Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1932

Page 1 of 216

 

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 7, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Page 10, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 11, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Page 14, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 15, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Page 8, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 9, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Page 12, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 13, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Page 16, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collectionPage 17, 1932 Edition, Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1932 volume:

H r'- ' .., 5,1-H A t' x if . kflf' E milf Q f 5125525 , ' rggjf yea? ?'K52iiJifvX1 9 Q Xw ' 0 5959699 Q ' g Q, -ffq AAf T :'jie,a ' QQ f a l.. .s Q fsf? Sgfifgi ENTS UNDER DIRECTION OF THE PUBLISHED BY THE STUD FACULTYYFRANK LOUIS SOLDAN HIGH SCHOOLYSAINT LOUIS R f VOLUME THIRTY FIVE 0 1 I X I we I .., , 3 Q - 1 NUMBE ONE 1 JUNE 1932 1 1 C I 0 i. 1 I UNCH IV.-I YIIIF. To the N16-morv George VVash1ngton lorenzokr O' Arne-r1ca11p.1rr10 xx :ow 1 X nc ounzge- 111 1141- fI'I 11- PHFIC-1716 111 mrfm ,ffl'I1f'fUN and hdse nmdc- 111171 111 f-xe111pl.1r of frm- ADCITFIOFISIN 1 1f- K f 'Hn SCTID 2 ,Qratefulls df-dmc rc-cl I7 the xefzr Of' the Wc1sl1111pIo11B1 e 1te11111f11 1111e'te+'1 f11111drecf.111dIl11rz no of X , Nte'rl111gQ c,'z1'1!1I1f' r1f1i1a1 '1 It-I my ' f' .L X ' , jA,fI1IYX'. i:r11 My ' ' , Nz 1 ' . . Lit: 215111-' 11011 the! v11clz1r111,Qfwtf-c4111 uf IHZAIIAIIICI f f V I Z v A - , , , U K. 'O Tl ,xo11tJ1 of 111 11'1r10r1 .. 'J ' 1. A' fu : Y ' ' ' ' 4' A11 . 7 7 P .. ' ' x -I . S'0I.l'.-IX HIGH ,YC'I1O0I. is A Messa6e from Mr Ste-llwagen The Soldan Faculty Seruors fanuarv Class june Class Summer School Autograph Paffes Prose Honor Ozgqnzzatzon S Clubs Spo1 ts Tattlez Advez tzsements Page 12 13 37 64 65 69 14 and 70 6 I 187 O 6 ' . 4 . . . . . . . 11 If ............ 15-36 Poetry ................ 71-84 , ................ 85-116 ' ' C ' ' r .......... 117-130 , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131-1 6 ' Q ............... 16'-178 ' ............... 179-186 ' ' . ............ -2 7 I4!,l ,, ll.l.1.liAf Y -1295, 2 'EZEYSY-SQL'QJl ! 5 3EAR SOLDAN FOLKS In these months of the celebratlon of the bxcentenmal annlversarv of the blrth of George Washmcfton xt IS our prlvlleoe to follow h1m aOa1n through the st1rr1nU events of '- Sv hls tlme As we ln our thouvhts Go wlth h1m nn wllder ness camp campaxgn councxl hall pres1dent1al office we are filled anew wlth admlratxon respect love for one who stood so firmly who worked so devotedly who achleved so tremendously' We come to reallze we hope as never before the Greatness of the povx er for Good that IS 1n any man or woman whose character IS noble whose ldeals are lofty vxhose fidellty to ldeals IS unwaverlnv whose deeds are d1st1ngu1shed by honor are marked by the fearlessness that rwht can gxve are Oraced by the courtesy that comes from d1Un1ty polse understandmg tolerance consxderateness In amazement and m Joy we stand to honor Washmoton when we observe his qulckness to hear the call to duty h1s readlness of response to that call hrs complete devotlon m whatever of servxce was requlred of h1m May these months be a very speclal trme of mspxratlon to you our splendld Soldan 01rls and boys May you llsten to and hear and obey the clarlon call to youth for worthmess of character for falthfulness to ldeals of honor and mdustry and for that d1st1nct1on 1n cltlzenshxp that means the utmost m servlce to all The longer on thrs earth we lrve And wezgh the varrous qualrtres of men Seerng how most are fugztrve Or fitful gzfts at best of now and then Wmd wavered corpse Irgh ts daughters of the fen The more we feel the hrgh stern featured beauty Of plarn devotedness to duty Steadfast and strll nor paid wrth mortal prarse But Hndzng amplest recompense For lrfe s ungarlanded expense In work done squarely and unwasted days James Russell Lowell Slncerely yours, HERBERT P STELLWAGEN ll -1, - ' ' -A -eff 52.11,-T : - :V:A1. .- ,if if ,fear -' ff' .- .-' 1 1 , 7 X N, 5 ' 7 Je at as: L -1-. f-, ,AY14 -J H Eff? . r'r',- ' I lk . . . A, F.- , E Q . n Q . -, H 5 , 'S an 5 2: . J A . , D , 5 ' , y V s v n U 1 Y , . v - Y y 5 V . . V . b V . y . . . . V bi 9 D ' ID D ' 7 b , . . , 3 ' ' 7 , . ll ' ' , , ,V Y 5 - - l , l - I ' I - . .. N N N 5 1QGlSQ2G2a1W '5 'F Soldan Facultw ff-Kiln -ag-f-'?Qfg:',-.fr .ff 1,22 Q-,ffl ,V V 4-H ff, Af' :FSI i - f A ,,5,f.x. ' X ' 'Q 5 'T ' 1 7 , ' r . K 2-1 A 'S ff A Y - 5 ' Aj 5 Y -f ' 2 f , R .-.F ,Wi 11' -- Li-,ti v -1 - ' Y- , rn .!-v- - AUTUGRAPHS F I JVM r-,fJJJ-1 Senior Class january S ,mn 1 . -5532 f ,, . ' ff X XX 1 I IX X 1 f I I I -'dn MAI.. . - -ll ff JI. , , X VIRCIT OU! SE COLORS Blue Gold Green Class Song Vzncxt Quz Se Vzncxt Words by R Lewzsjohnson Musxc by Anna Marguerzte Gebhardt Wlth all sails set The Norseman bold Set forth to conquer seas untold And bravelv set hzs eyes afar To meet new dangers sw ord on bar As Norsemen bold Set out to wxn So Soldan s sons wxth hearts akxn Press on wzth every fear in thrall Who conquers self doth conquer a Chorus Vtnczt qu: se v1nC1t Aloft our banner Hzes And to :ts truth Jnspznng We lzft our hearts and e5 es ll! ll Q A I I I TD 1 II , - f ':'2'-- H 'art-2 'X,M1--5w,,f ,L - sigfg 5-I' ,. -X - :L ff-F s A Sponsors and Omcers of the Class offanuary, 1932 3... i I If IIIXS I - Q'- IIIS I QF' 1 I IR'XNIx BI.-'xIxE'vIORE NILXLTI-IE IREKH 11 fz 1 fr1114 I mm 141 1 rum- Jri and Sk!! Ili. 1 s IIIYNI mor IXILK 311 Incl nu C' Ilel ALI! E KT! 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Lxhrarnn 3 Botamcnl Club Pep Flub S'lUU'lllLS und iumu ELLISON BLACKFORD 11110111 1: 01111 71 1 Nlotto fommmee Seruce Club BERENICE BAKER 11: onlx 110111010 11 11111111 lun101 fl'l3II'llU'iClE 111 111 -X X Pep us VIRGINIK PFAFF fam nj hvaff hm r' 11111. 1 I KN ET MILLER lim f1c'11tIcst 1 a I Qeruce Club Ch'1m111'1rl4 11111101 C11 11111 wade -Xrt 'KDPYCCVIIIOII Llulv CLIFFORD RIGDEIN 1'I1e q111etn1111d1s11f11c1 1111111 a uf ll Imture Lommxttee 15 4.3 . ' tx 1 ' ' ' 'V' --'Y S7241-3 --Y-, ,,, - - ' ., .. . - 1 X L. -. ' ' E .. ug-1,1 -1 E1,11,141,l:1 T 1 v - . ' ' ' j fy, 7 V1 'ITI1 1 f lfq 1p1 y111t. 4 A E ' : . v YA 1 . v 1 ' 11 , . nd ' 1' 'f' Ku fi' 'ri , 11 , 1 ilxul 11 fun-'1'1-, .l . fi , ' . I'l'l:1- ffon1111i1.tee. -Cllernisfrf' Clul1.'A1't Ap- 1'1 P ' ' f Ti -lfl1'.l'4L71t'. an,',Agi. h Y','.,l. -E2-l' , '. ', Q., ' 1. A z ' , HUM. '. Y'v'11111d1'111r1tl1. A. 11 1--'A V. 1,l V1. - 4 ' 1 1 ' . . ' 1 1i11:11lc. G. . . 1 . Cl l. v A '11 . A ' ' :'1'1-1' I '1-111I1 j1 11. 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KIM' 1111 N I' fx NC' X XJ Y g J C3 Semor Class Q, june '32 I X Q 1,3 VI I. -FIV . fl Psfgtii?-ff I A-fr? I1 x U U ', Q N X I W I I jf .-'L 4,-.L A! - .LL 6, JL , f 2 nun, .1 I-neqnf J-XJ WQ Xfxf NON 51131 OMNIBU5 COLORS fxzrdrnzl Szller Blick Class Song Non Srbr sed Ornnrbus Words bx C1rolSzunder'-. Music bs Rex 1 Abel on Hall' Farr Alma Mater Muse of wrsdom s lrght' Go we forth trzumphant From thy altars brrght Haul' O school eternal' We pledge oursels es to thee Guzde us bs thx goodness Slflg we then rejorcrng To her hallowed halls Raise vse hrgh her standards O er her lastzng v. alls Hold her alms ay s foremost In our hearts as best Her rnotto to ennch us To realms of loxaltx To es er meet Irie s test C horus Form 'ard Soldan sproudest sons Yreld to the pill Non srbr sed onrnrbus For one for all' F0114 ard Soldun sproude'-t sons Yreld to the L :ll Non Srbr sed OIHIIIIJUS Not lor sell' for zll L5 Ex J I . AQ l l X l seek XX If , C5 'WI 'VS tx N W ML l i :vm 1 W W 7 ll ' . , 1 C 1 H M .V wc ,UM si 'Gar?r1iQE5,QI'Q?Jlf3 Qin Sponsors and Olficers of the Class ofjune, 1932 l H01 K SS llll I ll llflfl ICUIII ll IX Prfridmlt S mum fu All llll1JRll7BlCIxl1f lIR1R4Xlx O ARI ll I 1fxllX111lARSZY nr Purncur Sponsor Smutuvix IAY HODGES HARRY ROTHMAN e fone 0,7 Ill? oux merit uakcs A Xour bn! lxmxsclj can be hu parallcl Jax Senior Presxdent Honor Socxetx Url matxc Gulld Vxce Presrdent 3 Drums of Oude lrom the You 4 orners Flattermg VN ord K ome dx of I-rrors Prckermg Club Presx l nt 30 3 Serum lub Senior Treasurer Qhemrstry Club lbrarnn 3 X ICC, Pl'6QldCIlf 3 Presndent 3 Glee Club Pma tore Cameri Club Qeruce Club MILDRED BECKER vmcmm HARSZY Hoa modest kxndlx allarrompmlzcd use Semor Nxce Presxdent Honor Socxety Secretary 3 -Xgora Vxce President 3 Round Table Servxce Club Sec Semor Secretarx Honor gOClCtj Treas retary 3 Cl3QSlC'il Club Program u er 3 Servxce Club Treasurer, 32 axrman G A -X Secretarx Agora Sammxes and Susmes Secretary So an S N115 ourx Nl Bxsketlnll 31 Botanxcal Club Secretary 31 Scrxp Champxonshxp Team Sta 3 Beanlx and utnc :func jurc sr around there Bnght mug FU 11 ollxer 39 ' . 4 gf' 'J V 1 X , L Y Y J ,- - :Q -1-- fg --'- - Y igzf -Q ' -1 ,- , l v J.-1 ' I 7215.5 ill, . jli.X' T. 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'I QQ ,62iQ?sfQiFQ11 1i THOX4 AS LR LXX EW BEN EISENBERL1 'XLTER IELNRE K H REI NOX 3- 1111111 H -XROLD H -XCJEMEX ER 11111111 1 1 111 1 P11111 1 M XRX X IRGINI MX COX INGTON U 1 1 11111 111 1 1 11111 'Xmullux 1 111 L1 11411 1 1 11111 N11111 1 1 N1 EDXX -XRD X -XXX ITZ 111 1 1 1x111 12 llrgct N LI LLI KN SC HILLIINCJ 111111 I 111 11111 BL RR RR XLEX4 XXI LEON KRD R 'XDL NSRX 111 11 XX ILLI 'XM SCHXX IXRT1.. 1 1 0 1 1 11111 1 N1rw 11 511 X 111,11 11111111 BILI SC ULLX 1EROX11 SEX ERS 2,5 fj N YJQ., A f' ' -if 'fHN1,, -frgvixi f 'gffff-' ,fl 37,7 .' ' u ,A .1 X X 1 A A if---fu P -Y' ,- -., -1 f-'1 gy.. -1-i- -v- A2x.--Y-fgT,g:-it -.- ' - ,-Y - 1 ' 11. 1 ' 1 7 1 1 ,1,. W.. A A A ' I Hr 115 1:11t11v 1111111 1':1'1:1'1r11 11rd E 11111'11.'J ,jz 1 Q H1 1. 111'C11cNl1':1. A1 1'c1'11111111'l11'L'. , 1 1 - 1 , . . , 5 ,, A A A A 1 A W' 1 1 , 'IN111' 11111111111 7111.1 111 1'1 111'l' 111'1'11.v 111111 Q , :1'111i.v. '77 . ' . . . . . . QL? . . A11111111'l 2 111111111-.S1 '1:11'y.':9. 111m- ' 111-. S11111:111.111111111' .' 1' - '11'k 1 11 , ya S1- 1 1 ry, '31, '31, X11 511' .X11111 11-'1 '111 ! x l 111111, .'1 l11'N :1111 ,.lQ1k'N, Q 1 1 1 . 1 1 I1'1111!1 1'1' 1111 111511, 11-v41'1'1.1'1':1'1 11'1' ' 11111111 111 f11111f111'.'l1 lt. fg Sc' 1' V11111. 1.11N CH . !L'11:11111a, X ' 1' 5 '1X1':11'11: .'1111:111. '51. l'1ll'1I11NI1X' V11111. 1 1 - , X !11 1 1'j.' 1111 11'111.1 111111 111-1' :1'1'1'1' 1113'- 1' 12 . . 1' E , ' 1 f ' 1 1 1 1 1 1l1:1'1:11 .1-11 1:11111 111111 1'1'1'1'111'111 11 7111-11 1.111 111.1.11.v.1111 111 1111111111111 111111. 1l1'11:11:1111' HV1111, lb -1115' 111 1f1'1111'-. AK 'H' . 1 7 1 1 - 1 A' l l' - ' ll1f'V'11111. ' .-I 11111-1: 111 1111j'1' 111:11 11 71111111'1111V V 11111:11. 5121111 11'111. 1,-111111.111111 l111:11111111'1-. V 4 v H 1 '1 ' l1 :1'1'1t1' :1'1'1' fx 1 i1i11l1' :1'fl1'. Sc' 1:1510 511111. l'1vk'1'111g V11111. 'v ilu- 'l'l11,, '1'1'11ck ,'11:111: .1'11-, E95 xxp ' '- 1 '- -11- ' I :11111L'1'1i 111111: .11.t.1'1. 11111111911 111111. .-I 1'1'1111' 111111 11112111-1'1'11111 1111111211 1111111. Hl' 1 ' ' if ' . 7 ' . 1 ' ' l'11-111I111'1111711.111'..11,11jg,1,-1 111' . ' ' ' ' 11' 111.1 '11t. 1.1 11 11.. 11.1 1f',,A1A1f11,'111.1111'.1'111'111', CH SJQ3fRJli9 1 Candzdates for Graduahon From Summer School NI -RRI KN X11 C AXE LLOH D P-XLNIER 1111 ALLEN NICHOLLS BOB HILLI-XRD 7011 L 111 N :Ir GOLDYE BLITZ I HI C I p lIuI Orcheitri L1I11111 11 f I111111 tu GGRDON SMITH 1. 1 01111-1111 HCV 1111! XX OODROXX GR AY rut I DAN FISHELL uv nz T-11111. lI:111r1 Q . ' A ' . Nw , 1 . DN,-X SCH.-KDE 51111 1z1i:11'. :::.'.1:a LOREN SYLER 'A my- -Y I 1::l 'e f 65 , L Y 4X -A-I ' -ff' 4. -- rv !,-,xx , f' ,S - ,'- : L . rf, J X X f f 9 LA J-.4 q,,h, YY LT- , . - , 1 . . Q . I X iso :fr f-f::g. UH' 1.i11,'f.a,v rfffru '1zf.f.1fli1 'f 1' Lv :fr- Ififflv' f'a:11e1'z1 Vlub. H 1II1.vi1'.' l r'i1'11+I 1,1 f,m1f,:-P, 1'iv-1' f11:'.f uni. 'II ymrtfz of I Hlef f'I11If, Prcsil-11, '11, 'ifilcn r. I'i1m1u1'1-, 'I'r:11'k Sqzzanl. EN, '-9, '3-1. Y1x' struct 1r.fcz'un, 'e 1. , , 1, ' 'Ula , '3:. I A N Club. I fwfzzirl r11!1 aI My I , jr, Yo xm' tin' :Ami pr HJ Hu' iafmfi 1'fu1!'. i'I1e111iN11'y Cl-,1Im. Iizmd. 1 7 AILAIIHI with II11' fF'FSL'7If :1 :vfc'sr it Haj: M. In1n!11zI 111111bL 11 ' B aI1lI 1 g., '31 'MII l 1.111 XX tlmg l 1111 511 Ia fr In 1 L ml. I1111-1n11111e111111v.le U1 Lf 111m 1h11trxfIr1 hIel1m W-12+ 21 E'SSL'RgkW 1 if E lvl SOL FISHNI 'KX 11i11 SX LX I K IXINIERNI KN BERN KRD L KRN ER 1 1 I ANNIE POC ER 1 gk IOHIN STILLXX ELL 111 X1111 f L -XRENCE H -KSQEIVIER 1 1 f111111I ALFRED CONIENSRH 11 11 111111 UI I C'I I P IYIIIII HIC! LL l Il C IIIIIIIQ -1 1111 111 01111111 LEON A SCHNEIDER l1f,f'1111 1 111 1 1 THEODORE CIITT 1111 11 1-11111 H1 IK 1 BETTE CLKRX 11 11 111 1110 oy IJ1I11t111g Sex I1L .. ,,- ' A V 1'? -A :fu -f-- -: -Y-.Y ,,-- Q - V 1 1,1 -,yn 'f 1 ' ' 'J 1 N 1 I. 7 U- N- nf 1----il ASW - :L 1 f-,in Y JV-, .4 , -Y ,Y , , 51 - .- I Ki 1 111.1 1,1 711'.v1f11111.' . . , .7 . . 1 L. 1 1 . 1 1 'I'lj1 f'11f11' 1c11111,c11'. A A YA . 1 I fl 11111 111 1'1111111g11' 1111111111.11:1'.'1-1,'11't . V111-111iN11'y l'l11I1, I-'11111I111II 'I'1':111, '31, .Xg11':1. 11 Q l'k11'1'111l,1l11jX 111.1 11 1111111111 iw: -1 IIZI Ix'1'1:1. .X11j 1113 I 1f111'1' 11'11 11ll H11 1111j.' I11'1111111' 11 au. 1 g 'z. - v 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ll' 7111.1 A111111 111 1'11111'1311' ami ,1111 5 ' 41jIll t'I11I1, y 1 1 MII I1 tl11'1' 1' 11:.'1',1'1'1lg1, I -1111-111'! 111'1' ,Kg Az. L-LIIII 1 i'I11I1. R15 : 'l'1v:1Q- ' ','31g Y1 I'1'-4 I11t.'31, 'z ' 'Il-11111. fu. S11 f 111111 511511--, .A 'A gc: 111 .XV s, ',11. ' I - N. C Amis- try k'I11I1, 'I'1'1-1151111011 '31, I 1 1 E 'xx .11'1'111,' adv 111 I11' .i1'J111'1'1f.' I1111111' i'I1:1111i11:11I1'. I'c1 l'I11'1. tkI1c11114- try f4I11I1. N ll ' 1 H11' 1'f11'1'1 111111 111 t 1',.:11,11'1 111i:11111'1'.1. 'I' 'S 'I'c.1111. '11. 1-In-1?-.1fI 'I1-.11:1, '31, vI11111111' T11 'lx S11:1111I, 51-11111 I1:1ck S111:11I, '34, I I1'11111'1f I11' 1111'111l1' 111111 --1 :J II-11:1111'.1I 1'I1.1I1, .X'1 .X1111'1-1111111111 l'I11'1. 'I 1 -fag, 2 'C-i2figE'S,Q1:11241'5 L DOROTHX CH 'KPPELL 111111141 zv flex: 11111 f111nd I'1111r: C1 11' 3 Pmncr l 1111111t e XX ALTER SXX ISTOXX ICZ C DOROTHX BOX LE EDNALND KOHLMEYER 1 111161 11 1 1 1 1111 1' N 1 Idur ll 1 11111111 ELVIER 'VIILKE SUMINER V-XX PELT 1 1 1 1 ROSE GERBER 1 1 L x 1 1 1 1 Q HERMAN ST 'XL DTE L X tl L1111 My 411111 QL 11 1111L1l BELL KH M PXZER 1111x1111u u 1 11101 11111 1 s tml 1 1 SOL LHXYCOB Ill 1 OX 1 1111111 Q-1111 x 1 61 lhgw-,. YEK :A-: ' L E e'- 1-,gf 5-7, , L -Y Y- gvx ' , ,.. J K N 1 6 J Y!-,,, Jvx M 'L 71 3. W1 -J eg- -firigi-.I 7- f ' - 7 , lu '111. 1151.1 . ' 17715. R 'Q . T' .41 er, 'I 0. 1: '71 A It . , 1 1 1A A ' 1 ' 1 11'11r 11.v 1116 111'1'11f1' I11 1115 f111 . , Y 11111' 111'1111111',-11' 1111111 1111! 11lf1'11j.'.r .rj'1'111e, 711'1' ix 111111 111111 is l11'1'1'. Of 1' 111 1111- 111 t 311111 lc Ihr' f-1'1'1'. Sv '1 'I'1':1L'k .'q11:1l, '30, '34 ,f '- 111:111, '31, S1- nl '1 'tic-1:. UY1I0I1 .r1'1'.vf 1111r1 d1'1i111'11t I 11111. 1'711 1 s 11111115 111 f11u1'. Gyn i'l1111. f1i:1' 111 111' r1'111'l-1 111 ' l11'ft 51111 111:'r', A1111 t111' l11'.'t 11'11l 1'111111' hack I11 j111, ll, A. A. Art ,-X11111'cci11t11111 411113. Y 1 '1811' I1-111' ,IIE 111' Vt. C111 4s 1' ' . Gln Chl, Half V11111. But: 1 f'lu11. 7 A A It 1' 'E 1110 11111 :null t 111111e1' 11,1 1111:'1',1', ,111 ' ' C' 1 1i11:1lc. Lui Cu- -111115. l'hu1111Nt1'y C11111. I I -:'1' tl 111'11'f with 11111111 1111- 1'zc1'j1' J B111 1 111111. 111 ltru' L'1U1, . Ek, ,Q '5iQNi5,Q34?Jl j if v A S nf 3135.4 J F 1' XX UUDRUXX NXBSHIIR PAL L HAMISCH EETE MATTEI 'O 1.1 2 P TE vu ER IKNE LENS 4 DORUTHX X1 KTHIIXX S H111 I jam XOLXT 7 4 C KROLH X BENEDICT IOHN fx NTL SHlN9lxX -XLICI I XNH -XN1 CLNRIQXC L MILLER SAM RUSSO ai- L 2 -'3'4r g's?5,QLWRJl ' ROBERTK RKXX SON 'WD 5'7fW ffm? W I 1 EDXX KRD RERCHER KHIRLES SCH-XINBLKTT KLORCI HC R -XLICE REHLING IKNIE9 DICkEX 1 VXILQ 'VIKRTHK IHXNII IDIN1N1ITT PVVIEL-X ENIERSON DOROTHY lx KHN1 NINDELXN N1ON'1'C1OX1ERX KLBERTX FROST Nl 1, 1 mg- KXL-:L-F'-4,-+.,m4?jfX?,3w? fx-,+y1L-if ,far jjigf LQ, XA .lf- 1 J 1 N I 4 J be .1 ,7,, ,, F -3, - A-1 :,-.-f:A..., -,,,,.f- ,,7,C1,f YL, , ' ' 'ffm' 'M'7 Lff w ' WE ,E',.,., 'i.'1 rv ,fiai i1I'f1'I L11'1'1'1::-1-. if If111:11- S- fiery 514-11111 ff':'1 AX: -I-1.11-1' 4'Y1'1 2111f.1fc C?'I17:.1'.f11c. .A , l I 53 6 p . , A 'Z s '11 511' 11 1:.' ti.-1.f 1:1':1111 ' ' ,, 1 '11-'1111t 5 f'l'111, V A V :Vi 7,-fx , . . . 1. ,A . , . t .,, - 1 1 -1 4 1 7. MH 1'1'.'g1 1i111'f.v. 3 XIWN11' .X1111:'r131J1111111 15171, Sv '1 1 1, in .., 9 1 , - 1 1 111 1 W If1 11f 111111' H111 11,1 7 1 . '. .211 I H1111 1' ' 1 U 1! 'V A I 1'1 1'1'1'1111'-111-711111 1 1111i 41, .X X. P1111 IAI1111, 7 2 'E f' 11' 15: Hl. JlfI1' 11x f1'11' 1111111 151 .11 'lv 1 ' :.'1111k. .Xy1111':1. 58' 411111, f '11' 1111'11' l11'1111 H1111 1'1111111'11' 11 -111 . . . 1 1 Lv . . 11 ,' ' A Y ff1'111-ff 11 1111111111'1'1'1 1.11 lf 1'.1'11'11' 11.'f1111.' ru' 11' f11 1,1'1': 1f1'!1'1'11111 11:11' :11,,11',4' .l111I 11111.11'1' t1111-- 1I'1'111- 111'11'. ' 3 1' .11' ,'.11.111' 11.1 11 11111511 H1'j,11111l a'l 12.19 'iff f111' H11: ff . .1 -- 111,,11. AUTGGRAPHS ffzjjggaq f fx I , we ff - 4' X'V'7i-:eE,1 7?'J', K f:..H1,i3 Z, A V POETRY .- Q - x N N .... A la D i - l fm I U . . O I ' ' ' A C gf. '- . fc I . -E 1 , r . r,f. .f 4' f A C 1 . . NGaSwGw1W'ViEfQE To Washzngton s QT WASHINGTON' O father of th1s free 'S 5 And noble land' Example to us all j Of h1 h achlevement' One whose memorx Slow t1me has left untarmshed unexcelled' And bebbed you 1ve her a1d no time elapsed Ere answerm xuth unfalterm volce xou spoke And bamshed ev ry cherlshed hope and dream Assa1l1n wxth brave stren th you undertoo A to1lsome task In spxte of obstacles And trlals reat you led your army forth To vxctory your land to unlon Hrm Oh who vshene er a cr1s1s IS a0a1n Approachln sw1ft as slender streaked darts Of lwhtmn through the clouds w1ll then step o tl From prxvate lxfe lnto the mldst of fray And save our land? TIS only one l1ke you Wlth coura e k1ndness and above all else Inte rlty and honor ln hvs deeds Who can by h1s transcendent power ralse A burdened natlon ln 1ts hour of loom Ellzabeth Zlmmermann June 32 PE1fF1Of1SH7 E love the land that gave us blrth 45' 'f l' 'The Greatest country on the earth 3 1We love the men who fou ht and d1ed ,That freedom m1 ht not be demed All hall to leaders reat and ood Who would not Hmch and ever stood For what they knew was true and fl And fou ht for us wlth all thelr m1 ht Let each of us be brave and true And loyal m whate'er we do And let no traltor nor h1s band Gam foothold ln our cherxshed land jacquelme Moran, 3 '1 ' QKR g4:f.L 'fn iff 4-f . . ' f ' - i - 4 . If'vs 7 - ' f g f1,-i ,,?5, h,, a,, A? fax -e rr , '- ref? ' V. , . X G ,h A A J fe h f 7 x V' Mr- -I N-...H J a, -L+ , -7 ai 5,-,, Lf, fi . f - -J . e gf-A . f- . .O . . Q ' x-v' . ' ' ,X 11 . 1' When 1n sore need your country called to you OO V O. . . D . . O 7. . Oy . v V D D V .1 . . g . g V k ' 2, 7 , . . . . 7 D . on . , bi 5 g , Q f r . ' g , ' , on . . . D ' 1 . . . on 3 . , . s ll, , 1 , A of 5 - S Q -O ' , X , .V U vf J ' O, O, . D D , 'ght. S S - Q t5?Lce,kSQ1:Gw1f'v T'i?jf',.'fZ QB At Valley Forge ni,-s. ER town and cotta e vale and het ht g fau- Doun came the wmter herce and vxhlte ix 2 And burled the wx orld quxte out of S1 h Old Wmter s ch1ld the youn New Year D1d sadly S1 h and VO1CCd h1s fear Of black wln ed Death a hov r1n near Cheerless that dlsmal realm of snow Twas p1a1n that Death was now the oe Harsh Wmter s brow could not be smoothed Nor the Youn Years mournful wa1l1n soothed How sad that man compelled to stay At Valley Forbe the llvelon day St11l hear1n 1n h1s weary ear The cry hls fancy wh1spered near Of comrades who lay stlll and cold They too hke h1m had once been bold Lzke soldxers brave they breathed the1r last Glad of the1r part 1n a noble task The w1nd d1d howl wlth merc1less sound And food was scarcely to be found But Washmbton d1d not desparr H1s thoubht was for our country s care lt was hls dauntless Splflt bold More vahant than the kn1 ht s of old That freed our land from tyrants hold It took a stormy mbht of woe To 11 ht our sky w1th Freedom s low And prrceless Lrberty bestow Lovey Chester, 6 l 'affix ,s.'x iE:Yf,egZC,T,A,44griJ, Ld, - -, ,4.,.l w ,5-.H fx Y- v.--',-.gf , ff J . X fo ' 'Q f 7 , lr - :L-CT- -, bw :TJ-if '.fxg- gf 1 AT 'XAJ f:'.-2.131-,L 'TJ - T - Vffrzlg, J .f ' 'ff ' 1 o' 'U ' Y '-' D 7 U Y B, , Ev 7 . V . - -' v-.-. -1 . , I I V. v ' ' r o A I . U f. Q - F E' , - ' ' ' 0' L -i ,ian A v D v . .O . . o . , . - o' - o' o ca ' v - f , - , . , . . o o h 5 ' of ' o' 13 7 . . O' . . cy . v 1 1 v v . O . . . v - v 0' . v . . , O. b - Y . or 'o' ' ' o' ' D U 7 . . V fxggf fl 6jei',fe.'EesQr:wn112v QQ A Star Arose 4 5 ,W Q, STAR vsas seen .if v'Ar1s1n from the land Of old V1r 1n1a Every one In rebxons far and near Its pro ress marked And watched lt wmd xts way O er heaven s vaulted arch And storms encountered At last lt neared the hex h Of 1ts ascendency In awesome aze The world stood st1l1 To see the star emer e From darksome depths Of mlsty clouds And stand forth bnbht In shmln splendour Ellzabeth Zxmmermann june 32 HSFOIC Sons mi :, EROES all' A brave array' A They helped to w1n that ,olorlous day Urbed forward by thelr country s call They forbed ahead and rlsked the1r all They marched to trabedy and death Faced dread and doom w1th ev ry breath Some llved to see thelr object won And came back proud of vxork xx ell done Heroes all' A sad array' The1r youthful Joy quxte worn avsay And these few words tell all the rest The Unknown Soldler dxd hxs best -1 jane Wrl ht 6 .3 , -4 fi? .'?i-alex -:p,.:-Yffxe.-1-wxgfifx -e 17' ,, VM Q- .0 X , x , A X , , , 'Q' ' 7' 31 1 S-'fin - - f'-'L ff-1 - ,egfxi --41'-Sf? -fr 1' lf, f - x X r ' ' T ' ' O fx l , QT b . . . ' , O ,T b ' , on O D Y Harsh winds it buffeted . .g t 0, b 0. D .OA . . O 5 . 7 A E o' TES ' 3 or ' ' - 0' ' Y , . . v 1 Y . . . Y ' 7 i U . . . ., .O b . ,,,N-4x-, 'fff 6NGfE5ww1 Youth s Answer 1. ' L' 'S z'-: -' 1275- ff:- Je- -1-1? - , , 'J 'I X I f fx ' J 'P -f ,- , V '11 '11 5, IF, f: ,lg ,5:LV'w Ei' ' v J 5 ig g qfi do you stand and gaze into the distant space? if The old man askedg and Youth, scarce looking back, replied, I: Before me lies the great unknown-my future trail- 1 I ya ' u ns as . CC ' ' Y . ! 7 Od . , . t Y Y ' . on . . on . D , . . U t, , . . ol Y . ' 1 . . . . . ,, 44 ' , ' . . , . - . y ' Y V l ! ' Y , . . on . . .,, YW . . . g .g li-2' ' I . . I 1 f I f . , fm., 1' ge And I must choose the path that first I would pursue But why go farther? spake the older man Can not You be content w1th what my work has given you' But nay good Sire what you have giv n has only served To open wider vaster fields whlch I must probe Perhaps my work like yours w1ll never be complete But that in you which ever sent you on and on Blds me go out into the many th1n s which are To find a road which leads to spheres outside our own To conquer tribes which we have never yet beheld To l1ve a l1fe as full as yours was full of new And ever new discoveries and when at last Ive reached the stage of life which now you have be un May my endeavor and my deeds bestow upon The youth which follow me a heritage as great And true as full of high ideals and energy As this which now I have in faith received from you Then on my son' At last am I repaid for this This IS the hour I ve waited for the tlme when you Of your free will would say Where you are forced to halt My Sire that quest I take Fare forth' And may your God Your footsteps gulde and lead you on to victory Nancy jane Miller January 32 Our Flag IS just a sllken banner flyin bri ht Upon a Gtful breeze but ln our hearts We know that red of which those stripes are Is dyed in blood of gallant men who fought To keep the purity the white portrays That we mlght have the Justice and the truth For which that starry field of blue now stands Nancy jane Miller, january '32 made r,,u -17-e6-, fjqjb' V 1i-Gi-SGDWRJIW HY 'W all Sonnet VOICE comes from our nat1on s h1storx A Volce of one who stood m vxar s array For freedom s sake was foremost ln the fray And suffered cold and dancer vallantly ln t1mes of peace whose dauntless ener And fores1ght led the natlon on xts vxax To Work and struggle for posterltya W1th us the answer to th1s questlon l1es If we appreclate the deeds of men Who buxlt our lorlous natlon and we rxse To further thelr reat enterprlses then How frmtful w1ll thelr SHCYIHCCS prove Insplrlno all wlth patrlotlc love' Alxce Atchlson anuar Sonnet O Ham1lton whose ,emus saved our land By gamm wealth for her and credlt far When she was left 1mpov rlshed from the war We owe the place where we monvst natxons stand To Jefferson by whose msplred hand Was Wflt the Declaratlon to debar Oppresslon we are grateful for the star That leads us as It d1d that Patriot band These two m days when th1s our land was ouno Contended each the other would deter The one ar1stocrat the other led The cause of common men a man amon-D The people Yet of all who served her We hold these equal ne1ther one ahead Wlnlfred Hosch anuar X92 '- S r Lai:-'riff-:-r ,: P fx-,1i,v,,ff1s fe' 2f 't '-sig do a, Q: ' ffasgcl t ,fxi .-ang its 44 A Y. .X P 1 TI ' ' ' ' f ' - 3 ',. Y - . Q . x X - ' s '3 v SY . . . 7 Y. Was it worth while, the Voice doth seem to sajf, . O . . Y . U , D . , J jf '32 .. -II ' 0 ' .wr -1- ' - 'sm iv V I . . g . if ,tigiifl . , . M s r , fmsifkf 531- , . ., l D . 5 J , V . A , Y 5. ' 'Q . . J V ,, ! 2 cf CSNGESwfw1 If Washzngton Could Lzve Agam Today aan' 151 Washmbton could come to lxfe today Am1d the speed and wonders of th1s t1me vxonder vx hat me famous man would say What he would thlnk of anbsters and of crlme Would Washmoton the man who never l1ed For IVC the bu1lty ones of perjury Or would he w1sh that he had sooner dleo Than from old En lard set our country freea Would Washm ton thmk he had l1ved ln vamj 3 Would he say that twere better to remam W1th Enoland than to be now as we are I thlnk not Yet who knows what he would say If he could come to hfe a a1n today H elen Bro1da The M1nd and the Heart HY work? does ask the Heart whxch loves all ease ' TIS better far to love and lau h and play i For once you work you ll find tw1ll never cease v Oh come and sm and dance throu hout the day d both firm and true Not so' cr1es out the Mm For what IS play but hollow false del1 ht? Tls only work can brmb Dreat joy to you Work lasts but plav w1ll soon pass from your S1 ht But nay the Heart does ently dlsabree For thoubh not lastm play IS surelv sweet hard to see eat Vklth play w1ll seldom meet T1s true says Mlnd but t1s not That mmds qulte br 5-nd thus for play w1ll always speak the Heart But from hard work the Mmd w1ll never part Helen Broxd a,6 -. -X Y-f-lfjilf..