Roosevelt High School - Sagamore Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN)
- Class of 1929
Page 1 of 166
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 166 of the 1929 volume:
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Ii 3 W' Q 1 , fpgff f. - 7 -7 J!! EERE 5929 RE Y 5 MED BY ME asm emi: on 390355511 Him SGML MHHEEAMIIS mss2se 1A 3 A F x 1 E X 1 W s 1 P GEQEWGEQD TE KREESHH ' is 0Ef2waeP..2S 5555522595 W-alssezwuizgaif-?-Y gp www vgwfms msgs? was BE B ...nga Q, -sm-: page IPLBS gif '33-mA 'iii Q lm Al is ll in n :M H4 swam MPQRQMEE imma amnmiii QGHEEHE EEE WEE BEJDEENC 'LEAVES EBM 322553 EEE? S Tile symbol and TT1ySfel'y of ll JOOF 1'eSI:CleS in the qullzify of COIICZKIIIHZIII. ..MORI,EY. gfeell and fidil' tllfe Summef lieS, just Inuclclecl from tlze Luc! of spring -SUSAN COOLIDCE. K 1 , Winter gillefll file fielcls 01161 fI'eeS SO IJ . . . 0 fllell'Lea1'ClS of lClCle and SNO117. - HENRY LONGFELLO W. Stuclents of Roosevelt : Life is a procession of opportunities. Positions of CVCTY COIlCClValJlC afllil IlCSC1'lPfl0I'1 3136 l3ClIlg left vacant Juflllg CVCYY liour of tlle Jay. Some one is lneing Promotecl toclay. Some one will lxe callecl to llis eternal rewarcl tomorrow. Prog- ress ancl growtlfx will create new positions of lionor ancl trust. Are You reacly to tlaese vacancies Wlflell tlaey occur? Success lll COIIICS Oilily to tl10SC Wl'l0 are Pfe- parecl to make rlae most of their opportunities. They Oilily C2111 IIOPC to he enrollecl Wlffll tl'1C solcliers of fO1'tU11C. Be reacly to talie aclvantage of opportunity Wl'1C11 it lxnoclis at your floor. Be reacly Physically, mentally, ancl morally. Tl1at is ,my message to You toclay. Corclially yours, Philip Carlson PHILIP E. CARLSON P1-incQoal QJAGAMQQE TOP ROW-Zuppann, Reid, Newell, Bclstrom, Schultz, Grzrcnmuaod, Nelson, Alcorn, Ulrich BOTTOM Row-Berkheimer, Stark, Lynrlz, T.srlmmp1'rlin, Bertelsen, Bruce, Waltorz. l L-LMA ,X 4figW K XRPZLTIUHRGMKI Heads 0 1 'fi xx X f 7 U41 JAGANL GD EDQQEQ TOP Row-won Lefvern, Stensing, Lewis, Johnson. BOTTOM ROW-llfrcradic, Ferguson, Carlson, Smilh, Halverson OMER Force I 15 1 t 1 ATU Alttumlb Clzanigf O11 mighty oalc, 110111 many secrets are lzfclclen witlzin your Iareastg HOIU lflally Cllltlllnll SZCISOIIS AGU? YOU IUUICLBKJ slip Pastg H0117 11101117 Lllle and CIOIIJZBSS 610178 LGUC you seen! O11 mfgltty oalc, lUjldf gypsy tribes have campe witlzin your slzacleg HOIU 111611117 .IQFBS A0126 Leefl, killlllefl y0ll1' leavesg WL0tAfI'iSLl.1lg squirrels lzavefrolicjcerl in your Lranclzesg Holv many lvircls built Peaceful nests luetween 4 your Ivouglzsf Hou long you have stretckerl so Patfently Yolll' great gnarlefl arms tozvarcl flld sity? Suclz wiselom as yours I cannot lcnow, Anfl yet IUOOKJSITLZII Clare to cut anclhfell A tiring which is so nearly mortal! -WILLIAM HARVEY. Wisdom is tlze Principal tllingg tlzerefore get lUiSJOlTlj anal witlz all tlzy getting, get unclerstancling. --PROVERBS. rgcfac. QAMQQE DAVID FLETT GRETCIIEN KUPPER Service Trophy IN 1924 the Senior Hi-Y boys decided to have the names of the two stu- dents Who had done the most for their school during their four years in high school engraved on a silver loving cup. This year Gretchen Kup- per, a January graduate, and David Flett, a June graduate, received this honor. Character, scholarship, citizenship, sportsmanship, length and type of service rendered, personality, and participation in school activities , , are taken into consideration. Gretchen Kupper was art editor of the Sagamore, vice-president of the January Class, a member of the Torchbearers, Senior Executive Committee, Zenith Literary Society, German Club, and for one year its president, an active member of the G. A. A. for three years. She also took part in two May Fetes. David Flett was the vice-president of his class, 1929 football manager, the drama and music editor of the 1928 Sagamore, president of Hi-Y, in charge of the book room, head of the secondhand book room for one term, president of Pilots for three years, president of Zenith in 1927, member of the Student Council and Dramatic Club, chief lunch- room supervisor one term, and in charge of the con- cession stand during the football season. l18l 4 :'fAG.!aE..MCD itesmfg MARIANNA Jonsrsu Ouviz TORINION Commercial Trophy VVO years ago Mr. Greenwood, head of the commercial department, donated a silver cup which is always on display in the trophy case, for the purpose of furnishing an incentive for greater effort to the students in the commercial department. Each term the students in the commercial classes elect the student whom they consider to be the most fitted for the honor. The students chosen are then voted on by . 3 the teachers, and so far they have always corrobo- rated the choice of the students. The points that are taken into consideration are character, personality, scholarship, and etliciency of work. So far only girls have been chosen. ln the preceding years Lu- cille Norlin, Margaret King, Grace Krohn, and Hilma Untine Were elected. Olive Tormon and Marianna Jorstad were chosen this year to have their names engraved on the cup. Olive was in charge of the book room for a year and a half, a member of the Torchbearers and Student Council. Marianna held the position of assistant school treasurer under Mr. Greenwoodg treasurer of the June class, and a member of the Blue Triangle, Torchbearers, and Student Council. . l19l , 45 44015 Gaasacinmia FRAN'K OLBERG AGNES LINDGRIEN' I 'l1lCIiil'f0l'it11l SHl1ll'IIf0l'i!11l Valedlictorian and Salutatorian january TO Frank Olberg goes the distinction of receiving the highest honor of the January graduating class of 1929. His average for the four-year high school course was 2.5. Agnes Lindgren has the honor of being saluta- torian of the same class with an average of 2.345 points. Frnak's was a special honor as he was the first boy who has ever been valedictorian at Roosevelt High School. Frank had a pleasing person- ality and a quiet, reserved nature. According to lV1r. Greenwood, Frank was in the senior class a whole term before Mr. Greenwood knew him. He was a member ofthe Glee Club and the Senior Honor Society. During his last term at school Frank spent the eighth period every day in the library, reading and studying, even after he knew that he had Won the valedictory. He was born September 11, 1911, and came here from the hlinnehaha grade school in January, 1925. Agnes Lindgren entered Roosevelt in January, 1925, also, but she came from the Johnson grade school. Agnes was born on January 21, 1910 and graduated from high school at the age of nineteen. Although she always stood high in her studies, Agnes belonged to several social organizations. During her senior year she was an active member of the Scandinavian Club, the Senior Honor Society, and the Blue Triangle. Agnes, like Frank, was quiet and retiring in school. 1201 V I I 1. fAGANsoJife9E4p ROYAL NIM: Siznuwi Hxxzm. DUNLAP l7l1ll'dil'f0!'iI17I Salulzitorinvz Valediictoriiaini and Sallutatoriiaini june ROYAL MAE SEDGWICK graduated as valedictoi-ian of the June class of 1929 with the highest scholastic average that has ever been attained at Roosevelt High School. Her scholastic average was 2.897. Hazel Dunlap is the salutatorian of the June class with an average of 2.654 points. Royal Mae entered Roosevelt High School in the fall of 1925 from Hutchinson, Minnesota. She is graduating at the age of 17 years, after a straight four-year high school course. Royal Mae not only stood exceed- ingly high in her studies, but she was also a very active participator in school activities. In her senior year, she was the editor-in-chief of the 1929 Sagamoreg president of the Blue Triangle Clubg a member of the Senior Honor Society, G. A. A., Torchbearers, French Club, Debate Club, and Zenith Literary Society. Hazel Dunlap has the unusual distinction of completing her high school course in two and a half years and being salutatorian of her class. She came here in the fall of 1927 from Sanford Grade School as a 10B student. She went to summer school, however, and succeeded in getting ahead of her own class and graduating as salutatorianiof the June class of 1929. Hazel had a winning personality although she was quiet and reserved. She was always greatly interested in her studies and stood high in scholarship. 1211 QJA QAMQQCE JANUARY CLASS OFFICERS SIDNEY CORYEII GRETCHEN KUPPE11 LAWRENCE BENSON HOWARD STOKES Prcsizlcnl Vice-president Treasurer Secretary amnuamry Class of 1929 Aizlio. Y' W 1 E JANUARY CLASS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE TOP Row-Hammcrot, Stakes, Craven, Corycll, Coulson. BoT'1'oM Row-Olson, Aflr. Greenwood fodfviscrj, fllidlhun, Savage. H21 JDAGANL QD fzizq JUNE CLASS OFFICERS HAROLD Koss INIARIANNA JORSTAD BIQATRICE THEISEET DAVID FLETT President Treasurer Sefretary Vita-prvxizlcnf une Class of 1929 ff ff .mu 1 , 7 Q -:' JUNE CLASS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE TOP Row-Butler, Johnson, Preslon, Kobs, Plf'irkstrom, Aaklzus. BO'l I'OIVI Row-Lowe, Kohanilz, Ebbcsan, Wall, Wuertz. E231 QJAGAMQQE W if . ,.. F .b if . ommury Class ANDERSON, WESLEY I. ---- WesJ' He fan mulee flu' piano tell a story. ANDERSON, WILLARD C. - - - Bill Selhst ist tlcr fllann. German Club. BENSON, LAWRENCE - - - - - Babe I'il flu ha en kllIt1l'I'f'Yf4'? Han lean faa fat i cn for tlig. Hi-Y: Pilots: Senior Executive Committee: Class Secretary: Seven Cliancesng Class Play. BENTLY, FLOYD V. ----- Percy If you need a right hand man, Call on Percy: He'll do it if he Can. BERG, DOROTHY - - - - Dot A blond is she: ds blonrls arf, she at-ill be. BERG, STANLEY W. ----- Stan Stan er en alv dem som faar tlenne usle fL'erzlt'n til at le. Hi-Y: Pilots. BORNCAMP, ELEANOR M. ---- El Some day a great pianist she'll be, And go to study in Germany. CARLSON, LESTER A. ----- Less If him for a frz'shie you zlo Ialze, He'Il soon inform you of your mistake. Vice-president of Student Council: Gym Team '25, '26, '27, '2S. CONLON, MILDRED B. ----- Adil She'll smile for' you unrl shi-'ll smile for ml. Torchbearers. CORYELL, SIDNEY V. ----- Sid Si1l's n goozl llanrrr, a fine fellofu, too: If you'r'e in lroulrlr, he'lI help you through, Class President: Band: Hi-Y: Pilotsg Gym Team '27. COULSON, LAVERNE T. ---- Curly What is more alluring than rurly, rezl hair? Hi-Y: President of Pilots: Senior Executive Committee: Class Play. CRAVEN, RAYMOND F. ---- Ray The stars of Hollymcaorl tall up me Ana' ask that I tame ofcer to lea. Hi-Y: Pilots: Senior Executive Committee: Student Council: Seven Chanv:es : Class Play. CRONSTRONI, GUNNER H. ---- Gun Amialnle in manner and in tcay, Anil also in fzclmt he has lo say, Class Play. DAHL, lVIILDRED P. ----- Pete Srille, munter, og hjclfvxom som faa er dennc fvor Illilflrezl som 'vi altid lean stole fun. Blue Triangle: Norse Club: Secretary of Torchbearers. l24l JAGAMQEQEQ ELLINGSON, MELVIN O. ---- Mally Den som litet taler taenlzer deslo mere. ENGEBRETSEN, EDWIN O. - - Eddy Eel-win plus a 'violin Means music ana' not jus! din. Orchestra. FITZHENRY, KATHERINE M. - - - Kate She is efver so friendly ana' so sfweetj We hope that her joys will be complete. Pilots. FLEKKE, ERNEST B. - - Ernie Little is he, And as noiseless as tan be. FRIZELLE, ERWIN C. - Don't let your heart be mellofwj fust be a real punehinello. Band: Golf '29. - - - - fr zyu GANSMOE, BERYL I. - Pl'here's Aflilly? I'm looking for Beryl. - - -,Q - ..Beryl,. - - - Arlene GUsTAFsoN, ARLENE E. Ein Veilehen auf der Wiese. G. A. A.: German Club. HAMMEROT, HOWARD G. - - - Ham A good aeior and a baa' actor. Bandg Orchestra: Senior Executive Committee: Athletic Band: Class Play. HANsoN, ARNOLD H. - - - Arne Silence is golden. HARDY, EARL A. - - - - - Earl I may appear a quiet lad, But you don't know me. HARVEY, SAPHRONE G. - - - - Gene Saplirone is always neat and trim, dna' efver full of pep and -vim. Blue Triangle: President of Torchbearersg Class Play. HENDRICKSON, HAZEL L. ---- Haze Si gif oelz fag en stilla stig. HERTENSTEIN, BERTHA M. - - - Berbee This is a eornplimerlt, now a7on't forgetg She eoula' stand in the rain and nelrer get wel. HEWITT, GRACE A. - - - - Tyke Nzfgon himmelsk flamma bor i dig, fnirdn den. Torchbearers. i251 e we if . ig.. l W , .A .53 , , . .--, E s,.: :-. I. -- - E..-i.. -ri- f. ,-, -- i i 'ffl I f - 1 - , -i'- 40A QAMQQE In W HOIEM, ESTHER D. ------ Es flfled sin slilferdige og beroligenzle mine fuinzler hun altid fvenner for sig og sine. 3' Blue Triangle, Norse Club: Torchbearers. A- ' G ', gg HOLM, BERTHA M. ----- Bert li' Eyes that can look into the souls of men. Blue Triangle: Torchbearersg Seven Chances. JOHNSON, CLARENCE H. - - - - Clare I may be quiet in school, but that doesn't mean much. JOHNSON, KATHERINE L. ---- Kate We find her a -very congenial schoolmate. German Club: Torchbearers. l lr-Lax: JOHNSON, LOLETA P. ----- Sd fatta all tanning, si -vdga all rdtt, och bilrla - alet skona med glaalje. Torchbearers. JOHNSON, RUTHVEN E. ---- Rudy Quiet? Say, you don't mean me! J JOHNSON, WALTER A. ---- Wally Full of adventure is this dashing lad, Who has read all the books the library had. Something attempted and something done In joyful serfvife and says it's fun. JORDAN, HARRY W. ----- Harp ii T 1 I ' ' KAY, KATHERINE. E. - - - - 'Kay' As a friend' and pal you'rc a wow. Does everybody like you? Ana' how! Turchbearers. KERROTT, CLYDE C. ----- Clem If in silent drama, he C0lll!l17lJl keep silent. l KNUDSEN, IDA E. ----- Shorty Belzymringer gif os bare rynlzer i panden. KUNZMANN, EVELYN M. - - - Ev In just the 'way she looks at you, You know she has no reason to feel blue. Blue Triangle: German Club, Torchbearers. KUPPER, GRETCHEN I. ---- Gretchen Du bist 'wie eine Blume, So hold, so schon, so rein. Class Vice-presidentg G.A.A.g German Club: Art Editor of Sagamore: Senior Executive Committee: Torchbearers. LARSEN, LESTER C. ----- Less Listen to them rheerg listen to them shout! ,- He's the fellow that the papers rave about. f Band: Orchestrag Athletic Band. E261 , l I JAGAAQQREQ Look him ofverg he's some lad, Always happy, nefver sad. Student Council. LINDGREN, AGNES M. ----- r-'11-qu Vern som fiitt fvingar till flykt strdcker dn mot solen sin ban. Blue Triangle: Swedish Club: Torchbearers: Salutatorian: Senior Honor Society. LOCKREM, EDGAR H. ----- Ed Studious, industrious, and brafve is he. LUND, DOROTHEA C. - - - - Dot Personality plus. Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: January Editor of Saga- more: Senior Honor Society: Torchbearersg Seven Chances. LUNDGREN, BERNICE D. ---- B uns Efuerybody knofws her as a 'very fine girl,' , dna' her friends all knorw shes as fue as pearl. MCDONELL, MILDRED C. ---- Milly She's here. Oh, no, she's there. Isn't she? lfell, she's somefwhere. Seven Chances : Class Play. MCPARTLAND, HOWARD F. - - Howie He is noted as a gyinnasl. Gym Team '27, '28. MCPHE.E, NAOMI L. ----- Nao Quaint, guiet, and courteous is she. MAURITZSO'N, LILLY V. - - - - - Lil Lilly's all there 'with her liig brown eyes, And the cutest of dimples that 'we all idolize. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. MIDDEL, HENDRIK - ---- Hank For he's a jolly good fellow With a hear! that s erver so mellow. MIDTH UN, BERNICE E. ---- Bunny Cute little dirkens, industrious, too! Nefver fan tell 'what she's going to do. Blue Triangle: Pilots: Sa amore Staff' Senior g y Executive Committee? Torchbearers. E' M Z 4 U P.. 511 A? O H1 'g E 2 Q 3 2 Q W n-1 rn I ,-. : O F' m S' ' Z 2 :g pb Q ar., D:- X Q ' Q' g I I 3 E' .5 2 S N 2? I VJ: N I -4. N' 5' I Pu I Q .. I 2 E 0. H KN 1 3 K' I 'U 0 5' 77. 3 -4 Q 1 , . . 2 2 fs s S- ' Co 3'- gr I 2 T N: 3 Q FM E C K5 K' 0? ' I-.jfi 9:5251 Q gif? e W . , , , --.'-- - . 5 .11 ...N W .,.. W... ee. my 'STE- 5 .s ---s ' MYKLEBUST, SIGURD B. ----- Sig Glaede eller sorgj sorg eller glaede, A N2 1 Det har jeg laerz af skjule. Nurse Club. 3 ii' NELSON, CONRAD N. ----- Connie Connie's the lzoy 'whose cartoons make glad iili fi The hearts of a nation that must not be sad. L . Orchestra: Feature Editor of Sagamore. 27 5 me ,W W Q ff K 3 A X it .si S .. 3' M lik Q oi- -sQs:+s.,..,3 ,- .... Q..-, ,. :gg is 9 3 2 'W 5 . . ff i. Sf , . .U of it A , Q V ,.:t,'5::: i...siqigrte-sw-'fat :ss ..- M - s- . ss -s X SK X 5 sm, is sf s .sr sa we I 1 QJAGAMQQE NELSON, HAROLD T. ---- Nels He's the boy that makes a drum beat, And 'when he's around, fu-e're in for a rn-ol. Band. NELSON, RUBEN R. - - - - Rube Witlz the world for a stage He is a good actor for his age. Class Play NORWICK, ASTRID K. ----- Oss Mandig og stork stud hun op og talte Saa Vihinger alle maatte holde sig tilbahe. G. A. A.: Norse Club. N YSTROM, GEORGE B. ----- Judd Han fir sa' liten men dork si klok. Hi-Y. O'CONNOR, HOWARD T. - - - Bud From our hearts we gifve you joyj Blessings on you, football boy. Hi-Y, Football '27, '285 Golf '27. OLBERG, FRANK E. - - - ' - Frank Beskedent og rolig har han fvist os at der er iklze saa litet god! i Iverdenj det gjelder kun at Hnde del. Glee Club: Senior Honor Society: Valedictorian. OLSEN, B OLSON, DONALD W. - - - - - Olse An all-round athlete. I-1Seball '27, '28, Football '26, '27, '28: Hockey '26, '27, '28, Class Play. HENRY - ----- Hank A salesman he'll newer be Cause :chan he does talk, he means it, you src OLSON, As In Gym Team '27, MARIORIE E. ---- Marge a likeable girl she is above par, the winning of friends she always -will star. Blue Triangleg Senior Executive Committee, Torchbearersg Seven Chances. OMOTH, GRACE E. ------ Ria PALM, F. HAROLD ----- Palm PEEL, MILTON L. ------ Milt Where dia' you get such style and grace? And alzo-ve all your 'winsome face? Blue Triangle: G. A. A. Oh, Harold! Where dia' you get those 'winning -ways? Hi-Yg Swimming '28. Someday, some-where he'll make good. Hi-Y: Student Council: Gym Team '26, '27, '28. PETERS, NELL C. - - ---- Pete Har Attention leasefu is 'ver' clearlf ell A 1 J J As a sub in efonomzcs at dear old Rooservell. Senior Executive Committee: Student Council. PETERSEN, HELEN M. ----- Lu' i281 Is she a gogetter? I'll say she's strong ,' If you lraforl with her, you fan't go wrong. Blue Triangle, R Girls. 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 fAG.eR.,fMs. on mme? PIERSON, HELEN A. ----- Happy ' She's not so tallmtifve and shc's shy, But her personalily will get her hy. Blue Triangleg Torchbearers. PITTS, CLARK H. ----- Pitty Thoughlful ana' romantif, also an actorj At parlies he's an imporlant farlor. Hi-Yg Class Play. RONNING, SOLVEIG A. - - - - Sue Solfveig slrrilzer ilzlre fra traeloppernej Men hehofver du hjflp, han Ju slolc paa henrle. Norse Clubg Torchbearers. SAVAGE, MAMIE E. - - - Mac I'll he happy, I'll he gay, I'll leafve sorrow for some other day. Senior Executive Committee: Torchbearers. SCHROEDER, ADELE P. ---- Kidder 011 committees she ll zuorlz, And 'wc know she rloesn't shirh. Blue Triangleg G. A. A.: Tnrchbearers: Seven Chancesf, SIEH, FERN E. ----- Putzy Shy and alemure is this lirzle lass, But all the fworlzl she's sure to pass. Blue Triangle, Glee Club: Tulip Time. SKRIVSETH, KENNETH B. ---- Kenny Hc's not so loud or honnie ar gay, But he'll go far on his -way. STEENSON, KENNETH V. ---- Steeny Hfllezl freidighet ug flafnmenlle ora' .fllaa frilzetens fanc fores frenz paa jordf' Norse Clubg Pilots: Student Council: Tennis '28. STOKES, HOWARD J. - - - - Howy He fan make the ilvories prancej Tha! gifves you a feeling that you musi dante. Class Treasurer: Pilotsg Senior Executive Committee. STONE, WALTER S. - - Wally Han 'var en man for sig, Hans handslag gzilde mer in ed och skrift. SULLIVAN, IRENE V. - - - - Ilzy She is so quiel and sincere She'll be surtessful in her tareef. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. SWANSON, MABLE M. - - - Mibs Och i henna ldg en pdrla. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. TAYLOR, CHESTER J. ----- Chet .lark of all trades and pleasures. Stage Crew Managerg Gym Team '26, '27, '28, TNORMON, OLIVE M. ---- Ollie Arbeifle forst og fornoielsc sirlen, De:-for tile hun ogsaa prison. Student Councilg Torchbearers: Commercial Trophy. l29l ' K ' liliewsgi.: -E, -,., ' '1:1.4zagg?1:a.1 E.2 E e:2..-,f ' if ' K -ffviisff-i - ,., 3 - 1 , - N5 , , , fi A 1 E., figs. . 3 , . Z ' ' E . .sfkjfgfl J l l A QJAGAMQQE URBAN, ALBERTA T. - - WEBB, ARTHUR M. Fm newer sad! Fm always glad. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. r:AllJ VVALL, JEAN S. ---- - - Jean They piflced her for the lead in the class play. Torchbearersg Seven Chancesng Class Play. Do you still lofve me? Band: Orchestra: Seven Chances. ANDERSON, ELLA C. - ---- Cina'ers So nire is she and always ready to help a fella, No better friend is there than loyal Ella. Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: Torchbearers: R Girls. DUFFY, RUTH E. ---- Her cares are not manyf I doubt if she has any. rrDu'g-ienr Blue Triangle: Pilots: Torchbearers. ENGLUND, BEATRICE L. ---- - frBeaf1 We know her as a quiet and courteous girl. Torchbearers. FLADLAND, FERN L. ----- After the spring has hrought its shoizers, Fern You'll find her looking for spring flocrers JOHNSON, HELENE V. ---- Do 'zce like her? I'll say we do! JOHNSON, HILLEVI V. ---- She is ewer so happy and so gay: You'll always find her that selfsame LARSON, VERNA O. ----- Full of life and pep and spirit. G. A. A.: Torchbearers. OLSEN, ETHEL M. - - - She's :L-itty, she's wise, She's a lot for her size. