9 ' - 1 . fn' .'- 4111 PA NT NG BY CORNOYER P11 P 4 BWZIHH Cornoye was awarded th first pr1ze at the Par1s Amer1can Art Asso c1at1on ln 1892 a gold medal at he exh1b1t1on of the St Louls Assoclatxon of Pamters and Sculptors 1n 1895 he Evans prlze at the Salmagundl Club 1n 1905 the Inness prlze there 1n 10 6 and the Shaw purchase prlze 1n 1908 Hls p1ctures are ln the Brookyln Museum Dallas fTexas Art Assoc1at1on s Gallery the St LOUIS Museum and the Newark Museum Mr Cornoyer was made an Assoclate Academlclan bv the Natlonal Academy of DGSIUI1 1n 1909 He was a l1fe member of the Natlonal Arts Club and was affilxated wlth the All1ed Artlsts ASSOCl3tIOH and the Salmagundl Club As v1ce presldent of the Gloucester Art Assocxatlon he spared nelther t1me nor labor to make the art sectxon of the tercentenary ann1versary cele bratlon of the settlement of Gloucester a success He was also a movlng sp1r1t and charter member of the North Shore Arts Assoc1at1on of Gloucester Hls absolute SlI'1C6I'lty1I'l all thlngs h1s honesty of purpose the capacltv for domg for others wxthout ever a thought of the trouble It took to do xt or the thanks to be recexved h1s whole souled generoslty sent many a less fortunate one who came to hlm away happy And these thmgs he d1d quletly respectmg the feelmbs of those who recelved h1s conslderatxon and help In thls wav Cornoyer succeeded 1n a1d1n,D the less fortunate as he had re celved help from Chase Mr Cornoyer devoted hlmself almost excluslvely to palfltlflg New York street scenes but later l1ved most of the year at East Gloucester Mass H1s unt1mely dem1se at h1s home ln East Gloucester 1n June 1923 was slncerely felt by all A man of the finest character was called away leavmg behlnd more than h1s marvelous pamtmgs In the finest homes and the greatest museums hang h1s p1ctures and for tunate are they vsho possess them We Roosevelt1ans therefore should be extremely proud of ownmg one of the masterpleces of such a man HAROLD MILLER Wil I' 6 ' , ., . - , - Ju , . . 7 ' 9 ' ' .1 b . , . . . . Q, . . . . ' . .1 , v - , n v ' 3 U . ' 1 ' c' - . J , . , - 9 5 9 - 1 , - 7 . . , , l 1 Mr Muller Nr Hart, Fmst CP rmcmpat Fmst Hsst 'Prmcipat First Chanrmeq of' 'Student Courycmt Committees baura 'Bmscoe Cutlery Cod. Fmt Mayor Fmst Cup Whnner Y'1'I OUR STUDENT GOVERNMENT W1 E of Roosevelt may truthfully state that we live 1n a c1ty wlthxn a 3 Ss c1ty' Do we not spend five hours of the first Eve days of each week Sv-Q 1n the czty of Roosevelt, We often speak of our school as the blg town of Rooseveltvllle and consldermg our large number of c1t1zens and our system of government that lS a correct name because our school government IS very s1m1lar to that of our clty government St Louls IS dxvxded 1nto twenty seven wards Rooseveltvxlle IS com posed of fifty seven wards or advrsory groups In St Louxs each ward elects one of 1ts cltnzens as Alderman to represent that ward on the Board of Alder men m Rooseveltvllle each advxsory group or ward elects one of 1ts number as Representatlve or Alderman to represent that advisory group ln the Stu dent Councxl Slnce our school government IS truly democratic the more lmportant oFf1cers are elected by the school at large Hence the Mayor the Chairmen of the Slx Standnng Commmttees and the Editor and Assoclate Edxtor of the Weekly and Seml annual are elected by the entxre student body QTh1nk of It Rooseveltlans ln our llttle town we can vote before the age of twenty one' Is that not a prlvrleffea The work of the Student Counc1l IS d1v1ded among the S1x Stand1ng manage certam work delegated to them by the Counc1l The names and dutles of these committees are as follows the Athletlc Commlttee whlch at tends to all athletlc act1v1t1es and Roosevelt s interests ln the Ahletxc Counc1l the Audxtorlum Commxttee whlch prov1des entertamment for the weekly audxtonum sesslon the Fmance Commxttee whxch presents all bllls to the Student Counc1l the C1t1zensh1p Comrmttee whxch cares for among other thmgs the traffxc problem of the school and makes every effort to reduce tardmess cases the Personal Property Committee which endeavors to safe guard personal property the Socxal Commlttee whlch endeavors to promote a better relatxonshxp throughout the school and to get thls end ffxves the New ay partles every term Student Government IS the name we commonly ZHIX to our school management But we at Roosevelt do not exerclse Student Government we enjoy Student Partlclpatlon ln go zernment and that to the fullest de gree possrble The Counc1l whlch represents every group ln the school has the prlvxlege of recommendmg to the prxncxpal all plans whlch they thmk helpful to the student body and general welfare of Rooseveltvllle Wnth the consent of the prmclpal such plans are always developed and suc cessfully carrxed through So Rooseweltmans when you dlscover a new traf 'Ih rtxt G5 IV I. an , - X 1 . 411'-' . ' . ,.-N-., I . . U A . . ' . ' - Q . . i - I . 1 n . , Z a A Q l v , f 7 1 ' , . , 7 .- , . . . . ' . , . . - v s -D Committees. These committees, each with a faculty counsellor, direct and . . . , . . . ' 5 , I , 1 . , , ' : ' . - : ' . 1 n ' v bl ls U ' ' , ' li il . . , M . . . ,, . i - l 1 ' U I EWHNH hc rule, when you enjoy a fme program 1n the Audxtorlum or when you notlce any change 1n the management of the school you may be assurec that nlne tlmes out of ten that rule that program or that change or1g1natec ln the Student Councll whlch represents You' It IS obvlous that our student government depends upon us for ltS suc cess Our groups depend upon us for thelr act1v1ty each representanve de pends upon hlS group for what he has to contribute to the Councll the Coun c1l depends upon the Representatxves for the busmess to be d1scussed and acted upon So we see that our student government IS composed of many lmks each dependent upon the other Fellow Rooseveltlans let each of us be responslble for one of those lmks let each of us ln our respectlve groups do all that we can to make our one l1tt1e llnk a strong one Let us be actlve 1n our partlclpatlon ln govern ment Let each reallze that he IS a Charter Member of this large commumty and let us establlsh a record that wall be a model and a standard for all future records' LAURA BR1scoE THE CITIZENSHIP CAMPAIGN HE ldea of havmg competltlon between advlsory groups to stlmulate student part1c1pat1on 1n varlous 3CtlVltlCS IS not a new or orlgmal Emi one That scheme was concelved long before any of us entered hxgh school and lt was used effectlvely ln selllng txckets securlng enthuslasm IH lnterscholastlc contests and arouslng lnterest ln school lnstltutlons whxle we were being haxled by proud and fond grammar schools as youthful prodl g1CS and brxllxant scholars Several terms ago one of the Conduct and At tendance Commlttees of McKinley High School declded to mstltute a scheme of competltlon on a large scale lncorporatlng ln the plan not one ldea alone but the varlous xdeas of superlorlty ln scholarshlp cultlvatlon of thrlft par t1c1pat1on ln and supoort of outslde aCt1V1tleS and development of punctuallty The xdea met w1th the lnstant approval of the prmclpal and lt was accord mgly carrled 1nto effect And that plan was orlglnal for It embodled not one quallty alone but rather the many necessary for good c1t1zensh1p Llke WISE whlle the other plans of competltlon precedlng xt had provlded a vague and hazy honor for the wmner th1s plan provlded a del-lnlte reward the Cxtlzenshlp Banner to be publlcly presented to the hlghest group The C1t1zensh1p Campaign has proved strlkmgly successful in practxcal operatlon In the form 1n whxch nt exlsted then except for a few mmor changes lt exists today It IS a dlffxcult matter to show that scholarshlp standards have been ralsed or support of school mstztutrons mcreased as a dlrect result of the plan though they doubtless have However 1n the case of the bank where records are kept and stat1st1cs compxled we find a con crete rllustratlon of the usefulness of the work for deposlts have lncreased lux 1 s . . . . . v s s ' ' ' u ss , . I , ' , - , . ' 9 7 . . Q'-2:1 . xx, l . . . . . . . . . . . ff ' Cnr, A .74,, , . . ,.- , , Y 7 I 1 v , Q 1 1 ' A , ' , - ' Y 9 1 1 - ' 1 9 ! , . ' I , . , L . , 1 9 ' I 11 'I -IZsv ' EUJEHE Ureatly smce the executlon of the plan In fact one of our OH-101315 has made the unquahfied statement that the Camnaxgn IS worth uhmle from the stand poznt of thrxft alone The most recent ag1tat1on whlch has really afiected the Campaxgn ls that of havln three d1StlDCI banners one for first second and thrrd places respectlvely It was polnted out that sxnce Roosevelt xs so much larger 1n numbers than McK1nley xt would be well to mcrease the scope of the Cam pawn by grantmg awards to the three hxghest groups reachmg and enthus me ln that manner a greater number of puplls Thls xdea has not yet been trmed rn practlcal operatxon but lt blds falr to accompllsh all expected of xt Smce the Campalgn has done so much to a1d McKmley It should cer tamly recemve a falr trxal here at Roosevelt If we g1V9 It the admlratlon and loyalty lt deserves lt w1l1 surely do as much for us May mt always merxt and enjoy here even more success than It has at McK1nley' SCORE IN CITIZENSHIP CAMPAIGN 15 polnts for each pupll makmg all E s 10 polnts for each pupll makmg nothmg less than one M plus 5 poxnts for each member makmg nothmg less than M 5 po1nts for each pupxl of an outslde 3CtlV1ty 1 pomt for each deposxt mn he school bank durmg the 5 weeks 5 pomts subtracted for each case of tard1ness EDGAR BOHLE OO o x 0 0 Al K l 4 6 V! Sv:- v I A u In Q-fu W fAU 1'2'1! AX but 7111 ro 0 Q ' Q04 Q O 'bf 'rt ffl Q . 5 H u Q A A 0 Q 0 o o o 9 o - , o LEE RRWR BX AI ,. r., V3 V ,Q v., v I-gh . Q - , 4 , -.F -., 4 'L H . , ' -I ' - i. v ., if - .K 1.,, p I 11. -4--,fix fb :gil --57 A A . ', L , . , . ,A . A ,., -n g. A qi .F I, V I L, ,QL '- --, ' '-' ' - - . f - 2 '.'- f, -- 1 -1. . 'Z ' A , ' L, 4 V' , ' Q. ',- f E f- V ,. , .-, V .-. .:',k Q , ' -, 41 1,4 ' .L1.' . gg ' ' '- :-' 1 . l - A V' '. . ,,' . -X 'v' . .., , . ' Q . J, - Y I , nh ,x , ' 'J .Tv ', '1 ff.- 7 Q . 'ff- -- I' L .- ,4 if b 2 j 1 ,.a. , 4 . 5 1 ' , R ' - ' '-', 1 --' 1 ' , V A ' -A ZA , ,- ,, , 4. V, Vi-, - ,V --' ' - '- ' 'f 4. . Z . ' - : Z-v , Q' .I .'.. , -' -.'-gg. ' , 4 j' -- - '. 4 - ', ' ,fi -1- . -1 ,, . 5 . :V -1 - fu- 1 ' . wr' - V5 2 1 ,N ' ,.' .-' 5 3 - , Q A, A .J .-w .j - Q- , , .' F 55 'j 1 f , A. -, ' Z , A',4:.'- J' 1 ' 1 ng ' ,J ' ' ,' ,, Lf ji' AL' . ' 1 l - . -. Q' , 1..,1 -f ' ' .w -V , 4 , -t .14 4 .U in ., A , , .I M. Q .4 -1 ., ., . - L . 1. , ' -4 44, '. ' ,Q , -. ' x' 1 . 1'- .- xl ':. I' ki,- ,. B ' A. F, - ,ty -, 1 -, 5 'QLAZ , K , 4- 4' . BKUZNE STAN S LARIAT URE Ill go' sald Stanley Morton when he recelved an 1nv1tat1on IQ, from h1s bachelor uncle Mortlmer Carlton to spend the summer on h1s bxg ranch ln the Southwest But rxght away he made up his mmd as to a few thlngs Br1efly summed up these rellectlons resulted ln a resolutxon he would not rernam a tenderfoot long In all the Western yarns he had read 1n the smug luxury of h1s Eastern home Stan remembered that the seasoned plalnsman who so often plotted amusement for himself at the expense of the unsophxstlcated lad from the East usually ended ln a burst of admlratlon over the unexpected develop ment of some latent and unexpected ab1l1ty on the part of sand tenderfoot Naturally Stan coveted for hlmself such an experlence though he soon be gan to suspect he was not destmed to enjoy rt The atmosphere of the blg Western country seemed so strange to h1m Hrs uncle bxg hearted pros perous and Jovlal was nevertheless a product of condltlons to whlch Stan was utterly forelgn And as the days passed he came to thmk less of what the fellows back home would say of h1s exploxts and to thlnk more of what he could do to stand well 1n the eyes of the hardened ranchers about hxm Stan was afrald of horses partlcularly the v1c1ous ponxes rn which the plalnsmen seemed to delxght He took but an lndlfferent mterest IH huntmg and fishmg He felt shy and dxffident m the presence of the boys those frlsked away 1nto the mornmg sunshme and came home at sunset apparently but llttle subdued 1n sp1r1t desplte thelr long day on the tra1l or round up There was one feature of the cowboys equ1pment however that d1d mterest Stan That was the rawhlde larlat or rope as the punchers usually termed lt He never t1red of watchlng the wonderful skxll and dexter1ty of the rxders wlth thxs artlcle In h1s shy half dlffxdent manner he even went so far as to borrow an extra rope one of several hangmg 1n the bunk house and lmltatmg as closely as possible the professlonal herder to try h1s skrll on varlous objects Most of Stan s practlclng was done however when no one was 1n srght He dxd not care to encounter the covert glances and the unspoken r1d1cule whlch he 1ntu1t1vely recognlzed h1s bungllng efforts would be sure to draw upon hum It IS highly probable that the youths proliclency mn this h1s one real cowboy accompllshment would not have called forth any great adrnxratxon upon the part of the seasoned plamsmen had they been prlvxleged to w1t ness xt But there was one person about the ranch house who never laughed at Stan s pathetxc efforts to become a real Westerner however crude they many have appeared to others Thls was llttle Lester or Pepper McCl1n tock son of the ranch foreman so called because of a plentlful besprlnkllng of freckles over h1s small round face lim! 9 T, s ,p , ,, 4 . . . . . L ' ' . ' . ' . 5? I 9 v l 7 , - I Q - . . . , . - , Q Y Y 9 3 ' Y , . 1 ' ' ' KC ,Y ' Y vigorous young fellows who lived in the bunk house near at hand, and who . . . . , , , , - Q , . . 9 9 ' ' ' if !! ' 9 1 . . . . . . y - . , I . I , . . Y . . . . , . . ' 7 3 . . , . . . . Y y - , . ' s .l Kl,l' BWEHH Between these two desplte the dlsparlty 1n years there had grown up a real affect1on And lt would have been a hard matter to determlne whose was the deeper or more abldmg Pepper s because of the older lad s sympa thetlc mterest 1n h1s small affalrs and h1s never fallxng stock of mcldents and football and baseball storles or Stan s because lt was evldent even to Pep per s unpract1ced eye that desplte h1s years the httle fellow was the true son of the West Pepper would march among the wlld eyed cattle wxth a sang frold that amazed the older boy He would throw hlmself recklessly upon the back of a half tamed cow pony laughlng dellghtedly at ltS frantlc efforts to unseat hum and contmue to laugh just as heartlly when the attempt ended m dlsaster to hlmself as lt usually d1d He was a prxme favorite among the punchers who would llft hlm to the saddle 1n front of them and whxrl away 1n a storm of dust and glmtlng hoofs with Pepper shoutlng and swmglng h1s small sombrero Stan s V1Slt was drawlng to a close as one mtensely hot mornmg he and Pepper sauntered forth 1n search of dlverslon Stan wlth h1s ever present larxat coxled loosely across h1s shoulders and an mterestmg book tucked under h1s arm Pepper w1th a generous lunch whlch the provl dent Mrs McCl1ntock had lnslsted upon puttlng up for the two boys Thelr program for the day as was so often the case was uncertam they were merely trustlng to whim or caprlce to lead them wherever lt would For a few moments they paused to note the half dozen horses that stood wlth droopmg heads and 1dly tWltCl'l1l'lg talls w1th1n the dusty corral A furtlce glance around told Stan that he was unobserved so he lxfted the larlat from 1ts place and whlrled It deftly about h1s head two or three trmes 1n wardly exultmg as the long noose settled gracefully over one of the tall posts near the corral gate He trxed agaln Wlth equally satlsfactory results Say' sald small Pepper you re learmng all rxght I dont belleve Dad could have done xt any better Stan was on the polnt of attemptmg a thlrd cast when he caught a gllmpse of the broad smllmg face of Fun Loon the Chmese cook starlng out of the kltchen wmdow Coxlmg the rope carefully he plcked up hxs book and wxth Pepper trudgmg affably at h1s s1de struck out across the level pasture lands towards a near by clump of scrub oaks dxgnlfled by the name of Carltons Grove But the younger lad demurred Look here Stan lets not go there Let s go to Fetterman s Gulch You sa1d you d take me some day and next week you ll be gomg back home We ve got our lunch and we can stay all day lf we want to Stan paused He remembered h1s promlse to Pepper but the day was not the kmd he would have chosen for a four mlle tramD There was the usual hot wmd blowmg and the sun bllstered pasture lands looked anythlng but 1nv1t1ng wlth the whlte heat waves shlmmerlng agalnst the horlzon ln the dlstance llke wreaths of smoke Th1s was the hot season m the South Tlzzrlx 5 1 1 ' ' 1 9 . ' , . . v 1 v ' , . . . . 1 1 9 . . U . ,, ' 1 y , . 1 1 . , . . . . ' v 1 ' 1 ' 1 y 9 ' 1 1 1 ' 1 , . 1 , - rn 11 ' n 9 ' ' 1 ' . , , . - 11 1 1 1 1 - n v 9 ' 1 44 Q 11 as , 1 . , , - . 1 1 ' r ' 1 9 ' 9 - 11 ' 1 , - V'- CTYUIZ EWEHH west country and Stan was hndxng by experlence that the name was no mlsnomer Nevertheless there was h1s promlse to Pepper All rlght sonny to Fettermans Gulch well go But remember 1f you get sunstruck your mother mustn t blame me for It Stan swung around as he spoke and headed toward the hlgh rollmg ground and rugged hllls m the dlstant sky lme Stan knew the place farrly well as Fetterman s Gulch was one of the few mterestmg places that the locallty boasted Durmg h1s stay at the ranch house he had made several v1s1ts to It and had found there a sxngular fascx natlon It was xndeed a wlld and uncanny place Really xt was not a gulch but a mmlature canyon such as one occas1onally encountered 1n that reglon a deep lrregular gash wasted through the very backbone of the h1lls by the swlft water of the Ostego Its walls Essured at mtervals w1th ravmes and broken by rough stones and deep gashes were entlrely bare of vegeta t1on save an occaslonal stunted or gnarled tree standlng hke a monument of death 1n a world of desolatlon For the most part these walls fell prec1p1 tously ln some places a sheer drop of some slxty or seventy feet to the bed of the stream At pomts they dlverged to a breadth of a hundred or a hun dred and fifty feet Abam they narrowed untll lt would seem one mlght almost leap the deep chasm wlthout dlfficulty As Stan and hxs compamon plodded toward the dlstant range of h1lls he began to regret the generoslty that had prompted h1m to agree to such an expedmon on such a day It seemed to Stan that he had never felt such heat His head throbbed and hls eyes smarted Blts of mlca xn the occasional stones that strewed the landscape stabbed h1s v1s1on hke po1nts huge masses of cumulus clouds w1th mky patches of sky between p1led themselves ln fantastlc combmatlons hlgh above the horlzon From txme to tlme famt flashes of llghtmng streaked these dark patches and 1nd1st1nct echoes of thunder sounded mtermlttently Stan hoped that a shower was on the way In thelr swelterxng condltlon both boys felt that rt would prove a welcome rellef Guess well head for Ireys Bluff first Pep sald Stan as they neared the canyon s rim Then well follow the gulch down to that ledge of rock and eat our lunch nn the shade Im hungry but I dont partlcularly fancy the thought of a lunch out here In th1s sun Me nelther rejolned Pepper heartlly only lets not go rrght away Irey s Bluff IS a cracky place to drop stones Seems hke they never w1l1 reach bottom Dad took me and Ted Flsher up there one tlme an we made some paper parachutes an dropped em down I guess they sarled around down there for an hour before they l1t For some mmutes they walked on m sllence the older boy castmg un easy glances from tlme to tlme ln the dxrectlon of the dlstant clouds Fmally he spoke I guess we won t sail any parachutes today Pep and we won t lllllf 1 1 . . I , . . U nl ' 9 7 ' Y U ' I V 7 ' !l . ' I , V . . , - , . ' U . . . . U . . of steel. But there were indications of a change. Off toward the Southwest D V 7 . , gg 9 7 ,Y ' 1 9 Y 1 ' it 9 . , Y , . ' 7 . . ., M . ,, . . . I A, , . . . , I 1 ' . ,, , - N v - I 1 v A',x .'Ag1l: EVJEHH stay very long at Ireys elther for 1ts a good mlle or more to Goose Neck and xt looks to me as 1f those clouds over there mean bus1ness sure enough As Stan spoke he paused for a moment to survey the dark mass that had been steadxly rolllnv up for some tlme The hot wlnd had dxed down and scarcely a breath of a1r was st1rr1ng Though he sun stlll shone he notlced that ltS dazzllng brlghtness had gradually glven way to a strange watery lxght though Wlth llttle perceptlble d1m1nut1on of 1tS heat By the trme they had reached the top of Ireys Bluff the threatenmg cloud bank had obscured the whole southwestern sky and was rapldly reach mg up toward the zenlth Lnghtnlng darted and crackled between 1ts ever movlng rlfts As Stan watched It It seemed to hlm that the nnky darkness near the horlzon was shadlnv by degrees into a greenxsh pallor higher up gxvlng a we1rd and ghostly effect to the landscape below He had been long enough rn that country to feel uneasy about those sxgns Pepper he declared hastlly we must sklp Irev s thls tlme and make tracks for Goose Neck r1ght away Unless I lose my guess were gomg to have a real storm As ne spoke a bllndlng glare rent the heavens followed by an ear splxt ting crash Stan saw the llps of the startled lad move but heard nothmg Almost sxmultaneously wxth a crash a ragged sleeve of black cloud nearest the horlzon dlpped and bulged as lf some glant arm lmprlsoned 1n 1ts folds were seeklng to escape Its finger tlps touched the horlzon rose touched It agam and a moment after resolved ltself 1nto a terrlble funnel shaped cloud The experlenced Pepper recognxzed lt tnstantly as a cyclone cloud O Stan he cried exc1tedly 1ts a twlster and 1tS comlng rlght thus way O Stan where can we go' There am t no place to hlde out here Hush Pepper' We re not Uomg to be blown away at all reassured the older boy confidently as he grasped the l1ttle fellow s hand a d hurried him along the canyon s r1m That cloud 1sn t golng to strlke w1th1n a mxle of us But lt IS Stan It IS sobbed Pepper as he cast apprehenslve glances over hxs shoulder Its headed rlght th1s way Well be blowed into the gulch sure For a hundred yards they ran as fast as the rough ground would per mlt Suddenly Stan stopped and took llttle Pepper up 1n h1s arms One glance at the rapxdly approachlng cloud was enough to confirm the lad s sen tence To all appearances they were dlrectly IH the lme of the deadly funnel that traveling wlth express tra1n veloclty he knew would sweep away every thlng ln nts oath W1th1n five mmutes they would be swallowed up and then He stared helplessly at the approachlnv cloud then down toward the dark chasm at h1s feet where the slender thread of the Ostego gleamed we1rdly 1n the gloom far below Whatever he d1d must be done qulckly A the pomt where they stood Fettermans Gulch was narrowest and deepest lfzrxxzl , - . , . v , . . . . .. , . . 5 . . . . G . . -, , - - ., . . Y . Y , - ' 7 E, v L4 95 ' 66 ' 7 ' ' 4 9 - , . , . ' 1 va Y Y - - . , . Y ' U U 1 V - ' H ,, . . H. , . . , . . . 7 7 Y ' ' 1 - sy , . . .. s - n 1 ' D ' . , I . v v -' . . , . M . , . . . . . 77 H . . A . . ,, . u n v s . H , . . , . . su . - , b . 1 b ' v ' - ' Y t, v u 1 7 , . M I' 'f '- 1 5 , BWENH On the sxde on whxch they stood the wall pltched sheer to the very bed of the strearn wlth scarcely a projectlng spur or ledge that rmght offer a foothold On the oppos1te s1de some twenty five feet or more below the rlm of the gulch was the wlde shelf of an outcroppmg rock If only we were on the other s1de' Stan reflected bltterly Down there under the overhang of that rock there m1ght be some hope of escape from the rush of the storm but here Suddenly hrs thoughts reverted to h1s larlat In the excrtement of the moment he had temporarlly forgotten It It was long enough to reach the bottom he felt sure and Pepper was not heavy One of them at least mlght be saved for at the bottom of the deep gorge the fury of the storm would be scarcely perceptlble Pepper he sa1d calmly I m gomg to let you down lnto the gulch wlth th1s rope Its plenty long enough and you re not so heavy so dont be scared It won t be long before they ll be out here lookmg for us He paused suddenly ln the very act of sllpplng the noose over the boy s shoulders On the oppos1te s1de of the chasm a few feet from 1ts edge and dxrectly above the ledge of rock was a blasted sycamore one of the few that added to the cheerless aspect of Fettermans Gulch It stood up gaunt and bare 1ts whxtened trunk and leafless boughs lookmg almost ghostly rn the twlhght gloom One of the largest of 1ts llmbs the end of which had been wrenched off mn some former battle wxth the elements reached up at an obllque angle to the trunk about fifteen feet above the ground That up raxsed arm suggested somethmg to Stan Qulck as a flash a p0SS1blC plan of escape for both occurred to hlm of th1s yet Keep calm and do just as I tell you Even as he spoke he caught up the larlat determmed to make one desperate effort Could he do xt? He must do It Hms very hfe and what was of far more consequence the hfe of the l1ttle lad Wlth hlm now depended upon h1s steadmess and cour age Once twlce three tlmes he whlrled the coll above hrs head Then wlth a deft turn of the wrxst he sent It hurtlmg across the chasm The long rope po1sed ln mld alr stralghtened out and the next moment the runnlng noose at the end settled xtself stralght and true over the stump of the splmtered llrnb You ve got to be a man now Pepper he crxed passlng the length of rope swlftly through h1S fingers Take th1s knife Put your arms around 'ny neck and hold tight Don t let loose whatever you do When I tell you to cut do xt' As he spoke he made a sl1p noose at the other end of the rope loopmg lt about hlmself and the sobbing boy Gathermg up the slack xn hls hands wlth an addltlonal twlst or two about hls wrlsts and a sllent prayer or help he swung hxmself out over the chasm Would the sycamore support thelr umted wexghta Would the tree be uprooted and whmrled away before the rope could be severed, What 1f they I P . . , L - . U . . . i it ' V9 ' Cl W7 , 1. 9 7 ' ! 9 ' - Z KK ,Y ' lf 7 ' ' ' 9 3 ' 7 7 7 ' ! 7 9 I ' 99 . . . , ' . . , . 7 7 5 Y Q: ' 9 , Pepper, he shouted above the roar of the coming storm, we'll get out ' ' - in , , . - ' T s . . . . , . . - . , , . , . , . . . . - . y . , . . .U . :A 1 93 ' ' 9 ! I . . ,, . . . . n y y 1 . ,, . ! ' 9 I . A , . EWEHE should miss the ledge or both be knocked unconscious against the opposmg wall? Such questions flashed through his mind as he swung for a brief moment through space He caught a fragmentary glance of the dark gulf and the ghostly stream The next moment h1s body crashed against the op posite side just above the ledge with a violence that drove the breath from his lungs and nurnbed every sens1b111ty Showers of loose earth and stones rained about his shoulders Dlmly he felt the rope slipping through his Fingers When he opened his eyes he saw Peppers scared face streaked with grime bending above him His head throbbed and as he started to draw himself to an upr1ght position he gave an involuntary cry of pam discover mg that one arm was broken and useless But his own sufferings were quickly lost sight of in the glad discovery of the fact that Pepper beyond a few bad cuts and bruises was practically uninjured Evidently Stan s own body had acted as a buffer for the younger lad who had managed to cut the rope the minute thelr feet touched the ledge So it was that Stan was able to give a cheery response to the excited cry of a party of searchers from the ranch late that afternoon It was near sunset when the rescuers had made the detour of the gorge and delivered the boys from their perilous position on the shelf As plucky a thing as ever I saw in my life even 1f I do have to praise on the shoulder As for big Tim McCl1ntock with one arm around the small Pepper he could only manage to grip Stans fingers while the tears of Joy stood in his eyes Stan had at last won the admlration of the old and seasoned plainsmen LILLIAN RICE Winner of First Prize in Short Story Contest ANECDOTE I1 y avait un anglais qui marchalt dans une rue a Parls I1 a vue une belle maison et a demande en Anglais a un Francais qui passait Qui possede cette mazson et le Francais a repondu je ne comprends pas L anglais a marche plus et 11 a vu d une autre belle maison et 11 a encore demande Qui possede cette maison et les Francais ont toujours repondu Je ne com prends pas enhn 1 anglais dit Cet homme je ne comprends pas do1t etre tres riche BEULAH WI'1 THAUS fozti H18 D . . , . 3 1 ! ' 7 ! s 9 ' 4 s s . u , , , . 3 ? ,, . . . , . . a relative in saying it ! exclaimed Carlton, as he patted Stan affectionately . . ,, . . 5 ! 7 3 ' . , . , . . . , A, . , ' V7 ' ' il 9, Y ' 3 1 ' , . , . . , ,, . 7 X - as ' ' as - Y 9 vs. 1 ' ' n w' Q ' '- 7 9 1 7 . . ,, EKUZJHH l 1 K I 1 l I 4 A RUMOR CFrom V1rg11 s Aeneld j Rumor the sw1ftest of ev11s by exertlng herself becomes more act1ve and gams strength as she Goes She lb small at hrst because of fear but soon she walks alonv the ground and then llldfii her head among the clouds It IS sam that Mother Farth angered affamst he gods brought her forth as her younvest chlld the sxster of Coeus and hnceladus wlth swlft feet and mmble wmgs '1 monster hldeous and lmmense who strange to say has for every plume 1n her body as many wakeful eyes beneath as many tongues as many babbhng mouths and pF1CkS up as many hstenlnff ears By nlght she Fhes mxdway between heaven and earth bLlZZlY1U nor does she ever mchne her eyes to balmy rest Watchful by day she perches e1ther on a house top or on the lofty towers and terrlhes many Great cltxes chnv me to the false and wrong vet heraldlng the truth A I I .N f' fglx' ,K fvf!! ll .N IIV' fs-.re 1 aff t t lm xsfzzzzzzw' fffllflf flu wsu' .fx imc. 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BQUZNH A SONG OF THE ROAD T WAS a sultry day rn June when along a dusty country road there trudged a small and slrght Hgure It was a lrttle old man rn shabby I clothes carryrng a small leather bag rn one hand and swrngrng a strck rn the other A drlaprdated black felt hat covered hrs thrck shaggy whrte harr and shaded hrs blue eyes Hrs face wore a look of contentment and he appeared to be absorbed rn thought There were delrghtful lrnes of humor around ms mouth and when he laughed rt seemed as though hrs whole face were rllumrned by a soft ray of sunshrne It was a face that no one could deny was drstrngurshed and out of keeprng wrth hrs dress He wore a blue shrrt under hrs thrn shmy black surt From hrs walk he would be generally termed a spry lrttle old man He walked Jauntrly and rnstead of leanrng on hrs strck for support he swung rt rn partrcularly care free manner Presently he came to a fork rn the road One path led rnto a deep cool green forest whrle the other contrnued along the glarrngly sunshrny dusty road The traveler stopped a moment and looked rellectrvely down the dusty road that lay between frelds of poorly rrrrgated and fast scorchrng crops and then turned rnto the dark peaceful glade On the road from whrch he had just come there had been the soft lazy dron rng of bees wrth occasronal scramble of some Held creature back rnto the shade of the tall vteeds In the woods there was the occasronal sound of a brrd coorng sleeprly to rtself or the creak of the lrmbs overhead when drs turbed by some more enterprrsrng squrrrel Presently the sound of water was heard rn the drstance and the spry lrttle old man hastened hrs now laggrng footsteps to a brrsker pace Soon he came to a place where the woods were unusually dense and the trrcklrng of water seemed very near The anxrous lrttle old wanderer glanced sharply about as though rn search of somethrng then hastened on a few steps and smrled knowrngly as he saw an almost completely covered pathway brarrchrng off among the tall weeds He turned onto thrs path and hacked hrs way through the weeds wrth hrs strck In a short trme he stopped Before hrm was the entrance to a cave It was a srght that could truly be called beautrful There were rvy vrnes creeprng up the great stone wall rnto whrch the cave extended Great clusters of wrld honeysuckle hung about the entrance and the massrve boulders on both srdes of rt were heavrly cov ered wrth moss Nearby a clump of purple vrolets stood out lrke a purple eye rn the verdurous growth of the woodland The sound of the water was now very drstrnctly heard from wrthrn the cave The lrttle old man stood for a moment rn contemplatron of thrs gorgeous natural beauty then smrled remrnrscently and went rnto the cave I JI flu . . l . l . ' Y ' 1 I ' ! . . . . v 6 . . . - l - A 9 1 1 ' l I 9 S a I . Y i The quietness of the day accentuated the few sounds that were heard. 1 1 ' 1 . ' - . I .U , . W. .v.- BWENE It was a low deeo narrow cave At the very end of lt was the sprxng From a crevlce about s1x feet up 1n the wall the water trxckled down to a l1ttle pool causlng the muslcal sound that fell pleaslngly on many a weary traveler s ear At one sxde of the pool was an old wooden bench All about on the walls of the cave there sprouted t1ny ferns and curlous l1ttle Flowers near the roof there were many thick ledges Whlch projected at tlmes to the dxstance of four feet From the shadowy recesses of one of these dark ledges a paxr of sparklmg brown eyes watched the weary old traveler as he advanced toward the sprmg On another led e was a sleepy lookmg beruffied l1ttle gray owl When the mtruder had scooped up some water 1n the palm of h1s hand and molstened h1s 11pS he sat down and yawned Suddenly a thought occurred to h1m and he stood up wlth h1s back turned to the sprmg He straxghtened h1s shoul ders sm1led and then spoke a l1ttle apprehensxvely as though he were afraxd of the sound of hls own vo1ce Now that I m back 1n the scenes of my hap p1CSt years lt seems as though my cup of Joy IS runmng over Dear fr1ends of the past though you re long s1nce gone I feel that your sp1r1ts are w1th me and w1ll l1sten and watch my performance Just as attentlvely as you d1d fifty years ago For you dear frlends I w1ll g1V6 a premxer hearlng of my song and your song A Song of the Road My accompanxment wxll be the murmurln water My voxce may be cracked dear frlends but my thought came the song a wonderful song whose melod1es resounded through the natural theatre The s1nger s volce was full and sweet but when he reached a h1gh note just a t1ny waver was perceptmble On h1s face was a smlle of unearthly sweetness Hls hands were clasped and tremblmg and then as old memorles surged over hlm hxs clear blue eyes were filled Wlth tears but has song contmued unt1l when the end was reached the l1ttle old actor had struck a note of utter s1ncer1ty and stopped wlth a Slgh that was half a sob The brown eyes that had watched the l1ttle performance from the back of one of the ledges had lost the1r sparklmg quahty dur1ng the song and taken on one of glow1ng admxratxon but now they held only plty and ten derness for the d1straught l1ttle actor As they awalted the next move of the performer they suddenly notlced that he was pale and then qulte suddenly he crumpled to the stony floor 1n a heap The owner of the 1nterested eyes leaped agllely to the floor and proved to be a handsome young man of about twenty Hve with rumpled curly halr He bent over the old man and lxstened to the famt sound of hxs heart for a second and then dxpped a handful of the cold sprlng water and sprlnkled lt over the pale face In a moment the eye l1ds Huttered and a famt sxgh was heard As the eyes stared up at the young man qulte d1sconcert1ngly he laughed a trxfle embarrassed and sa1d Per haps It was fortunate for you as well as for me that I chanced to be present at the premler hearmg of your song Grew a l1ttle famt I guess dxdn t you? Happy Dxck as he had termed hlmself sat up and after a moment 1 :fx 1 ur 9 I S ' ' . . . . . U , . Z U - . . b 7 ' Y ' 1 , . , . . , . . . . 6, , . - , . - , . . . . Y . , . , . . . . , , . . .. , . . U . . Q ' 5 9 is that of the same old fHappy Dick' that you knew. After these words 1 1 ' . , . ' 3 . , , S ! 3 P , - S ! - , . ' ! . . . . . H v 9 1 y ' . . . . . , ,, . , , . gg ' 79 ' l 3 Tp ' X- 'lf BWEN5 smlled sheeplshly So you were present were youg Well Im sure I had no 1dea I had a hvmg audlence as well as one created by the lmaglnatlon Yes lt was certamly fortunate that you were here but where were you' I dldn t see you I know you dldn t the young fellow laughed I was napplng up there on a ledge Had you known I was here perhaps I wouldn t have been so for tunate as I was Oh I m sure of that smlled Happy Dick a trlfle grxmly But now that youve heard lt what do you thmk about lt, Thmk about lt, h1s llstener echoed Why slr theres no questxon as to what ANYONE could thmk about lt It s superb no thats not the word to descrlbe well I dont suppose there IS one though the only thmg I could say IS that 1tS as humanly beautlful as anythmg could be lt 1S ln short a true Song of the Road a Song of Llfe At these words Happy D1ck smlled and nodded h1s head contentedly Strange he murmured but that IS preclsely the way I feel about It He paused and then contmued quxte slmply I love lt s1r as any composer loves h1s masterprece Then you really wrote lt? the young man asked breathlessly Of course Happy Dlck returned full of prlde for th1s wonderful bra1n chxld of h1s But who are you? he was asked A lover of manklnd and of muslc was the answer I mean whats your name? was the mslstent return My boy he answered wlth an oddly sweet smlle names count for but l1ttle 1n thms l1fe we l1ve Men cannot be judged by what they are called only by what they are and do what you may call me however IS Happy Dlck for I am happy Thls declaratlon was followed by several moments of almost profound sllence then the young man asked rn a subdued tone D1d you ever happen to be an actor? The answer was All the world s a stage and men are actors on lt The speaker s face wore an mscrutable smlle More sllence followed this Fmally the young fellow laughed Perhaps before I ask you what I m about to xt would be best to tell you who I am My name IS ohn Travers I follow the stage for a llVll'lg I am alone ln the world and have had to work for everythmg I have and at that I haven t much Now next fall I have my b1g chance You see 1ts th1s way Dave Schoenfeldt the blg producer IS gettmg up a truly great revlew It s golng to have real muslc real dancmg real everythmg' No cheap Jazz Now h1s manager promxsed me a chanc to do my stuff for Schoenfeldt So you see what rt means to me Ive never known a father and lt may seem queer but Ive set my heart on a father and son act You strlke me as an 1deal father Are you a father? At th1s questlon the llsteners eyes were mlsty and he slowly shook h1s head saymg ln a tone so low the young man could scarcely hear hnm No but once I was Irtfi ' ' an 1 ' 1 ' 1 , . Y 1. . ' 9 91 cc ' 1 11 as ' , . 1 ' 1 11 cc 1 11 ' .L ' 11 ' ' cc 1 1 1 - , . . . ,, , . as ' ' 11 ' ' sc ' 1 - - ' 1 1 - 1 1 1 . 1 Y . I , . . 1 1 1 1 . . , . . . . . . 7 9 4 1 ' 11 as 1 1 1 ' 11 ' ' u 11 - 1 1 sc ' ' ' 11 ' . . H . . . . ,, 1 1 ' as ' 11 sc 11 u - 11 ' ' 1 1 61 Y! ar ' ' 11 , . u 1 11 ' ' H 11 ' ' cs 1 1 1 ' 1 , ' s ' 1 1 1 1 1 11 ' ' . . U . 1 1 11 sn 1 ' 1 1 - 11 1 1 - - ts 1 1 1 , - J . - 1 1 1 1 . . , . . . . 1 1 ' 1 1 . . , . . . ' 1 1 . . , 2 K ! ' cc 1 ' 1 1 1 ,, . . . , . 