-1:5 ,:2j.gf-QL-:f:.f,f,,X ff-ia ,fr ,, , , f M -- X ' 1 -:F 1 - '1-','?1 ':- :QV url, - A Ml.: ...Z , Y XZXMJ' P ,- F ' O' ' U' af , ' t -.5 f , ,ff 5 1 V 1 1 Y.. 1 . on or . D . 5 , , O. O . . ? 23 g . . . O . . . . D . Would he regret that he had won the war. , . ' V 9 c r ' . on . 9 D . , 7. - qx:,'.,.,,Av .N . : 4. -- ... - 3 W g' ' 3 Elf 1 - v ' 3 - .. r .4 '7 l Q S - X-2, Av' Al 'V ' ' V .. 7 . -O . b . . . I O O' ' . . .OA ,, , , 3 - O O' ' , b . ,, A O . 95' . .1 1 - H ' . . u ' ' . . o' 1 Y . 'I ,,,,--5 v - kV,,-,.,-,-f-4,.A-,- A' ,v L-'YS' r .4- The Mississippi River pITHIN a lonff and w1nd1n channel 5 'I lf Your mlghty waters onward How How deep and black they seem to be l As down to the warm Gulf they o' Smce first they salled upon your waters men have reatly sunb your pralse Father of Waters Indlans sald Who knew you well 1n early days In later years the Ne ro san Upon your banks a sad sad son Of rivers and the home from whxch He had been torn by masters stron What help you ave to the brave men Who dared the dan ers of the West' And surely those brave ploneers To your true value could attest Then came the steamboat to d1sturb Your tranqull peace and steady How You soon became a road for trade Where many boats went to and fro Now rn h for ot IS your past fame The steamboat s busy tlme IS o er But IS your day of blory bone? W1ll you not r1se to fame once more? Frances Feldman 4 Our Ship , HE World s a sea upon vu hose breast yy ', Our Natxon l1ke a Sh1D Rldes o er the waves and Hrmly braves All pe lls of the trrp She proudly faces ra m storms Serene amld the ale Her coura,,e dl nlty and stren th Forbld such word as fall Success and fame have both been er Achievement yet to be' So Wlth her Crew to ulde her throu 1' She conquers o cr that sea Jane Wflbkt 6 Y . . ol b ta .F 1 4 - A .. I , : 1 ., Am., V v . , ,I V I O . . l IJ .' .1 1 L? Af . . - All 0 0' ' ' 5 . 4. H - - v 1 ' 7 o o . D tr s 2 O, D. o D O 1 b I y 'o' o' ' ' tr ID ' , - - V ' o 0 . - . 113' ' v Q' . . . L ,o?.siQQ , 6, I h - v Y 4, w i J MS'-A T ' 1,1 J X . o o b 'Q ' ' o b . o 'o I o r ' tr ' c 11 f- S. r g A . '1 I 'o t V fx Qii5mwr Contrast Mg! ADIES da1nt1ly demure danced the raceful mmuet Tmppmb lt wrth allant swams devotees of etlque e Yellow satm creamy lace purple snlk and velvet blue 1 5,1 As the sparklm wlnter sky arched above the harbor s vrew .' Made a arden of New York whlle Torres danced the mmuet f ig -sa. 'N f Across the 1ce clobbed rlvers bank men lay dym ln the snow Houses skyward blazed rn flames women stlfled sobs of woe scale Wartm for a Dlft of llfe enou h to end the dreary tale Sacrlhce made ea erly by men bleedm ln the snow Whlle devotees of etiquette Danced New York s bay mmuet Frances En land anuary 32 Sonnet OR one br1ef hour I walked the Boston streets Of lonb a o and talked wlth xron wrlled men X if Men who undaunted marked the threats of fleets at-is And hostxle armles planmnb yet a a1n The1r p1teous defense after each blow Had fallen I watched the rabbed troops llmp by Sxck from defeat half starved but row by row They marched to suffer fresh defeat or d1e I saw the horrors of bleak Valley For e And hmpsed the care abed leaders rubbed face Yet sensed I hope behmd each breathless char Delmous Joy rn each hard won success Then dxd I for the first t1me understand What bloody SHCFIHCC unchamed our land Frances En land anuary 32 9 7, 5 715 -A A ff' 1-, ff tif, GLY, ,, ,X .W K Y , 4.4 . 4 11 J A X l !L f 7 v I . . on , 4 - , D , ' G g , tt . T . . i ' ' v v r I x . I . g . , . ' fin' 4 3 , ' ' ' . . - UO, . , . g . And the freedom of our land hung trembling in the future's . ' ' o' 0' ' O' -. D b . O . O . l D h . O . D , . 2 Y J - on g . . - . -- ,A . . .ol O. 'Y 'Z Y D n Oo' l V , - 2 O D O' ' - O' ' O'O ' D . . ge' O J Y ' 5 ' ' g'P 6mQismfwnm Q My Country f LAND of m1ne so fair so brx ht 'KS O countr of vast h1l1 d l 5 y s an p a1ns Your loyal sons and daubhters phb Thelr love thexr stren th thexr loyalty , The1r fa1th 1D you for good remalns O country mme from sea to sea From southern bulf to northern lake Your people stand umted free They ra1se thelr vo1ces joyously A sonb of pra1se thexr vo1ces make To your k1nd shores a people came Who poor oppressed had Hed the land That ave them b1rth a land whose m Was even on your v1r rn so1l To rule by the oppressors hand Who shall for et that lor1ous year The tyrant drlven from the1r home W1th d1sre0ard for smlle and sneer A happy people onward tolled To form a land of noble worth' Oh br1 ht has been your r1s1n star' Whlle fame mcreasln spreadm on Bespeaks a land knovxn near and far A land whose Patrlots loyalty Thms foremost place on earth has won O country mme from sea to sea From southern ulf to northern lake Your people stand umted free' They ralse thelr voices Jovously A song of pralse thelr vo1ces make Mary Theper, january '32 ll 1 1, - Tx ' ' ?TfPi'fmT'f1f- ftfav- ra,vf:,, sac --f-'4 .-,fab X N ,,, . x -v 1 1 , W r bfi- ,:-- :x - H1i',: --t ,- 'rl - Ai YJ,-,-.9 Q.f- li 1' 'V . . ' . v . .O s, v Q, x ' ,, -rv - . .I h 4 O A' ' g v ' 7 3 O Y , . 7 . . . . O . . . I Y 1 , 1 g I E11 Y . O. . 3 E 7 v o o ' Z3 C: 7 v 1 Z: . Q 2 - . . . on . or v bl ta ' y .- - v 7 Y Q v , . -1' Qi, g gSQ:fR41 Af W .1- sg?-rv' Thomas Ed1son E IS Gone It mourns for hrm who left no lack Of records brlvht and Oleamrnv He drd hrs share to teach the earth And gwe to llfe much greater worth Throuvh sacrxfice and dreamlno He IS Oone He IS Gone In h1m there flared a glowmo flame A leaprng fire whlch broubht h1m fame By peerless new achrevement A spark celestlal kmdled rt And 1n 1ts glow the mourners Slt To s1n0 of thelr bereavement He IS Oone He rs Gone But yet the flame remalns to lwht New workers m the cause of r1 Therr 01ftS to sc1ence rend rmo Beh1nd hlm also there rema1n Great comfort luxury and Oaxn To us hrs worth rememb r1nO He IS gone He 1s Gone And nature mourns wxth all the thronvs Of people rn thelr plamtlve sonos Who w1ll forvet hrm never He xs at peace wrth all the earth A man who left a mark of worth That wxll rema1n forever He 1S gone R Lewis Johnson, january '32 Nl ..f, f 'ia - r ffm' -f- 4 ,pf QL-,YZ-1 if ,fm 5' f Y f 1 1 A f- f4Yig:3 A: - Ati' '- ref A Sf A ' f 16' AAT? A-And all the world is draped in black: ,Lita Q 5 ' 4- s ' ' 5- 5 . . b ' t, . . E . O . . tg . . 5 . . b , 5 ' 'ght, 5 sl- , , tg ' , 5- .M Z3 c 5 , D , 5 . 9 Kfff EjfQ3.F'cfj?LQe:JJ.5QU.Qg11'v 'gggiiji SP New Amemcans rgla AY the path of hfe be ever smooth For the men of the world Who have come to these shores A When all stems a dun hope In thclr Patherland Immx rmts brave Who knows What thex w1ll face? 'lo a new land they come Wlth thelr wlves thelr chlldren thexr hopes Thu come cltlzens patrlots To do thur duty evermore 'lo the Unlted States Thev are comm To a new land They have left H3fdSh1IJS beh1nd They w1ll find H8fdSh1pS here But they have hope And where there IS hope There 1S ambltlon To become cltlzens Of the Unlted States Wearx thev are and cold But warmth steals throubh thelr he r s As they thmk wlth prlde Of this new land Where they wxll be patrlots C1t1zens Of the Umted States LONIU th1s countrv Alwaxs Evelxne B Farber june 32 ,,.f-X, ,S -Q f ,fwlfr --ivlyh, 1, .x H lf. fie. 2 4'-r' -ff, ' T4-,q,X.gX -'Ht -, M x ,, K if , 7 - S 7 YK- V,.AN jx s - 1 -Lx f- . J 5 ,, . 'X-'x' -,Q if ..s, , ,- , -- , Y ,,:L:,,,4.,--L.-14. I . -es ' 6 X A 343 1 , ' , . S .-1 , , NK X - 'g 2 ' . ' v 7. . , Y B Y . . . - . . 1. f , . . O . D V , 7 i 7 O . a Y . 7. . . X . Y. O . V 5 . , z figfwgicelfggmwlw ff? 'fi' lx.,..a Amerlca Todav OULD Washln ton return And vxew from shore to shore Th1s land h1s valor freed Hou xx ould he re ard us Hou look upon our Clt16S W1th thelr countless mdustrles Would he re ret the loss Of sllent lonely forests That he surveyed 1n yout Those herolc h1l's and valleys Phat yxelded no small part Of h1s v1ctor1ous army Would he slgh for slrnple I'L1St1CS W1th thelr homespun coats or Jacke L1V1l'1 stra1t laced l1ves of labor As they bu1lded a new natlon Would he feel that we have lost Our respect for fellowmen W1th the passlnff of those courtly ways That raced salons of olden days? Nay Geor e Wash1n ton was ever A keen Judge of human nature He would sense ent1l1ty In whatever arb he found It Thmk 1ts modern vesture equal To 1ts stately dress of yore And as father of thls country H1s heart would race wlth pr1de When he vrewed the mwhty c1t1es And the modern countrys1de, That are parts of a great nation Of stalwart men and women And beneath the farmer's denmm blue, The factory worker's gr1my shlrt, The clerk's correct apparel, He would recogmze a heart as true As any heart of bygone days. A noble heart, and vlrtuous too, And Jealous of 1ts country's honor Everett Young january '32 56 4. N...-AS, ,x,1,,-Ni7,gf+..T. ,.A1,: jvlvftgjjg-.gg , ff.:-' -1 at F ,X 9 K , r rvguwr -,a,' ,fre sl. aw ff, fe T- - o - . , ' g Y I' - . pf . . AN , . WP? ' fix' A 1 ' ' g ' kT ' ' ' . . . . D ' o D . ' v h'J . , . . . . D .O . . -13, . . on .- . D . . D D or g . Y O' . O' U D . on 1 O . . CJ O . ' g , ' v . D I 5 'Qa, t5'SiSlZ5,QLGj2gLi5T .. rg.. Q7 Dlffidence HEY say xt IS easy to qult When thlnos Oo wrono That It s harder to keep on fiohtmo Than to lve n How can one speak thus Who has fouoht and falleda Is It easy to lose what you see To fa11 rn the battle of l1fe When wmmnv means much? The shock of brawn avamst bravsn Is not the measure of strxfe For a hesltant soul Hls mlnd IS a battle Ground On whlch opposlnv forces of hlS braln Wage bltter war Unt1l h1s w1ll wavers And the prlze escapes He sees lt fade away Knows he s lost hls chance Gazes on tw1tch1n0 HTIOCTS That m10ht have Orasped the prlze Had he stretched them forth And mto h1s soul there creeps a horror of self A scathmg denunc1at1on of hesltant self A bltter contempt for hlmself Then the fear of faxhno assaxls hlm And he vows to escape The stloma of fa1lure By attemptln nothlnv Soon he sees that thls, too, Is but fallure So, straloht l1pped and unbendmo To cover a fast beatmg heart, He hurls headlong mto battle, Hldlng h1s hurt Behmd the mask of a smxle Crushed by a chflident nature He never can wxn the battle wlth self, Nor yet ever dare to cease fightmg And still there are men who say Txs easy to lose Everett R Yount, January '32 N4 .D - -- s H 1 Vvflffyiggfqs , Q,l?is-f,,- Y -a-ar' m f ., T ' X I ' , 1 ' I -5: - 11 .S 4X 'Y ' 'Y-' ffm: r Y '- '- -43'-W -4-ff' -5 - Y A ' ' v .- .,,, . I Q f a za 5' 1 - . . , , lc 1, b a ' 4 Q 3 - - 2 V 6 . ' k? b . . 7 b b b 3 , . v 5 s as 5 Y I V b v b . O . ' za za' a ' b V- PEOSE E T-T - X X X X - R 2 I T ij .h Q.isQ1:w1 3i The Rrsmg Sun ATRICK O BRIEN was possessed of the Wanderlust He J claimed no occupatlon and offered no excuses for h1s itlner ant pursuits Pat had come to the New World on an impulse seekin new fields of adventure and possibly the Nj xx ealth that xx as reported to be ly1n in abundance awaiting somebody to rasp it Not that Pat cared for bold To him It was merely a means vxherebx he mlbht extend his travels to more distant lands Thus it was that on a bltterly cold day in December 1753 Patrick O Brien found hlmself IU the depths of the western forests of stranbelv quiet Only the wind WhlStllf1b throuoh the bare llmbs of the trees broke the stillness Pat shivered and drew his buckskm shirt closer around h1S neck Troth an t1s a weird place he muttered Niver have I been afeared of the dark an the Injins afore but twould not urprlse me at all at all if a pack of the scoundrels should Jump on the back of me He glanced uneasily around him and trod a little more carefully on the frozen around Suddenly he stopped and his ears whlch had been sharpened by h1s lonb years of wandermv seemed to prick them selves forward Then with a puzzled frown he sniffed the a1r Smoke' was the mental ejaculation Very cautiously Pat crept for xx ard 1n the dlrectxon from which the smoke lssued As he approached he beheld an opemno m the thicket and drawm, nearer he looked upon a si ht that warmed his enerous Irish heart Seated close to the fire dressed in the rouoh arb of frontiersmen were two men sllently con templatinb the ruddy flames each absorbed in his own thoughts The older of the txxo vxas a bold lookmb person clad in buckskm beslde him lax a lon rifle and in his belt reposed a huntin knlfe His face xx as bronzed and hard his eyes had the merc1less watchful bleam of t e true frontiersman But it vxas upon the other a b1b fellovx clothed in homespun that Pat bent his appraisin eye Approvlngly he noted the manly he1 ht the broad shoulders and deep chest envxously he measured with hlS exe the lonb arms that spoke of unusual strenbth the capable hands he admlred the breadth of broxfx the square Hrm Jaw that proved him more than frontlersman Sure. an it s he that s a brave lad, murmured Pat The silent pair looked up suddenly. and perceiving that he was discoxered Pat moved forward lnto the circle of llvht Instlnctively Nl ,Y, ,AX -- .f:f',l .g:--T pufxf oc-is , 5+ z 1- '1 r M T . x NY K 'r,,,., r -gp MSL up ll- z ff is e be .1 div Te e rf. ,- -11 A-V ' ' ' ' - A Q1 - - O - , , ' 2: . , gf ' , , ' O ' ' t, Y U , on Q . . 5 . 7 7 .O I 1 9 ' the Old Dominion. Night was swiftly approaching, and the woods were O H . I . . . O. S . it y I 1 ' ' ,YV . AK ' , .. 1 , S . - - ns O . . - , . O . I . 5 D, D ' L ' .O . O . b D ' ' . S O . . - D b 9 . on , . . on . y 7 - . on . . . . , . y Z . . y O h ' ' . . Y .OA 7 . . . . g 7 I - . ,g v v o 0 V . . A V1 V l l Q ev Q'gSQ'-ii2, j the frontxersman reached for h1s Gun and notlnv th1s Pat smlled roOu1shly Bless mv soul he chuckled Ye neednt fear the hkes of me I am Jxst a roamer uandherm throuoh the woods Seem yer fire I thouoht that I mxoht warm myself for the n10ht Aye so ye may returned he of the buckskms after a searchlncf scrutmy of the v1s1tors face 1f so xt be that ye are not afrald to trust us w1th your l1fe Och' replled Pat Sure an 1f I dont know two honest sowls uhm I see them thm all my thravelm has done me no Oood at all at all an Ill Oo back to the dear ould Isle to stay He seated hxmself looked at h1s two compamons and observed amlcably T1s a danoher ous place to be ln the dead of the nlght fo two slch lads as ye Aye but no more so for us than for ye who are alone answered t e spokesman Pat s10hed and rubbed h1s bewhxskered Jowl med1tat1ve1y Troth an the IYIJIUS would mver harm an ould wan l1l me My re scalp has saved ltself many a txme Sure an the Injlns thmk It s re an w1ll nlver touch It but let me Oo my way 1n peace Indeed I m safe enough ent1rely HIS llsteners laughed at th1s wh1ms1cal1ty and the hearty mlrth especlally that of the young gentleman Hred Pat s cur1osrty wh1ch was ever act1ve to fever heat These men lnterested h1m He Wlshed to know somethmo of them so he set to work to draw them out The fire waned and wx as replenlshed many tunes whlle Pat recfaled h1s audlence wxth storles of h1s adventures now and then lnsertlng a shrewd quest1on 1n an endeavor to learn somewhat of h1s compamons But they were strangely retlcent concernlnff the1r buslness and when at last they lay down upon a bearskln to sleep and Pat settled hlmself to watch he had learned no more than that they had Gone lnto the wllderness on an lmportant mlsslon and that havmo completed that m1ss1on they were returmno home Who they were where they were from and what was the1r m1ss1on the curlous old Irlshman could not learn nor could he even Guess Dayllght was slow 1n commv and the sky had not yet llvhtened when Patrxcks dulled senses awoke abruptly He had no ldea as to what had roused h1m from hrs lethargy but belnff accustomed to the occurrence and to the woods he sat r101dly st1ll Hls ears and h1s senses however were sharply alert and xt was not lono untll he heard very famtly the tread of feet upon the hard earth behxnd h1m Instantly his m1nd leaped to a conclusxon Indlans' Pat was fortunate 1n the possesslon of a shrewd m1nd and an anlmal 34 E., , 4 --fx fie- ' ' . 1 --. ' ' I Y ,W M I -:fe - 2. ' X X I 'X ' - 5 P - , ' F ' ' fy -'Fe-A: r f- elf- :,:m : f f' - 'i - 'ca 1 as 1 3 . Al y it V ' J v - ' .. Y . , . , o ' ' . ' . ' , 'V a a 2: ' I4 'Y ' ' s 9 5 . . . , H. . . Y ' ' 10 tt V! ' 44 I ' 1 . . , . . . , U ,v y D , l . V v. - . b - y . . . H , . I v 1 b ' ' . . A . ,, ' 0 I' . t U yy 7 7 D ' . u 1 -- ' ' , , U3 . ' d . . n y , .. . . , 6 , . . . . g . , . b - , ' il , . ' Z , . V , . : . J Y , . . 5 3 - 7 . . . an , b , , ' rs Y O , 5 - . , 1 D - tx' b . , , ' a v 5 ' , , I 5 , , . . ff' ?EQESMHl hke 1l'1StlDCt that had served to xnform hxm ln all hls encounters wxth Indlans of the lntentlons of the savages whether frlendly or hostile Now h1s 1ntu1t1on warned hlm that an attack was forthcommv He looked at the prone forms of the two sleepers What connectxon d1d thls attack have with the proxlmlty of these strangers? For that lt did have a connectlon Pat was convlnced Was It posslble that he had made a mxstake xn h1s Judgment of them? He thouoht not Pat took great prlde rn hxs ablhty to Judge people at first slght and he knew that he had not erred m trustlng these men with the frank manly COunt6nanCeS They must be awakened but how? The sllghtest move on his part would brlng the red men down upon them For the first tlme ln all hls years of roammo Pat was afrald Flghtmg was h1s greatest dellght when he could see hls foe and know whom and what he was Hghtlno But to have Indlans creep up behmd to have them fall upon hxm unawares' Hls agltatlon lncreased That same red halr of whose pro tectlng power he had so recently boasted was now standing on end and Great beads of persplratlon stood on h1s brow Lxfe suddenly seemed extremely falr Ireland was very dear and deslrable An almost lmperceptlble movement of one of those blg capable hands caught and held Pats eye Wlthout a doubt the owner of that hand was awakenlng hls compamon Had he too heard? A great welght fell from Pat s shoulders as he reahzed that the two men were awake Prospects of a battle were very pleaslng now A plercmg shrlek not more than a yard behlnd hlm rose on the wlnd and 1mmed1ately all was confusxon The two whlte men sprang to thelr feet slmultaneously w1th the cry and 1nto the clrcle of lirelloht leaped live Indians Pat was no Slacker when lt came to lightmg and w1th a w1ld howl that augured 1ll for the red men he charged mto the mldst of the battle There was no time for guns lt was a hand to hand Hght Struggllno fiercely with a huge steel muscled savaffe strlvmg to prevent the wmcked lookmv kmfe from descendlng lnto hls breast Pat out of the corner of hls eye saw h1s two acqualntances engaged w1th the other four Indlans He was amazed and fasclnated by the ease and dexterlty with whlch the homespun clad figure warded off the two sav ages who pressed hlm so closely Hls long arms w1th those strong able hands doubled 1nto huge fists shot out and dehvered blow after blow mto the face and body of h1s opponents The hltherto calm blue gray eyes were blazmo wlth the heat of the confixct and his llps were com pressed mto a thm narrow lme Whlsht an 1ts he that IS a thrue fighter thought Pat Wur rah wurrah' an I were that youno agm sure an thls Injln would have no slch 3lSy txme murdherln me But he dld not long give hlmself NS s --f :Az ff 'L'14i'::.:Q ' -'r-4 -f:i.,N-: -' -ik '14'f x . , , K X V 7 --.A-1, 'fw H J if - , . Z V ,Y ,- YY Y - J - Y n 1 ' b. . 5 . 2 , . , . ea ' 1 b. v b . I . . . .OU I . 7 ' A . , , . . I , . s - b 1 5 - y - ' I or q b 1 ' tl ' ' 5 ' , , Y l ' I 1 V ! n , ' 5 3 ' , . an ' 1 - v - I n U . , P . ' . A . , . .. v - D , - . . . , ,, . Y V. . 1 -124451, , QfEV5S,Qfi'i2JL over to such lamentatrons Concentratrng upon the busrness at hand he summoned all hrs wanrno strength and rarsrng hrs heavrly boot shod foot he dealt the red man such a terrriic krck rn the shrn that the bone snapped and the Indran fell back wrth a Grunt of parn Och ye murdherrn crathur' crred Pat trrumphantly Ye wrll hereafter know well enouoh to lave Patrrck OBrren Oo hrs way rn peace Then he turned hrs attentron to the other combatants just rn trme to see the Indrans abruptly leave the field of battle and flee rnto the woods Pantrno and drsheveled the three whrte men stood lookrnv at one another Well lads sard Pat gleefully we larned them not be a throub lrn srch peaceful grntlemen as we But he contrnued and hrs glee turned rnto sternness rt seems to me that ye had betther tell me who ye are an why these Injrns should thry to murdher yees Farth an rt Orant and rt was he who replred Ay he sard and hrs eyes were blazrno wrth an mtense passron whrch Pat shrewdly guessed he was havrno drfliculty rn suppressrnff Ill tell you why they attacked us They were allres of the French who set them upon us to murder us rn the nroht My frrend here Chrrstopher Grst and I were sent by Governor Drnwrddre of Vrrdrrrra to warn the French at Venango on the Ohro avarnst trespassrnv on Envlrsh terrrtory burldrno tradrng posts and rncurrrng the hatred of the Indrans aoarnst us He paused to draw a long qurverrnv breath Pat breathed hard and fast rn hrs excrtement He had heard of Chrrsto pher Grst as the most famous and the boldest of Vrrgrnran frontrers men The speaker went on Endeavorrng to reach Wrllramsburv and make our report rn the shortest possrble trme we left the rest of our company and forged ahead on foot Half Krng one of the Greatest Indran potentates rn thrs terrrtory has allred himself wrth Hrs Majesty s servants and we have yet another to wrn to our cause In order to pre vent the allrance the French would descend to such measures as thrs Hrs hand swept out rn a contemptuous Gesture and fell to hrs srde as he notrced the rnert form of the rnjured savage upon the Ground Grst s eye followed hrs companron s gaze and wrth an exclamatron he grasped hrs Oun Prop l'1m avarnst yonder tree he sard and there wrll soon be one less French Indran rn thrs reoron and he cocked hrs Dun Urrmly But the other stayed hrs hand Nay Chrrstopher he sard and the passronate fire rn hrs eye Oave way to a sober compassronate lrvht Twould only cause more rll feelrnos Let hrm be The others wrll come back for hrm And N9 -.', 'S ' v ' -2?-21241,--t ' -1-.bf ,-7-T - ' '-- X X 1 r -- iv? 1 Q ei Tu F, X 1- ffsqgf of f - , v n l . y 5 3 ' , g . tt ' Y lv ' ' K4 ' 5 s D Y D V I Y - - ' I I V , was not for my red scalp that they came. He addressed the young 5 1 . . , 5 . . ' , 5 -Q- ' Y . S I y V D l I 1 Q 3 U r 5 , a - ' ea ' . . g , . D - ., S , . . ,, b .. D . e Y b 5 . il ' V ' VY ' ll ' 1 5 9 1 D ' D b ' ,, . ,, . i . . . , , . , ' ' ll! D ' - b ' g . . . Dg5iEQESQ:Gw1wC iE Christopher Glst the hard headed, touGhened frontlersman ylelded to the command 1n those steel blue eyes Hav1nG drawn the senseless red man closer to the dy1nG embers of the Ere the three xx hlte men Gathered up therr few be1onGmGs and left the scene Glst led the xx ay and soon they came upon the tra1l down xxhlch they proceeded 1n sxlence Pats mmd was occupled xuth the unknown man What eloquence sympathy and mercy 1n those alert x 1dely spaced eyes' What depth of feel1nG couraGe and strenGth lay IU that noble heart' Pat looked w1stfully at the tall form beslde h1m Troth he murmured an ye are destmed for Great th1nGs my The sun had just appeared above the tree tops when they came to a b eak ln the tra1l made by a broad 1ce blocked rlver over whlch the traxelers must pass Here they paused to erect a raft of loGs upon xx hxch to cross the stream but when rt was done and the two messen Gers had stepped upon It Pat shook h1s head 1n answer to thelr mqurrrng gaze Nay he Sald mournfully Tls not for me lads to thravel xud yees Ye are younG an thravelln toardst the r1s1n sun Always I have been alone an lver must I go on alone wandherm on to the settm sun Sure an we had a Grand 6Ght though Thrue for ye an we dld 1ndeed And xx 1th never a partmg word or handclasp Pat turned h1S face from the r1s1nG sun and tramped on nodd1nG his head and re1terat1nG Troth an It was a Grand Hbht Abruptly 1n the manner of one who recalls somethmff he turned The raft was m mldstream the two ff rms were sllhouetted agalnst the newly rxsen sun Cupplng h1s hands around h1s mouth he halloed The tuo on the raft looked up I axd ve for yer name lad but ye dxd not tell me he shouted lm1tat1nG Pats method the young man shouted back Clearly to the sharp old ears of the wanderer came the reply My name? Ay My name IS George WBShlU0tOD Marx Compton une 32 X41- 'NI ' -G1f41 rr 11,11-vfr If ,,.,f fx,-,ff ,DV f -Y MN- , ,J- ' -' H453 X T K X x ?V ' ff v-- . 5 fx, ff r ,f 41- - ',:: -: If -, - S -15 -:-'- ' -1 - -4 v ' D v 23 b ' D 23 b . ' I , . . . , l'- - I ' ' ev za 1 ta . I . 7 . . l AA VV Al ' ' . ' , , D D . boy, or my name 1S not Patrlck O'Br1en. I . - , , ' ev ' ' 'S ' 1 ' . D D . Ah VV ' Al ' ' 7' 7 . D . , . V Y ' ' fi 1 Q Q ' 9 ' V. . Y . D , S - 7 D D: , D - . D, . . . X . . , , B ' . , . J ' 1 v v - b 1 C ' u Y v 7 ' ' . V - . 