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. OLSON, LUCILLE E. ---- Sho fan smile, no doubt, And it's a good one, just tip lop! - HHEZU HiIlez'i fcuay. Sweden Ethel Lucille LUNDQUIST, DOROTHY M. ---- Dot Cheerful, amhilious, happy and gay, Iflfz' shall miss you when you are assay. Glee Club WRIGHT, BETH M. ----- Her mind has an upward, lofty trend, Beth U This eharming, fourteous, and graceful friend. l30l ndrtu fAce1.A.AAav mme? fume Class AAKHUS, DONOVAN G. ---- Don Einer der Edelsten unter den Zllusilzanten. Athletic Band: Band: Harmony Club: Orchestra: Senior Executive Committee: Student Council: Cross Country '26, '27, ANDERSON, GRACE M. - - - Grate Gloria 'viftutis Umbra. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. ANDERSON, HELEN M. - - - Helen For all that fair is is by nature good. ANDERSON, HERINIAN M. - - - Hermy Das Herz und nicht die Meinung ehrt den lllann. Norse Club: Class Play. ANDERSON, MILDRED A. - - - The gentle minde by gentle deeds is leno ARNESON, VIOLA S. ----- Die Kunst ist zfwar nirht :las Brad, aber der Wein des Lebens. Blue Triangle: Sagamore Staff: Torchbearers. BACKLUND, C. GUNNARD - Gunny X Sjeilfustdnzlig lzraft fir manne s s gil X 3 Orchestra: Tulip i BACKMAN, EVELYN A. ---- 'IETF Schaf, das Tagfwerk meiner Hinde, Holzes Gliiek, dass iflz's fvollennle! Blue Triangle: German Club: Pilots. BARON, ELLA D. ------ Allie La 'vertu d'un coeur noble est la marque rertaine. Blue Triangle: French Club: Senior Honor Society: Torchbearers. BARRETT, ELIZABETH M. ---- Betty'J Q Du dlslcar mtlnslzorna, flu JZSIJIZIT fir Ty inlet hat du i dilt inre lair. A Blue Triangle: Student Council: Swedish Club: Torchbearers: Class Play. BARTHOLOMEW, CHARLOTTE F. - - 'Charlotte Auxilium non lefve fvultns habet. Dramatic Club: Pilots: Class Play. BATES, PAULINE J. - - - - Pauline Spectemur agenda. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. wif..-:Q - - : f ,. -1 , BENT, MAYMIE E. ----- Maj- Anzieitia semper prodesl. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. BERGH, THOROLF - ----- Thor Ther fwase a youthe of Roosevelt hee, 117110 ne'er idled away a flee. Glee Clubg Norse Club: Track '29. E311 X D V C Y PA I Agree QAMQQE Z, gl 6 3... 9 J N 'X , if JJ A wx '45 :P a 5- if 19 535351 i L ' , . A ., .L,..3 Q ,. 5' 'X fm BJERKE, THORALF G. ----- Thorn Chefvalier sans peur et sans reprochc. BODLUND, EVELYN M. - - - - Ev ds mcrrie as the flee is longe. Glee Club: Tulip Time. BOWLER, ALFRED T. - ----- Al Le rzyle Hes! de l'homme. Band: Dramatic Club: Student Council: Class Play. rfR00.u BRACE, RUTH W. - - - - - Die Weisheil is! nur in aler Wahrheit. G. A. A.: Senior Honor Society: Class Play. BRANDSNES, LAWRENCE N. - - - Larry Though Lawrence is sileni, he thinks no ill. Norse Club. BROWN, CHARLES L. ---- Chuck In him alone, it 'was natural io please. French Club. BUDTZ, ALICE I. ------ Al Scrubrndi rule :apfrc est el prinfipium el fans. Blue Triangle. BUTLER, JOHN A. - - - - Jan Courage sans peur. Senior Executive Committee. . CANFIBLD, MARJORIE J. ---- Marj On est, quand on -veut, maitre de son sort. Blue Triangle: Torchbcarers: Class Play. CARLQUIST, GERTRUDE E. - - - Genie Es ist zloch den .llazlfhen 'wie angclioren, :lass sic' allen, gefallen fwollen, was nur Augen hat. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers: Class Play. CARLQUIST, LAWRENCE E. - - - Lolly Es! hildet ein Talen! sich in der Slille, Sich ein Charalcier in dem Strom der Welt. Gym Team '2 , '27, '28, '29: Football '27, '28. fE ,CRO T . Indian hi Honor fuirlulis praemium. Hockey '28, '29. CHRISTOPHERSON, GEORGE A. - - Andy ' Le prvxent est gras .Ile l'afcc11ir. Dramatic Club: Lunchroom Supervisor: Student Council: Class Play. CLAUSEN, HELEN M. - - -- - Helen Le hanheur semhle fail pour elre parlage. l32l M rr QfA.GAavs,.cm if-RE-45 CONSTANS, STANLEY T. - - - - Stan ' Ein guter Mensrh ir! sinh des rechien Wegcs -zuohl bewurst. Lunchroom Supervisor. . COTTRELL, MYRON E. ----- Bud Tout faiseur :le journaux aloft trilmt au Malin. French Clubg Hi-Y: Sports Editor of Sagamore: Editor of Standard: Student Council. CUMMINGS, DONALD F. - - - Shorty Vimil qui se fvimil. Band. DANILOVITZ, Rose J. ---- Flower En la rose je fleuris. Blue Triangle: French Club: Sagamore Staff: Senior Honor Society: Torchbearers: Class Play. R v DOUGHERTY, If--I . 5' - - Donn LJEZUI ' I , '. v L fl penser. Dramati 'Wu room I - , Class Play. ffD0tr1 DIXON, DOROTHY L. ----- Das Betmgcn is! ein Spiegel in Tl-'6lEhL'f jedcr sezn Bild zeigt. Dramatic Club: Class Play. Domes, HILMA E. ----- Sis Basis 'vfffllflllil ranslanlfa. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. DUNLAP, HAZEL V. ----- Haze Les Dulles atiions caflnfes sont las plus estimables. Salutatorian. EBBESON, SYLVIA ----- Sli11 La Palienee es! l'art al'espercr. Blue Triangle: Dramatic Club: G. A. A.: Senior Executive Committee: Torchbearersg Class Play. ELDER, MABEL I. ----- Mabel fag delar l71ll11Xl?H7IS lust och xorg afh 'vid rlrss sida gif. Torchbearers. ELLSWORTH, HAROLD J. ----- Al Wit and 'zvisalom are born with a man. Student Council. ENGNELL, ARTHUR E. ----- Art Deir slog si slor! ett hjzlrta uti ham' svenska llllfln. ERICKSON, MELDEN O. ---- Mrlly Stills Waxsr'r griinzlcn tief. Band: German Club: Tulip Time. ERICKSON, STANLEY R. ---- Ben Hur Es gieb! .llenselzen Ilia gar nfrhl irren. l33l 5. 59: . ,. up M in ,V . W e c, - 'Ti - Sgm. Q . ,Y .. ,,,4.5..4, . . Aw. 46 '98 lifes? Q ft 5 M5 41' 2 , 9,5 V. as N325 95 We . 535 'levi . IJ, .f.gL:i3 VI I .55 gf- ci, , ' Y J Q f . up le ' 'Q ...ig .. ,. ..,. ag .,,,mh. .3 1 'S e WL'-L 4 x ' 'F gvwftvu n I Lf!! l ,ffl , again ,set QE F x -S ' :mt .X X X , we K ESPELUND, DORAN A. - - - Doran I profess not talking-only this, Let each man cla his best. FELDMAN, LoUIs S. ----- Louy .. u His 'will be a great future. e '27, '28, '29: Debate Club: Lunchroom Supervisor: Class Play. F JELSTAD, HAROLD A. ---- Pinky Er slchet milnnlich an dem Sleuer Uml fuertrauet, scheitenzd oder lanzlend, Seinen Giltern. Band: Hi-Y: Pilots: Student Council: 'V Tennis '26, '27. FLETT, DAVID L. ------ Flit Weiss, Das.: alle Linder gute Metzxcheri tragen. K- Viceepresident of Senior Class: President of Hi-Y: Y Dramatic Club: Student Council. FossUM, HAROLD F. ----- Toby Ein ezller Nlensch zieht edle Menschen an. Baseball '28, '29. GABRIELSEN, BRAMWELL W. - - - Bump Wer sich nicht zu -viel dunk! ist fvirl mehr als er glaulzt. Band: Cross Country '28, '29: Gym Team '28, , '29: Swimming '28, Capt. '29g Track '29: Indoor Track, '29: Class Play. GABRIELSEN, MILTON A. ---- Milt Guter Ifille, is! hoher als aller Erfolg. Athletic Band: Band: Cheer Leader: Baseball '293 Cross Country '27, Capt. '28g Gym Team 28, 29: Swimming Capt. '28, '29: Class Play. GRAY, WILLIAM E. ----- Bill A shy but faithful laa' is he. I I, ,' .f GR.AYBILL, LUCILLE E. ---- Lucy ' ' 4 I R2 Lf ,IU e 9 . Denn das 1Va!yrell der Frauen ist so nah mit Kunst Vericandt. Dramatic Club: German Club: Class Play. - - nRu5-vu GRINDE, RUSSELL J. - - - fy suis, j'y reste. - Dramatic Club: Baseball '28, 29: Class Play. HAEINIIG, WALTER E. - - - De l'audacf, encore de l'a11darz', toujours de Vaudace. - - rrWally:1 - - rrjudu HAGEN, GEORGE H. - fllodesiiae fama nefver summis morlalilzus spernenda est. Glee Club: Lunchroom Supervisory Norse Club: Tulip Time. - - Sally HALEY, CELESTINF C. - - - Here's to Sally, thi: finest of her kind: A hettcr friend would he harzl to find. HARALSON, HELEN W. ---- Giggles Split leommt ihr-doch ihr lzomnt. Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: Glee Club: Sagamore Stall: Senior Honor Society: Student Council: Torchbearers: Tulip Time. E341 JAGANSOJ Eames HAUSER, RAYMOND M. ---- Ray Not too serious, not too gay, Is our schaolnzatc, Ray. Band, Orchestra: Student Council, Football '28: Class Play. HEATH, WILLIAM S. ----- Bill With him on a team, 'we are sure to mein. Hockey '27, '28, '29g Baseball '28, '29. HENDRICK, THURMALEE G. - - Thurmalee Suafviler in motto, forliter in re. Class Play. G. A. A.: French Club: Emblem HERRING, CECIL H. - - A - - -fag: No sinner or saint perhaps, Yet he's one of the best of rhaps. HOHAG, MARGARET A. ---- Muggs A miss who is so fne and neat Is one 'we always like to meet. Blue Triangle: Dramatic Club: G. A. A.: German Club: Torchbearers. HOLDEN, BERT L. ------ Bert Les granzlcs pensees -viennent du Coeur. Hi-Y. HOLLINGSWORTH, RICHARD M. - - Dick Befause he's friendly ana' he's smart, He fwins a place 'within our heart. HUSS, RAYMOND B. ---- Ray He hasn't much to say, But he thinks a lot each day. INSTENES, STANLEY L. ----- Stan We are fharmeil hy his actions and deeds. Band 9 Orchestra. JACOBSON, KENNETH M. ---- Moose Kenny's stature is somewhat low, But all our heroes tall do1z't grow. Baseball '26, '29: Basketball '26, '27, '28, Captain '29, Football '26, '27, Captain '28: Swimming '26g Track '279 ClassOPlay. JENSEN, CHRISTIAN ----- Farmer Fideli certi mercrs. Glee Club: Tulip Timen: Class Play. . JOHNSON, ALVVIN L. ----- Al Say, Alfwin, 'wire wondering, by the way, Who is the girl you accompany every rlay? Hi-Y: Class Play. JOHNSON, ELEANOR - - - EI ,Den som will lyekan ni Shall passa pri. Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: Swedish Club: Torchbearers. JOHNSON, HAROLD G. ---- Happy Irh bin fler Lzftzte nzeines Sfammes mein Name ena'et mit mir. Hi-Y: Sagamore StaPi: Senior Executive Committee. E351 X .ip Iv'-Es B RL 'Lf . er .JF ez 'IW' 1 sa. I ei Wh, sf I. I 'V 1!i' l7.F' ' IR f .. : ' Lili.. ii f A . if T S 'U' - 'Z e' 3535945 is .sf Y 3' K ff? was Xi. eg . ,S . s A gif fx . - Silsi' .', XO' X ,g xJ v I QW O 4 .M. of K T as esgfgg, . gi? ' ea A is gf, S 2 -- 3255 ., I 1 -. 'si' JOHNSON, HELEN G. ---- Whiyf Die Wah'-heir is! 'vorhanrlfn fiir den Weisen. Torchbearers. JOHNSON, MILDREIJ L. - ---- Mill Thy modesty is a ronrlle to thy merits. Blue Triangle: Norse Club: Torchbearers: Winner of Sigvald Quale Silver Medal. JOHNSON, VIOLET R. ---- - Vi P a cssc quam ronspici. Torchbearers. ONES, Lo ELL C. - - - - Jonny .' Cogilo, ergo sum. JORSTAD, MARIANNA C. ---- Babe La Clarte orna les pensees pmfomles. Blue Triangle: Senior Honor Society: Student Council: Torchbearers. KARLBERO, HAROLD E. ---- Nebbs All his enemies are frienrls. Golf '26, '27, '28: Glee Club: Class Play. KITTELL, FRED O. ------ Fred Tall oaks from liltle acorn: grow. Band: Dramatic Club: Hi-Y: Orchestra: Student Council: Class Play. 1: KNILANS, ROBERT A. ----- Bob ' For French and English he has no heart: A But from the girls he'll never przri. ., , : ssc., .h ., French Club: Hi-Y: Class Play. i VE KOBS, HAROLD G. - - - . - - - 'Korn' ' K . Toules grander fverfns Confvrennent aux grands I A X h 0 m m es . 1 E ' if 'T President of Senior Class: Dramatic Club: Lunch! Y My MQW KW room Supervisor: Senior Executive Committee: w sff i -in Standard Staff: Zenith: Baseball '27, '28, '29: Basketball '27, '28, '29: Football '27, '28: 1 K Class Play. 'Q' ' 'E' ' ' KOCH LOUISE E ---- - - Lou K , Z- Q . Can: mth! aus der Ar! gesrhlagen sind die klugen ,, 5, T 6 c h 1 e rl e i n . Blue Triangle: Torchbearers- Class Play. J? ' -is ' , Q A. KOHANIK, OLGA I. - - - - - 0. K. ' -Q ' 25.5-f'5iLl':' 3' ' 'L H h rms irihe Ih i hz , . 'Q ' ma y P A er I a ,S , e sg K - my' , 5 V And her ments 'win the soul., X X' f i in Blue Triangle: Dramatic Club: French Club: X li , - QI I 'K In Sagamore Staff: Senior Executive Committee: If A 1' A' 'W Standard Staff: Torchbearers: Zenith: Class Play. R! X A 1 'LII y gigig KOLESAR, GEORGE A. - - - - - K oly , S' ri g? xx Nec quaerere ner spernerc honorem. , i. ii l' in 5 ' -: Dramatic Club: Standard Staff! Baseball '27, '28, S , ....., .. .H . . .. . . ,.,.,. if '29' Basketball '26 '27 '28 '29' Football Z ' 126 '27 vig- 61 ,Pl ' H UMBIEGEL, STANLEY E. ---- Stan ' LL Sonderbarer Schfzuirmcr. f-'Kg President of German Club: Hi-Yg Pilots: Student ' K Council: President of Zenith: Dramatic Club: , Class Play. H X ' KVAALE, ARNOLD S. ----- Arnold ' ,L R Airiehtig zu sein kohn ifh fversperhen. W - x 'ei ' . E361 :Lf . Q .X . 1 R.. , 1 jf! 'm , WSIXJ T ri ' fi If i Q ' ,..- 1 K I .- It Y, 'xy . f ' : wifi is ' ..x 2 sv, A - X R wa-ff , X i Xxvj ,U LUNDQUIST, ROBERT F - -e Bob ag full ga Nlln egun man fll7Il uppa min egvn 211261. if ' Presxdeut of Pxlots YICC presxdeut of Hi-Yi, E QfAG,A.NNOv REQ Blue Trlangle Torchbeirers. - Margie 11 ccell. - ffWin,, - - ffjllillyu gloria. A. A.: Norse Class Play. - - MdTgl'IJ 1D1c Scllonhrzl :st 1 n nhlenrl Herz. Blue Tr1an1,le Dffllllitlt Club Torchbearers. LOVE, LAURINE R - - Rene Ram est aziea coneordxa armzu atque purliciiiac. Semor Etecutlve Committee Torchbearers. ' . 1 I 1' 1- 5 ' 1, LYNN, ROGER D Bremen Eyes Ievc I quad Ilene fuiur onus. Busmess Nlanager of Sagamore Student Council. MLGEE, DONALD W - Maggie Small 15 thzs goung Scolchman yet, Bu! he nefvzr IS lleahn 111 a bet. Df2lHl'1tlC Club Zemth. - fff-105311 Fnrs aequa merenles wspzfft. UESZad Amzczlza wmper pi ozlcst. - - Chet Hath auf dem altnn flulme stehl des Helzleiz ezflvr Y, - nforgieu' .Mhnell fezlzg ul dze fugcnd mit 110111 Wor'I. Dram ltlC Club Orchestrq. NIARTINSON, MILDRED C Milly Fst et zlelz tum szlcntzs mercm l37J xl!! P 'W 11 S S. A 5 1 ef. gif A 1 Y.-4 11.1 , X we 1 , 1: : lu nf , E- of Ee Aires GAMQQE QE l MARX, NINA E. ----- Nina E. lfh sleh 'Uerhorgen uml gehiirlz! Und mach nicht gerne sprechen. Blue Triangle: Dramatic Club: Vice-president of German Club: Sagamore Staff: Student Council: President of Torchbearers: Treasurer of Zenith: Seven Chancesng Class Play. M.ATTESON, MINNIE H. - - - Minn Toul fini! par iles chansoms. Glee Club: Tulip Time. MICKLUS, FLORENCE A. ---- Flossie llflozlcst, quiet, and of gentle grace, In lhe world of music she'llfin1l her place. Blue Triangle, French Club: Student Council: Torchbearers. MOBERG, VIOLET M. ---- Vi ,Win lefvnad 'var en slilla floil. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. s , MORINE, STANLEY E. ---- Stan 0f all the lads he is the fairest, Ana' decidedly the mresl. Dramatic Club. RIURPHY, MILDRED M. ---- Milly ' fafvais 'vu les gmnzles, mais je n'a-vais pas 'vu les ' perils. G. A. A.: Torchbearers. L MYRTHEN, JEANNE D. - - - Jeannie .V , lllusill is! Pocsie der Luft. --.. Blue Triangle: Campfire Girls: Harmony Club: Senior Honor Society: Torchbearersg Zenith. fi1gf ' f, -A'Q: ' .- NELsON, GEORGE N. ---- Foshay f Lili . ,- Es tcdchsl der illensch mit seinen grasscrn Zweelccn. 5 ,AKKV , ,K kk ,M ,,l,,kk ,M in Class Play. us A -- , ,.,' 5 - ..' 2 v ALL, ELMER L. - - - - Al ' 'f: - Although l1e's no! so fall, ' sf His personality surpasses all. f i i ,J ODAHL, RALPH H. - - 1 - Ossie A s .'A- .ma agus will jug se :Qzig sm ii' meal hauzlcn gripn i. ODELL, HELEN E. ---- Helen Prabilus werus honor. Blue Triangle. ', OOREN, C. HEIBERG ---- Heiberg lffie soll man Rulz' nzit Fleiseh unzl Blur lwohl finden? Glee Club: Tulip Time : German Club: Hi-Y: Class Play. 'L OLSEN, HASWELL O. ---- Hassle In school days he was quiei, ye! LK He's one we simply mn't forget. f if , I' Norse Club. , V LJ , .4 .' A , 1'-'f r AOLSEN, MILTON F. ---- - Milt ,l , Q ' 'vb Ingens hcrre, ingens irdl, lurk' Vip lngens kunslling will jug lrallas. X - I fx , Lunchroom Supervisor: Sagamore Staff: Student N My Council: Athletic Manager: Class Play. l 38 l ,. l efAG.A.evN. GD mme? OLSEN, MORRIS A. ---- Merrie Suafuiter in mode, fartiler in re. Norse Clubg Class Play. OLSON, ALVHILD B. ----- Al Vaa' rzftt du trinlzf, fvad du i lzdrlelz will, 'van' skdnt du drumt lean cj 11-v tidcn hdrjas. Swedish Club. OLSON, CARL K. ---- - - Gully Gloria 'virtutcm tanguam umhra scquitur. Debate Club, Standard Staff. OLSON, HELEN G. - ---- Helen Vad star! slcer, det slzcr tyst. Blue Triangle: Swedish Club. OLSON, OLGA C. - ---- Patehes K Graiiar ac pulchra fveniens in eorpore fvirluis. OLSON, VIRGINIA N. ----- Bella e il rossore, mo e incamnzodo qualfhe fvolla. Pilotsg Torchbearers. ff f , OLSON, WALTER E. - - - - - Walz'i Esse quam fvizleri bonus malebal. OMOTH, HELEN L. - ---- Peppy Whevz you know her you will see, just ho-:U scueet she may he. G. A. A.: R Girl. OSTRANDER, WILLIA - - ' 1 Illagnam 'arnf I I1 . OTTERBECK, GLA . - - - Gay She's a Eriendifwe like to hail, For she -will help us 'without fail. Blue Triangle, Norse Club, Torchbearers. 5 l OVERBECK, LUNIDA M. ---- Lu She is the girl tha! hanels out presenls, But for all of that, 'we like her presence. PACKARD, ROLLIN W. - - - - Rollin ll 11,6Sf rien d'fnutile aux gersonncs de sans. President of French Club: Class Play. PAULSON, ARTHUR S. ----- Art Suum euique decus posleritar rependit. PEDERSON, CONRAD C. ---- Connie .lurtitia suum cuique alislribuil. Class Play. 4 A it F . ,, T ff. C - ' J'-R-j s., , 1 5551- . '- fu-:.v:.x ' ' : .,.4E'1l?l, 342: - rN I ,L . efiff E391 W ff. S- f..,,'f' ' 3 - , xlib FWS F 'r N-L' lrxb if AJAS GAMQQE il ,- ex , 2 6 Wg mia. I PETERSON, JOHN A. ----- 'flohnnieu His nune praemium est qui rerla prafva fatiunl. PETERSON, ROINIA V. ---- Romona' Her merry heart goes all the rlay, Anil her smiles chase cares afzcay. Blue Triangle: Norse Club. PETRI, LILLIAN M. ---- - Lil Liren fager jungfru opp fviixer fager som on lcnopp. Blue Triangle: Swedish Club: Torchbearers: Dr. Arvidson Prize. PRAv1Tz, K. ALLEN ----- Allen He 'was a scholar, a ripe and goozl one. Band: Harmony Club: Concertmaster of Orchestra: Tulip Time. PRESTON, JOHN A. ---- Jack Il embellll tout te qu'il touche. Athletic Band: Band: Treasurer of Hi4Yg Pilots: Associate Editor of Sagamore: Senior Executive Committee. PRUCE, FRANCES L. - - - Frannie - Oeuli picluris tenentur. Blue Triangle: Dramatic Club: Sagamore SME: Torchbearersg Class Play. RHYMERS, HARRY S. ---- Harry' Que peut ee qui lui jvlait, rommande alors qu'il prie. Athletic Band: Band: Dramatic Club: Orchestra: Class Play. 0 ', , UANITA N. ----- Nita Not fvery lall, in fact rallzer small, Bu! fair and square, and liked by all. Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: Class Editor of Sagamore: Torchbearers: Secretary of Zenith: Numeral Girls. RUNDGREN, JOHN A. - - - - Jack fohn, -wilh all his Curly loflzs, Can'l eoun! his friends: they tonic in flocks. lllartin is both quiet and shy, Bu! his friends number up -very high. SCHERIN, SADIE E. ------ Sade' I hennes agll, lillsom en lzalz jag liiser tusen tanlzar. Blue Triangle: Dramatic Clubg Swedish Club: Torchbearers: Class Play. SCHREINER, MERCEDES J. - - - Merredes Tlzye modesty is a candle Io llzye mc:-iff. SEDOWICK, ROYAL MAE ---- Ritzy It's nite lo be natural when you're naturally nite. President of Blue Triangle: Debate Club! French Club: G. A. A.: June Editor of Sagamoreg Senior Honor Society: Torchbearers: Zenith: Valedic- torian: Class Play. SHORES, ROMAINE E. ---- Romaine Il faisoit rle netessilr' L'6l'lll. E401 rye, I 4 AVIK, MARTIN O. ----- Marz' J JAGANRCD ir2..1:m4 I . ' s SINGER, ELEANOR M. - - - Lee 1- I In classraam or in hall A 'zcelcomz' smilc -she has for all. Blue Triangle. f--Q - ' SINGER, LOIS M. ---- - Rusty Wise Io rcsolfvf, anzljwaticnt to perform. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers: Class Play. -.ei-W 3: 5 11... .Q SMITH, MILDRED C. ----- JlIilly Glad och fvrlnlig, from i sfdfr. SNYDER, JEROLD L. - ---- Jerry llIi11i111u111 IIIFFFI lihcri mi 11111lI11111 litfl. SOLHEINI, MABEL B. - ---- Mae .le nc' flois qu' a moi seul Iouie ma rc'11om111z'1'. Blue Triangle: Torclihearers. 5. Q53 1 '2 r 'F 9 . . we . 22222. ,af SUNDBERG, EVERT J. - - - Ev AmA, I .1 Silcnfr is his golden rule. SWANSON, ELNA B. ----- El V L'innorence cnfin n'a rein ll redauter. Blue Triangle: Torchbearers. SWANSON, LUCILLE G. ----- Lou Du sprichs! ein grasses Wort gelasscn aus. A Blue Triangle: G. A. A.: Senior Honor Society: Torclibearers. K .'