1 . U 91 1 1 ' 'Ll ' lx ft' BWENH Though john Travers pltled Happy Dlck from the bottom of h1s heart somethlng told h1m that the present was the best tlme for hls proposl 'non Well s1r you embody all that IS good and that a father should be Wouldn t you conslder a part 1n an act wlth me' Happy D1ck del1berated a moment and then looked 1nto the serlous pleadmg brown eyes At length he thrust forth a hand and gave h1s answer Yes lf you thmk I can help you Ill do It But I suppose I d better tell you now that I wlll be hard up for any good clothes that I may need and I am mn what mlght be termed as financlal stralts john Travers laughed and answered wlth easy assurance Oh I d an tlcxpated that but I ve been savmg for years ln vxew of the time when I d have my chance so I thxnk Ill be able to see thls thmg through Now lf vou ll just come up to the farmhouse where I board well arrange terms and go over the act You know we try out about the mlddle of September When the rev1ew starts ln October I hope we ll be w1th lt Three months later at the Imperlal Theatre m New York John Travers bxg chance was about to take place He and Happy Dlck stood ln the wmgs whlle the stage was bemg set for the1r act john looked at hxs partner to whom he had become deeply attached through constant companlonshxp He d1d not seem m the least nervous ln fact he seemed to antxclpate hxs advent before the footllghts wxth pleasure Thls was unusual for a new comer john knew but he couldn t qulte lmagme Happy D1ck bemg nervous about anythmg Three quarters of an hour later two hearts beat hlgh wxth antlcxpatxon They had put on the1r act and had done the best they could That It was good they knew but the questlon was would It be good enough for Dave Schoenfeldt s Rev1ew9 Presently a rap was heard at the door of the1r t1ny dressmg roorn and the door opened to admlt the mlghty Schoenfeldt He beamed with fatherly prlde on young Travers and then w1th lnterest and admxratlon on the older man Heres the contract folks he announced Slgn on the lme and your boss name IS Uncle Dave' A few mlnutes more and the wonder of wonders was accomphshed John Travers was a blg tlmer Before leavmv the elated partners Schoenfeldt paused and turned to Happy Dick Say you know that s some song you smg It almost had me spxllmg tears there for a whlle But I wouldnt have been the only one Who wrote lt, Why was the proud response I wrote that A Song of the Road Do you hke xt? You got the contract havent you? was the rejolnder Its the real stuFf or I wouldnt have It Then on the openmg nxght of the rev1ew the house was sold out and the father and son team knew that they had the1r chance and that every thmg depended on It The first half of the rev1ew was brlllxant classlcal lr! ' - It ' 11 ' 1 ss ' ' 1 1 ' ' 1 - ' 1 11 an ' 11 ' ' ' 1 1 . 1 1. - 1 1 1 1 1 ' ' 1 . . A . . , ,, ' 11 1 - 1 1 ' . . , . . . . , 1 . , . . . 1 - 1 1 1 1 , 1 . , . . . , . . ,, 1 1 ' . . , 1 1 ' as - 11 ' ' 1 7 1 1 ' ' ' ns ' 11 ' 1 1 - Y ' 1 1 1 , . . . - , ' 1 I1 1 11 11 ' ' 1 v ' 1 ' 11 ' ' .1 ' ' 11 1 . . b 41 ' 11 U 1 ' 1 , . . . . 1 - 11 11 n 1- I 1 1 1 1 . . . ,, 41 1 11 ' ' 4. 1 , . . 1 ' 11 1 1 - - - ' - ' 1 1 'H ' l .N'.,l' BVJZIHH and sometlmes showy so when the curtaln finally dxsclosed a slmple home scene the audlence was startled but the scene was effectrve The note of utter s1ncer1ty that was found ln all of the com ersatxon between father and son soon moved the audlence but when the wonderful old man started to srng h1s preclous song the audxence was mdescrrbably thrrlled As he stood there ln hls homely clothes hrs head thrown back h1s face took on a start lmgly sweet appearance He no longer had the look of a k1nd old man H1s srnrle was that of a chlld s lnnocent happmess A somethlng that came from hrs soul shone on hrs face luke a shaft of Heaven s glory H1s mellow volce was tender and caressmg then mlghty and compellmg and finally carrled a note of mfinrte sadness and pathos As the fast sweet notes drlfted away through the house a profound sllence relgned Then from the awe strxcken throng there came a srgh as that of a multxtude released from enchantment The tumultuous applause that followed brought a joyous smxle to the lrttle old slngers face He knew that the act had gone over He stepped back and motloned the curtaln down but the applause was 1ns1stent so he stepped forward and sang agaln th1s t1me w1th h1s young partner He had no partlcular thought to convey to the audrence but that of joy When finally the performance was over john dressed hurrredly and walted outslde the stage door for Happy Dlck Suddenly he was con fronted by an aggresslvely busthng l1ttle man john Travers rsnt xt? demanded the l1ttle man rmportantly My name IS Blxby The lawyer you know I beheve I am not wrong ln statxng that you are l1able to belng charged w1th plaglarlzlng the song whlch your partner so successfully sang It belongs to my employer Rlchard Merryweather the composer of whom about lt? Am I flghta Oh yes and by the way what may your partners real name be? He currously remlnds me of someone but I havent placed h1m yet Too shocked and stunned for words john leaned galnst the wall Words falled hlm Provldentlally the stage door was opened just then by Happy D1ck and a ray of hght was thrown on Mr Blxby The lrttle old man stopped a moment and then stepped toward hxm wxth hrs hand outstretched Hello there Brxby he greeted the thoroughly astonlshed lawyer I happened to overhear what you said just now What IS there now that you object to about my smgmg my song? Blxby turned red and then whlte Mr Merryweather he spluttered It cant be you The doctor sald pos1t1ve1y that you were 1n Florxda I know I know the great mus1c1an returned obvlously amused by the other s confuslon but I declded that I needed a change Now my son and I are rn a rush so Ill see you tomorrow Goodmght' Walt a mmute Mr Merryweather Mr Blxby mterposed You sald my son Fvrfx 5 1 1 1 I . ' , , . I Y - . . v ' ' . , . . . v . . Y , . V 9 Y . . . M . ,, - ' ' ' as - a ' u . , . . . ,K , . V . Y D you have no doubt heard. He's in Florida now. I'm his representative. What . ' l ' 1 7 ! Y I . . , ' Y ' 73 , 6 ' . . . . . . H . ,, . . ' 60 ' 75 ' ' Y V . ,K . . . . . . ,, ' ' li ll :L 1 ' ' ' ' ' YY 64 YY ' ' ' - ' , ' ' KC ' s - , ' 7 ' Q! , . . ll ' ' 31 ' ' 45 ' 9 ' I ' n 4 9 97 '1 ,- lZ EWENH Tonrorrow wnh ohn 5 permxwsron I take out adopnon paper I num have some assurance of havlng company for the rest of my days ab well as an helr smce 1111 and Rose Cthose are my chxldren he explamed to Iohnl have gore thelr way You wrll please have the papers drawn up by Lomor row Bxxby Goodnreht and the tall young man and the httle old smoer of Songs vamshed 1nto the n1Orht L VVALLACL nne of beco C1 Prrze n o o 1 Ill Il fl .. , ' J ' . ' . .' , ' . , .. , . . . . 5. . ., . 5. . 4 . ,, . tx ' . . A- . v' ' A n 4 - ' ' C ' b ' 33 . D . 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' .v.'ff1'l1'f.'I r'f.l, lll' fl .'.'ll.vlf'l' ,f gllxfl' is .':Ulfl'. fl' ,ffm 'CCL .l: lm .tvlilp ,ll :lln ls-l Vw fflxflru :ill 2'-'V' 7.f'r'lFI-EJ. if flint xl, 1- l yl:l',' V lu 'Hill' ffm ,,,,l'i,,.. , If N .5 BKUENH DIE DEUTSCHE SPRACHE 'tg AN sollte d1e deutsche Sprache studleren um d1e grossen Werke vo , Goethe Sch1ller Lessmg und von noch andren beruehmten Dlchtern lesen zu koennen Solche Werke auf Deutsch zu lesen bletet slnen Genuss den keme Uebersetzung uns geben kann Aus den Schrlften solcher Dlchter lernen w1r d1e Sltten und Sagen ja das ganze Herz des deutscher' Volkes kennen Zum Belsplel Goethe hat e1n sehr kurzes aber auch em sehr schoenes Gedlcht das von der Stllle der Nacht verfasst Das folgende Gedlcht hatte er ln der Nacht vom 6 zum 7 September 1780 an d1e Innen wand des Jagdhaeuschens auf dem G1ckelhahn bel Ilmenau geschneben WANDERERS NAC HTLIED Ueber allen blpfeln Ist Ruh In allen Wlpfeln Spuerest du Kaum emen Hauch Dxe Voegelem schwelgen 1m Walde Warte nur balde Ruhest du auch Und so bletet d1e deutsche Lltteratur demjemgen der es treulxch sucht xmmer etwas Interessantes Wer d1e festen alten Schloesser sehen moechte wer lm Farmllenkrex verwellen mag und wer s1ch mlt dem ganzen Lande bekannt machen wxll der soll durch se1ne Embxldung slch d1e Bllder neuerschaffen d1e des Dlch ters Auge uns W16 m emem Splebelglas zelben Hamerlm hat schoe gesa t Des Dlchters Aug 1St Splegelglas Es Wlfft das B1ld zurueck Man kann bexm Lesen Re1sen machen nach den fremden Laendern und unte den Fremden llebe Freunde gewmnen Dann kann man verstehen ass alle Menschen Brueder smd und Freunde sem sollen Wenn Sle eme fremde Sprache erlernen wollen denken Sle elnmal an d1e deutsche Sprache und bedenken Sle alles Intelessante das S1e darx linden werden Und sagen S1e w1e Goethe be1 Ihrer Arbe1t Lust und Llebe smd d1e F1tt1che zu grossen Taten IRENh. BONDI f 1 1 fl . . . H I . rl , l . . . Y r 1 n QS ' ' , . - , l . , , . U. 7 7 7 7 ' 9 7 . Y S 9 Y , - . . . . . . Y' ff U . g .r O. . b . C! ' 9 ' ' ! ' ' Y! . . F -, - G v d -- 1 . , n . . . . l U . . . . . ,, .1 . EWZINE JUST Doo 4 S E WAS a homely l1ttle pup was Frxday but he knew that not every 'Q F dog could be handsome and every dog could be faithful and be h..-4 neath lns yellow hlde beat as loyal a heart as could ever be found Hts ears were ln shreds due to many unsuccessful battles h1s legs would have made any bulldog proud but hrs head was unmlstakably that of a ter rler One eye was apparently blotted out by a black spot but nevertheless the pure falthful heart gave a wonderfully soft expression to hls eyes Hls yellow carcass was generously sprmkled wlth black spots and the Sklmpy tall was tlpped wlth black Not a beautiful dog by any means ln fact a rnost rldlculous one but nevertheless a friend worth havlng just now Frlday was wa1t1ng patxently for hls ten year old master to return to the shack Frlday had often wondered what went on 1n the large whlte house 1nto which h1s llttle master so often drsappeared but he had never trled to enter for the slmple reason that llttle Bob had bade him never to do so so there he squatted wlstfully waxtmg It had been on a Frlday that Bob had saved the llttle pup He had been strolllng along toward the baseball field when he suddenly heard the help less crles and whmes of a dog 1n despalr and then a black and whlte streak shot out of a byway and rested agalnst Bob s legs shxvermg and shuddermg He was tryln to protect hlmself agalnst some boys who were peltmg hlm w1th stones Bob hastily took the llttle mongrel xn h1s arms and thereby for ever gamed l1ttle Frldays touchlng frlendshlp He followed Bob to the manslon trylng to tell h1m w1th hls eyes how much he loved hlm but Bob had a blg problem wlth whlch to contend Hls mother and father more especlally the mother scorned dogs and espe clally such a hopelessly homely one as Frlday There was but one thlng to do and that was to refuse Frlday a home He knelt beside the lxttle dog and placed h1s arms about h1s neck l11s heart felt so heavy so very heavy that lt hurt hxm horrlbly to give llttle Frlday up The tears rolled down h1s cheeks and onto Frlday s scraggly ears Frlday senslng the unhappmess ln hrs loved masters face sympathetxcally lmcked h1s cheeks and wagged what lxttle there was of h1s tall joyously Bob carried Friday about two blocks away and tled hmm to a post Though hugglng and pettlnv hlm he told Frlday why he couldn t keep hlm Frxday wagged hls tall slowly as 1f to tell hls master he understood and would make the best of xt Hxs large brown eyes gave the only evldence of hrs sorrow Bob Fmally tore hlmself away and determmedly d1d not look back once he knew that lf he d1d he could not reslst Frlday s pleading eyes That evemng at supper he just sat at the table wlthout eating food seemed repulswe to hlm for hxs thoughts were of homeless Friday Sud denly he declded to beg h1s fathers permxsslon to keep hlm and said lj! , , , fa., V--3 . A L . - wig! - ' 'U 7 ' - - Q Q Q , . v - - 1 s - 9 1 s - , - - ' , , Y T , . , - Y . , . . . , . ' 2: c y - . . . , . . . 7 1 y v ' Y ' I l 5 Y . , . . . . ' v . , . . . Y , . . . . . , . U Q 5 Q Y - v . . . . . , . , . Y 1 ' ' . . , . . . . ' , . 7... H EWENE Mother I was vxonderlng I saw such a nlce llttle dog today He looked so hungry and alone He followed me all over Please please mother mayn t I keep h1m 1n the shed? He won t come here once you ll never see h1m Please? H1s chxn was qulvermg and h1s eyes were fast fillmg wlth tears and yet Why Robert how can you ask dear? Dogs are Just nulsances and 1f we wanted to keep every stray do we would have qulte a collectlon Hell find h1S way about Robert But mother he loves me and he looked so sad Oh mother dear please let me keep hlm R1d1culous Robert How can a dog love? No you must forget h1m By the way Harry Mr and Mrs Van Dyke are comlng thls evenmg Thls last to her husband L1ttle Bobby crled h1mself to sleep that evenmg and vowed solemnly that when he was rown up he would have a l1ttle house m whlch he would harbor all stray dogs Nevertheless the pleadmg eyes of Fr1day haunted hxm all mght When he left the house next morn1ng wlth a sack of bones whlch he had slyly taken from the kltchen 1n hls pocket he found to h1s joyous surprlse Fr1day squattlng before hls house lookmg more rldlculous than ever w1th one ear lald back and the other just hanglng and hls haunches stretched ln a most xmpossxble fashlon But on seemg Bob he bounded clumsxly but happlly towards hlm Bob qulckly took hrm 1n h1s arms hastened out of Slght of the house and then caressed Fr1day to h1s hearts content After the mornlngs greetxngs he took out the bag of bones and watched Fr1day devour them Then both of them made thelr way to the woods Fr1day Joy ously trottlng at Bobs heels He met the rest of the boys at the customary place and they all set out for the day 1n the woods After reachlng the spot whlch they had decided upon Bob and Fr1day Went off on a llttle excurslon of thelr own Even tually they reached the rlvers edge and the two strolled along Bob 1m1 tated some b1rd and Fr1day on hearlng lt prlcked up h s ears and cocked h1s head to one slde ln a very compllmentary manner Bob was walklng very close to the edge when suddenly a tuft of grass gave way and he fell mto the raprdly Howmg r1ver He screamed for help and Friday at flrst thought of boundlng 1n after hlm but on second thought he ran swlftly back to Bobs companlons and by excxted yelps and jumps told them that somethmg had happened Two of the boys finally reallzmg that somethmg must have happened followed Fr1day and there on a log whlch mxght at any moment gxve way was Bob clmglng wxth all hls strength searchlng qulckly for some means of rescue Ed the older boy found a strong stlck and rushmg to the edge as near as he dared he held It out Ken wlth hls arms about Ed s walst helped pull Bob 1n fzjlx M , . . . , . . - - 1 1 1 - ' ' 1 , 1 - 9 . ,, . . . . . . . . . , - ' T. it . . . 1 1 1 - 1 . . , U cv ' ' as , . as 1 1 - 1 1 1 - sr n ' ' ' , . . . - . . . ,, . , , . . . U b - 1 1 1 1 1 9 1 1 ' 1 - 1 . . . , , . . , . . 1 . , - 9 1 1 - ' . , . . 1 f ' . . . . : 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 - ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 , . . . 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 . , . . 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 - 1 , . . , . ' '-UIIC BWENE When Bob and Frlday finally reached home Bob could not find It 1n h1s heart to drlve Frtday away so he tucked h1m under hls arm carrred hlm to h1s shack where h1s mother and father seldom came and made a bed for hxm out of a box and a bag In the meantrme Frlday was scamper mb joyously about his young master and now and hen nooped curlously 1nto the bed belng prepared for hlm Poor l1ttle fellow he had never been sure of a bed m hxs 11fe When all was ready Frrday clambered 1nto the box turned about a few tlmes and then flopped down hls head between hrs paws pretendmg to be fast asleep but out of the corner of one eye he peeped slyly at Bob And so they l1ved for many happy days Bob and Frrday Bobs mvs terxous trlps to the kltchen thence to the shack were barely notlced and even so the cook became a staunch frlend of Frlday Bob loved the l1ttle dog as he had never loved any frlend before and though Frnday was homely he had brams and before long he could do many trlcks But why IS It that Fate must so heartlessly destroy such Innocent joys, Probably to make us stronger and less selfish but to a chlld 1t IS such a heavy prlce Mrs Mannlng once strolled out to her lxttle boys shack and the plcture that met her eye was that of a very dlrty ugly dog rolhng over and over wlth an equally dlrty boy whom upon closer scrutlny she recogmzed as her son At first she was utterly dumfounded then Bob she cr1ed where does that awful dog come from? And why have you h1m here when both your father and I strlctly forbade 1t9 Bob was so dazed that he couldn t find words and then w1th h1s arms about Frldays neck to prevent him from affectlonately Jumplng about hrs mother he whxspered wlth tremblmg l1ps and fast filllng eyes Mother thls lS Frlday He saved my llfe out at the rlver He what? Oh' My poor darlmg tell mother and Mrs Mannmg was 1mmed1ately all mother Bob told her emphaslzmg strongly Frnday s heroism whlle Frlday was Slttlng by hrs master wxth wlde open 1nterested eyes After pettmg her rescued son Mrs Mannmg sald Its wonderful that I have my llttle son back but dear the dog didnt save your lxfe It was the boys Bob pleaded and argued but all to no avall Hls mother left htm wlth the admomtlon that he get r1d of the dog very soon All joy for hlm was hldden as by a dark cloud tears seemed to choke h1m llttle Frlday gave a sympathetlc whme and hcked aftectlonately what was to be seen of the smutty cheek Twxh ht came but Bob st1ll lay on the ground wxth h1s arm about Frxday wlth Frxday s paw on hrs neck Next day when he came home from school he found h1s mother Frxday and the machme gone m hxs room he found a perfect mmxature machme whlch would have transported htm to the seventh heaven of Joy under ordx 11711 ! 1 1 1 1 1 , ' . . . + . 0' t S ' 1 ' 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 . , , 1 1 ' 1 1 1 , . 1 1 , . 1 1 1 . . , . 1 1 1 1 1 0 , 11. u 11 ' u 1 1 - . . . ,, , . . 1 1 . , . . I . . . 1 1 ' ' H . . . . . ,, , . . sa ' , H ' T . . , , . . . . , 1. . . 1 1 - , . - - - 4. 1 1 ' 1 . . , . 1 1 1 1 ' 77 , . 1 1 .U . . D , . . . , . , . 1 1 1 1 7 - . V'-fiw EWEHE nary c1rcumstances But Bob dldnt llke the appea ance of thmgs a new machme and Fr1day gone Oh what has happened? He dashed through the house through the yard callmg w1ld1y for Fr1day No response no Joy ful crxes of welcome Oh where lS he? Hls mother couldnt have taken h1m away before he had saxd good by to h1m Then suddenly he reallzed that as much as h1s mother loved h1m her hatred for dogs was greater He threw hlmself on the fioor of the shack Fr day s cloth crushed ln h1s hand and sobbed wxldly so wlldly that lf a doctor had been there he would have ordered the chzld to bed But no one heard the heart rendmg crles nor saw h1m beat the floor wxth clenched lists F1nally the One who sees all and feels all took plty on Bob s sorrow closed the swollen eyes wxth tender lingers and sent the httle fellow mto bllssful sleep But Bob never was the same he was sulky and cross to hlS parents no matter what glfts they showered upon h1m They argued that the dog had been after all only a mongrel But th1s they sald only once for Bob flew mto a rage and passronately defended hrs beloved Fr1day and then weepmg left the room So a day passed then two days and finally a week crept by Bob was s1tt1ng ln his shack almlessly Whlttllng a StlCk when he heard a pltlful fa so thm and h1s eyes so very mournful hxs ears m tatters and he w1th barely enough strength left wlth whlch to wag hls tall Wlth a cry that resembled a sob Bob rushed forward and took Fr1day ln hls arms petted h1m crushed the l1ttle dog to h1m and then when h1s mlnd became a llttle more clear he carried h1m to the k1tchen and there wlth the cook tried to fan the httle spark of l1fe 1n the th1n homely carcass But suddenly Fr1day llfted h1s head hcked Bobs cheeks wlth his l1ttle hot tongue and then d1ed 1n hrs beloved master s arms Bob won the consent of h1s parents to burv l1ttle Fr1day 1n h1s yard and had the melancholy happlness of bemg near h1s l1ttle companlon s grave HIS parents finally relented and bought for h1m a lovely COllle but Bob though he played wlth h1m and loved h1m rn a way always thought of Frl day as the one real frlend and often one could find h1m slttmg by Frldays grave absent mmdedly strokmg the beautlful head of the collle ID hls lap No affectlon can be equal to the affectlon of a boy for h1s first dog espec1ally 1f It be homely HERTHA BECK I ' ' K6 73 . , . ' , . . . . : - ' 65 ' U7 ' 9 . , . ' - v 9 v . , . . G , . , . 9 7 . , , . U , . . . h v Z , 9 ! ' I l Y . Y 3 . y I Y 5 7 ' l x a s ' miliar whine, and, looking up, he saw Friday. But such a different Friday, Y 9 , . . . , . , . l Y 1 l 9 . . . y . ' . . . , l , Y 7 1 1 ' S . . . . . , I . . . , . . . . , V , - . , Iii 'fy-ffl BUJEHH 1 L I I YOU NG THINGS' PRING' just the word suggests wee buds, warm wmds questlonmv clues of b1rds all of th1s added to the shouts and Games of Youth V Tender buds peep shyly at the world OUtS1d6 and blrds Hy Uleefully from branch to branch A sprlng mormnff IS so sweet and joyous on whose soft w1r'd tne merry songs of blrds float mmvled wlth the fresh fragrance of new grass and Howers Sprmnv t1me1s Love tune Dream nme and Txme of Laughter Each tmy falry m each Hower peeps 1ts damty head from the heart of xts home spreads 1ts raxnbow wmgs and hles from Flower to flower to Uwe the happy crv of Sprlnf' to all The sky lb a tender smlllnv blue not laughlng yet It lb oo shy for that you see 1 laughmv sky belongs to Sum'ner Tlme but Sprmv Tlme IS too young The forest brooks How wlth a purl1nCf bubblmv sound s1nCf1ng IU bell llke tones thelr sono of Sprmff The trees mn thelr gay Oreen dresses lxke clnldlcn who nave txred of the r finery are happy to be free from thexr Olltterlnv restramed wmter garments Oh Spung Wltll your Llfe Love oy and Laughter who can resxst you? A bubble of gladne s slngs wxthxn one at the fixst true songs of Sprmff even as a younv fountam rxses joyously m the Golden sprmo t1me sunllvht liven the stars are more friendly and the moon less ll'OLI'I'1flll when Sprmg sounds her clamcn' HPRTHA BECIX In ff an ll Q I ,ff 'ffl' ff' I llvllfl f':'m fist I, ' mwftgv.. Yf.'.-rp '.m.'.f 11 :vt:.'yr'1ffrf '. , :'-yHwf:y1A11' H1141 Ifblll. .izfff ffmn' :tum lr !ff.'.'r fwlxfxuf' fxf.1 ,5-' 't.w'r!1i11' if off wh' ifrfzf. .inf It'f.w'11 ffm? l'f' 'wwf ff: !!'.uv .:f1',V.,f'.'111'f1' iff ffm ww, ,intl 'fsu .f,'1'1','u'.v tflwzx. 0 :11l 'uf .'H.'1w fmf111l'11' mst' may 'HIL' fM7uf.'.fz11'1f11-V fzlvffkmf , lllzf frlsllllifl lvf rIIt'Llkl'. Ht' tm' ffm! l'11f1'1'u 11:-'.ffff1 llfrfzlzz um' .vlvzfffw ffl!- , Hu Mr fill' 1'1'114f .mtl Jlwnpf. Hs 7I:1f.vf'2urf if fflfifl rim. ,lmf flllffl ffm! :tw.','l'f','fs.'fffzJ fizxf gy, mmf ffzzfxffuli ixfizi. fff'?y1'zf. ru' If ':-V ' V , ' . . 5 ' 1 . e ' img. ' D . . 3 . . : . U , . - . B . A Q . bn . . - . Q 1 .A ' . 1 . . . ' 5 - ' Q -C K l U 1 A V . I . b . - . 1 . . bv . h g . . b. L . -. . 5 S b. . . Y' 'S H . X . D , . 5 u A . S. . 6' 5 . I ', . Sr. 5. S Ap. b. .,. . r,' ' 5 5 ' U 7 I s v 5 5' ' .s - 5 ' 5 1 . .'.' . 1 V .Q L . ' 7 BVJENH LA DEUDA En una aldea muy oequena de un P315 dlstante v1v1an un hombre y su esposa Se llamaban el senor Manuel Bauche y Morales y la senora Carmen Garc1a de Bauche Tenlan una casa que era como un palacxo muchas r1quezas v una hlja muy hermosa la cual ten1a c1nco anos Se llarnaba dona juanlta y sus padres le amaron mucho Le gustaba a dona juamta andar y correr en un jardm que se hallaba a un lado de la casa En la d1stanc1a se v1o un bosque muy grande La n1na era muy cur1osa y qu1so saber de estos arboles En otra parte del pueblo VIVIB una fam1l1a muy noble TLIVICFOH un lujo y se llamba Fernando Un o1a el padre de Fernando volv1o a su casa muy tr1ste D110 que hubo perdldo mucho d1nero en el commerc1o nuevo Fernando era muy Joven pero su padre le d1JO de su perd1da Al fin la madre le HVISO que fuese a don Manuel y le p1d1ese que prestase d1nero Entonces toda la fam1l1a fueron al hombre r1co A111 Fernando le V10 a dona juamta y gozaron el placer del Jardm Durante este t1empo el senor Manuel Bauche y Morales promet1o prestar el d1nero El d1a prox1mo dona uamta deC1d1O que 1r1a al bosque Entro en este bosque y nmguna persona la v1o Anduvo hasta que sus p es fueran muy cansados Bajo de un arbol muy grande se sento para descansar Dos hombres que fueron g1tanos la hallaron aqu1 Dec1d1eron tomarla al carnpo g1tano y guardarla para un rescate En el cam1no dona juanlta lloro por su madre pero al carnpo le dleron muchas cosas bonltas y no lloro despues de esto Los gendarfnes h1c1eron mover a los gltanos durante esta noche y no oyeron del rescate por la n1na y por esa razon la degaron a una casa de hombre probre Al pr1mero la madre y su esposo que tuv1eron CIHCO n1nos Gl1lS1CI'Ol tomar a dona uamta pero al Hn la tomaron como una h1ja Los tanos la hubleron delado a la puerta y las personas de esta casa no sumeron qu1en era nero dona juamta pudo declr su nombre Durante este t1empo los padres de uan1ta la buscaron y ofrecleron un rescate para ella Sus padres eran muy trlstes y creyeron que ella se hub1ese sequestrado Aunque don Manuel y su esposa tuueron molest1a y eran des d1chados no olv1da on a ayudarle a su am1go qulen promet1o que volver1a el d1nero El padre de Fernando no pudo pagarlo y su l'11J0 qu1so pagarlo algun d1a Cuando Fernando tuvo ve1nte y tres anos oyo el cuento de la n1na hermosa de los 3 T11UOS de su padre DeCldlO hallarla Sl fuera v1va pero esto no parec1o pos1ble Penso que pudo mformarse de ella para ayudar '1 sus padres Su madre creyo que fuera V1V3 pero su oadre creyo que fuera muerte Fernando empezo a vrajar a los pueblos acerca dc la aldea tn que v1v1o En un pueblo muchos k11ometros de su aldea encontro la casa en que dona lf . - 1 f . A . , ' ' . . ., .5 . , A . - , ., - . . . ' . N ,, , , . - J . . ., ., , . i . , , . . - . , . . , , . . un . no A . J . g1- 1 3. ' Y. , N . g r l .. . Q , . U . ., . . C , . , , . . ' 'f 1 ., , - -' 'fig -fl: V' BWEHE luanlta habla vivido tfece aflos Estaba triste y parecio diferente de las hlgas del hombre pobre Tuvo ojos negros, cabellos negros y una cara her 'nosa Don Fernando pregunto del pueblo y de todas las personas para saber algo de dona juanlta Dona juanlta le encontro cuando Caffllnaba en el bosque y Fernando le amo lnmedlatamente Quedo en esta aldea para dos 'neses y dona Juanita le amo tamblen Entonces un dla le dlj0 a ella porque habla venldo a este S1tlO pero no qulso buscar a la nlna perdlda mas porque .lo tuvo una esperanza de hallarla El dla proxlmo dona juanlta tuvo dlez y ocho anos y la mujer que ella llamo como madre le dljo que no era su hlja y que pensaron que los gltanos la hablan dejado a su puerta Don Fernando oyendo esto d1Jo que creyo que ella fuese la nlna que habla venldo a buscar Esto le hlzo muy dlcho y qulso tornarla a sus padres Ellos dleron graclas al hombre y a su esposa y salleron por la aldea donde V1V1a Fernando Cuando llegaron a la casa de don Manuel dona Juanlta mostro un V6St1dO que llevo cuando tenl CIHCO anos Su madre estada rnuy alegre y su padre dljO oue don Fernando no habla de pagar el dmero La deuda estaba pagado Pero don Fernando dljo que amo a dona Juanita y qulso casarse con ella Ellos se casaron en la 1glCS1a de la aldea y los padres de don Fernando, los padres de dona Juanlta y la mujer y su esposo pobres con sus l'1lJOS vlnleron al cerernonla HELEN HOEFNER I ll nf Il f Hee 111' CJK 11 llc A 1714 1 I I Ill lil? I 1 . . , 1-11 l'lx'l.X Y'lfllfl'S Lux llz'.vl'llll,1', Vtxzlflllff llll lllilyf 150 'mx uid.: lflllls lux Zlrlz1zl'11l'.v llllwj l' If Q N5 l'lzl111!l'11I lfltrs llylflllhlwj 'I film' .Ull .9 flex f'I'f'.V., lux :'l1Ull11.v uf 15.9 fflzf' Lux I'Jli,v.vl'll1l.l', Illlflllfllllf lil' ffm' j L'11l'1f1f11q11t lfrlluil'lJ.fl'1l1l'1lf illrx ll: lllvrg Us ,vl'1'fl'J1fl'11f ll' lllillf lfllv Ivlilv, JL! fl 1'l.'l1l! l1Z'l'l' ll'll1'f l'll11,l' l'.llri1'l'.f. Ins illllllflx ,vlzlf flllmllv l'i 111 lllxi l.l1f flsliv lil' lf1'l111l.llll,r ,fluff 1'l-llzfluj l'.l:fl:l '1'lxrf1'l'.v.vlll11:l'l1l lil. l'l'll3lll1,c, lllsrlv ljsxll ll' f1'f11fle111l,M lift iff. - 'N'l'1111ll th.: I xv. EWENE IRELAND THE LAND OF FAIRIES T IS not probable that the majorlty of people would thlnk of fa1r1es C 1n connectlon w1th Ireland yet accordmg to Seumus McManus one 1 of the foremost present day poets of the shamrock country Ireland IS essentrally a land of fa1r1es Up 1n the northwestern corner of that lsland IS a mountamous dlstrlct rocky and barren perhaps but free from the rushmg busmess l1fe of the c1ty and beautiful ln 1ts sheer slmplxcxty 1ts t1ny vlllages w1th thatched cot tages set 1n the nooks of green hulls the blue sky above and the tempestuous seas about xt Thms part of Ireland called Dunlgall IS mhablted by the na t1ve Celts the real Irlsh who stlll speak the old Gaellc language and stxll belleve firmly 1n the exlstence of those l1tt1e sprites whlch we sometlmes call fa1r1es It IS the folk lore of Ireland that stlmulates thls behef m fa1r1es Each vlllage has 1ts story teller who knows as Well as he knows h1s own name the thousands of tales that have come down from father and son and survlved by word of mouth the twenty elght centurles that span the gap between the t1me when the Celts first set foot on the shores of Ireland and the present day One evemng ln the week all the people of the v1lage leave their dutxes at home to gather about the flresxde of the teller of tales and hear from h1m m the1r natlve Gae11c tongue those fa1ry stor1es of long ago So many are those fascmatmg tales that lt takes the tellers from une to January and january to une to repeat them to the1r mterested lnttle au dlences And so well are the tales told that to th1s day the housewlves of Dunlgall enjoy hearmg about the good fa1r1es who help them 1n the1r dreams and the fishermen stlll 11ke to hear stor1es of the sprltes whom they often see danclng on the rocks 1n the sea You may ask how the faxrxes happen to be 1n Ireland That questlon IS superbly answered 1n story forn' by Seumus McManus hlrnself But slnce Mr McManus IS not here to tell us nn person we must try to 1mag1ne hlm telllng us the tale xn h1s own quamt lnrmltable way A man of normal bulld waving auburn halr and sparklmg blue eyes he stands before us and talks to us w1th a fascmatlng Irlsh brogue and a vo1ce dellghtfully rlch ln tone of hls boyhood days ln the hllls of Ireland and of the stor1es he used to hear so often Of the latter we quote as best we can the follow1ng tale about how the fa1r1es came to l1ve ln Ireland It was long long ago when a great battle was bemg waged ln the clouds between Luclfer and God The good angels took Gods slde and the bad angels slded w1th Luclfer but there were st1ll some other angels who took nelther s1de whatever When the battle was over and God had come out v1ctor1ous the angels came before the Lord of the heavens to recelve Judg ment The bad angels who had fought w1th Luclfer were sent to the under If 9 nl- I . . . . I I s s Q 44 -1, ,,- - , y r 1 9 - v ' v x ' 9 v ' v 1 ' 9 v 0, . s , . 1 J 1 ' - Q s s , - D 4 , . ' s s - s ' l I - s Y 3 . , . Y , - I'1 .j.'-.vt'z'fz1 EWZHE world as a pun1shment and the good anoels who had fouvht w1th God vu ere rewarded by bemg sent to Heaven When the neutral angels were asked wlth whom thev had s1ded and It developed that they had fought nelther for nor agamst God the Great judge deuded to send them +o the earth Because they had not fought agalnst Hlm He let them choose where they would dwell So the clouds opened and these ar-gels dropped down to the earth some falhrg dlrectly upon lreland and others fallmg mto the seas around that country becommg the farrles of Ireland Seumus McManus has made a collectlon of some of the many folk tales whleh dehoht Ireland so much and has pubhshed them rn a volume en t1tled Tales Prom Irlsh Folk lore He has also wrltten and pubhshed numerous Irlsn poems Both poems and famry tales are rnterestrnff to grown ups and ehxldren ahlte for the delleaey of the poetry 19 dehohtful and the hvmor eontalned m the falry tales ls most entertammo ELISE MARDORl 111 xl I 1 1 . '- ' ' 1 . Y . L., . b ' . 7 . v .1 V- Q . . x- p . , f .M ' Q v 4 1 4 l .1 y sy f . 5. ' . V L B. ' 5 , , . A . - ' U A 1 ' , 1 , ' ' , 1 sl sl. 1 1 A v4 b A ' xq ' i Y ,' x x ,, b . . . . , b. lLf. . ff.1'., X itll li., ffl! ff jill' 'fy-ivy .- lh' f.:.v z1mf1t..w741,v zzrjfzmf lin 1f.ft'.'ff'.lz'.:N1'. .ST f. 11.'..'f1 fm' fi1'f'wfft'.v x' ftzlmx Cvtlflfffl. mu ffl -7'1'.'.vm1 f'.'H.:f:'. .Vfrf uf ?.'1'11f.1 Wlzzylln ffl' 1sf1ft'mf.' ,SQ u.'.i..v1 Xxx :writ ffl A1'f211.'1'm wz:1ff'1'r.f.' ff III .Q '1f.'.f llfl.V4I.f, flfl' llffr fyrfffl jf 31141 l. 5 ffj. f,:4l'r,', fm' 4ffs'ff1'1l1.v x' ffflluv .V.'f.f '. 2 w,'l,'f'w.v flu 1lff.'m1.'.1v, 3' ' if ' :IFJ 111.1zwz.'fuIx.'.1t 'f l f A' -l',.'1J.w.'.w 'V 5 l' Inj ,Wav ,v I.: 5 rf V H1 wif If ,un M' l Q ffl, f V I. . '.V wfrlflllfx' flvl' .F I I' lfff' f f. ' , ' V ,l . ' , , ,t .., l'. ,, 1 .I l .' . fl lf , 1 ff 7' ,,'f'r7,'f 1' - Nh ' LVM EWQNH THE STORY OF CONALD AND DONALD fAs told by Seumas McManusj NCE many years ago 1n a small town ln Ireland hved a llttle hunch s. back shoemaker whose name was Donald Now of all thmgs he va nted most to be rxd of ms hump for he was somethmv of a soc1al lwht Regardless of how long It took h1m Donald was always to be found at any soc1al funct1on ln any town for mxles around It was often xery late at mght when he reached home after a chrxstenmg a wake or some other affair Now It happened one mght when Donald was returnlng from a chrxsten 1ng 1n a nelghbormg town that he was later than usual and as he came through the mountam passes the shadows looked very myster1ous and for blddmff So Donald hurrred on as fast as he could but suddenly the moon went under a cloud and poor l1ttle Donald was left there all alone wlthout a sxvn of a hght to travel by Bemg unable to th1nk of any way out of such a s1tuat1on as th1s Donald lay down on a h1lls1de and went fast asleep Now he hadnt been asleep very long when he was awakened by a great rushlng whlrrmg sound nearby When he was sufflclently aroused to slt up he saw to h1s great surprlse a band of fa1r1es allghtmg on a h1lls1de nearby where a portlon of the h1ll had magxcally opened to admlt them As qu1ck as a flash Donald jumped up and ran over behmd the fa1r1es following them mto the h1ll wlthout thexr knowmg lt He followed them down a long dark passage and soon arrlved at a brwhtly hghted room where the fa1r1es were assembllng under the leader shlp of tnexr queen Unbeknown to them Donald stayed out of swht 1n the passageway IH order to observe thelr actions Soon the fa1r1es began to slng At first Donald who was accustomed to good nauslc thought It was rather a pretty tune but It soon grew very monotonous for they sang It over and over agam to the words Monday Tuesday Nonday Tuesday Now Donald wasnt very dlscreet so when the fa r1es contlnued to SIHU th1s queer song he became very 1mpat1ent Stop lt' stop lt' he shouted as he sprang mto the hall from h1s l'11d11 lU place Why thats no song at all Its not even pretty' The fa1r1es all turned around to see who th1s mad person was who dared to r1d1cule thelr wonderful song K1ll h1m' K1ll h1m they cr1ed Kxll h1m' But walt Sald therr w1se queen Let us see lf he knows of one that s any better Of course I do declared Donald Instead of s1ng1ng such a s1lly thmv as Monday Tuesday Monday Tuesday smof Monday Tuesday Monday Izff ,.., S- . . . . 1 l l b l 5 Z ff 1 ' v y r , Q1 yn . , . . . cgi, - W 54 . b 2: ' es ' 1 Y - - . . , - as- ' b . . . . , Y 1 ' 3 ! 9 v - , Y D - - . , . . . . , . D , a v - ,B . . , ' 7 7 ' ' A4 , . D! H ' I 1 Y ' I 9 . - 5 , . A . . ,, . . . . . . . . ,S 55 9 7 V9 . , . . ' L . . . U . . . . ,, . H . . . , . ' 15 .. ' su ' - - , H ' ' , . 1 yy tb V! L. ' ' ' ' . - t, it V7 ' lt 9 v s v 5 v v 4 7 y-1115: ' BWEHE Tuesday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. The fairies were doubtful at first, but, after they had tried this new plan, they were so delighted that they cried. Reward him, reward him. The fairy queen was much pleased, so she stepped down from her throne and said, Donald, instead of killing you, we shall reward you by taking your hump from your back. So saying she lifted the hump right off his back and put it on a shelf nearby So Donald vxent out of the fairles abode a happy man Now the next day the people of the town could hardly believe their eyes when they saw Donald as straight and strong as any man Of course the news spread qulckly and people from all the country around came to see the miracle wrought by the fa1r1es It just chanced that in a neighboring town there lived another hunch back named Conald He came to Donald and asked eagerly what Donald had done to secure the good will of the fa1r1es and before he left he made Donald tell hlm three tlmes just exactly what he had done and said for Conald was resolved to be r1d of his hump also Late that nlght Conald sta tloned himself just where Donald had told him to and he at last gained ad mlttance to the home of the fairies in the very same way as Donald had After the fa1I'lCS had been singing their wonderful new song for some time Conald sprang out sald the very thing that Donald had and upon belng doubtfully asked if he could improve the song replied Of course Why dont you sing Monday Tuesday Monday Tuesday Monday Tuesday and Wednesday and Thursday Kmll htm' Kill him' cried the outraged fairies for the words Conald had suggested did not Fit their tune at all No said the queen Don t kill him Well punish him for meddling with our affairs by gtvmg him an extra hump As she sald this she took from the shelf the hump which Donald had worn and fastened lt on Conald s back and that ts how Conald came to be called ever after Conald the two humped or Conald the dromedary LUCILLE WALLACE I1 JHHIXL 1 11 l 1 1 1 X 1 I1 117 11111 1 1 1111 l IHA Lf 11111 ll11 I . u 7 .. , . 1 7 - 5 1 Y ' 9 9 Y ! . . . . ,, 9 Y ' S ' 1 3 5 5 1 9 1 5 5 97 , . M . . . . ,, . .. . . , . LA 73 ' tb 9 ' ' 9 ' ' v . . . . . ,, - . , . 9 Y 41 ss 1. 3, 5 l 9 3 V 1 !11 11'11' .v111111111'1' :vc :.'1.vl1 11 :stu rt'11111'1'. 111 fflt' ':v11111'1' :wr Iuixlz 11 mu .YIIIJI 111111 1l'111'11 it 1' 111.x' 'Im' 711.111 for 111' .v1111,' . '11 I 'z.'!11'11 lfli' .VIIII imxf ffllill' :ur :.'1'.fl1 for !1'11' 'll.lI. .-1111! 1!1i.v fx flzc 1111-x' 11!! 1'1'1'11.11.v Q1 , ll'1.f11.51151 fur .Q111 1'1', 1111 -rvixfz' .1 fm' 11'11111'1', ll'jy,'11111 fm' 111111, 1 f Tt'1:.x'fIl1 1111- ,cl ' 1 .llllff 5119! 11-:1'1'.fl11'1111 is!! fllr' .f111111'. w!1y111'-if li. , Jltllf EWENE THOR'S BATTLES Darkness enveloped the earth dlstant rumbhngs of thunder were heard V1Vld streaks of llghtnmg rent the darkness and the tempest broke' Heavy branches were torn from the trees the ram came down 1n torrents the storm gods were at war' Where the1r charlots crossed the sky the rumblxng was heard and the brllhant streak was seen Thor cared not for mere human bemgs the dark curta1n descended lower and lower upon the earth as If to crush It com pletely the battle raged on the w1ld crash of thunder and hghtnmg 1n creased and the ra1n dashed down 1n sheets when suddenly the vlolent crashlng stopped and the dark curta1n was transformed 1nto rose Thors s1gn of vlctory' The llght remaxned for but a few moments then the enemy renewed the battle Wlth w11d enthus1asm There were fierce repetxtlons of elemental fire arms And so the battle contmued all day now and then the thunderlnfr and lxghtnlng would cease but the ra1n fell 1ncessantly Gradually as mght came on even the ra1n stopped and soon the curta1n was ralsed A few stars twmkled 1n the heavens at first t1m1dly and then more and more steadfastly The moon shown whlte and cold agamst the mldmght blue of the sky but the expresslon of 1ts face was as patlent and sorrowful as was lts wont Ot sees so many unhappy thlngs 1n thxs world of oursj As the mght wore on only a falnt wxnd stxrred the branches and the heavens wlth the1r many starry eyes were at peace HERTHA BECK I 11 X F 11 1 Nftllll 1 1 0 11 11110 11 1 1 X111 1 f1l11 1 1111111 0111 1111111 1 1 111 111 1 1111 111111 111 11 0 1 1111 X 1 11 1101 L11 01 x11 1 1 1 1 IN 1 1111111 10111 111 I 11 N 11 1 1 1 I0 1 1 1 1 1111 5 D1 . 3 . b 7 ' 5 . . , . . , . 7 f ' 2. 'IX 1 1111.',.'111'x.v is 1-L1!!i11!1, 111111 11r'1'1' 1111' 111115 7111' 11 1'.v. 11 lIl1.N'f'X' 1111111 3 1: P11'11.1' 1111 ff 111'1'y A 111112 T111' 51'-' f1111xv 1111d1'1' . 111': A ' 111' 11111111, T115 511111' ' 1 ' '1'1-V 1'1111 111'.x' J f11j' 1 'llll I'f'1'11 1111' 11111'k1'111'111, x1'11'111 111.11111 11111 LI 5 1'1 11j, f1 'lf 111'1111. YAIZU 'lflflftl Af 111' zu 1 , ,lf 11 .v11f11V' 1111s 11' 91 '11 B11 .xv 1111 1111 .'1'1lCB, G1'11z1'1'1111 511711111 '1' 111 Ill 111'f ,11'L'. 51111. 