1 . D D , v J ' 1 V ' c D D Y , DT , . f ... -I 2 -0 Q1 R'6'jse,'Elff-S,Q5ARa1 Red Coat fb' HE dxstance was not U eat but the basket was heavy and ja: Barbara Manners felt annoyed vuth the world ln General and Br1t1sh sold1ers 1n part1cular Boston fa1r swarms wxth them she commented b1tterly VR, to Eh Watson as she stood before h1s booth examlnlnv the Oetables yxh1ch he d1splayed Not a place can you look but there s a red coat Haunted before your ey es The old man Olanced about them nervously Have a care what you say m1ssy They ve a sharp ear for rebel talk and no l1k1nO for It H15 counsel but hewhtened her feelmo of lnyury and she went her way home lon01nO for some m ans of demonstratmo her opxmon of Kmg Georg s soldlers The fact that she was already maklno trouble for herself by her outspoken hopes that the rebels bes1eU1nO Boston xx ould capture xt she rewarded as ummportant She coll1ded wlth one of the causes of her wrath as she entered the house and frowned at h1m an actmon whlch he wnored I was but now lookmo for you M1stress Barbara he told her takxno possesslon of her heavy market basket There s to be a masked ball thls Monday at the concert hall and no doubt twxll be vastly entertammo Id thouoht you mlffht care to Oo You know r1Oht well you re wastmg your breath Captaln Brent I ve no Great des1re to spend an evenlno at one of your Tory balls look no at red coats Nay now he coaxed t1s a masque and all w1ll be 1n costume An you hate our scarlet so twlll rest your eyes In splte of herself her smlle answered h1s contavlous Orln but she shook her head w1th determmauon T1s what you need lass You re ever at work t1l1 you re falr thln for need of play T1s you Br1t1sh soldlers that make the work she retorted Your Ouns fr1Ohted away our servants and left but Aunt Marfaret and me to do for all and w1th a soldxer quartered m the house' Brent flushed I knew not you so resented my presence M1stress Barbara I can arranoe to be changed elsewhere I thmk Nay nay she sald hastlly twould but mean that we should have others And hav1nO r1d herself of cloak and bonnet, she turned to the bas ket XVl'11Ch he had set on the table 1n the kltchen Reassured, he bhthely set hlmself to help her take out her purchases There's no salt she dlscovered suddenly, and I need It sorelv I'll e'en have to so back 1,1 1. -: 'TXS ' A'-ffl 1-L'-.9-fi ,, --V:-X , , ' H- ' X ' V , r 1 375, - 4 N 1, ,, . x . A . . , r -ez - Q, Q, hu-I-x Bazar, I 2 -I -H 4 ,, ,E - Y 1 L, I ,l X. bf , M-.f y v' v ' wr:-' D ,H -,bf . . . . . Y 2 . ' F, sae? f ' ' ' .. ,H D . , ' ' 7 veb f . H v , i , , H U . . , . . . .. y , . . ty . b 35 9 . . A . I . . O D ' b . , . . , .K A e . b ' ' D b f ti ' l 4 b n u ' , ' rs ,xl ' D 7 5 7 , ' , ' as 1 .D . . 1 , . 7 v . - - 4 - V - , -yu D' 'b D b ' 4. - . - - as ' ' , r . . A B 5 ' 3 , sv . D , 1. 1' 14 v - I - - v 1 V v - - v - H , . - ID 23 ' ll 1 v Y 1 ' Y ' ' , . -- U, . . . . ,, , . .4 4 - , v J, D D 13 . . . ,, rf - 7 ' M v V v ' V7 ' a e 1 ' Cl VY I . ll Y y v v D - 1 1'-fights 15':EQK5,Q1:w' f,E Nay Ill o for you and thereby prove I deserve the ball said he startlno off as he spoke I promlse naubht she called after hlm but he only lauohed and left alone she turned back to her work It was rowln dark and she reached to a shelf for candles There were none there nor 1n the drawer where next she looked and she finally went throuvh the narrow back hall to the llttle room wh1ch was used for such stores She was well w1th1n xt before she reallzed that there was someone else there someone who breathed heavlly 1n short pantmb basps And starxn wxfh unaccustomed eyes throuoh the shadowy darkness she saw hlm crouched low ln a corner seemlno more llke a large bundle thrown carelessly there than a man Abruptly she heard hlm speak whlsperxno I pray you do not scream was not puzzled by hls means of entrance the treat wmdow the shut ters of wh1ch customarlly open he had pulled shut behlnd hlm ave a slmple explanatxon Who are you? But upon seem hlm by the llbht of the candle that she held hx h there was no need for reply You re of our soldlers' she exclalmed and by those words the man knew he need have no fear of betrayal by her He stumbled to hrs feet look1n dreadfully thln and rabbed to her pltyxnb eyes You re a Whlb then? She nodded What do you here? she asked anxlously and he smlled ruefully I d not be here an I mxbht Oet away I ve but now escaped from pr1son The hue and cry s not yet about but He lanced helplessly down at h1s tattered rebel s umform But thou shouldst not have come here lad T15 no safe place theres an Enohsh soldxer here He swayed back avamst the wall and looked at her wlth weary eyes I could go no further clad as I am Twas but luck that I came even so far wlthout belnb seen Poor lad' Poor lad' she murmured It was then that she saw how she mxbht help hlm There was no tlme to dlscuss lt Wlth the qulck command Walt here she set down the candle and Hed leavm the rebel soldler to stare after her He was slttm., on the floor wxth his head ln hls hands when she returned and she hastened to h1m w1th a llttle exclamatxon of sympa thy Have you any hurt? Nay he muttered tls but wearmess Why t1s food you need then Put you these on whlle I fetch It Up with you now there's llttle trme .,-, Z-, X-wp 7:7 YY- --5 4.1 -.- - -f 5:17 i ,..- Y. ' , K 4, X . C X 1 mv J LQ N. i ..-41152. ,I .Z , i, Y: 7:4-fsk f Y Eff' v ll 1 of VI ' s 5 1 , 5 - an ' 0. H - , , - , , ,, . , . O' I O' b b ' , 1 5 . . . on O- l . g .x 5 Y , , 5 A , ,,, , ,. I hadn't thouoht of doino' so, said she and struck a l10'ht. She b ta CJ - 3 of s ' . . . . ,g . . ,, ,, . Ov . . . ,G .0 .U a v ' ' 9 . . U . Ono. ' 23 ' ' O, . ll V '07, 'YV . Aa v a -O, I v ,D . - . ,, O . , - ,D , . D . 5 . , . O . ll V' ' gg ' U1 ' O. v 1 Y D , - ll I7 bl 1? A4 1 ' ' 'V I 1 ' It V ' ' I .. -12959 '6gsQfiSG1:ll24l,i , Hrs eyes were wondermv as he looked up but at sight of what she bore he scrambled up and snatched It ladly It was the umform of a Brrtlsh soldler Be qulck she admomshed as she left hum She was more exerted than she had ever before been m her llfe tlme It was from her hands that she knew thls the hands whlch usually so firm she now found to be trembllnv so as to make work almost xmposslble She paused rn the mldst of cuttmg sl1ces of cold fowl to steady them and as she d1d so she heard the front door slam exuberantly to And though she had been expectlno Captam Brents return at any moment she started as lf she had not consldered the possxbxlxty He came whlstllnff throu h the house and swung mto the kltchen deserve a kmdnessg I promlsed naught she remmded hlm praymg lnwardly that the food she had prepared m10ht not appear susprclous But sure you re not so ungrateful as to refuse Youll be mx htlly pretty rn costume Althouoh 1 falth theres scant room for lmprove ment He regarded her dark lovelxness approvmgly I can scarce see you he complamed suddenly T1s pltch dark here And for the first tlme Barbara reallzed that she had forgotten ln her excltement the need of lxghts He glanced around No candles, Nay theres one yonder ln the storeroom Ill br1n0 rt He had started for the door when she hurned before hlm Ill fetch It she told hlm qurckly but he stopped her ere s1e could pass Should I let you do xt when you but now spoke of the work I make for you? Nay I ll do xt myself And be under obhvatron to a redcoata she lau hed Never' It was only when she saw that he was determmed to have hrs way that she thrust Jestlno aslde and spranv before hlm m the doorway You shall not' He stared at her startled by her sternness 1nto gravxty m the rrndst of hrs laughter Why should I not, Merely that I do not wxsh you to o m there she 1ns1sted loudly not with any hope of stoppln hrm but rather that the rebel soldler mxoht hear her What have you there? Wlthout waltmg for reply he started for ward She could hold hlm but an mstant ere he passed her and dashed down the hall The room was empty and seexno thls as she hurried after hlm, she gasped w1th rellef But there was no IT11St3k1I1U the torn umform 'fl X.,-,v-, V :Af-ff- i??g Y -8- 23.5-rf-fot.A7l-ri.,-R - 1 ' , ,if g-,L 'P :H ss H 1 I. V J . X Y xx f i i V .tif J, 5 y I . on . D . ' ' ' u - uv - - . , . ' b : ' , U . ' o Y fs 8 ' v Hmgmg the package upon the table. Behold! said he. Do I not now , , ,J . .. . U . -O, . , , - t, . 5 , - un U ' ' . ca il ' ll 9 ' 1 !! , . . 0' . U . , , . . g . ' ' it I - u - - . v ll , ' I v . . ll ' ' YI ol li 'V g . g . . 5 5 - .. ,, ' . ' L6 V' ,, . on . ,, . . 5 1 ' 1 . . O . . b Y g . ,, . . . u - 3 sf I w 3 . . ?:1 f'Jf-iff-fffif nf,,-,-ff,,vA. -5-fi fy' I lying crumpled on the floor, or the significance of the window with its yawning shutters. With an angry glance toward Barbara, Brent leaped over the sill in pursuit. Standing silent, waiting. she heard him shout- inoc for soldiers for the search: heard the shouts in reply: heard the sound of runnin? feet: and then, as the noise died away in the distance heard no more. As there was nothing else that she could do she picked up the candle and, returninff to the kitchen prepared dinner. It was several hours before he returned' but she knevx as she turned from her task of burnino the rebel uniform to look at him that his search had been disappointed She lauohed triumphantly Well? she taunted He stood in the doorway scowlino at her Escaped' he told her curtly Twas clever of you to dress him in Enolish scarlet He slipped away ere any could catch him Tis well Abruptly he strode forward Mayhap youve not thouoht that today you ve been a traitor Nay I m no traltor I ve ever been loyal to the colony in which I ive An 1f I tell what I know voull wish twas the Kino to whom you had chosen to give loyalty She shook her head smilino Youll not tell she said with con viction He stared at her And at length he lauohed Ave that I know he admitted ruefully and of a sudden swept matters of state aside Wilt Oo with me to the masquerade? Nay I Ill een continue to ask till you say you will he threatened Why then belike I will she smiled Now Slt you down I ve kept warm your dinner for Vou Winlfred Hosch january 32 anaskfswf TS-me ll 5 S . 1 D v I . v D . . . . . .. N . b . . . . V U ,, , b . . H , . . I . . . D . - .. .. - - v. .l . ' a v - .- If 1 ' I ' ' , . 1- .. if 1 - . - . - I ' .1 D - Q. ' ' if U 'Y ' ' 1 D' v ' if VV - 5 - J . v , . u ' , ' -v U . It rv v .- ,. . . . . v . .. 4 ' ' it ' ' V1 ' ll ' 7 . , , . . . - .. f . . , , . Up, 1 Lf-,,vk'v:,a:i-. J, f,. , 4' .J ,. Q , ' W 3.1, :jg sf-jlvjg '.,1gv,zila..,,,-:.- Ak- .AA I., U 4-41.1715 L. ,,,..,,- . - FJQ5, Q EQ3 The Tory RE you a rebel? Qi The youno man m the contmental un1form turned star A I' tled A ch11d of ewht years or thereabouts was standmcf on the porch behmd h1m feet Wlde apart under full pettlcoats hands clasped behlnd her back and Great dark eyes reffard mo h1m w1th the utmost scorn The mmlature puppy bes1de her was lfnltatlno her posltlon and attmtude as exactly as hls camne quahtles would perm1t The soldxer smlled at her Aye that I am he nodded amxably You re another arent you? She drew her small person up haughtlly I saxd she d1st1nct1y am a Tory Why lass are you not Master Rolhns babe9 Youre sure not denymg he s a Whxo 9 Aye t1s so she confessed reffretfully And seated upon the top step wrth the tmy pup ln her lap she set herself confidentlally to expla1n Daddas ever thus No w1ld scheme e er starts but he s ln It that s what Mother says Why rebel he talks for hours bout rep sentatlon nd such and fa1r danced when Genl Washlnffton and you others stopped here thls mornm ' But me I lxke rt not nor Mother Nay? murmured the rebel She shook her head solemnly I she told hlm am a Tory Nay but why? Mother says t1s for that the rebels are maklnff the war that hurts and starves people But I thmk shes mlstook Aye that she IS llttle mald Tls not we who starve the She lgnored h1m She s m1stook for that the rebels couldn t make a war They ve nauffht of an army not een uniforms You have she condescended but most havent They re d1rty and ragged as beggars they cant fi ht An you saw my army the Br1t1shers at were here ere thls' They ve red coats and all march together and Glnlal G1n1a' Wheres my llttle lass? She was up 1n an mstant and away leavmo the soldxer to stare after her It was a man as bw and hearty as h1s vo1ce who met her as she dashed throuffh the door Aye, there you are lass, he Ureeted her I've some blts of sweetmeats here I thouvht mlffht su1t She snatched them wlth a dellghted cry Candles were not so frequent a del1cacy for her as to have become commonplace You'd best to bed now, he told her as she crammed the sweets 1nto her mouth 9 r .. , - - 'g,,4:a5r.A-A-vel- ff 2 , J ff- sf , K r 22, ' -,.f', . J ' X r- fx . 5 f fx 'sf' Y- 1 , 4' ' 1? 'pf--1 ' -- --avail: -Y Y -if, - - H K- I ' . ., 1 :fy I . . . - Q . v .'4 D I' I4-'S' - ' ., V , - D 5 ,Q ' 5 . . . - . - , v ' 9 5 b - 5 . za n n 44 Y! ' ' Y Y l If Y U V9 , . V . H ,, . . . - ' Y Y lf II so ' v Y Y 7 ' - v - , H U. CK 7 ' 15 , , C, - -1 ' if ! ' 7 Y ' ' 3 l Y - s 9 ' . , . , . v b . . , . . ,, u , Ll l ll YY KK V! ' ll YY . , , . ff il , . u a - - I: - . - H ,, . . . , . ,, 1 1 - i . . U , . . I Y ' YV Q b 1 1 y li 7 ' ' . - y V I ' ' Y ' ' 1 o' D .- za ' Y , YY xc ' ' ' ' 1 ' H v a 2: z: ' ' o ' a :- I -1291, I 6mQ'Esmfwm Dlsmayed she stared at hlm Why Dadda tls scarce sundown and I ve not had supper Aye to be sure he smxled youll have your supper upstaxrs Now off wlth you But why 9 I dlne tonlght vuth the General and hls staff You re over small for lt And havmo rumpled her curls aflfectronately he strode away leavmg her to Journey up the wlde staxrcase her sugar coated l1ps yet open 1n surprlse and lndxgnatlon It was an era ln whlch chxldren partlcularly glrl chlldren were expected to be seen llttle and heard less and thouoh her thoughts seethed whlle she ate her slmple fare she put but llttle of them mto speech Not untll her mother swept xnto the room 1n all the majesty sullen sllence Are not you golng to sup wxth me? Nay chlld I cannot Needs must I do my duty as hostess But Im a hostess too complamed Glnla and you wont let m Vlfglfllal Bem held as stlffly tall by her txoht laced stays as was humanly posslble Mrs Rollms could not strarghten to more xrnpos lnb helohts but she made the attempt Ive told you ere th1s that rebels are roubh uncouth men unfit for assoclatlon w1th chlldren Have ye not heard me? Aye slghed G1n1a mournfully I ll come back to see thee sleepmg ere I bo to bed promlsed her mother as she left but Glma saw 1n that no great reason for cheer She shrugged pettlshly away from Susan when the nurse would have helped her undress I m no babe e en thouoh I be packed off to bed as lf I were Tls thls Genl Washlngton she confided an rlly If twere my soldlers lf twere Genl Ga e hed have asked me to dlne wlth them Nay missy objected Susan Ye ve ne er een known General Ga e An Dadda were a Tory and Genl Gage had stayed here There was no convmcmb her that she was wrono and Susan shrugomv wlshed her good mbht and prepared to leave takm the tray of dxshes wlth her G1n1a seated on the bed owned to her toes and wlth a small nloht cap drawn over her ears reoarded her wxstfully Could you leave Gllath here thls nxghta The nurse glanced down at the mmxature doo Thy motherd not llke 1t,' she hesltated 'But have thy way And blowmff out the candle she closed the door carefully behxnd her 'Nu lf, ,- - -A K -: -or fJ f::.,-,.-.:Q,,, e 'Y ff4I' , ' , fa X X , r '..f - .I K ' - rn I' 'Lil -'fl' '::+-- if--.f -- A il .f- .rf EZ' , ' ' u n ' Y ' 1 1 1' ll I' ' ll U ' 7 9 7 ' ' Y! , . .. ,, ,, . . p V. . , ' D 1 1 , , , - ' 3 5 V of lac hoo ed Oown and hi0'h- iled owdered hair did she break her b b 1 ' ll A ' - ' VI 61 ' 3? Y Y ' ' ll 9 !! ' ' ' V 9 Y e ,, ,, . I. . ,, . O. . .1 - ' b D v ' ' . on . p l ,, , . b v ' U . . . . Y ! ' I! CK !! ' ' ' C6 I ' A O, V! ' . ll 9 V V . , b . , g . il V ' ' ! V on 1 - U - g hi! O- r 1 b! . .ol , . g . ' 1 S 5 I ' ll 1 5 ' ' ' V ll I b. . - . b 2 - 'harm Smeismww Tweed The chlld thus left ralsed herself to stare through the darkness Glxathl Here Slf' He was by the bed 1n an mstant and she lifted h1m up bes1de her Sent to bed as early as lf we were babes she lamented ln whxs pers to the puppy But for that Genl Washmgton and hlm naught but a rebel She paused suddenly to llsten as the sound of gayly con verslno volces and of dlshes belng moved reached her even through the closed door But llsten to them' she ordered mdxgnantly A feast Sxlently she stood wmthm her softly opened door to llsten She looked from the qulet darkened room to the Great lwhted hall below and wlth Gollath besxde her she stole cautxously out to curl up by the bamster and aze down mto the d1n1ng room beyond from whose open doors came cheerful sounds Only part of the table could be seen from her pos1t1on Her father at the head was talkmg enthuslastlcally w1th a tall arlstocratlc lookmg man She surveyed the latter crltlcally vxonderlng lf he too was a rebel he had but llttle of that resemblance to ugly rufflans that her moth ers comments her mfrequent gllmpses of tattered prlsoners and her v1v1d lmagmatlon had led her to expect Indeed none of the Guests were preclsely as antlclpated comparing on the contrary quxte favorably wlth the Brltlsh who had so aroused her adrnlratlon She looked care fully for one who mwht be the general that had so dlscourteously wnored her presence m the household She was lnterrupted by an abbrevxated squeak from Gollath Turn mv hastily to sllence hlm she saw the cause of lt A man was standmv silently ln the shadows but a short distance from her Shrlnklng closer agalnst the ralllng wlth Gollath held qulet s e watched hmm creep stealthlly past her and pause on the top step of t e staxrcase to lean over the bamster and Oaze as she had done mto e brwhtly llvhted rooms below Hls face was hldden from her by t e huge cloak he wore and he resembled no one of her acquamtance How and why he had come there she could not lmaglne and she was con sumed w1th curloslty regarding the dark object he bore half hldden under h1s cloak Golxath was wrgglmg She loosed hxm finally but lmmedlately she regretted her trust For wlth a senes of eager bounds he reached the mysterlous mtruder and barked' Not loudly enouoh 1ts true to be heard at any great dlstance but quxte sufliclently lt appeared to strlke fear and anger to the soul of the man who was at that moment ralsmv the dark object He whlrled wlth a snarl to snatch up tmy Gollath And at sight of this outrage Glnla gasped wlth a fury that crushed her cautlon, and she sprang erect 9 ,,., g -A fifefkvf .L -fmggf-R A A 1 .-JC 7, 'f 1 . T t x , f . Y Ui - -1 'L '-f-1 ef.-f of Y- l I :gf , V 'L - H'-P' - l 1 v l ' n 1 ' - u - - ' ' 1 ' Y li ' V! ' ' , - ll U ' ' - 1 D ,. - - 5 . . KS ' Y! ' ' 65 - - ing while we- She slid to the floor and pattered across the room. v s 5 3 ! . U . . . 1 b 9 . , y - I . . , Y . . l I O' - , . . . 1 of v b ' b U Y 1 b b g . D Y ' D . . U . . . y . . . , h . . h . . S y , . th as za ' h , . b l ' b ' 3 1 - I V u , 1 - 5 v . U J l 1 D X 121+ Pe 6NQfE5mw Choke her puppy would he' Both hands outstretched she dashed at h1m to str1ke wxth all the force of her small body And he wholly unprepared for that sudden 1mpact lost the dog and dark object lurched forward and went rollm -crashlng down the stalrs Then of course pandemomum broke forth People appeared from all dlrectlons to crowd 1n doorways and stare m wlde eyed amazement at the man who lay at the foot of the stalrs strugglmg to free hnmself from hrs entanglm cloak at the dog who squealed plalntlvely and above all at the chlld who standmg at the top of the stalrs whxte clad wlth clmched Hsts and angry eyes seemed llke a small goddess of vengeance G1n1a clutched Gohath to her and stammered w1ld1y He t t trled to k11l G1n1a' roared her astounded father sprlngm up the steps to clmgmg to her father and her dog saw them extrlcate the mysterxous person from hrs cloak pull h1m to h1s feet and quest1on h1m Everyone talked at once lt was lmposslble for her to understand what was sa1d The dark object whxch proved to be a gun was dlscovered and brought down stalrs The word assassln was repeated a great many tlmes Even the xntruder Jomed finally ln the dlscusslon Then one of e officers exclaxmed The llttle Patnot' and she became suddenly t e center of attractlon Her father introduced her proudly My daughter Vlrglma She was amazed when 1n place of reproof for her dlsobedlence she recemved pralse for what no one explaxned She looked up at her fondly smllmg father at her mother who fhavlng wrapped a cloak about her xnformally clad daughterj was smoothm her now night capless dark curls w1th caressmg hands And G1n1a wondered A true Patr1ot' exclaxmed some one for the sxxth tlme Gmra was 1nterrupted m her 1ntent1on of explammg that she was a Tory by the appearance of the tall quxet man she had seen at the table by her father The others made way for h1m as he came toward her and thus lmpres ed by h1s xmportance she walted awed W1th a courtllness that thr1lled her unused as she was to such homage he bowed and klssed her lxttle hand Mlstress V1r 1n1a sald he gravely txs lmpossxble for me to repay you for that you ve done for me thls mght I can only tell you how rateful I am Why who are you, T1s General Washmgton lass sa1d her father She regarded the General wlth startled eyes You re far from bem as I thought she told h1m 95 .4-, ,, 3 -ia.: -- ':':,f-,..-f-- --,Lf Q-f, 1 , Y -fa 1- - , f-- 4- ,- r 'f- i, '?--s -1- E -1 ,, -' :L Z- Y Y , , ' ! . . . . , 9 . I . on . . g . 7 ! ' , - . I . g I , . . 3 a v n ' ! Y . . . . . ,, . , - - ' !! ll ' ' Y! ' of 0, . , g her. It was the signal for action, and everyone hastened forward. Gmia, . . U U . . I ! ! ' : ' - , U , - ' il ' U! 0, th ' ll v l !7 , . h ' . ' . ll ' ,' ' 97 5 ' 7 - y , I , . - U . g .U - ,, . ,, . . . . . . . . . . . U ! 2 S 7 7 ' ! , 0 ll ,Sf Cl Y ' ' ' V ! ' 'o, . g .ry IK T yy sa 9 - . I . O Y ,sv l O, ' . ll I I g 93 ' , . GJSSQES mw He laughed I hope I ve not been so drsappomtmff as to cause you to regret that you have saved my life, D1d I9 she asked blankly A chorus of volces answered her but only her fathers was d1s t1n ulshable Why lass 1f youd not stopped the fellow when you drd he d e en have krlled the General A true llttle Patr1ot' gurvled some one as 1f she were the first to say lt B but twas not you I trxed to save she stammered Twas G 11ath Gohath? My doff There was a moments stunned sllence G1n1a heard her mothers shocked V1r 1n1a' and her fathers uncontrollable guffaw ere the lau hter abruptly broke forth But It was only at Washlnffton that she looked fearful that h1s attltude mlfrht change causxng these new atten tlons to vanlsh and the former custom of lgnormff her to return Why then he observed I owe my l1fe to Gohath as well And w1th eyes a twmkle the great General bowed deeply to the mrmature dog Gohath Sald he w1th all Cfratrtude I salute you It was then that G1n1a became a patrlot Wlnlffed Hosch january 32 The VV1nter at Valley Forge CHARACTERS Washzngton Farmer Howell Soldlers Messenger SCENE Valley Forge january 1778 Some soldrers are burldrng a hut on a barren spot An Amerrcan Hag waves 1n the background There IS a small Ere buzlt on a cleared place zn the snow The sound of hammermg IS heard Frrst Soldrer 'Tls good we cut and trlmmed these logs today to bu1ld our shelter Second Soldrer Aye, 'tw1ll feel good to sleep 1n a hut mstead of huddlxn' together rn the cold to keep warm Thzrd Soldrer 'Twxll do me for a few days, but I'll not be wrth ye long 99 -.3 ff - Y '-rx ignf -' for-14: rf -ff' Qzf Y - Y - - Y f 17 . 4 'J ':', X f 3 Y, ' :ge g -,,:sQ.F-., -, - Y xx . Z Ef 'J '- -' Y Y 4 'Y' ' ' rT'+:'1 - -' 7 :Y Y ll Y Q 1 u ' .:w ' Y! it ' 3, . , . , - U If ' Y 3 ' Y P ' v s . ,, Y . ll ' ' 37 ' . 5 , El Y ' Y! ll ! , . I ' Y! C6 ' 71 Ki H! b. , . . . , li O, ' 7, ! 5 . U . . ta - b , t, 2 ' D . Ki ll ll ' ' ,, ! 7 7 ' ' 1 66 ' Y! ' CK ' ' 95 . , , b . . . , , . . . , , . 2 -we 6Reismm1 to starxe and freeze I could have a decent place to l1ve and good food to eat had I not Joxned thls army CHe warms hrs hands at the fire H Fzrst Soldzer Cdropprng a hammerj Dost mean thou rt gomng to desert? Thlrd Soldxer Thou may st call mt what thou wrlt But twmll soon be a year slnce we X e been pard and the war rs lmkely ne er to end Fzrst Soldrer Txs treason to say that but hush here comes General Washmgton Washmgton enters talkzng to Farmer Howell Washmgton Thou canst see for thyself the condmtmon of my men and how sadly t1s we need thy ard Farmer Aye trs true but we get naught for our produce The paper dollar rs scarce reckoned at two cents Waslungton Prmthee man thxnk of thy country' If my soldlers all felt that way I d have ne er a man mn the army Fzrst Soldrer looks at Thzrd Soldzer He turns away Washmgton Cro Second Soldzerj Thou hast been at thy task a long trme Is t nearly fin1shed7 Second Sold1er Aye slr all I must do IS to fetch the clay from the rrver and stop up the cracks now He l1mps aw ay, leaung bloodv tracks ln the snow Washzngton Tarry a bat Thy feet are torn and bleedlng Go thou to my cabm There thou w1lt find part of a blanket to bxnd thy feet mn Soldzer Thank ye, s1r Washlngton Cro the Farmer u. ho has been watchzng the erectzon of the hurl See how loyal my men are' They are brave lads I'm ,lg , , Jeff V - A , , ,?g7g'2f ,J f-,ffxgi-X, ,Ji 4 iff- . fe , J- X N- Y Q? f 32. - L Q - A , J ' X ' Ji , 5 -X - 'f . -v : fr- -ev, res. 5? .37 f, K Y 1 F X Wtgzg 7:7 i rr - -1 V . y . . . . . , . Y . , V . I . . , . . I , . . , , - Q , . . , . . , , . . , , . . , . , . . , . - 1 w ff' 1 Q-.?Q:Q11D 'FN' pleased w1th them but t surpnseth me that thex stax here xxhere thex have scarce a bxte o eat and no xx arm place to b1de A messenger enters and salutes General Washzngron Messenger I xe been to the town slr tvx as easx to pass the stupxd Torx guards and get to my brother s market Ye ll soon haye supphes they re on the xx ay here rn a xvavon Messenger Nay my brother lS clexer A Tory drlxes the wagon The supphes are covered xx1th hay they are bemg taken to a farmer who s thought to be a Torv but he s truly fwhtmg xx 1th xe He s to see that the wagon gets here Washrngton Thank God' The sold1ers xmll be o eryoy ed Farmer General Washmgton I ye changed mx mmd My products are thxne for the askmg Washrndton But xxhat hath changed theej Farmer The loyaltx of thx soldrers Txs my du x to help too They depart Frrst Soldzer General W sh1 mgtom s a great man I m oroud to hms army Thrrd Soldrer Max hap xou 'ire rwht Ex erx or e seems to knoxx t s l duty to be here I Frrst Soldzer Pr1thee doxt be a weaklmv Wouldst qL.1t xxher tn Gener l has such fa1th ll Ls all9 Thzrd Soldzer Ah thou h st conxmced me' I sha t qult I am a tr sold1er of thy cause CHe salutes the Hag zn the background The faznt sound of drums IS heard as the Curtazn falls Helen Tanner, , llll if- af' - 'fx' --ir:'?1f,t:': 5: ot,1fr:-f,f',-ty -- ?f- Tye 4 lf.. A 0 . J - X Q A J 0 ' u 'u us, P -Y Y:-rg -1 4- :Z YY fs.. -, I-ktir -. , Y WW ,Q-he 4:2 lv i i if i v ' 1 i ' ' - ' V v I Q- v A . l y ' . I v - ,Q ' . V ' ' , ' . . 