. SWVANSON VIVIENNE L. ---- Viv , 4 4 Shc's sznferc, rntertazning, aml sweet, A lass 'whom -Zoe all like to meet. f TELKE, RICHARD J. ----- ' 011 peut itre pour fin qu'un aulrc mais nan pos peus ' fin que tour les autres. Class Play. ' TENOLD, JOHN C. - - - J y Veritc sans peur. THEILIvIANN,DoNAI.D F. - - - - Don K XIV ,I-1, 11 ' is Q' Le honhfur 581111116 fait pour ctre pnrfage. '-- German Club. . n ' ' ' ' THEISEN, BEATRICE M. ---- Bee Loyal je semi zlcwcanl ma -vie. Secretary of Senior Class: Blue Triangle: Pilots: ' .i ii Torchbenrers: Senior Executive Committee. THOMPSON, ALVIN K. - - - Red Fidcli cerli mcrces. ' v l41l 4' w ues THORSTENSON, JOYCE M. ---- Joyce I have a hear! me-irh room for cfucry joy. Dramatic Club. TOLLEFSON, STANLEY T. ---- Stan Tilles of honor azlzl not io his worth who is himself an honor to his Iitles. Band: Class Play. TOOHEY, WALTER J. - - - Walter Le 111cille11r his zlu moncle. Dramatic Club: Orchestra: Tulip Time: Class Play. TOUSSAINT, CHARLES G. ---- Chuck A sincere ana' truthful lrul is he. Band. TRov1K, DONALD W. ---- Don Vols non fvalea. Band: Dramatic Club: Class Play. VEEDER, CHARLES J. ----- Chuck Le chagrin monte en troupe cl galape :wer lui. Director of Athletic Band: Band: Orchestra: Class Play: Dramatic Club. Ipse decor, recli facti si praemia clcsinf, nan . moaiel. Dramatic Club: Class Play: Hockey '29. fjyt DER, CLAUDE R. ----- Claude WALL, JESSIE M. ------ Jet Forluna facies mum rommcnzlatio csf. Dramatic Club: Senior Executive Committee: Torchbearers: Class Play. WEINER,BERNICE H. - - - - - Berrien She has happiness wiihoul cnzl. Blue Triangle: French Club: Torchbearers. w7ELBAUM, GERALDINE - - - Jerry Praeslo ct porsla. Glee Clubg Pilots: Tulip Time. WICKSTROM, CLARENCE ---- Wick Die lllenschen gchcn mcie Schiesslcugelu cucilcr, iz,-enn sic ahgfglatle! sind. lior Executive Committee: Cheer Leader: Gym f Team '26, '27, '28, '29: Class Play. ,I YILKI L 0 ALD L. ----- Don 9 Iffonle rllann, uncl zlir icirrl eng die unendliche llfvll. Glee Club: Luuchroom Supervisor: Sagamore Stahl: Athletic Klanagerg Tulip Time. WILLIANIS, M. KATHARINE Mudjekeewi.v Senzfrcr fizlclis. Girl Scouts. WRIGHT, ROBERT T. ---- Bob Que les gens d'csprit son! hates. l42l J3AG.4e:uMgQD i:Q.,E.4y. VVUERTZ, GERDA ----- '1Gerda'f ' Hfir Deulschen fiircfzlmz Gall, sons! ubvr Nifhts in flcr 17011. Chief of G. A. A.: German Club: Senior Executive Committee: Secretary of Student Council: Thrift Club: Zenith: R Girls: Emblem Girlsg Class Play. ZAYECHEK, MARIE B. ---- BunnyJ' Though she's quicl amf full of yrafc, In Ihr' world she will ffm! her flaw. QW We Qiifffjiwjy SIDNEY VERYL CORWELL Y - 191 1-1929 1431 4 I n Guts of tile? Groun And out of tlze ground made tlze Loral Goff to grow every tree tlzat is Pleasant to tile sigjzt and goozlfor food. tlminlxing this as I listenecl to tile willows dripping their Pattering moisture on the gravel walls outsicie my window. I was thinking that He must have given trees souls at tile salne time. I know that my Wiuow tree has a souig and if you have ever seen a Poplar lifting sturdy arms in Prayer or Pines under the stars Jarli anti heavy with the mystery of forgotten ages, you will not riouiat it. Drip. Drip. Their delicate, Liurrecl Sil1101.lEff6S against a dripping slay. Theirs was real lneauty. I t-lf1OllS1'1t of silver inirciles Lending their slim 1it11Bl1BSS to cool streams and of mapies the color of oicl wine against an autumn sunset. I saw mlaris foiiagefl, spear- Pointecl spruce trees against ciariser hills and a wiiite moon caught among their interlaced inougils. Drip. Drip. It was the only noise in the night. Steady rliytixm. Lilxe time faint beating of a tom-tom. -MILDRED MURPHY. ' fA.G.as.AAfs.dJiaE4s T he Castle of Maidens THE picture, The Castle of Maidens, was presented to the art depart- ment by the SAGAMORE Staff at the SAGAMORE day program in recog- nition ofthe services the department has rendered to the SAGAMORE. It is now hanging in the art room. Continually seeking the Castle of the Grail, Sir Galahad wanders about in the enchanted land. At length catching a glimpse of a strange castle, he makes haste to reach it, and finds it to be the Castle of Im- prisoned Maidens. Sir Galahad enters the castle and is welcomed by the maidens, Who have long been expecting him, for it was according to prophecy that a perfect knight should come to deliver them. N112 Abbey has represented these maidens as most beautiful in form and feature. They are dressed in pale colors such as blue, White, rose, and lilac, richly embroidered with gold. The hero is turned away from us as he humbly receives the shyly offered gratitude of the fair maidens. His helmet and shield may be seen on the Hoor beside him. E451 QJAGAMQQE Caesar Borgia This magazine section contains zvorlr zchieh has been done sinee lllareh, 1928. Some of the selections came in too late to be published in the 1928 annualg therefore, this year- boolz prints ivorlz of a few stua'ents who graflziatea' in the June class of 1928. J. Wveston Prineell, who grafluatezl in the June class of 1928, has alone the most and the finest ereatifue work that has been done by any .S'2'llh,FI1f in Roosevelt High School. Ar the eonnneneeznent exereises in June he reeeitfefl reeognition of his work and, therefore, is not awarzlen' a prize in this annual. fo Z a iu, Al. W1is'r0N PRINCELL I. THE URBIAN CUND on the pavements, beat on the drums, Kill the Barbarians and hang them by their thumbs! Ravage the farmland! Start the fire! Smoke climbs upward! Strike the lyre! Yell and dance as We did at Tyre! Hell for Christians, throw them in the tire! Nleasure it all with the throb of drums, And beware of Borgia, when he Comes! Corvinius toiled hard and well-- Mixed his powders on a bright sea shell, lVIoVed his fingers in a magic spell, And Borgia said he Was an Infidel. They took Corvinius! Listen to him yell! Oh, cut his hands off! Oh, cut his tongue out! They took Corviniusl Listen to him yell! Ch! Oh! Oh! Listen to Corvinius' gasp of woe. Glistening blood in a smooth, red How! Glory! Gloria! Greatest of the Nebula! Caesar Borgia Rules us below. !46l 45 JAGAMQ REQ II. THE MUNARCH DRlX Ii along through Italy, pushing all before! Shake the earth until we split the core! Flames for the soldiery, flames and war! Long dim sieges of dusty years, Twilight ghostliness-Superstitious fears, Dead piled high, and a mighty flow of tears! Leave the men unburied on a sultry plain, Or staring quietly in Alpine rain. Old wounds ache again. Pain! Pain! Pain! Madonria Fluvia, young and fair, Lived and dreamed her dreams of air. Borgia arrived with kingly train, Borgia left, and left a stain. Oblong boxes in a clumsy row- Pock-marked faces with feverish glow- Listen to the lunatics, learning how to crow! Yelling at the Tiber for its listless flow! Vvhile a tall, gaunt monk, of feline grace VVhispers to Borgia and sets the pace. !'Hush! Kill the peasantry. Hush! Kill the noblemenf' Borgia schemed with poisonous wine, And tainted daggers, bright and fine, And laughed at it all, and held his side, And screamed, and howled, and laughed until he died! Glory! Gloria! Greatest of the Nebula! Caesar Borgia Laughed until he died! III. THE RIZCKONING SATAN grinned when Borgia came, And gibbered into the dull, red flame, Vvhile ebony maidens danced to the shame Of Borgia's everlasting name. Flickering bodies glisten and glow- Borgia dances as the lunatics crow!- Satan howls again. Ho! Ho! Ho! Vvatch the convulsions of Borgia's soul, As Corvinius takes his long-due toll! Pound on the pavements, beat on the drums, Scourge the Emperor, and hang him by the thumbs! While the long-dead soldiery howl on for more, l !47,l 4?- Agfa. QAMQQE And Satan laughs 'til his sides are sore! Hush to the number of Borgia's crimes, Listen only to the church bell chimes- Only watch when the steeple-jack climbs, But remember this, when the tale is said, Borgia's enemies all are dead- And now lie crumbling into dust Holding still their swords of rust. Listen only to the soft, sad chimes For Borgia died ten thousand times. Glory! Gloria! Greatest of the Nebula! Caesar Borgia -and soft, sad chimes. -I. 'WESTON PRINCELL, 12A. Nations in ll-lodgeflpodge AR!!! Funny men in long coats run away. Bloody pavements. Black newspapers. Hushed talk. Wild justice. Long lines of tents. Silvery bugles. Droning motors. Gibbering machine guns. Tiny specks in the sickly dawn. Long lines of lumbering trucks. - lblen marching in time. Much laughter. New faces. lVIissing faces. Trenches. Rain. lVIud. Quiet men staring into the heavy rain. Long hours of silence. Feeble songs. Strong nerves. Clenched teeth. Wild eyes Blinding Hashes. Hot metal. Smarting throats. Gas. Big iron caterpillars wallowing in the mud. Many men! running after each other. lylore gas. More men. Many droning motors. l Hours. Weary, ghastly, aching hours. Tear-faced women everywhere. Red Cross stations. Frightened girls. Blustering little boys. Sad little boys. Much religion. Many gold stars. f48 Victory! lron heels on vanquished throats. Many papers. lyluch shaking of heads Returning men. Shouts. Laughter. Different men. Changed men. Qld men. Hopeless waiting. Longing eyes. Defeat. .ge H6 I ln hlemoriam. Long, white rows of silly crosses. lvlany people thinking. Flowers. Sweet, beautiful flowers. A warm and friendly sun. Birds. Stately granite. Prayer. Nlany, many bowed heads. Leaning shadows. Many benedictions. Sundown. Beautiful, tinted clouds. Prophetic clouds. Sad clouds. Taps. Long lines of men at attention. VVhite faces. Crystal tears. Realization. -J. VVi5sToN PRINCELL, IZA. 1 i I Q I fAG.a2gNaoD iI5Qe-EA? March O for the gay days, grim days, gray days! Ho for the March Winds! Ho for the play days! When the rain and the sun rule the aye and the nay days! When the voices of Spring are already ringing, And by small snow banks, the young birds are singing, And Spring time is winging- Onward! Northward! With all her display days! Dressed in her collars stiff with starch, VVith wind and cold and icicle arch, Stern lipped, forbidding- Sending low cars skidding, Bent and grizzled, hobbles old Dame lVIarch. Laughing, howling! Cursing, growling! Swaying dizzily back and forth. March days are here, hurrah! With shrieking hysteria, With kingly regalia Spring comes north! Zoom along the highways, darkways, byways, Zoom past the reaches of the airplane skyways. Zoom among the tree tops, Zoom Where the sea stops. Howl and threaten past the cold, gray tomb, Answer to the echoes like a cry of doom. I am the bold wind, March wind, cold wind. I am the old wind that howls along the moon. Raging afar, like a spent typhoong Or zooming onward, forward, nearer, Bleaker, darker, grayer, drearerg Zooming like a cloud upon a famished land. Cutting, slashing, curving, dashing, Spattering blood upon my outstretched hand. March days are here, hurrah! With shrieking hysteria, With kingly regalia And outstretched hand! Ho for the gay days, grim days, gray days! Ho for the March Winds! Ho for the play days! Ho for the thrill of the aye and the nay days! Ho for the voice of the March wind calling- Ho for the crash of the icicles falling- Ho for buildings and streets forlorn And Ho for the month when dreams are born! -J. WESTON PRINCELL, IZA. l49l 4? QJAQAMQQE 43 Fancy First prize for junior high poetry. ROBERT EvANs S I lay on my back And watched the clouds, I saw the sheep Go by in crowds. Some cows go by, And horses, too, Up to a gate And then right through. Here comes a pig! No, it's a mouse! Now it has changed Into a house! Clouds can change Into everything. It is such fun Imagining! -ROBERT EVANS, 8A ll ll ll ix Teacher in Spring Honorable mention for junior high poetry. CAN'T she hear and can't she see And Canlt she feel for a kid like me? live brought her apples of reddest hueg I'Ve brought her violets Wet With dew. And yet she doesn't seem to know How tiresome it is, to sit and sit Or work, and Work, and be just so! -MARGARE'F MCPHEE, SB E501 QAGAMQ rragmq. Rain Clouds Firxf prize for junior high poetry. ALBIN Kwon: HERDS of white sheep move too slowly away From a black, hungry wolf, Seen far off in the blue sky, Growling as he moves toward the sheep. Now he comes closer, and the blue sky darkens, VVith rumbles and fire streaks he scares the sheep awayg Then when the heavenly fields are dark and grey, The water drips from his swollen tongue. -ALBIN K1.oc'EK, 8B. December Honorablf mention for junior high poetry. TPI-IERHS an untamed fellow about today, He is frolicking over the town, He nipped at my nose as I came from school, And he almost knocked me down. It is the jolly, dancing, wild, north wind Vvho makes us all remember lt's time to get our skis and sleds For the snow storms in December. Our cheeks all are a redder hue, Our faces all wear smiles, Let's drag our sleds to the top of the hill And coast for a million miles. -ALBERDINA MLDDIQL, SB. E511 1 4 Q Qfxscefxxmobmm Three Kings, Eve in Porto Rico First prize for senior high poetry. YE fi 3 QE i ri W. L . 'f ,-:,v J .5 r Bruxicn HORROCICS EVENING was nestling over Aguadilla, And the brilliant sun of Porto Rico was drowning In the wide, wide' bay. Evening saw the ragged urchins of Jibero Squatting underneath their propped-up cabins, Heaping the damp grass in little mounds In honor of the Three Great Kings. The Three Great Kings might pass that way tonight, The Three Kings on their way to see the Christ Child. Their camels might want grass tonight, And should they stop there, they would leave Gifts for the peddlers' children of Tierra. As in years before the little children of the poor Had waited anxiously, so they waited. The moon that night saw no illustrious kings, No wise men from the East came riding up, And no bright jewels were left for waiting children Except the diamond dew-drops on the grass. Only the tide came in, and waves dashed Against rocks on the red earth. The thin sand-ribbon was buried beneath The green satin waves edged with ermine. The sun rose, and by its blinding glare Sought to hide the revels of the night. But one long, pointing finger set An oyster shell afire beneath the cabin, And when the wee dark faces, Eager with excitement, saw the pretty shell, They found the King's jewel Inside it, set apart for them. VVho was it that had sent his messengers To give the small, dark children Happiness? -BERNICE HoRRoCKs, 11B E521 45 Y., JAGAMQ iE'9l?5-E45 The Caged Tiger Ifonorahle mention for senior high poetry. SLEEK, tawny beast, That stalks with restless pace Inside your iron barsg Vvhose glowing, yellow eyes of hate Rellect the untamed savagery in Their golden depths. Do you remember jungle nights Under a flaming jungle moon VVhen crouched in the damp Swamp grass You watched with greedy eyes the Doe in her hiding placeg Watched, with greedy, yellow eyes Mad with the lust to kill, Her fear distended nostrils and trembling Flanks as she strove to riseg Felt the quivering flesh beneath Your rending paws of death -And smelled the hot blood? Sleek, tawny beast, That stalks with restless pace Inside those iron bars, Do you remember? -MILDRED MURPHY, IIA. Allegory Izfonorable mention for senior high poetry. THE world is a cupboard Holding many kinds of dishes- VVhite china, purity's tokeng Blue willow, which is rareg Fine glass, easily brokeng Brown crockery, that stands wear. -MARION ALBERTSON, 12B. E531 45 QJAQAMQQE 'll' ree Shadows HAY'E you ever watched weird shadows That the trees cast at night As the moon shines through their branches VVith a soft and silvery light? The great oak looks like Hercules And shows his muscled strength. The slender willow sways, a dancer in the breeze, And shakes her grassy skirt to its full length. The snow-clad pines and frosty Hrs Are stalwart lords Wrapped in cloaks of ermine white, and pearls. All these, and more, youlll see If you watch the shadows of the trees. -DOROTHY VADNAIS, 11B Field Grasses EVERY blade a gossip with the wind, Listening-then passing the news along. To bits of meadow scandal One group nods assentg Qthers sa-dly shake their headsg They bend and sway, their words a whispering waveg Each leans gracefully to catch the other's words. -RUTH BRACIE, IZA Love UVB, you are a flaming sky Of passionate sunset hue. Love, you are the blackest night That ever mortal knew. -Lois ZIEGLER, IZA l54Ql 45 i QPAGANL on Q-,EQ Whiteness ILIXST night Mothei' Goose shook out her feather bed, And myriads of feathers came twirling and dancing down, One was a star of the perfectest shape, Sparkling enough for a fairy queen's crown. More and more came until the night was filled VVith whirling snow ships and fancies, Fit trimming indeed for the fairy queen's gown, One touch of mortal hand and they vanished. -DORA SCHULSTAD, 7A. The Downy Woodpecker DOWNY is a drummer boyg His drum's a hollow limb. If people listen or do not, lt's all the same to him. He plays a Chinese melody With nothing but his bill. And when he gives a concert, t He makes the Woodfolk thrill. -LEONARD Ni2LsoN, 1lB. Dreams HZDREANIS are but the idle fancies Of the fairy folk that play In among the flowering pansies On a summer day. -CARL ANDERSON, IIB. l55l 4?- QJAGAMQZEE My Garden A POPPY swaying on its stem ls an oriental dancer Swaying to weird music And waving a crimson shawl. The lily is a stately lady With powdered hair and billowy skirt Floating gracefully on a mirrored Hoor To the lovely strains of a minuet. A zinnia is my gypsy gay Flaunting her vivid colors in my face And dancing with wild abandon To the wind's amorous song. E -HELEN STEVENSON Sheets COOL, clean, snowy white things! I scent the crisp morning air In youl Part, and let my weary body Take flight to heavens of dreams On your clouds of lleecy peacefulness- You cool, clean, satin white things! ,11B. -DOROTHY DEFORREST, 12B x A Tapestry FLOWERS and butterflies all woven in together, Children and lambs and fragrant blue heatherg A little, brown cottage by a silvery pond, With the cattle grazing in the clover beyondg The apple blossoms, and maple trees grown so tall, All this I see in the tapestry on the wall. -LORETTA BEL E561 45 L, 9A QfAG..4asNXsdJ iwsmqi My Lady N0 fancy llulls, no powdered tresses, No satin shoes, nor gaudy dresses, My Lady. No haughty air nor condescending glances, Nothing that displeases, nor yet entrances, My Lady. She cares for no crude, Highty styles, But always looks at me-and smiles, My Lady. --BIERNICE HoRRoCKs, IIB. Music HT is in the Voice of the wind Sighing In the pine trees. It is in the sound of water Rippling In the forest. It is an Indian legend Always Mysterious. -JEANNE YRTHIEN, 12B. M A Wave of Life I AM a wave of Life Stained by the drifting waste ln the struggle and the strife Of the narrow streamg I roll to the Sea's immensity To wash me from the slime Of the muddy banks of Time. -JAMES JAECK, IIB. l57l r 4? QJAGAMQQE I I 45 Alone in a ll-llonse TELI, me what's worse, On a cold, windy day, Than to be alone in a house? What sound is more freezing, When all are away, Than the scurry of rat, or of mouse? Each book, each chair, each crevice of lloor Is alive with demons of the days of yore. The house is haunted, as in printed book, I close my eyes, for I dare not look At what surely lies Below me, above me, beside me! My ears are ringing with a silent groan. VVhat's worse than being at home alone? -LORENE STUBBS, 9B. xl ln ll ll ll ix To Winter BLOW, blow, northern winds, blow! Cover the earth in a shroud of snow, Burden the trees with a heavy load, Drift the snow on the icy road, Bend naked boughs with your iron will Till they scream and creak, loud and shrill. Blow, blow, northern winds, blow! Cover the sun with your clouds of snow, Freeze the fruit on a late-bearing tree, Hold tight the ships on a northern sea, Hold the world in your cold, chilly breath Till you die a long, hard, cold death. -VIVIAN KRALL, 11B lx ll xl In il xx Ceylon Gl,ElibllNG gold, shimmering silk, Sandalwood and teakwood, Stretches of mahogany, Ebony, ivory- Roses and pearls, Burma maids whirling, Big elephants hauling,- All in a cup of tea. -MILDRED DAHL, 12B l58l , I fA.Q3:.Ar4Ms Co ire-n'..4y The Weeping Willows Q GRACEFUL, pining willow treel VVhy is your heart so sad? VVhy does your head droop downward so, And, when the South wind whistles by, IVhy is your song so sad and low, And often broken by a sigh? O, were there days when you were glad Before your heart was broken? Perhaps you smiled up at the sky, Or, when the sun was out of sight, Did you sing a lullaby Sweet as that you hum tonight? Or, was your lot so very hard You could not bear to smile, Or were you such a sulky tree You only frowned and fussed each day, Until now, when I gaze at you, You have forgotten to be gay? Or is the World so different now Than in the UGolden Age, The people passing quickly by, So every-day and commonplace, You mourn because, as years roll by, Nlen lose the ease of knighthood grace? I would that you could smile at me, Most lovely of all trees! I would that I could dry your tears And make your heart be gladl Yet over all the laughing world, I love you best though you are sad. -DoRoTHY GRANT, IOA. xl xx xx lx wx lr Late Afternoon UST an unmarred surface of a pondg A grove of oak trees, scarlet, golden, Somber hued, Hecked with deep shadow- Then, a sudden burst of golden sunlight. Transfigured! Kings' jewels reflected clearly In a darkly polished table top. -DoRoTHY HANSON, 12B. l59l , 42 asks. caasaamfam My Grandmother ALL day long she sits by the fireplace in her little old rocking chair. Her face is wrinkled and aged, but her blue eyes still twinkle and her thin lips still smile at everyone. Over her scanty locks of gray, she wears a frilly, White cap. Her dresses are usually black. She says she likes that color best since grandpa died. Her feet are rested on an old fashioned footstool that grandpa made long ago. To complete the peaceful picture, the big, old cat sits wisely by her side, and when her hands are not busy, curls up in her lap and purrs her to sleep. -EVELYN HED, IOA. Ain Apple IT Was so bright against the drifting haze 0ne felt that summer left it there to turn The mind from fading things. Boys gave it praise Upon their way to school, and stopped to yearn. It was a crimson challenge on a bough They could not clinchg in a tree so tall They could not shake it, and they pondered how to get it. They gathered sticks and stones, and arms were swung In frantic haste to drop it from the skies. They struck it, and the fruit that fell they found ' More bruised than other apples on the ground. 'T -HERBERT OLSON, 11B. i601 , -45 i o JAGAMQ Q34 Diamonds and Blue 'Velvet IT was dark blue. I had seen it many times before, but tonight it was more beautiful than ever. The background seemed to be soft velvet elaborately trimmed with sparkling gems. Across the entire length was stretched a silvery belt, that shimmered in the pale light. One large dia- mond sent forth a shaft of rays that glimmered on the rich velvet. The sky was watching over the world! -THELMA SELANDER, IOA. The Sun God AH, waning moon, Pale white goddess of the midnight heavens, Treading lightly on your dusky pathway, Your loveliness veiled in a film of mist, Cool, distant, Like silver, Quench quickly your soft starry lightg For a shimmer of soft yellow gold Far in the eastern horizon Warns that the sun god is near. Now from under a powder-blue cover The lights of his crown flash bright. Dazzling colors: Gold, lemon-tinted gold, Spirals of Vermilion, and purple, Pink, coral and crimson stream out. The fire-souled sun god Is here. -IMOGENE ADAMs, 11B. l611 4? QJAGAMQQE A Tree HIGH on the r0ck's seamed face, High on its heat shim'ring gruyness, A cranny-rooted pine tree grows, VVatc-:red by rain and Winter snows. Soiled with fairy dust, in the grayness It is a piece of green lace. JAMES MCHITGII, 11B af' i621 A 4 i WAGAAA QD iuvgmq The Wild Rose IVVENT into Z1 Wooded glen XVhere nature's fairest flower grows. I went into Z1 Wooded glen To find the sweet, wild rose. I plucked the rose and took it home. I plucked the rose,-but Why? It lived and flourished in the gleng I brought it home to die. HARRY OLIN, 11B. P631 P I I i I r l i 4?