13 rt S 1 L '11 P01 111 511' 1: 11110 0111' 111'111'1.v: T119 L51 up 11111 1111' lIll'Sf'1'. IIC .Y '11111 T1 11131 11111 III' ' 11111'1x, -S'1111'f1' B1'1'l30:1'115 BWENE THE IMPORTANCE OF CHOOSING THE RIGHT VOCATION T IS commonly saxd among busmess leaders that a mans Judgment IS no better than h1s 1nformat1on If there IS any tlme when he IS at l most 1n need of good judgment lt IS at the beglnmnv of h1s career when he IS decldmg what h1s lxfe work shall be Yet rellable lnformatlon about occupatlons seems to be one of the scarcest thmgs on the face of the earth Many a young man feels llke the sallor on the raft w1th water water everywhere and not a drop to drlnk He sees hlmself surrounded by men ln all kmds of occupatlons but he seeks 1n vam for the drops of mforma tlon that w1ll help hrm 1n h1s problem The trouble rs that although the mformatlon IS there lt lS usually ln such a form that lt cannot be absorbed except after a long process of d1s tlllatlon There are plenty of books that contam vocatlonal mformatron that w1ll help hlm n h1s problem The trouble IS that although the mformatlon IS there It IS usually rn t1on There are plenty of books that conta1n vocatlonal lnformatlon rn com bmatxon wxth such a mass of hlghly techmcal materlal and general facts that no young man can swallow them to advantage They w1ll only mcrease h1s despa1r There are plenty of men who have succeeded xn business or profes s1ons but very few who have ab1l1ty to advlse on the questlon of choosmg a l1fe work If you lrve on the avenue m your town you may know the stock broker who wlshes he were a doctor You may also know the bank cashxer next door who does not have h1s heart 1n h1s work he was cut out for a frult farmer and IS dlscoverlng rt at the age of fifty Eve Across the way IS an msurance man wxth an eve for color If tvs enty five years ago he had had the rlght encouragement and mformatlon he would have been an artlst and so xt goes There have been books prepared under the dlrectlon of experts to supply stralghtforward uncolored conclse mformatlon on the major occupatlons 1n which young men are generally lnterested The opportumtles condltlons advantages and dlsadvantages are descrlbed by men who have chmbed the ladder from the bottom rung and are ln thexr pnme today It IS not expected that a mere readmg of the chapters of these books w1ll settle the questlon of a career The1r purpose IS to help the reader to help hlmself to supply the facts that w1ll serve ham as a basls of comparxson when he sets one occupatlon agamst another and asks h1mse'f the questlon Whlch mterests me? Nlll f 1 , L ',,. 9 AD i . ' ' ' Lt ' 1 5 . ,, . ' . . , . . . F such a form that it cannot be absorbed except after a long process of distilla- U 9 Q ' 3 7 ' v . . . Z . ' ' 1 - I, ' v v Y Y , , , . . . y . . , ,, . BUJZIHH The rnan vs ho early dlscovers the r1ght ansvxer to that questlon S a lap aheau of the hstless runners There is a deal of Sound phllosophy 1n the clrcus r1n0f master to the raw YCCYUIT atternptmg a dlffxealt leap Th heart over Flrst ohn and your heels wlll follou Imelhvence alone 15 not enouvh The qualxty of lnterest t range xmtahtv permstence makes the chfference ln choosmo an occupatlon aduce of the ox er a hwh rrapeze row your JOSEPH GROSS I f l I I 1 4 rw I I L H1 11 V. .A . D- V X' .. 'D . '. b ' ' 11 S k . ,' X: J. 1 b. ' ' X' ' ' All '!x'f,lxVif lf!1f !f!x' 'W'ff.'1! ffm' 11'1u.' ff .if-ri! f'lf'ffl' mf .VH 1.J.'!l'l'I', Y'fJQ. 1'u f1!Ir'f1'y.v fzfmf wr !r1:.5x', fluff fzvzz .vrmiz In lzmr. .N'ff'1'11.ff fCI'NI', ffzr .vf.':rI'u11f llml fzfx ll1f.wfw.f .YuI'u1' mm 4rym'l'. ffzfv uvxnlv gflllmw' fl7fx'tI?'1f.X' ffm' :.'f1sffff:.', l: f1r11 ffsu1'r'.v Jzfvllimf flzrrw ff: fry, Nf 'llljl fczwx Tfzu xzzzffffrf' fllvkxgv fw'.ff1'11 fu Nfl' llfffs 11m1'!'fl x, in lfll' .v!m'ln', 'fffrfz fl1l'1'l'x 41 .YZIIT .Ylllffll ffzrffzryffz clflrll f'f.'fwwuf,'!1 'lffzf inrim' LUSH fu' fmsf, .Yfn'1'11gf fl'-:'w', Tiff fiqp, fr .v.m111.v. fx l1rf1'11ff ljmu rf 'Ilan' JIFHXI fu' .w111ulf1Ulgf I.'1w:.'lf. 'fl f, wu,f11'f gfzwfnf lx! llzw Ml fwfr:-li , .l11l1' ,x',l4','f'X ffm' Iufwfl' firlbl' lffznx, .YJ Vilxff frz'r1'. ff f,1f:r',' lf iflzlwfflvx' lu! nf fwfr, Nfl uxw1'5,'j,' um! will fu f.wu'A,f' Vwlrlzmlf cljrfilfljf' l'f'.f:: .wif I r'l. 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WJ 'K -, 1 H A ei 4 n 4. I EWZIHE THE GREAT STONE FACE E AVE you read Nathanrel Hawthorne s story The Great Stone Face, Q 4 Perhaps not or rf so I wonder whether you drew from rt the lesson ia: rntended by the author Perhaps you wrll permrt me to rnterpret rt for you Ernest the hero of the story had been born and reared rn a beautrful valley surrounded by hrlls on the srde of one of whrch nature had thrown the stones together rn such a manner that from a drstance they portrayed perfectly the features of a man Tradrtron handed down from the Indrans had rt that some day a natrve of the valley would appear who would be the perfect lrkeness of the Stone Face The face represented a grand character wrse forceful benehcent and sublrme Ernest was of an rmagrnatrve temperament and spent most of hrs lersure hours contemplatrng the majestrc features of thrs Grand Old Man of the mountarns and readrng 1nto rt far more than drd anyone else In fact he grew up and lrved hrs lrfe under rts magrc spell It became for hrm an 1deal wh1ch was held constantly before hrm sank rnto hrs rnner conscious ness and rnfluenced hrs every thought and act Though a srmple trller of the sorl hrs darly communron wrth the Great Stone Face caused hrm to become a man respected by all who knew hrm as a person of grand and beautrful to hrs actrvrtres that of preacher and people came from far and wrde to lrsten to hrs rnsprrrng and uplrftrng sermons From trme to trme begrnnrng rn Ernests chrldhood men had come to the valley each rn turn heralded as the fulfilment of the prophecy The first was Gathergold who had made a great fortune rn a drstant seaport town and rn hrs old age had come back to lrve out hrs declrnrng years rn a beautrful palace whrch he had burlt on hrs old homestead Everyone declared that thrs man was the very rmage of the Great Stone Face and pard nrm great homage but Ernest saw only a wrrnkled mrser wrth a skrn as yellow as hrs greedrly acqurred gold As the years passed by the people were drsrllusroned and Gathergold was consrgned to hrs grave and forgotten The next asprrant for the honor was old Blood and Thunder an rllus trrous general who was comrng home to enjoy the peace and quret of hrs natrxe valley Agarn expectancy ran hrgh and like everyone else Ernest was happy rn the thought that the Great Man was at last about to appear As often happens the contagron of an rdea robbed the masses of therr Judg ment and all wrth the exceptron of Ernest declared the prophecy to have come true But Ernest had lrved so rntrmately wrth the Great Stone Face that he at once saw through the thrn verl of resemblance and was drsap Nfll - ' Q H as .,. 1 r - 5 V . . 7 Y V ' 9 . 5 7 G - . Y 7 ' 9 , - 3 character, deep sympathy, and a philosophical turn of mind. In time he added 7 . . . . . , . Y Y 7 . Y . , . y O ' Y - - , I - , , . . . . Y . . . Y , , Y - I I Y fir' '.'-rf' BUJEHH pomted The generals face d1d lndeed portray energy and lron wlll but the gentle wxsdom and deep sympathy of hls Ideal were lacklng In t1me the people recognlzed thelr mlstake and almost forgot the tradltlon Ernest alone remamed contlnuously under the spell and mfiuence of hrs companlon of the mourtam and hoped for the realxzanon of the prophecy The years rolled on and once more the tradltlon was revlved at the com 1ng of the great statesman Old Stony Phlz When the celebrity put mn h1s appearance even Ernest was for a moment decelved and shouted and threw up h1s cap wlth the rest but not for long A close mspectlon showed hlm that the strong and handsome features of the noted orator though re sembhng 1n many respects the Great Stone Face lacked the subllmlty and the statellness the dlvme sympathy of the orlgmal As tlme went on Ernest ln the nature of thlngs became an old man but a grand old man he was H15 fame as a preacher and phllosopher had spread beyond the confines of the Valley and noted and hlghly educated men journeyed from afar to see and converse Wlth hxm Among these was a poet whose 1nsp1red WI'ltlI'lgS had long been read and admired by Ernest because they expressed 1n beautlful language h1s own hearts yearnmgs Ernest had fancled that a man who could produce such wonderful poems mxght perhaps be the counterpart of the Great Stone Face for whose com 1ng he had never ceased to long But the Poet s l1fe had not been cons1stent with hrs occasxonal grand dreams and much that was unlovely was recorded 1n 1tS l1nes At the close of the day on Whlch the Poet was v1s1t1ng Ernest they went together to a natural amphltheatre 1n whxch Ernest was accustomed to preach to hxs frlends and nelghbors As he took his place and began to speak wlth the lmage of the Old Stone Face plamly dlscermble ln the dlstance lighted up by the rays of the sett1ng sun the Poet dnscovered what the duller xmagx natxons of the natlves had never suspected 1n thelr llfelong fnend namely that Ernest hlmself was the very embodlment of the Great Stone Face The lesson of the tale IS thxs If you keep an ideal ln front of you con stantly you wlll Grow more and more hke It unt1l eventually you wxll be 1ts personxiicatxon ust as a great work of archltecture at first exxsts only rn 1mag1nat1on then IS made mto a plan and thus worked out rn reallty so a hlgh conceptlon of the sort of human bemg you would some day l1ke to be xf held constantly 1n your mmd wxll b1t by b1t be buxlt up and some day you w11l find the ldea reallzed ln your own personality ln proportion to the mtenszty and constancy wlth whlch you have held It before you A R M Szxfx . , . . . . ' 9 ' I , - . H . ,, . . , . ! ! , . , - I , . 1 v y s - 9 . . . , . Q , - . , . . 1 Q ' n ! y - ' .Q , 9 g, 1 s 9 9 s 1 9 , , ' v'-JCI' '71 BRUZNH THE CONSTITUTION HE unlque and outstandmg events rn American Hlstory have not been ffl N accldents they have been achlevements Not achlevements of hasty Yugi and unwise actlon or of narrowness and of dlscord but achxevements of effort of sacrxfice and of bloodshed gulded always by the controllmg hand of sane and conservative actlon Thus the Constltutlon of the Unlted States IS an achxevement It IS the culmmatlon of the noble efforts of the Cclomsts nn thelr attempt to solve the problem of self government These people who colomzed the shores of Amerlca were not revolutxonary ln thexr attltude toward government and authorlty They had no deslre to tear themselves from their mother country These guardians of the everlastmg rlghts of man were not revolutlomsts they were helrs The helrs of certam fundamental prmcxples and xdeals whlch they were not wrllmg to sacrlfice' Prmclples that were deeply lmbedded 1n the heart of every Engllshman pr1nc1ples for whlch therr ancestors had fought on the Field of Runnymede when they wrested from Kmg john the Magna Charta prmclples whlch thelr forefather had struggled to tear from Kmg Charles the Petltlon of Rlghts It IS no wonder then that when England vlolated these fundamen tal prmclples of democracy the Thlrteen Colomes were stlrred to declarlng these Umted Colomes are and of rlght ought to be free and mdependent states Then followed the memorable Revolutron when colomsts from the North and South threw aslde all sectlonal feellng and fought slde by slde in defense of those prlnclples Through years of hardshlp and bloodshed the Thirteen Colomes emerged a free natlon They had won a glorlous v1c tory but they were weak When the excltement of war had passed the States Jealously preserved the1r 1nd1v1dual1ty The Artlcles of Confederatlon were a fallure There was no money Industrles had stopped Forexgn nat1ons r1d1culed the Colomes Anarchy seemed mevltable It was durlng condltlons such as these that those great Amerlcan statesmen framed our Constltutlon And as nts foundatxon they used those very prlnclples for whlch they had just engaged m a bloody war The Colonxsts had won thelr first war for mdependence and had formed a more perfect unxon whlch thelr posterity mxght enjoy Agam ln the year of 1812 the Umted States was forced to fight for those prmclples and ldeals whlch she had set forth ln the Constltutlon Again England was the offender seeking to rule the hlgh seas with an lron hand thus brmgmg rum to the commerce whxch the strugglmg natnon had buxlded It was then that Henry Clay set forth anew the principles of Amerxcan de mocracy It was that same appeal that had caused the Thnrteen Colomes to wage thexr first war for mdependence and xt was that same unshaken cour age and loyalty whlch had so nobly shown rtself at Lexmgton that caused Nutt nz . 1 I. N39 l . . . - . -t .Gu 5 1 - 4 T a n , 4 ,U , 9 v 1 , . Y Y s y 1 . , - , 1 U . . . . 1 s u Y - r ' 1 I . P S , 1 , - I . .' -'-R-JH BWEHH the Umted States of Amer1ca to agaxn throw off the shackles of Engllsh despotlsm When vue revlew the hlstory of our Constltutlon when we look back wlth admxratlon on the acts of our fathers does xt not seem strange that certam condmons can exist as they do m our country? Whale lt IS happxly admltted that people of today are unusually prosperous whxle xt lS true that the nation IS entermg upon an era of prosperity and while xt IS a fact that the progress of thls natlon has been one of constant betterment never theless xt IS surely a wxse and commendable thmg to be able to realnze the ev1ls of the present age It IS not because today IS worse than yesterday that we should pomt to the faults of today lt IS because tomorrow must be better than today It seems that a perlod has been reached ln the hlstory of our natlon when the pr1nc1ples and xdeals of the Constxtutlon are forgotten and mans only thought IS maternal gam When d1sregard for law becomes so prevalent mn a natlon such as ours lt IS t1me to pause a moment 1n the busy llfe of today and g1ve a thought to lawlessness It IS not the petty thief or the gangster who threatens the welfare of our natlon It IS the man m a responslble posx txon who for personal and petty ga1ns d1scards all the ldeals of the Constx tutlon What shall we say to the xmmlgrant ignorant of democracy when trusted Amerlcan cmzens dxsregard the law whenever thelr feehngs so prompt them? What shall we say to these people who come to the Umted States to l1ve accordmg to the ldeals of our Constltutlon? Shall we tell them that the Const1tut1on of the Umted States cannot protect the llves and prop erty of 1ts cmzens? Shall we say to them that 1deals no longer have a place ln Amerlcan government and buslness? What reason shall we give? We turn to the Constxtutlon and find that document as ever before proclaxmmg a message of Justice and equalxty a message of law and order We find that the Constxtutlon of the Umted States st1ll contains all those prmclples and ldeals that have thus far gulded our natlon We find that no occaslon has ever arxsen nothmg has ever been accompl1shed for whxch the prov1s1ons of the Constxtutxon have not been adequate The fault does not he 1n the Constxtutxon the fault l1es wlth the Amerxcan people Too many of us have turned our backs upon the Constltutlon We have forgotten the :deals of our forefathers We have fa1led to place the prmcxples and ldeals of the Constltutxon above petty personalltxes and greedy desxres Wlth flagrant vlolatxon of law cloudmg the atmosphere of American democracy wlth the mcreasmg dxsrespect for the prmclples and ldeals of our Constltutlon lt IS t1me for the cltrzens of the Unxted States to wage thelr Thlrd War for Independence It IS time to revert to the prmclples of the Constltutlon Too long have the leaks 1n the dukes of our laws been plugged by armed force We must repaxr the holes ln the wall of law by lI'lStlllll'lg a deep and reverend respect for the Const1tut1on We must change our mode of hvmg by means of a bloodless revolutxon and return to a peaceful Suit rzme Y . . . . 9 7 9 . Y - 7 9 . . . . . . , 9 9 y - v a y ' 0 s v 1 1 , . Y v a . a n 9 BKUEHH re1gn under the Const1tut1on when l1fe and property shall be safe when the courts shall deal out speedy Just1ce and when our leg1slat1ve system shall be free from pol1t1cal corrupt1on May the c1t1zens of th1s great nat1on agaln unseal those f0unta1ns of 1deal1sm may they reawake the1r sleep1ng c0nsc1ence and ma1nta1n a deep respect for law and the Const1tut1on Then truly The nat1on shall under God have a new b1rth of freedom and Government of the people by the people and for the people shall not per1sh from the earth CULLEN COIL Wmnmg Oratlon 1n Washmgton Un1vers1ty Orator1cal Contest GLOBE DEMOCRAT ORATORICAL CONTFST Roosevelt entered the nat1onal orator1cal contest and after prel1m1nary el1m1nat1ons held the school finals on Apr1l th1rd Those who were fortunate enough to have gone th1s far were Laura Br1scoe M1r1am Meeker W1ll1am Evans and Cullen C01l The contest although not largely attended was consldered successful Flrst place was g1ven C011 and Evans was chosen as alternate The next el1m1nat1ons were scheduled for Apr1l seventeenth rn the Roosevelt Aud1tor1um The schools competlng 1n thls contest were Web ster Klrkwood Maplewood Rltenour Cleveland and Roosevelt Roosevelt pet1ng 1n the d1str1ct finals held at the Persh1ng Theater Apr1l twenty fourth A large crowd greeted the e1ght candldates one from each of the fol1ow1ng places Greenv1lle College Hlgh Greenv1lle Ill Normandy M0 Slkeston Mo Carrolton Ill Keytesv1lle Mo Paynesv1lle Mo Academy of the V1s1tat1on St LOUIS and Roosevelt H1gh St Lou1s Paul Street of Nor mandy was declared w1nner defeatmg Cullen C011 of Roosevelt by one po1nt ORATORICAL CONTEST 1925 CW3ShlUUtOU Un1vers1ty Cup Contestj Laura Br1scoe Cullen C011 Roosevelt H1 h School by w1nn1ng first place 1n the boys oratorlcal contest won her first cup Not only shall we keep th1s cup for the year but we have now ga1ned enough po1nts to Obfaln It permanently no matter what next years results may be In the 1rls contest Roosevelt fared al most as well wmnmg second place N nf . ' . . y . ' 9 A . . . . . . ' ' 44 ' l v 3 v . ,, , ' 4 . . . , . . ' . Y . y I l ' l 9 ' 7 ! . 9 7 Q 1 Y ' was successful in this contest, giving our candidate the opportunity of com- . . . . , . , . I i . . Y . 2 ' D , , -: , -1 ' 1 -C , - I , -1 , -3 ' ' ' , . 3 , . . - , , . . I b .U . . . , . C, . . . . O 1 . g , ' . . U i . QUIT 'Q EUJZHE THE PASSING OF MCKINLEY HIGH OR more than twenty years have the towers of the old McK1nley Higlc School reached to the sky actxn as an mspxratlon to those who spent part of the best years of their lives there and who have now passed on 1nto the great world some Ending happ1ness others sorrow but all rever encmg and cherzshmg a memory of beautlful old McK1nley High deep in the1r hearts McK1nley was opened on February 1 1904 and during these many years which have only too quickly passed numerous changes have taken place Over two hundred and fifty dxfferent instructors have tau ht in McK1nley and the number of puplls who have attended it of course would be well up in the thousands From 1904 to 1913 Mr Gilbert B Morrlson was the dearly beloved leader and gulde ln the p0llC16S of McK1nley Early ln the year of 1913 the fla which surmounted McK1nley was lowered to half mast and the school mourned the death of the1r friend Gllbert B Morrlson Mr William Schuy ler was the next prmcipal but ln july of the following year the grim reaper again sought h1s toll by claimmg another life revered and loved by the Mc Klnleyites After this change the assistant principal Mr Armand Miller took charge w1th Mr Maynard Hart as assistant principal In the year of 1916 the Student Counc11 was formed which was one of more recent years the orgamzatlon called The United Patrons and Parent Teachers Assoclatxon of the McK1nley Hlgh School was formed To galn an idea of what McK1nley did 1n athletics one needs but look in the trophy case at Roosevelt and it will be found that the dauntless war rxors of old McK1nley followed through wlth the true McK1nley spirit The Carnatlon McK1nleys year book was started in 1905 and the Crlmson their weekly was started ln 1915 Both of these publications af forded excellent opportumtles for any pupll w1th Journahstic talent to de velop it During the World War McK1nley was well represented m the various branches of servlce and a memorlal tablet ln the mam entrance IS a mute and lastin testlmony of the supreme SHCFIHCG made by sixteen sons of old McK1nley When finally ln 1924 it was declded that McK1nley Hlgh was to be closed as a senior high giving over its pupils to a newer and more modern school nearly everyone felt as though a foster parent were being substituted In the last Carnation plctures taken of the varlous rooms were lnserted plen tifully though they were not needed to keep green nn the hearts of McK1n leyltes the scenes of the1r old school It seemed that no one could quite real 5 H 43 p . . . . i ,g , g V gg . . Y 9 . I 1 u ' 7 V V . . , I . . U . . b . 1 Y , . - . I . . , g , . . . ' 3 . . ' . , . . . , . , g , . . , . , . the most important happenings in the life of McKinley High School. In , ' ' as ' v - . Q . . . . ,, ! y - . . , . 1 ' 9 7 9 s ' - 5 . Y . . . . . U . . . b , , . , . . . . 3 , . . , . . . - . U . . - Y fern' fy- 'I BUJZJNH 1ze that there would soon be no such school as the W1ll1am McK1nley Hrgh School On the last day of our occupancy there a peculxar axr of reverence perhaps awe was notlceable among the puplls Every room hall nook and corner seemed like a dear old frlend calllng out to the students not to leave old McK1nley Hlgh devoxd of the youth xt had always known As the stu dents left tears welled up 1n many eyes for the Swan Song of old McK1nley was bemg sung Never before had the school seemed so beautlful and ap peallng The old school as McK1nley Hlgh exxsts no longer for the old order changeth yleldmg place to the new but the one thmg about Mc Kmley that can be felt wherever a McK1nley1te may be and that wxll go marching through the ages as long as red blooded honest men exlst IS the spmt of dear old McK1nley Hmgh LUCILLE WALLACE MCKINLEY AS IT IS NOW At the time when the faculty and student body of the former McK1nley Hlgh School were looklng forward to belng transferred to the new Roose velt Hxgh School rt was as yet undecxded as to what would become of the school buxldlng whlch had for twenty years been a regular semor hlgh school of Salnt Louls Its fate has s1nce been declded however and lt now bears the txtle of the McK1nley Intermedrate School Manual Trammg Center As the name 1mpl1es McK1nley IS a combxnatlon of both the Intermedr ate School and the Manual Trammg Center As an Intermedlate School lt m the grammar schools and thus by accommodatlng pupils of the upper grades reheves the crowded condltlon of four of the nexghbormg grade schools The Manual Tralmng branch of the school has had transferred to lts en rollment many of the puplls who formerly attended the Eads Avenue Center It offers to those pupxls many types of work For the boys there IS prac t1cal tralmng for the future electrlclan also sheet metal work general shop work conslstxng of forgxng and machme work mechanlcal drawmg type wrltxng and 08.168 practxce An addltlonal feature IS a completely equrpped prmtmg plant wrth two presses Typewrltmg and oFf1ce practice are zncluded Ln the girls course also In addltxon to that gxrls may take cookmv sewmg mxllmery and basketry Although McK1nley was already well equlpped for use as a vocatlonal trammg center a few sllght alterations are to be made and addltlonal equlp ment secured ELISE MARDORF X I . Y . . , I . ' ! ! ' D l ' n - ' .vw - 9 s ' ' 1 v I 9 ' Y 1 , - . . u . , . offers the same seventh and eighth grade courses of instruction as are given . , , . . i s l 1 - v ' ' , . , . . . ..... , , . . . , . . by . , y . , - Sfzvu jv- :tw BWEHH AN UNDERSTANDING OF SAINT JOAN -IE theatre was dark and an awesome hush pervaded the audience I 5 The stage represented an eccles1ast1cal court of the Middle Ages 'fb' the dark background sat rows of forblddmg lookmg monks In the foreground was a lofty desk at whrch the Judge a hlgh churchman was seated Before the Judge seated on a low stool between two monks sat a young glrl Her head was bowed and the short wavy auburn hair hld her face but ln a moment she looked up at the Judge wlth great greenish gray eyes full of tears Her face wore a look of mdescrlbable anguxsh and as she spoke one could see that the feehng came right from her heart Her volce rxch deep and throaty quxvered and broke at tlmes under the stram of her grlef When she stood up her dress was revealed to be that of a man It was black and plam brmgmg out the pallor of her face Soon only too soon came an end to the scene and her guards led her away to the great funeral pyre whxch was to claim nts l1v1ng SHCIIHCC rn the name of Chrlstlanlty joan the glrl or joan the samt The audlence broke mto unrestramed applause at the end of this scene Lrttle dmd any of the audlence who had applauded the wonderful actmg ln the scene dream that lt wasn t really actmg Yet It wasn t because lt came stra1ght from the heart of Julla Arthur the wonderful actress who por trayed the glrl samt who IS known to be the herome of the hlstory of France When Mlss Arthur s frlends hastened to her after an unusually brrlllant performance at the New Years day matmee they found a very drfferent lookmg person than the one they had seen on the stage for m the Fnrst place Mlss Arthur IS well up ln her s1xt1es and ln the second place she IS not nearly so slender as she appears to be on the stage Needless to say Mxss Arthur s make up rs very lntrlcate for this role The auburn halr IS of course a wxg whlle the eyes that look so blg and appealxng on the stage are made to look bxgger by the lavlsh use of a black pencll The need of thls m unfor tunate because throughout the last scene m whlch she appears as a Splflt It 15 notxceable to the people slttrng ln box seats that the mascara ran when she cr1ed ln the court scene Mxss Arthur confesses that she does not wmllmgly cry m the court scene It just so happened that whlle I was awaltmg my turn to see her back stage she was talkmg to several frlends One commented on the fact that the mas cara streaked her make up Yes lt s too bad But she got me agam today I can t help lt was the reply A few mlnutes later when I was talkmg to her I was moved to ask her S1 nh 1111 . . , . s - . ' , , ' 9 3 . . . , G . - ' Y v v Y . . . U . . , . 9 ' l 3 7 7 G I S ' ' the court scene from St, joan, Bernard Shaw's much discussed play. . . , . . , . Y ' 7 , - . , . . . , . , . - - 7 9 . 7 ! ! ' I . , . . . . . . , - ' 5 7 .U . . . . , V , . . . . V . ! - li ' Y -1' ' 1 ' 73 s ' ' . FIT '- 'Um' EWENH whether or not that remark She got me agam had been m reference to St joan Yes nodded M1ss Arthur as she smxled You see Ive been trymg to break myself of crymg ln that act ever smce I ve had the role be cause I feel that I m not truly acting when I let It affect me that way I m l1v1ng lt You see I seem to lapse from actmg 1nto l1v1ng 1n that scene I am Joan of Arc for I feel her suffermg qu1te as keenly as anyone could suf er They you really love and sympathize Wlth oan herself? I asked Oh yes of course or I wouldn t take the part answered M1ss Arthur You have always been mterested ln her9 How dld you regard her when you studled her ln hlstorya I lnqulred somewhat curlously because for most of us xt IS so drffxcult to v1sual1ze joan as a real gurl who had her 11k6S and dlshkes her whlms and humors just as glrls of today have M1ss Arthur smlled a l1ttle as she replled Yes I suppose I always have been mterested 1n her At least I ve always admxred sympathxzed wxth and loved her As a hxgh school glrl or a glrl about your age she samd under standlngly I d1dnt g1V6 anyone 1n hlstory enough txme but I remember truly feel or fully understand her case untxl I studled the part but now she stopped and her glowlng face expressed the love sympathy and under standmg that words are 1ncapable of expresslng Then I notlced how weary M1ss Arthur looked for rn the emot1onal turbulence of the play there 1S qu1te enough work to wear one out A few moments later I met Ph1l1p Lee the man who played opposlte M1ss Arthur as the Dauphm of France On the stage he had appeared as a weazened l1ttle old man Wlth a long mls shapen nose a bent body and a warped dxsposltxon Back stage however he appeared to be between twenty five and thlrty years of age and was exceedmgly handsome havmg sh1n1n light brown halr and very brlght blue eyes I asked h1m lf he d1dnt thmk the dauphm was perhaps a l1ttle feeble m1nded He answered very firmly that he dndn t thmk the dauphln was men tally below par but that he had been abused for so long and hls health was so bad that he was p9CVlSh and fretful at txmes In fact Mr Lee sald smllxng Im that way myself at tlmes Takmg thls as a warnlng I fled to the stage door whrch leads away from the magxcal land of drama where dlgnx hed rather elderly ladles become hero1c young glrls and where weazened old men become handsome young men and into thls everyday world where memorles of a pltlful l1ttle old kmg and a brave young salnt serve to hold the name St joan ln my heart with deepest reverence forever LUCILLE WALLACE N 1 7 ZH Gb ' Y! ' 1 9 44 wr ' ' as V y . , . . - f . lb ' ' J V9 , . . tn 7 91 ' J Y 7 1 ' . . . ,, . . . ' J ! , 3 1 ' . . . . ,, 9 Y . , , . . . . ,, . - r 1 ' . U . , . . . . ! D how moved by pity I used to feel when I studied joan. Of course I didn't - - , -as v 1 ' . , , . . y . ! ' . s I ' 1 9 ' 1 9 ' y . , . . . g, , . ' . ' 9 ' 1 Y AA 9 ' 19 ' ' ' ' 1 v 1 ' . . .'u:'.'1 ' BUJHHH FRANK WYMAN OUTING FARM IGNS of summer brmg the1r thoughts of Wyman Outlng Farm where yi ch1ldre'1 from the crowded c1ty dlstrlcts are sent for fresh a1r and fun Twe1Je young glrls are Sent wlth each group to help take care of and entertain the chlldren They probably would say chlldren came for syrup and storles because they never seem to get filled up on elther Indeed syrup pourlng becomes an art on cold days when 1n1t1als ovals houses and ex en gxrls wlth prgtarls can be formed on the plates Then lf at the same txme at your table you happen to have a Leroy who can eat elght dlshes of cornflakes or a JUIILIS who couldnt count hrs cups of mllk you are kept runnlng to the cooks for more please Some of the thmgs that happen at meals are very funny some very pa thetxc One youngster drdn t know what desert was unt11 h1s first dlnner on the farm At supper he notlced lt came agaln the next morn1ng at breakfast when he was asked lf he wanted more bread he proudly answered No I m ready for my desert Besldes the chrldren and entertainers there are about twelve mothers wlth each group the kltchen force h1red hands and a young man who dr rects boys athlet1cs Thrs large force IS kept 1n smooth runnlng order by Mr and Mrs Txllery and the1r asslstant hostess All do the1r share to help make the chlldren happy One httle glrl wrote home Mr Tlllery has a blrthday every Monday so we have 1ce cream to celebrate Letter wr1t1ng IS always P1165 of fun for those who get to censor for slgns of homeslckness Thls part IS taken out because almost always after the1r first few days the chxldren get over It and parents would only worry needlessly One llttle boy who lI'lS1StEd upon gomv home klssed a g1r1 be cause another youngster had told hrm such an act would surely lead to home Other blg events are the swlm every day ln the fine pool whxch you can get drowmng 1n h1kCS games and races on the playground and the tr1p to the cave where eyes grow w1de wlth wonder at the petreefied bear Jewels snakes and Susie Dave Feathers w1fe cf Blg Chlef Wampus Petreefied 1S one of the new words every chrld learns Every pebble shell or other such unfamlllar object IS so labeled and hot arguments are held as to the age of each Another good subject for argument IS whether Mxss Mary or M1ss Peggy was Tomboy Taylor ln the entertarnment last mght Shows are glven every mght and entertamers learn how to be everythlng from four of joseph s Brethren at once to a negro washerwoman or tlger Of course lf you happen to have bxg feet and observlng llttle Joes sat 1n the front row they can tell you next day that you were the first tiger who came on the stage Although some chlldren don t hke some thmgs on the farm all regret at the end of two weeks gomg home and even Vlto forgets to get even wlth john on the tram for callmg h1m a Dago NORMA E YERGER l fl ,j 4 ' Tw i A H,. s 1 ' ' , . Y 0 Y Y . . . . . v - - - v . . , . . ' ! Y ' - ln vs , . y - . . , . . . . - - cs v , v v as I s y 1 ' , . . . . . . . . H . . , . . . ,, . - v s Y , ' 1 b - . . . . H . . . ,, . Y , 7 ' ' ' as sy s Y Y Y ' -1 va - ' . . , ' V U ' ss n ' ' ' ' Y V . , . . ' , ' ' n xr 9 s ' - ' ' u H .Nu:'.'ufQ- tv 139321135 ALL E LIST IURST QUARTER Kennet Allen Helene Barnett JCSSIC Bast Lucxlle Bxehl Irene Bond1 Myrtle Chr1st Georg1a Flowers Vxrgmla Freund L1ll1an Gale Marcella Galle Eva Held Ada Hodges Audrey Hubell MHTIOH judell Gladys Kammerer Amta LCWIYZ Wzlma McCracken Harold Mlller Roland Mxller Dorothy Moldenschart Albert Mueller Vrrglma Nlcolal Eddy Schrlck Mable Sm1th Marcella Wxget Norma Yerger SECOND QUARTER Kennet Allen Martha Antome Beatrlce Audram Helene Barnett Adolph Baron JCSSIC Bast Lucllle Blehl Mane Blarkrr-ore Edgar Bohle Irene Bondl Amy Chase Mary Chrxst Catherme Cummlns Gllbert Early Paullne Ferencevxc Georgla Flowers Ben Freeman Vlfglflla Freund Grace Games Marcella Galle Fern Grossenhelder Llla Hall V1rg1n1a Hllton Frances Humphrey Evelyn Joss Marlon Judell Gladys Kammerer Ellzabeth Kausch Amta Lewltz Albert Marlen Vlfglnla McG1nn1S Gertrude Messlna Mary M1l1ar Arthur Mlller Paul M1ller Dorothy Moldenschart Norman Moore V1ola Mutschler Vernon Myers Vrrgxnla Nxcolal Audrey Nlemeyer L1ll1an Rxce Eddy Schrlck Mabel Smlth Carl Weber Florls Wegner Eleanor Werber Marcelle Wlget Norma Yerger Cl 99 Gertrude Messina Maxine Larisey BUJENH CONTEST WINNERS Dedication Page Bwana Title Page Bwana Lettering Bvvana on Cover SHORT STORY First Second Third POETRH First Second Third CLUB NOTES First Second of fourth term daily art class Editorials Clubs Calendar Sports Literature General Humo Audrey Hubel John Allen Dora Mae Silb Lillian Rice Lucille Wallace Mar aret Gleax Rowena Quenti Inez Flye Bernard Mey Mask and Buskm Spanish Club Louetta Reitz Elma Haas jCorotha Lavender tRoy Beck jAlbert Renje George Helfensteller lMay Kidney fLoretta jenkins Virginia Floyd George Helfensteller fEdmund Cary lElma Haas Roy Fleming N ' ' er . A g h ,e ' A er The division pages are printed from blocks designed and cut by member S . b. . CROSS-WORD PUZZLE ll EDITED BY ALITA SPOHR z I3 I4 ' ' I I I I I I i l l 0 I I -I I I I I I I ... I I . I For SoIution See Page 21 I in Ad Sectio Fr: ff: 1 I ERUZHE I-IORIZONTAL lxature of cate naen Equestnan Pres1derxt of Umted States Act To ra1se A State tabbrj Wrath The Master Rlght Angle Cabbrj Anlmal frequently found at School South D1SfT1Ct School Cabbrj Lxquld food To estabhsh Cobsj Temper of m1nd Paths VERTICAL To dlp over agaxn Un1ted Ra1lway Surname Surname Glrl s name Ear of corn Term apphed to detectxve Cslangl To cap over agaxn Blnds Escapes Large wagon An account of mountams Place to sleep On the road or way Cheermg Spo1ls of plunde Monday occurrences C xrcular motxon Apartments Cabbrj In1t1al letters of four make up the body A pronoun Gladly Babys hrst word What I do at ralhes Cabbrj Those who search A State fabbrj A place to eat Occurrence Fxts elements wh1ch Proceeds Cobsl Truth Qobsj Boy s name fpossb Months Qabbrj Hard structures of the mouth A metal Assert Prepare food for the table Cplj Match cord used for firing cannon God of Love Name glven to German soldlers dur mg late war French com Ind1rect object pro CSpJ Possesswe Pro CSpJ N I I 1 V . . 29. ' . r. ' , 30. .. Q ' . 32. 1' ' . , 33. . . ' , 36. ' ' ' ' ' 38. . ' . 39. . 4 ' Q ' 41. ' . - I 42, ' , . . - 43. . - - ' ' 45. . . - ' 46. . . ' ' 48. . I ' 49. ' . ' V ' . 22. . . ' ' . 24. . . . . 26. ' . . . 27. . . ' ' . 31. Q . . 34. . ' ' . 35. .1 . ' . 37. . . ' . 39. ' . . 40. . . 43. U ' ' - ' ' 44. ' . 0 46. ' ' . . - . 47. - ' . . EUJEHH WHY STUDY LATIN IN HIGH SCHOOL' HE other day I was speaklng to a young man who plans to enter hlgh school In the fall and I asked hlm rf he xntended to study Latm 1,-51 No he replled Latm doesnt help you get a Job Im golng to study book keepmg Thls young man was maklng the same mlstake that many other school students make that of thlnkmg that only those thlngs have value whlch can be turned lnto dollars and cents Dollars and cents may make a lrvlng but one cannot appreclate llfe lf he cannot appreclate llterature In the first place lf a student decldes to study any foreign language he should take xt for at least three years and lf posslble for four years al though the Board of Educatlon requlres only two In the first two years you learn the prlnclples of the language only and xt IS ln the last two that you become mterested A thlrd year IS worth as much as the first two a fourth year w1ll gnve the student far greater mastery and pleasure There are several very good reasons for studymg Latm Flrst Latm more than any other language IS a help to the understand mg of Engllsh grammar Latm grammar IS much more slmple and much more easy to learn than Engllsh grammar and he who knows Latm gram mar knows English grammar for studymg Latm compels hlm to study Engllsh A student can learn more Enghsh grammar by studymg Latm fgf two years than he can learn by studymg Engllsh for four years Second Latm not only helps one to remember the meanings of a very large number of Engllsh words and to understand thelr compounds but lt also makes lt posslble for the Latm student to figure out the meanlng of new words Third Latm IS the basls of all the modern languages of western Europe It IS the mam source of French Spamsh and Itahan The boy or gxrl who has studled Latm has a great advantage ln the speed wlth whlch he w1ll mas ter a modern language Fourth Latm llterature opens up to the student gllmpses of Roman clvlllzatlon from whlch our modern c1v1l1zat1on sprang He gets a dlfierent and more mterestlng verslon of ancient hlstory Certalnly no one can doubt the truth of these statements But you say Latm IS awfully hard It IS not' It requlres earnest study yes But mf the student does has Latm assxgnment dally and pays careful attention ln class he will find Latm both lnterestmg and easy But lf you study Latm by all means study lt for four years NICHOLAS GEORGOPOULOS Ixzlxtx r .. ' I , ye: . wg R . . . . . - 1 . - Y At, , . fl lJ!uV'.s U H . .K . , . , . 5 . . A , , . - sn . 1 1 1 1 s 1 1 ' . . 1 ' . T v y - ' 1 9 7 ' 1 1 1 1 - 1 - b - 1 1 . . U ,, . . . . . , . - 1 - - 1 1 :U ' 1 EWENH GREETTNGS We w1sh to extend our greetmgs to our brother year books of the other h1 h schools of Samt Louls It IS true that we are young but we hope that as tlme goes on we shall gam as wlde a reputatlon as the rest of you enjoy We named our book BWANA because that IS what the Afrlcan natxves called Roosevelt when he hunted there The word means Master and m callmg hun BWANA the Africans meant that he was an ewttraordmarlly .good hunter and fighter We hope to make our book worthy 1n every respect of the name lt bears vue shall let you be our Judges THANKS The Bwana Staff wlshes to glV6 1ts most hearty thanks to those who have helped so ff eatly 1n maklng xts first lssue a success We are very grateful to Mr Bryan for hxs artxcle on the hlstory of our buxldmg and to the Instruct1on Department of the Board of Educatlon for the prxnts wlth whlch the art1cle IS lllustrated To the art department we extend our slncere thanks for the dehghtful thlngs they have contrlbuted No magazme could be successful wlthout a due amount of decoratlon and art work The Student Councll has helped us greatly by selllng the t1ckets for Bvs ana and to them we are exceedlngly thankful To select the best storles whlch were handed in for the short story con test we asked Mxss Grace Mlss Wade and Mr Comack who w1111ngly gave thexr SEFVICES We wlsh to thank them for the tlme spent and the care taken 1n thexr choxce The poetry contest was decxded by Mlss Battle and Mmss Nxcholson to vt hom we are most grateful In the Club Notes Contest the judges Mlss Craxg Mxss Brlstol and Mlss Connor are to be thanked greatly for thelr kmd assxstance We vush to convey our appreclatzon and thanks to Mr Hussey for the valuable asslstance g1ven the busmess staff durmg the tlme he was at Roose xelt We wlsh also to thank Mr HofTten who so kmdly took up the work as finance moderator at the departure of Mr Hussey Our mdebtedness to the Rough Rlder IS so great that we almost hesxtate to say a mere Thank you for then' kmdness m always havmv some room for Bwana 1 1 f O' U . . b s Y , . n vw - - - gt u - ' n Q ' ' u vw - - - 1 n . O 1 1 . , ' . , . I' b . 