7 Y V D . Washington : But will the guards not search it before't leaves the city? , - - v ' v v I 7 ' .' . , ' ' .f ' Q D . .A .rv ' l ' . Q. 6 -. -v , t ' Q ' : ' a 'r 1 i s .. ' I be in ' ' : y' y' C 'D . f H' 1 H ' ' is ns ' ' : ' . x ' ' .Q D. 1' ' 1 ' e g ' 'z 'N . ' ' : . a . n' ' . ue ' 1 . ., s ' ' ' .D 2 -1-'asm Gifs?-fEsww1 DE CHARACTERS Mrs Truman a stanch Tory Betty Truman her daughter Barbara H1cks a fnend of Betty L1eut Schmidt of the Hesszan army Officers of the Hessran and Brrtzsh army A Messenger Young people from the town SCENE The home of a Tory ID Trenton TIME Chnstmas mght 1776 The scene IS a gay one A large Chrrstmas tree stands at one end ot' the room and at the opposzte end apart from the other guests Lreut Schmzdt and Mrs Truman are talkrng Lzeut Schmrdt Ach goot mlstress such a lufly party' The musxc lt 1ss so beautxful Mrs Truman Ay that lt 1S And methmks thou dost truly enjoy 1t For d1d I not see thee but a half hour ago gaxly tr1pp1ng a mmuet w1th our pretty young Barbara H1cks9 And surely t1s a good thmg for all of ye to forget the horrxble busmess at hand Lreut Schmrdt Ne1n nem talk not of xt now Ve are here only to eat, drmk und make merry D1s country lt 1ss not at all so bad to l1ve m Mrs Truman Oh no no Ithmk CBetty rushes m nearly upsettmg a ma1d m her hasteD How now ch1ld be careful' Txs shameful the way these chxldren are becommg so bo1sterous and clumsy' Indeed, 'twas ne'er that way m England, where they absorb from chlldhood all the graces of court manners 10' '-Y i '- - ' A F Drifr R t1r ,Ji 17 72, , ,- C 7 - .hz 4 -Y , J l X . s g 'YWJ J-'N ' 1' -1 751 Y fy- - 1 1- Y- 1241, ,lf .,W 1 - -L f . , . , . , . . , . J 1 . .' , , . , . . , . . . , . . . .' , , . , . , . . . , , , .... . , . . . , . ' 1 9 1 ' Lzeut Schmzdt Ach be not so hard They wxsh to whrle away tlme wmth a game of charades and we hope thou and Lxeut Schmrdt Will-10111 us Lzeut Schmrdt Shall ve go goot madame9 They Jozn the others who are standzng about rn small groups Barbara fcomrng up and l1nk1ng arms wrth Bettyb W1lt thou not now persuade thy mother Betty to ass1st us wxth our afore planned word? Betty Oh yes mother please wrlt come and help us? T1s to be an arnusrng and approprxate scene Mrs Truman Please excuse me L1eutenant wh1le I go to see what these g1rls are about Lzeut Schmzdt Ya wohl fa1r lat1es He bows as they leave and then Jorns a group of officers A Brrtzsh Omcer How now men' A glass for L1eut Schm1dt' Another Omcer Aye and a toast to the Colonel s cleverness 1n trappmg the rebels wmth a p1ece of ace They laugh rrotously dnnkrng the toast whrch they follow Wlfh strll another Mrs Truman Cappearzng rn the doorway, Ladles and gentlemen, ye are about to wxtness a charade planned by several of the maxdens The first one to guess the word may have the honor of leadlng the quadrmlle 103 ,ef f I5 ' 4-' fi -ik-1.42 ff Pvrsrxzif ,tr ,fi ,,- - an 6 I ' X 'V JY - ' X! 'f 'X l . - .' , . Betty: But, mother, I come only to tell thee that the guests tire of dancing. 5 . .' , . . , , . ' 7 s ' A . , . ' 1 3 7 ' . .' , . , l . .' , , ' l . .' , , . G . . . .L , , . . , , . I . Q,igggQLQ4lWDl-Y? Lf There IS rnuch clappzng of hands and general nozse Behold' She draws back a curtazn to rexeal tuo gzrls standzng II'1 an attltude of astonzshment xx hlle a thzrd turned 1s about to rrse from her seat beszde a quzlt frame The front door has been left slzghtlvx ajar and at thls rnoment a man rushes II cox ered vxrth snow and Ioolxzng xx 1th ben zlderment around at the crov, d Berry Cturnzng Axe thou hast guessed mt Lteutenaut But prxthe xxho 15 tl'11SD Fzrst OfHcer Eh? I thought txxas a part of the game Speak up ma 1 Look not so affnghted I-Iast lost thx xx ax 9 Come speak up Where IS thx tongue9 Messenger I fa1th xe haxe scared speech from me I knovx of no game I come rather xxtth xxord that the rebels haxe crossed the rxx er at Q hasten to take our outposts Lzeut Schm dt 'vat do xou sax mauj Mach schr ell' Messenger Axe s1r But I kuoxx ohlx that exeu noxx the rebels um Washmgtoh march to attack thee Lzeut Schmzdt Cfhcers' Qmck' To arms' Thex hurrx out and Bettx runs to the xx zndcu fo 'lou ed bx If rernaznrng guests Bettx O mother Barbara come qutcklx' Look Doxxu tht rond thex engage m battle Ca 1 9 Bat t must he Tht xelx s haxe taken Tre trot Sirahelen Henrx une .9 nu --fi ' ' vie Jaffe ,?R5fv:'Tff N if 1-,,-1i,Y.,ix L- 5-EI 'g :Y - Q-'ga T .X Q' Y 'yi F' jx, 4 ', ' , 'A f fV'l ilfs 1 ',x, '-X :T-2: if-f ' -1 - -'T- - vj First OmC6f.' I hax'e lt! 'Tis alarm. is't not, Mistress Betty? I I . Y Y v ' w . . . . . I . , ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' 1 'er if V' V' .Q ', I ' -' 'te fx' . . 2 . 'f ' ' 'T ' I L . -' ' 1. Litbe. ..... 'i ' is 'li ' t ez. 1 Y . J ' 'Tj L . , . -. 'QL ejSSQ??iREI Four Great Amer1cans A HE most outstandmo men of the Revolutlonary perxod were Georoe Washmgton Thomas jefferson Alexander Harr'1l ton and Benjamm Franklln These were all great men But why were they breata What xs Greatness? A Great man IS one who rn a great pos1t1on or am1dst Great opportumtxes serves God and hls fellows wxth a humble heart These four Amerl cans of Revolutionary tlmes d1splayed much dxsmterested devotlon to thelr country s cause of mdependence Each of them held rn hrs heart the thought of Shakespeare who sa1d I do love my country s Oood QQ gf' wrth a respect more tender more holy and profound than my own l1fe In the followmg character sketches I shall attempt to show what made each of these men a Great Amer1can Benlamm Franklm became Great as a sclentlst and dlplomat We are mdebted to h1m for the lnventlon of the l10htn1n0 rod and a new heatmg system and for the establxshment of the Hl'St publrc llbrary msurance company and fire brloade He dlscovered that llghtfllflo' 1S electrlclty As a sc1ent1st he was much llke Thomas Edlson of our own tlmes who has benefited socrety and lmproved c1v1l1zat1on by hls many lnventlons and d1scover1es Franklm became known throueh the newspaper of NVl'l1Cl'1 he was edltor and for which he wrote artlcles about the government and about matters of General rnterest Later mn l1fe he represented us 1n Envland and France It was due to h1m that several forelon negotranons dur1nO the Revolut1on were successlully carrled out H1s serv1ces to Amerlca 1n Enoland and France rank h1m as one of the heroes of the War of Independence and as the Greatest of American d1plomats Alexander Hamrlton was a great statesman and Fmancler He served 1n Congress usmv h1s talents to secure the adoptlon of the Constxtutxon Whlle Secretary of the Treasury Hamllton devised financlal measures whlch met wxth 1mmed1ate and renearkable sr ccess Washmoton d1d much toward the savmg of the country from defeat dunno the war but when peace came Hamllton was the one who dxd the most toward sav mg the country from financxal ru1n He establ1shed the Hrst Umted States bank and 1nHuenced the people to pay the army and thelr Euro pean cred1tors He was a conservatlve statesman leader of the Feder allst party wh1ch belleved IH a strono central Government and the protectlon of property He was not a popular leader because he dldn t belleve 1n OIVIHO the people too much power and he was opposed by Jefferson the Democrat who upheld the theory of mcreaslnv the 1m portance of the states Hamllton however rendered lastmo servlce to hrs country by h1s NVISC measures Probably to no one man except to I0- -: fltix X N I 'ii- -Zigi: uf - ' ,: A27 .f- 1:7-4.',.: J, r ' K X A 1 rx I V ,sae-' 1 Y g .gre Y, Ci Y ,3 Sz-g W ,J ef-'41 iw 5 7- 7 . . Q, , 6 . , . - IQ , . . . U . 5 U ' ' O' ' e ' H . I . . . . . v , D v . . ,, . , , . . . , - I tn v . 1 - 5 . - vv H . ,D - . D D , . - - 5 ' D - 1 x - as v D . D . . A F . . . 4 . I D B ' :J D -, I b L ' v I 1 . 6 ,A 5 3 , ' ' . , ' - V D 3 . . , b D - 1 v V A v ' . . , 5 - 1 -. ,L il fA i f r'f 12--DLT: -..f i A 44 4 2 ,?, t ' ' ' 3 ' 'N R Washington, does American nationalism owe so much as to Hamilton. Thomas jefferson was a versatile statesman. As a young man, he was a leading lawyer and legal scholar. He showed his hearty support of the struggle of the colonies for freedom by writing the Declaration of Independence. He was Secretary of State in Washington's cabinet and one of the chief advisers of our first president. Because he man- 3,60 successfully many plans for the betterment of the state jefferson vsas the most popular politician of the time The Louisiana Purchase effected during his Presidency IS a great proof of his wise statesman ship jefferson was the originator of the Democratic party and the first defender of the rights of the common people in America George Washington was a great leader of the people He won fame as commander in chief of the troops of the Revolution and as first president of the United States Yet he was not a great military genius nor a brilliant statesman but llke Lincoln he understood and trusted the people and his character and personality drew them to him and made them love and revere him Washington was educated into greatness by the 1ncreas1ng weight of his responsibilities and the man ner in which he met them He had a fiery energy hldden beneath a calm and unruffled exterlor By his patience courage and wisdom he did more than any other leader toward the wmnmg of the Revolutionary War When his soldlers were wounded and discouraged he inspired them and led them on to new v1ctor1es After the war Washington was the president of the Convent1on whlch drew up the Constltutxon From this time on he held a position in American public life and in the Amen can political system whlch no man could possibly hold again He was elected for two terms to the presidency of the United States because he was the only one at the time who had the entire confidence of the people Washington showed great wisdom and courage in governing the country One may rightly say that each of the four great Amen cans of the Revolutionary perlod served God and his fellow country men with a devoted heart but of these great patriots Washington stands out as the greatest in character leadership and achievement Molly jauncey june 32 fe iw. , ,33 1 106 fi ' , , - ' ! I , , ! ' Y l ! ' Y I , ! ! ' Y , . V , A - - I! 1 Lff'.??21'?f' f, ',5-srgqgggggailpf 'Q vi I ' QQ , I ' Q. rl ' i 'J J S l'.'4A1f1 4 15' lip-,Q rr. . all 1,. A I ' .W ' . H' Iliff-:gk fr 0711? J, 5 ',,' .1 12 ,., 1, . , tv ,- - 1 -34:1-5i.afvs'1.' 'lt it 4, ,,, 6mQESmwQ E Wash1ngton as a Sportsman ASHINGTON mherlted h1s Enghsh forbears love of land 'S' 1 f and an1mals At Mount Vernon he had many opportumtles Q for enjoying 1n the proper seasons h1s favorlte field sports Washlngton dellghted ln open a1r aCtlV1t1CS and he was 4 always eager not only to partxclpate 1n manly sports but also to ga1n further knowledge about h1s natural surroundmgs Durlng Washmgtons many surveymg trlps he spent h1s spare tlme studymg the anlmal and plant llfe of the frontler He saw w1ld game ln great numbers but he was not able to shoot many turkeys or deer m fact one soon gathers from read1ng h1s many notebooks and dlarles that Washington must have been a rather poor shot Later at Mount Vernon on the Potomac Rxver Washlngton engaged ln fishlng Thls was done on a blg scale wlth the negro slaves from h1s plantatxon helpmg to draw the seme In thls reglon of the Potomac canvas back ducks abounded and Washlngton spent many hours shootlng them as thls was one of h1s favor1te recreatlons Innumerable lncldents are narrated of Washmgtons great love of thoroughbred horses and h1s unusual sk1ll m both r1d1ng and trammg them One 1nc1dent IS told of a stable doors bemg carelessly left unlocked and young Georges dlscovermg lt Slxppmg mto the stable when no one was watchlng and mountmg without a saddle the wlldest young horse he could secure he rode l1ke a madman over the rough country for many hours Thls youthful dellght 1n horses contxnued 1n h1s manhood wxth the result that Washlngton kept many fine saddle an1mals IH h1s stables both for r1d1ng over h1s broad estate to observe the crops and lxvestock and for followmg h1s foxhounds Washxngton loved to rlde wxth h1s hounds over the rough country about Mount Vernon and h1s constant mterest 1n h1s large pack of fine foxhounds was almost boylsh ln 1ts lntenslty He not only loved the dogs and tramed them well but he also took the best care of them especxally when they were s1ck When Washmgton came home after the close of the Revolut1onary War he stlll contlnued to chase the fox and to handle huntmg dogs and tram them From txme to tlme he even xmported dogs from Europe for h1s kennels Fox huntmg xn Vlfglnla requlred bold and sklllful horsemanshlp, and though Washington was a bold rlder and an admirable horseman, he never consldered hlmself an accompllshed fox hunter In the hunt 1ng season, when he rode out early to mspect h1s estate, he qulte often took some of h1s dogs along wxth hlm for the purpose of startmg a fox, whlch he occaslonally succeeded ln klllmg In the henght of the season Washzngton would be out with the foxhounds two or three txmes a 10 7 ,- A 53 , -l 1 l- ll..1, W, - ,Mme ,. .. ,F e - 2.4 5 X5 Y Y .f L - 1- va i 'fx V- Y ' ' 4 lr. 1 - ' X - ,X . 5 N f. Y. Y - 4- gf -'G :Y 1, f- -W QX-Y-- Y :gi--i --e, . s V1 , I . . . . . . . ' . C, , 'r ' . . n 2 , ! Z y 1 v ' , 3 , 7 7 I 7 Y l ! X -1-asm '55-sie-:?ssQ:9?q2?lmi5 week The Gentlemen of the nexohborhood we e very frequently asked to these hunts after whxch there would be a dmner over wh1ch Wash moton presxded as the Oemal host Arden Peterson 1 George Washlngton s Interest 1n Educatlon .J-Wm., ECAUSE Washlngton has always been considered by the Q 91 publlc a Great mllltary leader and an able statesman h1s servlces m other Helds have been overlooked One mstance 1S h1s connectxon wlth educatxon m our country In the mxddle of the ewhteenth century the means o lnstructxon 1n V1r01n1a and the other Southern colomes was lmlted The wealthy planters sent therr sons to Enoland or secured pr1vate tutors for them for there were few publlc schools There was a vert small mlddle class for whom to provlde educatron and xt was thouoht that the poor whxte class and the neoroes certamly needed no trammo Governor Berkeley once wrote that he was thankful for the almost was learnmo that had brought dlsturbance and heresy 1nto the world Although Berkeley wrote this a century earlxer lt typxfied the opxmon of many of the Southerners ln Revolutlonary tlmes Wlth condmons such as these orevalllno It can be seen how dlfhcult lt Nas to obtam m Washlnoton S day even the rudlments of learmno Auoustln Washmoton GeorOes father was a cultured man uno had been educated ln Enoland he had sent hrs two elder sons I an rence and Auoustme to Enoland to supplement thelr educatlon and he hoped to do l1keW1SC Vvlth George Meanwhlle he made the best ot the sltuatlon When Georve was about Eve y urs old he attended a small schoolhouse lfept by one of 1 s fathers tenants named Hobby Th1s Hobby was a former convlct from Envland s1nce Jn these days however people were Jaxled for tr1v1al causes one should not Judoe Hobby too harshly The curr1culum mat thxs schoolmaster had to offer conslsted mamly of the three R Geo Ge accordmoly had to recexxe most of hls early moral and mtellec ual tra1n1n0 from h1s father When Washlnoton was eleven years old h1s father dled Soon after It was declded that George be tralned to earn hls l1v1nO He xx as sent to hve wxth h1s brother Augustme at Brxdoe Creek on the Poto mac where he attended a school kept by Mr XAfllll3I'I1S Here hls edu catlon was Dlam and oractxcal desxvned for ordxnary busmess At about thls txme he became mterested mn survexmv and resolved to become proficlent 1n It He made surveys about the nel hboxhood and ke at fi ld books vwhxch show the rerseverance and exactness that character 1zed all of Washmgton s undertakmvs Ills -.', ,- e K V iwlf g:f1i,1'4 - -Ei-L 'T JI lu ' , -, x X , Y 3'5'N as -1 4-1, -11 e Q be bw, 1 -and ff, v l ' o rs I ' 5 ra - . . , . . 1 53 ,, ' ' ' ' I Aj' 3 . .. , ld V: ie .1 . .b , ' 5 1 . D 3 o D D' entire absence of public schools in the Southern colonies, because it b - . ' U V . . . . . X . L D' b b' , ' A ' ' ,, y1 b '- :-. 1 D v ' . T . Y- D . , . 5 - s 3 . 5 t ee , .. ,. y . , i . v D 2 . i . , - D v . , . s. ra , D ', ' . . y . . I . . D . G 3 Y Y' , . . D. , P. ' ' , , ' D -v ' .' CI . . . V .U I ' ' . 5 I e ' ' 1 ' L .- , ' ' Q.. '6i5:i',e. ,Q1:wii-'Dari cfs In 1747 at the ave of fifteen Washmgtons schoolmv ended He vs ent to reside wlth hxs brother Lawrence at Mount Vernon Soon he obtamed a surveymg pos1t1on w1th Lord Falrfax who became one of h1s dearest frxends Lord Falrfax had recelved hls educatmon at the Unlverslty of Oxford and he was the owner of one of the few prrvate llbrarles ln America It was in h1s frlends llbrary where he spent much of hls leisure tlme that there was mstxlled 1n young Washmgton a love for books Later he acquired a hbrary of h1s own composed of nearly two thousand volumes A survey of these books shows the varlety of subjects ln which W3ShlDgt0H was lnterested His lxbrary mcluded practical books dealmg wlth farmlng horses bulldrng and on the other hand phxlosophlc volumes relatlnv to history government pol1t1cs and educatxon Slnce Washmgton very early reallzed the value of books ln offsettmv hls meager educatxon xt does not seem so surprls lng that he should have achreved success as a statesman and leader Lord Falrfax sald of hmm Hrs educatlon might have been bettered but he IS a man who wxll go to school all hls hfe and profit thereby Perhaps lt was because Washington reahzed the dCHC1CI'lClCS 1n h1s own educatlon and the general neglect at that tlme of trammg for youth ln our country that he felt such a Great mterest 1n provldlng educational opportunltles for others He knew as few others dld that the educa tlon of 1ts youth determlnes the welfare of a natlon He alded there ore several young people to obtain an education He placed two neph ews 1n school at Georgetown assumed the expense of another nephew s aw studles and helped pay for the educatlon of john V Weylle a boy who was unknown to hlm but who had been recommended as a drllgent and apt pupll There were several other young men who benefited 1n a slmxlar manner by Washlnfftons generoslty Washmgtons great deslre was to estabhsh a natlonal umverslty On several occaslons he urged Congress to Uwe 1ts support to the project but nothxno was ever done When he died he left a bequest of fifty shares of stock ln the Potomac Company equivalent ln value to about twenty thousand dollars wlth the request that Congress use the money as a foundatlon for the establlshment of a natlonal unlverslty Congress however did not take advantage of Washlngtons bequest In h1s w1ll Washmvton devoted six pages to the toplc of educatlon He contrlbuted to a fund for the free educatlon of orphaned and poor chxldren at Alexandrla Academy He also left gifts for several colleges and unlversxtles Washington hlmself expressed his unceasmg mterest rn the cause of educatlon ln the followmg words To promote lltera ture ln thxs rlsmg emplre and to encourage the arts have ever been ancong the warmest wlshes of my heart Betty Lachterman, June '32 109 2.5, V ji fx ire- ---4?-wg, -- - ati-fem-L ff- - f 1:1 '4 4 x ,, ,, t X r ' , if Y- , v -2-, gig fx, ,K ,VY J,A'. .L-2, Y Y, 'LA Y ' an v b ' V . . . 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U . 1 5 ' 1 . rag-qfQw Our Nat1onal Songs ' Q' LTHOUGH Amerlca IS regarded as a very young natlon she 'T m X IS well represented ln the musical Held by her natlonal songs These songs were not 1n most cases wrxtten by muslcal or llterary genluses but by men who 1n sudden 1nsp1rat1on wrote words or muslc whxch appealed to the Amerlcan people Some of our patrlotxc songs are solemn some are dlgml-led whrle others are very near be1ng gay All of these songs were wrltten at trmes when patrlotlc feellng ran hlgh so there are many mterestxng lxttle mcldents assoclated wlth the1r or1O1n For these reasons xt mlght prove lnterestmg to find out about the hlstory of some of our most popular nat1onal ballads One of the most popular natxonal axrs ln Amerlca IS that slmple humorous llttle tune Yankee Doodle Probably the reason for 1ts popu larlty IS that lt lacks the solemnlty which IS usually assoclated wxth the natlonal songs of a natlon The tune to Yankee Doodle 1S not of Amerlcan origin It IS belleved that lt was composed ln England by the Cavallers of Cromwell s txme to r1d1cule thelr Purltamcal enemles It was durmg the French and Indxan War that the Amerlcans Hrst learned Yankee Doodle from the Engllsh At that t1me the Umted States was not 1n existence the Co1on1es of Amerlca were as yet loyal to the Englrsh crown Therefore It was natural that England should recelve a1d from Amerlca ln the war Thxs a1d was ln the form of a company of m1l1t1a made up of Amerlcan recrults These men belnv somewhat awkward and 111 dressed were a cause for constant r1d1cule on the part of the Br1t1sh soldlers It was ln such a splrlt of dxsparage ment that a Brltlsh army suroeon Dr Rxchard Shuckburv made new words to the old tune of Cavaller tlmes and gave the song the name Yankee s Return to Camp He taught the song to the unsuspectxnv Amerlcan soldrers who took to lt lmmedlately and from then on they sang lt on all occaslons much to the delight of the Brltxsh army Dr Shuckburg didnt llVC to hear that same song wlth the tltle of Yankee Doodle played by the Amerlcans some twenty years later at the Battle of Lexmgton Yankee Doodle played an lmportant part 1n the Amerxcan Qevo lutlon Durmg the earller part of the war the Br1t1sh army played or sang the song whenever an occasron arose on whlch they mloht poke fun at thelr Amerlcan enemres After the Battle of Lexmgton how ever the Amerxcans took the song as the1r very own For a whxle It was called The Lexmgton March, but the tltle was soon changed back to Yankee Doodle At the close of the Revolution, when the Ill! '-S 'T - :Z-AY f' f' 'ff -ff 9::, --! ' - 'jf' , f 4- . 152 e i .. J K X f X ff- -- as - 1, ff- KI, ,-,,:..' W- -' 5 - . , i 'r t, 1 x 6,, . . . . O . ,Qs so . . . fb : 1 I ,w ' - . . . . . . Y I , l Y ' Y v 5 . Y 1 - ' 3 , Y . , b 1 v - b - b 7 ' D' Y , . - 1:- 1 1 v 5 ' I . , . - . . ' f 1 A - 5 . , ' 9 I 1 1 9 L' Q' 'fx A!-lntlzxl - -agar 'gfanvgi-,ffsgsmmmfv Engllsh army surrendered at Yorktown they were made to play one of thelr own tunes as a s10n of thelr defeat They played The World Turned Upszde Down the Amerlcan army played Yankee Doodle Today the sond IS as popular as ever Several poets have trled to Wrlte words of a hlgher llterary standard to the popular tune but with out success Amerlca seems to want the old words for thelr pert ffalety has an appeal of 1ts own In splte of lts lack of d1Un1ty Yankee Doodle st1ll holds a place rn the hearts of the Amerxcan people as one of the best of our natlonal alrs Ha1ICoIumb1a another outstandxno Amerlcan patrlotlc sonv was wrltten at a tlme when the Umted States was 1n a state of great unrest It wlll be remembered that ln 1798 the Umted States because of her unwxlhnoness to a1d ln the French Revolutlon was havmff trouble wlth France The people of our country were d1v1ded 1n op1n1on on the mat ter Some wlshed to axd the French R6VOlUtl0H1StS whlle others real lzxng that our country was financlally weak wlshed to keep clear of mterventlon 1n forelgn affaxrs It can be understood why patrlotlc feel mg ran hlgh At that tlme joseph Hopklnson a br1ll1ant lawyer of Ph1ladelph1a was asked by a frlend Gxlbert Fox to wrlte a patrlotlc song for a benefit performance ln whxch Fox was to partlclpate He thouvht that lf lt were advertlsed that a new patrlotlc song was to be suno at the performance a great crowd mwht attend Accordmgly w1th a 11ttle persuaslon he was successful 1n Oettmv Hopkmson to wrxte new words to a popular axr for the musxc to Hazl Columbza IS from the stlrrmv tune The Preszdents March whlch was wrltten ln 1789 ln honor of Washmgton who became presldent m that year Hopkmson hoped that these words that he wrote F1rm umted let us be Rallymg round our Liberty As a band of brothers Jomed Peace and safety we shall find would help to msprre the American people to greater patrlotxsm and keep them umted aoamst forelgn foes Ha1lCo1umb1a was recelved w1th Great enthusiasm by the Amerl can people and before lonff xt was belnff sunv m almost every part of the Umted States At first It was known as The Favor: te Federal Song Later however xt took lts tltle from the flrst two words of 1ts openlno stanza The popu1ar1ty of Ha1ICoIumb1a has contlnued to the present trme The Star Spangled Banner, the national anthem of the Amerlcan people orlgmated ln a very mterestmg and dramatlc manner Durmo the War of 1812 Francls Scott Key a young Arnerlcan lawyer of Baltx 111 .Ag , Y - -1-ef-fr -ffw gf ff- --4 i , ' , -f' , ,.. 1,71 ' .4 -A I .1 H X ' , X ifv '-N' 1 -J '- , 11- fyf 5 XM- f,f- ggg-,ff-V ,- -' Y., , V 1 b . , . D . , - . , D - ta J 59 I zs - b - I , ' I y ! , , - as :J 9 D - 1 f as a I -O , , . . . . 