- qgffseasaaammm G The Lost lldol of Barkool First prize for senior high short story. THE heavy perfume of burning sandalwood hung over the heads of the worshippers who were intently watching the sinuous departure of the huge fantastic dragon. As the ter- rible figure disappeared, the people hurried to the temple, and kneeling before the god, Kin Su Nli, listened to the fore- boding words of the prophet. f'This god of Barkool, Kin Su bfi, will within the next Vmm KRUL five years disappear. It will leave no trace, and will be lost A A ' to the Chinese race forever. The prophet spoke the words in a voice that trembled slightly, but yet lost none of its power. A terrible, wailing cry rose from the listeners and then died down to a perfect silence. With his patriarchal head bowed, he walked slowly into the carved and frescoed temple with his gorgeously embroidered robes dragging unheeded behind him. The crowd dispersed, each going his own sorrowful way. Long, dark shadows were stealing silently across the sky, when a shadow, darker than the rest, darted noiselessly up the steps of the temple and disappeared within its shades. A few minutes later, this time inside the temple, it emerged from the surrounding blackness and crept to the foot of the shrine of Kin Su Mi. Slant, covetous eyes looked enviously upon the little gem-covered, scintillating god. Dirty hands reached out as if to grasp it, and then hesitantly withdrew. A step was heard in the chamber adjoining. The dark eyes, under their mop of straight black hair, glanced quickly toward the sound of approaching footsteps. The silent figure retreated noiselessly, its torn white pants fluttering. This performance was repeated many times in the months that fol- lowed. No one knew of these nocturnal visits, no one even suspected them. Safe in his knowledge that he was undetected, San roamed the streets, shunning every one. He made many plans in which the idol held central interest, but each plan he discarded as undesirable. Whenever' Kin Su Mi was mentioned, a possessive light would gleam in his eyes and fade out so quickly that one wondered if it really was not an optical illusion. Each day the desire to possess the idol grew greater. Now he roamed the streets with a gleam of madness in his eyes, muttering to himself. One night, when San was making one of his visits to worship the idol, he was startled by the sound of tramping feet, frightened cries, and shots. He ran to the door to see what had happened. Confused crowds ran here and there, wildly trying to find an avenue of escape. Lurid flames leaped up from burning buildings: bullets whistled, carrying their grim message of death, and naked steel clashed upon naked steel. The grotesque shadows of vengeful figures, greatly enlarged by the light of the fires, raised monstrous arms, wielding giant weapons to strike, only to be stricken. The hollow thud of giant boulders, loosened by raving, blood- thirsty men, was heard at short intervals. San's frightened eye caught the l f64l -45 J. JAGAMQREQ flicker of torches upon the mountain side. He started to run and then thought of the idol. He turned, ran swiftly to the shrine, seized the image and fled. He recklessly ran a gauntlet of bullets, the idol clutched closely to his breast, and safely reached the foothills of the mountain. He stopped a minute--listened. Everything on the mountain was silent. He stag- gered up its steep side, cutting his feet on sharp stones and falling head- long into unseen holes. Greed pushed him on. Once in a sudden fall, he dropped the idol. He hunted frantically, muttering curses. He finally found it lodged in a crevice, and seized it with a hoarse cry of delight. On and on he stumbled, losing track of time. It seemed hours before he reached the entrance of the cavern he sought, though in reality it was not more than a half hour. In his confused state of mind, he failed to notice a huge boulder precariously balanced over the mouth of the cave. The rock had been loosened by those stones rolling upon the frantic city. Inside of the cave he weakly sank down upon a pile of dirty rags that had been thrown into one corner. He seized a torch which he had previ- ously left there and lighted it so that he could see the god better. He gloated over it, muttering caressing words, finding satisfaction in its glint- ing lights, and recalling the prophet's words, 'Alt will be lost foreverf' A crash! He jumped up, the idol clutched in his hand, and peered fur- tively around him, then crawled to the entrance of the cavern. It was blocked by a huge boulder! His mirthless, demoniacal laugh rose on the silent airg he wept, clawing at the obstruction until his fingers bled. Snivel- ing in abject terror, he groveled on the ground. Eons passed, it seemed. The torch Hickered-went out, and the idol grinned sardonically through the murky air. -VIVIAN KRALL, 11B. Waves ROLLIN G, tumbling Rollicking, laughing, Small waves and big waves, Racing and chasing, But never catching. Gurgling, bubbling, Advancing, receding, Ripples and mountains, Lapping and slapping, Still never catching. -MADELINE MARIE PRESTEMAN, 1213. l65l QJAGAMQQE ,N i W Godis Hands I first prize for senior high essay. MY childhood was spent in a small log cabin situated at the edge of a majestic mountain where it terminated in a deep chasm. Great green Hr, hemlock, and pine trees cov- cred the slopes in all directions, it was an awe inspiring sight to look out of the cabin on this scene of peace and quiet. While I was yet very young, I formed the idea that these beautiful, strong trees were God's Hands fighting the ele- ments so that a small group of mere humans could continue VVMLACE WITHEE to survive. In rain or storm, the powerful trees held back the great forces that surely would otherwise have pushed us into eternity. Many were the times that the wind howled and screamed outside, pouring down upon us with an overwhelming force, only to be turned aside by our guardians and go careening down the mountain side to vent their rage on those below. Early in March when the spring freshets commenced, and the tinkling, playful streams changed to demons that Went dashing down to flood the valleys below, I-Iis Hands would be waiting to quell this new threat to our further happiness and spread their shade over the deep snow so that it would not melt and join the truant brooks that were leap- ing down the slopes, going outside their boundaries and playing hooky like bad school boys. Even in times when our grief was solely from personal hurts, the great Hrs would Wave their boughs and whisper comforting words to the sick one or perhaps hum him a tune, meanwhile nodding their heads to keep time. I have often gathered great solace from these almost divine guard- ians when after stubbing my toe I would creep to a secluded nook beneath one of those great comforters and cry 'til I could cry no more. I would lie in their shade in tear-stained silence and listen with a still, hurt sob or two until I fell asleep listening to their soft melodies. All this had to end. When I was eight years old, we moved to the city and never again was I to be put to sleep by those friendly caretakers. But even though I can see and hear them in reality no more, in my troubled moments I often talk with them and receive comfort when I am sick or hurt. --VVALLACE VVITH1-313, 11B. E661 JAGANLQREQ Along the Minnesota - Honorable mention for senior high description. THE placid Nlinnesota River, unruflled save by wind, is truly a haven for the canoeist and nature lover. To one accustomed to the scenery of the northern part of the state, the river and its valley might seem monotonous. The stately cottonwoods, the drooping willows, and silvery maples that confine the river, the valley hills with their upland trees and small spring brooks, the marshes and ponds between the river and the hills-these make the valley beautiful and interesting beyond any description. And one who truly loves nature will find as much beauty and mystery along the banks of the Minnesota as he will find in the northern part of the state. It is difficult to say which season makes the valley most striking. In the spring, kinnikinnik and willow take on a greenish tint. Birches are white against brown hills. Ducks and geese of the flying wedge stop in the marshes for a bite to eat. Redwing black birds pour out their cheery notes from the tops of cottonwoods. Tiny frogs sing out from the swamps. The trout season is open again. In the summer there is a peace that hangs over the bottoms. The meadows are carpeted by rank grass, decorated by lilies of the field, and dotted with butterflies. The river is so quietg and yet it is pulsing with the life of smaller beings. Cattle gathered under the shady trees wonder mildly at the people who so hurriedly go up and down the river in speed- boats. The fall is different. Red squirrel does not scold so long nowg he is too busy. All wild animals are either gorging themselves, or storing food in preparation for the long winter that will soon be upon them. The boom of Shotguns from the swamps, and circling ducks proclaim that the hunt- ing season is in full swing. Golden cottonwoods, yellow elms, willows that still are green along the riverg scarlet oaks, naked gray butternuts, brown basswoods on the hills produce an effect that even an artist's brush could not equal. Then winter comesl The river is locked up by ice, muskrat houses like miniature haystacks rise from the frozen surface of the marshes. Spring-fed trout brooks that never freeze, steam in the cold. 'Coon, fox, weasel, mink, rabbit, squirrel, and mouse tracks make intricate patterns in the snow. The snow meltsg the river rises, and the ice goes out. Everything is grinding chaos, noise, and confusion. Great blocks of ice several hundred feet long groan and rumble, pile upon one another, slide off, and break apart. With the ice are logs, treetops, old boats, almost anything that will float. After the ice has gone, it is spring again. -SIDNEY ROMMELL, 11B. E671 .qcfas GAMQQE Reveiriie Honorable :mention for senior high essay. I READ somewhere that reverie is the source of intelligence. Oh, I must have reverie, I think, and search through the article for a few sugges- tions as to how to pursue it. I had always dimly imagined that persons who indulged in reverie paced up and down a room with slow measured strides, their hands behind their backs and their brows furrowed with care. But no, I am informed by this smug author that reverie is usually taken in a sitting posture and that it is an excellent idea to keep one's hands occu- pied with some light task while his mind is engaged in deep thought. The article gives a few illustrations of ideal situations for reverie. One is a picture of an old lady before her hearth, knitting while the kettle boils a gentle accompaniment to her thoughts. Another is of an old gen- tleman sitting upon a rock and whittling a miniature ship while he looks out to sea and thinks. But neither of these suggestions seem practical in my case for I have neither the time nor the inclination to knit, I have never seen the sea, and I would be sure to cut myself with the knife if I did not pay the strictest attention to what my hands were doing. The third and last suggestion was the picture of a gentlemanly tramp holding a piece of meat over a fire while he gazed into the flames and dreamed. This, thinks I, is more like it. Accordingly I take stock of the necessary props, and at the earliest opportunity I gather them all about me in a secluded spot, and set my stage for reverie. WVhile gathering the wood for my fire, I try to get my mind in the proper philosophic mood. Ah, I muse, as I pick up a stick, perhaps this log has lain here for hundreds of years, dropped by some Indianls hand. I grow quite elated over this thought. Reverie certainly does give one an intelligent feeling. I am brought back to crude reality, however, by the pressing need of preparing my meat for frying for is it broiling?j. After much careful thought I have chosen steak as the proper meat for reverie. I should really have preferred weiners, but I argued that weiners would be too trivial, too frivolous for my weighty purpose. I begin to repent this decision, however, as trouble arises over keeping all of the meat over the fire at one time. I had not counted on this difhculty, as the man in the picture had seemed to be having such an easy time of it. His posture had been graceful and negligent, while mine is strained and awkward to a pain- ful degree. lNIy trouble arises from the necessity of more hands than I am possessed of. To meet this requirement I am forced to curve one arm around the tire so that my two sticks will meet from opposite directions in support of the steak. This position soon becomes unbearable. lVIy arm is beginning to show and feel the effect of the flames markedly, while the steak remains an obstinate, dull red. One corner turns abjectly in upon itself. Nly contempt for steak is unbounded. There ensue five minutes of agony. VVill that steak never be done? I nibble at a charred corner. I-Iorrorsl I have never tasted meat like this before. What can it be? Oh, yes, the salt. I dash a liberal amount of it upon the steak. I am l,03l QfAc31,aQs.JfsA.dD Q34 determined that this meat shall not suffer because of unseasoning. I take it from the fire and taste it. On the contrary, this meat has suffered because of salt. It is uneatable. Thoroughly disgusted, I stamp the fire out and return home. My Hrst act upon my arrival there is to burn up the article by the smug author of Reverie. To all others who wish to pursue higher thinking I will say that reverie cannot be sought after or prepared for. It must come natu- rally, like the measles, or it is of no use whatever. -MYRL13 GSBCJRNIQ, 11B. To an Old Willow Ware Bowl Holzorable ment'ion for senior high poetry. ULD blue bowl, dreaming on my shelf, VVhat is your history? Was your yellow surface ever White And gleaming in the candlelight? Did your mellow cheeks once glow Vvhile a merry company Toasted king and country with red wine? And now you stand aloof from my blue china Listening-to a dead minuet. I feel so small before you, proud blue bowl. I know that if I shrieked at you You would not hear me. Your ears are straining back to sounds long passed, -a tinkling spinet -the lacy rustle of lVIilady's dress. -MYRLIQ OSBORNIQ, IIB. l69l 4?- alfa GAMQRE Old Hans HOULD one chance to stop at a certain store near the outskirts of Nlinneapolis, where everything from pins to the largest of household necessities can be pro- cured, he may consider himself luckyg for it is not everyone who has been able to view the picturesque little store keeper that would greet him. Undoubtedly one would be as vastly amused as l was the first time l had occasion to see him. Should it be on a Sunday morning that one enters this untidy store building with its stock piled about in a harem-scarem manner, it might be some Hve or ten minutes before his presence would even be noticed, for it is at this time that several of the proprietor's farmer friends draw chairs about the little round table in the center of the room and, with old Hans, engage in a spirited game of dice or cards for small stakes. lf, after several minutes of waiting, the customer finds it necessary to inquire of the group as to the whereabouts of the clerk, he will be astounded by a man like none he has ever seen before, who will ask in an uninterested tone, ls there some- thing you want F If the buyer answers in the affirmative, he will come shuffling away from the game like a schoolboy called from his play, hurriedly wait on him, and rush back to the one sport that he really enjoys. If one should happen to come in at another time, he would probably see him sitting at the same table, with a pair of gold-rimmed glasses, selected from his own stock, resting peacefully near the tip of his wrinkled nose, studying diligently the daily paper, and weighing its contents carefully in his mind. lt has been for some twenty years that this beloved old man has maintained this little country store that is as much unchanged as its bachelor owner for all the progress of civilization near it. Neatness is missing from his makeup. His hair, seldom cut and less seldom combed, is like the stocks of his very store as they lie scattered. His clothes, though not worn, are only as clean as he deems it necessary, regretfully, that is hardly enough to meet the approval of most of us. Yet under all of this mask, there dwells a soul more kindly and honest than most. Seldom, indeed, has it been that he has turned away some poor customer simply because of a lack of funds, even though his generosity might have been infringed upon by some few. Although he is given to sudden outbursts at times, his ideas are usually based on some conclusions that he has arrived at through careful and deliberate thought. His habits, with the exception of using considerable profanity which he hurls at teasing boys in a manner that indicates his vast vocabulary of such, are not to be questioned. He is always willing to listen to anyone, provided he is not at dice or cards, and this fact has sometimes proved unprofitable for him, especially when some high-powered salesman convinces him of the necessity of some seemingly useless article. He has never married because, as he puts it, 'fl do fairly well by myself, certainly l could do no better with a woman to look after. Asked why he does not give up his store, he answers, Here my friends come often to see me. If l had a home other than this, it is doubtful if so many would come. So it is that old Hans, grizzled and rather stout now, lives in solitary contentment in the rear of his little store, enjoying the hundreds of friends that he has won to him by his good fellowship despite his many peculiar traits. -JOHN BUTLER, IIB. l70l I JAGAMQQEA 1 The Storm on the Lake F you have never seen a storm on the lake, you are missing one of nature's most awe-inspiring spectacles. It humbles while it uplifts. Gradually the sky darkens and the clouds form themselves into rolling masses of purplish grey and smoky yellow. A stillness settles, and then the storm breaks suddenly in full force. The wind, at a velocity of forty miles an hour, lashes the waves into a white-capped sea of foam and sways the trees to and fro. The thunder awakens the echoes on the farther side of the lakes, and the lightning flashes and re-fiashes on a sight that is terrible in its beauty. At intervals can be heard a sharp crack like that of a pistol, as a tree breaks off and falls. The clouds get blackerg and then comes the rain, the pelting, beating, stinging rain. lt comes in sheets as though the bottom had fallen out of the heavens. It comes in torrents, in floods, until every little crevice and hole is filled and overflowing. As I stand on the porch, secure and dry, the elements seem to be trying to outdo them- selves in their ferocity. A last picture holds me spellbound and silent. E The white caps dash themselves far up on the beach, leaving shells and seaweed in their wake. The lightning streaks across the sky and lends its lurid glare to the scene. Even as l look, a tree is silhouetted for one instant, in the next, it falls with a sharp crack, leaving me with a sense of my utter insignificance before the miracles performed by our Creator. The thunder vents itself in an ear-splitting crash and grumbles its way to silence. The storm stops as suddenly as it began. The wind becomes calm and the waves roll back into the lake and spread out in peaceful circles until once more the surface of xthe lake lies in glossy smoothness, murky water hiding the living things beneath. Every little leaf and twig glistens and drips. A fresh clean atmosphere causes me to take deep exhilarating breaths and gives me new life. Along the beach are the many things discarded by the waves, an old umbrella, a Hshing rod, and a pair of spectacles-yes, even a lonesome looking, ragged, red felt bedroom slipper. Walking along the beach after the storm is over, l observe tiny, gleaming, pink shells, bits of seaweed, and dead fish strewn here and everywhere,-all souvenirs of the storm. lr -TRMA WICKSTROBT, 11B. T f A f' 'C f K ,-. Q ,f il gf f z 7' :y!- .fff i7L Vf-126, fo , ,f2ff-MMA! ftfzf -fc!! ,- , 7' fy 1 ,- ufff W QXV fy-f-f-5'fVL'-'diff 7X fi 'ii f f v f ,f4.cQW, s we , , yi M. MM JL? g . ,'i ' 5 1 , f 4, I if if ,. ff' X ffyffefjfff. AT! ju yi - f'lf.f , f 1 KM ff 5 Q Qgfii lg 3? 