1 . . . , x 7 , . v - s v - v 9 v H ,, . . . . . - 1 v Q , . 7 l ' 1 ' . - a U ,, . . . ' O ig I 1115- IU' EVJEHH THE SHORT CUT W1 E ARE l1v1ng 1n a restless and 1ntense age and constantly there 1S 3 X w before us the remlnder that We are possessed of nerves Such a thlng if-sa-41 as wa1t1ng patlently for results IS far from our thoughts or purposes All one has to do ln order to sense the sltuatlon lS to read the advertlsements appearmg 1n our papers or magazmes Here we note that a forergn language may be mastered ln sxx weeks and there we learn that a hlgh school course may be a p0SSlb1l1ty or even a reallty ln two years Thls IS true also of the puttmg up of bulldmgs of busmess enterprlses and m fact of every aCtlVlty or endeavor 1n llfe Is all thls wrong or IS It rlght and proper? In one respect the legltlmate short cut has 1ts place We must not for get that new occaslons or trmes present new problems or plans we are not lrvmg m the tenth nor even rn the mneteenth century The screntlfic d1s coverles of our era and the demands of the efficxent l1fe whlch we all desrre to lead make lt necessary for us to fall ln l1ne and to adapt ourselves to the changmg cond1t1ons lf we w1sh to be up to date and to keep our places 1n thlS work a day world Would we be wxlllng to do wxthout the typewrlter the telephone the automoblle or even the rad1o7 And yet these are but a few of the seemmg necessltles whlch are after all only modern short cuts In truth our fondest dreams and vaguest lmagmatlons cannot catch even a famt gllmmer of the mventlons whlch ln a short tlme w1ll be part and parcel of our lxfe and experlence and so one almost hesxtates to look too far 1nto the future for fear of being fairly lost m wonder Our problem IS to adjust ourselves to the ever new day However 1n one realm there IS not and ln the nature of thmgs there cannot be any short cut for ln the makmg or buxldmg up of character and ln true greatness ln whlch lofty purposes and 1deals are reahzed there lS no royal or patented pathway The seasons are eternally the same 1n length agaln a gourd may grow up over nlght whlle an oak lS the product of the years So rn the tralnlng of the mmd and 1n the essentlal attrlbutes of char acter tl l'l6 IS a s1ne qua non that 1S a prerequ1s1te or necessary prmcxple Herern thmgs do not just happen The goddess called Fortuna by the Romans may seem to brmg renown or perhaps good luck to many people but thxs IS too often only temporary Such qualxtles as produce real men and women qualltles of mmd and heart whlch we may call mvlnclble reso lutlon calmness courage mtegrxty and an unwavermg rellance on truth do not come 1nto bemg as lf by maglc These are the v1rtues of slow and steady development for whlch there can be found no short cut M H I ,SU v ,, . Am' . . . . vv-n'h ' Y Y , - , Y Y U , . . . . . , - - - - . , Y O ' Y , Y ' Y , 7 7 l 1 , , - ' a 1 5 . . H . ,, . . . . . , . . , . ' ' lf' YV fl 'Y , - 1 1 Y 9 glgllfj'-ff1l'.'t' great that every hxgh school IS becommg aware of thelr great dommatmg 138.26116 SCHOOL SPIRIT The underlymg prmcxple of the success of any hlgh school lS school sp1r1t That IS the thmg by whlch a hxgh school IS judged Roosevelt IS now developmg thls elusive quallty school splrlt Many students have come from all sections of the cxty to become a part of this great lnstltutlon of learn1ng They have shown everyone that Roosevelt Hlgh w1ll always be noted not only for its educatlonal f3CllltlCS but also for 1ts unlxmlted co operatlon and enthusxasm The mere fact that these puplls have labored to bulld this great foundatxon also proves thelr future pOSS1bll1tlCS We have a glorious opportunity' What shall our future be? W11l those who follow us carry on the good work of thelr predecessors? They wxll as long as they are mspxred by hlgh ldeals of school spxrxt Our school durmg the present term has proved its strength and power Our fxghtlng teams have battled hard to establlsh a reputatxon ln all branches of scholastlc 3CtlV1tl8S In basket ball baseball and track as well as 1n debate and oratory they have fought to make thls school worthy of the hugh xdeals and prmcxples of Theodore Roosevelt ln honor of whom our school IS named The students have co operated so well and mamfested a force so power Let us contmue to co operate and let us support our wmmng teams to the end that Roosevelt w111 never lose its school sp1r1t COURTESY Good breedmg IS a quallty whlch characterxzes every true lady and gentleman It IS a qualxty that the poorest of us may possess but that the rxchest of us cannot buy Good breedmg must be attamed' One of the best agents pollteness To be courteous manners d1d orxgmate ln the Customs may change xdeas but the custom of bemg courteous wxll Be courteous' That practice ylelds as a ladder to greater things just as we of good breedmg ms true thoughtful common IS not to be old fashloned even though courtly days of kmghthood Courtesy IS always m style and beliefs along many lmes may be shattered always be m vogue vast returns Courteous actxons act are Judged by the company we keep so are we judged by the actlon we employ If our actions are courteous the first xmpresslon we make w1ll be a good one If our actnons are not cour teous then we declare ourselves wrlfully mdnfferent to publxc opmxon con cernmg us Let us all endeavor to be thoughtful and courteous and thus obtam the vast returns whnch our courteous actxons wrll yxeld 1 zyhlx r , . 5 Y - , r . - 1 v , - ' , Q , 7 Y . ' , 1 ' 1 1 ' U Y Y . ' , , v - v ' Y ' - . f 15 -'-fun BWZNH A MELTING POT just as the lmmlgrants came to Ellls Island so dld the first students come to Roosevelt Instead of comlng from dlfferent countrles as dld the xmmlgrants these students came from three dlfferent hlgh schools namely Cleveland Central and McKinley Not only were the students xmmlgrants but the teachers were lmmlgrants also These students and teachers came from these schools to be united lnto one large school just as It took the xmmlgrant who came to Amer1ca a time to become acquainted wlth new surroundmgs so dld It take the Rooseveltlans time to become acquamted wlth the new school These lmmxgrants forgot the schools wlth whxch they were recently affrllated and became loyal Roose veltlans ready to boost Roosevelt at all tlmes and support her loyally when ever necessary ESTABLISHING PRECEDENTS One of the greatest responslbllltles whlch bore xtself on the mmd of George Washmgton when President of the Unlted States was the matter of establlshlng precedents Presldent Washmgton with a keen understandmg looked far 1nto the future and realized that his acts would form a gulde whlch later Presldents would undoubtedly follow He realized that any actlon precedent and followed by those who would guide the future natlon Wash mgton was therefore extremely careful that hls every actlon mlght be one of wxsdom and Justxce Students of the Roosevelt High School have placed upon them thls same responslbxlxty As the first persons to enter the school a great duty and prlvllege IS the1rs just as Washmgtons actlons meant much to future Amerlca so do thelr actlons mean much to future Roosevelt The thmgs they as students do will ln some degree govern the puplls of the future The precedents of Roosevelt H1gh School are of thelr makmg What shall they be? Shall they be msplrmg or degradmg to those who follow? W1ll they make them worthy of Theodore Roosevelt or w1ll they by careless and thoughtless actlons establish unworthy and unwlse precedents9 Let every true Rooseveltlan be a worthy framer of precedents Let no student abuse the prlvllege whlch IS hls and let us all Departmg leave behmd us Footprlnts on the ands of tlme bzghfx fn n . . . y . ' . 1 , 1 ' 3 9 , - n y - . , . . s ' Y 7 which he might take while in the President's chair would be regarded as a Y . . . - 7 ! ' Y . . . . . , . . , . . t . , l 7 ' 1 . 1 ' ' . V , . , , . U A . v . . S . ,, BWENE BE A TRUE ROUGH RIDER A new school a new student body and followrng these new pep anfl new laurels Drd you ever wonder what makes champronshrp teams? Then I wrll tell you Frrst of all the athlete must have pep secondly determrnatron and then self confidence Theodore Roosevelt had all these essentrals and as a result was proclarmed a born frghter But no one fought hrs battles for hrm He set hrs own goal and then attarned rt To work to labor and to endure was hrs motto and rt should be ours A desrre to follow the footsteps of Theodore Roosevelt rs the spark that makes the Rough Rrder Gallop at fall speed toward the hrghest goal just remember when thrnkrng of Theodore Roosevelt that the frurt of labor endurance and darrng rs vrctory Keep abreast of all actrvrtres at Roosevelt and be a true Rough Rrder HEART HFAD HAND These very rmportant reqursrtes rn lrfe played a promrnent part rn the lrfe of our renowned Presrdent Theodore Roosevelt He realrzed therr srgnrfr cance and proper place as he wrote to hrs oldest son Ted I would rather have a boy of mrne stand hrgh rn hrs studres than hrgh rn athletrcs but I could a great deal rather have hrm show true manlrness of character than show erther rntellectual or physrcal prowess In thrs quotatron rs shown one of Roosevelts rdeals In thrs way does he put the three factors Heart manly character Hrst head educatron Although he places athletrcs last he was no slacker rn thrs respect As a red blooded and real Amerrcan crtrzen and leader Theodore Roosevelt showed hrmself to be no srssy He delrghted rn football huntrng and out of door lrfe to a very great extent He also showed an rntellrgence capa ble of solvrng drflicult and trymg problems But above all he ranked char acter character as the eal arm rn lrfe HALF WAY Prepare your lessons well' A person who prepares hrs lessons only half way wrll never get the most out of hrs school work whrch rs very rmportant One who rs half way rn the preparatron of hrs lessons at school rs usually half way rn personal appearance rn work and rn fact rn almost everythrng he unde takes But on the other hand a person who rs thorough rn hrs school work rs usually thorough rn all hrs other actrvrtres He wrll not only make good grades rn school but wrll also make a hrgh mark rn the world So rf you are a half way person get busy and correct thrs harmful prac trce and learn to be thorough rn everythrng you undertake and rn so dornv you wrll get the most out of your school work out of your busrness and out of all actrvrtres you undertake lllllf Il s v v 1 ' . ' . : , 1 , - .. , , . U . , . . , . It 71 ' ' ! 9 V 3 ' U I . , - , . - J .. 1 - ' ' lr 9 7 3 ' I ' ' as . . . , . . 1 - , : - ' , second: hand-athletics, third. Y 1 - . , . H . ,, . . . ' ! Y - - ' , ' - - Y . . . . . ' 1 l 1 V I 9 . D r . v ' ' ' U 1 , Q v . . . D 9 . - I . - I 5 v r bv T V U lj -T-.V -. A EWENH PUBLIC CALAMITY IS A MIGHTY LEVELER On Wednesday March 18 1925 a terrific tornado struck Southern Ill1no1s Southeastern M1ssour1 and Indlana Would we as an enl1ghtened people do less than what was done to relleve the storm sufferers? No cer ta1nly not' All agencres headed by the Amerxcan Red Cross labored unceasmgly to relleve the strlcken people They a1ded m the rescue of the mjured and helped IH the recovery of the dead The lnjured were tenderly cared for by doctors and nurses who volunteered thelr servlces wlthout thought of recom pense or reward The dead were given a bur1al conslstent w1th our t1mes 1n sp1te of the great handlcap Moreover the homeless who were ver, numerous both r1ch and Poor learned and unlearned were provxded w1th food clothlng and shelter and all the other necessltles of l1fe Money IH large amounts was necessary to carry on th1s noble and mn splrmg work Whose duty was It to supply the necessary funds? Our duty the duty of the fortunate ones who escaped the calam1ty v1s1ted upon thlq unhappy regxon As m all emergencles the Amerlcan publ1c responded w1l l1ngly promptly and generously Now what dld all thxs show? What lesson d1d lt teach? It showed that there IS a common bond that publ1c calamlty IS a mlghty leveler for everyone co operated w1th everyone else to remedy the s1tuat1on The banker worked w1th hrs porter the hotel proprxetor w1th h1s wa1ters the r1ch w1th the poor the black w1th the wh1te all for a common cause In the c1t1es whlch sent ard the same thlng was true People of all classes and statlons gave all they could to brmg rel1ef to the sufferers as soon as possl ble The theaters as well as churches d1d all 1n thexr power to ra1se funds Th1s co operat1on between the known and unknown great and small strong and weak shows the true American sp1r1t a sp1r1t based on WllllI'lgI'leSS promptness and generos1ty a Splflt such as a country l1ke ours should have and a sp1r1t whlch let us hope w1ll last forever DUTY Duty rmplxes necesslty and obl1gat1on It 1mpl1es a word that does not appeal to us must But We must work to l1ve and all thmvs dealing w1th that work are dutles Llfe IS must so our entlre l1fe IS duty But Duty IS not a hard stralght road whlch we are forced to walk' It IS not a hard road to hxm who meets It squarely does not shlrk It but does all hxs tasks to the best of h1s ab1l1ty then lt becomes a pleasant walk and who would care to dev1ate from 1ts path? Work brmgs 1ts own reward faxtl fulness to duty must brmg success But st1ll there IS another thmg be suc cess yet far removed there IS a Joy that fills the heart the Joy of work well done But to hxm who does not know h1s duty and cannot learn to love lt duty IS a hated thmg l1fe IS a sham and success an 1mposs1l:1l1ty Know your duty and stand by I 1 9 1 v ' 1 - 9 v - Q ' 9 9 Y - . . . 1' ' v Q 1 9 1 o y - . , ' , . . H . . . . ,, 7 1 1 9 1 1 - , . ' 1 1 1 s - s v u s - , . H U . . . . 1 . , U - ' - as wx ' ' - as as . . , . , . 1 - 1 1 s . . . . 1 . 1- . , A . - y ' , 1. , s s 9 ' ' , u 97 l1ll1f,l .V1 ?A BVJEIHH THE FOLKS g if man lxves alone No matter how personal the sltuatlon the folks cannot be excluded even from your thoughts It rs of them an through and by them that we l1ve and though you may cherxsh your reserves you are aware that you keep no secrets Llfe IS the one pure de mocracy the one realm where one man IS but another man s brother whose ways though devlous are well known soberly judged and rlchly loved ull The reason for youths eagerness to seek and follow fortune does not lle entlrely m the fortune A lot of rt rests rn the longlng to hear what the folks wxll say when the Journey accomplxshed the traveler comes home There need be no fear of the Justxce and rlghtness of the declslon for the folks can be trusted to take the true measure of a man They love plam ways and thexr faxth IS founded on the sxmple thmgs that make hfe wholesome They are fond of old words hke decent and honorable and uprlght words worn smooth ln the service of many generatxons until they shme wlth the radlance of frxendly stars You know that rf you measure up they w1ll brlng out those old words 1n your honor and bestow them upon you as a kung mxght bestow hrs coveted decoratlons No xmposslbrlrtxes are asked of you just that you fight a good fight The folks know In them the ages have deposited much of the sorrow and pam the Joy and bltterness of lxvmg To them there IS no new good no new s1n All the goodness and all the evxl smce the begmmng have come mto thelr seasoned salty souls and they still find l1fe sweet at the core Great possesslons wlll not wm them Thelrs IS a verdlct none can buy You may return as poor as Job s turkey or as rich as old Midas and they w1ll make no sign but lf you have stood stiff backed for the thxngs they hold dear those ancxent mtanglble thrngs symbolized by the line old words hon orable nd decent and uprlght therr faces as they turn toward you wlll glow as the morning sun The youngsters who march toward Fortunes castle ever travel Janus faced Each step ln advance means a backward glance toward home and the folks Wlth each rmgmg challenge the WlStfUl echo drxfts back What wlll the folks say now? Don t you know? It IS the answer wxthm you that drlves you on makes vou ask and hope for a slgn of approval Honor and decency and upright ness are your herltage and the folks back home are wanting to see what you do vnth it WZ-lltlng to cheer and throw up thelr hats and cry proudly I sald that you could do lt' when your tram comes ln It IS worth xt all Make no mlstake about that The day IS commg when you w1ll glve all you have to hear a shaky old volce say Ill say you ve done well The folks are r1ght proud 1 H1 1 111 ' 1 ' v but U 4 1 i d W- , 1,1 'I . - an-,-9 . 5244 1 9 - ' - s s n 1 v 9 ' 1 9 9 ' Y U ' ' lu ,Y u ss an ' vs - ' v L- 1 Y ' Y Y 5 ' , . . s 9 , - . . . . . H Q 1 9 ' so A -4 as an ' as ' 9 1 v 1 s , . . . . . . . u - n , . . . . ' Y Y . . . U . . . . . H . 1 . 1 . ,, . . , ' ' ' , n 1 1 ' vs il A.: jx-r ,L BWEINE QQ SCHOOL LIFE School lxfe means Just what the name denotes life at school If we should stop to thmk just how long we remain 1n school we would mdeed be surprlsed About one half of our tlme IS spent ln school and yet some of us just come to school study and go home The old saylng L1fe xs what you make It holds very true at school also Why not make our school llfe happy and enjoyable? There are mdeed so many ways to do thrs that surely some of them ought to appeal to some of us Flrst takmg part ln school act1v1t1es after all we get as much profnt out of thls as the school It brmgs us mto closer contact wlth fr1ends School Splflt gwes us a taste of higher ldeals and standards and at the same tlme broadens our mmds shapes our habxts and glV6S us a more confident feellng Taking part ln these outside act1v1t1es develops ln us that most sought after thxng leadership What a great satlsfactlon It IS to have leadershlpl If we dont care for clubs then there IS the athletlc s1de of school football baseball basket ball There IS hardly any greater satlsfactxon IH the world than to see our own team wm a most excltmg game after a hard Flght or to cheer and cheer even lf they dldn t wm that s school sp1r1t One xsn t taught school spxrlt he just falls mto xt tented wlth l1fe and of course he should be If he enters mto h1s studles so enthusxastlcally that hlgh grades are the result h1s achlevement IS scholar sh1p There are so many rewards for taklng part actlvely 1n school llfe that they can hardly be enumerated yet we have wlth us everywhere we go the 1nd1FEerenf person He can hardly be defined except that he just doesn t care whether hrs school wlns that next debate or whether the sun rlses Eve mmutes earller than usual No one can ever be satlsfied wxth hlmself lf he never gives the school any servlce He just goes to school because he IS compelled to and the sooner he can get out the better We should all have the feelmg that we owe lt to ourselves to be en thusxastlc and of course no one else can pay the debt we owe ourselves 'Q' cf I1r1fx 1 l - . . . , . . ,, . . . ,, . v '- 9 , , - 0 . . . . . . , . - , . . I ! ' You will always find that a student who gets high grades is very con- : , ' , . 4 V 4 'LA I' 3 A 7? U . 'A Q.. 'f E L - - ,I 9 fx ,. v- ji' f'-if .'- zinc EUJZHE BYVANA STAFF EDITOR IIN CHIEI ASSOCIATL D O A 1111 Mo Luell s. 'W I USIINI SS MAINAGERS Henrv L Iretmd hdw 1rd Harmav Aset LITERARS1 STAFF HUMOR S1 F Marybelle Ia1111e5o Nhcholas Geor obo Ehse Mardorf Hoyt Wallaee Harold MIIICT CIa1re Welle F.m11y Baubu Albert Burn ART Audrey HuLeI He bert Meaoe CART OOINIST C If VVe JL I ACULTY ADV' O M155 I an to Mr Hott te Mr Hu ex YPIS May RL11111 PS 1 . ': H : 14 . w 1,119 -'1, ,1 , ,fm , , A N J 4 'CA An :N 4 A , , N.- . KX H A . x J . . . T ATHLETICS , . HN e .1 T , . , - T -T Q I I lt' ' 5 1 . 1S f V ,1 . ' XII i 1 JUDE SCGFF Q ii 42425 IZ CD Ii! Z- 2 i CII 1 3 Z? EI? 1 i 1 i LUCILLE WALLACE A550 EDTTOR ARFIIN HOELLEP EDTTOP Xf u-:eww memo H ausmzso mn EZ 1 H E EDWARD HARMON A560-BUSINES6 MGR HUYT WALLACE HUNOR ELISE NARUORF LITERATURE CARL WEBER CARTOON LST ALBERT BURNS ATHLETICS CLNQE WEILER HUMOR HAQOLD FNLLEQ LXT EPATURE HERBERT PTEADE ART NARY RANNXNGER TYPTST EMILY BAUETCH ATHLETXC6 NHGEORGOPAULO5 I'-lUI NOQ FXAYNBELLE JANYESON LITE PJXTOR E AUDREY HUBELI ART 5 3 ff 2 E E 2 E 5 3 T 5 XM N nu fx 'I' BWZINH fielivibqi w A V f Kw'Wf11l'9f 'M 7'.r 2 ,-1-0' -11511. .pw 1 U9-.H-v c SENIOR CLASS une 1925 COLORS MOTTO Crlmson and Whlte Truth Courage a Presxdent Vxce Presldent Secretary Treasurer Sergeant at Arms In f., MODERATOR Mxss Blodgett O FICERS Cullen C011 Lucllle Rlckey Hertha Beck Albert Burns Roy Beck nd Famth f5'z2.1.'5F51- I'-55.2-J15.112 .. -.. 1 7' Q ...- ' ' LX - f I ','t1f5'i' ':--'ff ' . fu, ' f -v fl 'll .v 7 '-1:7 .:::,,,. , ,, . , f -.1 V A .. 1-'H-5:-' H- - kv ., 11. f Q ,- :eff f ..4:,f-1-5, ,:,1' -1-: f fr... -:zzz -' '-,. 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A-f -- .:. f.- .Q-1 ig.,-. -' 5.55-., 11- :- 'impi- J , 9 9 TI A LLCILLL R14 my ls not thus vuld rose sweet without comment General Course lzce Pres X 5 and S Clarscv 4 Col ege Club 3 Yrrgenul at Arms Colllgc Llub CLL1 EN Con has am faults e leaves us m doubt X! least m four xears we can t find them out General Course Ires Sunor Class Tonlr 4 Pres forrlx bdmn Carnahan jan rael. -Itlrletlc HhRTHA Bsus thyself and know thy self to be General Course Secretary jenxor Class Sm lflasl? and Buskm Corres .Sec College Cluh Teas 6 A R Short .Storm Contest Declamatorx Contest Lollege Club 3 -I Vasl. and Bus-1-xn gL'l1Y0l Plal Pres Lzterars Dcbatmg Team 3 -I Student Cannrxl 3 4 Rough Rxder Staff Ofatoncal 4 A1 ademzc 7lI R C hem Leader 4 2 ALBERT Buns He wall be pompous m hxs grzne General Course Umor 34 Student Colmfll '74 9 Social Com Buana Staff Rough Rader Handbook .Staff Zo Treas .Sensor Class Pres of Bank ootlvall 1 Captam Football Baseball llanager Lnemrx Clee Club -lnudenm ll' 'ltllletlc M Clranman Class Dm Cam Snnar Plat Roy BECK X man ma? speak the thmg gt he will General Course at flrms of Semar Class V1zePns -ht Club Football Buslsetlmll 3 4 Che Clnlr lnnk 4 A uzvfx tlxree 9 . 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Rough Rll' ll I lallmlnl ull l l 1 l 1 on lm l ll nm l nl ln mn Clrlllt ll est Four Yr Commercxal Con .Student Council Refrcsentata e 74 Clmxrnmn Fmance Committee Atlzletzr Commmttee Girls Indoor 3 President lolIc1 Ball Team Letter Prcssdent Baslet Bull Team and Le ter '73 N Trustees Orfzce Senior Pm Committee YI? IRI-.NE BRAD! JOSEPH BOKERN XIRGIXI-K BLRQ She was full of Joke and -X goodly man and true She newer spoke ag.nn5t a Fourlear 'llunual Trammg toe B rsleetball Genexul Course Canal Club xu Rxtlzmu HARRX BLcH1:xxL RLTH -X BLRM-HRT JON!-PH BRLxrxRD Hath he not aluaxs treas Rlch saung comm urei always fr1end5 sense Geuezal Coznse Four I ear Comment -lsustant Trustee Basketball 3 4 Laptnzu Basketball Baseball 4 Lupton: Baseball lvllu Bull Track on :al XX hole lh hxmself a com mon good llnmral Training Course Football -ltlrletrt ll aestlmg Club Baseball S ummmg Club Track 7 Basketball Student Canmll ,Nzmlx seven n- , - 14 1- 14 , A ,- , j 5, ' . Y . . .' - .. - . ' L , '23, '24, '25 ' - -- ' ' ' - '25 '-, '25 ow, '25 , , -J H ' , '25 , '24 , 2 I 24. ,Za , 23 f ,- ,'24, '25 ' ,'24 r,'--.'- ,'25 , '23 , 23 ' ' .'. ' ' . . ' ' . fl '.'1. ' ' ' lll - , V - ' K -5 n N ' ' 7 ., ,, fi? V34 . - . - -J . .II ' ' ' f '25 '- ' '25 - , '2, '25 '23 ' . 'Y . '25 il ' , '25 , '25 - . '2-. '25 , '22 , '24 '24 .I Q I- V JI-ssllf BXIXGTOX ,wx B1 kk In her sxmplnclts sublime X valxant man Grnrral Cnurse General Course Pustzlla Club 23 23 LIYFVUH 72 Stamp Llu HE: hh CAs'rANo How wonderful IC charm of courtesy General Course Sclgcaut nt 41115 Offa 24 ta 24 Sruttnvx Sfamsli Club 5 Bank Alllffl ug Ax BILRT Buzxs Ile xull he pompous ln his graxe Gcnrral Course Ungar 24 Xtu tn! C1 nmil 4 5 Sonal Com Bmana .Sfarf Za Rough Rider Handbook' .Staff 5 Tyra: Sensor Clan Pre: of Bank J oaflfall 21 Lafmm Football Haxtlnll llanagrr Llterurg Gln' Cluh hadrram ll 4tlxlttu ll Cllanman Class Dax Com Snuor Pluv ht Ol lu. Dum Nuctess ns sxudx s oun ward C rnrrul L v xlnllla Llulr Trrgt ut -frm: Pnsula nrmll L lulv m rn I 1 4 Toni: HYJC CLLI FN Con If he has any faults h leaxcs us ln doubt At least m four years xx End them nut Gvnfral Couric' Pro: Srmor Class C311 f Tnrrh Pre: Ton-lx Editor Carnation an rank 4tlulehc 1 nun Prrr Lvtrrnrx 4 Ilrlvatmg from 23 Student Council 23 Rough Rndcr Mall' Orntonml 4cadrmn 'll L lwr: I rudrr 4 .. - 4 - , - U U. - U, U , . is tl ,- - 1 1 - ' .. r ' ' E, '22 ' - -- . ' ow , ' , '25 : 1 ' - . ' ' ., . v , ' 1'-1' ' . '22. '23 - .' fl I w'.'2,'2 . .- -. ff A23 ' .' ' . F- 4 ' , '23. '24, '25 , .2 A ' 1- . ' ' 1'f.T-law. 1-'r .-1 '11 11, '25 ' . '24, '25 ' , '25 -- , '25 . , '25 , . . 2 ,. J -. 25 - . . 1 V , '22. '24, '25 Q . . ,'2' , , ' .U P , W , '22, '23, '24 Lf ' '22, '23, '24. '25 ' .. ' -, '2 , '25 1 . . '22 ' ' , ' ', '24, '25 ' v .2 ' ', ' , '24, '25 l ' ' , '25 , - - . . '- , ' , '24, '25 ' . Q . - '- , R . ' 4 . '2 . '25 ..- XIxx1x1 D1-x1x111R XX 4.11111 Dltlxlk T1111x1x D11-une N16 1115 the llght fantas at l xx x an N1e a umsome use xc there s an end th ng 1-1110 -1125 Coiusc F0111 lrar lI11111111l T111111111g Gnztrnl Co11r:c 81111115 Festx I '77 1a1.11 0 rgr Club 3 1 Club 11111, frstl 111 Cmol Clulv S 1 xul Co1111111 L' tllllll 1115, Club 1XRx11111 Drums GERTRLDE Dxuox ROBERT FELDXIAN TI11 dass must ha1l hxm as We re proud of thus lass The force of h1s own men s the master of the Joke Shes ax athlete of he make h1s was F0111 lem Ilnmml Traxnmg C1355 General Laura 1111 lffll 2 COIVIYIICILIGI Course Glen' C111 Tcnuxs 2 Gxrls Trmk St11111p Club 111 ackctlull 7 X1111fx 111116 H51 1-' .. ' - H1111 ill. 1 11111, 11 il is f , 4 J f 1' 1111, -- ' T- '21, '25 C ll 1 ' 92 , '24, '25 ,4-1 ,'24 xr' 1 - 1- , '24 ' - , '25 ' 'rn- S11' 1' f , '25 . . - v Y - . 3 1 I ! . . -11 f '22, ' 3, '24 11, '25 '.'5 ' '.'22 Q25 our . '-4, '25 B 1 - 1 , -2. '21, '24, 25 G. A. .11,. '24 DoR'rrHv DOXII- XII shall vwursuf- 'ut none shall claxm me General Course fznlor g0LlUl Committee .Serretmv N S College Club 3 Bm-L etlulll Emilia A FIORITO 4 leur llanual 'lmmlng Engmeermgf Club Glee Club 23 :re Pre: Glee Club 4 lure Pnc Cin Club Gr xms l DINFLR tle I ask mx wants are CNN Fcllffdl Count 1 a ulmnx Club 4 Il .v Tralk cl. erball 23 4 HARRY FREDERIL HFIEN El-IRSTEIN JAMES Gmulx Om' Hundred Slsler s onlv Four Year Trulk 'PZ Baxebnll rn al Amauntmg 24 74 Athletic ll Athletic R l - ln Y f ,- . - f- , .U , . '75 uf, zz, 33, 24, 23 ' '. 41. . C ' ' G . 'Z , '25 G. A. JI. l'il'4'-I'rvxl1lel1t German Clu , '2 G l ' ' . '21 ' , '22 G. .-1. R.. '25 Ba, ' , ' , '2 . '25 ' , '.. , '23, ' , '25 ' ,, -' ' , '23, '- .. '25 l '.n lla CI , '23, '..4, '..5 ' i Knd little other care hath X lnttle nonsense now and s e then Genem, 60,17-M ls relnslled hx the best or ,I , nb 7 9 men Crnvzul Caur 1' Golf Club Pu LINE FERFNCFVIC XII grace summd up and closed m lxttlc Fnurtrar Home Econom1c.f Aieademsc M 23 Atlrlehr Commntee 2 Student Council 25 Olta Z9 Basketball '23 24 Prnsnlla Club 23 X111-IOIAN Qrmz ovol 01 N Ill speak m a monstrous httle voice General Course Humor Oratoncal Context Omtoncal Contest ll znncr Better Speech Better Speech Pres llnsl' and Bus-kin Jlrlsk and Buskm 24 1 rung 22 23 Cheer Leader 23 Carnation Star? Crmnvon Stuff Rough Ruler Academw Intel Society Debates 2 7 2 '2 2 25 Semarl T Com Class Day Pa RQBFRT HXRRINCIX llxs uorst h kept hxs best he gaxe ron lun llannnl Traxnmg Comse Llmss lub HELEN Gram' XX herexer fun abounds Helen 5 aluaxs found Central Couric G1 1 ls Ba ckctball F1121 GAM x7lRFl'NlA FINHLR Strong adj ectn es make VlNlLl destrlptlons General Course Ru lz Ruler 22 23 24 5 Student Counczl 24 25 jun HELLER The uorld knows little of the greatest men General Course I-dnfm Handbook 25 cI'llll.t'07l 23 24 lrts Onhestra 2 ln.CPr1'r Frenrh Club '2 Student Councsl 25 anlulm Clnlv 2 Golf Club 2 Tensor Play lnotball 23 Z4 Our Hundred One ' , , H - ' .fy .v 5 . . l,, .H 2 1,3 02 ','n , - ',24 , , ,'23 ', ,'22 -A ' ', .1 . ','25 , '35 L'tn' ' -J ,,'24, 125 , . 4 ' ,'23 .. ' 4 Bzuana Staff, 32.5 J ' JI 4, ' 1 y . . Ig .U U - , A A I --4 u ' Y A 1 u . 4 . ' .. 1 K ,ig l.. , s'-c riff . . . U . - , 4 N- .,,4 .111 .'23,'4:'25 . ',4 f B I I , , Fun GRKJSNLN H1-IDLR here ns 1 gurden m 1er face XX here rnscx and ulutehlxes grnu Genmal Coznse rvmlmxt Lum! Club 11 15 Cmul max College Ll11lr 13111111 tflft 11 l1.ad1 11111. 1 Sf-11111511 Llulv 11 rgm Clnlv '71 nu I1x1x HLNNOX X beau among the ladles Stxrdenf COIIHCII 74 11vo1111I PMP C0111 Trafhf Offuu X IBX HU1 Xecommod mon 19 her clnnt xntllv. Cfrzmal C.a11r.xe 11 111111 H11 1 lllu Cl Huulx 1 1 C Nirlxxx Huwx h x H1113 FRHJ Hlxrs qu lmngx mart n X ortln ann an Izur Im Nur Oracle and when nun ClChlEX?1!lLl1l' I :peak let no dog balk r 1 Ilan G 11 ral course Gcncral Counse Inmym Touch Jssemblx Um lluudr. d T.. 11 11111111 0111 'J na fssun X L1 Club ms D1.lvut111 711.1111 H07 I1 A A. v1 nt 0111111 lllllldfl ltlzlrtu Lam us and B114 111 1111 1 I L a 111 an Mum: 1x - l . , , 1 11 1 1 ' - ff I - , fs , , . . 1 ' ' ,A - ' :.' 3 ' I .' .llc A ,lx MT . . I U 1 -v nl , I ' 't ', 52 . ' ., ,H ' ,25 .. ' f ' ' P--. - . ., 31, '25 - ' H '- ' ' '23, '24 .YI1 lrnt L' gil, '24, '25 - ' - O' , '23, '24 P- Q ' - T , '25 I'r'.vc' '11l1, '23 l'i1 -21 . f ' Cl1rl1, '24 1 Q '. '24 T.. I ' . ' , '24,'25 tml. mr' A-IH. am., '23 ', '24 .S'1'11iu1' Vie: ' Cu 1., '25 .- ' ' ,l': .' ' ' . '22 1' ll ' ' . -.. '24, '25 C'111'nl C'llllY, ,'23. '2-1. '23 T I: 5 X Q I , , 15 , ,ef Q., J 2 V . . ' , 35 3 3 'v, 1 3 J: hue is J :tv L, .. Y zu . SH d . . 1. . J. V . H Fun 'l'1'11A . 11ul 1' J' 2 ' ' ' ' 5 C -'f 1'f ' - -1' . . . , . .-1' 1 'Ji' Jl': 21, 22. 23, 24, 29 ., '23, '..5 I' . ' blj, '25 X, urxlz ' , '24, '25 B ,' ' ' ' g . .411 1 C'H'z.'llY Cum. K 1 '24, '25 A11 lc L' ' I, '23, '24, '25 Ulf. .- ' ., '25 ,U X' 'lf', '25 T' 'l.', '22 Sort.: 'au1.. '24 .IU J' :lf ,U IJ R ' ' Fl.-' GERTRL DE HFID She has exceptxonal Lharacterlsuc orxgmal General Course lcademxc Ytndent Council O sta 3 SPGIIIJII Club Baal-etball 3 Przsczla ADAM HENRY Home RLTH H1-num If aught of prophecy be X rhapaody of nord mme Optimal Lawn x Thy ml! not lne m xam College, Club 22 13 24 Four leur Commercial Course llasl. and Burkm 23 2 Baseball Student Counul H elfare Conn 5 C Rough Rfder Starr emu.: Girl: Tuul. Sprung Fmt: al Fasluon .Slw Czrls Debanng Tum: .Sex xo: Iduxtfrifatlon fa :le l Handbook Stal? -lcade :nu 11 FRFDERICIX JLDEII. Hxzm HCJELQCHFR His mmd was keen mtense Food nature I5 the heautx and frugal or the mmd wr for all agmrs Gnncml Course General Laurse Tar xtennx rnvvlz Clulr ami' Llul LL Pin gffllllall lub -hadenm: Laval Club Bas etl all El: BERx mn IX-KXUNLR Clue-i of a thousand for grace General Conue lnzallvall Dthlzf ll yall. 3 S :mining Clnlr Xlanager Basketball LL Pu.: .Stamp Llulv Hltllletu V Ind P Rouglx Ruin hldff TUV Om llundn dlxlfnf an - .. ..A , , . ir-- -' H ' ' -' ' - - rv ' ' ' '- ' 111- . l . - . ' m- .322 I ' - ' - W 1 .1 , Q .Y JI , '23 ' , in - ' '24 ' . ,, '25 , 'Z : '25 ' .' ', '25 ' , '25 G. .-I. R., '24, '25 . 'Z , '24 T A. '23, '24, '25 ' ' , '22 ' ' 'zz ,' ' - ':' , 'JS ' ' iv. '23 I ' ' . '24 ' f . '15 A A A . , ' 44 ' 1 LA ' , , , , , , - - -, ,- , , U . 5 . - - ' '22, '24 L' W '24, '25 ,A Srl 1 V . '24. '25 ., B 11, '22. 'z3. '24 Sf A Y, '21, '23 lr - . ' C , '23 T' '2 , '24, '25 . ' .II ia ' , '25 ' ' '75 '75 , - . , - , ,Y , '24 ' ' pgs . . A '. -- 5 '. '25 . ., ' ', , 5 4-:a ll x 1 Rl N xclu ur: xx :HF 0 UNIV rzp, lx 1141 I' 1 DUN: X mx 'r xxmx I s mxt llll vu m annul fr H1 41 ar 1 S 11 1 x r umm Ia n lftlvall 1U nlvll I1 Onlzuira lam I1 I xml: x lx x N 'Q LL X 1 A xl! KI K I I HN Nha Ull lr Lmux fn: C yi! 1 -Xxxux XIUHHR nh m'nd he Q Qnfur lllll :url xn Ax Crum nl L on xr :mm Soczal om I 1 Soma! Com S Student Comzml L1 man 2-1 Rrflc Club Yxafl. a 1 cnt' B1 v m 7 -icudrum If FRKXCIN Inn ERNUX I XIURRIN rcmus hlnp L me n T Strnc to Sack to md small l'l3CI'xdLCN and not to weld Four Im: C oumzcrc xal General C our v I nu alla bfamrlz Student Counfzl 24 za C m 1 exam 22 2 J Tncavmcr Llterurv Sec Glen Club 24 2: Room clt Ilotlo Com F14 R IxR XTIIR Ncxcr xm a hwse sweeter I' XUSL 1 ver Gcurnnl Conn cr fb HHN ll 7 Ill lvrnflh 7' 79 Hum R Fmn Um Xlunmn Bxluzuu I XNGF X 1 Qvm tr xx 1 N 1ght of foot so 1 -I1 r qnrxl frm! C v fr Stvno Course' Iarcum I' 1 a Bavrlvall 3 Om' Hundrcd Fur' 2 I Y I , -'Q' 4' I ' w 7 fl ' I 6 -'N' A , 'L' If .J , gf ' I , ., A A ft N T V . l I 'I 5 I Wifi' fl! I U U ' ' U B A I o , . . 3.,: if .:'.' V .' 5 UXY' .' N . f I: I' 1- ' 5 I 4 f, 'o i 0 . ' . - ', f , cl. s ' BI','. Q 1 '. . . ' VM. .- ' , ' . . ' ' .h L. Ediior H:-mm, '25 Collcgz' Clulv, '23, '24, '25 Prrx, Frcurlz Club. '24, '25 Ulm .' ' C . .' '. , 'ZZ , ' ' ', ' , '25 X, S., '24 ' . , '23 If. P' ff. o ., '24, '25 C'lllll'llIl7l A . '25 L I ' '.', ' -, '23, ' 4, 2' ' , '..5 ' . ' ' , , '24 't -',' ,'25 . . , ' , '24 . 7' , ' ., '25 1' '. ,24 .If fr . :.li ,I '24 . Y E I I- 1 I . 4 4' I ,I I I v Q , I o 5, ' I 1: ' . ' 3 . 'H . . 1 , , .P ,I J I . S . .' I - , I mah' nct I-:k v' 'h.! fo I' . . l'ght Xu in .lr-ying vzj 'om- I I' now, If . ' ' . 'l ' ' Gr: ' 1114 'xl' FU: '-Yr. f . ' 1 .-l ' l ' I, '25 OH! , ,ZS .-lrt Clz , '23, '24 . , 'Z frru, ' ' ,-Ir! Cl l G. sl. K.. '25 K OU! : 'Z-4. XRTHI R Xlllll-R Nl l'l'lllK.ll L ill Ollk lllilll lo 1 dm- not .111 and know fl'lLllClS C11'1111al C11111v1' axldjmjl Stn nxt C11111111 01111 -1 1561111111 1111 1 1 17 I rcmh ll 1 5111111111 610101511 3 11111111111 fum 1117151111 U11 B11.v1111'vc lltlllllgfl C 111111011 I'111ro1 Rough Rxder F1111111 1 9111011 I'or1.l1 Trad A111dem11 Us C 11111111111 Scnor I 7 0111 111111 XlXRll' x1-x ller tr111l111ess xx 15 ner C1'111111l 61011752 Q H 1111111 Xlllll-R o I nu small 111 wt 111 e RCA! am l Ill nnure 1111111 LQ11111 01111 I1 P111 L11111111I C1111111111111 I Proputx CUIH 1111111 C1111 1111111 S11 411111011111 ll 1 111111111111 1 1r111x 1111111 11111111 1 11 1 111111 1 1 81111111 81111111 11111111 111 Tldglx H1111i1!171111111 C11111 l111g111111 1.11111 Dxxm Inrxcsrux x1 1111x111 Ile Stud-1 ull the elil I1LZ1t hcirt urs 0 1111 mal 1 1111 111' lIl1lldl 514' ,loin NI1D11x Xl D ader tl u m 1 1111111 L xr 11s1 XIx1u11 run a rm: 1 gunnl a u1111p1111u11 1111 '15 perfect a gxrl J Lau he found 1 1111111 OIL 1 111131111 1 cl Ruuglz Ruin 111111 11111at1a11 111111 H 111111 1 1 1,1 L 11 1111111 1 111 111111: Cl11111 11111 llflx 111111 H11s1111 11 B1 mwtan Lv Clan Dax Lum a111tb1.111 1 d 11111 111d1tu1111111 Lum C1111 11111111 U11 11 L 11111 .11- xxR1x11 S Xlrxx 1 xxnrh 11s no 111 1 1111111 111 1111 111v11111g 111 11111 1111011 1111 S111111p C1141 5 1111 1111111 1-1x XML xm XXL 1 l 1 urnlx 111.1 C0111 RoS,xM11ND McD11N,x111 Music hath charms 1 1 Q1 hath she, ' Q me Ii' 011115. 'K 1' 1 . --tv b- - l-1 . 1'1c ', 'QE 'AN R111 as 'S 16:1 thy, 91111111 , 1 clear. and xx' 1olc. ',H..,1 QLEX R111 1 '1s.1:N eyes. Cllr . '1'4' V. ,,L.. . 11 .4 O111' 111111d1'1'a' Suzvfi 14,1 F111-111 N11 FQ Fmsn Ixrmlxwx 1 nel 2-1 1 u11dcr5ta11d1r1g, but 0111 of IIONLY IOIIC N0 if-'Ugue 1 1 lcv: llllfllllll Illlllll ll Co111111c11 al CDIUSK' Rlldlv CI7fb 51,1911 Cmmnl I 111' P111 Radio Club 8611111111 k'11d1o Club 11 Zflfllf Rrdm Cl11h XIAR1 -X1 lu Nnox xx KY 11111111 mm Ccmc-'1l111g power untold 1 1 I frm HI C011111' l 1111 lllll I College Club 2 Rxtl111111 1'111x1T11x T111111111111 P1-1 urn: 1 XRN X111 H 114111 11 RPAUX1 xx - I U ' ' U' ' U 1 , V , , . 1 . . . . . . ' .I Y Q' - Q 1 A ' 'IX S A . vl11, 11 I 1' v' 1I1L . - l 11: '- ' . ' . ' ' 'ng ' ' ' ' Y ' F111--1'1-, -ff ' - ' , '23 1fn.1--1'f11 1 -11 A -. -, 1 - V f , ' '- C1111 '21 P .i ' 1 ' ' , '24 ,' ', '23 G. .-1. R., '24, '25 1 '1 11' , '. i .J 1 h 1 1 ' 9 U 0 Q 1 f R L Ji .' L I M. ' Rl1'Lf. 'z1.xN , . 2 . , 3 '- ' i 1' XY.1n gin-Q s11114l1i11e to oth- - 1 ' gf' U 11 ' g 1 K 1 1-1's:N1Icv As 111 wh h-rl I:Um.,5'nH. I ff - - g 51 arks .zu 're ' c 11'i1. VII- 1,1 gk' ,237 '24. '25 1f,1,,1. ' - , 1 x L7 .1.1'.-1:1 c'1111n1.- 11,1.1111.111, '24, '25 y-,. A - Y - .Af 1.1J1'f,1f 611111, '43, '34, '45 .'1tl1-'- .11 11,1111 11 ,pw C -' 5 V 'QQ' '23 171'1'11fl1 flu!-, '13, 'J-I lf.1'fl11l 14 I L 111:.1111, '24 ff- fl- HH U5 .-1.1 . Hnx. .Tlgz '11:1gl1 4 ln':'lr1', '25 ,8'r1.,111' l','1:j,' '11- 5111 c d 111 1111iec-d show Q01 16 1 Ill .1 lik 1 irm 1111211111 111111115 C0111 I' I I PIHIXON ll FX l C 111 1 I1 I 7 1 I11111d1 d111,1f 1 AFXQ l l Al I I H11 I-11115. of dlZHll0!ldS 1111111101 lramxn 11 I 1 flu wx Xiu xeu uct x but brl ut llmugmtx nnmul Lawn Nu un C ua C ml Llull 3 Przsrzllu Clulv 4 rms Irzsullx Club -lit C1115 nm xx Xlm S Hxml-I 1 PR Ii! IVIN l0ll LUHIOI IULIS fne and quc Gusexal Cmlrvc ngzmenmv 111 Pla Flzffxrxemzrr Llub Orflwrtra 4 lug Prev Oullfutma Sfudenf Cuumrl ll ll Lay axl Ltlmll nu Mural Play P mr an nom m no 1 x phnnmd 0 warn fl com or 1 1 command General Cum M umvl:Clul1 73 lffl 7 Caro L 1 L un lfrlu ltl xo 'I num RINNLII must 'argue lat 1 no Umor Ja to Tune I re: Ixsemblx L01 rl: rlgtu lmgul R Pre: Rsrle Liu: Lv rl srl: rg 1 NL n ur P u LL LII I E 0 Coxxuk e ict xx A Lhnrml PCFSOIIZIIIIX a nu H gl If w Bash tlmll PU! Te no: Ilax Dllfxb. Annum Sm HXQRNIXNX W nsdom perbomhed and saw ed mt General Cource Siu ent Coumll :emu Suuftx elntau Iztnmzx Yracl Atllvtu Smmb Clzm as El Lmmu On. Hzmdnd X mc Nl x Run M Iflx-A L SMDER x u Ie 1 m sun Truc 111 nord md tned Ill s me rm r n deed Ocxzmal Louvre General Comes a Pm: Yfamfv Club vc all Gtr' Club '77 73 mm ' 1 ootbull 74 7 -Hlrlrtn V -Jzlxlctw R LL CILIF RICIXFX not 1,115 mld rose sueet xuthout Lon1ment Gnzeral Carnes ll lrrs S' an Classes Z4 C0 rgr Club 73 24 5015111111 at 111715 Lollrgr Club 9011101 Irlrxzlzfurliinaz Table' Czxmmn mul Rough Rulrr Sfaflx 4 Sxl11dC1lfC01l1ICll 2 Ollll lloum Court 11ad1mz4 Cmol Club fume lzofmh 1 1 r 7 Raul Dumfm 4 -XLBLRT Rrxu Xlbert ls 1 muslcal lad '1N.01u'xUU11 ns Ins Grnclnl Lmnfr 114151 and Fuslm O1fl1c.vt1n umlolm Clul Om llmrdrrd 7 fn Gln' Club ztmaxx L l rr: lrr1rlf'1 Xrnxm lrnmf la Bxkauzx Xlllllfk jd rx clnld a lat uhr mll he clexer nz r L umnwn m Toulz 1 51' :lm I lm lfrbutr ol Q1 C lul 1 Vuvl and Hzzvlxzn anl v 1.1 Int' 11m'1o11 3 a 1111111 S Ru XIOXII RIXOIRF See the conqucrlng hero names Qound xhe trumpets beat the drums F 117 10111 ffcurral Couric N' Llub '73 Trrasurer Ircnrh Club znlf L v IX rlzo Clnl 1 . Y . 1 A , . G' , Y 1., 'i :1.'.' '. 2 .. .X1x :js tl - nme. ' ' K' ' ' ' , 2 ' ' MIS , 'If 'V 5, ' rhix fr ' ai . ' ' 1 1 on , '24. '25 1 .. ' 923 V ' 7' - -V1 H fl. 5- .,5 Bn. b , '25 1 ' , '-,, ', H , 4 , ', H35 7- 22 Mg-, If 3-.. LS ., A ' ' ' - T - ' ' , '24 ' . '25 I A .' ' , '2 ,,'25 . '. ' 4 7' .. - ' 1. '24 ' ' , '25 P 1.1 'A Crm., '24 G. pl. R.. '24, '-5 A .1 '1 1 1, '2 . '25 , ', . 'D . Ile gr-1 , 'Yeyl ' , nd f ' fy 1 . ' ' 1 fad. 1 . ' 1 - . 1. .K 11 -1' 11,1 ' I , - N , . : , '24 , . 1 1 -, '22. '23 - 1 ' ,jg 0 1 ' , '75 A ' ' , '2?. '24. '2' . . - .-: 'I .'-., 24, '- I '- ' V -gg C .1 11 1. '25, 24. .23 ff . .Y -34 L' 1 '24. '25 - ef - .33 ' , '24 '1 1 Q -, '23 , . fi.. 93- ,34 51. 1 1111. '22, '23, '25 V- - . ,, lflefff' U1 - , 22. 23 fl, 1 , '33, -33 . .2-5 ur rl' 4.'1Vn, ' ff, '.4'. 'Rf '25 .-11' 1' 11' JI' H 11x Q Im mt 1 :gh1ml111atC r 1111 T1 nwgfrvrlll JL VU CY madrflm I 7 1. I 1 Nun T111 x x N ues-cd Sfloxtxm Couzvc Handbook Staff .rccfuhlx .Student Coumxl C' 5011411 0111 Lllflill loulz 1 RHP Il IwT11 1 sn Ntmrls 'unong ltr 111 nu Gcncral Cours Oztu 24 11 1f'r!1u Yzmvzucr Orflxcxtra Torflz -lcallrvvm U 51RT111u QKIINI-IDPR Q cm 111 north and un uf e11Se 1111111411 nznlug C0141 0 VHH KIND!-I lv P011 Xl lx Her gre-ateq 1 at c0111m011 if-nee Grurml tonrrr arhtlull VUL Hufrlnll I nllm hall 111110 C 1 Ix XIPKII Sw 11 XX hd! rtheri are to feel and k on 1 xirlf A mm I' 11111111 Vanxml lrammg COIHYC l'z1g,1nm A I lglllflll Club fnmszm Smrr Rough R1du Starr 111r.rf Ig: R Claw D03 Com Ntamf' Club nhl Gtktfhnlll 17111 H1111 r d fall 1 - u A 2 u , u - 1315 ,. ' T11 V11 . 'L C. 'xl M111 . f'l.Xl'I xr, ' AK plus: 2 S 1 as I leans Ill' jrcnt111-N to be nlliu' I - . 1 . I ' 11:11 g 11 '11d. g 1 '. H ' . '23, '24 '. 'e ' , 1 Club, '23, '24 .' 1, '25 , ' , '25 'A .U A , '22, '24, '25 O l . ' . '23, 'Z-1. '25 ' ' , '25 . ' ' ' , '24 S. . C' ., '25 ,n '25 .-1 'ri 'Q R, '25 . ' . -- , '25 . , - , .VK I , ,V,M1V li! Y ,ii M , . ' -' 7: 3 1.52 IT III , , . .sf-, 1 . , :ml S . . ., . 