3 1 , . ! u ' ' Y Y I ' I J .. b . b - ' a as 5 1 v 15 , ' ' - 5 , - 2 -fa, fp f5'ig'Q QLRLi3 more went ln a flag of truce boat to the a1d of a very close frxend who vsas bemg held by the Brrtlsh Navy as a suspect When Key reached the Br1t1sh shlp he hxmself was held for on the very day that Key went aboard the ship the Brrtlsh were plannmg to carry out an attack on the c1ty of Baltlmore As Key was an Amerlcan soldler the Brmsh commander thought that xt would be danoerous to allow hlm to go back to the clty for he had learned of their plans So they held hlm hrs frrend and some other Amerlcans on the flag of truce boat That mght the Brltlsh beoan to bombard Fort McHenry on the coast of Maryland Key and hrs friends were anxlous spectators of that battle All mght long the Brltxsh contmued their bombardment all night lone Key gazed at Fort McHenry throuvh the mxst to see rf the Amerlcan Hag stxll waved over rt Every tlme that he looked he expected to see the flag Done but each tlme he saw lt wavmg m the breeze When mormnv came the news was disclosed to the llttle party of Amerlcans on the shlp that the Brxtlsh had been defeated by the Americans This llttle 1nc1 dent concernmg the prxsoners mlght have been forgotten as so many lncldents are were lt not for the fact that during that mght of the Bat tle of Fort McHenry Francxs Scott Key began to wrlte the words of the rmmortal Star Spangled Banner When Key went back to Baltlmore handbxlls were made conta1n mg the words he had wrltten set to the tune of the old English drlnklng song To Anacreon m Heaven Thxs melody had been set to patrlotlc words before ln America but wlthout the success to whlch The Star Spangled Banner attamed Soon the new patrlotlc sonv was bemg suno by every loyal cxtlzen ln the Unlted States Francls Scott Key wxll always be remembered by the Amerlcan people for thls Fme con tr1but1on to our natlonal sonos The patrlotrc song Amex-:ca came mto exlstence ln a very unex pected manner Lowell Mason a well known cho1r smger and com posel was lnterested ln some German muslc books whxch had been lent to hlm by a frrend who had acqulred the books when v1s1t1ng Germany These books contalned slmple songs used ln German schools Mason had heard that Samuel Smlth then a young theological student at a semxnary ln Andover was very good at wrrtmo or rewrltlng words to musical composmons I-Ie went to Smlth and asked hlm exther to trans late 1nto Engllsh the words to some of the German songs or to wrlte new words to the German muslc Smlth promlsed Mason he would carry out his wlshes but bemg a very busy young man he allowed some t1me to elapse before he Cave serlous consxderatlon to the songs In February of the year 1832 Smlth whxle lookxng over these Ger man songs, came upon one whxch attracted hlm because of ltS patrxotxc theme and lts slmple tune Wxth a sudden msplratlon he declded to II' .5 1 f f - A-f -'A -f-1 g-:- X,-12:4-g ,-7 ' ' -1 C' --- A -- - f - W V-f -f--g.. 1 ,- v - 1 1 X I 3 Y .1 ,, 1 J ' - . ,-fJ J-'N- 1 -r, fix -icq-, ,,,- Y fe ,W ,Wg 2, ,ff 1 A V I- - Y 7 . A . . 1 1 V . ' 1 b 7 ' 9 9 U' ' ' I b . . I , b D D : ' b n U , - 1 , . 3 , . 9 . b b b . Us 9 ' . , ' v 1 , . n - as , L, Y I V a b . ' - -fa. 'L-3?fief2'5,Qr'0l'G?41'-12? E wrlte the words of an Amerlcan patrxotlc sonv whlch he would set to the German tune He lmmedlately carrled out hrs dec1s1on At the trme he dld not know that the muslc was a German versxon of the Br1t1sh tune God Save the Kzng Smlth sent the song to Lowell Mason who was thoroughly de lwhted wlth lt and had It sunff at a ch1ldren s Fourth of july celebration 1n Park Street Church Boston Th1s was the f1rst t1me that Amenca was sung xn publ1c It was llked by a Great number of people 1n sp1te ot the fact that lts musxc was that of a Br1t1sh nat1onal a1r The popu larxty of Amenca became greater as It became better known It was sunv 1n churches schools at pubhc meetlnos and even at p1cn1cs The rnuslc to Amerzca orlgxnated IH some European country but xt IS not deHn1te1y known 1n whlch one To th1s popular a1r Henry Carey an EnOl1sh composer wrote ln the e1ghteenth century the patr1 Of1C song God Save the Kmg It seems a rather odd co1nc1dence that Enoland and the Un1ted States should both have a nat1onal sono Wlth the very same tune Amerrca has played an lmportant part on great h1stor1cal occasxons ln the Un1ted States Dunno the Cxvxl War lt was one of the few sonos whlch was popular wlth the soldlers of both the Unlon and Confederate arm1es At the present tlme Amerlca IS sung by the school ch1ldren 1n every pubhc school ln the Un1ted States At almost all pubhc or natxonal gathermgs It IS sure to be xncluded on the program wlth some other nat1onal songs The popularlty of these four nat1onal songs Yankee Doodle Hazl Columbza The Star Spangled Banner and Amerlca should always be as great as It IS today The msplrxno words and melodles of these songs are worthy of last1nO remembrance Josephlne Brlck 5 4 .lg 113 X.,-, , ' jx A ':'f r - ,Atv ,Y - ,-:Y - -f .,.,-R gr! 1 , ky, '- - .A I ,, r X .' A A - I rx J. -YY 1..-1, -a. ,Y T V ,S :sYJl,,,Tlg:,,: Y 5: A Y Q! , . , Y b - . . . . . , . a b , . D - 5 b y v t, y - v 9 y - , . , 5 5 - 5 5 I 1 v J 7 J - 5 5 . , . fx-w w 11 - sx- A y T 'N 1:1 ,K X 3 . P , 1 .X 1 . X I 1 . ,, fs 1 v S rr- 'H - ' 1 ' 'Qs qw n2gL The Integnty of Washzngton jr' EORGE WASHINGTON by h1s thorouoh and consxstent 2,7 gg honesty has set up an xdeal for the Amerlcan people to I x my follow There 1S no phase of honesty whxch does not show HIS honesty IS umversally acknowledoed whether as a V1r 011113 planter as a rnlhtary leader or as a statesman From the tlme of h1s youth Washxnoton s honesty mamfested xtself through several hablts whlch he formed One was that of promptly pay mg h1s debts When he was ln Barbados wlth h1s brother Lawrence he saw many planters who owned about a hundred acres of land but who were practlcally destltute because they were not honest enouffh to lxve w1th1n their lncomes consequently becomxno burdens to the com munlty Thls made a lastmg lmpresslon on Washmgton and caused hlm to watch with care how he managed h1s own finances When Washmgton was a youno man of twenty h1s brother Law rence dled By provlslon of the wlll youno George was made one of the admmzstrators of the estate So much faxth d1d h1s fam11y have 1n hlm that they left to h1m nearly all of the adm1n1strat1ve dut1es Needless to say his accounts were all scrupulously correct Later on ln llfe after Washlngton had come 1nto possesslon of h1s brother s estate hxs honest character was publxcly acknowledved When hogsheads of tobacco were sent down to the wharves on the Potomac from Washmgton s plantatlon to be shlpped to England so correct were they known to be that the customs ofhcers d1d not even lnspect them Although accustomed to pos1t1ons of authorlty and responslbrllty from h1s youth Washmgton sought no prlvate Oalns through them For all hrs servlces throughout the Revolutlonary War he steadfastly refused any recompense he even helped to feed and clothe h1s soldlers from h1s prlvate mcome Washxngton by the strength and Fmeness of h1s character endeared hlmself not only to Amerlca but also to natrons the world over Thls was very apparent ln Europe at the txme of h1s death In February 1800 Parls had planned a Great celebratxon to be held 1n honor of the conquests of Napoleon But when the mormng of the great day arrxved news also came of the death of George Washlnoton The merry maklng turned to mourning Instead of strrrmg speeches and gay muslc the people heard funeral oratlons and muffled drums, and mstead of brlght colored buntmg, they saw black crepe When Talleyrand, Napoleon's great mmlster of state, heard the sad news from Amerlca, he sald Th1s occaslon deprlves the world of one of xts brlghtest monuments, and ll! 'lg fi M Q :surf ezliligef- -fxgf-1 -R--1, - -, -Q, - fi-- x'. 1 T 'X - fT W ',Yf 't 'i' T1 55 -re-A if 'Q Y ,,-,-,l figz--H Y xfll v f ' 7 T I ,: y - . ' g . .. . , . ' , ,lf ltself mn some wa throu0'h Washmoton s words or actlons. Qv. D b ,, ,' .V Y - 5' l .Y I ' D . b , 5 ' . A S , . - - 5 , A . , . , . , ,, - b . S , , Y . ' , , . ' D - ' V V ' . 5 - ' f, , EbS'g1:i'm removes to the realm of hlstory one of the noblest men that ever hon ored the human race When the news of Washmoton s death reached England the Br1t1sh Parhament suspended 1ts proceedxnos to pay trxbute to h1m and tradl txon records that the Haos on the shlps of the Br1t1sh Navy were hung at half mast What Washmgton was as much as what he d1d has been the cause of unlversal acclalm It was hxs character that endeared hlm to the world He had faults but so Great were hrs endeavors to correct them and so superlor were h1s good quahtles that he w1l1 always l1ve nn our hearts as a standard of honesty patrlotlsm and self sacrlhce Robert Van Meter 8 A Well Rounded Patrxot 'i' ASHINGTON was a man who had acqulred the sklll of lxv qv 'I I mo H1s llfe was well balanced m the four fields of human development mental soclal rel101ous and physrcal In mental tralmnff Washlnoton IS found to have been 4 emment amonost hls contemporarles On account of the death of h1s father he was denled the pr1v1le0e of attendmo college but he worked mdustrxously throuohout the short txme he was permltted to remaxn ln school As a result of this faxthful study he accompllshed much more than the ordmary youno man under s1m11ar condltlons HIS reports as a surveyor show his Great knowledoe of hloher mathematlcs and the accuracy of h1s calculatxons for errors 1n these reports have not been found by mathematlclans of th1s ave equlpped as they are w1th the most modern of mstruments I-Ie read the works of the best authors and assoclated wxth persons of outstandlno mtellectual abxhty lett1n0 no moments pass ldly but always endeavorxno to lmprove hrs mental facultles Durmo h1s l1fe txme Washxnoton dld hls utmost to a1d and further educatlon In hls w1ll substantlal Olfts were made to various 1nst1tut1ons of learmno In recogmtlon of hls Oreat mterest ln the furtherance of education he was elected toward the end of his l1fe Chancellor of W1ll1am and Mary Colleoe George Washmoton engaged ln soclal act1v1t1es rn true Vlf01n13fl style Mount Vernon was a center of feastmo and pleasant pastlmes Guests came there from all parts of the country and stayed often for weeks enjoymg Washmotons Great hospltahty Washmoton loved muslc and at hls request h1s stepdauohter played two evemnvs a week for hlm These concerts were held 1n a specxal music room wh1ch he ll 1. X ' 'A rr'-f f '4r--1 - 'rf --,Y,.YY fr V ' fi' 2: - -1 .:.- -Q - Eff J X r w Y If J 'J ' ' - ' TQ- 1- 'Y' - A -- 1g:- i V - YA , H . I , . . D y 29 1 ' 5 ,V 7 I - y 5 v v 7 V - ' , . . 91' V-.lf . n . . . if I f D- 1 f' , . , 5 , - . 5 Aff . . . A . E A l 5 5 .' 1 . V . . b . 5 D b ' 5 - v b . 5 5 5 . 5 v ,CQ . b D - 5 5 ' za b' I C! 1 v - b . 5 ' 5 . D . y ' D b ' b - 5 5 - Q 5 2' -Q-aw w - Q'EWS,QiFR:am had equ1pped wlth a zxther flute and harpsxchord Wash1ngton ln fact beheved ln all the socral arts and ln the1r value for the cultural devel opment of a country Washmotons rellglous tralnmv was not neglected As a boy he Mount Vernon he attended church SCFVICCS frequently On each occa slon he had to travel s1x mlles over a rouoh and muddy road three hours tlme bemo requlred to take the tr1p Even wh1le servrno h1s country as a General Washmgton attended church servxces as often as pOSSlblC When he resrgned h1s commlssxon as head of the army he commended the mnterests of our country to the p otectlon of Almlohty God George Washlnoton physlcally was exceedmoly strong He was more than slx feet ln he1Oht and wewhed about two hundred pounds He stood erect h1s strong hearty appearance lI'ldlC3t1l'10 hls Great love for the outdoor llfe He labored at txmes as a common man upon h1s large estate braved the severe wmter of Valley Force and served erght years as Presrdent of the Unlted States tasks demandmo the greatest of physlcal endurance In George Washmoton a truly great answer IS found to the poet s lmmortal prayer God OIVC us men A tlme l1ke th1s demands Strong mmds Oreat hearts true fa1th and ready hands' Gordon S Letterman 6 N9 1 1 fi: 116 hung, k rv -ff,-'N-f7ilgtvf- 15.5-YV TX -f Q ,il-G' , - K- H' , - J K 2 I ' Xi! , . . . Y , . Q . y . , D b ' ' l1ved in a home which provided hlm with suitable sermons. When at Y - ' - .O . s - 5 3 9 . , . r b D D ' s 5 - - s 5 s , y ' ' 't, ' C7 D D . 5 , 5 . , Eli E .W V, ' v l I. fl N !,,J-H Qfp 3' fffxww 1,-will ,,., :WMM UNIT!! RCANI AT ONS ' 1. ,KT H , , T ,P ,M f V lf 1 w y X L 'wp 1 V' 'J' ,LIP my 'U ,f' ,f Z, ,, ,V ,ff yn' ' I X P, 4,11 1 ' ,Lf M' .. 1, - ,.f' ,LW 'P ' 2,,,,v' fx uf, ,AJ fm Vvvy VV L ff - ... .L,L,.f Y Y . I F 1 4 X Y . 1 H v B-nn. M-n..v- N N N N N N N N N N N N I VT Z A N N, Z Z N N 2 73' Qpaxazsmwmwa The Torchbearers of the january Class 5 HE Soldan Chapter of thc Natxonal Honor Socletv IS known a the Torehbearers ElCCtlOH to membershlp rn the Honor Soclety whlch IS llmrted to Fxfteen per cent of the Senlor Class and based on vm, Character Scholarshxp Leadershxp and Serv1ce 15 the h1 h est honor the facultx can bestow upon a student The follouln are thc members o the Class of january 1932 Offlcers Presldtnt Myrtle Sophxr Stcrttaxx Marx lheper VICC Presrdent V1r 111121 Sea rave lreasurer Beulah Hcmker Marshal Evely n Zelda Adelsteln Alrce Atchlson V1r 1n1a Bosse jane Dlel Frances Hall En land Sldney Epstem Mar uerlte Gebhardt 'Vlartln Croldsworth Preston Green DeVera Grossman Ehzabeth Ham Deutsch Mollle Hman l'lorenee Holtgman Wlfllfffifl Hosch Pearl B Lerner Myra Lesser Let1t1a McCulloch ulla Martln Wllllam Mason Ethel Evelyn Palans Eleanor Pllllsch Leo Sachar Everett Yount ONOR SOC ET Z f I N 3 'YL IIS ,K V ,Q f,YX,f,i:-p1Q5h,?., -Aj, .Eff at ,ali-Q:,4.,x ,s -f-.. r ,, f ' r . 7 f sf' : ,. J - X T es 36 'S+ e -: .Less ,asf ' , YJ-,-R? ff' f '1 - C S . ' .-'QW' . . . . fn E L , ...:.,,-1 1 , 761 P ' ' . ' 1 X. -K1 ble' t . . . . tl' lx 1 , . . . . .' , . r . Si 1 . . - - , . I . . U. . 0 l ,. W A an m . O. . - - o g l O , J . . D . . 1 1 I NA7lONAL H l V X- if 2 NN' f 4 - 7 N 1 xg N N N N N N N N N N N N N 2 -ff Z N -ff z -, E N tgnsgfieserif-wn6l The Torchbearers of the june Class EVEN per cent of the class of seventh term pupils lS elected . ushers at the formal mductlon of the out o1n Torchbearers and at the commencement exercxses They also help to enroll the students 1n thelr classes at the be mmno of a 4 E 341 HCVK tCl'1'1'l The remaxnm erbht per cent of the class out of the fifteen per cent ellblble to the Honor SOCICYY rs elected durln the elahth term The folloxun are the members of the Class of june 1932 OHIICCYS Pl'CS1ClCI'lI Dav1dGoldr1n Secretary Mlldred Becker Vlce Presldent Betty Mxller Treasurer V1r 1n1a Harszy Marshal Lewls Mllls Reva Abelson Rose Adler Edlth Alllson Ruth Baker Clara Bam Vxr 1n1a Barrloz Ol1VC May Burke Albert Cankroute Mary Compton Mar aret Detweller Evelyne Farber John Frerlchs Anna Mar1e Goehler Edrth Gordon Mary Greer Paulme Helsler Harold Hllllard jay Hodves Wxlma Hoffman Molly jauncey Betty Lachterman Irene Mackey Chrlstlana Meyers Maurme MOTFISOH Berthola Plrosh Mol11e Port Roberta Rawson Thlel Nora Rosenber Frances Ruppert Carol Saunders Mmnette Schzmmel Oscar Schmell Nancy jane SISCO Nma Stemson Rose Tropp Cella Tucker Vlva Loulse W1ll1ams Selma Wolff Valerle Youn Vlolet Zlervo el Ellzabeth Z1mmerrnann omon soc mv X N f I ATlON i X .4 y L. W Q .3 -- 5 - r-', 14725 -f wife: --1-:T ,IX be- JP' S, , f- ,fl-.3 y T L7. . ' -.'- f' ' X fx . 5 9 'ssf 1 'hd if 52 4' 'cv 'F' cs-'ff iff -if is if 'fx ilgze 5 '. -',,A, --.lr ,I C 'x l ' S IQ to the Honor Soclety each term. These members act as I I . . O. . O ' S s D D D D , . . O ,O b , .O. . , . . g .ol y v' 0 - D . . - . .O - . b . . - . .- . O. . b . O. . . . 'B Q O D or . 3 Q - . ,oy . ,:, .v :J . or Z7 1 1 I ' O . . 3 N N N N N N N -ft L N K Q Vi 4. -f fjrf-7,35-l':,ji3,,,. 94: 1:.,ff11,-13-1,-'R .f-:irF.5s4,4?- V A The Scrzp T O many and warmed are the conceptxons 1n tlee student mrnd con ermno the uork done bx the Scrmp Staff 1n preparxne J the annual for publlcatlon that xt mrcht be xx ell to explam J ex ctlx x hat IS done The Job 15 far from easy for rt 5 1nvolves much tedlous wxork and careful concentrat1on In tae composltlon of Scrlp the Erst step IS the typrnv of all materlal for the book The t5 pei coples must then be carefully examined and every error ferreted out and corrected Then all the ty pecl artlcles are sent to t e prmter vxho returns a valley or prmted copx of the material to t e staff The second staee of the process IS the comparmv of thls Gal cv and the maklno of anx neccssarx correctlons The valley 1S then cu up and pasted on blank Scrlp pages to form the dummy Prom thms dummy the pr1nter prepares the pages of the book whrch are sent to the staff for a final examlnatlon After the return of the loose Javes to the prmter the staff au alts IU tense expectancy the arrlval of the hnrshed book Q0 vxxth the hope that th l932 Scrlp VV1ll uve as much pleasure to xts readers as rt gave to those xx ho prepared It the Scrlp Staff pre ents thls book to Soldan The Scr1p S tag Assrstanr Edztors Typzsts l ?l F' v 7 . . . . 5 , ' I 1 , C ' ' K ar l U . . I .Q r r ' El 4' V ' l . Y - , I '4'.6-W - . . ' J I I 1 v r . . y A. ' 7 ' h ' . ' , ' J' ' , b . h ' 1 as b ' In D YY , - JV . D t K 1- . 1 4 x' 4 ' ' 1 V, . L v . . v . 1 :D ' ' ' 1. 3 . 5' 1' P ' ' ' . - - 3, 'J'J'.-'J' '7.V'f . ... ,....,,...... ....,. J 'ill J- '-'ffff-. .iXN'frliJJ 'f.'l1J', ,. ,... . ,. .. JJ. Jf'N.!'Jx '. J'1J.J lf iii! cf 'l IJ .' X Il' JIJ' JJ I IJ, '.J ' ll-Cl'J X ll' J, Jn' J I 'JHJ J l' JJ YL Jl IJJ JJ ' J J l f J J , ll J iz' ' Y l', fff,' J f .' Jr' J . JZ 5l'J I f'J.3.' J-J -l.f', '. .fffs llx'f'lf NJN, JJl15'. J,JJ-'Y 1Jll,',J',.'J J:.lJn'NZ': JUJNJ 'Z'J' ll! NJN! NN .'f'.J1wl4 , . . .... . v'lJ J' lf ' N J'v.' 11,1 '- .Jx WS, fi K 1 lil NJ . X N ?1',lJn' .... ,.,.. , ....., J 'IW 2 J J.JJ,J-S J Alt J'J..' l' ,-JIU. NJ'f .N1'lrf .............. TJJNS' J'l.ffl-K' fft .', fl,5Z.,:',J'I'.'J1 fl-it I'J..' Y JJJ N. '. N f.J',-51,1 J-.' .. , . .,... '-JJ' ' If JJ, Jfli JJ, J.-It VJ .' l' 1 J'J 'J' . . .. ..., . ., . . '-JJW '. ZJJ ',J,cjlw'J.J1' Ill! Silxlll lfl Sl ll! lXl'lxlfUlxlllxN lllxxl lllx' X 'V Qtr f1S'ii'EQ1:f-12Ti1fD't f.ua Scnppage b CRIPPAGE as most folks know, IS the school paper pub hshed by members of the Scnppage Class Althouoh It IS a small paper, much work IS needed for 1tS preparat1on The reporters follow up any h1nt of news whlch they conslder 5 to oe 1nterest1nO If the news proves of value the reporters wr1te lt up and subm1t lt to the ed1tor, who e1ther rejects It altooether or has lt rewr1tten All mater1al IS typed and Gone over carefully before bemg glven to the pr1nter on Wednesday mornmo Wednesday eve mnv the Galley IS returned to the ed1tor m ch1ef, who reads If over and then prepares the dummy Any typographlcal error IS noted ln the marO11'1 of the Galley, whlch Goes back to the pr1nter on Thursday morn 1nO alonv Wlth the dummy The sponsor fM1SS Cameronj the staff and reporters Oo throuvh th1s process every Week 1n order to have Scrlppage ready for d1str1but1on to the students on Frxday mornmo To help celebrate the Washmvton B1centenn1al Scuppage IS prmt m0 somethmv on that subject each week IIl1Xl I X Hx 11111 l x 11 1111! IIIX X I fx V11 161151 I 1 ffx x I 1 T7 1 5 1 1 , H ' 7 , ' - p la A . . . . I - f' ' 5 p X , . . . l , . . G . . V J l . . 41 5- . 5 - 5 , , S. - 5 D 5 5 5 ' 5 14 - - y b D , S1 'Q 1 V ' D s ' ' J 1'.'.!6'.' XV,I'fII P,f'1.. .8'f,fI'f ,NRL 'f'.Il LII I.I'II' I' IL 1.'. ,','.f7 fMfI,'I7ffl.',N1'1,.If ,..,, ,... ...,,....,,.. ...,,..,,.,.. l I l 'Ix'.1' ' fu' .f'fV'I,.'f .INVILI IV' . ,.1 f, 'I1.'N' nf'1'1f'v 1m.!1'l' ..4.,.....,. . .. ,,...,,,.,. l1.H'lf'1 1.11 ,1 f'.1, ft' f.,'Sf1'N '1 :I VW .,.,.....,..,, ...,. ...,..,., , , .... I , 7'IN '.'.lII,'. 'mix I .lI.'I. l',!I'flI.' ....... .. ....... ..,. ...........,, l I 'fI.I.'!f P1 I lIlI.I,I.l',1' '.'.lN ' .,.... .,,.....,,......,,,,,,,.,.......... I '.'f'.S'.'. i'. ,' ' ,X,1,,f,41f w' fyljy .l.1'i.'.'.l.'V L'.f'f'1'.','.'l1I1', .,,,..,....,.. . . ,,...... f'.' Xlfl' I,Il IfI..'flI,i,', If, II lf'IX , 'II' VV1 ....,.,.,.,,,, . . . ,.III I'.Xl'ffI I, IC lI.l f IJ l.'1'I.' nuff' I J'.ll1'.' f .' f' J ' 1' .,,.,... ,..,...... ...,.,...,. I 1 '!,.I'll1'l4 I. I1'1'I.l . YI' l' r I 5 If 1 .1 ',l'f fl I '. lf,,'v.'vIi'.' ..,........, ,,.. ,.... ........ I 1 ' I.! .l .lI .f..Nfl,'1 .'II F I,' 'If IlI1'. fNIf?.'1' f'f, 'f.'.. ..,, .,......,..........,,.,,,. I f II.I.I.I.l1' .S't1'Ilf'. ' ' Q .',YrI .IY l .'.1 . 'I.' J' I IZ.lI-iff. ff' I. '. Iv ffl ................,... .......,.,..... I fI'IN' Alf, . ' .' l'J ,'N N f,1' '5l,1'l.1 I Zzwfl' rr., ...... . . ...,... . , 'VI l.Y'1..', I-'.11Jlr.1' lv , II1'1fI'-.I.l IUfN,N'. ,,......,..... , ..... '1f.lIII.I1.I IXYIx'I.N.'vII,II.I',I 'I.l,1', I'.lI.I'. Sf ..,.....,...., , . ..... ...... I if l1l.I..l . 'Ix'I.'X lJl'lfl'f..'. .5 fI'f!'J'lf ....,............,... .... ............ . ' Q 7l..'fZ!. f If ,IHIL I1'X lil-1.1 HI7 .'JI' X' .'f1.'1Ij.5u 'J .i N N N N N N N -lx. 3 ii' 'A C Ylfi : 'T -5:21 -Y - A 2' - 4,1 X The Soldan Service Club 1924, under the able and inspiring influence of Miss 3 Rasmusson, the Service Club has been a vital factor in the '- I life of Soldan 4 I The purpose of the club is exactly what its name 1mpl1es g a that IS to render a helpin hand wherever and whenever it IS possible The members who are the ri ht hand assistants of Mr Stellwagen and the faculty number over a hundred boys and Olrls who are w1ll1n to 1ve up some of their spare tlme to make the machinery of the school run smoothly Every period there are two or three students in the office ready to run errands catalo ue cards and carry the slips which students usually await with a uilty conscience In the library Miss Mays assistants fill the slips and patiently take out book after book until the pupils wants are S3tlSHCd Service Club members valiantly ,guard the stair ways and watch the l1nes in the lunchrooms The first time a new student Does down to our lunchoom he IS escorted by a SCYVICC Club member who shows him around and introduces him to his fellow students At the same time the member boosts Soldan to the new pupil telling him some of the fine points about our school so that he soon becomes a loyal Soldamte This was formerly the work of the Sammies and Susies To qualify for membership in the Service Club one must be either a senior or a seven who has never failed a subject has been exempt from all Finals the precedin term or has an avera e of Cl hty per cent in Soldan This year a party was iven for those in Soldan who were new in S Louis schools in order that the club members mi ht become acquainted with the new students and m1 ht make them feel more at home IH Soldan The officers of the Honor Society sometimes referred to as a Superservlce Club are the officers of the Service Club First Term Officers Second Term Vir mia Seaorave Vice President Betty Miller Mary Theper Secretary Mildred Becker Beulah Hemker Treasurer V1r mia Harszy I ,, ' QQ - 1 - ,, , 1 . . U 7 b . . . .OA . . , D . t 5 . . op O. . . . 23 b , g , ' ' 5 . . 1 . . op . - U . . , 1 - v . O O' 'OA D ' D CJ . OA. . . D th . . .g . . .or D Myrtle Sophir ...,l.,,,.,,.....,.,.......... President .......,........,......c....,. David Goldring b b ' A 'A ' Q . O. . 1 lx INIIISJUU '. Y -1245169 QJiSg1if.5Qa15r3 JE The Agora X HE Avora IH ancrent tlmes Vins a socral center or market place for the Greeks Here people Gathered often to dlscuss the1r BHHITS The Avora of Soldan H1 h School IS of much the same nature The representatlves from each advlsory Oroup who form the Avora meet to transact lmportant busl ness whlch affects the whole school The Aoora IS an honor oroanlzatlon each of 1ts members havmo a G or h10her averaoe Each member 1S cons1dered one of the leaders 1n the school The Aoora representative must be a wlllxng and accurate workex and also one vxho can spare the t1me for thls sneclal serv1ce Thxs oroanlzatron under the sponsorshlp of Mlss Brown meets daily the last perlod It IS an Important body because It dlscusses school problems lt sometimes makes lmportant decrslons and then reports these dec1s1ons to all the groups by the representatlves Let us vxsmt the Aoora for one perlod and see what takes place After the attendance has been checked and the Chalrmen have been Owen the names of pup1ls who have left school collectlons are made for Scrlp and SCFIPDBOC Next new busmess 1S presented and acted upon The group 1S now free to dlstrlbute bulletlns or to ass1st ln any capaclty wh1ch the prlnclpal or faculty may deslre The tlme remam 1n0 lS then devoted to study The officers of the Aoora are elected each semester as the mem Q35 97 berslelp chanoes from term to term F1rst Term Officers S cond Term Mlldred Becker F1rst V1ce Pres1dent Robert Ross Irene Mackey Second V1ce Presldent Maroaret Smith Anna Marxe Goehler Th1rd VICE Presldent Henry Schwartz VIYOIDIH Barrloz Secretary Emily Sewell Ann Clark Assistant Secretary Grace Grlmme Mllton Westphalen reasurer Mllton Westphalen Houohton Hallock Ass1stant Treasurer Rodney Pelter ff: l 9 ..g,,- izfrff 'A 'Leg' -e- F -ff - 3 , 1 A fa 2 5- , ,. KT K X T , re -Q i M sy-5-2 :W -fb, Ye era'-L--46,1--,f r,- J ,I Y . l.,.-, .. b .- 4 fr. ' 5 g xx-jg?-,P . . ,f J: , - -Q zs 1 c, r ' 5 5 v 5 D D ' ' b -X 9 7 ' 5 ' , , Z . . V . . . y . . A . 7 D . . 5 ' - ,, . . H . . , - b ' ' 4' 7 5 . as 1 ' . 5 . ' e Robert Buchele .........Y..,,ee,,,e.... President .,,eee,..,....,.,,...., ca,,,,... -I eanette Forman A vaav ...a...a....al...,.... ....aa.aaa 5 D ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,we,- .....,,,..,,,,,e,,,t,,,e.rr.,..t,....e ,.........,,....L ---------Y-----,Y----Y------ 5 aa.aaaaaa......... - aaaa.aar......... E -,, ,. lil, ,., ' milf ' The Debatzng Team , J OLDAN lost the coveted Prmceton Cup when the debatlng I Ea team of 1932 was defeated by Central and Cleveland ln a P debate held on Frlday Aprzl 1 Cleveland the leadmg con vw tender for the trophy emerged vlctorlous over the other l schools thus gammg permanent possesslon of the cup ln the contest affirmative Bernard Femstem Dav1d Goldrmg Morrls Wallerstem and Mark Sllverstone falternatej negatlve Melvm Kranzberg Robert Buchele George G1llerman and Alfred Comensky Calternatej Although the team falled to brmg home vxctory due somewhat to then' mexperlence they made an mtensxve study of the questlon under consxderatxon and dld cred1t to Soldan The questlon debated was Resolved That leglslatlon embodymg the prlnclples of compulsory unemployment msurance be adopted ln thrs country l I0 , . . . , - The following teams, selected by Coach Mathie, represented Soldan 1' f 'Wf- Wmfzf ig W-W fl 4 CLUBS E llll-iw! l l, 1 A h E gg, l jl lr 1 fl if? , lp 1 .514 N' 1 in NIMH' ,Q W if 4 Vi ,H W' M l ,w ww f l l w 2 A wr ,I ,Im .,, B MI! rum , , mil'-Nl! NNI Q 1 Wkwh-Fr uh ll',k 1: g zTr i1r,1m',,f A Q4 - , f 1.U:S + 'W 4 ff X-ar FN' 'Vx ,. 3 INS Q, fj 1 1 Zi' M1 i . .,,g 1 ,1 f 5w X , M ' 22 Fw W 1 N H ,v v-I Wa' W X: 2 1 , 1 'I 'X P sf LA, el ' 1. 