5 ws lg EQWJZW W . x A Knottecl aim ffof f f l J ps Sjgiigziguif ITL Spf, 0 . . - :X . Q S ' 1 ig2Qfgb L3Q N3 W W i 1 QU WgNff , M fp2?iLf?WfVw ff 519 M wf:42ffwfa5?G wtf M.,f QMWW ,g Wwfqfdfffwf W W WM ffwwf , MQMJ, '1 ifgfwwwwff , Jw KY M W JAGAAAQREQ TOP Row-Brace, Sedgwick, Olberg, Jorstad, Baron. BOTTOM Row-illyrlhen, Miss Coleman fadiviserj, Haralson, Illiss Newell fadfvisc-rj, Su-anson, Danilofwitz. Honor Society OFFICERS . MARIANNA JORSTAD - ----- - - - President ELLA BARON - - - - Vice-president LUCILLE SWANSON - - Secretary-Treaxvurer Miss NEW1-:LL - - ---- Adviser Miss COLEMAN - - - - - - Adviser HE purpose of the Senior Honor Society is to encourage earnest eflortg to give recognition for superior scholarshipg and to promote charac- ter, leadership, and service. In order to become a member of the society one must attain an average of 2.3 points in scholarship during the first three years of high school. He is elected by the unanimous consent of the principal, assistant principal, the dean, and the heads of the departments. In the spring -of 1926 the Roosevelt organization became a chapter of the National Honor Society. The club has the distinction of being one of the few Minneapolis clubs belonging to the National Society. Members of the January class that were members are Frank Olberg, Agnes' Lindgren, and Dorothea Lund. Those in the June Class are Royal lVlae Sedgwick, Marianna Jorstad, Ella Baron, Ruth Brace, Rose Danilo- vitz, Jeanne' Myrthen, Helen Haralson, and Lucille Swanson. rm AJAQQAAACEQE , , . UH sa: RHS se XXV' ' E, 9 LR d FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM ASTRID NORWICK - - - - President - - - CLIFFORD TOLLEFSBOL CLIFFORD TOLLEFSI-soL - - Vice-president - - VIOLET LYNGSTAD VIoI,E'r LYNGSTAD - - - Treasurer - - - INGOLF ROSKAFT JANET LEIN - - - - Seeretary - - - JANET LEIN MR. EGGAN ------- Adviser ------- MR. EGGAN HE Norse Club sponsored the Sigvald Qvale Silver Nledal declama- tory contest April 16. lXIYR'1'LE I'IAGliN llI1.nRIcn joIINsoN IRFNE WAGNER Winners of the Dr. Siwertsen prizes in Norse. l 74 l I YJ? . sf! JAGAAAQREQ E Rl'- YV rx .R,iXl, x EIR is if L 5 N. A ,f in QL if Ni IN FALL TERM CARL ANDERSON - LILLY EKLUND - RAYMOND PETERSON CARL BERGDAHL - AIRS. STARK - - Swedish eiuib Al' OFFICERS SPRING TERM - - President - - - CARL ANDERSON - - Vice-prfsident - - LILLY EKLUND - - - Secrezary A - - RAYMOND PETERSON - - -Sergeant-al-arnls - - - CARL BERGDAHL - - - - Adviser - - - - - - MRS. STARK HE Swedish Club, formed this year, is interested in studying Swedish customs, history, and literature. 1-A '. ' ff. UU-58fV'd V GLADYS JORDAN CARL ANIJ4IRSONiA XIARGAR1171' YOUNFQUIST Winners of honors' in Swedish. I 75 I l Q AJA GAMQQE g L .Lf ...afkf J' ii: ii I ,l ii an iffgfe f it ' Debate FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM CHARLES EVANS - - - President - - - CHARLES EVANS THFLMA SELANDER - - Vine-president - - THELMA SELANDER CLIFFORD GERDE - - Secretary - - CLIFFORD GERD-E Louis FELDMAN - - Treasurer - - Louis FELDMAN JOHN STOWERS - - -Sergeant-at-arnzw - JOHN STOWERS MR. OSTERHUS - - - - Adviser - - - - MR. OSTERHUS HE debate teams, under the direction of Levi Osterhus, Won the city championship. Those on the Winning teams were Thelma Selander, Helen Clausen, Louis Feldman, Bernice Nyen, Jack Youngquist, Clifford Gerde, and Charles Evans. A debate club has been organized, due to the growing interest in debate and extemporaneous speaking. UN , i761 E -,vfifgx X ,f A we f.A.GA.NeoJm-,EQ Student Council THE Student Council of Roosevelt High School reorganized in the fall of 1928. Stanley Krumbiegel was elected presidentg Ingolf Roskaft, vice-presidentg and Gerda Wuertz, secretary. Little time was lost in get- ting down to Work. Many important measures have come up before the council. Among these are the establishing of a permanent class ring and the student supervision of auditorium programs. In each case the council has shown itself capable of giving every bill proper consideration. No thoughtless action has been taken on any matter. It is the ambition of each member of the council that, as time goes on, the council will grow in importance and in the esteem of the students and faculty to such an extent that it will be considered an honor to become a member. . The reorganization this year was due largely to the efforts of Mr. C. C. Carlson, faculty adviser of the council. l77l QJA eaesaanmm TOP Row-Hendrickson, Srheren, Faster, Kinney, Kimmel, Swenson, Kelly, Baker. SECOND ROW-Nash, Norblorn, dlm, Peferson, Hibbard, Morgan, Ziegler. BOTTOM ROW-Holzer, Burrell, Schaenert, Miss Dennis fadiviserj, Hafhaway, Gardner, Dahl FALL TERM DOROTHY SCHOENERT VIRGINIA BARRETT RUTH HATHAWAY BLANCHE HERING MISS DENNIS - - MISS WHITCOMB - Silver Triangle - - - President - - - Vice-president - - Secretary - - - Treasurer - - - - - Adviser - - - -Y. W. C. A. Secretary - - SPRING TERM DORIS GARDNER - ALINIA DAHL RUTH HATHAWAY - BERNICE ALINT - MISS DENNIS - MISS WHITCOMB HE Silver Triangle, under the direction of the Y. W. C. A. secretary, Miss Elenor YVhitcomb, is open to all tenth grade girls. The club, which has thirty-two members, meets every two Weeks. This year the girls have Worked on a patch Work quilt. Every meeting is represented by a colored patch. At the end of the year the patches are to be made into a quilt. The club does outside Work. This year the girls Went to the Lutheran Orphanage and took charge of the children for the afternoon. For Christmas the girls Wrote cheerful verses and put them into pill boxes Which Were sent to the Danebo Home. The purpose of the Silver Triangle is to promote fellowship and to give service to others. The girls have many social gatherings. They not only have a good time, but endeavor to improve character. E781 . 45 . QAGAM on E2-E-45. 1 I Toi' Row--Read, f1lcCabe, Kobs, Glarlhill, Bissonnette, Ball, Birgert. SECOND Row-Holden, Adams, Solberg, Drill, Swanson, Olson, Harrington, Bartholomefu, BOTTOM Row-Roeslcr, Nelson, LN, Cottrell, Tinker, Arnold, Wilson. Girl Scouts 41 WF O F F I C E R S CATHERINE CoT'r'RELL - ---- - First Lieutenant KATHRYN TINKER - - - - Srribe KATHRYN TINKER - - - Treasurer Miss MURRAY ---- Captain HIS is the second year that the Girl Scout organization has been active at Roosevelt High School. It has advanced rapidly in this short time and expects to do much in the future. The troop consists of twenty-three members divided into four patrols, each of which elects its own patrol leader. Upon first entering the organi- zation, a girl is required to pass certain tests which class her as a tender- foot. The aim of every girl scout is to pass the tenderfoot and second- class tests so that she may be able to Work for merit badges. Of the twenty-three enrolled scouts of the Roosevelt troop, sixteen have become second-class scouts. Catherine Cottrell, Who at present is the most ad- vanced member of the troop, is a second-class scout and has fifteen merit badges. So far no project has been taken up, but the scouts expect to renew old acquaintances at the Glen Lake Sanitarium. ' tm 4.5- essays GAMQQE l 4 Die Deutsche Gesellschaft V' AI, FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM STANLEY KRUNIBIEGEL - - - President - - - STANLEY KRUMBIEGEL HEIBERG OGREN - - - Vice-president ---- NINA E. MARX EVELYN BACKMAN - - Serretary - - EVELYN BACKMAN Avis NIARSHALL ---- Treasurer - AvIs MARSHALL Roy HUNT - - - - -Sergeant-at-arms - VVILILIAM SIRLEY MRS. GRYCE ------ Adviser ------ MRS. GRYCE HROUGH the successful presentation of a clever vaudeville show, the die deutsche Gesellschaft, one of Roosevelt's most active clubs, has been able to present to its school an eight-tube superheterodyne radiola panatrope. The club has made the social life at Roosevelt more enjoyable by giving semi-monthly sunlight dances. E801 , 45 fAGIAR.AfRQ3 12912.45 W 1 f :W-.f ,. ,A in ,. Lg- . , . V M Blue Triangle ew FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM ROYAL MAE SEDGWICK - - - President - - ROYAL MAE SEDGWICK HELEN HARALISON - - Vice-president - - - HELEN HARALSON ELIZABETH BARRETT - Secretary - - ELIZABETH BARRETT FRANCIS PRUCE - - Treaxurer - - FRANCIS PRUCE MRS. ERICKSON - - - - Adviser - - - MRS. ERICKSON Adviser ---- MISS YOUNGDAHI. MISS YOUNGDAHL ---- MISS ADAMS ---- Y. W. C. A. Secretary ---- MISS ADAMS HE Blue Triangle is a high school branchgof the Y. W. C. A. The meetings are usually given over to prograxns and plans for service Workg but sometimes discussion groups are hxeldjin Which the giplb discuss ' ' 1 1 ' 1 1 1'r 1 ' RJ S r ' 1 I ' .1 l l31l 4?- AJAGAMQQE A TOP ROW-Sletten, Bo-wtlin, Westland, Danielson, Mr. Clark fadfviserl, Peterson, Larson, Farncs, Georgian. SECOND ROW-Berglund, Foslrr, Johnson, Sllullolm, Peterson, Benedici, Branrwell. h BOTTOM Row-Prcsfon, Sword, Stinsrud, Olson, Sjoquisl, Hawalh, Strom, Thomson. unior ll-li fY O F F I C E R S CARL SJOQUIST ----- - President LEONARD OLSON - --'- - Vice-president CARL GEORGIAN - - - Secretary VICTOR HAWATH --------- Sergeant-at-arnzs HE Junior Hi-Y opens its membership to the seventh and eighth grade students. The purpose is to extend the high standards of Christian character throughout the school and community. Mr. Strandjord is the faculty adviser, hlr. Buress of the Y. M. C. A. is the leader. The meetings, which are held weekly, are opened with a short prayer. The roll call is then taken, and following this a business meeting is held. Students receive credit for attending Sunday School, church, and for any meritorious work. After the business meeting games are played, or the group goes to the Miles Standish gym to engage in athletic sports. Sweater emblemsare awarded to encourage the members who live up to the highest standards of the year. Trophy cups are awarded to the chapter that makes the best standing of the month. Upon their graduation from the Junior Hi-Y, the students usually join the Torch Hi-Y. l8Zl 45 . l QffA,GA.fMs.co REQ. TOP ROW-Baron, Krfillafzv, Korslunzl, zllyhre, Sorenson, Kelfy, Smith, lllmquisi, Hazel. BOTTOM ROW-Hess, To-tele, Pflerson, Finrud, fllr. Ulrich fa11'fUisvrj, fohnson, A1l116'7'X071, Geiscl. Torch Hi JY 0 F F I C E R S JOYCE FINRUD - ----- - Prfridmzt CYRUS MYHRE - - Vice-president ELLSWORTH TOWLE - Searetary WARD KELLY - - - - - ---- Treasurer HE emblem of the Torch Hi-Y represents the three-fold aim of the club. The advisers strive to develop the mind, body, and spirit of the boys by promoting clean living, sportsmanship, and scholarship through club activities and meetings. The meetings are held regularly at the Y. M. C. A. or at the home of one of the members. A short prayer is offered by the adviser or one of the boys, and Biblical passages are read and discussed. Frequently debates and musical numbers are included in the program. For an hour every Week the club is given complete use of the gym. Sportsmanship is devel- oped at this time. The Torch Hi-Y at Roosevelt is under the supervision of lVIr. Ulrich and Sheldon Ostroot, a Roosevelt alumnus. Both men are especially inter- ested in the Work. Membership is limited to eighteen boys in the tenth grade. l33l . Q, 1 fgqfas. GAMQQE I l XX, XV i 1 i X . QWX Tor Row-Kolesar, Kobe, Swenson, C. Carlson faalfuiseri, Olson, Roe, Johnson, Knudson. SECOND Row-Roslmft, Guilfoyle, Blom, Collrell, Early, Cody, Efvans, Brandsness, Pearson. THIRD ROW-Horrorks, Totushek, Larson, Harfvcy, Da-wson, Aloe, Oslie, Sclander, Kohanik, Franzeen illontayue, Cladlzill. Standard Staldi MYRON CoTTRELL -------- - Editor-in-chief MURIEL GLADHALL - Associate Editor LAuRENcE BRANnsNEss - i4uodaw Edhor BERNIE SVVENSON - - - Business Jlflanager C. C. CARLSON - - - - - Adviser HE ROOSEVELT STANDARD, a newspaper, has been again offered to the student body. With C. C. Carl- son as faculty adviser, the first issue ap- peared February lS, 1929. A class in journalism Was organized at the begin- ning of the spring term. It has been over a year since Roosevelt published a school paper. The Standard is published bi-weekly. The aim of the staff is to herald the news of the entire school. Among the most interesting columns are l'Pokin' Around, Tedbits, UVVith the Fac- ultyf' Apple Saucef' and Thinking It 0ver. E341 , 4 i fAGA.Ns.,oz rcvemrs J. i SECOND-fiovglbsboirrielYisjgiiiilirl,iffrrielson,ififarx, Mr. Noreiiz zadfviserj, Rodman, Darxilofvitz, Haralson, Callas, Shelley, furllyga. BOTTOM Row-Franzeen, Illidthun, Fought, Sedgfzcick, Lynn, Kupper, Dawson, Srlandrr. Sagamore Stailll' FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM DOROTHEA LUND - - - Editor-in-thief - - ROYAL MAE SEDGWICK ROYAL MAE SEDGWICK - -Associate Editor ---- JOHN PRESTON ROGER LYNN ---- Business Manager - - - ROGER LYNN GRETCHE'N KUPPEIR - - - Art Editor - - GRETCHEN KUPPE'R MR. NOREM ---- - - Adviser ------ MR. NOREM OROTHEA LUND, the fall term editor in chief, resigned during Q- - December to accept a positiong and Q 0 Royal Mae Sedgwick was elected to fill U N-'X 0 her place. This SAGAMORE is the third book in which the art department has used lino- leurn blocks. All the art work was done in the art department under the direc- tion of Miss Reid and Gretchen Kup- per. The literary section was contributed by the English department under the di- rection of Miss Newell. Miss Thomas corrected and criticized all Work that is in the 1929 SAGAMORE. l35l X 4? . qsfaeasaaconam K2 Wi Toi' Row-Anmlfrson, Kruznbirgrl, Bush, Ogren, Borg. SECOND Row-Larson, Coz-yell, Pool, Iverson, Griffin, Palm, Aagaard, Julien, Fjelslazl. THIRID ROXV'iC'iIZ1-1'l6H, Nystrom, C. Anzlerson, Pearson, Cottrell, Johnson, Ulson, holdcn, L'r11-z'z'n. BOTTOM ROW-Lunzlqllisl, Jacobson, Preston, .1111 C. Carlson fndfviscrj, Flflf, Jlr. Owfrrnirc fY..1l.C.A. socrctaryl, Sic-wart, S-reonson, Coulson. FALL TERM DAVID FLETT - - ROBERT LUNDQUIST JOHN PRESTON - WVALTER JACOBSON WILLIAM STEWART MR. OX'ERNIIRE - MR. C. C. CARLSON Senior HIAY OFFICERS - - Presidzvzt - - - Vice-presiderzt - - Treasurer - - Srfretary - - Sergzfafzt-at-arflls - Y. Ill. C. A. Secretary- - SPRING TERM AUSTIN BUSH BERNIE SXVENSON WALTER JACOBSON CLIFFORD PEARSON SIGURD ANDERSON MR. OV'ERB1IRE - Azlwiser ---- RTR. C. C. CARLSON HE Senior Hi-Y is the high school branch ofthe Y. NI. C. A.g and its purpose is to create, maintain, and extend throughout the school and community high standards of Christian character. The Organization at this school meets every hflonday evening. At these Weekly meetings edu- cational talks, discussions, and entertainments are given. The olhcers of the Hi-Y are required to attend the Y. M. C. A. sum- mer training sessions at Camp Yvarren. There the boys are given ad- vanced training in leadership Which many of them put into practice by leading grade school clubs. This leadership training enables the Hi-Y to take an active part in school activities. The boys maintain a secondhand book room in conjunction With the lost and found. During the football season the Hi-Y operates a conces- sion stand on the field to enable the boys to give the members of the squad a banquet at the end of the season. E861 gy, Tor ROW-Preston, Corycll, Sleenson, Peterson, Bartholonzmc, ffoifgns, Slokns, Fjelstnd, flfillzw. SECOND ROW-Limlsfy, Thwiseu, Olson, ll'1iIlll11I11, Filzhenry, Liwi, D. Coryvll, I. Carycll, Berg, Kfilmlziegel. BOTTOIXI ROW1Coulson, Lmzzfquisl, Faxzzll, Backman, Iliff. Srhult: faifwisvrj, Jlr. Claus fazlwisvrj, Russell, - Dafvis, Crafven. , aff, Pilots CW!! llllg gntlk STI FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM LAVERNE COULSON - - - President - - - ROBERT LUNDQUIST GLADYS FOXALL - - Vim-president - - GLADYS FORALL EARLINE RUSSELL - Secretary EARLINE RUSSELL HOWARD STORES - - Treasurer - lALDEN MILLER MR. SCHULTZ - - Adviser - -- MR. SCHULTZ MR. CLAUS - - - A Azffviser - - MR. CLAUS HE ushers comprise that worthy organization which g'Pilotsl' the play-going public to their seats in the auditorium. They organized their club in 1927, and since that time they have carried on their work unfailingly. There were two purposes for organizing: the first was to increase the eliiciency of the members on the usher staff, and the second was that they might have regular meetings and social gatherings. On some of the days when there is to be an entertainment in the evening, the Pilots stay through after school to hold a meeting and a social gathering until time for them to take their places. The club has regular ollicers. It is the president's duty to see that everything is in readiness before the public is allowed to come in. He must check attendance, assign places to new members, and take care of all neces- sary arrangements. E371 WAGAMQ 5:74345 EIRJA QAMQQE Tor Row-Torman, Urban, Hollag, Jorsiafl, Johnson, Pearson, Jilrdyga, Koch, Wall, Salvage, K. Johnson, L. Johnson, Arlleman, Carirs. SECOND Row-M. Johnson, Zllirklus, Sacanson, Sullivan, Singer, Lafgren, Ebbeson, Weiner, lValI, H. Johnson, Smiih, Lindgren. THIRD ROW-Odell, flfurphy, Scllerin, Prufc, Barrett, Darlilofvil-1, Lucas, L. Swanson, Elder, V. Johnson, Petri, Baron, fllyrthvn. BOTTO31 Row--Rodman, Sf'a'yiuifk, Lewin Kohanile, Dahl, fllarx, Helms, Olson, Arneson, Kuppcr, Haim, Illiss Coleman fazlfvixerj. Torchlbearers FALL TERM O F FIC E R S SPRING TERM SAPHRONE HARN'EY - - - President - - - NINA E. NIARX NINA E. MARX - - I'ire-president - TXTILDRED LEv1N TVIILDRED DAHI. - Secretary - - - JESSIE WALL NTILIJRED LEviN - Treasurer - - FERN HALX'ERSON Miss YOUNGDAHL - Adviser - Miss YOUNGDAHL Miss COLEMAN - - - Arlwisrr - - - Miss COLEMAN HE Torchbearers is a club composed of A and UB senior girls. It holds its meetings twice I1 month. The various purposes of the club are to create a feeling of friendship among the girls of high school ageg to study in a practical way the rules of social etiquetteg to promote the higher ideals of life such as truth, sociability, service, and self-relianceg and to work for the general Welfare of the school. To put into practice the principles of social etiquette, a Christmas tea and a senior farewell party Were given. Programs of a varied nature have given the girls a splendid opportunity to display individual talents in music, dancing, and public speaking. The club has been carrying out a program of social service. For exam- ple, at Thanksgiving time the girls aided certain social agencies in deliver- ing baskets of food to many poor families in the city. T331 fA.cG.aQs.4em. on aamq TOP ROW-Danilo-vifz, fllonfaguc, Mcinke, Thompson, Bararl, Da-vis, Halfvorson, Jansen, Norlnlom, Nelson, Siell. SECOND ROW--Knilans, Micklzls, Mifhalcs, Biggin, Weiner, Kohanile, Surlgfzcirlc, Sole, Dahl, Shelley, Beaumont, Black. BOTTOM Row-Corycll, Wilsorz, Holleran, Anderson, Osborne, ilflrx. Anderson fadfvisrrj, Parlmrzl, Hasrrifk, Kabs, Jalmson, Carlson. Le Cerelle Francais O F F I C E R S ROLLIN PACKARD - ----- - President DOROTHY HASERICK - - Vice-president MYRLE OSBORNE - - Secretary-Treasurer Mas. C. ANDERSON - - Adviser LMOST every school in Minneapolis where French is taught has a French Club. Several attempts have been made to form such a club at Roosevelt, but it was not until this year that one was successfully organ- ized. The membership is limited to those who are able to maintain a C or above in French. In this Way it is hoped that a greater interest will be stimulated, and an incentive for better scholarship aroused among the stu- dents. The purpose of the club is to promote an interest in France, its people, customs, and literature. The meetings are alternated, every other one being social. An effort has been made toward the presentation of interesting as Well as instructive programs. One of the outstanding social functions of the yeargwas a sleighride party held at the beginning of the spring semester. l89l 4?- QJAQAMQQE Top ROW-Blackburn, Middel, Guslafsan, Hjorup, Pfalslarl, R. Hjorup. BOTTOM ROW-Hanzstfeet, Slallbcrg, Johnson, Nlagnuson, Arncson, Amlfrson. Nolkomis Campfire Grrls FALL TERM O F F I C E R S SPRING TERM RUTH ARNMON - - - Pwndmn - - - - RUTH ARNEON HEI,EN JOHNSON - - Secretary A - HELEN JOHNSON SAIDEE R. TNGRAM - Treasurer - SAIDEE R. INGRAM SAIDEE R. TNGRAM - Guardian - SAIDEE R. INGRAYNI HE Campfire Girls is an organization which endeavors to secure hap- piness through work, health, and love. The watchword which is WOHELO truly signifies these three essential factors. A girl learns to include them in her everyday life. Homely, humdrum tasks are performed more pleasantly when honor beads are rewarded through the medium of wholesome, health-giving activities. The girl learns to enjoy the out-of- doors and to think of her body as Uthe very shrine of the Great Spirit. Dependence upon each other teaches the girls to love God and their fel- lowmen. The girl who joins a Campfire group is offered a program which helps her to form ideals that will serve her all her life. The laws of the Campfire are Seek Beauty, Give Service, Pursue Knowledge, Be Trustworthy, Hold on to Health, Glorify VVork, and Be Happy. Q T901 I JAGAMQREQ 1 TOP Row-Wilkins, Cronsfrom, Daugherty, Mr. Hamstrcet fadiviserj, Olsen, Webb, Nelson, Lorentzen. BOTTUM Row-Hagan, Savage, Gansmoe, 1lIcDanncl, Nelson, Kobs. Lunchroom Supervisors ECAUSE of the large crowd of students using the Roosevelt lunch- room, supervisors are naturally necessary factors. The people in charge are known as lunchroom supervisors. The force is composed of over fifteen selected students. They are placed under a faculty adviserg namely, lvlr. Hamstreet. Each student who is on the force this year re- ceives a half credit for each termls work. All supervisors are on duty the entire lunch period and are allowed just time enough to eat their lunch. In order to be a good supervisor, a student must have the ability for good leadership, personality, and the determination to do the right thing at the right time. It is also his duty to make our lunchroom the best and most orderly in Minneapolis. The entire force is divided into two groups, each with a chief in charge. William Nelson has charge of the first floor, Donald Daugherty supervises the basement. The group responsible for keeping the lunchroom and halls of the basement in order must also see that the refuse, trays, glasses, and other articles are disposed of before the next group of students arrives. The group on duty on the first floor has charge of the halls, the stairways, the doors, and the grounds about the school. It is each one's duty to main- tain order between the three lunch periods and to report all persons who show disorderly conduct. i911 QJA QAMQQE FIRST BAND Bands THE bands hold a place of equal importance with the other organiza- tions of Roosevelt. The first band has the most complete instrumenta- tion, as it is supplemented from time to time by students who are capable of advancement from the second band. Auditorium programs are often enlivened by selections from the bands. Many times they have played at programs outside of school. Under the direction of Mr. Belstrom the first band took second place in the city contest held last May. The second band, directed by Mr. Van Ackeren, played for various programs in school this year. X: iw SECOND BAND l 92 l , 45 . fAGA.Ns.co iapmfq FIRST ORCHESTRA Orchestra OOSEVELT offers many opportunities to students desirous of de- veloping their musical talents. Of the musical organizations, the orchestras afford the most varied instrumental experience. The first or- chestra follows an intensive practice course in all types of music. The second orchestra serves as a training group for the less skilled musicians who advance by competition to the first orchestra. Both groups play for various programs and plays throughout the year and compete annually in contests with other city schools. The two orchestras are served by Mr. Belstrom and Mr. Wohlford. SECOND 0RCHES'FR.A I93 l 4? 