11 ' ng. : I . 'u:1r-YH11' , I ' ' ' . 'ff '- ' ' . T11 'V ' -.1 Bwv- ,'2:, '23 Q f ' -. 1'i.'r-Prf.f. Gr' TH Club, '24 I,1'rl.v' 7 W. '22 - 'HH' Club, '22. '23 . 1 . '23 Vi1'c-I'rr.r, f' Mg ' ,' . '24 , '23 Fr-'Q-' '11 lv. '33 Q ', '24 1 ' H A ', '25 Bm' . J '. . R., '25 S , '21, 'ei T , '23, '24 H . '2.'4. '24 ' 11' F El I ANNA Smnoxx 1.11111 Luusr lnx QXROGIIX FRII-.DX Sc 11x1-111141 X carefree lluss whose Xnd one ns glad her note When xou hzne met her smle ls knoun to all IS ax 6111111-11 Lumm Ceuual Comse 111111111 lulr C-11101 Club 4 7 Xufzne Club 3 1 11111111 Carol uh 7 Xa me Club 3 xou max be sure knoumg sure mure 10111 l 1.111 C01111111 1 .1 ll' FLLNORA Stun 51511: -X1 Il 1 Sol-1x1 1 RLTH SLDD XltTH Her XOICC was ex er soft Nhall I compare thee to a gentle and lon summer s dax excellent h 1 1 CGHIVIILVLIUI 0011151 XX Ofllllll 9llldLHf Counul 4 I um I Fill Camnu rrlal Chan man 'Ind Com Om' Illllldffd T.u'l Carul Clulw tv 1g Club P11.u1ll1 CI111 Haslteilzall Bank 111 our 81151111111 Llu v flux ow 1.8 The fmr the chaste tht un expressne she Genelal Cdlflfz 1h1 5 Baskttlmll E . ' ' 1 E A' ,, f V lv , 1 ., . A 1 1 ig M .1 . .- H .. .Q . -.. . . H v A. '. . A ' ' Ak. Y! n ' vw Y ' . . l . ' . ' -- 'f - U1 ' .. ' I .- - ' . :1 miss icwllllll Club, '24 GfI'lllilll Club, '24 012115, Sweet Gnd de' 61 C , '24 - ' ,Q 'Z , '..,5 - . ' , '2 I. lv' '1 A ' Cl , '-5 7 '- 'f ' 'v-141.11 . r - , '2 O 1, '24, '25 Pd '24, '25 H V ' . . I nh- ' bn 1, ' . I . H ' . . .Xu .' t 1 g ln ' 1 . . . ' . 1 ' '2 , '25 0 ,'2: f - 1 2 ' '- . , .. '25 1 , '25 4 ' C ll 1 Q' . '23, '--4 .' .' 1 Iv , ' U5 I l ' . '23 5: v' C . X Nl ixw Y' 1' ll X ! nu xx L rt Nl u Inunru., 1 nut If L11 . I XIPR I. L imu 1 xg s Ilmm 1 M11 111 1 ef. lx NPNXH-X II X I X H IY L I ull 14 I 1 I- x ww Siu r x H I 1 Ulf mln Y 11 H111 a H I C1 ffm' L 4 f , 5: Q ' 5 -57 . , ' AI I V My I ll 5 U I 0 Y. . I'.S1'm'-1.1 PX Yu 'INIX 'u. Lf pm livin 'YI-1 'lkumu In tl I xv! Ntwmg :AN Xr1 4.'tx.r' t :ull xitf: hr-r .X umm!!-'1l1.m if nur th Il'llL'.. un ming my. QLIvf-!:n'. In1:1'fY'4'u1' ,Tlf :f I Q l H:fr-Y-'ull' L11 r w':'fi.l' Ljrllrnlf L fm M ' Q -' L 'Hifi' L'L1ffl'4.' fun '13, '24, '25 .Ulf-full! Lu:'u.'1l ,Stl d ' Luz Q13 f, 'Qi H. .I, AU., 'iF f,:'u4' L l: '. ' Rmfl W . 'IT f .:!w'm1' L' t f. 'Ji ,T.'n1.v' Lmff H1,v,l'g'11, Qi, ' N ,'1x,L'H vl , Q- J.fv: ,','-vw , 'jf I.in'z-wy LUN- 'U' Ui'-'fu'.w'U . I: 'I .'1z1:1Xj 'gl ,'-.'.'r'.':fry L W , ' 'I vvn' 'JJ Tl.1,v.m' l1f.f wz. , 'J- , V, .gl ' , . V i A ,J . , Hr. .ICN SIM 3 f XI . 1 1 'Ho' Hi: 1-ix Thu 11,1 xx 4 ffl tllslc i9 th- 1 -1' of Hear I ull, In-r CIIINHKICS Guzsrlf' Lww gn ul i'1'c'. 1.-I : ' L' in NLHH--I ' lm, 11 'rr rf f 1' 'V Ylyf -,' L pfVw, 'ji ff4'ln'n1f L.f:frw.' l'y',-'IIL1 g'f1fFg 'jj .Mu r.'lm'j' L'-fml L'l1f'l. '13 HIL-I-. All .N1':Nf H'xIf.17'lHi Aly, 4,35-V 'Lx Llfml Lin . 'ji I-?.,fp?v,1,',f. 'QA ,Ytniv f L'.fw:ux , 'JF l',,Jj,-L '44 l'r1vf', L'.fm,, 'IF ' L '31 .Ig Jrl1'1'L' AU . L f'L'f'qU L'11 , 'IL 'lF H. zur L'm.q, '34 L.: I L.':f . 'l3. 'J-1. Ag.: Lffrfx' Yvlyg' 'Q- lf 'V , XI um TRITNQHIHQ prmcn frlcnc to ex OI ff 1 Ita: Home fxonzoumv II ll jun XXx11HrR 911 Qcxxm excxx hi ur x hu ls to lmc' Cfrumal Lum vc Cfumnl C0111 vf 0 mlall 9 1 lib lfrlnnn Club 24 x Huw: X sR'l1r lxxmx 1 x r in IE truth ss on mru the our tm Imumrg Course Crum I 1 fn ' f 1 zz. fozwtfrz VIN' 11 fl x XX1 c x tu be un frmral Loimrn Baxflmll 4 Baurrlmll -1 T a 1 udrn! tum 1l . :H C . fnrzrrt a 1' .-Iflmxdumw' Liam. '- Icp Cam.. - cf - 'rx Com. ' .v, Circ' fu. '-' .- :IRIN J :mr SARA VN EIINER I e not merely good be good for somcthmg General Course German Club 24 25 lfzcc Pars Gorman Club 2 Trxf-lc H Club 23 Nl-anim x XX IGGIN wxllmg co worker a gen ernus heart Oh hom well muse her tal en m rt Art Couxse Colcge Club 2 23 24 7'- A 2 Carnahan Staff Rough Rider Sldff Tcnnxs Champxon llask and Buxkm 24 2 ficadmmc ll 0 Carnahan Co rr Bas! etball ELI7 XBI TH I VX Il 1 IANIS Hou funtlx flushzd how phantom faxr Four l mr Communal 1 ll 2 Bank 2 Xlx RTLE XX ILLI Aus XORVI A EQTELLE X ERGLR a h friends I luxe her for her smxle dc-.ned her wax of spea mg General Course Umh Baxketball 24 Home Efouamxc: Com vc Vmcun x Club 24 T01 h O zta O :ta Student Coumxl -Icadcum ll Stmol Pla One Hundred Fzftem ' Q 5 ii v , , . , ' , , 5 ' . ug ' ..A - - ,. 3 , .. , K- v, ,, . ,, - ., . U , I . , ' , ' f ' -'X our ,' '22, '23, ' 4, '25 .. A V . , , 5 , ,. ' , 5 O'ita, '25 I Aff 51145, 23. 24 Orclzrsfra, '22 . , , , , . ' Gf .'R...'--1, '25 4 4 , '24 , ' ' ' : A , , . . ' . f 1 H To ll er ' en- ' . 7 -' ' ' . , - -- ', ' -Q ' , '25 SENIOR IDENTIFICATION TABLE N I XX IIN :X xx X r x I XlZr ' KV- V ' 'H X wx, P wave- I f Xb-ttH1r,'-,ffl I-I Vw I- , W ,'.Xf':,'fff','vv X1-11+ I- Ixx. vi 'f':s ' Q, I IH-, Iii-44, X's'- '-xr 1' ff. 'Uiuuw f' llwlmzaxl X4 K1 N1 I f'! .v '14 :J XIV, ilu, X ff! 5 1 'l.xf','7V.'l. IIHHII, I !u,m' ,'f,'-X' ffm. ffl. I:lrN,fKX. -III-1 'H , f1'.x' 'Um'-'C l1f11'm.x,:'1, ,z k'I'H Hfx Ilr I Ili X xy LI X-'EN ,mfrf 1 v -mf lla wx, H rx fx':fs, J 'X 'A U r .'z 1.-I Ill I' A X: :uw , ff v'f'J7Vl :.1' 11111. ll 111-,X , fi,v J If IDM mu, XXX HX-r fffx .'w'f,v l3lu4Xl,, X VII !V vrxusf,-r lfwmrxxl ldwzrnrw 'f'fv Iiwl-rlwf. IU X: 1: A !!f.v 1 .' I71e'm-.l:i.. llwssx, , 'f.'ff v.f , 4IXE4XIX. ,IX VN 'fix , If fw , fi1wm.1wz' +1--vw Nm lem xx !f '.v I 'frm' H XIIRIEUN, K Im in , -, :fv flm' 'X Iixwfrac, .luv , , l'- r.1r' zf IJ 1 ,, , Hi xx I Q if: xx ' ' .vf:.'V . IM-NWN, Xl: nw , , 'I' '1' ,, , HINI.: 15:1-'jx ,,,, , , , , .f1: ' ' Eiwwf. Xwx V , A .' , , ,II wi I 1A Vi-:rm vw - 'f fi' xi, H ' I' ,klrxfxr I1 'QR mm , N , ,, , lis'm1. I'1 :4' fx H, , ,,, 'fry 2 ,, , , l. wmgX'wx, ifvw , , Nj' , , XII Dux x 1, M1-X. H , . XII Xl Xl4r'N', -I '- 4 H, , df' , PXIHJRN, Xiuiw is H , ff ,xv 'If'il1 .' ' f, , Xlwzm, IIXIWVIW, , .I I' 2'1 ' X11-Ir- XX'15i:' 2, , , 'w' ' :uv , Xlwlzfau. .X.-11' ,, , ,,wf1 . , Xlwwsa X ,1e1HX, , f ,v. ' X111 xxm rf I, Ax X-1 ' , I'1Nr1.11, 'III wwf ' ww' IX w'.z,','X, H -iw rl 1' 1' JJ' i' Ii ww XXX Q F 'f: mu Rvws. .X rc!-, ' H my I-fx , M lblrcix-wx, If mx V, ff v V If'XX1i! ll-I -I ,'.wfw'vv Fxlfm. XX.. X--. N, gj,fH N:..zUr1 ue, Nw' XY wi ' ,, , f. F. EiX:I1'iz'. X9-'ui .: '41 ,X F-'mug !'xxf-, ff. ,'Xz,:f' 51:1-.14 ifv. . Nw. , ,yv 1, Fwxrxw-x, KW: :aw .f Q, V 'lwwwxq Ifr, x ' V I' 'Isxw '. M1-uf ' ,I XXI . l x I XX wx , lik' X 4 ,I,:,.,lj,. K:' N . . SENIOR UDENTTFICATION 1 TABLE 1 111 1 1 11. 3 - '10, -11 1 1 ' 11 1' 1 511 1:,1.1 11,1 , . 71 511' 1' '1'11' I'1'1'1:. 1' 111' If ,, ,. I 1 F11 1 1' -':v11'!'1'1' , , . . ,.,I ' N11' 'If' 1 11 11 X 111-1-.1 1' - ffl.: 1'1' ,I '71' 11'11 1I1'1' 5 ,i 1: -511' r ' I fff' ' ' I' 1' 1' 11 ':f1 I ' 1 ':1'1 1:1 ' 1' 115, V I 1 If 11 1f:'1 11'111'1 1 1 11' , I 1 1. 11 1'1':1 1 1', '1' 1':5'f1 11' 111If1A,1' 11' I111' ,f', 1111111 I 1 1111' '1!'1v' I 1 I,-11111'1,1 1'11 X. 1' 1'1 ,1 1 ,1 111' 1 11 I ',f . 1 1':r11' V, I M,:':1 N, V' 1 I ,I , I.. 111 ' 1'11f:41'-' ,, , I 11 51' 11'1 1' .-. .!f V li 'II I '.!L 1 , 4 IWYVI, H' '111 f1': ,1'.',f,, , , , ,,,I1 Cy' 1'I1'1' '1 11111 i.11'f1': '1I1'.v,v 1' 1' , If 1I 1,I 1' 111 1' 1'f 1 11' 11' I 1711 11':1' I111II.f , 'I11 I'1' 1'I1'I'11' 1111'1'1'1' 1 11'1111 1 , 'I' 11 '1 , I 11'1I1 H 1 fr ,1 1'1'1'1',1'i' , If .1111'f11.1'.f 1' S1 1 51'1'1'f' .'1.1.1'1',,, ,, ,, , , I 1 f 1f':1':1' 1J1'1'1111 A111 'ff ,,,, , ,, ,,,, , , I1 Tx 1f 1 1'11,, 11:'f11 , V ,, , H ,,,,,,, , 'I 1 111'11' 'I1'. 11',1' 1' 1111'1I: ,, , ,,, , H , ,1I111'1' II111'11'.11',11 'I !, ' I i11I f1'1.1' 1' 11 .1'1'fI 1'1:1'11:' 11 5:.111',' ' 'VP' I,1'5.1f1 I '1' 1'115, 1' 1' 1, , I 1 1 11 11' 1'1 .' , I 1' 1' .11'I' 1 1 11':1'1 11: , , I 15. 1 1' 1:,1' 11' W, N A Y H I .V A jlkvrl VV 5, , ,, .X'1:1I1'1 1' 1111'1 11' .. , , I7 1111511 1113 ' III' '11'1j,' 1 111X1'11'1' 1I IJ' If 1? 11 'V 'I I1 1'1'f1' fr' 1 3' ' . . ',,, ' VI. II. I1 H ,,1' Z. V' A '!J,'.!, , N1 1 111 . ' ,111'11111' I 1 11'11 J ,111111 ,Q '1'11I ,, I ' 1' 'J '11' '1'C1' 1.'1'1'I.1' If ' , I' 11 11111 1.1 ', 1' 1 11 'v1'.'.1' .. ,I 1' I If 1 ' ' 1,vQ1 1 fq1f 1' 1 1'1' 1' 11 IW' , 1 1' 1 ,A 1 N, , I, N V, W I1 mmf, '. K ,1 1 1' . 1 1 ,1 , .1,'J!1'1,1' I 1' 111,111 1 1 ,,I, F1 V If N VV ,A III, 1 I ' '1v'1'- 1 '.1 1 A1 1 1, I I1 1, ' 1 1 1. 11 VI, if 1 'L ,X 1 , r.. 1 ' w 1 'N 1 11 I',11. ' 1 1' 1.1 '1'1'1', 1' , I 11' 11' , 1 1, 1 . 1 1, V. N, M , , 1 1, 1,1 1 1 X 1 I 1 EWZIEIE SENIOR IDENTIFICATION TABLE 1 I I I IX Il X N 1 1 XXI I XI X X 1 I I X XIUII L N Xl C IIN X 11X XIII N N I1 I X 1 1 1 1 11' 111 III I I I I I I1 N11 1 I 1 IIII 1 1 1 I 11 I I I I 11 1 I .V X. NN X II1s1'1v11, 1', 1-- V -,,' 1, I111 '. I 1I 1R11-1' , 1,1.': . 11' 11:1311- 1211113 If11N 1 . ,.., ,,,.,,..,,..,,,, 1 f 1i1'1f.1' .. IZ11N111. If11:1 . .. .I'1111f1 .. IL1111, I1111 1. .. ..... ..1':1111 .. . II111.. III I11 Il I, .. II11,'1fV 1I1',1:1'I II1111: H1111 . ....II111 - 1111.151 II11'1111.1. X1 111 , . . ,,,1 1 I1'1:.-.' .. IZ11x1-1. IIIIXI. . .. ,,,, .. .. . ,..,.... ..,., I l1 .1 '51y,,,,,,, II11.1:11. I111 11-1 .. . .. . I ,,,,,A,,, I1 ,ff V I':I'IH,, Y1111s1w11. ,... . ,,,... II1 I.. IZ11:11111111. III I II ..,, . .. ...,,,.. .IJ.'p.':'1I111'1'I' 1' II11t119'1' 11. WI1 XEII , ,,,, , ,,,,,, H H A,,,,A,A,A, X',,111l- INE1 XY . II1-11.1.11 ,,,,,,, ,,,,, . ,11, . I ,,,,1,,,,,,, 1,'11.11I 11.11111-.-W, II11111. III IYI-1 X111 ,, ,,,,,,,A,A,,,,,,Y,,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,Y,,w I-'1-.1111-,II V AAAAVVYV Il1111111-11. NI INR' .,..... ,. . ,,,,,...,..,.,...... II1111111111.1-I'f1j1.'1'.1 IJ11111 11. 'IIIII-II II 1 . ,... ,,,.1, 1.,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1, I I 1 -.13-.f111'1'11.-.1-.1 , I711111x, 1l1.111'111 111 ,,,,, .. ,,,,, ..,.,.,........,. I '1I.'f 1:4 .... IJ1111 I. IJ1111111 II 1 .. ,,.., ... . .. ,.....,...,....,.... I.11111a1 11,,1,,,, If I.'1.I.R. I11.1'11N , ,, , H ,,,, H ,,,,,,,,,,A,,VAY 1,'1'.,1',,1Ij1,--1, I'IIII1f'I 1 11. H1 I.I Y, .. ....,, ,,,,,,,, .,.......,...... I ' 1'.'.'I1 'I-I. :'111A1'1' VIIIIWIIIIK. II1I'I 1112 .. . ,,... ,,,,... . III. 1I1.vf111.1'1'11'1111. I71X11111:, Y1111:1Y1.1,. . . .... ...IIu1' 11f:'111Y111. f21.1c111. II1.1 14x . ,,.,,,, .......... . ,,...,, IIs ' .'111'I.1 .. IQ1'11Nf1111111111s11. If11-:xp ,,,, . ., I ,,,, If,-11111 k-,' ,,,,,,, , , II.111'.1, XIIIIIX . , ,,,,,, , ,,,,,, U H , ,,,,,,,, lI.'1- ,A III.IIl. I-11 1 . . . ........... ,,,, ,,,,,,,,, I11.-II1'..1.-11.-.- II1 III. IQ1 11'1'1:1'11 . ... . ,,,, , ,,,1,,,,,,1 1j11'111-11.1.1 ,A II1x11,11.11, R1 III. ..,. . .. 1. .... ...II1'1' .'.1'11.'... IIIII-I Fl III-11, II V1.1 ,,,, .. ,. ,1,,, 1, , , ,,,,,,, II :'1'111v.r II111111. IIIIII-ZX ,,.. ,,,,,,,,, II.'- 1-111-I.,-W ,I11111x-11. NI11.1 II1-.1.1 1 .. ,,,, . ,,,,, ,.,1,,,,,,, 1 'I111fr.f1'I111,1 ' ,I1111'.1x. I111 . ,,,. ,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, . I'I1.'1JIIlI11111 11,1 IXIX IV, II1lNIIRX,, , Aw H ,,,, Y H ,,,,,,,AAA I'1'1f,1'I1 ,111 l,,,lf1lI. I K-II-I. II1 1 , ,V ..,, . ,,,, ,,,,. . .. , ,,,.,,,.,,,... I'111'I1I1'11.11':'1'111'.1'.1' I111 1:11 If1.1111.1 ,,.,,,, ,,,, ,,., . . .,..,...,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, I , .1.1Igv ,,,AA,,,,,,,,,, I111. 111 11. I:I.1 111 ...... ..... . ... .. ..... . ...1......... II1'r 11.151-,M I.1N1.11. R11 11111 Il ...1 ... ..... ., I ...... ,,...,, 1 ,I A Iggy I.1' lx, I:11. NI'I.FAA ,,,.,,,...,, A,.,,,,,,,,., ,,,A,A,,AAA,, I , 111-Ig 11f XI. . IIQI-', IC1,1N1-3 .........................,.1A..1 I ,,,,,,.1 I1111 11 fip ',,,,,,,, X11 I'111'1'111'. I':II.I.I-.Y ...,. , ,...........,,.1..... . ......,,, Hp' I1'.1y1 ,,,,,,,,, XII f11'1z11,1N, 11.11111 ,..........,......... .,..,....... I I1-r Mir ,,,,,,,,,, f1I1IJ11x,11,11, I'1f,11111A1,,, ,,,, ,,A,,, ,Y,,Y,Y,,,,,,,A, I ' .1f1-p ,.,.-,,,-,A,v RI1111111. II11:1.1N ............ .. .............. ............. I I1-' .1-'rf1'1 -11.,,. NI II 1.1 11. II.11 111111 ..., . . . .... .. .. .... ......,. I 'I1.11 1i.1gy-I1'I,1,- M11 N. V111-11,1... 1...,.... .. ........ ......,. .........,...,. I ' 11.1.1-11 1111.111 .1-11111 N11 11 '. XI.11c1' .X1 11 1-. ,......... ...1.1. ....1..,,,, I I. 113111.11 711115 KVI' 311111. I.111111-. ..... I ................ .. ......,. III1111-I1' I'1'1-.v.1'1-'yn I'1N.111-N. II1-11 1.N . . . . , .. ....,..... II111:'111p1'.1' .. , I'11111,11. If11x.1111 III . .. . .. . . .... 111.111 '11:'.1'I1111'.1.v.'. I'111.1111 a.. KIA .1 1 1... . . ... I-'1'.-,I.'I.'11,g,g1 IQ1 lI'I wx XIIIII .1 . . . I-f11':.111'1I11.'.1'.v,',',' IQ111111, I,I'1'IIII . , , ,,,,,, V , ,,,,,,,,,, llpr I'.ff,'1y.,,,m,,, IQ11x1x'.11.1'1-,1:, I-IIIIII. 1.1 . . , I-'1'1'.'1:1I1'111.-.11 .. . Iffri II, III.I I N., ,, , ,QU AVV, l'1,'j,1'1'1,'1f,11 , IC-1111, KI II 11111-11 , . 'I1'.1.1,1-,' H, , IQ1111 1, RI11e111 H V, 11115 H Y 5 1 H1111 I 1. I,11l IEI . ,..,N'.'l'1- 111.1'I.1'.1'.1' .. , I111:11'1'.'1I I: 11I1!1 ' 138.72153 SENIOR LDENTIFICATION TABLE I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1111 1'1 11 111 1 1 x 1111 1111 1 ll I1 11111 1 S1711 I I 111 1 111 1 11111 11 1 111 111 1 frm 1 1 x 11 11 1111x 111 11 11111 XI I1 1 1 1 1 11111 9 ll 1 7 11 I1 SIZITV1 1 1 11 11111114 Y 1 111111 71.5 111711 Q HI 11 .3 111 111 1 KV1 111111 1 1111111 11111 1 I1 151111 11 ll 1'1111 111111 111 11 lf 1 1 11 11 11111111 1 WX .11111 S 111 1 I 1 1 1 L NIL I1 1111 1111 11 1 1111 1 II L 11c111 1 1 1 1111121 ,x'11131111N 111 1 1'v1'1 1X 1Y,'1.1i:'1'11 111'1'51'1f 1:1-11.1 ,, ,1,, ,,.,1 , ,,.,,,,,.,1. T 1'1 11.1 11.11 1-11 1' 11',ffw1n'1' 1111.-1'1s11 ,,,..,,,,,, ,,...... ,,,...,,,,,,,....,. T 1 1 111' 11 1111111 J111'1f111: fjff' 11, 11I1'31 .v1'1' 1 ' .,......,,.,,,.,,.. 1'11 ,1'11111111f1' 11.'1'.1'1'1'1:11 . ,,,...,......,.,,,,..,,, 1'11 gint 1131-1 f1'111 '1 111' 111' 11111111114 , ,,,,,,,,... 1.,.,,, ,,., , 1 '11 111111 11111 1'11 171 1 j1'11'5 '1 'H. '1.'-11 111 1111121' ....,..,,,,,.,,.,.......,.... 1'11 1111 1-1 11 1'1'111111111v' 1 111'.'1111 111 1.. 17, 11' .11'.11'111'1 ,.1,,,,,,,,,,,1,.,....., 1'11 111' 11 .' 1,11 1'J1'1'1J11 1111111 ,,,..,1..., ,,,,.,A....,A.....,,,..,,,,,,,.,.1...,. 1 '11 111' 1111 c1111'5f1'1f1'1'r 1. 111'111y,1 11 1f'.1' ,,,,, , ,,,,,,, A.,AA.,.,,.,,,,,,,1,,,,,,,,...,, 1 '11 111 111' 11 111:g 111'111'1' 1 .111 .' 111-11 111111 1', 111 ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.11,,,,,,,,,,,,,1,,..,.., 1'11 ' Nv1'1'J '1-If 1111 171'11'1-11 ',,,,, ,,,........,,,11,,,,,,,,,,,.,1..... 1 '11 1111.111'11 5111111 'l 'V1', '111l1'l.1'11I' ,S'1'111111' 1111.1 ,,,.,,...1,.......,,,,,,,,,...., 1'11 111' 11 Q1 ' '1111 1'.1'11111f1p'1' 1111111 1111,x'.'11! ,,,1,,,,1,,,,,,,,,,,1,,,,,,,,,11,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1,.1, Y'11 111' 1111 1111 If .f111111'1,' l1J1,,1'--11 11r1111111 ,,,,...........,.,..,,,.,.,...,.,......,.....,. '1'.'.'.'.' '111111 '1111 ,,,,,,.,,,.,,,1,,111,,,,,,1,.,,,,,,1,,,,,,Y,11,,,,,,,,,.1,,, ll .Y 1111119 11511111111 ,.,1,,,,,,,,.,,.,,,,1.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,1,,,,,,,,,,, 1'11 111' 1111' 1 1 11111.'1'1'1:11 fJ,1qf:.'1' 111 .Ywrn ' 1' 111'1'11g 11111 '.1,, ..,,..,,,.....................,,,,,,,,,1,,,.1,......,, 1 1' 1111 111! 7'111 .1 ........,.,,,,..,,,., .......,.,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,...,11.,,,,, 1 '1 111' 11 5111115 111111111 11-11'11g 111 f 11 1111111'.'.v ,1,1,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,. 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'1'11 111'1l 11111116 1y111'1'1: 1,11111.'1'1111 ,11111'1' ,,..,.,,,,,,11...,,,1,,..,,.................,..,.. 11 111' 11 111Z'yar 13' ,1..11.1r:11X':1'J' BWZIHH SENIOR IDENTIFICATION TABLE XXX l XX Xl N X X P wx Sf x X um 1 X mn x Suu X new X 1 RI X N 111' SENIOR PLAY The first play of the Semor Class of the Roosex elt Hlgh School and the 50th annrversary of the Hrst performance of The R1vals by Sherldan oc curred 1n the same year so what could be more natural than that they go hand IU hand' The natural thmff happened The cast rs as follows S1r Anthony Absolute Albert Burns Captam Absolute Joe Weller S1r Luclus O Trlgge Boyd Russell Faulkland Norman Schmoeller Bob Acres Theodore Phueger aff Wrlllam McMahon Davld Albert Renje Thomas Fred H1nes ulla Barbara Mlller Lvdla Langulsh Hertha Beck Mrs Malaprop Lucrlle OConnor Lucy Norma Yerger lhere we are' And Mlss Grace rs our coach Also the school orchestra nas kmdly consented to lend us nts servmces on tnat great evenlng The Rival IS qulte a dxfferent type of play than any the Seniors have neretofore glven It rs a charmxng costume play wxth a dehghtful plot and nne w1t a play that catches you and holds you rn wllllng surrender to the last ' '11 fl-' mms HF F.-nw. 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A 0 ,I 1 qu EUJEHE SENIOR IDENTIFICATION TABLE fl t I1 f 1 1 I 1 I 1 - I 4 1 V 1 fu QTfI'.XTI X ,1. 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I 7 QQEWEHEQQ 11 r 1IfX fzre D 4, fdvd Tzcv Q- I BWZNH CALENDAR Jan 26 Mlghty Hunters Cfor advlsorlesj began thexr exploratxons through the vast jungles of knowledge Feb 11 Our assoclate edxtor made a most ungraceful and dxsgraceful descent of our stairs th1s mornmg Quite an event says Armm' Feb 15 A wonderful basket ball game but xt turned out wrong Sol danltes wore the smllmv countenances th1s evemng Feb 17 Electlons' ' ' Ma Briscoe stepped off wlth the blue ribbon It zs to be regretted that those perfectly beautxful speeches of the candldates were wasted on an unappreclatlve aud1ence Feb 20 Patrlotlc program as first audltorlum offermg Three of our shlnmg llghts Cllterary not splrltualj expostulated wlldly on the vlrtues of humanlty Our llttle Melvm waxed eloquently oratorlcal Feb 21 Another wonderful basket ball game Cleveland was defeated 35 24 Feb 23 G A R s dlsplayed thelr athletlc prowess Cthat xs they showed oh' J by means of a skatlng party Our own Lucllles were most gracefully Pj entwmed or to be more exact mlxed up Feb 27 Younger generatlon fmascullnej were entertamed after thenr own fashlon by our elderly and dlgnliied upper classmen After 1nsp1r1ng UD talks by the outstand1ng students of Roosevelt the youngsters were coaxed to partake of that Amer1can stand by the ever present 1C6 cream cone Pop Burns then presented the prxze a real toy auto Feb 28 Sent Yeatman home wlth depressed att1tude all because of thelr scormg 16 polnts to our 19 Mar 2 All Rooseveltlans gathered to hear an address by the Hon Chas M Hay on Playlng the Game We expect th1s wholesome advxce to remam wxth us Mar 5 Thls t1me a few members of our faculty entertamed the senlor 1r1s of Washmgton Unrversxty at one of the famous College Club teas Mar 5 Thns date IS to be remembered for another reason also The hope of young Arnerlca were entertamed Cat least we hope they werej by a New Jay Glrls Party Interestlng talks were dehx ered by Mxss Blodgett our dean and Ma Brlscoe our boss Reps of varlous glrls clubs pralsed thelr organlzatlons and urged the sweet young things to jom Three stunts suited for the average lntelllgence of th1s SPCCIC were presented Of course the lnevltable ICC cream cone followed Mar 6 The Patrons and Parent Teachers Assocxatxon held open house tonlght Some of the guides served 1n their true capaclty and others well you know' H fllll . , . D . Y . . . , , . . . . ll 99 ' ' ' 3 Y 7 ' Y - , - . . , . . . , I5 ' I9 ' ' . . . . U . ta . . , . ! . , . . V . ' I ' ll 1! it ' ' ' ' v ' ' . . . K U U . ,, . . I , . . 1 V I Y ' If ffirwl' lrr'.'::fj.'-JA :xr EWENH Mar 7 jane Faber we always thought lt of you but we dxdn t hke to catty ' ' Mar 9 A very lnterestlng and unusual mus1cal program was gwen by some of the members of the MISSOUFI School for the Bllnd Mar 12 One of those dellffhtful College Club teas Our School was well represented Mar 14 Roosevelt beats Central 1513 Tol Ja so' Mar 16 Very lnterestlnv talk by Mr Wenzllck Employment Sec y of the Y M C Mar 20 G A R swlmmmg party at the Y Mar 21 They were finally let loose freed from bondage as xt were on the hlke to Sugar Creek We extend our smcere sympathy to the chaperon Mar On the same day Roosevelt defeated Soldan 19 15 Hoorah' ' Mar Home talent program conslstlnv of mus1cal selectlons m ad d1t1on to speeches by pup1ls of Publlc Speakxnff classes 'VIar 27 Yes joe t was the day of the Sen1or Skatmg Party Uh huh' Ask em Apr 3 Our leaders appeared rn an Oratorxcal Contest Of course Cullen we beheved lt of you Apr 6 Carol and Glee clubs enterta1ned us ln the aud whxle our youth ful orators suppl1ed food for thought Apr 6 The great soclal event of the season No Albert we dxdn t go to a movle but to a dance Sen1or shelk and blushlnv lnnocents Cmaldens Apr 10 Coll our world famed orator took the cake QWash1ngton Cupj by h1s eloquent efforts Apr 13 Fxtremely lnterestlnv mus1cal program by Mxss H1lb and Messrs V-Iahnel Muller and Magmn Apr 15 Mask and Buskln open meetmg Oh you Ruth and Dan we re thoroughly ashamed of the brazen rudeness of you two' Apr 20 Dr T1mm1ns dehvered a wonderful speech on the annlver ary of the battle of Lexlngton Apr 21 Nxck spent two hours 1n Jail tonwht' No It wasnt speedmg or any lxttle thlnv lxke that so don t be frlghtened He was ldentxfyxng cr1m1 nals Don t worry he won t breathe to a soul how many Rooseveltlans are 1n the Rogues Gallery Apr 25 Edd1e has a new crush' Snuf saxd Mxcky' May 4 Impresswe torch ceremony ln aud How envrous we are and e May 11 Wash ngton Un1vers1ty program Mr Ph1lo Stevenson May 18 Entertalnment by Sen1or Plav Cast X be lb Yi ' . . g . . . g . . . . . A. ' ' St YY .. ., . . . , , .21. , , - , . . D 23' , . . 5 . . . - b l ' A . . ', V ,l - A . . ' - . . . ,, . . ,, , . . . I . Y , , . l ' , . ' s ,D which used to wasj were all too plentiful. 4 1 5 ' y - . . . U . . . . , g . . . , . , b . . . g . , , b ' . ' . . .- Y 1 ' . . ' Y . , . . y t-? G . . . Lv 5:':.:: irflf Y'It.'r:tj-flin' iff, Fredencs Wee Cullen Cod Hfmgh Hurdle Pole Vault Mir' Casllemarp Caplamqs of Track Baseball Champmom of H25 7We Hope 5 if . X, x J, ' r I w ' . I I N ' D ' ' . o. 0 H d df-' Om Hll7ldJ'L'd Tzwnzfy-sc:'mz QLQBWEHH BASKETBALL FINAL STANDING Won Lost Central Roosevelt Soldan Cleveland Yeatman In placing Roosevelt second we are aware that It seems dxscourteous but by vxrtue of our defeatmg Soldan 1n the MlSS1SS1ppl Valley Tourney by the score of 19 15 we feel justlfied Roosevelt was defeated by Urbana 1n the fourth round of play m the MISSISSIPPI Valley Tournament Thls game closed a hlghly successful year for us and xt closed the hlgh school basket ball career of Captam Ray Wxse one of the best Guards xn the League and George Antroblus our All star Forward Coach Lee R Carlson rs to be congratulated for hxs xerf successful coachxng LINE UP Freeman Forward Jarrett Forward H111 Forward Metzger Forward Antromus Forward and Cent Hell Center and Guar Wlse CCaptamj Guard Blckle Guard Lorenz Guard FIRST GAME SOLDAN vs ROOSEVELT out because of 1nJur1es was defeated bv Soldan 25 12 SECOND GAME CLEVELAND vs ROOSEVELT Our boys came back strong 1n the second week defeatmv the Orange and Blue by a rally m the last few mmutes of play Antrob1us and Hull vue e the outstandmg stars for Roosevelt We won 20 17 THIRD GAME YEATMAN vs ROOSEVELT Our next v1ct1m was Yeatman whose team our boys outplayed n ex ern department of the ame Antroblus was hx h pomt man scorm 9 poxnts Roosevelt won 26 15 U1 ,fill ia 1. 6 2 2. 5 3 3. 5 3 4. 3 5 5. 1 7 K D . ' . V - ' ' 1 er ' d Roosevelt, minus Captain Ray Wise. the star running guard, who was b A ' . tr ' U . .U . .AU . N b ' 5 ' : ' Tl -.-li BASKET BALL K BWEIHH FOURTH GAME CENTRAL vs ROOSEVELT The Crlmsonltes had an off nlght when they played Central whlle our boys played an excellent floor game thelr shots were lnaccurate The whlstle found us tralllng Central to the tune of 20 17 FIFTH GAME SOLDAN vs ROOSEVELT Agaln the West Enders proved our Jmks Though the game was close throughout Soldan forged ahead ln the final two mlnutes of play Augle Hell of baseball fame was our hlgh polnt man wlth 7 Flnal score 19 17 SIXTH GAME CLEVELAND vs ROOSEVELT The Rough Rlders were out for blood to avenge the setback glven them by Central and Soldan Antroblus opened the scorlng wlth a neat field goal The score see sawed back and forth the Crlmson leadlng at the half 14 10 In the first few mlnutes of the second quarter Cleveland put on a great rally and as the quarter ended they were leadlng 23 21 Marlan Freeman was sent ln at the openlng of the fourth quarter and proceeded to put the game on lce for us by scorlng four field goals ln qulck successlon and before the game was over he scored 7 field goals Freeman and Antroblus shared hlgh polnt honors wlth fourteen polnts aplece Roosevelt 37 Cleveland 23 SEVENTH GAME YEATMAN vs ROOSEVELT Yeatman showed plenty of speed and ln the last quarter the gun stopped what threatened to be a dlsastrous Yeatman rally Roosevelt won 19 16 EIGHTH GAME CENTRAL vs ROOSEVELT Central had met her first defeat the week before at the hands of Cleve fightlng pltch Antroblus scored first on a free throw thereafter the Crlm son was headed only once Thls game proved to be the blg thrlller of the lea ue schedule Capt Wlse Jarrett and Hell played fast floor games Blckel played the best game at statlonary guard ever played on the Cleveland court and Antroblus was the only man on elther team to score two field goals Flnal score Roosevelt 15 Central Champs 25 13 BASEBALL When Coach Lorenzen sent out a call for baseball materlal about one hundred and twenty five boys reported Among these were SIX letter men of last year WISE all star first baseman who led the league ln hlttlng last year Hell veteran pltcher of the past two seasons Readman a pltcher and also an outfielder B111 Thomas shortstop Haverstack thlrd base and Spook Frederlc center field Pewee Hlll has made good at second base and IS our lead off man John Robertson appears to be the End of the season for he not only fields sensatlonally but also wlelds a mlghty stlck Strlng O11 Ilundr d Ylllffl g . , . ' tl 17 , . . l . . y Y . . . ' . , - u Bl YY ' ' ' 1 1 ' ' . 9 1 - 1 I s ' - ' ' lt . ,, . . . . 7 ! 9 ' ' I . , ' v , . 3 3 . 3 . ' l land, whom we had defeated twice. This fact aroused our boys to their best . 3 - , . . Q ' , i ll 1 11 ' ' 5 Y 9 ' 9 I . , - - ' . . . 1 , Z 1 . , ' . ' . LA il ! 9 1 1 Y ' SL V! '1 gg 19 ' , . , an H - . , . . . . M . , - . . L- In 7 h ul W.. fr- ,NV X-2 1,1171 925 CHAMPIONS BASEBALL BWENE Bean Blckel has clmched the catchers Job wlth jarrett a close second Roosevelt has a wealth of good reserve materlal 1n Heltz a southpaw pltcher Vandover outfielder Vents Newell and Thomas who are ut1l1ty mhelders and Cotton Garw1n who IS a contender for catchlnv honors YEATMAN vs ROOSEVELT Auggxe Hell was 1TlVlI'lClbl6 ln plnches and although Yeatman outhlt us we took advantage of thelr poor Fleldlng and trxmmed them to the tune o 5 to 2 SOLDAN vs ROOSEVELT Soldan opened the first xnmnv by SCOFIHU three runs on a walk a hlt batsman one h1t and two errors Roosevelt scored four runs ln the fourth Soldan scored two more runs whxch was all she could do for the rest of the day vvhlle our boys scored two 1n the Flfth mnmg and three more ln the elghth to w1n easlly Score 9 6 Readman Gave them only four hlts whlle hls teammates were gatherxnv thlrteen CENTRAL vs ROOSEVELT Th1S was a sluggmg fest and nelther team seemed to have the advantage at the tenth mmng when the Cfame was called on account of darkness Score 8 8 CLEVELAND vs ROOSEVELT After Robertson had h1t a home run 1n the second our boys proceeded to knock Musgrove out of the box by scormv Eve runs After Cleveland had scored her three runs 1n the elghth Wlse h1t a homer whlch ended the scormg for both teams Hell was stmgy wxth hrs hlts allowmg them only four Wxse and H111 were the battmg heroes of the day Score Roosevelt 1 Cleveland 3 It looks now as lf Roosevelt mxght w1n the Chammonshlp IH a walk We are now 1n Hrst place The standmgs to date are Won Lost Txed Roosevelt Soldan Central Yeatman Cleveland TENNIS Yeatman won the mterscholastxc tennis tournament last year wlth Sol dan second and McKmley thnrd Thts poor showmg was due entxrely to the lack of organlzatlon and also to the lack of mterest shown by the students ln that only a small number turned out which of course lessened our chances of havmg a wmmng team At a meetlng called by Mr Rlley thls sprmg qulte a number of tennxs C HI 1 U ,, . , . . b l . . b . b Y . , , . , - I . V . . 5 . . . ' U I 1 h 5 - l. 2 O l 2. 2 l 0 3. 1 1 1 4. 1 2 0 5. 0 3 0 Dun ll: dvd 7'l:1'rfj,-.: Anim' ,HHKHIXDY XV 13 sa I' llllllllllfilllllllllfllflpp I 0 acifk., kb - fm Ifltllllyf' d Tlzzrh Iflnf TRACK 37x A . Q ' f , 37 ' T ' 14 , I ' 'V' , M A -1 f ,Q 1 1 ' ' 4 .gg A A ' ,, ., M , ' , ' ll h dei , 40 I1 f 1: 5 1' A If 1 . V , , A I 1- :, , V , T , m ,' f V.: 1' ' Q' ,M va . 2 7 I ' f A 'T -2 J' 649 .L. an ' V li' I , - 1 If 'V -wa? , 1 1 ' I ' ' - , - f In 4 m x 7 - 21 1 , ,Q W, -I V -. I v ' . f -I 1 . if I Il Q I 13 Ifl , 1 . za Q ' ' I.: X G. L Q . :Q Q X we M- ' I1 V ' , al K 'Q' ,, C5 , 4 . 'fr X . A in Q- 43 A gi , I V vc vrv- -- M ,,-,,x., , , , - ,J fl 3 f Nm iw ,'fA .M ,.,, 4, ' 'sm 1 I I X Vs x jg, ' V , ' h -, l ,V ,Ag ' .. ' ++ 1 f ' Q 3 'q'7' A , y ,, I V' 2 - .I A , V 1 Q , ' 1 1 . - I' 4 x A K l . 4 V i A 'f , F 1' A . I' Q EWZNE asplrants reported They dec1ded to organize at once so as to get as much practlce as posszble before the fall tournament Prospects are brlght th1s year as we are fortunate ln retaxnmg three let ter men of last years team about whom Coach Rlley expects to buxld a champlonshxp team These men are the veterans Collms Grxmm and We ber our entlre smgles team of last year Matches haxe been arranged wlth several hlgh schools not 1n the 1nter scholastlc tournament the Hrst of these bemv with the team of the St Louls UHIVCFSIIY Hwh wh1ch wlll undoubtedly furn1sh some hvely competltlon Even though we now have manv promlslnv players our team for next fall s tournament IS by no means certaln thus all boys lnterested are urged to conae out and earn the1r letters by helpxng Roosevelt w1n her first tenn1s cham plonshlp Can we do lt? We have the school' We have the coach' We have the players' So let s go TRACK Fresh from a hard fought v1ctory m 24 Roosevelt ant'c1Dates the date of Fleld Day w1th much pleasure Although no predlctlons as to the actual result of the meet are made vxe know that wm or lose every Roosevelt track man backed by a iightmg coach w1ll stlck t1ll the end Whlle talkmg of coaches, lt m1ght be rnterestlng to know that Roose velt has the best h gh school track coach ln the MlSS1SS1pp1 Valley The rec ord whlch he established at old McK1nley would certamly seem to bear out thxs assert1on Coach Castleman has led twelve of h1s sxxteen track teams to the champ1onsh1p Roosevelt IS lndeed proud that Cassy has come to the new school We feel that with such materlal as has shown xtself th1s year we may surely look forward to a successful day on May twenty mnth Much promlsmcf materlal makes vxctory extremely plauslble W1th such men as Kulla Robertson Frederlc Wise Collms H111 Jarrett Coll and others reta1ned from last season and wlth many new men we can expect nothmcf but a track champlonshlp for 1975 Up to the tlme of thus publrcatlon Roosevelt was successful rn defeatmg East St Louxs and Webster wh1le our mldgets were barely nosed out by the Yeatman team Ou mu , v , , . . ' - ' I U I - , . 1 r-, - b ' ' . . , , Z3 7 , . , A . . . , . . ' A 4 so ' an - - - 7 . - , . . . g , . 5 . . . . . - ' ' ' ' as -Q 1 ' . ,O . v 1 v v -fa v u v . . b is n . ' V U II1 ful 7'i1irtj,'-f 'zzz' I snnn xv Illl Il lflilldl d llzlrtx GIRL ATHLETES OF ROOSEVELT 1 4 V ,. g, ' ' A, ,- ,mi .-.ii ' .I ' I ., ' I , E29 iv ' , K , 5 ' if if 5 gl VV y' . . , It A M gl x gr 5 H S! t -1-I H-- Da QQ ,lx V . 4' y .J3 I ' ,I -IX L, :-,x , j, I Z1 ' H' 'I . x 25 ad 2 l M J' N , w .-V sl V. ' A - lj- , I , . L I A , ,, U M YW M , : 44 ' x?h' va' : L 7 , 4 ,,,., ,, W, f 2 O' mv , ' R rv - . ' , . . N, W.- - . .. , W, ,, ,. QM. ,HI Ill!! IIIIIIIHDIHIII -wgpzf NFYA - ' O X xa O L. .F 'A ' -.-ffm, A f . MJLL Q5 Q 5211? ,,f' f m' MN :lt Y GAR Motto One for all and all for one Moderator Mxss Watt Presldent Edna bchrlck Vlce Presldent Lucxlle Wallace Secretary Ellse Mardorf Treasurer Hertha Beck S A A Emmly Bausch ,E 11 O one can deny that the G A R IS the pepplest orgamzatxon at Roose FI J velt But dont mxstake the G A R for meamng the Grand Arm fl of the Republlc for It means Glrl Athletes of Roosex elt The meet mgs are held 1n room 118 on B Frldays These meetmgs are short and for the sole purpose of dlscussmg busmess and plans for hikes swlmmlng Dart1es etc The hlkes thls term have been very successful The first one was Satur day March twenty first to Sugar Creek where the glrls went wadmg and had a howlmg good txme Th1s probably rernlndeo them of thelr varlous chlldhood athletic sports After havmg had their H11 of wadmg they decided to hmke to Meramec Hlghlands where the hlke ended ln a grand scrlmmage for soda pop Altogether twelve mxles were tramped over by the G A Rs The second hlke was March twentv elghth to Falllng Sprmgs whlch IS 1n Illmols A motor boat was taken to cross the MISSISSIPPI because the ferry had been destroyed by the tornado From the Rlver the gxrls hiked to Fallmg Sprmgs, a beautlful, hllly place where a cataract falls about one hundred and twenty five feet over a preclpxce Numerous caves found there were explored by the glrls Thxs hlke certamly proved mterestmg and some what excmng It was also twelve mxles long Of course, everyone had a 'keen ' tlme I l I I A ffl Fl B I ,... , 'Q ft. . .X - ' V1 , die K X Q r 1 , ., 4- - ' ' ' r J - Q 5 ,3 N. T X, . f - 'lf I K .I .J ,,, 1 1: ' 1 ' 1 xl - .C ,lf , M., f , . 'H f--. A 114 Q- 1, , Q nil t KJ I ut - K we 'X w if IQ ei p f Q'-1 I , V, X I K , 2 v 1 ' It A sf T mf A- Q - 1-Q s ' x t ' , X ' Lf- Q -iff-fair V - x ' I fi f f ,tffw . C3 ' f aaaa iii, ag, ,,- , 1 , , f f,--f':.,,l , 5 ff-4 I I A A ly l B--' - - .1- , 45 K f fa! f if - il? ii i -4 Q 'Sf . 4 1 -' f ' . -iw F 1 Fe ' .'-'--ew-.. , lf 1 T , A X ,.s K ,, , -4 ,.- ,,'s'f.,:- , X -mm -.-n.. f-pgs.-:guQ.3E?.5i:?f,. jg, , .,-Q, W-i:,' V n. Q . ., . 4 . , -el, . . . . Y 594.1 9 r ' ' . . H ,. . . J . 9 ' Q - 1 Q U . ,, . . . , . . ' 1 ' s - n g n s D , ' s Our Hzuzdrrd Tlurtx scum BALL VOLLEY . ,, . i , A Q v N ff . '- EQ BWENH One Monday afternoon after school twenty two of the Ulrls walked to Forest Park by gO1Dg through Tower Grove Park over Kxnvshlghway up Oakland Avenue and mto the Park to Lookout Pav1l1on Here were played four excltmg mmnffs of baseball after whxch a fire was bu11t and hot dogs were rapldly consumed PlCkl6S and xce cream cones fwhat a dehghtful com blnatlonj were also devoured by the hungry G A R s Miss Watt and Mlss Cralg who seemed also to enjoy the outlng were the most dellghtful chaperones If a glrl hxkes fifty m1les durmg the term she recexves an athletlc R Two swlmmlng partles were held at the Y W C A It IS hoped that the Club wlll be able to secure the swxmmmg pool at school for one after noon a week If you want to Jom a peppy enthuslastlc organlzatxon 1o1n the G A R VOLLEY BALL M1ss Rothmann and Mlss Kavanaugh Presxdent Irene Brady Sect and Treas Louetta Re1tz Coaches Volley Ball IS one of the best U1rls athletlc clubs of the school Why9 Because the co operatlon whxch IS the mam asset of anv club s splen 1 What do you have to do to Joln the Volley Ball clubj A test must be taken owlng to the fact that lt IQ such a popular game It IS qulte a snmple test so don t let rt frlghten you When are the meet1ngs9 They are held every Fr1day from three to four IH the gym Is the game 1nterest1ng Of course xt s mterestlnff If you want proof you are xx elcome to come and wltness our mterestmg and eXClt1l'1g games What does the club do, It IS dlvlded mto two groups one playlng agalnst the othe The match games between the teams are very excltxng and thrlllmg At the end of the term the losmg sxde glves the wmnmg one a spread Is everyone welcome? Everyone IS welcome' One of our mottoes IS The more the merrler Our good txmes together are not forgotten We wlsh all lrls to be lnter ested ln Volley Ball If you cannot Jom then come to see the match games whlch you wlll surely enjoy Un Hun 1 O - b .. E, , 5 . , . ,D . , , , . . , . , , . . . . H ,, , , I . . . Y an - . , . ,- D . K5 97 H . . . . . - . 1 1 . 1 - d'd U It ' ' in as ' Q s Y U 5 ' u ' ' - v . . ,, , . tl I 71 .. . . ,. in ' . VY tl - Q - - . b' ' . . . . . ,, ll V, M . . . . . . , Y. . . . . . . . ,, t. Q, Cl I ' 1 ' Y J. - ' 5 s ' T . . . ,, .' ff 'fd' llllfd-','w'Iu'1If 43 Qi U1 ly INDOOR BASFBAI I Tuesday Groups Term BKUZHH GIRLS INDOOR Moderator Mlss Ewers Presmdent Edna Schrtck Secretary and Treasurer Irene Brady C t Catherme Cummms and ap ams 2Ruth Burkhardt The meetmgs of the Glrls Indoor teams are held every Wednesday an the gym The glrls are d1v1ded Into two groups one playmg against the other Keen competltlon IS shown between the teams resultmg ln very peppy and excltmg games Each s1de chooses nts captam and at the end of the term the losmg slde glves the wmnmg slde a spread Naturally each side IS certam of wmmng smce the glrls are matched as evenly as posslble but the results at the end of the term determme whxch sxde IS vlctorlous GIRLS BASKET BALL CLUB Coach Mxss Varlan President Esther Wmtt Secretary and Treasurer Isabel SCl11ll1l'1g Capta1ns Captams Capta1ns Capta1ns Capta1ns Captams Capta1ns Captains Term Term Term Term Term Term Term 2 Florence Wrlght 4 Marle Schlensker 6 Erna Stem 8-Ruth Burkhardt Thursday Groups 1 Dorothy Sexauer 3 Mary McNe111 5 Evelyn Angelback 7 Isabel Schxllmg The glrls are dlvlded mto the two groups because of the great number mdulge m thxs favorxte sport that This IS Mlss Varlan s first term as coach Because Mxss Runge and Mlss Nelbert our former coaches had to glV6 up basket ball Mxss Varlan klndly consented to serve as coach and we End her a very valuable one The gxrls are busy practlcmg every week and are usmg the large stage gymnasxum to great advantage The reason for all thas practxcmg IS of course that each and every one ms ambxtlous to make the first or second team Later m the season each team will have the chance to play all the other teams The Sxxes proved to be the undlsputed champxons last term not losmg a smgle game These Slxes now Sevens lssue a warnmg to the other teams smce they are sure they can and w1ll do the same thls term A certam number of pomts IS gwen to each glrl who makes first or second team These pomts count m the pomts necessary for an Athletic R H1 IIYIH! 9 ' s ' 1 ' 9 9 Y 9 L .. . . . . . , . - 9 s ' - , . 9 , . n- ' vs - ' ' ! ' U ' 17 A1 99 ' ' - . . , . 1 . Q ' il 99 . If :mul . w'zj: T Hxmdrcd Fwrty-nm' BASKET BALL R, Ch N Georgopoulous VlI'glUl3 Weber Fred Hmes 6 mfr 1 Lucllle OConnor Mr Mxller Armm Moeller Benito Flores E bar Bohle Melvm Barkon .RRR f X I A i V K ee . . . 5' as . y M UA xx. f X e 3 is . 6 e . 1 XX X 1' NNN- x ..,,L,f-'X is 4 e , 5 Q X x e e . . ..-4 '. . . . , do' lm' ll: 1'rllZf1-ly-r:.'f f- . x . -L 1 ' -p, , 1- 1. . ,5,j'.f .' 3 .5- Jef' , K A '. K.. x I fx-. A . 4, A . .5 S 56 Huizdrrd l ffr'?-x'-111 BUJEHH ROUGH RIDER Faculty Adwser Edxtor 1n Ch1ef Assoclate Ed tor Mr E C Karnne Arthur Mlller Edna Schr1ck STAFF Helene Barnet Ruth M Henckle Edgar Bohle Bernard Kamme Laura Bnscoe Burtm Keeble Albert Burns EIISE Mardorf Cullen C011 Ga1l Potter Rlchard D1emer Lucllle Rlckey W1ll1am Evans Lee Stark Vlfglnla Flsher Ellzabeth Thorne Nlcholas Georgopoulo Luc1lle Wallace W1Il1ma Hall Marlann W1gg1n Joe Heller Ray WlSe Busmess Manager Randall Sm1th Asst BUSINESS Manager Theo Pflue er Ass t Busmess Manager Charles Pace Typ1st V1ola Mutschler Exchanges Harold Crowder D1str1but1on Manage Fremont Heath Carl E1nse1de1 Rober Mxller D3V1d Hess Oswald Schlegel Calvln Hodrnan Ralph Tlrmlnstexn Walter Meyer Hoyt Wallace OUR PAPER Our weekly publxcatlon the Rough Rlder IS w1thout doubt the largest actlvxty 1n the school carrled on by the students The ed1tor and assocxate edxtor are elected each term by the student body first bemg nommated by the Student Councll The staff 1S appomted by the faculty advlsor Candx dates for the staff hand 1n sample artxcles and lf they have ab1l1ty they are gxven a chance Asslgnments are g1ven out every Tuesday mormng and must be turned ln by Thursday They are read collected and typed The dummy IS made out on Friday The galley or materxal 1S prmted over the week end and IS proofread and pasted 1n the dummy on Monday and Tuesday The paper IS prmted Tuesday afternoon and dlstrxbuted to the students the seventh pe rlod on Wednesday The Student Councll has an lmportant part to play ln the success or CCont1nued on Page 1925 U H1 If il I 1 . 