6 .J 1 451 A J QV X A 31 'U l A ' 1 X ll A K If J V 5-1 7 gg U h A .1 Q 54 A uf -r ry if 6 .1 lvl! 4, f ffniyifkj ' ' 'V Q9 4 g N N X N x -ff X '4'2f' fs !'f'e?fQ1:4w11i?J ' i if-1 F' 1' OLDAN niuslc lovers may be seen 1n the aud on Tuesdays D 1 and Thursdays after school enjoyino Henry VIII dance J tunes thfllllflo to the strams of Orplreus en der Unterwelt or even sprinv danc1nO throuvh the aud to the tune of c-. , Percy Grameers Country Gardens So wide IS the range of accomplishment by the Soldan Orchestra that it can play all types of 1 I'1'lL1S1C Under the dxrectlon of Miss Finn the Orchestra has provlded classical entertamment for most of Soldans functions since 1910 Fre quently throuoh Graduation the Orchestra loses 1ts most experienced members This happened last year As a result the new members con stltute the Oreater part of the oroanization but after several months of severe pract1c1n0 the Soldan Orchestra still holds its place amono the h1 h school orchestras of the clty This term the Orchestra con SlStS of twenty eieht violins one viola and two cellos in the strino section two clarinets three cornets two saxophones one flute and two trombones in the wind section and four drums and a piano Th1S term the hi h school orchestras under the direction of Mr Eueene Hahnel took as an experiment the place of the Symphony Orchestra IH O1v1n0 a serles of concerts for the seventh and e10hth Grade puplls of the city Soldan 1S proud to have had her orchestra represented and to have Martin Axelbaum chosen as Concertmeister of the combined hloh school orchestras The Orchestra plays at such school events as Class Day Com mencement Day aud sessions and Patrons Association and Mothers Club meetinos This term it furmshed the music to the Comedy of Errors Irvin Rosen a Graduate of the class of june 31 and a prominent orchestra member has recently been elected to the St Louis Symphony Orchestra Other outstandme musicians of the city received thexr first tramino in the Soldan Orchestra First Term Isadore Rovak Barney Fox .....,.......Y,,..,,,,. . . Reva Abelson David Goldrin Mollie Port .t,................................. Oflicers Second Term President .r,r,,......,,r.,Y...rrr..,,,... Walter Baron Vice President ..,.....c.,. ....,,,David Goldrino' Secretary ..r,...,r..,r,V........,..,..r..r.,. Mollie Port Treasurer r,.,,,..,,,,,,,....,r. Librarlans ,................,.,.' II!!! ,, .Joe Bakalor I Salvatore Manaici I Ruth Werner X., , Y . -' f- i..-T '4f---- X-,g.L':,YA:,f,v-,C-. M- - VIA ' .4 at 1' J 1 X . 1 5 -wife f - 5 YY , ,J-.u :x.. fyf'-g --fffx -elf -,H ,,V ,-,1i - W 4 --:-- A ' , - nn , ,f -- , . 1 ' 1 ' D l ' 1 D 1 Y v . a' rs o --u .5 1 ' ' ' ' . . U , V . , . . , . . . . za a . , , ' 2: b i o' to .g . I . - ' o 1 v D 3 , , . , Q . . .O . . , a 5 - - .' rs rs b b - v v D . , - ,, .. . . - - Q , , . V . . . . U C, . -- . , . v 3 . . - I - 5 .0 . c w Q 4 -'Q -N. N N 1 Y w The Senior Band ! HE Senxor Band IS one of the most promment or anlzatlons Q' H91 rn the school because of 1tS many publ1c appearances Thrs past season the Band performed with Great success at foot g ball games and basketball Games and d1d much to 1nst1ll pep and school sp1r1t 1n the student body Last fall the Band played for the Mothers Cxrcle It also had a part ln the provram at the Arena durxng the Da1ry Show The Band helped to make our pep sesslon last fall a success On Armlstxce Day it took part ln a glgantxc parade throuvh the downtown sectlon of our c1ty The Band IS also scheduled to play for the Patrons Assoclatlon on Aprxl 17 Thus the year has been a busy one for thxs xmportant muslcal oroamzatlon Last fall Mr Ernest Hares succeeded Mr Olson as dlrector of the Band Mr Olson s many years of devoted and efficient SCFVICC 1n direct mg the Band have won for h1rn the deep appreclatlon of that or anxza tlon and of the student body Mr Hares hls successor IS well fitted to cont1nue Mr Olsons good work Mr Hares muslcal experience IS of Great servlce and the Band IS makln steady provress Membershxp 1n the Band IS open to all who play a band mstru ment The experlence gained by ensemble playmof w1ll be extremely valuable for anyone who would l1ke to enter the field of music when he leaves hrgh school For anyone who cannot as yet play an mstru ment there IS the Junlor Band where he can learn to play lf he has any muslcal ablllty whatever The Band IS proud of 1ts Student Leaders The pos1t1on IS most lmportant for the Dlrectors work brlngs breater results when It IS strengthened by the asslstance of a good Student Leader The Band offers valuable tramlng for all zts members by tC3ChlflU them to work ln harmony wlth each other and to cooperate 1n strxvmb to make thexr orcfamzatlon an lmportant asset to the llfe of the school Frrst Term Officers Second Term Isadore Rovak Student Leader Manuel Soldofsky W1ll1am Crowdls Secretary Treasurer jack Leon Wlllxam Holle Llbrarlan Ben Levme 556 YK! Y Il lux- 'asf' . . . '. g . .- fr S 5 b . . .- M 5 , . 1 . b . . 5 . . D . . . . g . - h . , . . g D - g . . . b . . , . , . U . . . . . . O b . . . . t Hamilton Card .....Y.............,l......... President ........e..........,...... Robert Davidson A 0 - l' - - -' ' E ll L-' ' I CB x N N 7--2' T 'R' An' at-L:-3,1-fxfyf'-Q j The Chaminade I A S a memorial in American history stands that bleak and blus- tering night on which Washington crossed the Delaware ant day when he journeyed through Trenton on the way to It X Q to Trenton. Yet far too few have heard of that most pleas- his inauguration at New York. That was a buoyant spring dayg all nature was astir in vernal freshness. The sun bent its gracious rays upon the Delaware br1dGe which was thronved with Girls and younG women Attlred in whlte Gowns and bearing garlands of fraGrant blossoms this chorus sanG its Sonata of welcome strew1nG the path of its hero with flowers as he passed beneath the Trlumphal Arch On I'CCC1VlI'10 a copy of the text Welcome Mrghty Chief Once More Wash1nGton acl-rnowledGed his Gratitude for the exquisite sensations he had experienced Since Wash1nGtons time Girls choral clubs have reatly mc eased both in number and in extent of their activities This has been true especially since the lntroductlon of l'1 LS1C into the public schools The first club orGan1zed at Soldan was a girls glee club Within the first two weeks after our school had opened in 1909 Blanche Burden had orGan1zed this club with Miss Finn as its faculty sponsor Chamlnade Club was chosen as its name Gold and white were its colors Through the swift passing years Chaminade s activities have stead ily increased Each term proGrams are given for the Mothers Club the Patrons Association Commencement Day and for patriotic and festive occasions Fifteen operas and four contatas have also been pre sented Last fall Chaminade was featured in the Missouri State Teach ers Convention Three selections were rendered The Bridal Chorus by Cowen Indian Mountain Song by Cadman and My Creed by Gar rett The club has also enloyed the new experience of s1nG1n0 over the radio dur1nG the KMOX High School Hour Chamlnade s spr1nG appearances will be at the St Louis All H1 h School Orchestra Con cert and the Art Teachers Convention The success of the club has been due to Miss Finns never ceas1nG efforts to perfect the club s s1nG1nG and to her Gracious and generous manner toward the Group She has been assisted by very capable officers during both terms of the year First Term Officers Second Term V1rG1n1a Lee Swann President jane Schwartz Vlfolnla Ruth Davls Vice President Elizabeth Kn1Ght Dorothy Scott Secretary Ruth Wr1Ght Elizabeth KH10l't Treasurer jane Wr1Ght Myra Lesser Librarian Mary V1rG1n1a Cov1nGton Selma Berzon Librarian Dorothy Matthews li b ' 5 - b .5 ' ci ts . . U ,, . , 3, , z, 5 . V , . . . . H l . . . 1,, zs ta :J 0 If ts a 5 - , . . . . . A! . . . L . Y . . , I . . b . . I . . . . . . ,, . D . ,, . . . . . .O . . . r V- . . 3 1 , . . . . Y 3 . . . . ,., , . . . 1 1 - - 5 o A O, as ' b . . .O - ' b , . a b :sf za g . 5 --G---------------'- ----------- - --------------'----- cy ' -- '-'-------- 4-'-4--- ----' A o a ' 'c ' ' - ' A --'-- - 444'---' ' D .- ll N V N -N N N 5 Q Q 4 5 The Glee Club J.ags ' HE Soldan Glee Club wxth a membersh1p of nearly forty 2' gr boys IS one of the most actlve and popular clubs at Soldan Under the able d1rectxon of Mr Ernest Hares the club has pro ressed untrl today lt IS reco nlzed as one of the leading lee clubs 1n and about St Louls The club has bullt up a reputatlon Wh1ch It str1ves to uphold at each performance Its work has been especlally pralsed as to art1st1c effects m artlculatlon and shadmv The club shows ready response to 1ts leader s dlrectlon m 1ts fine attack and release and also 1n the rendl t1on of pxamssxmo passa es Durmb the past year the Glee Club has partlclpated 1n numerous events The club san for the Patrons Assocratxon and later at the Teachers Conventlon The members worked on some Mlchwan songs whlch were used durmg the v1s1t to Soldan of the Presldent of the Um verslty of Mlchlgan At the January graduatlon exerclses the club was pralsed for 1ts mterpretatlon of The Crusaders Thls IS poss1bly the Greatest of all the numbers the Glee Club has ever produced Early th1s term the Glee Club san over KMOX wlth such success that the orgamzatlon recerved con ratulatlons from thelr many frxends and even from a Soldan alumnus as far away as Texas In the near future the club has a number of enbabements for whxch lt IS now preparmo Flrst Term Elmer Bowenkamp Torn Buchan Officers Presldent Vlce President Secretary Treasurer Fl 5 at will L A ISU Second Term Dundas Cooper Oscar Schmello 1 YA- ,2-if-1 yyfziqzfx 1- 1-f f ,f 25 1' : kgs 'L CAJ4 C Q, Y ULN.- fv.-1 , , l I5 7 ' . . ' -4 1' . . . ' . . l - sr , 2 5 J:-' U ' - .O . . 5. . , - . . . . on D . . U . . . U , . . ' 'Q ' Z3 b U . . O. . D D O' O' - 5. joe Barr ............................ . ............, ' ..,,..l,...............,.... Channing Miller 9. C Cf fvi'-Eli ' Q ga 5, V' .f x ' , O :ng 'A ,' X l 1, ' filjgg' ' 94 2-' l 1 ll E -'I' L4-la., - ---- ' , The jun1or Chamznade INCE 1ts orlbln m 1928 the jumor Chamlnade has Hour T 'Q lshed steadlly The club has now twenty e10ht members a y sophomore 1rls who enjoy Slflblflb bood muslc and who ! 4 have taken the opportumty the club affords for developmb 5 e vo1ce M1ss Ernst sponsor of the club accompames the s1n mo and OIVCS the members valuable tra1n1n0 Last Chrlstmas the club san carols for the old folks at the Memo r1al Home The members have subscrlbed for two t1CkCtS to the C1v1c MUSIC Lea ue Concerts to whlch they have Sent representatlves Flrst Term Ofhcers Second Term Berry Meyer Vlce Presldent V1rb1n1a Haller Margaret Lounsberry Secretary ulla Ann Zlmmerman Grace Goodmg Treasurer Dorothy Hustoa 140 V 7 . no-. . , - . - - j' : . . . ' F . ' H g - of or 0' i . y h i , . . g. S S. 5. , g 1 . - . g , , . n Barbara Lampe ..........................e. President ...,................,,..,,...,,,..,.,. Clara Critz A ...Q............ .......rr......, J ' ' The Orpheus Club , HE Orpheus Club under the efliclent sponsorshxp of Mlss Ernst meets every Tuesday and Thursday before school 1n room 300 The club conslsts of twenty boys who are 1nter U ested ln muslc and who love to s1n0 The purpose of the club IS to tram the members to sing correctly and to mten slfy thexr Joy ln s1n01n0 and thelr love for musxc ln General Last term was a partlcularly successful one for the Orpheus Club Besldes presentmo a prooram t an audltorlum sesslon they sang at a Patrons Assoclatlon meet1n0 and at the Arena durmo the Da1ry Shox and caroled w1th the umor Chammade at the Memorlal Home at Chrlstma trme Sometlme 1n the near future the Orpheus Club plans to give an afternoon muslcal party 1n conlunctlon wlth the junlor Chammade and thc Muslc Anpreclatlon Club two other muslcal organlzatlons whlch occaslon members of each club w1ll partxczpate ln the program FlfSt Term Ofhcers Second Term Anthony Lamp Presldent john Bryan fQq, 1 37 Edward Keller Secretary Gordon Tlger Robert Gebben Treasurer Edward Krawll Robert Bell Accompanlst Gordon Tlger l4l VL Av y - y . . . if g , L15 3 h . O ' ' A ' - 5' . . . . . S. S . . . U I . . D S a . . . V 5 5 ,yy J 7 . h . . Y . . . V on joe Tachrnan .............,..,,,,.,,......,.. Vice President ..,..............,..,..... Laddie Sloss The Mus1c Apprec1at1on Club Q HE Mus1c Appreciation Club has been reorgamzed this term 'Ui 1 w1th M1ss Ernst as sponsor The club meets on Tuesdays 5 ln room 300 to study the hves and works of great masters U Usually the program conslsts of a hfe sketch of a composer a study of h1s type of work and a presentation of one or two of h1s composltlons The Music Appreclatlon Club studles muslc of all per1ods and takes an 1nterest mn what IS golng on 1n modern music circles The club IS str1v1ng to develop a general 1nterest 1n music among Soldan students It admrts as members not only those who play or sing but all music lovers Members who are nonmuslcians are able to take an active part m the work of the club because the programs are planned for thelr benefit One half of each meetmg IS devoted to a re port pertammg to music yet not xnvolvmg any sk11l 1n performance Under this plan the membership of the organlzatlon has 1ncreased Officers President Reva Abelson Secretary Shirley Schalnblatt Treasurer joe Bakalor 14 Lf rj- . . 251 ,Alrfjgj I If ' ' , . my 1 n , - . . . , . Vice President ,,.,,,,..,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,..,,,,,,,v.,,,,,,....,.....,....,,.,..........,,.,, Mollie Port 4n S 1' f The Ros trum MONG the foremost of Soldan clubs is the Rostrum organ N' ized for the purpose of furthering an interest in debatm The club serves as a training ground for Soldanites who desire to acquire the art of public speakln and logical think mg The Rostrum also sponsors the debating teams in the interscholastic debates for the Princeton Cup Several debates have been Soldans principal opponents The Rostrum IS the proud possessor of a newspaper Pro and Con which is very popular among the students Meetings are held each Thursday in room 201 under the sponsor ship of Mr Mathie They are conducted along parliamentary lines the members taking charge Programs consist of speeches and debates First Term Bernard Feinstein George Glllerman Alfred Comensky Irwin Pollack Officers Vice President Secretary Treasurer Parliamentarlan ll! Second Term Alfred Comensky George Gillerman David Goldrmg Mark Silverstone K G ' , cr - qu in Q1 . .... U. , . . U U . D li . . . . U U. . - .'- s D 1 Q u i 1 bl held this year, the high schools of Webster and University City being Leo Sachar .................................... President ......................,... Bernard Feinstein N N N N N N v , N N X 12191, 9 6-me SJQf5?Jl The Art Apprecnatzon Club ' HE Art Appreclatlon Club IS one of the most lnterestlnff 'la pf' organxzatxons to which you can belong It IS not necessary j for you to study art ln order to be a member of our club h Anyone can learn to appreclate art When you learn how to analyze a plcture your enjoyment of all plctures IS ln creased You become more observant of all beautxful objects and scenes Our club meets every other Thursday at the Art Museum where we hear a most dellghtful speaker Mlss Powell Many of you have probably heard about some of the exhlbltxons held at our clty Art Museum They are most entertammg especlally w1th the explanatlons MISS Powell g1ves of the plctures We hold busmess meetmgs on the Thursdays that we don t attend the Museum Our sponsors thxs year have been Mxss Rowan and Mlss Hazeltlne both of whom have helped us a great deal ln our act1v1t1es Our members have many dellghtful tlmes together We have splen d1d entertalnments whlch are planned by our soclal committee Indoor partles are held 1n the wmter t1me but when sprlng comes elther a hlke or a plcmc IS suggested for after a long winter we en3oy gettmg out into the open Our club plns are ln the shape of a little artist s palette One has to attend at least a year 1n order to be ellglble for a pm but It IS very Worth whlle havmg New members are welcome to 10111 at the begm nmg of each new term The club dues are Hfty cents a term We feel to be an actlve member Flrst Term Officers Second Term Marlon Wlnd Presldent Edmee Moellman Dorothy Lehnertz Vlce Presldent Llllxan Beck Natalle Sanders Secretary Rose Tropp Exleen Mlller Treasurer Vlolet Zxervogel .L. X n ..-,x, ' 4 ln-Y - ---X - -W 35 'Y l 1i! T? 'arg -'sf' : Cr - - --rf -agzk -: -' igs Y W , by . . . . D 15 - A l .U , . i . 0' o u sure that after you have attended some of our meetings, you will want F. ' f . 'f IB ' x v 'yl I. .,.r n s v X 'l,lf, lfll' I lf'V x K1 1 1 2-'-'. , ' E Liffbf gi W If f- 5155-fQL:-k g KG- , WV 1 The Round Table HE Round Table, a literary organization, you murmur. Oh. -y ,,g'af, I prefer a club that sounds more interestinv more exciting. Do I hear someone Sllghtlfla the merits of a literary 55 club? Can it be possible that anyone has been kept in ivno rance concermno the activities of the Round Table, If so how enlightening would have been a visit to the club durmo the past term If you had but Cone up to room 329 on any Friday afternoon your opinion mioht now be very different There you would have found Miss Ueberle the sponsor and a Group of Girls l1sten1nO intently to the person presentlno the program But you would have wondered at that far away look in their eyes Incredulous as it may seem these girls without once havino left their seats had been with a scene painter in Russia' Perhaps if you had chosen another Friday you would have found them adventurlno in France or Spam or some other country on the Continent If you visit the club thls term you will find the members enjoyino drama by modern playwriohts a prooram which promises to be as inter estma as that of the precedino term Perhaps you also will want to Join the Journey of exploration into the realm of books In that case be sure to equip yourself properly By brmoinff a G averaoe in Enolish for the preceding term and attendmo three meetinos and a social you may make an application to Join our forces Sometimes the hardy adventurers of the Round Table feel the need of social activities ln order to make them more eaver and refreshed for future travel Each term there are three soclal events At the beffmninv of the term a New ay party is grven for prospective members at the end of each term a party is held in honor of the semors who are to leave the club Dur1n0 the fall term there IS always a Christmas party the spr1nO term the mothers of the members are entertained at a tea First Term Mary Wilson Mary Williams Dorothy Westermeyer Frances Enoland Carol Saunders Officers Second Term Vice President Dorothy Westermeyer Secretary Carol Saunders Treasurer Dorothy Chappell Proffram Chairman Myra Goldstem Sero eant at Arms Evelyn Rubin 14 rg., W D H f' D7 D 1 . . .D - , J: jg. . I . . . a ' v . A . 5 . . . S . b . , y v b O. . . U . . S . - . . . . y A. , . . b . V . - . . . S . , . V .D , - 5 . . . - . b . S U , ' . . . Y. U ,, Q I . f . v ' O C D b . I . I . U ,, . ,, D D ' . . . . . D Q . . D. . b J . K. . : U . 5 . . 1 in . S . I Frommet Feinstein r....,.,,,,,, ,......, P resident ......,,,,.,.........,.r........,. Ruth Bowen 5 ' '----------'4---t-----' 2: i '- A'-- ,, ....,....,,..ulll,l,...., g ......,,,.,l.... .. -N N N. -N N L: fa E. N N N N X'-2 . Y :ii - f- 1:1 fx:.f-- ,JX - f-J?-F- The Soldan Dramatic Guild 1 Q., , NE of the most popular and busiest rooms in the school 3 ' - 5 result of winning the annual Dramatic League Tourna- I A ment with Austin Strong's The Drums of Oude, the Guild, Tm during the past year seems to have been 204. As a 4 E Q 1 ,, under the supervision of Miss Lucas, has retained its line reputation. Last fall the curtain opened on our theatrical activities with Kelly's The Flattermcf Word The play was produced in October for the Woman s Exposition at the Arena The second production on our program was the Christmas play From the Four Corners It was written by Lois Moore one of the prominent Guild members and was presented four times for the Mother Club the Patrons Association the College Club and the school There were two speaking casts in this play which offered our members more opportunity for actual stage experience In November the Dramatic Guild voted to give as a major dra matic undertaklng Shakespeares Comedy of Errors Immediately the preliminary work was started and on March 18 another memorable event in Soldan s history took place with the successful presentation of the play Those who saw it realized the clever work and tireless energy that were put 1nto it by Miss Lucas and the cast The scenery lighting costummff and make up were excellent the club sponsor outdoing her self in each respect Amono the members of the cast the most out standin work was done by jay Hodges a graduatlnv member jay as the twln Dromios kept the audience in an uproar and Arden Peter son as the aged Aegeon brought tears to the eyes of many Others carrymo leadin roles were Georgine White Ellen Ann Schackner Mary Williams Mauthe Frech Gregory Lucy and Bobby Swain The entire cast numbered over sixty Because of the educational value of a Shakespearean play the Guild offered as a gift to the school a second performance of Comedy of Errors The cast as a whole feels that its efforts have been amply repaid for both performances were quite enthusiastically received by the audiences As this book goes to press we are trying to decide on a play with which to enter the tournament held between the amateur dramatic roups of St Louis and St Louis County First Term Officers Second Term jay Hodges Vice President Lucille Miller Ruth Baker Secretary Mary E Wilson joe K johnson Treasurer Joe Barr 149 ss ' '9 b . . . y u 'Y ' ' - a . . , - cv 1 ' ' 5' 1 Y Y ' , . . . , . - . . , H ,, . , . l . , . . . . . . ' , . . , by ' v ' . , ' . on . I ta 1 a ' 1 s . i ' v 5 1 ' . Y . O. . . ci o v r 9 1 Y ' 9 ' , l Y If VY - 1 s 1 Y U . . D . . . Eileen Ogden ..............,. ,, .............. President ..................... ,....., , ,Joe K. Johnson The Forum 5-. HE Forum which w1ll celebrate 1ts first blrthday next Sep fin 5' tembel IS a group of glrls orvamzed to dxscuss modern questlons current events and literature of the present day U Mr Lyon temporarily accepted the sponsorshlp and gulded 8 the club through 1tS period of organlzatlon Soon after wards Mr Welch accepted th1s oflice and IS now sponsor of the club Although the Forum has existed for less than two terms lt boasts a membershlp of about twenty glrls The program usually conslsts of a short talk a debate and a book revlew Sometlmes the entire group partlclpate 1n the program each member makmv a brlef comment on some angle of the subject 1n ques tlon After the program a general dlscusslon follows whlch gives the members an opportunlty to express thelr oplmons The purpose of these programs and dxscusslons IS to teach the members to speak Hu ently and easlly and to express thelr thoughts clearly The Forum IS plannmg a party and also a SCTICS of programs to be based on the Washlnoton Bxcentenmal Flrst Term Officers Second Term Ruth Wool V1ce Presldent Bernice Albert Sylvla Faler Secretary Treasurer Lottle Schuff l-10 U y . . . . 5 r ,, W, i . . . . 'Q -f f ,... .- v as f- 5- - . . l t 9 I b - ' l n . b . . . Edna Wool ..r,..e,,er,,r,,,e,,re,,e,,e,.,..,.. President v.,,... ...,.e,.,.,e,ee.r.,r,, ,.,, . . ,Sylvia Faier qv L' The Classzcal Club F you should ever chance by room 212 some Monday after Q51 noon and hear strange sounds 1ssu1ng from that v1c1n1ty pray don t be alarmed for lt wlll only be the Classlcal Club at one of 1ts b1week1y sesslons But those mysterlous no1ses9 ah but what language could be more myster1ous than Latm? Yes after all the 1ntell1gents1a Cahemlj must have thelr llttle d1vers1on too So our club has contlnued to meet to l1sten to reports on the l1ves of great Romans or on Roman publxc llfe and mzrabzle d1ctu to puzzle our heads 1n attempts to solve conundrums asked by our sponsor M1ss Cunmngham Here1n are l1sted a few of these rlddles ln order that you can see for yourself what fun we really have So 1f you understand Latm read on What IS the thmg that automob1le owners love to do? Answer res fracej What does the father expect the boy to do when he has seen weeds 1n the garden? V1d1t Qweed lt, And now that youve had a glance 1nto our classlcal l1ttle club wouldn t you l1ke to Joln us? Ollicers Presxdent Mary Wllson Secretary Treasurer Mary Wllllams Program Cha1rman M1ldred Becker 1 1 'I V M 4. wg- g ,...,., , - F l f p J f - ' f 'Z ' , , 'I 5 3 . fl -Hy 1' ' V fr ' 1 W , -gff ' . ' b ' ., A WW, , f W 'fY'i',' 4' ' E 1 'V f Lfi, 1 5 A . 1 X ' Mr' 'Av ' 1 - 4' , t b ' I , I WM I My , . . ,V , I 3.-:2.,,z u ,11 XA ' F, . . . . . .11 ,. . , f v , . . . V Z ' . .5 . . . . . 1 , . , 1 - , . 3 1 1 , . , . ' 1 lr as ' n ' ' 17 ' , . . . 1 , . . . 5 Fleur de Lrs Mlglmg HE Fleur de L1s Soldan s French Club was organxzed 1n the 'Um 4- ' fall of 1929 It has been sponsored by several French teach ers The present sponsor IS M1ss Wxllemsen 5 The purpose of our club 1S to glve the student an oppor 3 tunlty to become better acqua1nted w1th the French lan uage and the French speakmg people A student often desxres greater opportumty to speak French than can be glven m the work of the class room Thls opportumty IS afforded every Thursday at three oclock by the French Club for at every meetm We speak only ln French A student may become a member of the Fleur de Lxs xf he IS tak mg French three or a hlgher term of French and has attalned ln this study no less than an M average So you see we really have a select little roup of members Durxng the year we have glven several d1alogues played games read and acted plays and had a party and for the benefit of French students not ln our club we have held open house F1rst Term Otlicers Second Term Irene Mackey Vxce Presldent Betty Wemtraub Mary Spudxc Secretary Treasurer Dlana Brown Betty Wexntraub Program Chalrman Betty Wexntraub 1 2 F - - . y , , A . . Cr 77 . - 5? . . . Il iad ' . . ' - U - . g . D . U. . . . . , . U . 7 b ' . . , . . . 65 !9 . U g . . U. . I ! l , Z ' li !l Berthola Pirosh ...............,.....,.,.,.. President ....,..............,...,., Dorothy Mathews Los Cas tellan os h L club espanol de la escuela Soldan se llama Los Cas Qi tellanos Los mlembros se reumeron todos los mlercoles en la clase numero 304 con su dlrector que es el senor Maya X '2 La 1dea del club es fomentar el mteres por el castellano en re K A los alumnos de la escuela de Soldan Tuvmmos el ano pasado var1os programes mteresantes cantamos canclones populares espanolas se Jugaron dlferentes Juegos y algunos mxembros nos hablaron de los palses de habla espanol Tamb1en tuvlmos hermosas vlstas de Mepco y Espana en la pantalla E1 club espanol de la escuela Roosevelt nos mvlto a una fiesta para celebrar el amversarlo de la Umon Pan Amerxcana Los Castellanos respondxeron a tan Urata mvltaclon en la fiesta nos dnvertlmos mucho ambos clubs E1 club 1nv1ta a que se allsten en el todos cuantos tengan mteres en la lengua espanola Pm-ner Semestre D1rectxva Segundo Semestre Presldenta Cella Tucker Laura Hlat Vxcepresldenta Hlldegarde Shrlber Rosella Sorkm Secretarla Rosella Sorkm Wxlma Hoffmann Tesorera Laura H1at l i - I l I n N U : .5 . , , . t Celia Tucker, ................................. ' ....