337' f x' p n X, ar! age Wy Z, X, V1 , . if f 3 y'7' 45 N M V7-'fr' I Senior lee Cllulh THE glee club exists for students who prefer vocal music to instrumen- tal. The Senior High Glee Club has made a name for itself in the musical circles of Roosevelt by its excellent rendition of part music in a great variety of pieces. The organization consists of both a boys' and a girls' glee club, which sings at various times throughout the year. As their major achievement this year, the glee club produced the operetta, Tulip Time, with the cooperation of the orchestra. lVlr. Belstrom is the leader of the organi- zation. 1 cccc rm Boys' Guan CLUB i941 fAG.A.NsciD iramzs Guns' GLEE CLUB junior Glee Club THE need for a junior singing organization in Roosevelt is met by the junior Glee Club which in a short time has become Well known for its splendid singing. The students who join this glee club usually graduate to the senior organization. The chief purpose of the Iunior Glee Club is to arouse greater appre- ciation of vocal music among the students. The organization, which is composed of a boys' and a girls' glee club, sings frequently during the year. Their director is Miss Marguerite Boege. BOYS' GLEE CLUB T951 4? QJA QAAAQQE 'Seven Chancesw Earl Goodard - - - RALPH ODAHL Anne Windor - Joe Spencer ---- ARTHUR WEBB Irene Travor - CAST OF CHARACTERS - JULIA PALM - - JEAN WALL Ralph Denby - WESLEY FREDERICKSON Georgiana Garrison - DOROTHEA LUND Henry Garrison - - CARROL RHODES Lilly Trevor - Billy Meekin - - LAWRENCE BENSON Peggy Wood - - - MARJORIE OLSON - BERTHA HOLIW Jimmy Shannon - - RAYMOND CRAVEN Florence Jarnes - - - NINA MARX Mrs. Garrison - TYTILDRED NICTJONNEL Betty Willoughby - ADELE SCHROEDER George - - - LINTON LEVIN 4' EVEN CHANCESQ' a three act comedy, Was presented by the modern drama department November fifteenth and sixteenth under the direction of Miss Pauline Hayes, assisted by Emily Shoemaker. The story is centered around a young bachelor, Jimmy Shannon, who is to inherit twelve million dollars on the one condition that he is married before he is thirty. The action commences the day before Jimmy's thirtieth birthday. This unusual predicament causes a series of highly humorous events to follow, for al- though Jimmy does not wish to marry, he agrees to do so in order to obtain the for- tune. His first six proposals are promptly turned down. Jimmy begins to think the inheritance is lost, but just before the clock strikes twelve he finds out that Anne, Whom he really loves, also loves him very much. This incident brings the play to a delightfully surprising and happy climax. l96l , 4 . f..A.cea-.4Qs..Mfs. to rramas Grumpy, CAST OF CHARACTERS Mrs. Maclaren - MILDRED MCDONNEL Virginia Bullivant - - - JEAN WALL Dr. lblaclaren ---- CLARK PITTS Keble ---- LAWRENCE BENSON Susan ----- SAPHRONE HARVEY Dawson - - LAVERNE COULSON GUNNER CRONSTROM Ernest Heron - - HOWARD HAMMEROT - - - LINTON LEVIN RAYMOND CRAVEN - DONALD OLSON Mr. Bullivant lWerrideW - Ruddock ---- Mr. Jarvis - - - Mr. Valentine Wolfe - RUBEN NELSON H RUMPY, a four act comedy, was presented by the January '29 class under the direction of Miss Pauline Hayes, assisted by Emily Shoemaker and Adele Schroeder, student coaches. The theme of the play is Woven around Grumpy, who charmed the audience with his eccentric manner. A delightful romance is centered about Virginia, Grumpy's granddaughter, and Ernest, his nephew. Ernest, the fool of his firm, secretly brings a diamond from Africa. He Was chosen by his em- ployers to accomplish this diihcult task. He carries the diamond safely to England, but there it is stolen from him. Grumpy, who has been a criminal lawyer, finds the diamond by an unexpected method. After it is found, Virginia and Ernest are united. The theft ofthe diamond tends to make the play mysterious, Whereas the oddities of Grumpy make it a comedy. The combi- nation of these elements with the hne characterizations made the play a great success. l97l I Q ' AJAQAAAODEEE MERVIN ROSELLE - CARL LUNDEEN - - HEIRERG OGREN - - HELEN HARALSON - CRYSTAL MOLIN - DOROTHY LAVALLE - CARL BERGDAHL - - STANLEY LEE - - - UTuliip Time LEADS - TVIERVIN ROSELLE TVIARSTON PEARSON CHRISTIAN JENSEN MILDRED ANDERSO'N - THELRIA AARHUS - DOROTHY DE FORREST LEONARD FRANSON - GEORGE H.AGEN - Hans - - Burgomaster - - lVIcSpindle - - Aunt Anna - - Christina - - - - Katinka - - Ned - - - Dick - - MISS MERCEDES NELSON? - F 1 F I ' auditorium M f X f, If MISS CORELLI NELSON f Director - KIVIR. VAN ACKEREN Mu ty ' - ' I MR. WOHLEORD - - - - MR. BELSTR M 1 5 l HE operetta, Tulip Time,', which was p isentefl Tn! the Roosevelt 7 and xpresented 21 third night to a full house. by the glee club, bone of the most suc- cessful entertainments ever Staged here. American boys go to Holland to here they fall in love with gil ls. One of the girls, Chris- Some onds which have been left Ned, who understands their value, Saves them for her by preventing the pompous burgomaster from obtaining them. The chorus contributed a great part to E-. the operetta'S success with its colorful costumes and appropriate dances. It was I TWO The attractive xstage setting contributed I much to the beauty of the piece. A I95i'1f' , T b X - HQ it, 'K , ' xg R A i A 2 , X x 3 T' , l ii x J xy, 'N fAGAt4sm.dJ ifamas Ulf ll Were King CAST or CHARACTERS Francois Villon - DONALD DAUGHERTY Louis XI ---- CHARLES VEEDER Tristan L'Hermite - - RAY HAUSER Oliver Le Dain - CLARENCE' WICKSTROM Thibaut D'Aussigny - CLAUDE VEEDER Noel Lejolys - STANLEY KRUMBIEGEL Rene DeMontagny - GEORGE KOLESAR Guy Tabarie ---- DON TROVIK Colin De Cayelux - - ALFRED BOWLER Jehan Le Lous - - HARRY RHYMERS Casin Cholet - - ROLLIN PACKARD Robin Furgis - - - LOUIS FELDMAN Trois Eehelles - - - GEORGE NELSON Toison D, Or - STANLEY TOLLEFSON Montjoy, the French - HEIBERG OGREN An Astrologer ---- FRED KITTELL Captain of the Watch - ALWIN JOHNSON Petit Jean - - - ROBERT KNILANS Katherine De Vancelles ----- - - - - CHARLOTTE BARTHOLMEWV Mother Villon - BIARJORIE CANFIELD Huguette Du Hamel ------ - - - - - - ELIZABETH BARRETT Blanche ----- DOROTHY DIXON Guillemett - - FRANCIS PRUCE lsabeau - - - - JESSIE WALL Denis ----- LUCILLE GRAYEILL The Queen ---- SYLVIA EBBESON Iehanneton Le Belle Heaulmiere - GERTRUDE CARLQUIST HE June Class of 1929 successfully presented the play Ulf I Were King on May 16 and 17 under the direction of Miss Pauline Hayes, assisted by VValter Toohey. If I VVere King is a play of the period of Louis Xl. It is the story of a Parisian rogue, Villon, Who becomes the Grand Constable of France for a Week. Many interesting and delightful circum- stances arise because his chance to live de- pends on whether or not he Wins the hand of Katherine. just before the play comes to a close, Villon comes out victorious. T991 4? QJAQAMQQE Honor Roll HE purpose of the honor roll is to encourage the students to raise the scholarship of the school and to give recognition to those students Who have become members. To be an honor student one must have an average of two and three- tenths for three successive markings. A letter H is awarded for one semester and a monogram for one year. They are presented during an auditorium period each year. The honor students are entertained at a pic- nic on homecoming day and at a party later in the year. The number on the honor roll is steadily increasing and no doubt will soon place Roosevelt among the highest in scholarship. lr 1001 , 45 . JAGAAQQREQ Boys' Athletics UNDER the tutelage of C. Henderson and Arthur Christenson the athletic teams of Roosevelt have been very successful. Mr. Chris- tenson was in charge of football and basketball, Mr. Henderson coached baseball and the gym team. The gym team won first place in the North- west Meet and all the other teams have established good records. The minor sports, hockey, tennis, and golf, have suffered mainly because of the lack of accessible grounds for practice. The hockey team was forced to practice at the arena and then had only two sessions a week. A rink was erected on the athletic field but not early enough in the season to do any good. The same was true of swimming, as the boys could practice only twice a week at the central Y.lNl.C.A. Tennis has been revived again under the direction of Mr. Weum. Roosevelt is situated so far from any golf course that the team could not get enough practice, but they succeeded in breaking the course record for high schools last season. One field of ath- letics that has been raised to a very high standard at Roosevelt is intra- mural athletics. Mr. Henderson has inaugurated intramural hockey, bas- ketball, and diamond ball and has made the gym classes very interesting with regular track events instead of routine drill. The faculty members who have given their time to coaching the teams are M11 Bertelsen, hockey, lVlr. Zuppann, swimming, Mr. Disney, golfg and Mr. VVeum, tennis. Mr. Von Levern was athletic manager and Mr. Eggan was in charge of the stock room, assisted by Don Wilkiiis and lVlil- ton Olson. The athletic activities at Roosevelt were supported by the sale of season tickets, under the supervision of Mr. von Levern. l101j QJAGAMQQE Tor R0w1.l1r. Lnndin faxsistanl coafhj, Kitlell fmanayerl, Brown, Carlson, Carlyuisl, Chrislcnsonff ffoachl, Eggan fmanagerl. SECOND Row-Hallingswarllz, IV. Jarolzson, Senior, Olsen, K. Jacobson, P. Grimes, Grimle. J BOTTOM ROW-Lewin, Fcldcr, Hauser, Kalmar fmptuinl, B. Grimes, Oyffannar, Snyder, Kobs. Football Roosevelt ............ 0, Edison ........ 6 Roosevelt ............ 12, Washburn ......... O Roosevelt ........,... 0, North ........ ........ 1 2 Roosevelt ............ 6, West ...... - .... ........ O Roosevelt ...4... . .... 6, South .................... 12 Roosevelt ............ 7, Central ...... ........ 6 Roosevelt ............ 12, Rlarshall .............. 6 TQOLIZSAR LAYTNG a fine brand of football, but handicapped by a poor start, the Roosevelt Teddies fought their way to fourth place in the city title standings. The Hrst two games were lost by narrow margins, the hrst to Edison and the second to North. Roosevelt scored its first triumph when the team won a decisive Victory over Marshall. In an attempt to carry on their winning streak the Teddies almost upset the champion- ship South team in a thrilling encounter, which South Won with a long pass in the linal few minutes of play. The team had now found its stride and finished the rest of the season undefeated. VVashburn was the second team to fall and the next week Captain Kolesar led his teammates to a victory over VVest. In the last game of the season the Teddies adminis- tered a stinging defeat to the Central team. Letters were awarded to Olsen, Kolesar fcaptainj, Kobs, Senior, Felder, Snyder, Brown, W. Jacobson, P. Grimes, B. Grimes, Carlson, Carlquist, Hauser, and Levin. Ii102j 4 . S JAGAM. cm REQ . k V13 T7 xe525:Z9-L5jfvnDx is, f103j g . 12357 4? QJAQAMQQE Tor Row-Erickson, flleyers, Instcncs, Tenold, Olsen, Bevan, Henderson froarhj. SECOND ROW-Kildahl, Shelso, Titromb, Kolesar, Snoaubefg fmptainj, Odahl, Johnson, Rissman, Crimfe. BOTTOM Row-Hatling fmanagerj, IV. Gabrielson, Heath, IllrPorllanfl, Hollingszuarih, Fnssum, Roosevelt ...,........ Roosevelt ............ Roosevelt ............ Roosevelt ............ Roosevelt ............ I .V,, M A w 'i B. Gabriclsan. Baseball 0, West ...................... Roosevelt ..,......... Edison .. 23, Central .. Roosevelt ............ West ,..... . 7, South .... Roosevelt Central ...... 12, Washburn Roosevelt Washburn 7, Edison .... Roosevelt ............ South .... 7 7 4 8 7 HE baseball season this year was one of the most successful Roosevelt has ever had. The team Won the name of the Teddie Sluggers be- cause of its wonderful hitting ability. Many times the Teddies would be forced to trail their opponents until the last few inningsg then they Would stage a rally and score a substantial margin over them. Snowberg did most of the pitching, but was given much assistance by George Kolesar. The other players contributed their bit by heavy scoring and excellent support. One game was lost to each of the following: South, VVest, and Edison. Roosevelt Won the remaining seven games, and tied Edison for sec- . s Q 5 . ,- N ew ' hw 2- 3 X ,it . wig K X Q , W i is K-'Q s Q ea L Sxown V: L, ond place in the city title race. Titcomb, Snovvberg, Odahl, Nleyers, Erickson, Kole- sar, Rissman, Olsen, Rungren, and Fossum earned letters. f104j 4 . JAGAM QD mmap - ...,.. , ,, L! ,V , , 1 V K 5 Cross Country Roosevelt ............ 77, South ................ 43 Roosevelt ............ 80, Edison ...... 40 Roosevelt ............ 48, West .................. 72 HE cross country team this year secured only second place in the city championship finals, but ran up a large point margin over all their opponents with the exception of West. Led by Captain Milt Gabrielson, the Roosevelt harriers were always a constant threat for the city cham- pionship. ln the first meet the boys won a decisive victory over South and clinched second place the next week with a victory over Edison. The team was not able to cope with the championship West team and lost the last meet. ' f iti' Among the runners always in the fore were the Gabriel- f p gygf, son twins, John Hunziker, Sidney Rommel, Tom Reedy, and Joe Barnette. In the state meet the team did not make ' p c a very impressive showing in total points scored, but showed nne teamwork in placing all men in one of the first I 1 twenty places. Sidney Rommel came in third. Hunziker, R Barnette, Constans, Foster, and Bramwell Gabrielson all received medals. ft ii 1' The boys who accumulated enough points to earn a letter were Milton Gabrielson, Bramwell Gabrielson, Bar- npyp nette, Rommel, Foster, Constans, Norstad, Reedy, and 7 4 Hunzlkef- IXI. Gmsiurrsowr l105fI Ab- QJA QAMQQE WisillioiviviiowfiiiliiilzioZ,wsQIio:,' ogiliziliif blfrQ'i1'Qiii,nciiifiq1iX1iViffriiflff, 'Fl:1:1Zilim Basketball Roosevelt ......... ...... 1 9, 24 Marshall ..... ........ 7 , 13 Roosevelt. ........ ...... 2 0, 31 North ......... ........ 1 8, 12 Roosevelt ........ ,.... . . 28, 24 Central . ...... ........ 3 0, 29 Roosevelt ......... ...... 1 8, 15 South ........ ....... 3 3, 22 Roosevelt ......... ...... 4 7, 41 Washburn ....... 18, 23 KOLESAR Kons JACOBSOXI HE basketball team this year finished among the leaders in the high school con- ference race, placing fourth. The team showed itself to be superior to all the teams on the schedule with the exception of South and Central. A unique feature of the team was the Three Musketeers,'l Kohs, Kole- sar, and Jacobson, who took turns in piloting the team. These three men were among the outstanding players in the city league. ln both of the games with Central the team lost by a few points, and in the strug- gle with South the battle was never decided until the last few minutes. Kobs, Kolesar, Jacobson, Odahl, and Senior were awarded letters. f106j . 45 . x., Y Nb TOP ROW-Bwwlvr, Tingulsfrul, Bvrlelsen froachj, Callan, Grebslmf, F. Nelson. SECOND Row-Dischcr Iassislanl managerj, Eideson, Peterson, Larson, Hanson, Johnson. B0'1 1'0M Row-177. Nvelson, Chaffee, Jacobson, Olsen, C. Tollefsbol, Brown, H60fll, Anderson, R. Tollefsbol fmanngerl. ll-lloclkey Roosevelt .............. 2, South ...... .,,.. 5 Roosevelt. ...,......... 1, Edison ..... ...... 3 Roosevelt .............. 2, Washburn ..... 3 Roosevelt ...........,.. O, West .......... ...... 8 Roosevelt ......,....... 2, Central ................ 3 Roosevelt .............. 1, Marshall ............ 2 Roosevelt .............. l, North . ................. 5 ECAUSE of inadequate practice, this year's hockey team suffered greatly. They could practice at the arena only one day a week. The fellows must be given credit for going out and staying with the team in spite of suc- cessive defeats. The pucksters played their best games against the two league-leading teams and lost them only after hard strug- gles. Roosevelt lost to South by a score of 5 to 2, and to VVashburn by 3 to 2. Don Glsen was elected captain for the first part of the season, William Nelson suc- ceeded him. Clifford Tollefsbol was the sea- son's high scorer for our team. He scored four of the nine goals that Roosevelt ac- cumulated during the eight-game schedule. The fellows who received letters are VV. Nel- son, Tollefsbol, Chaffee, Veeder, Brown, VVangstad, Jacobson, S. Hanson, and D. Olsen' OT.SlZN f107fI E 'Q 5 2 Q X ., it H 'AX f 7? 43 -5 U .J f JN 14 If . D... Xxx UB ...J .2 to -Q re ATF5, ff 5'- AJA QAMQQE C 06 Qs Lt. ' Illr. Zuppann froarhj, Sherney, Sha-wbold, Bie, Titcamlz, Reedy, B. Gabriz-Ison, Georgian, Iverson, Anderson, Erickson, Ill. Gabrielson, S. Gabrielson, Jaeck, Allen, Byers, Felder. Swimming A HIS is the second year that Roosevelt has competed with other schools in swimming, Although the team did not win any meets, they showed a vast improvement over last year. Milton Gabrielson was Roost-:Velt's high scorer for the season with 22 points. He was entered in the diving ii and the relay contests. John Allen pressed Milton close , for high honors by a total of 18 points. He was entered 1 l in the 220-yard race only, due to the fact that this race , always came in the middle of the meets, thereby making ' it impossible for him to race in any other. ii A new ruling was passed this year that one man could M .-', race in only two contests. This law was passed in order fi to prevent a school with three or four good men from winning everything. The new rule made it necessary for iii, a school to develop a good team instead of a few stars. B. G.-KBRIELSON The team practiced twice a week at the Central Y.lVl.C.A. under the instruction of the HY coach. All meets were also held at the HY with the exception of one with Edison at Ryan Baths. LIOSII Q I I 4 fAG.4Qs..Ns.db REA fl Toi' Row-Krashen, Fraser, S. BBTIHIJ illziyer, Kildahl, Engnell, S. Gabrielson, Eirieson, Eilzaas. SECOND ROWllWf. .Henderson fcoacflj, Blizcl,N4 fw'q11isl,Spar1zs, Titus,Al1lricf2, Oleinil, farobsan, Knutson. BOTTOIN1 Row-R. Bevan, Clark, Ostramlcf, Iflfirkslrom, Carlquisl, JI. Gabrielson, B. Gabrielson, Elslazl, Hollingsfwnrth, Eroj. Gym Team HE 1929 gym team, coached by Mr. Henderson, enjoyed one of its most successful seasons in many years. The Roosevelt gymnasts car- ried away both the HB and C classes to win the city championship by a wide margin. North, last year's winner, placed a poor sec- ond. Stanley Gabrielson was high point man, followed by Gordon Fraser and Andrew Titus. On lVlarch 4 the Northwestern lyleet was held at the Uni- versity Armory. Roosevelt entered in both B and C classes carrying away honors in this meet, competing against colleges, normal schools, and high schools throughout the northwest. North again followed us in the field. Lloyd Hol- lingsworth took Brst place with 92.8 points, followed by Don- ald HTag Senior with 9l.3 points. The diminutive Andrew Titus, the smallest participator, took fifth place in the meet with 90.1 points. During this one week of competition, five silver loving cups and one large plaque were won. Nlembers of the gym team are chosen for their outstand- ing ability in the gym classes. These students meet every day the first period and practice on the apparatus. The team gave a tumbling exhibition in the auditorium, and later in the season this program was repeated at the Minnehaha school. cntfifi-'r I 109 I 4? 'i AJAQAMQQE v' XT. . -J sp -XJ -Ji YQ. 43 xc L K .J . 1 Anderson, Consfans, Coffrcll, Holden, Roskaft, i mn. Track ANDICAPPED in the first place by lack ofT1aterial and practice, the track team was further hampered by ineligibilities and injuries. A squad of thirty boys reported for track, but this number dwindled to seven or eight Which Was not a sutlicient number for a good track team. The field was so slow in drying up that the boys didn't get any real training until late in the season, but practice sessions .V were held in the building to help as much as possible. How- ever, as soon as the track was in good condition, the team an pyy members put in some intensive training under the supervi- , 1. sion of Arthur Christenson. The members of the team com- fi f peted in all the meets, and men were entered in most of the ,I A events. lc , All the track meets are invitation tourneys held at neigh- T boring colleges and universities. There are four tournaments: , ,.