1 r . Q . , . ,- L ' ' ' r Q . . . . U. Y ' 0, - 5 , . . . . F 1 1- - . . I. 1 - 1 , 1 1 1 . , . ' v v ' 111' 111 r'.'1 1fr'fj,'- 'lr iK 'uk V FQ af .l'. ' A V. .'- f ROUGH RIDER STA fldr' rf NEW SENIORS HHI17 Hmzflrfd lfnrly-51 NEW SENIORS EWHHE NEW SFNIORS On March 11 1975 the first New Senlor Class of Roo e elt Hxgn o gamzed and the followmff officers were elected Presldent Noel Delporte Vlce Presldent Edna Schr1c' Secretary Ida Loeffel Treasurer Arthur Hertel Sergeant at Arms Euffene Bokern As yet thxs class has had httle opportunity to show what lf really can do but under our able presldent and moderator xt lb SL re to be a very peppx and enthuslastxc orvanxza lon of Rough Rlder THE SECRETARY OITA Moderato M155 Whrtelaw OFFICPRS Presxdent Lucllle Wallace V1ce President Mabel Smlth Secretary Ida Loeffel Correspondm Secretarv Mar1on Burge Treasurer Ehzabeth Thorre Now Olta IS a club of g1rls who lxke to work and play We work on programs wlth a w1l1 because they gxve us mformatxon experlence and conhdence and these thlngs do help us m and out of school And so be cause Olta IS a literary club we talk of famous malds and men who poetry or books have wrxtten And we ourselves attempt to scrxbe for meetmgs and our Gold Bug Another time we hear how our members can debate how llterature doth add lts charm to muslc how better wrxtmg both the aged and the new doth mark 1ts place w1th words And now t1s rumored of a day where dxs course will abound ln wltchcraft and mysterxes But now tls tlme to say that we too play have recxtatlons wxth a laugh or stunts to ht the toprc of the day And then perchance a party gay and now that May IS soon o come our mothers shall we entertaln with such entertamment as you may also hear rf you but come to 301 on Frxday the hrst or thxrd that comes rn every month Un llumr .I f ' 1 s ' ' 7- . D V Z . - 4. - .Ki - - L- b , Q. . .i ' I i. .Q . t. . Q 5 -. . U . b .1 ' 1 Sergeant-at-Ams Bessie Korn v ' u ' Y 3 ' ' . . . . , . . ,. . . . . U I I ' , ' 1 V U . A . . l v . ,V fe.-.f lf Om lfmldna' Fufx 71 TA OI .A 1 x ,' , HP 'S- U1' 1' 1 STUDENT COUNCIL W 4WW3f hx Q V R 1 i I ur Hnmirvd Fifty-Nwzu FRENCH CLUB BWEHH THE HONOR SOCIETY Moderator Mrss Crowder OFFICERS Presldent Cullen Coxl Secretary Lucxlle Rxckey 653 LTHOUGH the Torch or Natxonal Honor Soclety of Roosevelt be Q5 gan xts frrst term wlth but exght Senlor members the chapter has 5 is thls term, accompllshed several features not heretofore attempted Obvlously w1th so lxmlted a membershlp It was xmposslble to carry out any projects of lmportance and It was necessary therefore to walt untxl new electlons were made to prepare any dehnlte plans However with the awalted mcrease ln numbers the meetlngs hvened up wlth a snap Several new features were brought forward by the recently elected members who threw themselves wholeheartedly lnto the sp1r1t of the organlzatlon The features planned and put 1nto executxon thls term are worthy of specxal note here The Roosevelt Chapter had declded to take the lead IH effecting a reumon of all the St Louls chapters s1m1lar to that held at the Coronado Hotel last term Such a reumon stlmulates the Torch members to greater 3CtlVlty Stlll another xdea of our chapter IS to glVe more pub llclty to the orgamzatlon 1n Roosevelt smce lt IS certainly true that too few of the lower classmen know anythlng at all about the orgamzatlon other than 1ts name Increased knowledge on the subject early 1n thelr hlgh school career wlll probably result ln stxmulatlon to hlgher efforts toward perfectlon xn the requlsltes upon whlch Torch members are elected An accomphshment of th1s chapter worthy of separate mentlon IS the declslon to hold regular meetmgs every two weeks In former terms meet mgs were called at long mtervals and mterest on the part of the members lagged to a large extent However the regular meetlngs thls term have brought about mcreased co operation among the members wlth the result that many constructlve features beneflclal to the school have been proposed and acted upon It IS celtamly to be hoped that thms 1dea w111 be accepted and retamed by all future chapters at Roosevelt Perhaps It mlght be well to mention here the requlsxtes for electlon to whxch we have referred above When a candldate for electron IS proposed to the faculty every teacher conslders the pupxl from the standpolnt of charac ter leadershlp scholarshlp and servxce It lS readlly apparent that each of these requlrements IS a worthy and necessary one and that as a whole these requlrements represent the sum total to be deslred ln any well rounded Amer :can cxtxzen The choxce IS a happy one In closmg I should lrke to emphasxze especlally to lower classmen that It IS absolutely necessary to begln early 1n hlgh school to strive to quahfy m all of these requlrements The benefits derlved from membershxp m the fCont1nued on Page 1923 In Hu 1 1 74 . . - ,.,1 v s ,t,. . . . . . 1 ' E' ' ' 7 1 V ! ' 5 , . 3 ' 9 7 1 , - ' s ' 9 7 , - 0 9 Y ' 1 Y U I D I ' xr 1:1 rrI l'1jtjf-frm f E RCI-I TO 15 Q 'N-1 'w '-1. ri E1 NI V-. 4 , -. :- 3 I I ORCHESTRA N ORCHESTRA No 2 Om' Hzmdrvd Fifty-jiri' ERUEHE GIRLS DEBATING The express1on We must take the bxtter wxth the sweet rang true last term when the Ulrls of th1s school falled 1n thexr efforts to retam the Wellsley Cup On the eventful nlght of debate Roosevelt s team lost to Cleveland To make a long story short Roosevelt lost the cup to Cleveland so that now Cleveland has one leg and Roosevelt one leg on the Wellsley Cup Under the capable coachmg of Mlss Battle and Mlss Sm1th Roosevelt won one leg on that coveted cup We all know that under the same capable coachlng we shall w1n two more legs thus placxng the cup where xt r1ght fully belongs Let us all root for the G1rl Debators' They have won for Roosevelt Let us mstxl 1n them a deslre to agaln w1n for Roosevelt LAURA BRISCOE THE SWIMMING CLUB Sponsor Mr MacKay OFFICERS Presldent Norman Hagemeyer Vmce Presldent W1ll1am Evans Secretary Treasurer Norman Moore The SW1I'!1I'I'1lDg Club was organxzed m March wlth twenty members To become a member lt was necessary for all to pass swxmmlng and d1v1ng tests The a1m of th1s club IS to promote swxmmmg and d1v1ng We indulge m such actlvxtxes as water polo and speed contests wh1ch are very healthful A very 1nterest1ng and enjoyable afternoon IS spent ln the pool every Tues day after school Another sectlon of the Sw1mm1ng Club has been organxzed whlch meets WRESTLING CLUB Moderators Mr Stone Mr Whltehouse Preszdent Boyd Russell A wrestlmg club has been organxzed here at Roosevelt and IS makmg Fme progress m teachlnv the manly art of self defense JIU jxtsu and other good holds and defenses Mr Stone the moderator for the wrestlmv club IS an old hand at the game and knows the trlcks of the trade Mr Whltehouse who IS very much mterested ln boxmg IS taking charge of that branch of sport very successfully We have three sets of boxmg gloves and members of varlous sxzes whlch msures anyone who comes to our regular Wednesday meetxng at 3 o clock m the boys gymnaslum a chance to meet with a partner of h1s own ab1l1ty The Wrestlmg Club extends a cordlal 1nv1tat1on to boys who are lnter ested ln self xmprovement through physxcal dex elopment to attend lts meet mgs BOYD RUSSELL Pres U lllll fr I b. . . . . . every Wednesday. NORMON MOORE' i . . 6 Q . 'ur if 'rl l51'ft.,'-.v:'. BOYS DEBATING In the first Prmceton Cup debate of the year Cleveland defeated Mc Kmley ln upholdmg the negatxve of the questlon Resolved That the Umted States enter the League of Natxons lmmedfately A large crowd attended the contest nn the Cleveland Audxtorlum It was only after a hard fight that the Crlmson debaters accepted defeat One week later Soldan defeated Yeatman thus matchmg Cleveland w1th Soldan and McK1nley wlth Central who had drawn a bye m the orlgmal paxrmg Soldan defeated Cleveland eltmmatmg the south s1de school from the runnmg McK1nley was able to defeat Central who later was defeated by Yeatman Thls concluded the work of our debaters as a McK1nley team The first debate scheduled for Roosevelt was agamst Yeatman on Aprll twenty thlrd The quest1on was Resolved That the Clty Manager Plan of Government be adopted by Amerxcan MunlClpa11tleS The declslon was ln favor of Yeatman g1v1ng the North Slders the opportumty of meetmg Soldan 1n the final Prmceton Cup debate While not extremely successful ln the number of debates won the team as worked for 1ts school and deserves the support of all Rooseveltxans MchINLEY ROOSEVELT DEBATERS 1924 1925 Wxlham Evans Rene Lusser Fred Hmes Cullen C011 O Hn! r 1 , - . . . . . . ,, . , . . . . ,, ' 1 , . ,, ,, . . . . . ' I , . . . i H . ' . , . . . . . . ,, . . l . 9 , - , - . . ' nv md sd F ftg.'-.vrzuw HI RADIO CLUB Lfi Xl nn: 1lf11f1:15TM ' .-4. L l :L 1-Q 51 One Hmzdred Fifty-nine CAROL CLUB BWEHE LITERARY SOCIETY Moderator M J Lew15 Pres1dent Cullen C011 Secretary Ha o d Mute V1ce Presldent Henry FFEUWG Board Echtor e 1 Ba Treasurer Rene Lusser Sergeant at A I ee Lada A Cornedy 1n Two Acts Characters Patr1ck Isadore Revmald Act I Scene Beanery Booth Roosevelt H1 h School T1me September 1925 Pat What hav we herej Ugh' How 1n two hecks does th1s Nora Izzy fentermff Vot you do1n dere huh? You xant for orea-c Dont youll pull lt off' Pat Hum who be you? Where d ye g1t that orderm to grt a dr1nk to be sure Izzy Oh here Ill show you how See Pat What are ye here for? CIVICSD Izzy s1tt1ng down Uh huh' Sorne bw boy he told me o o e dere Room 1 Pat s1tt1ng downj Me too Sure s some b1g room My but the e be a bunch 1n here for c1v1cs Izzy I wonder for vot dey got dem counters Maybe def ea 1.1 e retall blzzness Pat Ach yass Izzy You don t need to be so smart rn1ster I Guess yo a e s 11.1 bert huh? Pat Me name? Why P1erre Izzy P1erre' Ha ha' P1erre' Yaa and m1nes Arch1baa Pat Ach yass Izzy Llssen I tell you not for be so smart Pat That rem1nds me of a Joke I heard the other day Izzy A choke? Vel It better not be about me or I ll choke you a Pat Ya see there was an Ir1shman and a Jew argum aoo.1 'whose father was the greatest The Y1dd1sh guy Izzy Say vatch your language Pat As I was saymg d1s Yut was Izzy I say you better shut up or Ill punch you the Jax Pat Well then th1s gentleman ahem was Reggle fentermgj Thay boyth what you do1n here? Izzy Why er we re Waltln fur de CIVICS class to begm and Regg1e-Th1v what, Oh my You poor boyth thxth 1th the 1. CExeunt J CCont1nued on Page 192D 1311 11111 r. . . . T E, v - 1 ' - M rko: , 1 - VFW Y D . .. T 4-I Q 3 1 it ' 'O' V b ' - , . . .Q Q , I . . , . . - . Dj- ' . . 1 1 . datf 3 7 ' - , . ' U' 1 ' g :tie-I T: tryin ' , . . 7 T Y 7 ' ' C. . D- . 5 C ,T . - . . , . r Mug. ' , . . . L ar. 5 - . 1 1 rn 's ci - , . I I r uf- '1 we Q' I- - ' ' D ' ' D , . l v 1 1 . . . , . 7. 1 . , . . Y L . - , . - , . . , . - , - . , ' , .lr1gnt. - , ' ' ' ' 't xr ' - , . - y l - 1 ' ., a.. , .t.. . . . , , . . , . . . .. - - V Z - . , . , 1un'n roorti. .V 111 1 -111 .sfrfg A A an On Hmzdr d LITERARY BWHNH COLLEGE CLUB Colors Green and Whlte Motto Always to Excel Moderator Margaret C Dockery OFFICERS Presldent Laura Brlscoe V1ce Presldent Ehse Mardorf Recordmg Secretary Emlly Bausch Correspondlng Secretary Hertha Beck Sergeant at Arms Marlann Wlggln On February thxrteenth you could see a bevy of smxlmg lasses Makmg thelr way to the muslc room llke p1l rlms On the way to a shrme Thelr p1lgr1mage took them upstaxrs To the muslc room Th1s was the first meetmv of the College Club At Roosevelt It was devoted to a Valentme program None of these brxght sm1l1ng glrls knew anythmff About Valentmes That IS how they first came To be written The old tlme verses were rare As a day m june They felt sorry for the swa1ns Who had to make them up but thelr hearts bled For the poor glrls who had to recelve them Tony Weller s valentlne was a treat But they lxked the drafnatlc part gxven 1n old tlme Costume best Edna Crusxus was darlmg and Eddv Was such a perfect lover that she proposed On bended knee and saxd lt wlth flowers The College Club 15 patrlot c Anythmg you want to know about To tell vou The College Club Roosevelt program Of February twenty seventh was most mstructvve As well as entertaxnmg Roosevelt s llfe was taken By Gladys Kamme er Hrs letters were covered Entxrely by Edna Kelly and brave Clalre Weller Followed hlm mto the Bad Lands Now we know the great Amerlcan the patron of our school very well mdeed And we admire h1m a great deal more than ever The program for new members was fifty fifty throughout The meetmg as to serlousness and levxty The ceremony was serlous As could Be The speeches and talks were dlgnxlied and full Of meamng But the entertamment was all fun CCont1nued on Page 193D 11 dr cl N11 I ' ' Q . - if 1 I . . ,D . , . . . . b Y I I u . . , J ' ' i . . ' Roosevelt? Ask anyone of the College Club girls - , ' Q . . , . r . ' A , Y I . . . . , . , V ' , za V ' - l , . ffm' ,7 H3 'f . ,'Ij.'- lvl I YYY 'M919'-'Q lllllllll IIIIJIIJ Mmm 4,311 -F--l One Hundn d Srzfx fhn. UB CL COLLEGE 5 ' ' ' P 1: -af ' Y? Q, kj Y A LK 325' il iw ' , , ' N 'Qu - s ,E V ,wa J.: . fi J ' L 5 I L L 5 ' if i - L Q , g'3x A L L ' S N A: ' 73 s V L . 1 'Wil QE, S- Q f x W 5 ......,.. I' A W k , Q ,,,.'L ...,..4..-, L, in A A A M ,X g ' , . . , . 1, EWEHE MASK AND BUSKIN Moderator M1ss Runge Presldent N1cholas Georgeopolu V1ce Presxden Lucllle Wallace L1brar an Marlan Wlggln Secretary Hertha Beck Treasurer Edward Harmon Sergeant at Arms Melv1n Barkon yo ALENTS here for butcher baker and most any kmd of roles wash women Theda Baras v1lla1ns Happers and Krng Coles Heroes mei too we have aplenty wlthout them our plays how empty' The stage IS set the play begms The herome enters ln draped 1n yards and yards of s1lk enough to dress mother and all her six She 1S weepmg weepmg tears maybe tears from onlons sprung Through a door Ctermed CXITID comes the hero 1n knee breeches lace and w1g Ah noble man' Stralght to her ladyshxp he strldes mountams could not stay hlm nor even tldes He IS down upon h1s knees now speaklng smoothly soothmgly now gestlculatlng wxldly hrs VOICE comes haltmgly stumblmgly Were these the lmes and was th1s the way or wast the Splrlt of the play' Or was It a weakness of the knees? None shall ever know Alas' But he has not been wary close behmd hlm comes her father filled wlth fury and wlth anger Cand wxth hls vo1ce thunders h1s cane stamps wildly on the Hoor And w1th hlm comes the dastard Vlllaln suddenly most brave and bold for IS he not her fathers cholce and had that worthy not hlm told? The herome H165 unto her lover But alas' The tldes have turned hlm he ns reachxng for h1s hat From the sweet mald comes a shudder but just use your 1mag1nat1on or a book wxll do as well for every term some members graduate and the vacancies must be Hlled And then they hold the famous tryouts called tryouts because you usually try OUT but they must needs have a butcher a baker and a Happer too Sometxmes they need a v1lla1n so here s an opportunlty for you As to the seml annual audxtorxum play plays need casts and also out casts you may perhaps serve well as A knock IS heard or A bell rmgs or perhaps as hero Every Tuesday 1n their play room Room 301 at 3 oclock qulte regu larly quxte promptly the noble work IS carrxed on Fxve great works have been presented Marrymg Belmda was a task and m the scene from the Xmas Carol Santa wasn t even asked The Lost Sllk Hat was a big suc cess tho the Hat was not of sllk and Effle Whlttlesy was charming wlth her face as whlte as mnlk The Prmce of Court Pamters didn t fall tho the prince dldn t pamt a court at all fContmued on Page 1939 ill! Ilumr 1 . . 5 . ' L . Q . . . 4 ,- . . ' I - l S, 3 . . . i Url v I , , T , 7 ' ' 7 . Y ' 1 . , . y . - Y . l v . . - . . , l . 3 1 Y ' . S y - , . , . . . , . . . Y . . . two large sofa pillows--he must look both stout and wisej. His eyes glower, 3 . . g . . . . . , 7 3 , . . . , . . . . ' . 3 , . 1 Q 7 V Y ' . . . , . . v ' ' . ' y 1 ' 3 ll ' 79 tl ' 17 9 7 ' . . , . ' a v ' Q l 9 ' N . . ,, . ' y M sy 9 u ' U ' - , . I M . . ,, . , 9 U 1 ' ' il ' ' ,Y ' 9 , , . , . A Q' Ivrl .Y.1't3'-fwzzz' I d S MASK AND BUSK N 11 ,. w L Q Y 1 v-1 5 N J J lfmzdrf i,z'f3'-ffm' EVEN? EL CLUB ESPANOL Motto Adelante Sxempre Adelante OFFICERS Presldente Secretarla Bemto Flores Helen Castano Vlce Presldente Sargente de Armas Hazel Hoelscher Jean GUISC Tesorera Moderator Edna Kelly Mxss Comfort BUENAS DIAS fellow Rou h Rxders Have you ever been to the Spamsh Club? If not you have certamly mlssed a Good time As you already know almost everyone has a favorlte club or meetmg he attends For mstance there are lodges for men and many clubs for women These are the means of furnlshmg enjoyment for the tlred buslness man the busy housewlfe But what of the chlldrenj What have they for thelr amuse ment? They get as tlred whlle workxng at school as thexr parents do at thelr work CAt least they thmk so J Well there are many dlfferent types of clubs here at school llterary dramatlc musxcal and language All of these orgam zatlons are very beneficxal especlally the last In the Spamsh Club one learns to speak the Spamsh language more fluently learns the customs and hablts of Spam and of Spamsh speakmg countrles and also learns of thelr geographlcal condltlons and thelr relatlon to our country We have many lnterestmg programs at our meetlngs such as dlalogues playlets games speeches muslcal numbers and blographlcal sketches of famous Spamsh artlsts authors and statesmen All of the programs are car r1ed on 1n Spamsh On lirst thought you may say Oh I don t want to joxn that club because I couldn t understand anythmg But do not let that keen you away If anyone fallS to understand any part of the program lt IS readxly mterpreted for hlm So you see ln th1s way you not only enjoy the pro Gram but also increase your vocabulary Last term the Club gave a program rn the audltorlum for the benefit of the whole school It conslsted of the presentatlon of pamtlngs by renowned Spamsh artxs s the models of whlch were members of the Club Thxs proved to be a very mterestmg feature The Club does not coniine xts work to meetlngs and programs lt also has soclal BHQHIYS such as liestas p1cn1cs and just heaps of other thmgs the puplls would enjoy The Club has been successful ever slnce its first meetxncr at McKmley Now that we are IH this line new buxldmg we expect to go forward Wltl' renewed vlgor and make the Spamsh Club one of the most promment orgam zatlons m the school The Club IS under the able moderatorshxp of Mxss Corr CCont1nued on Page 1931 fill 1111 1 U . 1 5 - . , b . 1 . , . Q . . , ' ' 1 1 ' ' , - u , 1 v v v t . . . M , . . - v v 1 1 ' 99 v ' A f 1 - v 1 ' rs 1 ' . . 4 . . 1. , . I . . . . ' .- vs . ' O' v v 5 . 1 . . 1- b L' 111 ini Szyf -.':,: Ou 11117 SPANISH CLUB EWZIHE DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN Moderator Presldent Vlce Presldent Secretary Treasurer bable of VOICGS scraplnh of feet rap for sllence relgns complete Open the book And call the roll Read the mmutes Of dues take toll Now for busmess Observe the laws Address the cha1r Durmng breathlng pause An ear achlng thln Chlna 'nust be lf rn a chorus They talk as vxe The busxness concluded The program s be un Now settle yourself For good hearty fun Mrs Ho ues Helen Strmeder Sara Welner Irene Bondl Belle WCIUCT Laughter and notse Is the surest slgn That we get together To haxe a good tlme Remember B Tuesday The German Club day Spend It wmth us For well you may If you lxke fun As all humans do Here s a chance for that And more yet too' We re fr1endly too In our 1nv1t1n For thats the purpose Of all thts wr1t1ng So lf you can German Speak even a b1t You are welcome here And we mean lt' TRENJE BONDI A 5 Q A . .Q A 1 ' U . - - 4 ' A .' - It 'U f . f ' . . . 1 ' . -J 9 - , , . Q . , . - . . G . . D . , V .Q .. - . A 1 r 4'5 4.1--.. Awww?--qw, QM if O11 llmzdr d X GERMAN CLUB EKUEHE THE ASSEMBLY Moderator W E Rxlex OFFICERS Presldent Frederxck Hxne Vlce Presldent Carroll Gllpen Secretary Edgar Bohle Treasurer James Burton Sergeant at Arms Roy Kauffman Correspondmg Secretary Theodore Kohler Lxbrarlan James Qulgley It IS always dxfficult to operate an orgamzatlon 1n new surroundlngs especlally when there are so many dxfferent aCtlVltlCS from whlch to choose Consequently lt has been thought that clubs of an athletlc nature would trlumph over the academlc It was thought that wlth the passmg of the present semor class the Assembly would smk mto obl1v1on The Assembly however IS not to d1e From the first meetmg of the term there has been a steady growth ln membershlp It IS to be notlced that the new members are mostly lower classmen There 1S therefore o scarcity of prom1s1ng new materlal IH the Assembly Although there IS no small number of Freshmen Sophomores and jumors rn the Assembly the soclety IS well fortlned wlth those lords of the upper world the Sernors The Assembly s purpose IS to TEACH Wlth Mr W E Rlley as mod W1ll1am McKinley Hlgh School IS st1ll TEACHING boys The Assembly does not requlre any tryout whatsoever because xt TEACHES lt does not requxre talent When one speaks of teachmg the llstener almost always thmks of the drab un1nv1t1ng schoolroom The Assembly s method of teach 1ng however IS novel It teaches successful publlc speakmg by means of mterestmg and 1nstruct1ve programs Spreads h1kes and such actxvxtles as are always of mterest to the Amerlcan boy are also featured And so wlth 1ts novel way of teachlng debatlng and publlc speakmg successfully thls club can well say Semors may rome and Senxors may go but the Assembly goes on forever' WILLIAM EVANS Or H1 if . . . 5 . ' 9 , . y . . i . . ' . 9 V n 9 . ' 3 . . . . M V ,, . , . , . . . - erator, the club, which existed for twenty or twenty-one years at the former , ' : . . . . . , , - . . . , . v . . . . . . ' , lb ' ' . . . b . .. rc 11:4 'fd Suzvrffj. HH111 IZ ASSEMBLY EKUZHH THE GLEE CLUB Moderator Mr Mag nn Treasurer james Burton Presldent Ray Wxse Sergeant at Arms Augle Hell V1ce Pres1dent Elmer F1or1to P1an1st Olxver Hasek Secretary Vernon Morr1s STOP at room 301 any Wednesday or Friday durmg the s1xth perlod LOOK at a group of boys who have banded together m order to get a better understandlng of chorus muslc and LISTEN to these same fellows smvmg and see lf you are not agreeably lmpressed Some people don t belleve that Muslc hath charms to sooth the savage breast That s because they haven t heard the Roosevelt Glee Club The Club slngs all sorts of songs school songs sentlmental songs popu lar songs and the meetlngs usually end wlth a lxvely number that sends the members out 1n a happy frame of mmd Mr Magmn IS the leader of thxs growlng organxzatlon and he and all the members extend a cordlal mvxtatlon to any boy who has the s1xth per1od free to come up and pay us a V1Slt VERNON MORRIS Secretary PRISCILLA CLUB Colors Blue and Gold OFFICERS Moderators Mzss Gxlmore and Mlss M1er Vxce Presxdent Helen Ehrsteln Secretary EISIE Jansky Treasurer Helen Paschen Sergeant at Arms V1ola Melse The Prxscllla Club meets every Thursday afternoon mn Room 16 Thls term the members of the club declded to make artlcles for themselves Under the able ausplces of Mlss M1er and M1ss Gllmore many pretty and useful thmgs were made At the begmnmg of the term the club conducted a membershxp cam pazgn The members were dxvlded mto two teams the Blue and the Gold Interestmg and hvely competltlon vsas shown by all the members of the club The Gold won the contest and according to prevlous agreement the losmg slde entertamed the club CCont1nued on Page 1932 O I1 7 : . . . K b ' , . U . ' or - ' - 7 9 l . U. . . . . . - , , . President Helen Del Cour U Q 7 Hr I liI1l7'r'. . ' f I -5- XHY!!Yl 'M I Hnzdr d S H x If PRISCILLA Ifmdr d 5 fufx I0 GLEE CLUB UB CATIONS CL VO Q 3' S. 'Q '5 Q. U7 'B Q 'E 'lf 'Su fz I' A EWZHE VOCATIONS CLUB Moderato MlSS Suror' OFFICERS Pres1dente B anche Marte VICE Pres1den Charlotte Demxo Secretary Dorothy Semon Treasurer Ethel Sea Sergeant at Arms janet Barthel Ouch' Oh excuse me but Im 1n a b1g rush' Where ya o1n 9 Vocat1ons Club have a lotta fun Wanta come along Surely That IS the way all the ff1rls feel when they are gomg to a meetmv 1n a b1g rush The purpose of the club IS to enable the curls to mcrease thelr knowledge of all kmds and var1et1es of occupatlons They go on tr1ps to d1lTerent mercant1le estabhshrnents and get valuable 1nformat1on EVERY GIRL IN THE SCHOOL IS ehgxble so U1rls 1f you are mterested come up to Room 230 next Thursday DOROTHY SEMONIIN STAMP CLUB Moderator Mr Crosbv OFFICERS Pres1dent Me1v1n Barkon V106 Pres1dent Bernard Kam1ner Secretary Charles Wettengel News Edlt0f R1chard Burg Sergeant at Arms Hugo Meyer Aprll 1 Got to school just on tlrne Went up to the Stamp Club that what you call a real club No dues a real moderator and a fine bunch ot boys And when It comes to buy1ng and tradmg stamps that s the place you want to go to DlCk bought a stamp for a penny that IS worth S1 50 I traded a Tr1n1dad for a good Br1t1sh Gulana Mr Murray a well known ph1late11st gave a talk on the collectlng of stamps I learned a lot Meetmg adjourned at 4 15 Went home and pasted my stamps ln my album then stud1ed for the rest of the evemng THOMAS MACKENZIE C71 11141 N F . . 1 I .1 I F. ' 1 1 T1 ' - ' n T I q,. CY bo - - S 46 7, H , . . .. Y Y ' ' 9 Y! li O, ' D H . , D.. , . . Cl V9 . . U . - u 1 D D H. . ,, . . . ' a . 4, . . . ,, . . : . E, . . . . f ' .1 ' e, . . . ,Q . . 1 5 ' Y 7 . . . , ' 1 u s 1 - I . . , 11' 111 1 .'d . 1'I'.'r1fj1'-.v1,1' sv Z Z ' 4 Q 1 z Imzff CLUB P AM ST ,... 5, - '-1. ,JJ N . . . fl ll I- iv i I ' 7 -A inf---A--. M4 4Tft.'l..--..,,,1iQ'4i7 lv, A 1-4 - - 4 A--- 4-- - ---- v-. -...- QL... , . , , A A EWEHE Q23 ENGINEERING CLUB Moderator Mr Gammeter OFFICERS Presxdent Carl Stellmh V1ce Presldent Oscar Rosenkoetter Secretary Carl Weber Treasurer Harry Gmdra Sergeant at Arms Jauslm Stutz The purpose of the Engmeermg Club IS to present to mterested boys arxous englneermg processes and projects Thls 1S accomplxshed by Held fr ps lectures and General d1scuss1ons The excurslons to lndustrlal centers vx here manufacturmg processes are seen and explamed make up an lmpor ant part of the club s act1v1t1es A tr1p IS made every second or th1rd week nd the followmg week the varxous phases of the process or project are dls cussed durmg the meetmg typical program for such a meetmg IS as follows General report on trxp to Auto show The mductlon coll 1n automotwe engmeermv DISCUSSION of the sleeve valve motor General pomts on upkeep of cars Automotxve engmeermg and 1ts future Any boy mterested m envmeermg would do vxell to belong to the En gmneermg Club where a more General and a broader VIEW of the field can ne had PAUL MILLER I N I I . I . . U .J . . . . . . . . . I , b . , Y ' ' v ' - - , . . . . . . L . , E . . . . - A . . . : 1. ' . ,, . . J- ' . 4. ' . 5. . . . . ' I b ' - 1 ' b A4 Ill H1 f N mm B CLU NG I NEER I ENG 'X X g 'i , N - S f gi Q E ML no l if 5 , ' ,, ,W r' , 5, N ,NK , i b :W . 5. . N 1 an ' ' S -E- wih v ' ' X - - s 'Tf , 8 Q Q. H f Ia V1 I ..K Q .. . . J. V EVJHHE THE STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS Moderator Miss Crowder Presldent Laura Brlscoe V1ce Presxdent Edgar Bohle Secretary Claxre Weller Sergeant at Arms Edward Broe CHAIRMEN OF SIX STANDING COMMITTEES Athletlc Fred Hrnes Audxtorlum Ahce Sohnle C1t1zensh1p Edgar Bohle Fmance Irene Brady Personal Property Harold Mlller Soclal Lora1ne Z1mmerman Every orgamzatxon at Roosevelt has endeavored 1n th1s first term to set a hlgh standard whlch rrnght serve as a model for all future terms at Roosevelt The Roosevelt Student Councll has proved no exceptlon to th1s rule' Under the leadershxp of the Presldent Laura Brxscoe and the Chalrmen of the SIX Standmg Commlttees the Councxl has set a goal toward whlch future Councils may strxve Early rn the term the Presxdent announced her Constructlve Feature It was the Clrculatxng Llbrary The Councll gave 1ts full support and the Llbrary was establlshed It promlses to be a permanent feature at Roosevelt The Aud1tor1um Commlttee has arranged many mterestlng as well as profitable programs The school appreclates thelr line work The Athletlc Commxttee has arranged rallxes provlded for electlon of The Soclal Comm1ttee conducted two new junlor partxes and not bemg content wlth that took over the edxtmg of the Roosevelt Handbook whxch w1ll be xssued next term The Cltlzenshlp Committee put on the Cmzenshlp Carnpamgn Thls scheme has been Instrumental mn decreasmg tardlness encouragmg thr1ft and promotmg better scholastlc records The Flnance Cornmlttee took charge of the recelpts and expendrtures of the term and put over the sale of Senlor Play t1ckets The Personal Property Commlttee has trled ID every way to lncrease a regard for school property nn the Student Body They have solved the problem of lost locker keys and are ready for more work It may be seen that th1s Councll has been more than actxve Rooseveltlans make the next Councll as good a one as th1s by choosmff your Representatlves as carefully O1 11111 1 cheer leaders: pushed the sale of tickets, and planned for Field Day. . . . . i, A V . . U. . . . a zu Ja' 'uri Ifsyfzfjt 1 X141 3714 zlzmdnd lzzylztx ore ,Vi ' 'a-, 1 'S -'L 1 YJ. zr, , lf- ,A 4 4: . I F '- ff '11 - .135 :jg 'I K 1.l Q. 1 'vffif .--If RUUEH RIDERS fl QQ? L., g L-,-.5 C1 Jw ,fx-f Qw, I JA WITH OUR ADVT-TRTISERS Bred Wlth a reputat1or1 Ou Lumen Room Poll They Sat1sfy G1fts That Last I d walk a mlle DEIICIOUS Refreshmb Don t say paper When words fa11 send Keep that School G1r1 We have come to sta It pays to advert1se Keep your Clty clean After Every Meal Complex1or1 Report Caro D1p1omas For my ho he work IU VHCHUOII ay Rouvh R1der A Note Home Luc1lle Wallace B111 Thomas Mr '-Ioffsten MISS O Leary Mr McKay blows the WhlSt1C Let us take care of your bloommb problems Mr Hart and M155 Blodbett What are the w1ld waves saymg S1ster dear to me? Study your lessons and you w1ll always happy be uahty not quant1ty Harold M1l1er KIN FOLK An Ir1shman was Slttlflo' lI'l a tfalfl bes1de a pompous 1'1G1x1d,1al who was accompamed by a dog Fome doo ve have sald the Ir1shmar1 Phat kmd 15 11? A cross between an Inshrran and an ape the man repl eo Shure and lt s related to both of us the Ir1shmar1 rewomec U ilu V 6 'A f .... f ..... rQ'QQr...,.Y--1 'g - .,... ,. ,A 1 ffiff I' ',,,.-wf' -I -- 'I' . f 1, ' - , , l ' P - , '-Z ...-f 'r YI 'X 1 X T I Q A. ,I 1 , 1 , ? 1, ' 'Q O 'Y V, I t , . 6 -U. If ll Z 5 dai , f fu 7 Q ... H . . V M T . N S 14 - 11 'Q st ' ' . ll 9 - -- T , X H . . N - Un -X , , , ,, .1 v 1- Q - , ,.... . ,, . , , .., b We aim to please t ,t,,, , , L The Stat? u ' T , ,,,,, , , H . U - . . ., . it 3, iii iiii- i ' N AA ' 'V 1- ' 'v ' 1 ,, N . H - O, A ..YVV I . A O M .h . ' . Q irvr H Y H V 1 .. , - V ., .KQ . ' IV ' . . , , , h b A . Y Y A ' 1- ' A ' -v ' ' 1. ' ' ' '- cl . ' - - ', 1 ,H . 'l '. u ' v wr 'i - - 1 211' V lHl'I'1'1i l.f1fr -Ii. EWENH AN EGYPTIAN WEDDING JOHNNY WALKER from PALL MALL was on h1s way to see h1 old fr1eno FATIMA marrled to Lord CHESTERFIELD He thoubht he had made a LUCKY STRIKE when he met HERBERT TAREYTON and MILO Then along came PRINCE ALBERT ln a TUXEDO wlth SERENE express1on rxdlng on a CAMEL and lookm very NATURAL When they had reached BUCKINGHAM Palace and had saluted the FGYPTIAN DEITIES they percexved a BLUE BOAR wlth a VELVET skln standmg before the palace just then up came BIG JOHN and slew It with an ARROW Whereupon DUNHILL yelled out O MAR' Tha was a HOME RUN' After the wedding PRINCE MELACHRINO made a CLOWN of hm' self by playxng the golf course 1n ONE ELEVEN whxle HENRY THE FOURTH made It 1n FIFTY FOUR An opt1m1st 1S a guy who works a cross word puzzle wlth a fountam pen Nervous Old Lady I don t l1ke th1s road I just know somethln awfu IS gomg to happen Conductor how often do you k1l1 a passenber on th1 11ne9 Conductor Only once Madam Sue The artlst says that 10000 won t buy that p1cture he has on e h1b1t Sam I rn one of the 10 O00 Frederlcks What are you golng to run the mlle or two mlle H111 I don t know Ill tell you at the end of the rnlle T-I I wonder how It IS a glrl can t catch a ball l1ke a man She Oh a man IS so much bngber and easler to catch Irate Employer Late again d1d you ever do anythm on tmae Clerk I bought a car A llttle g1rl ran mto the house crymg bltterly and he mothe ce er what was the matter Brlly has broken 'ny dolly she sobbed How d1d he break tt' asked her mother I h1t hlm on the head wlth It was the answer K ffl 'C . 1 . U A 1 w v - . , E . . . . . O, 1 5 ' 4 1 ' ' U L Y! I ,- ' Q S , . . . . , : ' ' fr v t, . . , U ' 77 , st vv . , . , it ' ' ' 1. . , . .H- ' ' vw , n 1 vu . , . . . U . . . D.. . M A ' . ' , u s 1 - u I M . . . , . ,. - 6. - l H . . . ., n . , U - I M . u . . or . T, . , D . . , 4. -y . . . . . T Y- ad d , , . . -. gg ' 97 A , . na ' ' !7 . . . H . . . . ,, , . ,...' ,.',,f!g'v..,,.,. l.. rnlur .1711 .-.., BUJEHH WHY SOME PEOPLE COME TO SCHOOL Bohle To ma e more E s Moeller So lee can brmg Al1t'1 Dnemer To loop: mdrfferent Ruth Henckler To talk Blanke To talk to Marguerete Hesse To pester the teachers Allce Sohnle To show her nevx clothes Gans To find a nevx Urrl Vxrgmla Weber To carry notmces Keeble To k1ll tlme Hem To est W1se To play baseball Laura Brrscoe To run the school Young Wlfe The post offices are very careless sornetlmes dont you hmkl' Sympatheuc Frxend Yes dear Why? Young Wlfe Fred sent me a post card yesterday from Phxladelphla v.here he IS stayxng on buslness and the s1lly post office people put an At lantlc Clty post mark on the envelope Mamma Teddy you should always say Thank you when anyone xx es you candy apples COOk1CS or the hke Teddy All rrght Mamma let s pract1ce They told me th1s suxt would wear l1ke lron and lt has I ve had It two weeks and 1ts rusty FAVORITE SONGS If I Cant Get the One I Want Ill Take the One I Can Sheller When My Shoes Wear Out Ill Be on My Feet Agaxn Theodore Flueger They Call Me B1lly cause I m the Family Goat Wxllxam Evans Asper1n my Head Aches for You Arm1n Moeller A Sock on the Eye Is Worth Tvxo on the Foot Al Burns When the Banana Skms Are Bloommg Ill Come Slldmg Back to You Freund Cltllefl Thats my car A th1ef IS just Exmg a blowout Pollceman All rrght I ll go over and arrest hlm CITIZEN Sh h h' Walt t1ll he gets the tlre pumped up Orr fd! alt I, ' T . IX . 4 W' A C- . 1 . . l Y .- Y l 7 . Z, . 1- r ' . An Y- h ' 9 . . , . ' 91 ' ' , .4 va . , . . . ' U . . ' v . A V - ' - 71 , n s 1 - . . . . ,, U Y b v v Q - , sz ' s ' an . , , . U . . . . . , . , . , , - s as . . .. . , N , . - . ., . . H , . - an ' 9 V ' Y! ' ' na ' YV ' , . - . .. I H U . . , . . , . . .' . H , . . . . ,, . ' U . . , . ,, . , . . . u M . . . ,, , , -. . 1 fluvmr gan :jf-jun' BWZHH ACHIEVEMENT 1-ler heart swelled w1th pardonable prrde as she watched h1m He was ner son her 11ttle boy who only a few short years ago had played at her knee Lrttle then had she thought that he had that v1tal spark of gemus whlch would eventually place hlm where he now stood among the verltable kmgs of the earth Llttle d1d she dream when he l1sped h1s chlldlsh amb1t1ons to her that they would be fulfilled m thls wonderful way Lrttle d1d she guess when he brought her the plctures of Napoleon Caesar and W1ll1am jennlngs Bryan that some day he would be greater than they As he moved about among the men who Hew here and there at h1s bld dlng he seemed the persomficatlon of all the VIYIJCS of st1ong Manhood And he was her son She watched hrm as he gave mstructlons to h1s subordmates ever cour teous and kmdly yet always w1th the touch of aloofness whlch set 'um apart from all others even the brllllant throng rn that great room She turned to go stumblmg a l1tt1e bl1nded w1th tears of happlness Her mother s heart was hlled to the brrm w1th swelllng prxde Now lt could not be sa1d that she had worked m wam For was he not her son her rlttle Gerald now Head Walter ln the b gge t and smartest hotel dmlng room 1n the whole c1ty9 HEARD IN THE LUNCH ROOM Boy gets sandwlch but finds no ham between the bread whereupon he ays Shuffle em agam I got the joker Agent When are you gomg to pay for that sewmg machme I sold you9 Mrs So and So Pay for xt? Why you sa1d that 1n a short txme xt would pay for 1tself Last nlght slr I dxstmctly saw my daughter slttlng on your lap what explanatxon have you to offer' I got here early slr before the others A man m a mental hospltal sat danglmg a stlck wlth a pxece of strmg attached over a flower bed A V1S1t0r approached and wrshmg to be affable remarked How many have you caught? You re the mnth was the reply Volce From Hall Edna doesnt that young man know how to say good nnghta Edna I ll say he does Dar Jluudlrd Ezghtt fi C , . . . , Q . ' 9 I y ' 1 . . . . . , - 1 1 . n , - , . 9 u 3 Y I T , . iv s - . - . . A . . ,, Boy. 'Grmme a sandwlch. 9 1 , U ' ' ' ws s . . . 19 h H . . . . . . ' ' u . Q . ,, 3 U 7 . ., .. - U 1 9 ' ' 1 7 7 u 59 , . U v - ss , . . , ,, . - . , an 9 13 5 1 - 4' -- it EVJEHH Mr Hoffsten Thomas are you copy me from Smlthi' 1 Ix slr I m not He hasn t wrltten a thlng yet that I dldn t know No Allta a satlre IS not a preclous stone You can t sleep ln class I know lt Ive been trymg for t e last half hour FAMOUS SPRINGS Hand Held A steam roller rolled over a stray camne And Hatted hlm east and west He dldn t have tlme to utter a whme For no doubt h1s pants xx ere pressed Sunday School Teacher Now rf Vou are bood chlldren there wtll be anve s around your bed at mffht Tommy Dont I know lady an s v cant dey b1te9 Bed 1-1 Hot board Maln at --P Cool a leak of l1fe an exam Burns I thought you xx ere suierm from a chlll Smlth I was but I shook xt off Aha crled the eb, As lt splashed a b1t I was cast for a v1l1a1n And made a hat Maxine What makes your cook bow legged? Burton He Uot that way from fldlng the ranges Rub adub three men 1n a tub the tub s 6,08 Ns. PUTTING ON DOG Ruth Ctrymv out for class day pro bramD Ive been told I m very pretty Mr Kammerer Cant you take a joke Mzss Bennett The anclent Greeks commltted su1c1de often Bohle Them were the days You made of sand paper aye there S the rub can only do xt once now U Hn , 4. - - . . ,, . Y . zI3'll- --1 5 Y ' - , - ' . 0, . - n . 1 Q nl . . - ' I S 1 T , u ' n s ' - 'a 0' I I D 1 U - v ' h lb , .L Q V Q i , - . , 3- . 1 ' - U 115 l -- ,Q 251. ,iis ' ' tx Y . I - mmf s-.2 I ' .QQ www: S 9-- i ' K? -1 Z I 1 l --YS T 5?-'-'zfw 1 h D- r.. 7 , --s kv V It ----T . X , w M 'r r I I - 5' 1 I g 42 - C , 1 H , . .. . v ' ' bb uh 71 ' 0,0 , . . 1 H . . . D - - U or . U - Q .. , 1. ' 1 n I . ' . 2 3 SO . H 1 U . . ' b . .H . 1- ' ' ' - v. ' . ' , u ' v ' - . Q . ,. 1 I ' n :gy Jymlffmf ffiflflf-',-.ff.l' EWEHH Burns I would hke to marry your daughter slr Mr R1ckey When 'ny daughter 1S marr1ed lt w1ll be to a smgle man not a quartette ANO'l HER EXCUSE FOR TARDINESS Cullen and Al were late for school and of course had to explam What made you late Cullen? asked Mr Hoffsten I was dreammv I was goxng to Eur ope and I thought the alarm clock was the wh1stle of the boat I was gomg on was Cullen s qulck answer You d1d? asked Mr Hoffsten Now Al what have you got to say for your self? I I was wamng to see Cullen off Mlldred A burglar broke lnto our house last n1ght Celeste What dxd he get? Mlldred Practlce DO YOU KNOW THAT 1 There are no bones ln 1ce cream? 2 Out of 100 men at a masquerade dressed as toreadors 100 think they look l1ke Valentmo? 3 MlSSlSS1ppl has no husband? 4 Yo.1 can t bounce a snowball? 5 If all the boxes of clgarettes sold 1n New York C1ty 1n one day were placed on top of each other they would probably fall over? H What txme should I come? She Come after supper H Thats what I was commg after If Why Dld I Klss That Gxrl? two step and Down 1n Old VIYUIFIIS a waltz what as Bred ln Old Kentucky Ten cents a loaf She sat on the steps at e entlde Enjoymg the balmv a1r He came and asked May I sxt by you slde? And she ga Je a xacant stalr M1 s Grace Why havent you you lessons? ulla I couldnt study the hght went out M1ss Grace Why dxdnt you turr them on and send Ralph home? Schackmann The other mght I was read1ng ghost storles and a woman s forrn suddenly appeared before me Mlller Specter? Schackmann No' Wouldn t have been scared rf I had Coll to Dlemer Is that your own fac or are you breakmg It ln for a frlen A small boy who was Slttlflg next to a very haughty old lady 1n a crowded tram kept snlfflnv 1n a most annoymcf manner At last the lady could bear lt no longer and turned to the boy Boy have you got a handkerchlef? she demanded The small boy looked at her for a few seconds and then 1n a d1gn1Hed tone came the answer Yes I have but I dont lend It to strangers Harmon Q1n Boyd sj Say lemme have one of those new Corn Belts that Ive been hearlng so much about O1 f-Im dr d fzyizfx , as ' fs . - . , , A ' . IS 3 ' . - - . . . . ' ' ' ' - b 15 ' , tl ' ' . - .3-. . . ll - . . . . . 