------..------.............. ' aging eww an Ha Ivrza t Xa, FTER Hebrew at Soldan had become estab11shed ln the cur 'W' rlculum a Hebrew club for the students was orgamzed H Ivr1a was formed for the purpose of bmdmg together 1nto one group all those 1nterested m Hebrew At first as was to be expected obstacles to our efforts presented them selves and members were few But as tlme went on 1nterest was k1n dled obstacles were overcome and membersh1p 1ncreased We now meet every Wednesday after school hours We dlscuss varxous toplcs and report on the 11ves of men prom1nent ln Hebrew ht erature and ln Pa1CSt1I1lal'l llfe we occaslonally play Hebrew games and read short Hebrew poems and rlddles At present we are 1nterested m collectmg materxal for a museum a museum of cur1os1t1es connected wlth the Orxent We already have some contrlbutlons many more have been prom1sed and are we belleve forthcommv First Term Oflicers Second Term joe Tachman Presndent lsadore Blkshorn Edna Wool Vlce Presldent Rose Lander Mmnette Schlmmel Secretary Mmam Sandmel Belle Kolker Treasurer Rosalxe Schucart l 4 p A 1 g l 1 we- fe sf ,I 1- fv,,,,v,g:ef1f 13:1 Kr 25 L ,G-elsif: 'A 41-gf wwf' J? V , X . i -typ - k ' Y: 1 w V sv , . a r Q r s u 1 1 1 were 1 ' ' , . ' - , - I - , ! Q ' 7 - , 5 Y b' 5 The Camera Club 1 N keepmg wlth 1ts purpose to promote mterest 1n photogra X 15- n phy at Soldan the Camera Club plans at the begmnlng of St each term a serles of programs to be glven on Wednesday b afternoons ln room 117 for the club and other Interested Soldamtes The programs are composed of talks and demonstratlons on mter estlng topics such as prlntmg enlargxng Sepla color exposure and any other of the many subjects whlch dehght the actlve photographer The talks are prepared by varlous members of the club with an occa slonal outslde speaker or an especlally mstructlve talk by Mr Lyon the sponsor Movles are also shown and dlscusseo Monthly contests on chosen subjects are held and the plctures submltted are drscussed m a club meeting All the pictures m the contest are thrown on the screen and mlnutely analyzed wlth respect to outstandlng faults and merlts Besxdes the regular programs the club enjoys hlkes and V1S1tS to dry Frrst Term OFHcers Second Term Kenneth Dougan Presldent Grant Russell Abe L1pS1tZ Vlce President Kenneth Dougan Maurlce Mannhelm Secretary Treasurer Maurice Mannhe1m 1 ,iff ' . . M554 . e ll eu My ' , plate companies and other places of interest. The Botan1caI Club -f' EORGE WASHINGTON the great lover of the out of 5' fi doors m1ght well be 1nterested 1n the 11tt1e group of Soldan 1 iq., 1tes who ather each Wednesday afternoon 1n room 114 ln pursult of scxentlfic knowledge under the guldance of M1ss Pfelfer Every thxrd Saturday h1kes are taken to var1ous polnts around St Louls where many specles of plant and anlmal llfe are studied and fine collectlons are made At present the membershlp of the club totals about thrrty five boys and glrls Anyone 1nterested ln biology IS 1nv1ted to Joln The club has adopted the pollcy of lvmg at the beglnnmg of each semester a party for Soldan puplls who have a hx h average 1n blology thereby hopmg to bam new members Fxrst Term Oflicers Second Term Jerome Klem Presldent Jerome Klem Vxrgmra Harszy Secretary Mary Hurst VlfblH13 Bosse Treasurer M1lt0n Kemer Nma Stemson Ser eant at Arms Vxva Wllhams l i , 7 ,vw , - , A an , . . . . - Lf , U . . Q -11.5 . g. . on . . . .OI U . . U D ! . G U . . CNoneQ ...........,........,..............,,....v Vice President ..,.,...,,...........,,, Ethel Morris . U. . vllwg . , 5 The Pxckerzng Club ,gf K CCASIONAL star tnps by means of a four and one half 'ax 5 lnch refractmg telescope are made by the PlCkeI'1I1g Club SQ whose membership consxsts of a broup of Soldan students mterested 1n the study and observatlon of the heavenly bod les and in the l1ves of breat scxentxsts who have contrlbuted to the advancement of astronomy Under the sponsorshlp of Mr Alfred Davls the club has purchased for its llbrary valuable books whlch are avallable to 1ts members 1n the preparatlon of weekly reports on some phase of astronomy The club holds membershxp m the Astronomlcal Soclety of the PHCIFIC and also ln the Amerlcan Assoclatlon of Varlable Star Observers world wlde organizations from both of which lt recelves pamphlets contam rn accurate and up to date mformatxon on the planets stars nebulae meteors and other celestlal bodles First Term Oflicers Second Term Davxd Goldrm Presldent Oscar Schmellg Frances Ruppert Secretary Rose T ropp Georbe Glllerman Treasurer Allen Blomenkamp Oscar Schmellg Llbrarlan Sam Goldenberb 1 . ' ll ' I! - .55 tv . . ' Q x Q' f ' . . G. W 1 ,- ' . . . U . . . Y 9 . g - - . . y , , , . , , 6 . . t, ----------...------------A-- ------------------------------ LeRoy Deason ,.,,,,,.,,...r..........,,,,.. VICE Preszdent ......................r. Milton Kemer Cr ' ...,,,,.,.,,,,..,,.,.... ............,......... 57 N N N N N N 4 :N ff -1 .' ' Ziifi-'rv '- g52g in-if 1121--gli. 1w,:,i ,,::-,f3rE?'f1,.- The Chemistry Club HIS stuff won't react as it should, complains Harold Zaslav, QI' who is elbow-deep in a tricky demonstration. li Try heating it, suggests Molly Jauncey. Try stirring I fffiff it, seconds Irv Reif. You're crazy: all it needs is a little Ja J if Pb fC:H,O:j,. 3 HjO, snorts Herschel Roman, the super- technical. At this point thirty-odd spectators rise up in wrath demanding tangible results Only Harry Rothmans superb tact IS sufhclent to pacify them Every Tuesday afternoon some such scene is enacted in room 111 where the Chem Club holds its meet1n0s The room is always crowded to overflowmo with students undaunted by the sinister fumes of an alchemlst s den Soldanites will not be surpr1sed if some day this enter pr1s1n0f organization blows the roof off ln an explosion or announces the dlscovery of some great principle destined to revolutionize mdus tr1al chemistry Enthusiasts rejoice in the opportunity to dabble in acids and juggle test tubes unhxndered for perhaps the most fasc1nat1n0 of all the pro Grams are those in which members volunteer to display their skill by U1Vll'l0 demonstratlons Every conceivable product from dry ice to toothpaste is subject to analysis and synthesis at the hands of these 1nqu1s1t1ve amateurs For variety and to give a valuable 1ns1Oht into modern science at work trips are taken to local industrial plants Talks by guest speakers movies and slides all such projects effectlvely stimulate mterest The visit paid last term to the Pevely Dairy Company had a special appeal for the members in the shape of Generous samples of ice cream Every term there is a party characterized by more or less sc1ent1Ec dancing To enjoy such act1v1t1es technical knowledge is not essential inter est in chemistry being the prime factor Sclence students however find that participation in the club s proorams makes more vivid the routine class work Membership is unhmited and visitors are always welcome at meet mos Mr Althouse has sponsored the oroamzation durlno the sprino Mr Kruh was the former sponsor First Term Officers Second Term Lewis Johnson President Harry Rothman Harry Rothman Vice President fNonej Alfred Comensky Treasurer Harold Zaslav Marguerite Gebhardt Secretary William Wrivht julia Mart1n Librarlan Molly Jauncey Harold Zaslav Assistant Librarian jack Leon 1 fn ' b . , . . 2: :iz :fs 21: zf: 2: 2: 1 D . D . , . . . . . 5 v s ' D A g - , 'v b , . I s - 5 ' v 3' . ' - V M - v v 5 . Y - b ' ' b b D' 5. The Ph1Iai'el1c Soczety iq ITH great enthuslasm the Soldan Ph1late11c Socmety popu larly known as the Stamp Club has completed 1ts thlrd mterestmg and educatlonal year of study 1n the Held of stamp collectmg The programs have conslsted of the followlnb auctlons talks by members and outslde speakers and contests The contests mcludmg cross word puzzles Jumbled stamp terms and ldentxficatron of stamps 1n varlous ways have brought much pralse to thelr or1 ma tors OutS1d6 room 304 our weekly CXhlblt arranbed by varlous mem bers IS an evldence of the 1nterest of the collectors Under the actlve leadership of Mlss Hlldah Levy our sponsor the club has made an 1ntens1ve study of the new Washmgton Bxcentennlal Postabe Stamps lssued january 1 1932 as part of the nat1on wrde Wash mgton Blrthday Celebratxon Exhlblts resultm from thxs study were shown 1n our Second Annual Sprm Exhlblt 1n the Hrst floor corr1dor durmg the week of Aprll 11 Two of our present members Carl Lattner and Dw1 ht Warren have recelved the merlt badbe award of the Boy Scouts of Amerlca for stamp collectmb Fxrst Term Ollicers Second Term 41511.10 Julia Martm V1ce Presldent Olxve May Burke Ohve May Burke Secretary Paulme Hexsler Raymonq Palmer Treasurer Carl Lattner mo -:qf.!T ,x ' , ' lf ' O.. ' , 5 ' 7 - 1 . 1 r U g ' D . . , U . - , . . . . I U U . . - . - 7 S - zs b .OI 1 33 ' . . or . . G. George R, Murray ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,r, ,,,,,,,, P resident .,...,,,................ George R. Murray The Chess Club 2 df, ISTORY books fall to record whether or not George Wash ! lngton was a chess enthuslast but as a mllltary gen1us of the first rank he must have entertalned a wholesome respect L-9Vr7 no small part of his mllltary PYOHCICIICY For besldes bemg an entertalnmg game chess teaches patlence perseverence and strategy The Soldan Chess Club under the generalshlp of Mr E J Math1e meets each Frxday during the school year 1n room 201 So engrossing IS thls game of wooden men that the club has never been known to adjourn before four oclock Mr Mathle s a1d de camps durm the fall semester were Sam G01 lub presxdent Everett Yount secretary and oe Sllverstem treasurer At the begmnmg of sprmg maneuvers the staff was changed to joe S11 verstem presldent jacob Helsler v1ce presld nt BOYIS Mackler sec retary and Nathan Thaller treasurer In thxs years sklrmxsh wlth a well drxlled Roosevelt squad the Soldan chessmen came off second best 161 2 ' '5'. -s ' ' A ges Ir: . . Z . . . sa 1 . for the game, to the playing of which Napoleon attributed 1 .3 wi - I '- . . . . . . . . , . - - . g - , : , 1 J , - . . . G U .1 l 1' Q1 GAA it- HE Glrls Athletlc Assoclatlon IS the only Soldan athletlc 'ln gf' amzatxon for xrls Smce xts or amzatlon 1n 1910 It has been one of the most popular of Soldans many clubs It now has a membershlp of about one hundred fifty All vmrls V41 of the th1rd term and above are ellglble Every fall after several weeks of practlce an 1nter term volley ball tournament IS held Lxkewlse ln the sprln the club has a basketball tournament Membersh1p on the class teams ln these tournaments helps V ln earnlnb the Soldan S At the close of each season a party IS held ln the bym Pr1zes are 1ven to the wmners of the varlous contests Not the least enjoyable part of the party 1S experlenced 1n the lunch room after the contests For some the best part of the afternoon comes after the refreshments have been served and the coveted Soldan Ss and M1ssour1 Ms are awarded They are usually presented by Mr Klndervater Super vlsor of Physlcal Educat1on These awards are based on polnts earned for achlevement ln bfnnastlcs and scholarshlp M1ldred Becker Sarahelen Henry Ethel Morrls jane Mullen Molly Port Pauhne Stlmson and Marlon Wmd recelved S s last fall The followmb b1rls recelved the Soldan S thls sprmo Bern1ce Ansel V1r01n1a Barrloz Ruth Bowen Lou1se Cauohey Anna Mane Goehler Edna Gelssel Pauhne Handelman Flora Hauhart jane Henze Molly jauncey Evelyn Rubm Mary Lou Traynor and Dorothy Wes termeyer Dur1n0 the fall of 1931 Evelyn Deutch Mar uerlte Gebhardt Eliza beth Ham Ethel Morrls Molly Port V1r 1n1a Seabrave and Paulme Stlmson were awarded M1ssour1 M s The followm were awarded M1ssour1 M s th1s sprln Vlfolflla Barrloz Mlldred Becker Ruth Bowen Loulse Cau hey Anna Marle Goehler Flora Hauhart Mary Hurst Molly Jauncey Marxdorls Mallon Evelyn Rubln and Dorothy Westermeyer Frrst Term Officers Second Term Mary Lou Traynor Presldent Ethel Morrls Marldorls Mallon V1ce Presldent Leta Workman Mlldred Becker Secretary Treasurer Lou1se Cauffhey if. r 'S 13 -' 1243 -if rwAf,1fo.f1..-E ',k , , -.7 Q' 4 . , t X , 7 25' - 1 M 1 ,L Q., X ,, ,,-A ,E Y, 1 , ' . . . Y., . rv U or if ang. O D O ' 'cs ' f .- 'f . jqvffi.-11, ' ....Z, Q' . . J fi, . . D 1 y ' . i . . . . OA D ' ' 0, K5 V1 . . or . 0. . . . b . ll 7 U! ' ' KK 9 iv U . . , ' . . oi' A . . . 7 ! S U ' - ' ' ' as v n v v - . i. . H ,, . . I . o' o bf x v 1 3 9 1 v v v . y 1 7 - . I on . - za v D ' . . O. . 0 I Y Y Y D 7 . - - ,, v ,- . . . H , ,, . . . I. . O 0 ' 5 D ' D . . - or , v Q 5 v - v 1 v v , . -N N N N ' T- 'YT A- fp-Xwfk flfkfr The Gym Club .3 HE Gym Club or anized in 1913 by Dr. Koeni . is perhaps . ' the most beneficial club in Soldan. A threefolcl purpose ' ,lin g 53,-1, ives this club its distinction. The idea which 'Doc had 1 -' in mind when he orffanized the club was to provide bene- 'si-ff ficial exercise to 'ive healthful recreation and to increase the interest in gym work There are three roups in the Gym Club The third division is made up of boys who require quite a little instruction to be able to appear in the exhibitions the second division is composed of members almost ready for exh1b1t1on work and the first division is the exhibi tion roup This broup performs at the various pro rams iven by the Gym Club and aids Doc 1n instructin the lower divisions An emblem des1 ned by Sam Rosso a senior member of the club is awarded to the raduatin members of the club who have done outstandin work The requirements are to accomplish a rant swm on the horizontal bar and a hand stand on the parallel bars Frank Wachter was awarded the emblem last term In the program iven by the Gym Club this semester the boys built pyramids on the ladders In the most spectacular pyramid built two boys one on each ladder were suspended in mid air by two others who were holdinb on to the ladders Each boy had a special place in the pyramid to which he went by counts Nine Gym Club members participated in this exhibition which took three weeks to prepare The more efficient members have not 1ven many pro rams this term in order to spend more tlme in developing boys who will be able to carry on the hlffh standard of the club Now the boys are workmb on a fine prooram to be given in the future durin a special aud session The exhibition iven by six or seven selected boys will consist of tant sw1n s kips backraises hip circles and flyaways on the horizontal bar Sam Rosso a senior member plans to o to a gymnastlc school to study gym work Dave Feldman also a senior has ambitions to become a professional wrestler The Gym Club wishes to thank Dr Koeni for the fine work he has done in providin the boys of Soldan with such a beneficial OI' 3I1lZ3t1OI1 First Term Frank Wachter David Feldman Salvatore M3I'1alC1 john Minton Officers Second Term President David Feldman Vice President Allen Howard Secretary Treasurer Salvatore Manalci Llterary Editor Sumner Van Pelt ill' O ' o ' c :J -:J A ' r 1 I O , .v rw f' ' D X 4- l ea y Q, . ' ' Ci V! g . I . . . . . : , V - ' o' ' o' ' O ol D ' D D . U ,, . . . g . . . Q. g 1 v . or . or D D . on . . O. . O 'Ci ' D D n OA. . C! 1 1 ' . or D . . , . . O. OA . . D D . . . or . . . ov b . V Y. . . or - H N . D b ' . . . OV. . . . O.. - Y D ' b g v 1 v ' n - . on A . v v 3, ll , !i ' ' ' - v y . .or ' b . . . O. . . D O' . . I D 55 UAL... Soldan s Cheerleaders sm S S old d d a n S old a n Soldan'Soldan'Soldan'W1th v the first staccato syllable the cheerleaders swlng mto actlon B leaning Soldan s msplrmg Old Yell The boys movements 4 are rhythmlc and m unlson m leadmb thexr repertolre of ggi cheers The Hrst term of thls school year four cheerleaders were elected mstead of the customary three Howard Demeke Bob von Wxlke Fred Ruoff and Marvyn Stern Mr Welch IS sponsor of the cheerleaders and g1VCS valuable advlce and constructlve cr1t1c1sm The boys are greatly 1nterested ln thelr work and meet 1n the rear of the audxtorlum durmg the lunch perlods to practlce old yells and orlblnate new ones At the games the boys work hard and are often Wflflglng wet from exertlon ln performlng the1r antics on the Hoor A certam amount of responsxbxllty xs placed upon the boys shoulders at the bames They must try to keep the crowd IH a bood natured sportsmanllke mood advocating falrness Above all the teams must be supported to the utmost by orbanlzed cheermb on the part of the spectators lt I ff - - - - - - - - - -- - - . . . ' ffl 1 V 1- 1 - -' aa as 1 lb 0 1 c u -u n n M J U : Y U , . . . . . .o'. i . .. . , U i on ' 1 s ' 1 U ' ' 0- . Hi SPORTS 1 NX ff' - ' ' ,1- i f X N ,W ,L . . Q M.. , . ,, ., Q 'cgice-.f2!ffSQi7Wl Football lfglii R COOK resumed h1s posmon as coach for the 1931 football Q I season reolacln Mr Polster who was transferred to Beau k mont Around a nucleus of five lettermen Butts Fa1nt1ch ask Mmkey jeans and Handley Coach Cook bullt a team 4'-5' wh1ch dropped but two ames throu hout the season In thexr four pre lea ue games the Gold and Brown dlsplayed both a powerful round and aerlal attack and a stubborn defense allowln thelr oal l1ne to be crossed but once ln ty1n Maplewood and 1n defeat mn McBr1de St Louls U H1 h and Prlnclma Openln their lea ue season w1th Central the Gold and Brown met an unexpectedly stron eleven a safety however netted Soldan two polnts wh1ch declded the ame The second lea ue bame wlth Cleveland was featured by a beau tlfully executed pass Mmkey to Hudson whlcl' resulted m a touch down and brou ht vlctory to the team In thexr ame with an msplred Beaumont eleven the Cook men were defeated 14 7 Soldan and Roose velt once a a1n engaged ln the last leabue bame wh1ch has always resulted 1n a hotly contested battle Soldan opened the scorlno wlth a safety but vn the second perlod Roosevelt recovered a blocked punt behmd the Soldan Soal l1ne for a touchdown and the score was 6 2 Roosevelt fallm to make the extra pomt In the last few mlnutes of the final perlod the Crlmson team by way of another safety made the score 8 2 defeatln Soldan 1n the hardest foubht bame of the season Thls ame was dlsallowed on account of the meh lblllty of a Roosevelt player The br1ll1ant playmb of Handley Post and Falntlch Oamed them berths on the all star h1 h school eleven Post s sure toe arnered many extra polnts for the Cook men after touchdowns whlle the defenslve work of Handley and Famtlch was outstandm Braudrlck s able man a ement Hudson s and Ahearn s plun01n and Mmkey s bullet passes accounted for much of the round alned by the Gold and Brown Ba well and Flubel at the halfs also dlsplayed a fine brand of football The end posxtlons were excellently handled by Handley Butts and Buell Post and Jeans at tackle were the equals of any palr 1n the lea ue and they were ably asslsted by Mattel and Larner Fa1nt1ch and Barry at the Guard posltlons added much to the strength of the team s defense whlle Herlt had a Great season at center Claude Hutson who also played a Fme game at center when needed IS one of the most promxslnv l1ne men for next season Card Glass Wetzel Hassemer Zorumsky and Button ave Fme account of themselves when they were ln the games Soldan s fine football team IS the product of the earnest work and care of Coaches Cook, McEachron, and jones, and of Tralner McCarty Ili f- A 'ET W ,f1--4,,j?'Qf::-f- F 'rife -tif ,Ig -W , ,- ', f , . , N -Y , A K J ' X fx . 5 1 f- n rg -W fh f-1' 'H - - ---Q 4:?: -, Y -T.e- - - I . . . ,. . ... - . 7 o' - 1 - D - 1 1 . - , . Q V G 1 x Q. ' o o' I X D D . - O V - D . ' ' O- 3 ' a . O . . . O . - D D . . . 1 . or . . . . O . O g , . . D , 1 . :D 3 . or 9 D 1 1 1 1 o o o ' - D ' b W 1 1 1 ' O . . O . . . D ' C o' ' ' ' o' o ' t, 1 ' :1 Q . . on . . - L 1 1 . . OA . . ,O . . . . 1 1 - ' o' ' o' o' 1 5 ' . O . . . . . . s g . . . O . . , . 1 1 5 - 1 - or of b ' D - V . . . . , o' - D. I 1 1 ,- . 1 1 :CS 1 as Q' ' o' o' ' o'- C D ' D o' ' n V 7 ' . . U O Y . . - , , D 1 5 - 1 x 1 1 ' - 1 1 1 1 1 cr ' - D x ' 1 . Tennzs 6 -Q, OLDANS tenms team ran true to form thxs year as t e ' ' ip, 5 .I Plao men ran thelr wmmno streak to three consecutlve 4 Captam Elllot Levm who has been undefeated ln league MII play for the past three seasons featured the tournament Almost as outstandlng was the stellar play of Theodore G1tt second smbles player The other members of the team were as follows Hough ton Hallock thlrd slnbles player and Leo Sacher and Harold Hennmg doubles men Under the skllled guldance of Coach Plat, these five complled a splendld record totalmg twelve v1ctor1es wlth but four defeats Sol dans netsters swept through Central Beaumont and Roosevelt losmg but two matches Keener competltlon was found ln Cleveland how ever to whom two matches were lost Besldes Wlnfllng the clty champlonshlp Soldan was ably represented ln the state tournament by Hyman Adler and Elhot Levm who ranked thlrd and fourth respectxvely H ,, ,, 4 , , wwe, . X ' ' ' , h ,ff ' 5' cf M i champlonshlps. , . I U . Z - , ' ' ff : ' , . A . U . 9 , A ' - ! 3 9 Q , ' , . l 1 , . Golf , HE season of 1931 32 was a great one for the old Scotch l 'f Al, game at So an To begm w1th a Gold and Brown quartet won an un . ofiiclal Pubhc Hlgh School League champlonshlp m the fall of 1931 by defeatlng teams from each of the other publlc high schools The boys m the pxcture are W1ll1am Mason Floyd Davls jay Straus and Ed jamleson These students comprxsed the vlctorxous team and were awarded athletlc letters jay Straus was the member of the team to wm a leg on the new Wlllxam L Mason golf trophy by defeatlng Floyd Davis ln the finals of the annual autumn match play tournament The trophy w1l1 become the permanent possesslon of any boy who wlns three legs whlle at Soldan Largely through the efforts of Mr P L Stavseth Gold and Brown golf sponsor the Hlgh School League Board and the prlnclpals of the hxgh schools have ofliclally recogn1zed golf as an accepted sport and have declded to award letters to the members of the golf teams Thls actxon puts golf on the same basls as the other xnterscholastlc sports 1 l 'gg iQ? -ld: 4 5 . . A . .. ' , . . . U . ! Basketball I-9597, ARCH 1932 marked the close of a very dxsastrous season 1n Soldan basketball hlstory Wlth four lettermen return ,O Soldan had a fine team at the start of the season The L! fm West Enders won two out of three practlce games ' In league play the Whlte men succeeded 1n down1n0 Central Cleveland and Roosevelt but lost to Beaumont the eventual champlon by one polnt At th1s trme Soldan s tltle hopes were decld edly dlmmed when Bob Lahey joe K1n and several substltutes were declared 1nel1g1ble The mexperlenced mater1al avallable was unable fully to F111 the shoes of the 1nel1 1ble veterans After loslng all four ames 1n the second round of play the Soldan Mentors new cohorts wound up 1n fourth place In the dlstrlct tournament the Gold and Brown Hve seemed to awake wxnnlng games from the stronff K1rkwood and Maplewood quln tets only to be ellmlnated 1n the seml finals by St Louls U H1 h Although thls years team was not so successful Coach Whlte deserves great credlt for burldxn up a steady aggressrve combmatron Paul Braudrlck was one of the outstandmg players ln the lea ue whlle Art Mueller Ted Gxtt Paul Kleln and Howard Butts also played well Next year wxth co captains elect Klem and Mueller returnm for serv xce together wxth those boys now melwzble and other new materlal whlch shows up at the start of every season we all hope that the M1ch1 gan Cup Wxll be brou ht back to Soldan for the fourth tlme m five years I r I r !' B ' , -1911! g , , S., . , . - ft I - ll f on . - . . v 1 y v . . . . , . . 1 - ' . . on . 1 by . .of . . . . . .of . 1 D . o' ' ' 5 r , 0' ' - . . . .- . .og , . . 5 . - . , . 1 i . , . g , UO . . . I 0' g : y s 1 ' . - . . v . O- - 1 D y ' 5 . , - V , on . . b . --. 1- -911 M76 354, Baseball SQ OACH WHITES bflbht prospects for a hlghly successful Q' dl baseball team th1s season were somewhat dlmmed by the faxlure of Bob Lahey pltcher and captam to make his grade But wlth an entlre veteran lnfield lncludxng lettermen How ard Butts Paul Braudrlck Max Harper and Joe Plrrone returnmg for actlon thxs sprmg the Soldan mne should make a faxrly ood showlng The team has shown that characterlstlc fightmg sp1r1t of all Soldan teams and should go far ln thls season s competltlon Entermg the schedule w1th msufhclent practlce Soldan dropped the Hrst league ame to Cleveland 10 2 Browns form on the mound at such an early perrod was hrghly commendable In the second league Game wnth McK1nley, Braudrlck and Harper paced the batsmen, each one gettmg three h1ts out of four chances, whlle Soldan won 11 3 m seven mnmgs Playing a fine brand of baseball, the White men won a Game and dropped one 1n thelr two engagements wlth C B C The next league game wxth Beaumont was the best played of the season, and although Soldan lost 4 2, the ball played by the Gold and Brown was very promlslng Joe PIYTOHC could not be stopped thls game, and he got three out of four The team, whlch has already proven xts ment, alded by the loyal support of the student body, ought to be among the league leaders at the close of the season 1. z U will ' C ' - ' 35 fi! 7-l 2 , l i . 1 , l I ,A rl....J 1 5, 1 'F' J-, V ' J ' 'Of 'U fr' 1 ew- gi I . 