-' the state meets are held at the University of Minnesota and .',,i' Carleton Collegeg the Hamline relays and city meet, at North- ' '--.. rop Field. The only team members to place during the season Were Joel Anderson and Bernie Nelson. Bernie was a consistent y ,,,. ,winner in the shot-put, placing third in practically all the meetsg Joel Won from 'third to fifthpin the pole-vault, and third in the 110-yard low-hurdles. ANDIiR.0N f1101 fAc2,A.NsdJiQ9m4p Miss LIERCEDES NELSON lNIRs. RIARGARHT DAVIS G. A.. A.. ACH term two chiefs and a counselor are elected from each class to E organize and lead two tribes. The tribes compete with each other in all sports to measure their ability. The best players are picked from each tribe to play in the final game, which decides the championship. This method, which was started this year, has proved very successful. The purpose of this club is to encourage good sportsmanship, activity, good health, and friendship among the girls. Grcimn YVUERTZ JULIA PAIJNI Ersiia Soi,BiaizG flllj Y V i QJAGAMQQE 'FOP Row-Brimwall, Drill, Pine, lVlrLcan, Kenny, Luc, Ruxmursun, L-1'1lCIT. SECOND Row-ill. Illaycr, Solberg, Elelumi, Lind, fllciwisscn, Jacobson, Gfzcccrlcr, I.eFcbvre. BOTTOM ROW-Nelson, Dciningcr, Alaricle, Llmdquisf, Orlrom, Ortfl, Rnehl, rllagrlxon, Blom. Girls, Hockey HIS hockey season was successful, due primarily to the interest mani- fested by Mr. von Levern and Mr. Zuppann, who were responsible for the excellent condition of the field. The improvement, With the Wonderful fall weather, brought out about one hundred active girls. The O-Pee-Chees, the largest tribe, held a tournament in which the juniors Were successful. All-star teams Were then selected. A freshman and an upper class team were chosen from each tribe. There were not enough freshmen on the O-Mi-Mi tribe, so the active O-Pee-Chee fresh- men Won by default. This team exhibited real skill and gave unexpected competition to the upper classes in that tournament. The O-lVIi-Mi tribe Was the Winner in a hotly contested upper class tournament by a score of 5 to 3. For the Winners, Elsie Solberg, Astrid Norwick, and Lesa Lind were the starsg Jean Fralic, Catherine Cottrell, lVTarion Hanson, and Valborg Blom played unusually Well for the losers. Jean Fralic, Catherine Cottrell, Gerda VVuertz, Lorinza Beigert, Helen Omoth, lWarion Hanson, Audrey Hauskey, Inez Lee, Evelyn Carlson, Margaret Hohag, Sylvia Ebbeson, and Valborg Blom Were on the defeated team. A The hockey managers were Gerda VVuertz, lVIarie Mayer, and Cath- erine Cottrell. A picked team played a game With West High School. Roosevelt girls lost 2 to l, but demonstrated a keener knowledge of the game. The G. A. A. girls eagerly await the hockey season. f112fI Ab . QfAG.A.Ns.oJiroQ.,m.4s Tor Row-Olanzlcr, Johnson, Solberg, ill. lllaycr, Drill, Elclund, Lind. SECOND Row-Frampton, Herring, Ziegler, iWrLvan, Nash, Lynch, Kenney, Kimmel. BOTTOJNI ROW-Lee, Hurling, Dcininger, Franris, Vader, Anderson, flleufvissen, E. Mayer. Girls' Volleyball GLLEYBALL was played during the months of November and De- cember. One hundred and thirty girls worked hard for positions on the class teams. In the O-Pee-Chee tribe class tournament, the seniors With Gerda Wuertz as captain beat the previously invincible juniors. The O-lVli- Mi tribe conceded victory to the team captained by Dorothy Johnson. The chief interest lay in the intertribe games. Because of the large number of fine players, three teams, a freshman, a sophomore, and an upper class team, were selected from each tribe. The sophomore game, the first in an intensely exciting tournament, was Won by the O-Mi-Mi tribe. Fern McLean and her teammates proved too much for Babe Bie- gert, captain, Elizabeth Davisg Bernice Lemmon, Inez Lee, Cecil Adams: Harriet Wells and Ruth Stene, substitutes. The good playing of Nlarion Hanson, captain, Jean Fralicg Catherine Cottrellg Audrey Hauskeyg Mar- garet Hohagg Gerda Wuertzg Mildred lVlurphyg Evelyn Withrowg Dorothy Jerdie and Helen Omoth, substitutes, was not enough to defeat the O-Mi-Mi upper class tribe for which Dorothy Johnson was the out- standing player. The 0-Mi-Mi freshman tribe, captained by lrene Meu- vissen, defeated Valborg Blom, captaing Agnes Tweederg Fairy Ellen Young Grace Svvansong Rose Orthg Janet Roehlg Eleanor Rasmusseng Evelyn Nelsong June Pine, and lVIarion Jacobson, who comprised the O-Pee-Chee tribe. Everyone is looking forward to another successful volleyball season. li1131 rgfaceksaaobrram TOP ROW--Olander, Brare, Bcrnsdorf, Miss Nelson fadfvisfrj, Totushek, Glodhill, Johnson. BOTTOM ROW-Brighl, Hansen, W'1:ertz, Hauskey, Cottrell. Girls' Basketball IN no other sport has such genuine interest, great enthusiasm and a real desire to learn the game been shown. The O-Pee-Chee tribe boasts of 64 girls and of 44 games playedg the O-lVIi-Mi, 56 girls and 24 games. VVhen the girls had mastered the fundamentals, an early season tourna- ment was conducted. Teams captained by Catherine Cottrell and Helen Drill of the O-Pee-Chee and O-lVli-Mi tribes, respectively, were the win- ners. Class teams were then selected by Miss Nelson and Mrs. Davis assisted by Audrey Hauskey and Elsie Solberg, sportheads. Of these teams the O-Pee-Chee Sophomore Streaks with Babe Biegert, captain, and the O-Mi-Mi seniors under Marie Mayer Were undisputed champions. The coaches were highly encouraged by the type of basketball played in the intertribe games. Cool thinking, clean playing, and good sportsman- ship were manifested throughout the four games. The O-Mi-Mi tribe easily took the freshman and senior championship by scores of 24 to 14, 18 to 3. The O-Pee-Chee juniors, playing brilliant basketball, Won 24 to 9. The sophomore game ended a tie, with the small score of 8 all. There were outstanding starsg yet all personal glory was forgotten in loy- alty to the tribes. The upper class basketball team of the O-Pee-Chee tribe won the 1927- 1928 championship. The freshman game Was undecided, each team Win- ning one game. ll141 4- . JAGAMQQEQ TOP Row-Drill, Solberg, Omoth, Nash, Nyberg, Carly, Franris, .fllcLean, Scfmzildfz, Frampton. BOTTOINI Row-Ziegler, Herring, AY1!fl2fSU1I, illl 1l'L'iSS67I, If. illaycr, Ljrnrh, Vzlzlrr. Girls, Baseball THE diamond ball season of 1928 was exceptionally successful, mostly because of the large number of very active girls out, the keen interest manifested by everyone concerned, and the ample amount of time spent. Dut to the fact that the G. A. A. did not stage a May fete, Miss Nelson and Mrs. Davis Were able to direct all their energy toward baseball. Un- der Miss Nelson the O-Pee-Chee tribe, which again led in the number of girls out, conducted a class tournament. The competition was keen, but the sophomores, captained by Catherine Cottrell, finally outplayed XVinni- fred Scott and her fighting seniors. Even though the O-Pee-Chee tribe was able to boast of some very fine players, the members of the O-Mi-Mi tribe, Mrs. Davis' group, Were the happy and joyous victors of the intertribe game played at the school picnic in June. Helen Drill and Jean Eralic alternating at pitching, Mildred Johnson and Elsie Solberg at catching were hard combinations to defeat. Catherine Cottrell, pitching the entire game for the O-Pee-Chee tribe, allowed fewer hits. She did some excellent fielding but, due to poor coop- eration on the part of her infielders, lost the game. The O-Mi-Mi freshman tribe defeated the O-Pee-Chee freshman tribe, with Helen Lynch starring for the winners. Liisj 4 . . AJ-'a.ste.fs..4M.x.,QD1r.a:E F Emblem and RM Girls . A ROOSEVELT R girl must be a good all-round sport in order to make the necessary six hundred points. After receiving her R, she is Well on the Way toward attaining the highest honor a G. A. A. girl is capable of, a maroon and gold emblem. Both honors signify keen sports- manship, good scholarship, friendliness, healthfulness, and loyalty. The emblem girl must possess the ability to make one thousand points in the Various sports required to receive this honor. Lesa Lind, Gerda Wuertz, and Marie Mayer are the three girls who had the highest standards of G. A. A. girls this year. They should be examples for every Roosevelt girl. , ,F ,,i 5' R yL,4.'1,L,af61 l., QfAGA.fNsob if-arms Numeral Girls , A NUNIERAL GIRL acquires her numeral by making one hundred points in the sport which she goes out for. To do this, she must make her class team by being present at three-fourths of the practices, having skill, and maintaining a C average in her studies. For each additional sport in which a girl makes a tribe team, a letter is added to her numeral and one hundred points to her total. The numeral is the first step toward securing an RW If her good work continues, she will become an emblem girl. A girl is not considered a real G. A. A. mem- ber until she secures a numeral. f117j 4? QJA. GAMQQE Danish Gymnastics HANISH gymnastics are taught in all of the gym classes for ninth and tenth grade girls. For the past two years modified Danish gymnastics have been taught, but since Miss Nelson took a course in Copenhagen, Denmark, during the summer of 1928, a new system has been introduced. Miss Nelson studied under Mrs. Agnite Bertram at her private school in Copenhagen. Mrs. Bertramfa graduate of the University of Copen- hagen, had long realized that the system of gymnastics built for men based upon their anatomy, psychology, and welfare, was not productive of good results for women. There are two classes taught under Mrs. Bertram's systemg the other classes are taught modified Danish gymnastics. H181 , 4 i QAGAMQ if229m..4p 51191 , f l Q To OMIA Faculty Te aC11C1'S of wood- Sometlmes you think t11at7s what We are, Sometimes YOU WlSl'1 that YOU could POUI' the sap in from the top Ill orcler that the STEER ICHVCS sprout the SOOHCY. You C21l1l1Off Ul1JCI'Stalll1 Sap Sl'10U1J run so slowly, Or that leaves should fail to slfxow. But if we the trees in any way resemble, TIICIC is 21 time lll CVCIUY Year WIICII L1'Z1llCl'1CS S1'1OW UP bleak 211111 132.136, Empty of any sign of life. We,re green insicle. Though maybe tlflere are t1'1ose WIIO Jie among this little forest, Most of US L1OSSOIll Ollt .lll dl? SP1'lllStllllE lll foliage. I feel it-f Willterys Passlng,-- The sap is rising- Wair! Wafclll RUTH W. BRACE -1 A ff af W5 fwwwwiywe b WW WW WM W M WW W W JM WWW SJW Q WN G25 2,9161 ,fa f vw M ,W Wwfw W ff f MW Nw f.4xa.cG.aQs..Nxs.QiJ 1293.4 Ihr Sap vetkling VOLUME 4ZVLX NUMBER 1812 Nursery Rhymes You May Have Missed Sing a song of sixpence, Roosevelt Highg Four and twenty freshmen baked in a pie. VVhen the pie was opened, seniors began to sing, Wasn,t that a dainty dish to open in the spring P Hey diddle diddle, the cat in the fiddle, And the flutes were all out of tuneg The teachers laughed to see such sport As Belstrom broke a chair on the bassoon. Ride in a Hivver to Roosevelt High To see the students go ambling byg Arms filled with books, mouths with gumg Some are wise, but the most are dumb. lVlary had a little beau Hippity hop to the OK-Shop NVhose head was very hollow, Three bars to go a-seeking, And everywhere that Mary went One for Norse and one for math, Her beau was sure to follow. And one for public speaking. Jack Sprat is very fat, The girls never ride His girl Weighs ninety-nine: With Timothy Pipp, And so between them both you see 'Cause they have to bring along The rumble seat fits fine. A street car chip. I get an awful big guflaw Over the tale of doubting Olgag They told her about the missing linkg She thought it was a bologna. A bright little lad Now take the case WVas Goliath Greggg Of Genevieve Twistg He got maple syrup She thought Bill Shakespeare From his wooden leg. Was a pugilist. f121l QJAGAMQQE 'THE SAP VVEAKLING THE SAP XVIQAKLIXG I'11h1ish1'1f hy Sllfllflltl Staff fzrzycchwc u'h111 copy is 1'1'111ly for press. CONRAD NELSON, ,EIZHOV-tII'l'hjF-f Sizzling Editorial RIENDS Students Countrymen and Scandi- 7 1 1 P hoovian Faseistil ls Roosevelt High School to be infested forever with words of incomprehensible lengths and questions of deplorable uselessness? No! YVe shall light for their omission with a spirit pre- dominating to the last man. CCampaign buttons to be issued next week.D XVe will state our other issue briefly and concisely with no further delay. Whyr, we ask you, why are the seventh graders-the smallest in the school-compelled to carry the largest books? As an example of this outrageous evil, take the Elemen- tary Geography which they attempt to drag through the halls without aid. hflany of these seventh graders fall by the way side and never reach their classes, ex- hausted by the Geography which is strapped to their backs. lllany have lain gasping for water and strug- gled in vain to crawl to their arithmetic class, driven on by the thought of 328. As a remedy for this unmerciful situation, the S,-'XGANIORE has compiled a set of suggestions which may be used until that time when the junior pupils are relieved of this burden. l. lnstall pulleys to pull loads of these books from floor to floor. 2. Put first-aid kits in every corner of the building. 3. Keep a trained stretcher corps in readiness at the nurse's office to run out on a momentys no- tice and bring in any junior pupil who has been overcome with his burden. 4. Use Alpine dogs to scour every corner of the building in search of victims. 5. Give each seventh grader a horse to carry his book for him-or better yet, a motorcycle and side car. IIZZI Rirh men wrt in featlzer hells, Sailors snooze at sea, But Il eonzfy sent in 318 Is home sweet 1107116 to me. SBQP' dshfr to ashes, Dust to 111151, If we 1lo11't grrzzlzmte, Our gr11111l1'l1iI1lre11 must. QNX! 4 Our mt was not lzygimic S0 we kicked him off the place: He Sfmt 1lf7O7l hir jlrtwx .1i71zd ZUUFFIZ them on his fare. l x.. I WAGAMQ iraE.4s THE SAP WEAKLING 1' J ll l lf' i Za o f Qw vw, f A ' 'U ,--cv-f:fA6 x C, I , J? 7757, . lil s 3 Q' CI . Q ggi, a... di x Q wi I ' QB i V iz M7 4 f , fc i . 'E' K- t QW' J J 5 : 5 X f f i if z f lfciklvkll .44 A Science and Inventlon ingenious device by the stage crew to put an end to longwinded speeches and exhibi- tions of falsetto static. immediate action on the part of the stage crew. Members of the January class will never forget those hectic hours spent in attempt- ing to pick an appropriate graduation outfit which suited one and all alike, not to men- tion their pocket books. X :of :ef They sounded like a Ladies' Aid Society holding their meeting at a bargain counter. wk -sf -if Heated words flew thick and fast, and the clothing house salesmen departed quickly and with much haste for fear their samples of K a m p u s Kut Klothes would be ripped asun- der by the angry mob. Even the debate team, that organization of vocal experts, sent delegates to try to acquire some of the finer points of the manly art of argumentation. Hklklk As to suits, many of them preferred a beautiful Oxford blue-green, shadow-s t r i p e d plaid with plaitcd pants, sal- mon pink lining throughout, and vertical herring bone run- ning horizontally. Plffkak Some of the boys favored a combination of Cheviot blue and Oxford black with a few scrambled polka dots thrown I123j In operating this newly developed contrivance, the students, when tiring of the per- former's efforts, if any, will shout right lustily, Give him the hook! which will start l in free and a cheek for five dollars in the vest pocket. Pk if at They fought for three peri- ods trying to decide whether to have suspender buttons in their trousers or not. :F if X And then there was that much discussed question of spats. 4: PF Pk The question met with much opposition at first, but it was argued that spats would keep the May Flowers out of one's socks and that a wearer .of spats need not shine his entire shoe. Qfaeammfam THE SAP VVEAKLING The Rise and Fall of an Ambition f. 7 Z A - I 4 . 1 I i 5 so gov Vo' 10A f M An Astouncling Revelation of How They Get That Way. QBegun by Victor Hugo, 18703 Conrad Nel- 1929.5 Finished by son, the school boob. kind of human could love, and had her doubts. so big that his parents had waited anxiously to see whether he would walk or Hy, and his feet were sadly fiat, oh, very! They were a pair of pedal extremities to strike joy to the heart of any chiropodist. They were built somewhat along the lines of the Graf Zeppelin but with more artistic curves, humps, and bulges. XVhenever Horace walked down the street, horses shied, small boys hooted, and little children gathered at his heels. thinking the circus had Come to town. ln the luncbroom the boys derived much amusement by squishing Horacels mashed potatoes all over his head and then crying, Shame, shame, when he started to cry. His social errors were something fierce. Many wouldn't believe Horace was He was the only a mother she sometimes His ears were 3 this, but he actually cheered at football games and he sometimes laughed when mem- bers of the faculty told jokes in the auditorium. He just wasn't in the know, that's all there was to it. Now Horace secretly nursed a desire to play on the foot- ball team, but to express his ambition would only send his bearers into convulsions of choking laughter. Every morn- ing before breakfast he would patriotically don a maroon and gold skull cap, and in his pajamas, on which he had sewed a huge R, he would station himself before his dresser mirror, seize a large megaphone. and proceed in a grandiose manner to do an Indian dance, an Oriental ritual, a balancing act, and an attempt at the Australian crawl, then he would spring savagely into the air with a howl that made the cows out in the barn stop chewing their salted peanuts. Roosevelt stu- dents would interpret these wcontortions and undulations as being merely one of their fa- vorite football yells. He also had a small photo of the Roosevelt athletic field and would lie in his slat bed by the hour gazing at the picture, his rampant imagination see- ing himself, garbed as a gladi- ator of the gridiron, plough- ing over the goal line to vic- tory for dear old Roosevelt while the stands went wild lover their new hero. He would just get to the point where hundreds of Roose- velt's female supporters were lrushing across the field to smother him with admiring ohs and ahs when father would poke his whiskers through the door to hie him out of bed. He would then come down with a resounding thump to base realism. At the first call for football candidates, Horace dutifully lined up to receive his uni- form which consisted of a gi- gf' i f 3 X i S5 ,-2 -sf C655 W , fzfflb ' e bf .fiintl-t ' -9 . - - 1 ' 1::l'fllll 'ii' . as U '-.. L' l I +4 tml if '5!f,'t!i1:: 'gm' ea-.1 1 ,- - 4 lv Q ll 1 -- 5 itat tits, af 6 4 fi fo? 'till Hx: Attr- 'f'- n4M'lgggf'ia ' I 1 I . ix,v.,:rf:.f, f - Q J 7 . f V, t'4 -W4 dfv qsofv- llZ4I facammmmq THE SAP WEAKLING gantic pair of shoes, a huge pair of canvas bloomers, and an enormous and frowzy- edged jersey in which a col- ony of moths had partaken of a banquet. By the looks of the jersey the party had not broken up until a late hour. He was also given a leather basket which, he was in- formed, was used as a, skull protector. A sympathetic and well meaning coach gave Horace a blueprint to find his way into this garb. Horace had determined to keep in the good graces of the coach at all costs, but along about the second or third day of prac- tice, Art Christenson hap- pened into the locker room just as a June bug flew out of our hero's clothing. And here it was already Septem- ber! Things certainly were in a bad state of affairs for Horace. During the next few weeks of practice Horace played the part of tackling dummy whenever he was not enacting the role of a hot wa- a rheumatiz- The boys re- merely as a of entertain- ter bottle to stricken bench. garded Horace delightful form ment for their overworked nerves, and they used to tickle him nearly to death in the showers. But there came a day after which Horace no longer re- ported for practice. lt was an afternoon on which the first and second teams were par- ticipating in a rather rough scrimmage. Since, in the counting of noses for teams, Horace's large and prominent proboscis was somehow omit- ted, he was, as usual, occupy- ing a seat on the sidelines. Probably it was the strenu- ousness of this duty, more probably the warmth of his pantaloons and the hot sun, that prompted our hero to seek refreshment in taking a drink of water. Anyhow, after a few generous gulps, he was overcome by violent fits of coughing, and the twen- ty-nine-inch-chested football aspirant on his right, finding himself in a playful mood, be- gan hacking at our hero's back, causing Horace's specta- cles to bound out on the play- ing field. Horace, his bleary optics useless, groped out after them and was promptly FN .hz --.t-.W !5 if ?' ll l l l i ll l fs ..3 ll ffvscifv- p QX -- 1 i ,, and unceremoniously flattened by the impact of a l9U-pound fullback and six or seven tacklers. For the next fifteen minutes our hero was engaged in the innocent pastime of counting vari-colored elec- trons and atoms, and admiring the aurora borealis. Coming to school on crutch- es the next day, Horace was followed hy a reverent group of hero worshipping small boys who gazed at him in awe. As he approached the school, one of the students accosted him. 