4. ,, x D Q ' - wa ij 1 1 . V U - F Q H o ' v ' ' .4 vw 'N ' ' .- J u L , . . . an ' ' - za - 1 ,, . . - i S 11 - ' as . . v A ' U . . v ' . , ' .- as ' sy ln ' . . . , 1 U ' - ' - xv ' . ' H ft , ' ' .ll . va - , ll Q. ' 1 o' , , 4. v v ' .H - un . H . -- . D . . Q U - vw . 4- D , . - C . . . . ,, ' A Cl? 5 5 - l b ' ll - Q. ' ' I v 5 . 7 . ' . , ' ' v - v 1 u , - . s . va M - sv eg . ' v , rt ' 1 I as e, aa v ' H ' ' vs IJ - l 'C Q 1' . 5t'Z'e'3l EWEHH Once a Hy wlth Graceful flutter Stopped to rest upon some butter It was soft As ns oft Thereupon he Houndered madlv Wanted to escape so badly But was stuck Horrld luck Cook reached over threw the butter In the frvmv pan to splutter Fly was fried T1ll he dled' woutxm 1 w ' You WO D0 THRT Sm YOU COULDN X Mr Lewxs fquestton 1n QLIIZZD What three great losses have been caused by str1kes? Bemto Con paperj 1 In 1921 ack Dempsey str1kes Carpentler on the Jaw S17 469 700 lost on bets 2 In 1924 Meu sel str1kes out IU the tenth xnnmg cost mg the Glants the World s Serles 3 In 1924 the Hokum O11 Company of Okla homa strikes rock mstead of o1l loss to the stockholders IS about S2 000 000 01 111111111 d 1 1gt Delporte Cat class meetmgj The chalr does not recobmze you Mlss Bar nett S1t down Mlss Barnett Oh you stuck up thlng I went to grammar school wlth you Mlller What made Bohle a mental wreck? Mueller Why two trams of thouofht collxded 1n hxs mlnd Irate Customer Here look what you 1 Laundryman I cant see anythmg vt rong Wlth that lace I C Lace? That was a sheet Storekeeper I dont l1ke the rmg of thls half dollar Harmon What do you Want for Hfty cents a peal of bells? Man Cto a l1ttle boy at the pollsj Why boy you cant vote you arent old enough L1ttle boy I d l1ke to know why I m not I ve had the seven years xtch three txmes Mother Dxd you have a good tlme at the party dear? Dorothy No I felt so superfluous Mother Tnat s too bad I ll go r1ght down and Hx you a hot lemonade TRUTH A doctor fell mto a well And broke hxs collar bone It serves hlm rlght He should tend the S1Ck And leave the well alone ' ' , ct D . -r . . . U - . , s . ,, ' , at . . , , J, -- 1 ' , 44 . 0 ly 9 . , 44 ' 1 ' v D I .... ,, . ts ' ' n . 4 ' It ' , . , , , at 1 ' -r 2 , ' H IF ERE ' ,T Q 4, 1, l ULbN'T ' ' ' ' V . ,, , at f f as 68 7 7 1 a a as . . S, , . , , . ' 77 , K5 I ' . . . . ' U n . . , l , It 99 . , . ' U , 44 w 9 v ' as - , 44 J' . s u 1 ' ' ' , - . , 1 g o y Y 2 ' , . ,, 9 v - l Crt' 'f Iifdzfg'-t' 1: BWENH A Qputtmff hand to hxs vest pocketp 1 5-VUDY 4 HRS Say IS your watch gomv? EVERY N IGHT B Yes lsnt yours? A Heck no It s Gone Mrs Esklmo Well where nave you been for the past sux months? Mr Esklmo My dear Ive been s1t tmff up all mght w1th a sxck frlend Bank President But why do you wlsh to work 1n a bank? Snyder I believe theres money Blcker HAve stock W1Se HE1l ROB rtso 1 homAs Lorenzen H1lL TK ,Ox f I x .9 'v I , 114.0 an I' 'Q Q 1 ON ,sq wi! J -r ur NOT TWINS Hes Beslde Hxmself IT S A BOLONEY I woke to look upon a face Sxlent whrte and cold Oh frlend the agony I felt Can never half be told We d hved tovether but a year Too soon xt seemed to see Those Gentle hands outstretched and st11led That had to1led so hard for me My workmg thoughts had been of one Who now to sleep has dropped Twas hard to reahze my frlend My Inversoll had stopped Mother Roy are you teachmv the parrot to swear? Beck No, mother Im only tellmff hxm what not to say Mr Grocott What 1s a fortrhcatxon Me1v1n A foruhcatxon slr IS two twenty flcauons I fzz . ,O . C 4 ' ' 1 4 , D . I L K ' ! 1 V - 7 x . , . , w f- N A X . H . ' ' ' 1 as , , - . , , D , ,N v ' , ss , , K I . . , , N R 5 I - , , A ' , ss 1 ' ' ' V - lux t . . . . . ,, Q 0 9 L. 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Mm, 11741111 A4413- mm mx' fn mmf ffm, 5 1J,','Mx 1141 . 'arf film w4.'.!H'.' jlfh. fflnkn fffffx .'.f'1.Y Vrkfxf .. ..., ', ,' . , . Y , , , f.ff-n MMI 14 vffulf fm' ., LU . 73 .. M' f ., 1. lm. 1 ,. L V- fl1.'1,' ' hh. ,,'f'rJ 'f' H' - I 1' f,'i'Uf1. .UI Q .M .QW ,M fx ff. ,,' I ,' xl ,. ,. . Xf, .' ,f, x ,f,f. 5 , 1,- I- fn. Ziff Aff A ' .V ff vf ' , My X, , f X fd-YXA nlgy Monlku Mvn V N ous, suse DU ll :Ml NT R mn WTH xo! --x -X-x if I --K 'V IIIII11 J 1 4 CL, r -X A 9 WW 'f we XI 9 X- 0 w mx.bIlIII N 0 AY LEARSS Rau :S 'rn-ui Eli sfncri svn PQEVAI Q49 f-'xx L' 'PRESENT DAY IDEA qw mein SAY BILL DONT T FILLOWS OVER Ii X5 NF HREF T TWINS 'W h No' C0 NC HAN URE 4, EPT cn o T0 v SIGNS Ol' A STAGE um. uP 'ruf QURY 1- E gun as Sprung MN W 0 'WIIIIIW Qs 1, ,-4i I .4 Evri .nga vw-NI N BNN P' Fo'-R .I I T sl' ll 199 f i if I ll Ku AIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IN THE LIME LIGHT CQQQGQU WWII I P7 O '3 L II al ,gn! ' X .3f'.5 ' L R GOING TO SCHOQL IN ANOTHER 50 Venn fy JE ff? ,I f 9X I ff! QL M K OL 'L ,aisle I i vnu-I x LL I. Wx rf 5,55 . .1 I N, I 0 I 57 QALX ,Q M , , Yu- s ? lg -vf, Q., EXXS I S If I 4 X 4' Rou CF A I 0 0.3- UN T we -g I - A sen Lnon s-une -2-T 5 - 4-J ' milxx b Wx.. E' W.--q H .ml iii' . A I. ., iz' II, gaE::nus 'I' gf-I ' Q1 B - -- N I I fy 16 I I is 4 - ,' I ' if-,, - ,xx I' I I ' I I f I 1 I I 1 L3 I I ' Vx 1 - I II I : gf I- P' I ' , Q yc,,,,A S 1' I I QQ! I ff' I su l ' ln.....1 x I n ! 1 4, :Im I I A 1,+1'M . K 15 If fi ZIP lfzrzzdrvzf ,Yirfffy-0110 EUJEHE ROUGH RIDER fCont1nued from Page 1445 fallure of the Rough Rlder The representative must sell subscrlptlons whxch are forty cents per school term or about two cents aplece to thelr groups Everythmg of mterest to the student body lS prmted ln the Rough Rnder An early issue every term IS devoted to boostlng the clubs Athletlcs Stu dent Councll and audltorlum reports Jokes poems plctures and all news of student actlvltxes 1n general are given a place ln the paper One of the fea tures of our publlcatlon lS Mr M1llers letter to the students and thelr par ents The edltors and the staff are grateful to the student body for the support they have given them whlch has contrlbuted largely to the Rough Rlder s success 1n 1ts first term HONOR SOCIETY CCont1nued from Page 1521 Torch speak for themselves Wlth that ultlmate goal rn m1nd all Roosevel tlans should be palnstakmg ln the1r efforts to become as nearly perfect a humanlv posslble 1n these respects Even though membershlp rn the Torch IS not attamed the great efforts made w1ll not have been wasted for they w1ll have had thexr large share of mfluence m developing a finer and better group of Amerlcon cltlzens EDGAR BOHLE LITERARY SOCIETY CCont1nued from Page 1605 Act II Scene Corrldor No 87 Roosevelt H1gh School Time May 1929 Izzy Why my dear s1r does my v1s1on register an equlvocatxon m ln formmg my mental capaclty that at the present tlme my person IS honored wlth the extreme pleasure of beholdmg your royal self? orably submltted to my justlfiable dlscretlon the ultlmate response appear to favor the afflrmatlve namely I consent that It IS I Izzy Such be1ng the xmmment c1rcumstances whlch do foreclose tnerr selves boldness and audaclty do overwhelm my soul 1n trmldly expressmg my greetlng of salutatlon Pat The greetmg IS undenxably accepted and returned In performmfr the afore mentioned task concluslve evidence appears of the opmron that such a pleasurable meetlng as thls IS mdeed exceedmgly mfrequent m the mlghty expanses and domalns of thls magnificent manslon Izzy The mevxtable perception possesses the dnrlsxve potentlahty of surmlsmg that the prevlous statement of yours IS unquestlonably correct Indeed the Llterary meetmgs so mcessantly honored by our noble presence afford practically the sole p0SSlblllty of our concurrence Reggle fentermg Say boys be yourselves I told you not to study so hard Now see what has happened Let s go get a double of Pat and Izzy You saxd lt' CCurta1n Q U11 Hn: 1 Pat-In duly considering the perplexing problem which has been so hon- - . . . ' , D I . n ' 5 3 l- . l' :dvd ,Yim'.'j5-ZZ g EWEHE COLLEGE CLUB NOTES CCOI'lt1I'1Ll6d from Pa e Everybody dld laucfh at the rec1tat1on and the pantomme Was I'1C11 The stunt no less amused each one It IS very unfort mate that our noen bershxp 1s lmnted To a hundred because thls term we were able To admlt only h lf the enthuslastlc gxrls who applled For membershxp We drd so want them all Because they were fine fhe Club meets on the second and fourth Fr day of every month If you re lnterestecl come and v1s1t us Thank you MASK AND BUSKIN fCont1nued from Page 1645 Get mto the game Do not fear your knees w1ll shal e' they all do more or less But after all these actors aud1ence and all have the1r smaller ordeals sometlmes they are cr1t1cs and the1r revrews of plays and the1r dlS CLlSS1OI'lS of authors theatrlcal l1fe and trammg are eally qu1te mterestmg Everybody feels qulte at home and happy WILHELMINE PLANK W1nner of Clab Notes Contest fort and we are sure to l1ve up to o1r motto Nl'11 h rs Forward Always Forward All persons who are takma Spamsh and who a e xnterested m the Cluo are cordxally lI'1V1tCCl to attend 1ts meetxn s whxch are leld on A Tuesdays ln Room No 324 Come and see rf the Club merlt your membershrp PRIBCILLA CLUB QContmued rrom Pabe 2 For the last meetmg m every month mterestmg programs are provxded by the members of the club All glrls lntexested are muted to jom and are a sured of a hearty wel come and a good txme 111 lm if 'X f 11: ' g 1629 ' ' 1 . . . 1 1 . . V g .... x ' l . l , , i a ' ,J , , ' . ' ' sf , - . , v v w l I EL CLUB ESPANOL CContinued from Page 166j v . k ' K .C H v l U! . b r ' ' '- . . . . . gi' . I C . . S L 1 ' . ' ' ' U 17 D I I' Al fl fl. , vfvllr' X. If 'UQ TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS I know all Wlll agree that th1s the flrst lssue of the Bwana IS a splendld one' But thmk' Why 1S lt a suc cess3 The answer can be found 1n the Hnanclal sectlon of thls book Qnly through the advertlsements can thls book be publlshed Thus one can readlly see the 1mpor tance and necesslty of the advertlsements In order to lnsure the future success of the Bwana patromze the advertlsers so that they Wlll ln the future contlnue to advertlse ln Bwana On pages I97 to 207 can be found the advertlse ments of the varlous contractors Who alded 1n the bulldlng of Roosevelt Hlgh The buslness staff takes thls opportunlty of express mg 1tS slncere thanks to the many ad sollcltors who have alded ln the success of the book As th1s IS the first ISSUE of Bwana a large amount of advertlsmg was necessary and the sollcltors deserve great Cfedlt for thelr excel lent work In ClOSlHg we of the buslness staff want to urge all of you when PATRONIZING Tl-IE ADVERTISERS to MENTION BWANA HENRY L FREUND Busmess Manager 1 , so 99 - . . . . , . , . ' . I , - . I if 1' 1 s ! 7 U I C5 Yi . . . . . . G6 ,Y ' 0 7 Y .. . 7 . ' 1 . Una llznzdrwi' ,Yr'11ufy- 'mar THE BANK THAT TAKES A PRIDE IN ITS HUMAN INTEREST SIDE TOWER GRO E BA K Wm wx X, MEMBER E UINITED STATES FEDERAL I Ii 1 Q5 GOVERNMEINT 5 131. Y ACQUIRE THE SAVING HABIT AVE your doIIars when you do not need them so you w1II have them when you do SAVING account provldes you wlth surplus cash to use for emergencies ARIOUS substantial investments we offer to savers VERYONE w1II tell you that the first hundred dollars are the hardest to save the second IS easy because you have the SAVING HABIT O matter how much or Ilttle you earn make nt an unchangeabIe rule to put a certam portlon of your mcome mto a saving account here UT of the tmy acorn rows the mlghty oak but the acorn had to be planted first WHETHER you become mdependent or dependent depends upon what you SAVE NOW OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY UNTIL 8 P M MENTION BWANA 1 95 'f' fi VI, 2 Ski JN' f' T vL-.fc I -ifizisff l nn- ' L ' 1 QW, A RESERVE 1 5 I DEPOSITORY -. A-fu-f--.., '-'f f 92 W' H 79 O ' g ' ' School Days W1thout Exams You can becorre a full fledg d telephone operator by taklng a short course at the telephone trammff school There are no school desks or text books The lectures are just mformal dlscusslons of correct operatlng methods Operatlng technlque IS obtalned by practlce on model swltchhoards Followlng thls the quahfied student operator takes her place on the subscrlher s swltchhoard Telephone operators recelve lxheral pay whlle learnlng and frequent lncreases follow The work IS as mterestlng and dlgnlfiecl as any avall able to young women MISS eannette Skllhng ton the Chlef Operator lnvxtes you to v1s1t the exchange school at 4ll N l0th Street on after noons from two to five g,vHOHi 4 S o u t h w e st e r n Bell 5 Telephone Company 4' e N z 196 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS , 1 l J f. Q o 6 6 7 7 V A - e ' by u 1 l . . , . , . 7 , 9 , - L , , . 54 1 'FQ-C e 3 3 Q 8 4 5 to s LL wrt FOX-MADE MILLWORK AND ALL INTERIOR and EXTERIOR WOODWORK THRUOUT THE THEODORE ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL AND WM BEAUIVIONT HIGH SCHOOL FLRNISHED BY FOX BROS MANUFACTURING CO oHlo AVENUE AT SIDNEY SIDNEY I000 SAINT LOUIS OUR ADVERTISING SOLICITORS Otto Altenklrck Marcella Bauer Vlrglma Betteken Florence Braun Bernxce Castorfer Thelma Chambers jelda Clay Frances Dabrllelt Elmer Edler Ernest Erler Gordan Flxman Henry Freund Harry Halll Mllton Hartxg Em1l He1tzenroeder Otto Herman Moneta Hoeber Ada Hodges Audrey Hubell Alfred Kaeppel Bertram Kaeppel H S Katterhenry Burton Keeble Evelyn Koemg Margaret Krause B111 Krueger Jack Lehmann Margaret Luedeman Marian Mardorf james Meade Harold Mlller Armln Moeller Raymond Nass Chas O Connor Ben Powers Eleanor R185 Raymond RIVOIFC Irvmg Schllfmann Mltchel Schwartz Clarence Shaul Russel Strong Carl Wallace Carl Weber Clalre Weller Henry Welnberg Marcella Wlget Esther Wltt Samuel Wolff , . U I Nick Georgopoulos Elise Mardorf . Roossvmr coNTRAcroRs 97 E. XV. BEIIVIS XY. C. AULEPP, JR. C. BET-TEKEN President Vice-Pres. CY Treas. Secretary CLAESSLEH BE TER MFG OO RUSSELL BLVD AND SEVENTH BLVD SAINT LOUIS Contractors Interzor Equzprnerzt and Cabmet Work F e Roosevelt Hzgh School DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS QUALITY FIXTURES AND CABINET WORK SCHOOL EQUIPMENT BANK STORE AND OFFICE FIXTURES Sixty Sx Successful Years in St Louis Guarantees Our Efficiency and Rehab Irty g n u n I1 your GET ACQUAINTED WITH C 8: L QUALITY n rm h ubway ffunhgmtel n th tu ton nd o t b et q lpment contr t an n ext nd SIINCERE BEST WISHES FOR THE SUCCESS OF ROOSEVELT HIGH 98 ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS o o I . U or th . OF 3 , Y Y . - i . . . . . . i. Let us assist you in arrangin and pIa ning for yo r equipment. We are at your s vice in fur is ing expert advice to modernize and improve store, bank, or office. No obligation on your part Sub-contractorsa CI fi s who ave assisted s y o r is in a r'aIs i e cons r ci a execution f he ca in e u' ac d whose advertisements appear on the following pages, join us i e ing V ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT THROUGHOUT ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL FURNISHED AND INSTALLED BY W C BURTON ELECTRIC CO 904 PINE STREET ST LOUIS M0 LET US ESTIMATE YOUR REQLIREMEINTS WIRING LAMPS FIXTURES ETC PHONE US! ALL GLASS FOR INTERIOR EQUIPMENT AND CABINET WORK IN ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL SUPPLIED BY CONDIE BRAY GLASS 8: PAINT CO ST LoUIS g r: 6' KANSAS CITY W --- run aulwlns Punrnsfs LEADED ART GLASS H II GLASS GPAINT cn MIRRORS 4Bsu LU LYPU STLOUIS L KANSAS CITY PLATE GLA55 Lua z 'clE 5EmoL PAINT PAINTS WINDOW CLASS ST mum FOR ALL KA 'TY ounrnses I NSAS f MANUFACTURERS OF x ABSOLUTELY PURE PAINT PRODUCTS DEALERS EVERYWHERE DISTRIBUTORS OF PRATT 6: LAMBERT VARNISHES AND PUSHEE BRUSHES CQQTSACTCRS BOND FANEUIL INK WELLS ROOSEVELT l:'lIRGqHpSCHOOL X rr S ppl d y O F F RANCK KENNEY BROS at WOLKINS IF YoU NEED 2 C g INSURANCE T F , , A I t B d-S by f h 925 PIERCE BLDG ST LOUIS I4 W II ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS 199 a s o :: . , . I . , . -A I . I . I . - 0 . I I f - -' ...M I MMI T - -1 -- -I.., II IIIIIoIIIQ!',',I,'.'.f'J,. Y! V .,..,, , L0 , , I D , I 3: I ' mn-uucnlnrni A 'git - I . Ry? 3 - M, ' . 1 IQ . . I gf Y Coverin ui ment and Cabinet XVork for the For Desks an ui ment in Vri en by U ie b o 0 - 24 on ress St. Boston, Mass. dhc llaneuil lnlf Yelllg thoroughly durabe - f - I an wi p ' 've y ' r Corro or di in- Llfe, cCIcIen , Fire, Au o, on ee Me. t g t A th 'action t e inkf Mininfum ' Q t ' f lnk, easy keep Clean, a pro- ' te g t d mage to books, and neat in l app . By f th b t In e made. I VENEERS AND PANELS TI-IE INTERIOR EQUIPMENT and CABINET WORK ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL SUPPLIED BY CHRIST MANN VENEER 6? UMBER COMPANY Use Three Ply Flr Veneered Panels for makIng Tool Boxes Toys BIrd Houses Flower Boxes Bread Boxes Chlna Closets R3dlO Cabmets Checker Boards Draftmg Boards Sewmg Boards Lmen Chests Scenery Pedestals Shelvlng Clothes Hangers ChaIr Seats Celllllg Panels Wall Panels Slgn Boards Trunks Doors Show Cases Bread Boards and numerous other artlcles FII' Veneered Panels are the most reasonably prIced soft wood panels manu facturecl and compare favorably wlth hardwood panels from the standpolnt of beauty and durabllxty They are bullt up wlth waterproof glue therefore suitable for both lnslde and OUISldC work of every descrIptIon We carry them In stock In I4 Inch and 38 Inch thlcknesses In all Wldtlls from I2 Inches to 48 Inches and In lengths from 48 Inches to 96 Inches We also carry a large stock of Three and FIVC Ply Veneered Panels In Blrch Red Crum Sap Gum PlaIn Oak uartered Oak Yellow PIne Walnut etc In all thlcknesses for prompt delIvery Om' large stock of Rotary Cut Sllced and Sawed Veneers In Buch PlaIn Oak uartered Oak Sap C-um Red Cum Poplar Cypress Yellow PIne Walnut Mahogany etc cannot be surpassed A large stock of lumber IH all grades and tlucknesses always on hand FIr Spruce Sugar PIne Whlte PIne Cypress Yellow PIne PlaIn Oak Quartered Oak BIrch Poplar Red Gum Sap Gum Cottonwood Basswood etc Phone Us for Quotatlons CHRIST MANN VENEER Eff LUMBER CO OFFICE 8: YARDS HALL AND BUCHANAN STREETS ST LOUIS IN . . . . K-.. X-. . I ' .v ' D , ' ,Q . ' , . ., Q , , , , , . . O 200 ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS BRASS F ERRULFS FOR TABLES Axo DRESSING BooTHs h a b FOR Mueller Brass F dy Co ROOSEVELT HIGH L Y' FROM An ancIent car chugged pamfully up to the gate at the races A Gatekeeper Cdemandmg parkmg feej O W A dollar for the car Sold sIghed the owner wIth a pa thetlc smxle QUARTERF D RED OAK PANELS AND VENEERS FOR INTERIOR EQUIPMENT AIND CABINET WORK IN THE ROOSEVELT I-IIGI-I SCHOOL SUPPLIED BY Cl-IAS F LUEHRMANN HARDWOOD LUMBER C0 148 CARROLL STREET ST LOUIS Three and FIve Ply Veneered Panels In all Wldtl'lS lengths and thIcknesses both Plam and uarterecl Oak Gum Plam and Figured Mahogany Walnut Blrch Ponlar Yellow Pine Fir and many others of forelgn ancl domes tlC woods Plam and Fancy Figured Sliced and Sawecl Veneers also rotary cut Veneers In all grades thlcknesses and SIZCS domestlc and forelgn We carry the largest and most complete stock of selected Panels and Veneers ID St Louls at the rlght PIICCS MURPHY VARNISH LSED FOR FINISHING INTERIOR EQUIPMENT AND CABINET WORK In THE ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL MURPHY VARNISI-I CO. NEWARK N J CHICAGO ILL SAN FRANCISCO CAL MONTREAL CAN DEALERS EVERYWHERE ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS 201 Furnis e y . . Kin si way an F er . ouis ' ' 64 3U ' ' 5 4 I I I I I . Q . We Are Headquarters for - 1 1 Q , , , , r A- 1 x 1 ' Y I I I v - . , . Y X . , , . . . , . , . , . . . T I Mosberger Lumber Co -4. ,, 5 MANUFACTURERS A Band Sawed Southern Hardwoods Oak Ash Cottonwood Cypress I Gum Etc. Drain Boards Stair Treads ' d -581 u A . V A ' 'gf A 1234 CLARK AVENUE ST LOUIS sr Louis The Sanitary Flooring Co WE HAVE MADE VARNISH FOR HIGH GRADE FIXTURES CABINETS AND FURNITURE SINCE 1849 A. ROBBINS VARNISH C0 ST LOUIS MO ESTABLISHED IBB INCORPORATED 1903 ST LOUIS WIRE 8: IRON CO WIRE WORK AND ORNAMENTAL IRON WORK BRASS AND BRONZE WORK 926 932 Chouteau Ave St Louis, Missouri THOMAS 8z PROETZ LUMBER CO HALL AND ANGELRODT STREETS ST LOUIS, MO 'VIANLI ALTLRERS or HARDWOOD LUMBER OAK ASH CYPRESS, POPLAR Cum COTTONWOOD. MAHOGANY AND BIRCH SHIPMENTS DIRECT FROM MILLS AND ST LOUIS YARDS 202 ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS R hen! Germ Proo Domestic Scie ce Tabe Tops ' Roosevelt I lg Chool Of 66 7, A po ular Flooring for Z5 xears Has othe ses also such as Y 1 7 Y Band Mill, Tallulah, Louisiana Wainscoting' etc. Office and Yar s 6 Presco ve . - Holl ve Te mlnal Tracks ' . Fire Proof . Dur bl - Y I . , . 5 I, o o o 1 ALL THE NAPOLEAN GRAY MARBLE A MISSOURI PRODUCT IN THE ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL WAS FURNISHED BY UNION MARBLE 8z TILE COMPANY UNCORPORATEDJ 1109 TO 1127 S 7th BLVD ST LOUIS MO XYILLIAVI C Fox G g PHONE OLINE 334 A r gh Sch l N r S H You a housewife' I ll bet you don t know what a needle IS for She I do too It s for a V1ctroIa Pr1soner There goes my hat Shall I run after 1t9 Officer Youll get no chance to escape like that just wa1t here I 11 get your hat for you Lawyer Tell the court exactly where you were on the twentleth day of sald month at 5 30 in the afternoon Defendant I was on the corner of the Strand asklng a man a question judge Ah ha But how d1d you know it was exactly 5 309 Defendant Ah ha yourself I was asking the fellow the question of what time it was QUERNHEIM SALES AGENCY BUILDERS HARDWARE AND SPECIALTIES 955 CENTURY BUILDING ST LOUIS DISTRIBUTORS FOR METALLIC SASH OPERATOR CO AUSTRAL WINDOW St Louis New York ANDREW HOFFMAN MFG CO Chlca o III WE FURNISHED ALL TRIM HARDWARE For the Interior Cabmet Work and Equipment in the ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS 203 - - . , . ' . . , en. M rf .' , ' 5 Wve re Also Installing All Marble Work in the New Beaumon Hi oo .'ow Being Erected in Nor Im t. Louis e, 46 ' 9 ' , . ,, . . , as ' n ' as I I . . , . , . . u . 0 li I . . . . , . - 17 ' . ' , u v : v n ' ,, ' , - . CO. KN . 9 D . . The Woodworkrng Mach1nery Installed 1n the Theodore Roosevelt Hrgh School Was Supplled by HALL '55 BROWN WOODWORKING MACHINE CO St Lou1s Mo Hall Q5 Brown Woodworkmg Machlne Co 204 ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS ., . , . No. 189 A. C. Mow: Headsrock Lathe . Broadwa , T'ler, Ninth Streets t. ouis. 0. No. 186 No, 107 36-in. Bradshaw. Motor-Dr ' HEATING AND VENTILATINC APPARATUS ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL Ewa 3 Tm E is INSTALLED BY SODEIVIANN HEAT 6: POWER COMPANY 2300 os MORGAN STREET ST LOUIS Mo COMPLIMENTS OF BLACKIVIAN HILL IVICKEE MACHINERY CO 4' 1 See Our Metal Turmng Lathes ln the New Roosevelt Machme Shop and PhySlC Laboratory ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS 205 IN 9 'x ' F LE? J -15 af 12 6: 3 4- 51. J 'hr I IU ' .,' . 1 ' Q , 'TEX' bb A Iii' 1 1.1 : + 1 -Te ' . , . 1 1 O . TEMPERATURE REGULATION normncu Metafmlweath sf I er up Co 4800 DELMAR W J MOSLANK Licensee t PP g t ROOSEVELT I-IIGI-I SCHOOL SHRINERS HOSPITAL ST MARYS HOSPITAL IvIO PACIFIC HOSPITAL ST LUKES HOSPITAL LIBERTY HOSPITAL ST AEN S HOSPITAL ALEXIAIN BROS HOSPITAL jack It doesnt pay lt doesnt pay BIII What doesn t pay and why? 412N jack I told my wlfe that I dIdn t get paId thxs week and she went through my pockets anyway 81' LOUIS She Here S a story of a man who S5 mms sul? 5 srmulfn traded hIs w1fe for a horse You wouldn t do that would you darlIngP He Of course not but I d hate to have anyone tempt me wxth a good motor car ARTISTS MATERIALS EVERYTHING FOR THE ARTIST IN EVERY BRANCH OF ART School Dmfwmg and Pazntmg Supplzes SPHINX AND COSMOS DRAWING INSTRUMENTS USED IN THE ST LOUIS HIGH SCHOOLS F.WEBER CO. vos PINE ST SPHINX ST. LOUIS 206 ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS Is of paramount importance in I-Ios itals and our PuIJIic ScI1ooIs. Tha 's why o . . . , Was chosen to execute the Contract for Wea her Stri in a the , 9 - I . , , . . . , I . , . . , . . , ' . 1 Y ' ' 7 ' Y ,, . . U I . X I V Int A K fl-5, tv' ESTABLISHED I 8 7 5 HUNKINS -WILLIS LIME Ed' CEMENT COMPANY OFFICES ROOMS 902 3 4 5 6 CENTURY BLDG ST LOUIS MO BUILDING MATERIAL SPECIALISTS ALL MATERIALS IN OUR LINE FURNISHED ON THE NEW ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL Hub I met that old lover of yours on the street today He looked awfully blue W1fe Poor fellow I hope you trred to cheer hmm up Hub Oh yes I showed hrm that new t1e you bought me and where the button was off my coat HIS TURN AT LAST Doctor Cafter removmg hrs barber s ap pendrxj And now my dear s1r how about a httle hver or thyrold operatronl' And your tonslls need tr1mm1ng terribly RISK OF ALL TRADES A burglar IH Hllllg hls Government 1n come tax statement made a deductron for tools lost on the Job Evldently there IS some r1sk of loss even m the safe busmess Provldence ournal When Your Roof Leaks Call OLIVE 2853 TRINIDAD ASPHALT MFG CO ROOFERS Tltle Guaranty Bldg St Louls 00 B lt p A ph It PP sh5h gb THE S OBERMAYER CO 1 We have installed supplles ancl equipment ln all St LOUIS l-I1 h Schools also have contract for new Beaumont H1 h School Catalo ues a n cl mformatxon laclly furnlshed free to all stuclents ROOSEVELT CONTRACTORS 207 . . , 2 , ' , . . . . ,, . . A I , . D 1 ' . , Y Sl ' 79 ' I I C. N . Barker, Manager I C . . . - cr GRAVEL AND BUILT-UP ASPHALT O . . 'g - Q I 3 70,0 square feet of our ui -U s a of ' Roofmg a lied on Roosevelt Hi c ool. No 5 'o too small, nor too large for us. . N'l4 f . kb , . Walter Freund Bread Co SERVE All the Leading High Schools Colleges Hotels Restaurants Delicatessens and Dealers FAMILY CANDY SHOP AND ICE CREAM PARLOR NICK s PLACE. M k C y PHONE GRAND 2620 1635 S Jefferson THERE MUST BE A REASON t PULLMAN OLDE TYME RYE d Ch l282 MARINELLO Elizabeth Thlelen 4479 W h D I 00 A RARE DELIGHT WHEN YOU RE THIRSTY GRAPE BOUQUET V53 ANHEUSER BUSCH C ST LOUIS 5c P GI AF 208 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS X er Ireund Pre Al F nd Se L 5 Irtund Xice P s Ch F d Tre 9 . We a e Our and Inspection if Desired Y 9 9 v v v v v v Learn Scientific Beau ulture Makers of he Famous O I The only Authorized Instructor in St. Louis Taylor an ouieau Delmar as ington Blvd. e . 6 Anhui Y ov 'Q 1, -... 10 I Per Bottle EI 355 t ountain OPTOMETRY IS A REAL PROFESSION Its RCQUISIICS are AMBITION EDUCATION APPLICATION Its Rewards are Adequate Compensauon Sustalned Interest The lVI1ssour1 College of Optometry and Ophthalmology IS a real school with high ldeals and a practical program wrth day and nlght courses In our two year course the young man or woman IS given the opportunity to prepare for a lucratlve clean and attractlve profession ln whxch he wxll meet and mlngle wxth the best people and be enabled to render real service rn the refractlon of the human eye the dlagnosxs of eye ear nose and throat condxtlon and the fittmg of proper lenses to brlng about comfortable vrsnon Plan now to enter at the begmnmg of the next semester September Sth l925 For full partlculars address the dean Mrssnun College of llptumetry and Ophthalmology N E CORNER OF SEVENTH AND PINE STS ST LOUIS MO B U E L EXPONENT of the ART OF MAGIC A High Class Act Presented for Any Entertainment A l1m1t d number of stud nts for Instr ctxon tra!! be enr ll d ch season A I-I BUEL 3136 Iowa Avenue Phone Vlctor 1143 W BEN BALK GENERAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP 2820 Lafayette Ave DDLBLE EAGLE STAVIPS ON SATURDAY Work Done While You Rest ,-avi 5 I l Z X 'Q BURKE DELIVERS HIS SPEECH fAs an Eng 6 class sees Mother fsmgmgy Rockaby baby on the tree top Modern Baby For the love of M1ke keep qulet I rn trymg to go to sleep MENTION BWANA 209 . If ic will oee ea . u .l in I . N, X if 'Q . an HY- ' Genulne Sat1sfact1on - ' I , , ' D, ' , , EA Q, lin ' 4 's ,, 0 . 0:0 for I l . itj PHONL SIDNEY 3332 OMAHA PACKING HOUSE MARKET 21 18 SOUTH BROADWAY f GRAND 863 xx FOR GOOD XXORK SEE US HEISLER BROS TAILORS CLEANERS AND PRESSERS 2822 Lafayette Avenue THE RICI-IEST MILK JERSEY FARM DAIRY CO 1007 17 Russell Boulevard jack jokes can be so good that I have heard of cases where a man dlslocated hls Jaw laughmg at them 1111 And I have heard that a yawn can dlslocate a Jaw too Got to be careful about jokes Frltz I haf got a new chob today Lou Where are you work1ngP Frxtz In a nut and bolt factory RECIPE BOOK SENT UPON REQUEST Lou what are you domgp Frltz Nuttmg POL R WA To Use Less Ice Take Enough Take enough 1ce each day to have the 1ce chamber well filled lt means a double savlng F1rst lf w1ll keep food better and longer Second the colder the box the slower the 1ce melts 210 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 1 O Famous for Cuts of Native Corn ed Cattle and High Grade Sausages , . I ' 1 ' r Here s Our Furmture Doctor Who Repalrs All K nds of F rnlt R p ring Refinish ng a d Re ph l t rng Mattress 'Vlak mg R n xatmg and Cha r Canmg Uphnlstenng 8. Furniture Bu XXVI A BRLNE Prop California at Cherokee Ph nes at Both Stores Br I923 Cherokee St FRANK KEMBUGLER 1632 S Broadway 'Nllrrors Resllxerecl any SIZC Frames made to order Photos Enlarged Phon Sldn 5 lO68 The Goldle Beauty Shoppe MRS COLDIE CIBEALX Pr p 3820 South Broad St Louls Vlo SOLUTION OF PUZZLE HORIZONTAL Rough Rlder Roosevelt Elevate South Carolma re R T Pony D Soup Gree Mood Roads Booty Auds Apts H N O VERTICAL Redxp U R Goe Holb Reta e D T Recap Sews Evade Vans Orography Study room Enroute Rootmg Yeads Sooth Eds he Lleve Goo Hunters o Lunch room Sults Aslde Zmc Aver Cooks Lunt Eros Hun Sou Mos Teeth N xctor 402 WM C MOYDELL UNDERTAKER 1 926 Allen Ave FRED G KRING DRUGGIST 3133 CHEROKEE STREET Costumes for Schools Colleges Lodges Clubs Parades Amateur Plays Socxety CITCUSCS Mm strels for rent by ROB T SCHMIDT 706 S Fourth St St Louis Mo Olive 682 you get xt at Schmldts lts Right MEINTION BWANA 2 1 1 Y ' KC 1? O ' Q way . , . . 1. . 23. S. . S. 38 S . 5. ' . 24 . 39. ' . 9. . 25. . 41 . 13. Do. 27. . 42. Iy. 15. . 28. . 43. . 16. ' . 29. . 45. M . 17. I . 30. . 46. 19. Bwana. 32. Stir. 48. Event. 20. . . A. 33. . 49. ' . 21. . 36 .... C. 1. ' . 12. . 33. ' . 2. . . 14. . 34. ' . 3. . 16. . 35. . 4. . 18. . 37. . 5. . 20. ' . 39. . 6. Il . 22. . 40. . 7. . . 24. . 43. . 8. . 26. . 44. . 10. . 27. . 46. Le. 11. . 31. . 47. Mi. 1 ..lf . . . . , . . .. XICIOR IBK4 CHAS A RUEDLIN SPECIAL ORDERS FOR ICE CREAM Sl 50 A GALLON DELIVERED N W Corner Gratlan and Lafayette PHONE XICTOR 6-ll Cherokee Dry Goods Store Agency for Butte ck P tter s Jersxlk Sweaters Munslng Wear 3409 Callfornla Ave at Cherokee N xt to Hat 'Vlart Mr Crosby Where can the mlssmg lmk be found 7 Celeste Cjust wakmg upj Have you looked under the dresser snr? X ICTOR 3902 KALERT S Fountaln SCYVICC Candles and Plate Lunches ABOVE THE AVERAGE 3411 S Grand A na11 was standmg m the road A passm the tlme o day Flat t1re9 Well Ill say' nothmv Stlfflflg Sidney I2B2 x f A , A young man ran around the curve She swallowed the spoon so there was Flxtur s Vacu Cleaner Vlashmg Machmes A A OTTE ELECTRIC COMPANY Contractors and Engxneers for Electric Wlrxng 2800 Gravols Avenue ife-Q TRACK EVENT THE HIGH JUMP BLUE BIRD SHO Grand and Connectlcut 216 PIIVE ST Excluslve m St Louxs lor Buescher Saxophones and Band Instruments Ludwig Drums Paramount Banjos OLIVE 354 716 PINE STREE T P LANDERS 8: PEARLMAN FUR CO 823 Washington Avenue Second Floor 212 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS I I ri . a n , ' , . . fe .I . N . . . . . . . , . 99 ' 7 ' 7 ' ' , as - vs - , n - . , . 3 b . , 2 E. . . , , I . , Z Q ' ' 1 - . Ig X p I 1 . 45 X . I ' 4 fe- . p ,L ' .. 1 and Electric Appliances -iQgg...,g2iQ3323ii:zEJ' Q 2ZlTfZ112:3l :ill ,ii EL? KJ, , ,::t:2i11ZL.221.--:gg 1 .:EZ2:'2:f3EEQ:ElEE1Il . . 'lll'v -'- '--lm -Q 2 2 SAY IT WITH PLOW ERS P1-:LLETIER FLORAL co COMPUMENTS th y dy ST LOUIS Mlss Connor fduring h1stOry Iessonj What are the races that have dominated and jllpsiland slnce the 1nvas1On Of the Rom RIVOIFC The Derby the Oaks and the Grand Nauonal What famous general was buried ln E E 6 Grants Tomb? F1ve letters Ive trled Napoleon and Washln ton and nelth r f them Ht 1635 s BROADWAY zsoz CHIPPEWA STREET 3125 s GRAND BLVD NELSON S BALLET SI-IPPERS FOR S2313 'fkfaiidriiiinivfi ALL PURPOSES Fresh H emad C ndles a d I e Cream ght L t Cl d OTICE' TO PROPERTY OWNERS When you want repairing done in or around the house you can now deal with one company that will handle it all We have mechamcs for every purpose Don t have a dozen dlf ferent concerns We Hx anything m the Building Lme such as Carpenter Plaster Tuck Pointer Granltold Work Pamtm Paper I-lan mg etc Get our prices on caull-:ln It will save you money We can save you a lot of lnconvenlence Annoyance and Worry Prices Reasonable When in doubt consult GENERAL HOME REPAIR COMPANY GENERAL CONTRACTORS WE ALSO BUILD GARAGES Res 3216 Caroline St , Grand 6277 J Office 1643 South 39th St MEMBER OF 39TH STREET BUSINESS ASSOCIATION MENTION BWANA 213 Victor I98 Victor 088 . 18 and Ge er Ave. Saint Louis Closed Sun a ' Afternoons . . . 0 if ' at ' ' , an ' l l ' 1, ll ' ' 9 9 ' Y ' Or . . g C 0 SCHUERNIANSZUCKWEILEQ M Branches KC I 1, ' m . om e a ' n c Li unches a Re uce Prices O v - . , . . . , : y v v , gv U. :a Y ' . . U . 3. . , . - . STOP AT GRAND ARSENAL SWEET SHOP T Homemade Candles Sanclwlches L1ght I..unch Unexcelled Fountam Servlce Grand at Arsenal When you see us don t thmk of Llfe Insurance but when you thmk f I lfe Insurance see us ALBERTA ALLEN ALMA GIBSON ROBB MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE C0 Llberty Central Trust Bldg Gfr ThtL MUELLER Jewelry and Optlcal Company 2529 S Jefferson Ave g r Q 2 L JOST GRAVOIS PHARMACY 2931 C v s A R I. BRENNECKE M 81 d 282 FRANK SEBASTIAN REALTOR 3607 Hartford Street C W g A dy Eb NOTARY PUBLIC LOUIS MO OLIVE 88 PINE HAT 8: CLEANING WORKS, Inc dRp tB kdW Wt k C II d Del 501 PINE STREET xxrvl F MEYER EDR J MEYER C W MEYER QUALITY GROCER Cherokee St and Calxforma Ave V t 4947 4 8 S I. PHONE GRAND 5388 GEORGE MCC NELSON CHIROPRACTOR Suite 316 18 Nlcholas Bulldlng Hours Grand Blvd and Park Ave 7to6and7to8p m St Louis IVIo 214 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS U 2 s ra on ve. . . , anager Next Door to Arsenal heatre - . . i Cxand I4 Res. Phone, Riversi e 6 -M . . . I , ' ' ' Real Estate-Loans-lnsuranc I I 0 Salesmen -l' ' l Edw. . a ner, n Rall, Irvin I ert ST. , . 3 . Ladies' and Gents' Garments Cleaned, -- - -- D e e aired and Pressed F th C d r t . Y ' . or e ra ua e I S a as Suxts Pressed and Ha s loc e hlle You ai Wor a ed for an ivered . Re istered Op ometrist Vic or 742 . ' ' . ic or - 94 t. ouis, lVIo. . A DANCING CLASS for HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS t l d 1 1 Mrs Carrle Prtcher Johnson h d B tSt cl 3640 Shaw Avenue PRIX ATE LESSONS BY APPOINTMENT 7600 SOUTH SIDE BUICK AUTO COMPANY 3456 South Grand Boulevard The largest jobber rn St l..ou1s of Domestic Soft Coal Anthracrte and Sfllltlllhg Coal and Coke Wallace Coal, Co Pierce Bldg , St Lours Fisher Bldg Chr g E ,I WALLACE P d We Match Your Coal and Vest AIIENTIUN STUDENTS ' T Complete Showing of English Wlde THE P5515 713 FINEST 713 Uncle S1 wonders why Women talk so much Algebra was mvented The Democrats vote c1tS use Women have bobbed halr People buy O11 stock People find cross word puzzles a pleasure 7 People get married ln June The customs oifrcer eyed the bottle susplclously Its only ammonra stammered the returnmg passenger Oh IS rt? Sald the customs OEICCI' takmg a long swallow It was Irate gentleman whose Wlfe has been struck by an autoj Hey confound you' Look where you re gomg A llttle more and you would have h1t ME' CHEROKEE NATIONAL BANK OF ST LOUIS CAPITAL S200 000 00 SURPLUS 350 000 00 CHEROKEE AND JEFFERSON YOU ARE YOUING AIND XVE ARE YOUING, BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLOCK TOGETHER LET'S GET ACQUAINTED THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN THE HEART OF Member SOUTH SAINT LOUIS Fedesilfffifne OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY UNTIL a P M MENTION BWANA 21 5 ll I X , . H ls held a Rubicam Hal fGrand and Potomacl In XJ? t ' every Fri a ' Afternoon I4 to 6 o'cIockI from .X . ll ' October lst to March lst under he direction of ' Q ' ' -5 l f X ' 0 0 . l X P 2-I I Classes for c il ren and large girls in Toe, In-.. -X ' Greek Interpretation, Buck and Win and Acro- l X 1 Xj batic Dancing are held a rassberger's Hall, ' I If BUtt0I'nS Grand an Shenandoah. X I I ' , Phone, Grand 75lO if A I- ' .. - ,- l Grand , 1. - 2. ' .- 3. ' ' no D- 4. ' - 5. ' - 6. - ' ' I ' u 9 - rs 1 1 , ' ' as - - vs ' - s - , . . ' ., 'ca o v . sc . - , , . . ', resi ent ' ' I ' ' ,I 0 , . , . Eat Rooster Label Bread J HAHN BAKERY CO It LH PHONES VLM H UHRIC A r LHRIQ. l?964 UHRIG BROS DRESSED MILK FED POULTRY CAPOINS AND TURKEYS Frogs and Rabbxts xn Season KNOWLEDGE The Greatest Educatlonal Work Ever Pubhshed The Groher Soclety 802 Arcade Bldg 812 North Fourth Street St Louls Ohm 2980 All the world s a stage and the people Good Tormng Mrs Jones how are the playe s on It everythmg Yes but most of us are 1n the mob Having 3 grand time keeping my eye Scenes on the furnace and my husband I I There was a thxn maxden named Lena Who bought a new vacuum clean But she got ln the way Of lts suctlon one day And slnce then nobody has seena 3 BIuebeII Beautye Shoppe 2907 Shenandoah Avenue 5 PHONE XICTOR 981 Bob Whnte Candy Shop t,EoRoEJ ESSINS P p 2756 Lafayette Ave ONE PRICE THE LOXX EST ONE QUALITY THE HIGHEST VISIT Shenandoah Candy Shop 2225 SOUTH BROADWAY NILTOR 471 I XIR NL, LLI XNINL. RI XLILRINL. IRLSSINC. RLLININL. DXLINL I-I J BEACHAM TAILOR 273313 LAFAYETTE AVE 216 PATRONIZE ouR ADVERTISERS O 0 F. ', ' RIG , , Centra 375 , L, ' ' Central o - Q . I ss ' u 1 , y - 9 ' - as Y- ' 9, n U . . . . f keep my eye on one, the other goes out 1 , I , - . . , 0 ' . .' , ro . Phone, Grand B37l-R Blossom Nichols . Hours 9 a. m, to 7 p. m. Open Tuesday, Friday, 1- 1 and Saturda ' Evenings 9 a, m. to 9 p. rn, ZH I. I HYATT S ATHLETIC GOODS EVERYTHING FOR THE ATHLETE GOLF TENNIS-SPORT CLOTHING 417 North Broadway 0 S Charles MAY BOYER TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY JW Studio -Q' 2903 Lafayette Avenue PHONE VICTOR 1234 SYNTHONOMOUS Then agam the New York man who told the Judge that ever smce his dls charbe from prlson four years ago he had been making an honest 11v1ng as a boot Iegger dlSp6l'lSlI'1g only the best of goods may reckon that rect1Hcat1on of spxrlts and rectltude of conduct are synonymous g 2 JT3 BUSINIESS IS PICKING UP Ella Cto dog fanc1erj Here take thls ammal back You saxd he was a b1rd dog and he hasn t sung a note the whole two weeks we ve had hmm Q WITT XXXXXXQYS ABOUT 0 GQ 2929 Furn tu Ca B d Sl 2122 24-26 Srgih gn a eve. S Jefferson Ave terms Anaconda Standard THE mc WHITE STORE MEINTION BWANA 217 1- I f. Sl. gin If at 'Q . C-Q' ' - XXL U -T H . JOHN H CEBKEN XXX G BENZ XX N1 XXINGBERNILEHLE J H GEBKEN 2630 GRAVOIS AVENUE 6 2842 MERAMEC STREET Anagnos Bros STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES Imported and Domestlc Products 2100 Franklin VICTOR 4147 O A KNELL 501 6' '4pr,x1 WALL PAPER WIINDOW SHADES LINOLEUIVI 2850 Gravols Ave St Louis Mo SUGAR BOWL CANDY CO Grand and Washington CANDIES ICE CREAMS LUNCHEONS DELICIOUS STEAKS and CHOPS BROS Heller Sxr would you glve S5 to bury a saxophone player? Hmes Sure heres S30 bury 6 of IT1 Conme I feel sleepy today Bull No wonder you ve been lookmg at that yawnmg chasm all mornmg Stewed Let s walt here for a car Stewdest Sno use' The car IS gone can see 1ts tracks Honey Maud Bread REAL LOAF BAKING CO Wh le O 1118 N 13th Street POSER HAGEN PHARMACY 2800 Shenandoah Avenue VICTOR 1096 218 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 0 0 o Sidney 4l6 -Victor 678 Victor 4750-Victor 969 0 o QR 7' 0 K y 1 I ' f- , C 0 . . . . , . Estimates Furnished . ll ' ' ' s vs ' , ss T 1 i ie .YY O ' , In as ' , ll 9 ' ' 9 ' ' 3, , an 9 ' ar , u v ' I ' if 0 Q Y 0 sale nly ARCTIC ICE CREA That smooth veIvet ice cream that's made without the touch of the human hand. See the State Food and Drug Report on ice cream ARCTIC STANDS THE TEST A SMILE FOLLOWS THE SPOON ARCTIC ICE CREAM CO WM VI EDINICER AUG C WETZEL THE RIGHT PLACE TO BU Y Feldman Dry Goods Co LADIES AND MENS FURNISHINGS COMPANY 415 Morgan Street 818 w DE LUXE HAMS AND Scholle s Mllllnery Shop BACON Bug CENTRAL 2 s G a st 1. M 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 MEINTION BWANA 219 .. .3 0 X 5 ' 0 -0 -10 S. Broadway Sidney 0 S dney - ' , . . Tower Grove Gymnasium . - I 316 . ran Blvd. . ouis, o. - - - - FISH SEA FOOD SELECT IMPORTED DELICACIES AND CHEESE QUALITY SERVICE FAUST S FULTON MARKET C0 922 24 NORTH BROADWAY BOTH PHONES y 291 A teacher of muslc xn a publlc school was trymg to 1mpress upon h1s pupxls the W meanmg of f and ff m a song that PROFESSIONAL PIANO TUNER they were about to learn After explam AND CONSULTANT mg the first he sa1d Now chlldren does H mean P 3448 CONNECTICUT STREET E ghty' shouted one enthusxastlc SAINT LOUIS pupll OUR PATENTED BOIL O GASOLY Process Cleans Better Because We Actually Boll Your Garments ln Gasollne Try It and Be Convmcecl ggxxxxggms Qyezny and Gleanzny Cao. 47 Branches Phone Nearest 220 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 7 O siane 3-W ' ' ' 3 . ' as va sa an - . . ,, . l 7 Q l . ' 7 piano Tuning' player Repairing and what do you say, lf 'f' means 'forte , what Polishing 4 ' . as i .99 ' ' 1 1 O O I PHIL M NIEMANN PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST r Gr v d Ly AFTER SCHOOL ANGELS LITTLE HAVEN OF DELIGHT POPCORN AIND CANDY HOT DOG SAINDWICHES ANGEL PETSOFF Stokes Dellcatessen and Restaurant FOR BETTER THINGS TO EAT AWQQEET f wig awe S I E QD 1f5'?f'7fTl jRSg? J?f'?W?'2'V-is I., 7 S A ?lgEr5ssEI4 :sw-Ti.f'7nfJ:T,!