'Smatter, Horseface, drop an anvil on your toe? Oh, I snapped my leg in a little scrimmage last nightf' replied our hero nonchalantly. The air of the student changed from indifference to respect. He took Horace's arm and helped him up the steps. 'tYep, confided Horace, 'fthe coach says I wonlt be able to play all seasonf, The day was one of triumph from start to finish. Groups of giggly girls stopped him in the halls and gazed admiring- ly into his eyes as he told and retold how he had been hurt on the gridiron for his Alma Mater. A reporter from the paper received the story di- rectly from Horace's lips. It was a topic of conversation at Roosevelt for days after- v 12 ,Vit 4 lxxx ff XXX, X The potato has a wordly look, NOTICE TO STUDENTS fyfaeasaammia Q., t. axe 'THE SAP VVEAKLING wards, and Horace was flooded with invitations to join school clubs and attend parties and dances. Girls fought for the chance of walking down the halls with him, It became a common sight to see Horace stalking manfully down the avenue with one or two dozen of the fair sex clinging to each arm. 'tAnd all becuthf' one Q For it is worldly wiseg You can tell if it is honest By the expression in its eyes. lklkvk On Reading Chaucer-At Night VVhen Chaucer with his dip- pye melodye, My fancy rocks to sleep in poetrye: XVhen to a dizzy dreame lande I vvenden, And ,cross the roome my Chaucer boke I senden, And with a swayinge jerke I wake, And wish the gentle man had never spakeg And when the foreign pages o'er I loke. I take refuge in a Latin bokell llg THE YIUKKY WATERS And Graduation Coming? l V thweet little blonde had lithped in hith ear, 'tyou have been tho valiant in your ther- vice to Roothvelt on the grid- iron. But the extent of Horace's physical prowess is now con- fined to the dance hall. He is the proud owner of the loud- est pair of socks at school, uses hair goo, and hates to turn out the light at night be- cause he doesn't like to think of his good looks going to waste. He never has his themes in on time, and he cannot recite his twenty lines of Swinburne on. And now time thinking for his Hivver on his ukelele dreams of the the athletical when called he spends his up wisecraeks and practicing he no longer regal glow of limelight. 9 Many students who are try- ing to catch up on their sleep in the library are disturbed by the rustling of newspapers manipulated by a few incon- siderate members of the school. VVe honestly hope that the few pupils of Roose- velt who do this, do so unin- tentionally, however, and not with any malice. Please try to be more courteous. -Miss Bijeldanes. is an 4: Olga Kohanik is trying to remember under which seat in 313 she parked her gum so she can get it before she gradu- HTCS. Pk lk Ik And vacation can't be very far in the offing when the teachers toss away their stock of yellow failure slips. 4: if 4: SOCIAL NOTE Among the many out-door sports enjoyed by the janu- ary class at the Glenwood Chalet were dancing and din- ing, live hundred, piano play- ing, and a good deal of stren- uous reclining in overstuffed easy chairs. :ef if lk THE ORIGIN OF A SPECIES Said Socrates to Plato VVith a loud guffaw, Let's make a student Out of some straw. Plato got some glueg Socrates some hooksg Up jumped the student. But he forgot his books. f126l Among the many lovely Ha- waiian pieces played and sung at the German Club vaudeville were Du Du Liegst Mir im Herzen, Die VVacht Am Rhein,'y Er Lebe Hoch, and 'Stein Song. Pkllslk You will see him at your graduation. He will be a de- jected individual who is shed- ding gallons of salt water into an 8 by 12 handkerchief as each senior receives his diplo- ma. He is the man who sells hot-dogs, sodas, candy, and what-not to the students. You can make him a hap- pier and better man if you forget that spoiled hamburger he once sold you and, as you pass his seat with your diplo- ma in your toil-scarred fist, let him once more hear your melodious voice sing out that national noonday password, Three hamburgers with. and a bottle of listerine pop. fa ? D I-7 .ff N Z I 1 l mm 25 .xg si 'I . .t fu-x 3 , . -1- 'i-if? f' I. l - .,.. n -A V fi I' i ' 4 xlxl- T JAGDTIRQE- Nw' wi M wwf Qiffig 9 Milk .1 L i il ' I G I - . i , K L' ff' vi :v ii 'Y 9. 1 -L ' eww, 1 seorris ' H - r IE 5 PHARMACY ' I M 42nd street and zsfh Ave. W ff! f ' is I Why Try to DO It ,i Phone Drexel 7036 a Yourself ? ' Let W. G. Iverson, 3745 Minne- Q5 haha, build it for you. He's been I X V building houses for twenty-five PURE DRUGS, ICE CREAM years. He knows how. Iverson i will build on your lot. Nothing CANDIES, SODA D iie down. sg tx so i XX MILES STANDISH CORNERS X X MERCHANTS FX - Twenty-third Avenue and Thirty-eighth Street X llfhere Your Dollar Does Its Duty ei rug tore ae Furniture 'e 'tz Shoe Store Q Q trom's Dry Goods in X olst Cleaning and Dyeing ' C , hnson's Barber Shop in l er Shoe Hospital I X Gartland Fuel 81 Transfer ' '- X Ellrnbs Grocery 'Di gd X lx Dad VVorel's Service Station MX I X NeWfield's Meat Market Q X Nokomis Bakery EE 5 ,-. Miles Standish Theater ik ix Miles Standish Cafe W Q, wggwxtl-1 M, ibgl X WZDif3i? E??e JAGJAxNX5,.QD 1529154 ' I , - W 1 Yggf ' fqdf lm' 'IW M2311 .wr 1 W4 '?? ' L TI 'wif f 1 . .en r rf Q66-Q ff ,923 1-f 4 5. 'SH YS? H . A , , See WI10's VVl10, page 137, for 113.1l1CS. Q ' A P ,' V aff fy 1,4 XL K gPP'ff3TURES ff Q . ' he Best Tha Can Be Secured Anywhere M1 , ' x f gf! . ,Q JKT gyf M My HGME AND SCHOOL if T - 8 Sou h 10th Qtreet ff THE IQARD ART GALLERIES Us ,. ,E 6 666 6 L ' A foun 411116 C ofngf from Nicollet f 13 R. V X 4 A f A f if lg: A . 1-+41 ,f V' J A . V . . , Nat fi' Bloomington- Lake National Bank A HLOOMINGTON AT LAKE STREET T -ui4:aLg,0yar--4. I A Ayffiliatea' with FIRST NATIONAL BANK MINNEAPOLIS 0-WJQENP--0 ' DREXEL 0067-0068 WE PAY SM? INTEREST-COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY 51301 fA,G.A.Nx,GD 1P293E.4g . Mg . 9 - A' Jz5' . ' i 2 V' I 'eil A W H25 +111 i f it it: 1 ,W M' ef-I ihg! Mi W we , A fa W' W QF 5, ua 1 1 ivy? gf, IMI, smpl , V Q 59512 I YQQQNM . .-. .N az. 1 .5 '-,wg See Who's W'h0, page 137, for names. 4 J .MM V 1 1 . 1,- i V, pflf I IJ 1 fwfx f 1J.- V, KWH! X , i I fl V f. A .Mg J 5 ' . 1 .J if L J fy QY,s,X!! rrnrzfliesfarf BU INESS CQLLEGE DLQVIXL , mentS of ' XL? 613 HENNEPIN AVENUE, NIINNEAPOLIS M no , 1 : x: xx- fx: :x x -:xa s 1 , I egsisze tra' Ing in Secretarial and all IE il b sfiness courses. is if 1 M rie rai ing periods for commercial students. 12 Mlygj ' Mxcgw features. 1' gf . 1 ,il r I 1 I: r'Q,ExpitfindiVidual instruction. i 1! 4 ft M I XIV EQ Fully accredited. ', 11 '- 1 : 11 fl The College Bulletin will be sent, without 1 1 obligation, to any address, upon request. E 1 ' TELEPHONE ATLANTIC 4605 E 1 1 1 5 Qdnnual enrollment, three hundred pupilsj E 1 1 s I I Q- Minneajlolis' Fastest Growing Business School .P W 11321 JAGAMQ REQ See VV11o's VVh0, page 137, for names. v 4 l l ' - i yybc O ,Q,a14AJ2.. 0743. i . i X . - 3,3 62,0 A ' ' ' ' f ' f .. .flee 'S f ' - A M U71 I ' 1 f.f., 1flt..i.e. VWFfr'i'Fi!aF'f'?'f-P fY'fl-fer: it-W -f:7:--A---- --g:::-:' -y'---- -' M I b -,Www 6 s', l . . ,,... ' sw. '- r 1 1 Section 7 When ' t 'l2, ,1tQ,5-NWQQY N haseboard or wall reg- l .. isters are used, they , V 33,3fSi,: Q ! ' ' shall be properly and 1716 Sign of 2- ,V fr'f,1:k permanently attached to fl , Quality ., I , ,SQNF 4' the stack head in such A' QQ-' a manner that will pre- 1 ' vent any leakage of air ' ' ' between the head and NATIONAL iff fmgg WY' p. Av f is The National Line of Warm Air Registers comply with the Standard Code and properly installed prevent streaking and discoloration of walls and decorations. Insist on Your I-Ieating Contractor Using the National Line Produced in all Standard Finishes or Finished Special to Match Your Hardware. UNITED STATES REGISTER COMPANY .7Vlanufactured in South Il-Iinneapolis Since' .7907 PHONE SOUTH 0602 2109-2111 CEDAR AVE., NIINNEAPOLIS, MINN. y E L I Ht H, Berge Lumber Co, 3233 EAST 40TH STREET Dupont 2358 Qi' If A , dim, i A ,Q f s-1. lf i S Comte In and get Acqiaatnted .Z gp, L ,. N., 'L V 1 -N ,X .. I t ,Q Q Kim l f ff' H1341 N E f T2 X L A 47 . 51214, V JAGAM QD E229 317.45 See VVho's VVhO, page 137, for names. 4?- ? ,f ,qv 1 V f L, L, f f f je f . f fv , ' ,S if ff SJ A 47 4 9 . h K L-JV' J x , A W A 1 P A 1 v ' C X 47 ., 4, 1 , A X t, HERF-JONES CQ. Manufacturing Jewelers S ancl Stationers INDIANAPOLIS f- L Designers anal Manlcfacturers of X CLASS RINGS and PINS . 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', This page is to be used to learn the names of the babies appearing on pages 129, 131, 133, and 135. f, , You will note that the spaces on this page are exactly like those on which the pictures appear. There ada ,. four names in each space. The first name in the space is the name of the baby appearing in that space on f' ' - page 129, The second name is the baby on page 131: the third, the baby on page 133: and the fourth. Z the baby on page 135. l137 I r' A w 2 ,IL-I 1 , V, .AI AV, f I f .rf S-t ,f S .D lx v Better Dairy Products ttdlmtgigglw E 1 l L ANKLI MILK-CREAM-BUTTER CHEESE - IC C E A A Franklin salesman pa . your doo He will be glad to serve you. Two PLANTS 2108 Wash. Ave. No. Cherry 3334 2601 E. Franklin Ave. pont 2371 1 fi xy I N is , ,.-ijlk 1 00 I 1 -,W , ,' - V . -W .g l-- X- X. , X. xt T h X lgifg, .X ,X Y Do 3 Q2 xg , some women still Wash clothes at home? Progressive Women do not. They call us to take their Washing away from home. VVet VVash, Hydro, Soft Finish. DREXEL 0254 J Sz I-I SERVICE HoUsE LAUNDRY 1 i 4 l l I tif A41 , 1 ' lil. lrr lf N ji , X , I 15 For Vacation 4-way sports suits -coat, fvest, knickers and ulongsv 528.50 338.50 S50 Light shades, plain and fancy weaves ' smart new style ideas ' you'l1 find everything you want in the feature value suits for holiday wear 'V MAUPQICE E --V- ROTHSCHILD Sv. CO. Palace Clothing House Nicollet at 4th NHNNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - . CHICAGO f1381 x , J f , if f - ,. Qivdiffv KD? ', , Q I V .r , gr, .,:z Q J! A' E, .ffl 5, Q X X v X, X . A' , -V 1AbA L, f In rf' I. Af ' , , , f MM J f- A 5 , kl flaw f ' M 5 fs 3 If f , li, D f kin 1,211 1 f'f,AXxX N. X X, i WMM g f J , ff five ,ff - 4' vJ f4 . A , .UVM VJ V x. , .l -K . .', ML . V I X ktv' I 1 . 3 X 1,1--'xxx Q4 , .X Y iffy K J X , x , , ,X ,V P 'W' VA,w .X,g v 5 Q A-X ' fw 1 Q m M 4, ,... 4 V ,GJ 7 ' gf 5'-X-1 x?f.,,K,L S x X1 XX . , M X Y' X -'H fl Kung Q fi 1 ,rv M W 1 L. ,f xx 1 K 'A- M ' Q . ,,.,. MI, M4 Z ,- , 2 M if 1.11. Ig A 'G I JJ ' x A RJ 7 A' , gf' !-4 E ' ' A f M! ' W ' + '--qf' Z A I ,,f'U,fxf-f1lf1,f 5 ' X Y f QR X fx . W V Q V f 1 ll 1 ff' ., f?'1Qff:f-I-M., Off' , y f V '1- ' I , d v INV .' :L 1' ,591 . f xiii 9' L'f'f' ' ' V11 My i duvQ,kJ, MQ U - 1 f Mf M,L,4,, ff P , X Q f 1 ,f ff X . . , ,f F I ff I ,, , 1 V f , K1 V1 . 1' ' , ,, A V-,A ,f xr, 4, XO ff. I P V' X O L' f X ,f ' - 1 Y . ,,,, , f ff fw f l- L 1 i at MMM The Style Shop-College Room of tlze 'y ' f Standard Clothing 1 1 Company SCI-IDOL CF l has earned the right to be called the Style Headquar- ters for Young lN'len. Here you will find the lat- est and best styles that are worn at the leading univer- sities of this country and 1 abroad, priced for young men's purses. i You are invited to make an inspection of these tremen- dous s t o c k s of distin- guished apparel. Q27 His! fuenae flfarffi Q Mnneapobs, Mnnesota Ifslalllfslufrl 1877 Accounting, Shorthand, and Secretarial Courses OPEN ALL THE YEAR. Call, phone, or write for xpefzal mformzztzon. ill 1 RICKARD y1,yy,y, LVH!, ,. ,,- M 11 11 if es,3::Lc1Nu -lf '14 tfli inlg' 'T-1, i 1 Another Year! Nelson S Nelson y NELSON BRGTHERS 1 Still Our Pcrfecf rilfverzzge MdZ.7Zfai7Zpdl lllanzzfarlzzrifzg Jewelers VVe Invite You to Visit Us in Gur IE C FOUD .......... 99 44-100 New Factory Building- Mrrsicf ........ 99 44-100 5 2 SMILES ........ 99 44-100 Q5 R D SERVICE ...... 99 44-100 T pOPL-LARITY 99 44,100 1324 'WEST LAKE STREET CJIIF blofl' off Helzrzejwifz H6l7l726Pl71 at Eighflf Cum Rings, Pins, Jlledals, , Troplzies A Big l'Good-Lucku to the . Graduates W Dykewater 2558 11401 f , ' A7f'ff . Q UE? GW B WW f fWfff J ., , Il 'x0jMsDXXxhj-F ,ff 1' f' X , 1, 2' Tun: J ' ' 1 - . 7 ,J Q 1 1 Y I ' ,A - ff1p, f,-fxfix , . ' 1 fl ' . A X A . ,,.,.,,g..,n.Ak,,.,. Q G, K nf L. M 'AX0-vx. Cywf EEZ:kA, QB:roti iEQw,b4,,4,E1fL- 6QwnxlJ, ff. , P ffmk .,g,gx...,g,l WWW ' -' Sf aJi4,D!MJ3 ,Jw NY Javljfv fx VX0v'-fx fww ' ,ai ,L.QzZ7 Ji -iyx 7,A,,V ,QW ,Am ', J,4QQqn ' ff f1h2JQ A4MfQ2- fUf2fiJLW4 , ff rw 'mi I Engravers of tile SAGAMORE For tile Classes of 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929 GWOED BUREAU of ENGRAVING, Im. T TELEPHONE MAIN 1591 500 SOUTH FOURTH STREET MINNEAPOLIS glfinte rs of the S AGAM O RE for the Glasses of 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929 6566 LUND PRESS Q20- 70r1'n ters and 731111 ders Q W Cgelephonegg geneva 8684, 8685 V 1106 Sixth Avenue South eapo1is M 1 M 11421 u , 2 I U fbfffff M41 M41 - RAW Twentieth Year ' Collegiate Business Treinin For High School Gmduozfes Exclusively Qffers all the strictly practical business subjects of a four- year university business Coursey excludes all academic Work. FOSHAY TOXX'ER KE 1 1 - .flff I' 5 I ffm 152 fy, f , mi? Z2.7Q.:QlfQ1Q f3 wg g: 1212 Im 'fi M 33 ml Q :5g3:515g:5,:,::.1.:,,55:: C lv- -W awvzssfm. - W ff Tiff? W' 25 I A W NU EQ 5:1-'fs'- .I fl 5:-1.57 2. S3 Q . if-', : . P 4 ie: A 4-t ate, 5-. or 56 VR I f I' if fi R V-.., QL s...,. ' ' flf iii? 'f 1 I Q -,iffizg '11, vie? ! A ..., I ,. S. Q- 5: ,,,. f -:I - nu ll - ,,:-x ,L: -: .,S.,.qE 5,Z.:v?,, ev ...,. . 1 ,g , - v- I -V.- H Ibuu WN '- 2 .gt . ..,,,' ' g H . , -'-' j f ,,,,,,,, v.-'v. , , .,.,. . ,,,. will A in ,,.. ,.i,R355'9' . 7' ,,,. fl ' .... I - - ' . .,., ,.,., M - ,I 't f2'-:-r- ' 5 : . V- e f , 'I' E- ' . '- '- ' - ., ,, ,. -' -'--: ' 'Ref Q - '::f':':..' ' I-QE-. - ' 2 -'-- A I c 3 :'w1'::'::',.aS-.:- 'Ei ' .. .' , ---- ,. 21- M ' M- fif w , . , , C --'1:5:5514 :'!,,'ws... -v--. ,ME ' swf ., ,Q - .. ',:,:vg,15gg:.:s:,:,: ' . R 4 A , .. x , M - 9' '. E 1 .E 'ff .,:::: 4- ' V I ,, :W ,,,. ,A 1 S .....,v -. .f,. ew, -:-:-:,:,.,':.- . .. ,M ..-, : IW. COURSES CLERICAL 4 months BOOKKEEPING 6 months ADVERTISING 6 months STENoGRAPIIIC 6 months SECRETARIAL 9 months ADVANCED SECRETARIAL 12 months HIGHER ACCOUNTING 12 months BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 12 months COMMERCIAL TEACHER TRAINING 9 months WE PLACE OUR GRADUATES in good, permanent positions d 1 at goo Sa aries. HOIVIE OF COLLEGIATE BUSINESS INSTITUTE Call, write or telephone for complete information. CGLLEGIATE BUSINESS INSTITUTE FOSHAY TONNVER BUILDING, MINNEAPOLIS Geneva 8819 MoRToN M. NEYX'CCJk IB, President is Il-131 . l Die? 1 A SQA WWWWWWWW Najaf My Wil MW ,M .ti l l M. H. MCDIVITT 81 CO. W MJ , B l Funeral Directors ' The Largest, Finest and Most Phone Geneva 7025 Complete Funeral Home in 2506-os Riverside Ave. the Northwest' NIINNEAPOLIS, MINN, Lake St. at 29th Ave. Du. 2102 We carry' a complete line of BICYCLE PARTS AND A TIRES MARTINSON'S U. S. TIRE SPECIAL BAKERY 51.50 MINNEHAAHA HARDWARE 4204 EAST 34TH STREET SC PAINT CO' We use only the choices! materials 3740 AQINNEHAHA AVENUE w. N. MAXWELL DARGAVEIJQS GTOCCTY Pl-lARlNlACY Confectionery 40th and Minnehaha Ave. fue The Drug Store of Quality 4813 28th Ave. So. ' VVe Deliver Drexel 0950 Dreicel 2701 Drexel 2701 Say It Fl0we'.5 METTAYER SHOE CO. i On 27th Ave. and Lake St. FORMERLY VV. N. COMER You will find here a beautiful asso'tment of all that's new in Footwear for the graduate. HOSIERY TO NIATCH Young Menls Snappy Styles, all the New Colors. Moderately' Priced at 85 and S6 FLORIST Artistic Wedding Decorations Floral Designs Our Specialty Always at Your Service Phone South 5266 28 East Lake St. 51441 GOODY'E,4R TIRE VULCANIZING WILLARD BATTERIES CHARGING DRY GUUDS SULLIVAN BROS. 3403 42nd Ave. So. General Dry Goods, Notions, Men'5, W011zen'.w and Childrenlv Wear. Corner 39th and lvlinnehaha ATWATER KENT RADIO flame Demonstration Drexel 0992 ANNA SOLEM, Prop. E Du. 4445 . Wg Call fgr and Dgljqigr Drexel 4999 Drexel 4999 ' ' 7l fn t 5Uf 2flm25 cl U at 5 M PRESCRIPTIONS For Fresh Cul Flowers and Plants Q5 Designs Sick Room Flowers Decorations WIGER PHARMACY 2707 East Lake St. MINNEAPOLIS 38TH AND CEDAR DR' 4609 l Qualify H- FUSBERG I PHELPS MARKET jllgnufggfm-ing jgfwglgr I Fish and Poultry, Fresh and Railroad Watch Makers, Clock Salt Meats Repairing, Picture Ffamlngv Specializing in Home Nlade Engraving, Stone Setting, Sgukgngg Jewelry Repairing Drexel 3415 2804 E. 42nd St. I I H. B. NELSON F. VV. NELSON NELSUN PLATING Complirrrzents COMPANY 4255-257 6th Avenue South H- Ae Rosen-thai Phone, Geneva 5267 CO. Gold, Silver and Nickel Plating 3501 23rd Ave. S. Drexel 5687 Quality and Service Our Specialty MINNEAPOLIS, NUNN- I f1451 1 FALLS DRY Gooos I COMPANY I I Dry Goods and Me1z's Plfear i X I 3958-60 IVIINNIQHAHA Drexel 0953 The Hottie We Alppreriate Your Pfztronage of the Famous , MINNESOTAN Office Phone: Dr. 0709. Res., Dr. 8388 MCDEL DR. S. E. SMITH SUIT .Ju-Even euros 3754 Cedar Avenue Tailors, Clotllifrs, Furnishers IVIINNIEAPOLIS, MINN. , . NICOLLET AT FOURTH Efuemngs by .flppozntment Ofhcez Dupont 8808 Res., Dupont 7853 , EL LAGO THEATRE 36th Ave. and Lake St. Dr. M. Sheran Dentist Oihce hours: 9 to 12 A. IVI.3 I to 5:30 P. IVI. Evenings 7 to 9 Ong of the Cor. 42nd St. and 28th Ave. So. L-AA-C THEATRES MINNEAPOLIS I I COSTUMES-VVIGS-THEATRICAL SUPPLIES We Carry a Complete line of Costumes, Hair Goods, Theatrical Cosmetics, Tights, Opera Hose, Tuxedo and Full Dress Suits, Graduation Caps and Gowns. We Furnish Clean and Correct Costumes and Wigs-P1'o111pf Sffrvire' Quotations Furnished on Request MINNEAPOLI S CCSTUME CO. New Ownrrslxip and llflanagemefzf-E. P. Hilbert, lllruzzzger SOM. NINTH STREET .xlmmwfl 7'h4-mfr lsuilrfiny IVIINNEAPOLIS, MINN f1461 GARDEN HOMES SHOE STORE TO SHOXV YOU IS TO SHOE YOU Yes, Hosiery, Too We S211 - L- .. 5 X THE BIG FOUR SHOE 1 I ' T sTAa1.lsHEo1es4 i n fgr 114125 and Boyle L5 ' it IMIOI7 EPAIRING ' X 1 SKATE SHARPEIUNG l , 5 A l Orders Taken for Brief Cores 2 25 60 12 Q' 3448 42nd Ave. So. RIINNEAPOLIS Edmund cusatespresn A1 if L , 1 1 Your Neiglzborlzood Store T '1 A' L' SUN THE FALLS TTARDVVARE Co. 1 C I 4 7 S , j ww ,WHS 1 Headquarters for Fishing Tackle 2606 ll' 4-2nd St- l and Sporting Goods Good TlZi7fIgS to Eflf When You Need Paints, Garden Tools, . Lawn Seeds or Fertilizer or 1 CALL Us FIRST Phfme Drexel 3415 Phone Dr. 2441 400s lX'1lI'1I1SllZlh21 Ave. For Better E7Zfl?7'fdi1l1'IZE7'lIf - - mm the Minnesota O11 81 l Refining Co. MINNEAPCJLIS, lX1INN. i VVe specialize in heat oil for your 34111 Ave. fir 50111 Sr. Dr. 5230 i Oil burner- ul omp zmeu v of C 1' A r. CRO W LEY FENCE CO. 'iw 1 3100-3112 E. I,AKE STRIQRT 2815 EAST LAKE ST- Phone Drexel 4781-4782 Drexel 2019 1 11 f147j ncome- ro ucing ucation If a man wishes his son or daughter to go into business, he should not send him to Universityg he should send him to a business schoolfl- WOODRIJW WILSON, Educator, Author, EX-President of the United States, World Statesman. As a Business Sclzool, We Believe We Merit Your Patronage Gur Attendance so Indicates. Our Graduates say so. The Employers of our Graduates say so. M. B. C. Graduates make good. Many Graduates from every High School in the City attend. msit Us - Investigate Uur 'Record ATTEND SUMMER wscrioor ' IYYIVIVIZIPOLU Fully Alccrealifed by the National Association of Accredited Comme1'cial Schools. NICOLLE1' AT NINTH MAIN 4338 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. f1481 ddlf0f'Vf'! -' fi! f ,L f ' My 7 AAO ' . 7 f fad! A o fy! A , ,iiio - A K Qi? mzziv qf :6l7f'6ZClL67f' O GG G GLGGGG I:-f A Corner of Our Homefike Reception Room PHOTOGRAPHERS TO THE SENIOR CLASSES ' OFJANUARY AND JUNE, 1929, OF ROOSE- VELT HIGH SCHOOL. . . . .Zintsmo,ste1f. . . . jbfaster Qhotographer 816 NICOLLET AVENUE PHONE - GENEVA 4200 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. If149j Jostenps Treasure-Craft Jewelers CLASS PINS and RINGS Iosten School Jewelry is as faith- ful as a true friend. Only the owner can appreciate its true Worth. The Josten Manufacturing Company I Treasure Craft Jewelers l 207 lVlEDICAL ARTS BUILDING NICIJLLE1' AT NINTH QFormerly Yeates Bldg.J Call DREXEL 4444 F or Prompt, Courteous Service HIGH GRADE CLEAN COAL - I Sold Under Our Absolute NIONEY BACK GUARANTEE filopy on every delivery ticketj HARTZELL COAL COMPANY 3615 EAST l'fOR'1'Y-FIF'l'lI STREIWI' lil Again ..... f We have been chosen to fur- nish the commencement an- nouncements for the graduat- ing class. High quality and ez reasonable price won us the order. THE NATIQNAL ENGRAVING CO. Society Smtiorzers 509 SIXTH AVENUE SOUTH WE LIKE T0 D0 BUSINESS F' U W xl WH 'J I uit A . WITH YOUNG PEOPLE WE consider the boys and girls of the Northwest as our best friends. WV e like their enthusiasm, their ambition and their ability to do things in a modern and efficient manner. 'W e hope many of you will remember to do your banking here, and tell your parents that we are here to serve them. THE RIINNESOTA LOAN AND TRUST COINIPANY 405 NIARQUETTE MINNEAPOLIS Affiliated With Northwestern National Bank P1511 fgu , x 1 X , 1 x,zI f ' . J x W l ff, f nf- ' Z, f - f , X . f .f ' V . u f , 1 M663 K I 1 xg. v , 7 I , s MQ . f' X -f'f 4' . , - ' ff Y f' Q , I xn -Q I 1 w f aff ,gf A V. ,sd 'ff' MQ.,-f' ,f , . -' fw 2Xd.,ffN I I 'lfynf ' 1- cg , ' JW M SffA6QQfga !4yLC,q ff? ip xg .rv I L - p f W 4 A x :X we
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