-T2 W E M 1 Ex Q91 is !K Jxfgwjblffr SUNSHINE HYDROX H 3 Sqmglhmng Bmsemms FRESH AND CRISP B k d by ooss WILES BISCUIT GJM PANY 100 C Potato Salad Cottage Cheese Baked Ham Mllwaukee Sausage TRY THEM 2239 s GRAND BLVD THE LATEST SONG HIT W11l1e you may eat all the Jelly you wxsh but stay out of the traffxc Jam Friend to Souse My good man you Blank What kmd of shoes do you had better take a trolley home th1nk I ought to wear wlth these golf Souse Sno use my dad wouldnt hose? let me keep It BUSI1 Hip boots OUR SPECIALTY QUALITY AND SERVICE Schroeter Coal Co. ICE FUEL MAIN OFFICE 2300 MIAMI STREET VICTOR 3590 MENTION BWANA 221 . . A VYL:2' -.EZ .I If - I 'I 'z x 5 , ' '-s A-,fig f E5 1 Co . a ons an nch St. - ..., - If: If H 1 1. ff' '- f 1. ff .- , '. ' . ai,-. 1.'5,ewEs:Afi1 A ,JP 5 1:2-if-i'f 1a?T2Eg - , - ,Q N 4 T ,E , A-g I . sw E .7 ff - 5 l 9'nL . ' . A., , A, , Q ' 2 5-L-Zg,E:'-35 1 1 2. 2 1 '.f?- -fd, I . - , - ,' ,. ,L 5 I, VISIT 49 -+ If Xu: Qi, -74 M.:-.fv .Q f - aj :SQ 155133: ii 1 QQ... -z 1- : ' '14 ft., ,Vg H 9 121 E, .45 '53 T92 '-Taz 'awfff--E ,' N- ff - 2 QE' ','i X Q 94 tx' ' f Q' as V, 5 ?k .0 -, .X 'fl ' ' -'I-.mmn-v N An ori inal Sunshine creation of two rou . 3 , . . CTISP chocolate blscuxts, enclosmg a genero ' ortion of fra rant vanilla cream llln . . P EI e Q an I Q a e Branches in over flies . I . . , , . , ca ' . 44 . . , o n as . Y, , sas , 9 , ' 9 . ,, , as - .vs FOR 33 YEARS RUBICAM BUSINESS SCHOOL has been tramlng young men and young women for buslness llfe, and placing them ln the best stenographlc and book keeping posltlons ln Salnt Louis RUBICAM Can Do The Same For You RUBICAM BUSINESS SCHOOL 4931 33 Delmar Boulevard t 24 3469 75 S Grand Boulevard G d 40 LOTT BROS JEWELRY MFG CO FINE JEWELRY CLASS EMBLEMS 613 Locust Street 306 Equitable Building DOYLE S Lad1es MISSCS ancl Infants Wear 3l891f2 South Grand C d 7 y I JOSEPHINE BAUER PHARMACIST nm PARK AVENUE sr Louis Mo Ida L Cwho has just bought a postage stanepj Well do I have to put thls stamp on myself? Clerk Youll get better results 1f you put lt on the envelope Mr Castleman That hnlment you have xsn t any good at all Mr Sloan Well you dont have to rub lt ln J F SCHABERC COMPANY H-'-XRDW ARE K P 2505 07 So th J ffer n Ave 222 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS I Day and Evening asses 'ri e or phone today for bulletin. Fores ran 4 Sidney l605 Sidne 604 o o o Makers of , 44 . H . . , 1, . . - , na 1 - ' ,f , as ' ' , ' 1 79 , lr v . . , . . ,, U 9 ' Q . s , Y IJO er Cent Pure Paints and Yarnishes, Tools ran 476 - u e so . Models Tourmg Roadster Coupe Sedan WE BELIEVE THE HUPIVIOBILE TO BE THE BEST CAR OF ITS CLASS IN THE WORLD BUILT AS ONLY HUPMOBILE ER IMPLEMENTSAUTOMQM WOULD BUILD AN EIGHT l9tlz andL0c.1JlJ't ,fqynl Lguu- 340 HAIL ROOSEVELT' We salute St Louis newest and finest High School May your record be as brilliant as the illustrious American s whose name you honor' twllb m s thth IS th DIVIDED PAYMENT p I d d h DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY SILVER CLOCKS GIFTWARES I I gs y Ity He Qlewely Comoapy th e t I IIIIIIII I IIIIIII IIIIIIIII I II IIIIII III IIIIIIIIIII IIII I II I I I IIIIIIIIIIIIII MEINTION BWANA 223 T T I . I I 1 . . . wee' I' IIHI1IIII.II,II. II II IIIIIIII II 'I I, III.II 1 IIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIII II5 IIII III.II I III'III I , IIIIITIIIII I I IIII. I 'II IIIIJIIII III'I IIII III II III I I III 'I I I I I IAII , 'II' II II' I IIIIIIII:I 'III IIIIIIIIIIII 0 I i e a pIeasure to nu ber Roosevelt tuclents among our patrons, aIong wi ose of Cleveland, Centra , oIcIan. Rooseveltians and members of their families are 'nvitecI to make use of e . rivi ege accor e ere on QCOI ege Emb em Rin and -IeweIr a Specia rel Nin and OIive Str e s-Southeast Corner IIIIII IIII I IIIIIIIWIII1 I - IIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII' I I IIIIIIIIIII IIII I I' III? III-I IIII- ,II I III. I I III I IIIIITIII I II' YIIIIIQIIII II I I IIIIIII 1 IIIIII'I. IIII IIII II I I 1I, I IIIIIII I, 'I' III I.I IIIIIIIIIIIII II PHONE ,ivy 'SQ ?:x,KBQTER Ask Your Naborhood Grocer REWARD' A reward of about 2345356765439876000 marks Want Ad or so w111 be pa1d to any one d1SCOV6I'1ng a way for renovatmg second hand cross word puzzles ' Edna Oh s1r catch that man He wanted to klss me' Pedestr1an Thats all rlght there 11 be another one along ln a mm u e All cross words are not puzzles CANDY CANDY REMEMBER ,QM B 'ibm 5 to buyaboxof 1 GOLDEN VQ QM BEE U. CHOCOLATES xi 311.01115 CANDY HOLIDAY PACKAGES FIVE POUND CHRISTMAS PACKAGES to take home CANDY VUE MAIL EVERYWHERE 224 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ' Q' - S . +4 .' ' A 9 'V . A 1:00 ,, . ,,, ' 45 , 7 x V sei :. A 2. ,E f' 3 1 sms? 1 Q L 6 , Ak gram 5' ' g?-Tf-'If . Est' . ' , sa ' ' ay . , , . . ' , Cl 9 ' T 1 ' ' - t ?7 I: , , W ,. ,, XX 0 ' A uv ' , G 0 Y, G Fwy, ? 2. I' - X 4 A ll 3 ' A -- -. , ,- f N ji M- r Jw X, , . I .I A ', -s' N I' WASHINGTON U N IV E RS ITY SAINT LOUIS Washlngton Unlverslty rs one of the largest and best equ1pped Umver SIIICS ln the IVI1dcIle West Sltuatecl ln St Louls adyomlng Forest Park lt combmes suburban locatlon with the socral muslcal and artrstlc ad vantages of a large c1ty Techmcal students may use the clty s mdustrles as Iaboratorles for the stucly and appllcatlon of theones taught m the classroom St Louxs supplles large clmlcs for the Mech cal Dental and Nurses Trarmng Schools Whatever course a stu clent may select the entxre THCIIIIICS of the UDIVCTSIIY ancl of the clty are at his dxsposal The Umversrty mcludes the follow mg departments e College of Llberal Arts e School of Archltecture e School of Commerce and Fmance e Henry Shaw School of Botany e School of Graduate Studies e Robert Brookmgs Graduate School of Economlcs and Government e School of Law e School of Medlcme e School of Dentistry e School of Nurslng e School of Fme Arts Dlvlslon of Unlverslty Extension The Summer School F C talog and Full I f mat on addre C W Lamke Reg t 6, HINGTON Elf? RIVERS Y '27 SAINT Lows thSrL gT KINGSLAND WOODLAND CINDERELLA SERVICE CLEANING COMPANY CLEANERS Bc DYERS 1544 S Spnng Ave WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED VICTOR 5 f -- QD s A gl THE HOME STRETCH TYPEWRITERS FACTORY REBUILT GUARANTEED CASH OR TERMS Rented Three Months S7 50 p New Remm ton Portable S60 00 AMERICAN WRITING MACHINE COMPANY 807PleSt Ctll MENTION BWANA 225 Sou . ouis' Leadinx heatres ' . .. . ' if , x 'lp . f . we s Q1 G . . D X ' 1 Th ' I . ' Q' The School of Engineering .I , 4 IL' 2 ' 1 I ' . I Th I A A 43 Th - S Hu 'il A I., Th ' u Th Th ' ' Th ' Th ' TIP. . . ' . . as . . , is rar: , ' u v . ' g ' ' IT l A T I 'n . en ra 215 J. A. SOHNLE THE LAFAYETTE Restam ant and Cafetw za RATHSKELLER ACCOM MODATES I 00 PERSONS BANQUETS PRIVATE PARTIES BUSINESS MEETINGS SIDNEY I 039 1700 02 SOUTH BROADWAY ST LOUIS MO CARL SCHLOSSER F 1ne Grocerles 2902 Shena doah A enue VICTOR II7-I ST LOUIS MO UNITED BAKERS SUPPLY CO IMPORTERS JOBBERS MANUFACTURERS 111 S llth STREET MOTHER AT I-IOME AND QUALITY PIE CO B k I Crispy Crust Pies TYLER 9 X ICTOR 364 ICTOR Id HQ-f Dvemo conmuv 2603 mms :Ni 226 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 6 C 9 9 . P P - 0 , I 7 Q n v The House of Quality and Service There are only Two PeopIe making I - V In 0 C-ood Pies , J 1,6 X . ' Q .9 .Af-vgf! I+ a ers O I u - - 79 , ' 2 , Land 3IZO Cad3I0 EMIL ZOLLER B AKERY IRESH COODS BXIKED TWICE DXILY 1613 SOUTH JEFFERSON AVE Cra d 7I-O6 GEO FRILLMAN HARDWOOD FLOOR COMPANY ILOOR SPECI-XLISTS a Fl n Lad and P Ins Fl R Enxs 2651 CAROLINE STREET FOR ACCLRACY Hesselberg s Drug Store S W Cor Grand and Hartfort St SERX ICE QL -XLITY Grand 4119 ROLAND A GROSSF Ph G PRESCRIPTION DRUC-C-IST 4300 Hartford Cor Morganford Grand 3680 St Louxs M FELDMAN MUSIC STORE 2701 Park Avenue St Louis Mo IF ITS CLOTHES YOL RE AFTER SEE R .I VOGELSANG FAMOUS BARR Let Ls Sol e Yo r Bl omlng Problems OENNKER FLORAL CO Artlshc Funeral Work Our Specialty R as nable Reliable Pr mpt 2007 S JEFFERSON AVE VICTOR SOI ST LOUIS R MENHARD FINE IVIEATS AND VEGETABLES 3134 Arsenal St Sidney 2011 ST LOUIS MO REMEMBER CONSERVATORY CANDY SHOPPE GRAND AND SHENANDOAH FAIRVIEW PHARMACY Falrvlew and Giles If you cant walk or motor then telephone We w1II come to you Ph n Ls We D lner Promptlx J B SEILER PRESCRIPTION DRUCCIST tor I 4 Grand 4823 Klngshlghway and Botanical ZVSUSIC CO 5I6 LOCUST BT Mo.s'r OMPLETE music HOUSE IN .sr Lows R MEYER CROCERIES 'VIEXTS NECETABLES AND CANIE IN SEASON Ord rs Dell r d Phone Grand 2632 3228 Park Avenue I A SCHWENT WATCH AND CLOCK REPAIRINC 1 822 S Jefferson Forest Park College Clayton and Hampton MISS GRACE WORTHINGTON PIANO STUDIO Meals at All Hours Shenandoah Restaurant 2247 S Grand PURE FOOD POPLL-XR PRICES Phone Grand J 06 I MEINTION BWANA 227 1 7 'Victor 2-37-L F n - -R r r n - Q. A , I . . . O lc oori g I - o ' hed . Old oors e ' hed , O Y J, O I . . . . , , O O . ' , . AT we Sell on Easy Terms Grand 3900 ' .. V V u O . .. I e o - ' - o . ' 0 e v , 7 e ' ' ,' Vic 36 . . . . C V . O I e 've e A A' Y I ' ASHAMED TO DEPOSIT ONLYAIKHLARD D011 tFeel T hat Way About It' Many of our most successful savers opened then' ac counts wlth but a smgle dollar and we have seen their accounts grow to amazlng proportlons DO IT TODAY Your dollar IS large enough to start your savmgs account here C H O U T E A U TRUST COMPANY Corner Hemp and Vandeventer Avenues 4030 CHOUTEAU AVE ST LOUIS MISSOURI vt HEMI r x xxEsTox v P s L ST jam s , 228 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS . 9 o . . ,, ,,,,, ,,,,,- , ,,,, ,,,,,,,,., .,,,,, , , ,,,,. ,,,,,,,,,, , M ,,,, ,,,,. ,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,, . , ,..,, ...,. .,,,,,,,,,.,,.,.-,,. ,,,, .,,,,,,.,.,,.,,,,,,.,,,, ,,,,,, , , . . , L. . ' ', ,resident Y Y. H ice- resident . . . - -. ecxetar'-Treasurer To the Students of Roosevelt I-llgh School COIVIPLIMENTS ARCO CAFETERIA Broadway and Locust HENRY BELZ Sz SON MEATS POULTRY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 1 H DOBLER Mg 2037 Gravois Ave SHORT EASY COURSE IIN POPULAR MUSIC ught Fro L S SAXOPHONE BANJO UKULELE PIANO ght IJ d p pl WATERMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC 596la Easto A e b y 3339 M I1 g Ave u r BERGSTERMANN FLORAL CO 3200 S Grand Blvd fAt Wy t 2856 FLOWERS TELEGRAPHED THE STUDENTS DEN On Grand and Park FOR PURE HOMEMADE CANDIES SUPERIOR FOUNTAIN SERVICE THOS AHTIPLS VICTOR 322 VICTOR 4876 Knight F llls Prescrlptlons Rlgh 7 N E Cor Grand and Arsenal Second Floor R Y E PRICE N1 PRESCRIPTIONS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED C II ph a Down town Store Sixth Floor Century Bldg MENTION BWANA 229 Victor 868 Victor 62I - Retail Dealers in , y . . , r. Ta m atest ongs I 1 - v - 1' and all other instruments tau eginners or advance u is. n v nue Ca an 636I ic i an n e Vic or 909 Visit Our New Store 7 O . 4. A ' omingl ' A ' New Phone Number, Vic or Satisfaction Guaranteed C6 O O O O O t , A . , . anager Your Doctor wi one your Prescription to us if you slc him, - , , SIDNEY 218 SIDNEY ZI9 ZIEGENHEIN BROS. UNDERTAKERS Cherokee St ancl Texas Ave Salnt Louls FREDERICH UNION BISCUIT SCHOOL OF MUSIC 3332 CALIFORNIA AVE R Vxolm Plano Harmony and V one Crackers and Cakes f 1041 BAKED ONLY IN ST Louis Boys' Gzrls' DO YOU WANT AN INTERESTING CAREER3 DO YOU WANT A CAREER THAT IS MORE REMU NERATIVE THAN THE PERFORMANCE OF CLERICAI.. WORKS We can flt you for the work of a LABORATORY TECH NICIAN 1n Slx Months These posltxons pay usually one hlnclrecl dollars per month wlth mamtenance ln hospltal VI haue calls for technlclans constantly from varxous parts of the Unltecl States Gradwohl School of Laboratory Techmque 3514 Lucas A enue St Louls Mo R B H GRADNXOHL M D D t 230 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Bakers of . 1 1 9 v Vic or A' L! G 0 O O . . . . 1 4 - V . . . . l , . . . fe 7 Vfrite or call for further information with illustrated catalogue at 0 v . ' , . . . . I' , . ., irec or OUR PORTRAITS AND GROUPS ARE BY THE WELL KNOWN STUDIO OF SID WHITING 4322 OLIVE ST The Most Modern and Fully the Sczence of Photograplzy HIGHEST QUALITY MODERATE PRICES OPERATORS SID WHITING BURREL ROGERS MENTION BWANA 23 Equipped Studio Known to GOLDMAN BROS COMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS 1102 4 6 8 OLIVE STREET sr Louis Traveler Your son just threw one at me Irlshman Dld he hlt you? TONY GEORGE T'aVe1ef N CLEANING 8: DYEING COMPANY dLd D GRAND 7954 OPEN SUNDAYS St WE CALL AND DELIVER Irishman Then he wasn t my son SAD SULPHURIC STORY Poor chap he dled last mght Well see hrs face no more S 3020 G d I st L What he thought was H O Was H SO BANK WITH THE FARMERS Sz MERCHANTS TRUST COMPANY GRAND AND GRAVOIS MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Capltal, Surplus and Uncllvlclecl Profits S 600 000 00 Total Resources 6,000,000 00 INVEST YOUR FUNDS IN A 4'k YEARLY CERTIFICATE SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES S3 00 PER YEAR AND UP ALSO OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS 5 TO 8 O CLOCK 232 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS . ,l ' ,i ss ' ' 77 : ll O.,, ' , as 9 9 IVIen's an a ies' Suits Cleaned, yed and Pressed , ' ' , Hats Cleaned and Blocked 1 - , Shoes Ifned , S. ran Blvd. . ouis, Mo. 2 2 4' . , Q bathmg sults for boys and glYIS Callfornla Styles Sepa rate trunks and shlrts belts water wlngs and a Iarge supply of bathlng caps and shoes We also carry boys athletlc shlrts and track pants athletlc supporters If you are mterested ln bathmg 1n fact most any sport you surely w1II be lnter ested ln our QUALITY MER CI-IANDISE at lowest prices H 0 E L L' S 3143 S Grand Blvd SMART STYLES FOR EVERY YOUNG MAN ADLER coLLEc.1AN CLOTI-IIB GRAND AND GRAVOIS -wiv 6 Nj -I YOUNG LOCHINVAR COMES OUT OF THE XEST Vlfglnla F IS so dumb that she walked mto a store the other day and pomtmg at a watermelon sald I want to buy that big p1ckle Marlan That snappy fellow you just danced wlth IS ln my class Vxrgmla You Hatter yourself A SELDE ADVERTISING NOVELTIES BUY YOUR BUSINESS THE BEST WAY BY BUYIING INOVELTY ADS TO GIVE AWAY 616 Gramte Bldg ST LOUIS MEINTION BWANA 233 -1 T H . E I if is ' 1, f' ki-Ai . ' S Q. 05.-FT. 4: x X X - 1' I V I I I . 1 - I ' X, ,L .. - ' IIN :Q X Q .J QT . - IX, 0 -'x . E carry a complete stock of 5 gn -Q . . . . . 1 7 , Y ' fl ' Y . . . ,, . g . . . U ,, . ' . . . ,, 9 ' - ' , ss as , - ,Y 0 O O Buy From Us and Save Money Brunswick Cord T1 es Becker Lehmann Sales Co Inc 4 l P I L cl II 6849 FREE ROAD SERVICE FURLA FRUIT 8z CANDY SUPPLY CO I Fruits and Confectionery X E l8t a d M k t s xx p t S t TELEPHONE MAIN 446 LOUIS MO SHENANDOAH PIES THE BEST BY EVERY TEST ALL PURE FRUIT SHENANDOAH BAKE SHOP 3131 Park Avenue Fred Halter HIp Opt 2010 S J ff I74Z R AN OPPORTUNITY SICIQI US BS 3 SOUICC of We earnestly ask you to con supply for your table needs We are seeking an oppor tumty to clearly demonstrate to you our abxllty to furnish Hrst class goods at popular prices Awaiting your commands we remam Yours respectfully PUNDT BROS OROCERY Retail Grocers 2857 Lafayette Aye St Louis Mo SHAW STATE BANK THIRTY NINTH AND LAFAYETTE MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM U S GOVERNMENT DEPOSITORY INSURANCE REAL ESTATE LOANS INVESTMENTS 39 Paid on Savings Accounts 4f Paid on Certificates of Deposit P M OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY UNTIL 8 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 234 On H ' ir H ' R A XY'ho esale and Retail , K Foreign and Domestic r li . 7 yi g , . - 4.1 ' l 1 ll fy A -1 ' ,W N. .cm-. h n 3 4 ine Bvd. in e XT A ar 9 St ' r Op osi e Union ta ion 1. 34 Years in the Fruit '21 Business , ST. , . Are your Eyes giving you Trouble? Can e You I' Jeweler and ometrist . e erson A 4 Kin., Vic.. - Y Y . - I V Y V . . Y . 1 e V Y. 1 '. , . . CO r v ' , . . , . . . , yr VIRGINIA BARBER 0 CON NOR 3023 Vlrglma Ave Ladles Work Our Speclalty Exp tOp The Lat St Styles B 2710 Lafayette Avenue 'fOHNE BRO? I RED DEVIL VEGETABLES AND RQACH GROCERIES K B COFFEE DESTROYER Al'Sel'lal Street St Louis Guaranfeed 9 Pea ' , MEINTION BWANA 235 , 1 Q 0 . An er erator Always at 1 Your Service e in Hair obb' 0 Victor 056 Vic or 057 KK - 97 s Cor. Compton giummununununumliiuiiliiwinihifnQ'nUm'mImIBBMHWInumiunur , ' , ' 7 -' lg . - fn: is ig' QA E E . .Aim E 74 -' -f :I 5 ' fri. Ei E A5151 Z fiuam WITH iggignulivf JiUm!iUiQiUiU5UiUi !iUnUiU5UQUiUiUf UBUGU' , hi' FOR ssavxcs ATND QUALITY CALL Vnc 3520 Vxc 3521 Laclede Packing Company Shenandoah and Gravols Blue Rlbbon Brand I-Iams Bacon Lard Sausage A Ta ty Sausag wlth a F d Value OLIXE 71I9 CENTRAL 220 GERBER FRUIT CO WHOLESALE FRUIT AND PRODUCE Caterers to H tel Cl bs a d I stlt tlons 804 and 806 N Fourth Street St Louis, Mo PHONE SIDNEY 777 J VOCKRACKA Grocery Meats and Vegetables 2301 South Ninth Street Mxss Bristol to Ruth who has a sus p1c1ously verbose translatxon 1n Latm Thls certa1nly IS 1nd1cat1ve of equestrx amsm JUST STANDS Under the swmgmg street car strap The homely coed stands And stands and stands and stands and stands And stands and stands and stands Ruth When I was 1n Chma I saw a woman hangmg from a tree Dlck Shangha17' Ruth Oh about s1x feet Pohte Walter And how dxd you End the beef SIF7 Dmer sarcastxcallyj O I st moved the potato to one sxde and there xt was STUDIOS ARTISTIC PORTRAITS 3414 Callforma Avenue 3114 South Grand Blvd M K WERNER 7006 Cahfornxa Ave Hlgh Grade Shoe Repamng NRE MEND THE RIPS AND I IX THE HOLES BLILD LfP THE HEFLS AND SANE THE SOLE5 'VIAIN 4650 South Slde Laundry Co 1412 1414 South Broadway AH y GMI Clty boy lookmg for first tune at wmd mxll Gee Uncle Torn that s some elec trlc fan you have out there coollng the cows 235 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ,A - . . . . . , 0 . o s, u n n ' u ' Y . r v - . . .. . .. s e 00 , as ' ' ' as ' . - , ca ' va , cc ' 99 ' . , . l . . . U . - yn 9 ' Q . h, Ju . . ' Y? 9 9 ' ' as ,Y l . l I 7 , . Y 3 ' . . 0 0 - ' . . Michler, Sec '. . ich er, Pres. .4 Q Y - ' ' ' , an 1 - I' -' ' - 5 - 9 v L' f ' . . ya A Real Good Place to Buy Real Good Shoes at Popular Prices PENROSE SHOE CO 3197 South Grand w If It s Footwear We Have Itt ALLEN MARKET AND GROCERY Califomia and Allen FRESH MEATS AND QUALITY GROCERIES t 1 WE DELIVER Washmgton Candy Co WITH FIINE CANDIES at LUNCHES O E 302 Washington Ave WHERE THE BUSSES TURN BABY LABEL BREAD THE BAKERY LOAF WITH THE HOMEMADE TASTE WELLE BOETTLER BAKERY AMERICAN BAKERY co The American Cleaning 8: Dyeing Co M t C K I Whl Y t S K HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED IN 21 YN S th St O 4963 Herbert E Steyh PHARIVIACIST 2901 Sidney Street T ' Old Judge ' Q 4 IS St LOUIS leading coffee because It s undoubtedly St Xe-A-7 ' Louls fznest coffee Str h MEINTION BWANA 237 . For Cor. Wyoming St. Cor. yoming St. ' Vic or 837 0 . v v V For Your Convenience pen vening and Sundays v v v . . O The os Beautiful Place of Its ind in he ountry . Suits Pressed ie ou Wai , 35C Suits Cleaned and Pressed, I.00 We Clean and Press AII inds of Ladies' Garments ' E levi Process in Ten Minutis, 500 Phone: Sidney 932 . IX . we , , 'In . w----77, li' JU I I 0 Q 7 o KX ' :Y '-.- 1 0 we A L L ' 7 O HHWQ 'fzarezz' ' , , U will' ll0UlS.UE2y e les t e Question Whe1z We Make Them They A1e Made Rzght THE ST ANGE COMPANY Qfcggif Qmuwp 704 OLIVE STREET ST LOUIS IVI NUFACTURERS OF CLASS FRATERNITY SORORITY PINS MEDALS TROPHYS , , li F V :L ' 'XXI T I .gg QL' K ,QA ul Q-iq fl-,Q x. ' ,if-NJ! ay I 'Q A PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS WieseIman's Pharmacy Prescription DRUGGISTS H Southwest Corner Jefferson and Russell Aves. St. Louis, Mo. Victor I008 Victor I009 V tor IOI0 RUDOLPH STULZ HATS, CAPS AND MEN'S FURNISHINGS The Craft and Stationery Shop We have the gift you are lool-:mg for Something mdxvrdual and dnfferent I-landxcraft of unusual beauty pnces sunt everybody G G BOOKS TRIP BOOKS The Town Club Bldg 1120 22 Locust St Olive 6902 W F111 the Man But Nev r Empty Hrs Pocketbook IF ITS GOOD TO EAT YOU CAN GET IT HERE NEW PLAZA RESTAURANT 3305 OLIVE STREET Try O r S nday Chicken Dlnn r Sl 00 jack Hear about the awful row rn front of the Mxssourr last mght9 H111 No, what was the matter jack Two half sxsters trled to get rn on a slngle tlcket Grand 6991 Our Flowers Convey th Desired Message MRAZEK FLORAL CO FLOW ERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS 2109 S 39th STREET lNear Russelll St Louls Mo M F HAVLEN ARCHITECT BUILDER 3943 Humphrey Street Grand 5 I33 j BETTER BUILDING FOR LESS THE LEADER IN TONSORIAL FASHIONS KURUSZ BROTHERS Barber Shop for Ladres and Gentlemen lshenando h Shop! 2338 S GRAND AVE Beauty Parlor 3568 OLIVE ST SPECIAL HIGH SCHOOL STYLES FUNERAL PARLOR I I TNITLY ia? IAFAYETTE QW :- 4 Laaiilg 2112? ,,,b , N L rr--ar'-1-:QR X Q Nz.. MENTION BWANA 239 ic ,e , 1 e . Q . . u u ' ' e , . ' : ' , ss ' to ' . . . . ,, ' ' ' , If ,TY . , as ' - - - . ' ' ' ov .. E . , . I I . ' , . 3 . . . . A viff' I' 3025 Q I. Q 4 an ,, . , A A, . , ,, f fri lgf , 1 VF I 1 ,W Zf- ,,.?' Y g.,r.5,IJ ':.'g',g.'kf X '4 .6 A F' f ., Wi ' 697' . 1' .13 re. be if' rf ' ' Q, :wr I. V - .I T -. , , I AVENUE vi . I :Y It f L nf A , . .Mt ., ,, . , Ja ., ' , - f, 'g ' - 1 ' '7 f'::::: .-.V 'N ,. 1,2 0 '. 'f:'fLtv fl , ,, -,f -. Q - ' I .' ' AVL , L 9- ,- -L 1 V -- -- L . ' vu, ' ' R '-5e ' ' - P11 .- 'f-f-'.:-- - -.: 'a. 1-, ' 'Lau X I . l - I 'Q um.,-J ff, .,,,-,- '. ,, , 41, I N ,-f-iw ' I ' ---Y ' , Y A -at -gre--.fr-,LL-il Y A-,J-' -T LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH RENGEL WEBER r REALTORS LOANS INSLRANCE 3127 S Grand Blvd Grand 9544 V tor 09l DeLuxe Restaurant and Dellcatessen 2302 S Jefferson Ave GOOD THINGS TO EAT A R NIONKEN 'VI r Swiss Model Dairy Co JACOB RISCH P p t Dealer ln DAIRY PRODUCTS 2727 LAFAYETTE AVE d 2 ST LOUIS n t 4 GRAVOIS HARDWARE CO THEO C XKIRTZ P p LOWE BROS HIGH GCRADE PAINTS 2645 GRAVOIS AVENUE C011 to Senator How dnd you be Senator I began by addressmg en velopes WM BRINKMANN FLORIST 3146 A en I St eet I St Lous Mo T H HARTMANN DRUCGIST Vlrg d P st Io ll St Louls Mo COMPLIMENTS McNAlR THEATRE Blanche M Eberle PIANO AIND THEORY 3 0 H ph y G a d 855 R ERNST F ERLER MEATS ARD VEGETABLES 3304 Arkansas Avenue S L FOR GOIOIE fCLOTHES F R A N K BONDS OLIVE AND 8TH Avlator Half the people down there thought we were gomg to fall then Passenger So d1d half the people up here PHONE J J CARTEN 3215 Cherokee BILYCLES AND RADIO SUPPLIES SPORTING GOODS OF ALL KINDS BICYLLES REPAIRED P E SAPPINGTON 3871 Shenandoah FINE GROCERIES n d I G nd 2252 KAUFMANN BAKERY C0 HIGH GRADE PASTRIES Wholesale a d Relax 3127 S Grand Blvd St Louis, Mo GERHARDTS PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE PROMPT, EFFICIENT SERVICE 240 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ic I 1 ReaI W'orke sul - Y - . - . . I f .', . anage ' ' Vic or l079 Victor ISZ , ro rie or - - . . ' . ro . I I y MO' Varnish and ass I Phone: Gra lI8 . i H . - , . come such a wonderful orator? ' Teacher of , cc ' - V in 61 um re r n - ' 0 Phone: Sidney I42 rs a r . i. - I. ouis, Mo. , , s or At ' inia an e a z ' . ' 1 - Y ' , ss ' 3, OF ' , cs ' ll V I ' Pho e: Gran 084 ra 7 n 'I , Pharmacy as a Professzon RFLOGNIZED SCHOOLS of PHARMACY now require I-llbl-l SCHOOL graduation for matrxculatlon IH all cases where a degree IS desired thus 1nd1cat1n the hr her plane upon which the profession of Pharmacy IS now operatmg There IS an mcreasmg demand for competent professional pharmaclsts and especially for Pharmaceutical Chemists for the examlnatxon of foods and dru s THE ST LOUIS COLLEGE OF PHARMACY now m the slxty first year of its career offers most excellent courses in Pharmacy Chemistry Pharmacog no y and Microscopy leading to the degree of Bachelor of Pharmacy Graduate 1n Pharmacy Pharmaceutical Chemlst The St Louls College of Pharmacy IS Co Educational WRITE FOR CATALOGUE H M WHELPLEY Ph G M D Dean of Faculty 2108 Zl I0 Locust Street Saint Louis Mo F REED! IIIIMERUUENIG F LORIST PLANTS BOUQUETS CUT FLOWERS FLORAL DESIGNS ETC eM dGraosAeues SCHUESSLER S The Store Dependable Dry Goods lqurmshmgs and Ready to Wear t 3100 Ch k e s a GLS MAULHARDT WM JOSSE t 62 THE UNIQUE QUARTET 30ll M NIAIR OTTO GORGIA OTTO OTTENAD M I S S P L A C E S ADVISORY GROUP d 4 2 URBAN HARDWARE CO Xi F 'VIEYER M H d H 3145 S GRAND BLVD ST LOUIS MO 2826 J P STRUCKMEIER PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY 3901 Sh do h Ave MEINTION BWANA 24 O . . . . . O .O I I Y I 5 3 I I cr D . . V H ! . Y V - S , T I . , . ., I . - , . . I A I Phones' VIC or - 964 First Tenor B 9 Second Tenor H n omon c. Q A- Baritone Basso , . y ' I . Compliments of 7 Corn r ississippi an v i v n Saint Louis , Gran 280 Victor 976 . . I , anager Sldne 493 ar ware and ouse Furnishings at ,, Paints and Varnishes-Radio Repairing i Grand 550 Grand Visi Our Hemstitching Department A' ero e Corner of Minne ot enan a nue v Who IS the hamplon Shorthand Wrlter of the World? Charles E Swem a GREGG WRITER Record 280 Words per minute 99 79 accuracy Won Champlonship two consecutive years 1923 and l924 WHY? Because Shorthand should be based on ordinary Ionghand writing shading position writing and dlsjolned vowels should be eliminated vowels and consonants should be wrltten ln their natural order in the order in which they occur in longhand spelling Logical from the start this ldea has grown and grown and today after a severe test of twenty five years the principle has been almost universally accepted Here IS the Record GREGG 4 243 9 f Benn P tt 3 5 7' c. ha 9967 n 74 IVI sc II s 7 2 777 C-REC-G is the leading System taught in NATIONAL ASSO CIATION OF ACCREDITED COMMERCIAL SCHOOLS AMERICA S FINEST SCHOOLS BROWN S are FULLY ACCREDITED and TEACH GREGG SHORTHAND Brown s Buslness College JEFFERSON AND GRAVOIS AVENUES s a y 2 6 EMPLOYMENT DEPARTMENT BOARD OF EDUCATION BUILDING Ph C t I2 911 L t 242 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS I O O O I . I fy T- I . - . ,fv - O T . , . . . . . . . Number of Cities Using Per Cent . I.I3Q1 i man ............. I63 . 0 Isaac Pittman ............. 64 l.37S7o ra m ................. 46 . 0 Mu son ................. II ... fjb 26 i e aneou Systems .... l..9 . 0 Y 7 o Phone: i ne 62 one: en ra 293 ocust S reet Qintuz Clhnrnlatez ALW AY S FRESH lfierhrnes Qlanhu Qlnmpanu Lmdell 3948 GRAND AND PINNEY L dell J Dixon lane Music Puhllshmg Cn Popular Stand rd Orchestration MUSIC Instr m nts and Supplxes EFFICIENT COLRTEOLS ATTENTION Charge Accounts Sollclt d F C MEYER Drugglst PHARIVIACIST N E Corner Lafayette and Calnforma Aves Drugs Pr s rlptl ns Tollet Artlcles Etc C-rand 3952 W Open Evenmgs E E BAKER MUSIC HOUSE 3121 S Grand Blvd Saint Loull Arcade Bldg Olive 377 378 Bellls Realty Co REALTORS Sales Loans Insurance Ask the Seller Ask the Buyer GEM RESTAURANTS FOR BETTER FOOD 1727 Market St 710 Pune St YOU NEED A Ford FOR WORK OR PLAY Let us show you how you can own a New or Used Ford hy easy monthly pay ments We are Authorxzed Ford Dealers LAMBERT GRAVES MOTOR CO Ford Cars Trucks Tractors Manchester and Klngshlghway Blvd Grand 664l 6642 6643 GO TO T e Imperlal Rebulldmg Co CR E Stephens Propr When You Want to BUY RENT OR SELL A TYPEWRITER 303 Imperial Bldg 922 Pine St Olnve 4259 FAIR PRICES COURTEOUS TREATMENT WANTED ' AUTO OWNERS TO KNOW That now IS the loglcal tlme to have u refimsh your car wlth our all weather fxmsh one to sux day SCIVICC Entire car baked DEHCO BAKED ENAMEL COMPANY 4455 MANCHESTER Phone Delmar 3225 Phone Sxdney 4l9 SCHNEIDT STUDIO ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAPHS 3301 S. JEFFERSON AVE. Corner Utah Oldest and Best Equlpped Studlo ln South St Louxs MENTION BWANA 243 av I V - 1 v- .f- ' in '2I6 ' , 1 u 7 3 . . u e ' . . .l l ' . L' .V 4 I . - - e , e C ' 'o , ' ' , . 808 Pine st Phone Olive 6691 Agent for Nips It, the wonderful cough remedy. ' , I O . 0 T . T Q . . . . , Y O , A A ' ' s AD SERVICE ENGRAVING C0 , INC 618 N 6th St College Annuals Engravers to Ewa were cfdztor m you d Feel the respons1lJ1l1ty that every Edltor ln Chlef feels that of producmg an annual that he and lus school could vote an all around fine accompllshment Much of tlus responslblllty the prlnter Carrles for It rests wlth lum to produce the Hnal plece of work It IS lus eH,ort afler all else 15 done that makes the book a success or fallure Schools ln and around St Louis lcnow the WIQSQ Pmnung Company as annual printers know that tlus orgamzatlon IS rellable capable and prom t A repu tanon that has been earned gy dlhgently doing well year after year the work of producmg good annuals WIESE PRINTING CO 2123 29 Pme Street Samt Louxs Mlssoun The Largest 'Printers of School ofnnuals m St Louis nur Sohooliv Annual Become a successful SALESMAN Take adx antage of the Sales School to be conducted by the WILLYS OVERLAND Inc PAcToRY BRANCH Learn more about th1s most mterestrng of all profess1ons and the buslness of selllng personal transportatron SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATES WILL BE ADDED TO OUR SALES FORCE AT ONCE No cost to you but erght evemngs and no obl1gat1on lf after com letln the course ou determ1ne that ou are not fitted for P 8 Y l the vsork or do not care for It Course starts Monday exemng 8 oclock June l5th at the Classes now formmg Reg1ster now at our show room Ask for Mr Parker WILLYS OVERLAND Inc Dlr t Eactorx Branch d d I t 246 PATROTNIZE OUR ADVERTISERS V 7 - , 0 . ' . Y 7 . 7 7 I ' v v ' branch building at 23rd and Locust. - y . ' ec I' f3r an ,ocus CLASSIFIED ASPHALT Trxmdad Asphalt 'Nlanufacturm Co AUTOMOBILES Delco Auto Co Lambert Graves Auto Co South Sxde Buxck Auto Co Weber Implement and Auto Co Wxllys Oyerland Auto Co BAKERS Freund Walter Bread Co Hahn j Bakery Co Kautmann Bakery Quality Pxe Co Real Loaf Bakmg C Shenandoah Pie Co Welle Boeltler Bxkery Zoller Lmll BANKS Cherokee Natxonal Bank Chouteau Tru t Co Farmers 61 Merchants Trust Co Shaw State Bank Tower Grove Bank BARBERS Shenandoah Barber Shop Vxrglnla Barber Shop BEAUTY PARLORS Bluebell Beauty Shoppe Goldie Beauty Shoppe BICYCLE SUPPLIES Carten J j Blcy cle Supply and Repaxrmg BISCUIT CO Loose W1Ies Blscult Co Union Blscult Co CHIROPRACTORS Nelson Geo MCC CLEANERS AND DYERS Amerlcan Cleanmg 6: Dyemg Co Chapman Bros Cleamng 6: Dyeing Co Tony George Lungstras Dyeing 6: Cleaning Co Plne Hat Ac Cleaning Co Service Cleaning Co Wolfram Cleaning 6: Dyemg Co COSTUMERS Schmidt Robert INDEX 4 4 J 46 0 6 40 226 8 4 J 8 4 J 9 6 40 0 4 8 20 4 6 DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING Bond Clothmg Co Cherokee Dry Goods Store Doyle Dry Goods Feldman Dry Goods Co Hoell F H Dry Goods Pants Store Co Schuessler Dry Goods Co Stulz Rudolph Nlens Furn1sh1ng Tebbe Clothmg Co Vogelsang P j 'Vlens Clothing DRUGGISTS Bauer josephme Falrvlen Pharm ncy Gerhardts Drug Store Grosse Roland Hartman T H Kesselberg Drug, Store Jost L Kmght C F Drug Co Krmg Fred G 'Vleyer Pharmacy Nxemann Phll 'NI Poser Hagen Pharmacy S 1er B Seyh H E Struckmeler ,I P Vheselman Pharmacy 4 9 9 40 40 4 4 44 8 9 OF ADVERTISERS ELECTRIC O e A X Electrlc Co Burton W C Electr1cCo FIXTURES Claes Gr Lehnbeuter Flxtures 'Vlfg FLOORS Frll man Geo Sanxtary Floormg Co FLORISTS Bergsterman Floral Co Brlnkman Vim Bruemr, Koennker Floral Co 'Vlrazek Floral Co Pelletier Ilorxl Co 0 FRUIT AND PRODUCE Furla Frult Supply Co Gerber I-rult Co FURS Landers Br Pearlman Fur Co FURNITURE Goldman Bros Furnlture Co Thuners Ifurmture Co GROCERIES AND MEATS Allen Market Anagnos Bros Belz Henry 61 Co Erlers Meat Market Flschers Meat Market Fulton Faust 'Vlarket Kohne Bros Nlarket Vlenhard Market Meyer Robt Groc 6: 'Vleats 'Vleyer C W Groc Co Nlaborhood Grocer Omaha Packing House Market Pundt Bros Groc Co Sappxngton P E Grocery Schlosser Carl Vockracka ,I Market HARDWARE Gravoxs Hardware Co Urban Hardware Co HEAT AND POWER CO Sodemann Heat and Power Co ICE CREAM AND CANDIES Blue Bird Shop Bob VVh1te Candy Shop Conservatory Candy Shop Famlly Candy Shop Grand and Arsenal Sweet Shop Gerbmes Candy Co Kalerts Candy Shop Nelson Catering Co Shenandoah Candy Shop Students Den Sugar Bowl Candy Co Washxngton Candy Co ICE AND COAL O Connor Coal Co Polar Wave Ice 6: Fuel Co Schroeter Cowl Co Wallace Coal Co INSURANCE COMPANIES Alberta Nllen Insurance Frank O E Insurance IEWELERS AND OPTICIANS Halter Fred jewelry Co Hess 6: Culbertson jewelry Co Lott Bros jewelry Nlf Co Vlueller jewelry 61 Optxcal Co Schuvent I A Watchmaker Stange Co 1 O 29 240 7 239 4 2 6 2 2 2 8 29 240 2 9 0 23 Z2 4 224 0 234 40 6 23 240 4 0 2 0 08 2 4 244 2 26 29 28 23 J 2 0 2 4 24 22 24 28 MENTION BWANA 247 . I 'g 20' IIIIIIIII ' Izgg I I I 2 3 - ' I II I I 2 3 2 I . I C I 198 ' I II I I II ZI' ju 223 .' - ' I I 2 -1 I I I II .,,. I II 22' A Y' I I I 2 2 . I I I 2 B . I, ,' ' II I I I 2I 2 ' ' ' 0 I I I 2' I I I 23 I I I II I I II Z3 1 E 'V V H237 I A .1 E .... ..,.,...,. .I II H ZI3 . 7 I I I II I I I227 ' I I I II I 23 j 5 ' I I I 22 I II I I II II 232 II II .... ,...,.. 2 3 ,V 1 I ..,. . II II9' f I ' .,.. ..... ...., I I I 232 4 , 4 -------'- A- - ---,- 23 ' ' ...,,.......,... ,,,. .,.... I I II ZI7 A ----- --------- ---- ' - H -------- ZII , , .,.. ..... .,., ..,. I I I I ' ' I II III. II IIIII IIIII II IIIIIIIIIIIII I I I I A IIIIIIIIIIIIIIAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII227 , - - - , ., . I I II .,,. .... I 7 A - ' .....r. ..r.. I 111'1i3 '111i'ii123 'ig I:i1111jiII55' I - 1 -v - V- ---- -- A ' IIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZI I . . .....,..,..,,.........,.......,..,.,.........,,.......,. 2I - ,I I I I I. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZZ6 I ' ' .,.... ,,.,... I II .,,,. III237 . I ' ....... .,,.,....... 2 I . II .... ,,.. I I I. I .... II I ....., ..,., 2 32 I ..,... ....... ...,.... I I II II Heisler Bros., Tailors and Cleaners ,.... .... I II ,,., QIO Schaberg. j. T., Hardware Co ,...... .,.. ..... .... I I I 522 A I ,,., II .,..... ...,. ...,, .... ,,... .,., I I I I I I ' ' II ..,. I I..II2I ' ' I .III IIII IIII I I I IIII IIIII22s , ' ' A I V- -,-- 22 5 I ' '- ----- -- f ' -'-' -' - --'ZII ' ..,.. I IIII ..II.. IIII I... III, I I I I IIIIIIIIIIIIZIZ A I' .,... ,.,. ,.,.,... I I ,III I IIIIIII I II I H IIII,IIII II II II IIIII IIII I 227 ' IIIIII IIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII,.. 2 0 I I I ' I ' Mjjljjj ,jf jjv jjj' uf ylnyg jiljjftz V ' . IIIIII IIIIIII I I I I' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZIZ ' I I' W- UYQQ ----, ,--, A A U '-v-'.-- 223 1 ' II I IIIII .II II I I I I3 II IIII IIIIIII I.II I I IIIII II III. I..I, 2 I5 I ' I v Y A ' - - vvlv- '--A A t '--' 3 V 4 IIII IIIII I II A v I H A P I .I.. I.., I . I . . I .I.I . 7 , I ., L A I II I II 227 ' IIII II I I I IIIIIIIIII23' . ' II II I IIII I IIII 222 ' '- I 1 -I I '. IIII IIII I I II I 22: Y 'jjjjfl H 'A j'mjHjj'g27 ' ' 1 II.. II I IIII ' ' , ' I' I II II 227 A I , I I , , . I I I II 2I II I ' . I I, IIII II I I I 22 I I II I I I I99 I , I IIII IIII I I II 2II I ' I IIII I I IIIII II I I 22l . , ' II II II .I 3 - ' IIIIIIIIIIII I I IIII 2I - ,' 3 el I J. IIII IIII I I IIII IIII I II III IIIIIII 227 . I 2. ... .H II. .. 222 t ' I ' II I IIII IIIIIII II II I I I. .IIII 237 1 I .. . .. .. I I I I I IIII IIIII I II II II IIIIIIIII 241 I . I I, I I II I 227 I ' II IIII I Q A llll 23 I . IIII I. I. I I. I I I I 3 CLASSIFIED INDEX LAUNDRY South Sade Laundry LLMBER Chrastmann Neneer 6: Lumber Co Luehrmann Lhas F Hardv-ood Lumber Co 'Vlosberper Lumber Co Thomas Ar Proetz Lumber Lo MAGICIAN B el 'X Il Nlaglcaan MILLINFRY Schollc s Mxllanery MILK AND ICE CREAM COMPANIES Arctic Ice Cream Lo ersey Farm Diary Co Kruedlln Ice Cream Co St Louas Dalry Lo Svuss Model Dalry Co MISCELLANEOUS Ad Seryxce Anheuser Busch Brewery Co General Home Repair Co Groller So xety Haxlen M I Archltect Kenny Bros 61 Walkans lBoston Mass Place Mass Advasory Croup Mueller Brass Lo St Louxs Insect Co Selden A A Unaon Marble br Tale Co Unique Quarlette brag Bros Poultry Weber F Art Material Wanters Oscar care Wanchester Sxmmons Co MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Baker E E Musac House Dxxon Lane Musac Shop Feldman Musxc Shop Hunleths Musac Store Ludwag Musac House PACKING COMPANY Laclede Packmg Co PAPER COMPANY Krell O A NValI Paper Co PAINTS AND VARNISHES Condae Bray Glass 6: Pamt Co Murphy Varnash Co Robins A Xarnlsh Co PIANO TEACHERS Boyer May Paano 61 Harmony Teacher Eberle Blanche Paano br Theory Teacher Worthangton Grace A Plano Teacher PIANO TLINER Hoeber Claude Paano Tuner PICTURE FRAMER lxembuglrtr lrank Ilcture Iramer PHOTOGRAPHERS Pemberton Studao Schneadt Studao Vxhltang, Sul Studao PRINTER XX aese RE 'XLTY Bellms R4 alty L0 Rtngtl XX Lber Real Estate Lo Stbastaan lrank Real Estate Co RESTALRANTS 'Xrro Restaurant Dtl uxt Rtstnurnnt and Delatnttssen Gem Restaurant 6 0 0 20 0 209 9 29 20 40 08 26 29 2 206 4 244 26 B 02 0 O 6 4 4 4 40 24 9 4 244 OF ADVERTISERS New Plaza Restaurant Petsoff An el Lunch Room Shenandoah Restaurant Sohnle A Caf teraa Stokes Restaurant and Dellcatessen SALES AGENCY Becker Gr Lehmann Sa es Lo Quernheam Sales -Xgencx SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Browns Business School I'rcc.eraclc School ot 'Vlusac Graflwohl School of Laboratory Technaque Marmello School Missouri College of Optometry ohnson Carrae Dancing, School Rublcam BUSIHPSS School St Louas College ol Pharmacy XX ashangton Lnnerslty Vsaterman School of 'Vlusac SHOE COMPANIES Ansteclt Shoe Co Penrose Shoe Lo SHOE REPAIRING Werner Shoe Repalrang Lo SPORTING GOODS Hyatts Sportlnb Goods Lo STATIONERY Adams Stataonery Shop The Craft and Stataonery Shop STORAGE AND MOVING SUPPLY COMPANIES Obermayer Foundry Supply and Equapment St Louas I-lotel and Supply Co United Bakers Supply Lo TAILORS J H Beacham Tallor TEAS AND COFFEE Meyer Bros Coffee and Splce Lo TELEPHONE COMPANY Be S XX 462 Boatmens Bank Bldg, THEATRES Canderella Theatre McNa1r Theatre UNDERTAKERS Gebken -I H Lndertaker Moydell Vvm Lndertaker Peetz Bros Lndertakers NX att Bros Layers and Lndertakang Co Zaegenhean Bros Undertakers UPHOLSTERING Llate Lpholsterany., 6: Mattress Lo XVHOLESALE CANDY MFG Theodore Bros Candy Nlfg., Lo WEATHER STRIPPINIG MFG CO Nlo'-larch Vltt al Vleather Strlppxng, Lo WIRE AIND IROIN COMPANY St Louxs Vsare and Iron Lo NX OODWORK Blackman Hall Nlclxee Nlfg, Co lox Bros Nllg., Lo Ilall 6: Brown W oodworltlng, Vlathlne C0 VC RITING MACHINE COMPANY Xrneracan Writing, 'ylathanr Lo lmperaal Rtbldg, Lo 248 PATROINIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 9 220 4 0 4 0 230 208 09 Z 5 9 237 236 06 9 7 3 26 26 27 240 B 9 O 4 O6 0 0 04 4 I . ,. .,.. . 23 I I -I 227 , j. .. e I ,. ,t ., , , I 2 0 - ...,y , 221 , ' . 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