1 s ' Q , ' ' V - Y Y Y 0' o', U . OI. . . U . . . D on . . , . . Y Q g 1 ' ' . .U . D D . . . b. U D N N N N Q 3 14 34 V 11 N 1 -12221 '61cQ?i?SQZQ41w aj Track Qing, ECAUSE enthuslasm has not been reat 1n track and field ,1 events of late Soldan has not produced a champ1onsh1p team for some years Th1S year however 1n sp1te of lack of entrles IH the wewht events the cmder stars seem destmed to accomphsh reat th1n s In meets w1th East St Louls Hwh Central and McBr1de Coach Plag s cohorts emeroed v1ctor1ous although they were unsuccessful 1n compet1t1on wlth Western Mllltary Academy In the Maplewood Relays the Gold and Brown contmgent were able to total only three po1nts Ed Kohlmeyer and Slrnon L1 ht placlnb thlrd and fourth ln the 220 yard dash respectxvely In the sen1or d1v1s1on Soldan w1ll be capably represented ln the dash events by L1 ht and Kohlmeyer L1 ht has been turnm 1n some fast performances thxs year and IS rated as one of the leadm., short d1stance men 111 the d1str1ct In Captaxn D1ck Br1el1 the c1nder men of other schools w1l1 dlscover strong compet1t1on 1n both hurdle events The best entr1es 1n h1 h Jump are Tebbets Garelsk1 Mueller Nxchols and Mlller In the pole vault Mlnkey and Harmon are havln a close race for top honors Mlnkey at present has the ed e L1 ht of dash fame IS also starrmff 1n the broad Jump G1tt and Koplar seem to be the best poss1b1l1t1es 1n the shot put Kohlmeyer Showers Schwartz berff and St1ller have recorded the best tlmes 1n the d1stance runs Tms years Jumor comb1nat1on promlses to be one of the best 1n many years Hutson has been doln well 1n the meets so far w1nn1n0 first place 1n the h1Cfh Jump and we1Uht ev nts Schulz and Benkof are starr1n 1n both the broad Jump and dashes Henry and B111 Schwartz are hkely prospects ln the pole vault and hurdles whlle Cave M1l1er Krasner and Ley are fast men 1n the dashes In the m1d et d1v1s1on Coach Plao IS handlcapped as usual by the fact that Blewett jumor H1 h takes most of the smaller cmder aspx rants Schmedeke however and Dav1d look ood 1n the Jumps and dashes wh1le Evans and Kottmeler should awe the other schools plenty of trouble Last year Soldan placed thxrd 1n the xnterscholastlc meet but won the Senlor d1v1s1on champ1onsh1p Klm Moore bore the burden of the sen1or team last year but Brlell and Mlller also earned poxnts Among the Jumors Handley Wembero Dempsey Nelson and St1ller starred Schwartz and Wasserkruo were the sole Gold and Brown representa t1VCS 1n the mldget d1v1s1on Most of these boys have returned for duty thls year, and Wlth the many newcomers, Soldan w1ll most llkely have a very successful season .3 ' v',Y- j?'-'wg -1 ,C 'r-,y.,P-Ae.-:f,.f-,4-1 ffl ,f1' J - X ft at . ,-J .1 P ' W ' - 1- fe-LA 4 ' fs, - '-Taz: E r ' 1 - Y Y -1 Liar' K ' g A Q 1' ,l V- L, . . . I' ' 5' , y Q - . - Q . b . ' . . .- o' o' ,., D D . . - . V, I . . za r v 1 t, 1 . v . .g . U . . . , . .Ol .or . O . za ' a a . . . on 1 e g 1 , . ' . . . or Q J ' a . on .O . b . b , 1 b - ' Y I - ev ' , . , . . . . . . . on . . . V ' a 1 5 . . . . A a a ' . U . . . ,C . , ,. , Y ' o rp . .ol . .- zz . G . . ' 7 v D . . OV. ' Y v , . v 5, 1 v - 6 - N N N N f N N N N f f , N ill! Q i g Trzflf Ein -'e g rife-Q-A A' The Wrestling Association HE Soldan Wrestling Association was officially organized, 'fi February 15. The Association, during its short existence, r and has laid the foundation for a probable varsity squad A- V U.- u' il . has accomplished a great deal. It is efficiently organized - next year. It has furnished physical development to its members between the football and baseball seasons and has been a source of enjoyment to a large number of students. This extraordinary success is due to the line leadership of Mr Granger who has worked tirelessly to obtain satisfactory results Before the club was organized a series of matches were given by a group of volunteers and within a few weeks after completlng the organlzation a show was planned The club obtained use of the gym where snappy and interesting workouts were held in preparation for a mammoth card to be staged 1n the audltorlum for the mat fans of Soldan On Friday April 15 a large and enthuslastlc crowd assembled in the aud to enjoy thoroughly the fine wrestling In the curtain raiser Roger s weight advantage was too big a handlcap to Forman who was downed in a little over nine minutes Koziatek and Oswald two fast llghtweights furnished an exciting whirlwind exhibition with Kozlatek comlng out on top after six minutes of battllng The Ahearn and Zorum skl heavyweight match was a n1p and tuck affair with honors about even for fourteen minutes but a half nelson applied to Zorumskl who was fast tiring Hl'llShCd the bout Club members had anticipated a classic between Bagwell and Osborne two well built and powerful middle welghts Bagwell however had to be replaced by Dan Fishell because of a recent injury Smiling Dans extra weight served him well in defeating Osborne who looked great in defeat The mam attraction was a bout between Feldman and White ending 1n a draw Both men clever wrestlers were very cautious and a rather slow performance resulted By request from the audience Koziatek and Osborne the classiest grap plers of the afternoon gave a slap bang ten minute exhibition ending ln a draw which event concluded the program Interscholastlc wrestling matches will be staged next semester fol lowing close on the heels of the football season and ending shortly before track With the promising material which has turned up so far we should be able to produce a strong team of grapplers for the inter school competition Officers Secretary Bill Severns Treasurer Allan Bagwell . g , , . : . ' ' ' ll S! 9 - A a 7 I 7 g. , . I . . b D 9 ' 7 7 ! , Z , 5, - 5 v ' ' 9 y 1 ' 2:- b 9 D ' , - , 7 1 ' , 5 ' r b ' v 3 b ' 2: S f ' b 5 U - President ...............................,....,,.................,................... . ......,,., Harry B. White 77 The Basketball Tournament 6, ,OW would you hke to take part m an excxtm hvely game fb' of basketball as a rest for your mmd from your stud1es Th1s IS how the glrls ln the G A A Basketball Tournament LAI'-15 The day for chooslng teams IS always anxlously looked for ward to by every blfl who comes to practlce after school Fmally the great day arrives and the tournament IS begun Everyone knows how proud a glrl IS to be captain of any squad So too every member of the basketball teams IS anxlous to hold that pos1t1on on her team Each week a d1fferent gxrl lS glven thls prxvxlege and IS allowed to choose her players Many of the games are hard fought and requlre qulck thmkmg and actmg Even the lower termers give the older gxrls a good shak mg up once ln a wh11e In splte of this the older lrls always seem to come out on top and so It happened agam The elghth termers who dlsplayed very good work every game came out wlthout losmg a match and were granted the champlonshnp The members of the Champlonshlp Team are as follows V1r 1n1a Barrloz Mlldred Becker Edna Gelssel Anna Marne Goehler Paulme Handelman Mafld0flS Mallon Molhe Port Evelyn Rubm Grace Tay lor and Mary Lou Traynor spend thelr t1me after school every Tuesday and Thursday. Y :yy I ' . - . . - T O.: . ' e U . Y . A I . on. . U. . . . . U - . . . . . A. U. . - . - . . i . . y g. - . U . . .on - , . on . . U . . I . g. . TT ER Y QA ff4 SL... Q9 rg. ! lt! N U ..... r 1 + H 1 517 , ..72I.x:K 4 ' fwfxsff ' 52111, Q!! Alf TIS X 1 imlj r Q q Y EX if F1 4 f M Q Q ' 'Y Q 5 Q K 4 Q ' V 411 R i i I K Q A Q -...-'-:: n '5': Si5fsf5'Rgm' j SUCH IS LIFE I m gomg for a walk, mother I called up the stanrs Do you thmk that s wxse jane? You Just amved m Holland last evemng You mxght get lost Well mother I m not a baby I can take care of myself All right then but be careful Be home ln an hour In less time than It takes to relate I had donned my wraps and left the house In wardly I was rather abashed that mother dxdn t show very much confidence m my abllxty to take care of myself just be cause xt s a foreign country xs no reason why I should get lost thought I It was rather cold so I set myself a brxsk pace I had an enjoyable tzme squandermg my money 1n some of the shops and then I walked down a wide street along a canal unt1l I came to one of the large woods for whmch Holland IS noted It was a pme woods and the pme needles whxch covered the ground were about sux Inches deep The fragrant odor evxdently affected my xmagx natxon because as I walked along I saw knights mounted on stalwart stalllons leading a tram of lovely ladles ln litters as they joumeyed to change thelr resxdences or perhaps to vxsxt the kmg And then far better than anythmg my xmagmatlon could create-I came upon an enclosure which surrounded a herd of deer They were very tame As I watched them they seemed to fulfill my conceptxon of grace It was not long before I came to the other sxde ofthe woods I recalled an earlier vxsxt to Holland and then everyth ng be came famxhar I remembered that two of my aunts had lived near by ln that section of the cxty but I couldn t remember on which street their house was situated On my left was one of the resldences of Napoleon III So engrossed was I nn my scrutmy of lt that I dxdn t notice the dxs appearance of the sun and so was utterly unprepared for the forthcoming shower In Holland when xt rams ut pours so you may easlly Amagme the shock I recexved when I became aware that I was In the center of one of these downpours I was so surprxsed that I just stood stxll untll I was thoroughly soaked and then I decxded that I had better do somethlng I thought that anythmg would be better than retracxng my steps all the way to grandad s house It seemed more logical to look for my aunt s house I hunted desper ately up and down all the numerous sur roundmg streets whnch had many curves and twxsts and tums lookmg for a large red brick house Everyone had gone m doors and as I was xn the resxdentnal 150 sectxon of the cxty I couldn t take refuge xn a store Then just as quickly as xt had dxsap peared the sun retumed and the ram ceased Everyone came out on the streets agam and resumed has walk and conver satuon The only object that spoxled the scene was I I walked very dejectedly down the street I felt as uncomfortable as I looked My tweed coat was soggy my dress wet and my skm damp Every step I took was to the tune of water stlrrxng 1n my shoes I had walked m the dxrect1on of a grove When I beheld lt xt was a glxsten mg mass of beautxful green Strange to say the sxght ofxt disgusted me People stared at my drxppmg sell' I was hatless and my ha r had become an unruly mass of curls Oh If I could only get home quickly' sighed I I took a hasty glance around and then discovered that the woods were nowhere in slght and I dzdnt have the slrghtest notxon of mv locatxon What lf I got lost' An mner volce chrded me Well you mxght as well admnt xt because you are' Oh what a bramless gurl I wasl Why dldn t I take the address of the house when I left it? It would be senseless to say to a polxceman I m an Amer can and I m lost Wxll you tell me where grandaddy s house Isa!! What was I gomg to do? One half hour passed I was actually on the verge of weak tears from exasperatlon In a daze I heard a famxhar voxce I looked up Mother called down from the porch above Hurry dxnner IS wanting' When I took my place at the table I was struck by the utter calmness m the atmos phere They just dldn t know and as far as I m concerned they never shall jane van Herwynen 4 SOLUBLE BELIEVE IT OR NOT Three farmers and thelr wlves went to market The names of the farmers were Joe S1 and john Thenr wxves were Anne Mary, and LIZZIC but not respectively S1 bought twlce as many p1gs as joe s wife bought ducks joe s wxfe bought twice the number of ducks Anne s husband bought of plgs Anne bought no ducks joe s wlfe bought twlce as many ducks as Sl's wxfe bought geese The number of geese bought by Mary was twxce the number of plgs bought by S1 What were the names of the couples? Interested readers may get the answers from the Scrxp Staff nf too thoroughly perplexed . -A., -- --':-'-l.- -.Ae - -1-Y -t - ' 'A i.,,v-f- .. Y - 1.,L. -- - W , ' -r 1 . J X V WJ ' ' '-' .Fa 4 x f' f.s- Y -',, .- - Y - ff, Y ,,-V,-- iz -,, W Y Y- , . . , 1 n 1 - 7' I . . . 1 . , 1 u ' Y ' ' 1 - . - 11 , ll 7 . . 1 1 ' 11 , u ' . 1 ' , , - 11 , ' . 1 1 ' 1 ' . . . . . 4, A ' . ' U . '. , . . ' . . 1 A , rl - . ' 1 , . ,, . . 1 . . . . . , . . . 1 ' . l . . ' ' ' . u . . . - 1 . f 1 - 11 . 1 A A 1 1 1 1 , y 1 ' ' at 1 - 1 . . . 1 - - . ' ! . , ' 1 , na - - - - 11 . . , , l 1 I ' ' ' . . . ' ' I . - 1 . , 1 1 ' ' ' 1 . . . , . . 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 , . - . . . , , , . . , 1 . - 1 , . . 1 ' . 1 - . - 1 , . OG S LD zzzzz! f' 'W ' 1 , om arm 0 N ,Q X sr.: X E m 51 ff UM DOWN JOUIH R e. X ai H1521 ..a274f 1 L 5 fi fig 'UOME OF masf DA vs :i A7Y1DENf X X 5 :Q x Ti'-5 2 iaawgia CAN7' WE TALK IT OVFR? 6 xi I I ' V l ITJ' THREE OCLOCK IN THE MORNING 902 fn' X-,xfzif WHYAM! .90 ,, LACK AND BLUE? HFQPER SCHWFRTZBERG N If ' 5 .D M X Q 5 . ' ' , O IEW A? A Q : W N ' N5 1 x . . ' 05.2 J ' K I o 4: Y Q .g.f' i:3'a.':2's,-A3 -., 04 'xi' ef-MQ Xffr' ,lf 4 p AQ , ., ,-7t',-'.:' ' 7 340' 1 I ' I 5414 ,- -'f'5?7'5?79. 1 Q' 5 ' 1 74? ,- f pf ' . , mm.-vcffil f 2 z ff e'q.g:1.x..-,3.j.,.W, Y ,',,l , .1 .7 6, . xx :IRAQ 'SfL2:7:'.-'. W ' lx' ' 'T 'f.-1 Q L' -1 f , nay .f y 4 'f ' lf 3' as A ' '1 .. X A ' V . ,, f R1 x . gf' ,VY . .fflhf . , . ,K , , v T1 A I O ' u ,, . X 09 R N XX M 3 X X .. . 1 7' 1 - 5 N I . 3 I . ' i x J 1 y :EE f X W E' f 'fd Q 1 1: , ,. Q Q ,f ,T H 4 Q. 0 3 v i: R I. iq e N ' X far: - f - 'Q QM ' 1 ' 'mt 'P l rv mv i H I 1 f X 2-.mf ftigelg 'pg 4 x! Q u , I ll 4 Y 0 ' U . :ja ,I 45254 xx . i -4:53. ' 175732 f' ' , ' 57- 'SBS' Q., 11,3 J, 4' W ff'-Q. Xl + m e if Qfs2'QdWa:?aJ111S gR TRAGEDY OF A SIX Characters Perclval an amb1t1ous struggling Soldan student B111 a happy go lucky friend ofPerc1val s An English teacher Act I Scene I Place a schoolroom Tzme just before an exammatxon on Mac beth Teacher Everyone put away h1s notes please and start answermg these quest1ons at once Percival Cto Brllj If it were done when tis done then twere well It were done qu1ckly B111 Yeh you really said somethmg then Scene II Place the corrxdor Tzme forty mmutes later Bill fwzpzng hrs browj Wasn't that some exam though? Percival fstzll rn a daze, Never shake thy gory locks at me Bill Ah, shut up! Exeuntl Act II Scene I Place the lunch room Tzme end of the five weeks fB1Il enters and goes over to Per cxval who IS seated at a lunchroom table J Bill Why Perclval what IS the matter? You look as though you had just seen Banquo s ghost Perclval Cshakrng h1s head sadly and handrng B111 hrs report card wzth a tragzc axrj It s worse than that Bill fW1 th a breath of relzefl Oh lS that all that's worrying you9 Why I got an F and I m not worrled Percxval Qpzclung up a knzfe andgazzng a t It absent m1ndedIyj Is this a dagger whlch I see before me the handle toward my hand? Come let me clutch thee-M way of life IS fall n into the sear Bill Creadzng hrs thoughts, Oh come on Live a whsle longer They ve got straw berry shortcake for lunch Lovey Chester 6 DISILLUSIONMENT At last my most ardent wxsh was to be reahzed' As I walked through the streets of gay busy and beaut1ful Pans toward the Exffel Tower I rev1ewed ln my mmd the many t1mes I had heard of the wonderful v1ew that It afforded My cousm and I boarded the elevator whxch was well sup plied wlth wlndows We ascended on an angle which made me experlence the first odd feelmg ofthe many I was about to have that day As we went up I dec1ded that I wanted most of all to look down upon the Arch ofTr1umph and see the twelve boule vards that extend to all parts of the cxty We got off at the first landlng and as I looked down I d1dn t expenence the slight est thrill We walked around the pavilion then went to the veranda cafe where we had some del1c1ous French pastry We decided that It woul'I be great fun to walk up to the second land1ng although lt was rather a We bllthely set out and enjoyed ourselves durmg the first fifty flights Then the stairs began to be very worn Soon large holes appeared, and then once in a whlle there was no step at all Our once l1ght steps, as we scrambled upward became a method1cal thud thud thump, which remmded me of Rudyard K1pl1ng s Boots Our regular breath1ng changed to pant pant ' puff At last too txred to ascend any further we found a step which we beheved could support our wexght and then we sat down An xndescnbable feeling in my stomach made me regret the refreshment of which I had lately partaken As we sat we real xzed how rlckety the rallmg was and that the g1rders were fully ten feet away I couldn t help remarking Dav1d there are Just the steps and us Wanna go down? I detected a sneer m his voxce and so I hastxly answered 1n the negative I was spurred onward by the thought of the v1ew which was to be my reward Our eyes followed the glrders and we looked up to the top of the tower whxch was on such an angle that It appeared to be falling as it swayed xn the wind high above We stxffiy arose together dxzzy from the vnew we had just beheld My legs felt as if some one had been tying knots ln them Hlgher and higher we rose st1ll our goal seemed just as far away tiff Was xt true? We were really nearmg the top' With renewed energy we ran up the Contmued on Page 191 4. , : -14:1-'-'ij' A 'vw ' wifi A- , k,-' ,511 A 4' , 'X 7? 1? 1 ' ,. . J, i If K X I v f 1- ,N .- ,, , J ' A j X, f- --,Y .- 11- za ,-fk...., tee,-Y-, -7,4 ,be A -- : , . . , , . . . , v , - , - . . ' Q - , . , . . . . Y - y . . . Q H . , y ' ' ' ' . . ' . , . ,, I . ' Y ' ! long clxmb. - - 11 U . . . , , 3 11 rx 11 an - - 7 ,H ' - 1 n n - , - .1 H 4. , - , . I .1 H - - S . , - . . y - U - , , y ' Y! I I , 1. U 5 1 1 - ' . . . , , . . . . , Q ,Q , 5 y - , ' , us. . . . . . , ' ' .41 - I ' Y . . - . , - . Y ' . . , . ,, - : , I . . , - , 182 'f5':,?ccii5,QIril5'32e1f3F TF! DEVICE FOR BRN G STUDINTS MINDS BACK IO CLASS X X 1 I sl puffs P , W , W jx 1 f .l Q2 fl -if Z Qff Z 2 f Z 7 f m lu'- A DEVICE FOR BRINGING STUDENTS MINDS BACK TO CLASS QA Screntrfic Paper by the Emment Pedagogue Professor Gazook D In my prelxmmary report before the Propaganda Commxttee of the Interna tional Instltute for Indxgent Inventors I beg leave to pomt out varlous salutary features of the devuce sketched above for the purpose of furthermg the cause of educatlon Prlmarxly the need for some such devzce rs unquestxonable It IS xmperatxve to find a means of combatmg the woefully preva lent blank expression wh1ch m con junctxon wxth artfully concealed xnatten tlon IS m the hands of adroxt pupxls a tool that threatens to undermme the very foundatxons of our modern culture What self respectmg pedagogue would stoop to so undxgmfied a retallatory mstrument as the common razor strap? To seek a suut able and dignxfied method of abrogatxng the blank expression that xs the only alternatzve Secondly the mstrument chosen must have the propertxes of unobtrusxveness accuracy effectxveness m general must be thoroughly eflicment To combme such qualltxes m one apparatus IS naturally a Txtamc task In fact I have spent the better part of nmety three years not to 183 mentnon a consxderable prxvate fortune m perfectmg thls mventlon whlch I may say embodxes the speed of a hummmg bxrd wlth the ponderosxty of a sledge hammer Permxt me to descrxbe the method of operatlon as lllustrated An expressxon of boredom Cm the guise of a snore s1gh or fixed gaze out the wmdowl on the part of an mattentlve pupll IS the slgnal for actxon The mstructor merely snxps the pendant strung and presto' the slumberer IS tactfully awakened by means of the force ful impact of a brxck upon hxs cranlum Let me summanze the results obtamed m sundry tnals performed by me upon my own classes In cases D 1535 P 53 and A 111 the puplls awoke and evxdenced com plete restoratxon of thexr facultnes In cases N 45 and X 6931 fallen arches appeared In case C 53 an ambulance was necessary In cases M 63 and R 15 the brxcks ncochetted gxvmg me a severe blow In case C 14 the subject never re vxved In case S 456304 the student became an astronomer Incxdentally may I brmg attentlon to the fact that no mass resxstance has ever 6 Contmued on Page 193 51 :ji Tiff-D,fr,Qglj or ft Q A Gllxl ' ' l ' I I x I I Q rl 6' X Q , - ' .V '51 I l ,ft .. X Q26 .l l If 4' S 1 fu 43' Q ff- r X M ur! Xl 'I 'A I ' ' X-all Y Cl M 411 ,W 6 ffl! If wx' I . 4 fx WW Q K ' ' M G Q 2 I QQ f r I A ' f I 'Z 4 , I JZ X I ,f X 4 '. f. ' l . I 1, : , , , , , , ,. ' ' . ,,- . l 4. ' ' . N . , ' A ' , 5. . .' , ' Q I -fa. 4, COGITATIONS OF A THREE Feb 3 1932 I m feelxng pretty peppy thxs mornxng My second day at Soldan and xt won t be long before I ll be known xn thxs school when they see what a smart guy I am yes sxr I m goxng to be on the Corrxdor Officer Force and everythxng just luke at Blewett Well I m not goxng to make the breaks today I made yesterday sxgnxng up xn classes There goes the bell Whats that for? What txme xs xt anyway? Oh well thats only the first bell I ll just walk around the halls awhxle It must be early there arent many m the corrxdors Hx Bxll' say what s the rush? You d thmk xt was late or sumpn' the way he s runnxn down the hall There goes another bell Why so many I wonder? I guess I may as well go to my advxsory now Gee' my advxsor says I m tardy but that was only the second bell What' only two bells? I thought there were three How can a fella know anyway? A tardy wonder where that elevator xs that they told me about? I can t find xt Oh well I can stxll use my legs It xsn t so bad goxng down anyway I ll ask at the office where xt xs so I can come up xn xt Now what dxd I come down here for? Oh yeah a tardy slxp I guess thxs xs where you get 'em It says Receptxon Room Look at the lxne' must have been a lot tardy So I m not the only one I ll just waxt here Well at last' after almost an hour s waxt I can go xn What? She says you get tardy slxps from your advxsor and there xsn t any elevator And xt s the second perxod already' Wonder what I do now? Yes I m supposed to go to Latm next That s on the second Hoor so I go up Here s the staxrs What a crowd ' How do they ex pect a person to get up when the whole mob s comxng down? They keep pushxng around and Im havxng a terrxble txme Whew' At the top at last What? -Go back down agaxn? He says to try the front staxrs next txme Well I ll do that next perxod when I go to 101 Theres another bell I d better hurry The room nlmber xs 212 and xt s here on the second floor Thxs room xs 211 so 212 should be rxght next to xt Here xs 213 And on the other sxde xs 215 Don t they have any 212? I guess they don t whoopee' no Latxn' They must have put 212 on my program to gxve me a surprxse The teacher xn that room xs comxng out here He wants to know what all the noxse IS about He tells me 212 xs down the other end of the hall What s xt doxng down there anyway? Sure nough here xt xs' Thxs xs the funnxest school I ve ever been xn And the 1 N4 teacher wants a detamed slxp Is xt my fault they buxlt the school crooked? Now I go to gym Wonder where that can be? It was on the thxrd Hoor at Blewett I ll see xf xt s up there xn thxs school Gee xt must be a mxle around thxs thxrd Hoor Well I don t see any gym up here unless thxs bxg room here xs a gym I don t guess they d have benches xn xt though and xt looks lxke they re get txng ready to sxng I d better look on the second floor Nope-no gym here exther And none on the Fxrst floor They should have a dxrectory around here somewhere Well the next place to try xs the basement Here I am The teacher wants to see my program card H tells me I should go to musxc now Some system' Whew' Fxnally the day xs over and stxll xt s only one o clock but wxth all the trouble I ve been through xt seems lxke a week Well I guess I may as well Fmd my locker so I won t have to hunt for xt to morrow Let s see now I wonder where xt try goxng down these staxrs to the basement and see what s down there Gee' what a gang of gxrls there are down here' Aren t there any boys down here? I wonder where that locker xs The gxrls are all yellxng at me I m gettmg out of here Well no wonder' Look what xt says over the door Gxrls Locker Room I thought somethxng was wrong Feb 4 1932 Today we are stayxng at school all day and I m gomg to have my fxrst lunch at Soldan' I ll show em I know how to do everythxng just right Yes I know where the lunchroom xs for I saw xt yesterday when I went to the basement so many txmes Thxs sure xs a swell lookxng cafe terxa they have here I ll put my books on thxs table to save thxs place Huh? That guy says thxs table xs reserved for Senxors He tells me that the table whxch xs all set wxth silver napkxns and water xs specxally reserved for the new ones xn the school Boy' what servxce' But how can the teachers sxt here when xt s reserved for us? Well so xt s the teachers table' Now where can I go? And I have to take my books out and keep movxng Gee I feel so conspxc-conspec-out of place' W ll I guess I ll get some soup anyhow Now they tell me to stop breakxng xn lxne and to let all Senxors ahead of me Well xt seems lxke everybodys gettxng ahead of me I wonder how many Senxors there are? What funny rules they have here' Maybe when I m a Senxor I ll know em all Feb 10 1932 Ahem' I ve been at Soldan a whole week now and I m doxng pretty fine' My hxstory teacher gave me a lxbrary slxp so --s . A g ima?-A 3' 1 --1 f af- QI. -I--' ' f .K . . 1 ,f , , K X 1 v Us J' i 1. 4.5! -4-, i :L mtv! Y 4 i W - FHA: lg-:A W V: Y:-L ' Y . , ' 9 ' - h , , . .... .. . ' . g . . , ' ' , - x . e ' . . , ' , . i . . I I ' ' , . . 1 ' . . ' Y SHP? I guess You get that In the Office- I can be. The number is 944. 1 think ru . . , U ,- , . . . ..... . , . as ' , sl - D v va xv - 1- . - I 1 I . . . I . ' 2 l Y 1 ' ' ' '. . . . , I . ' . - v ' I ! . . . . . . , I 1 I 7 . . ' N Y ' . ' . , ' , ' ' , - v v . ...... , . , x ' . I I . 1 , ' . x L .T . 'I ' ' ' ' , , ' 1 ' v 1 ' . ' ' , . . -, ' , . . . . ' ' , . . . fda L- A:-ana 2 1? F'-R I Q92 6NQfEySQ2wQ I may as well vo to the lxbrary and see whats what M m she sald somethmg about tearmg thxs thmg apart Ill just pull hard and see what happens Gee rt dxdn t even tear m the mxddle What s the use of this l1ttle end pxece I wonder? Guess I may just as well throw lt away Now for the lxbrary What do I do wxth thls other sl1p9 I ll just sxt here wlth the rest and see what happens Ah' here s some one coming wxth some books She s callmg the names but she dxdn t call my name Dxdnt that hxstory teacher send my name to the l1brary7 Oh well what s the use? I ll look m the dxctronary Feb ll 1932 What s all thus I hear about Scrlp and Scr1ppage9 What IS Scrxppage anyway and what s Scrxpj I heard somethm about one bemg a weekly newspaper and the other a year book I wonder which xs which I want to suhscrlbe for both any way so I can keep up on all the news and see my name m prxnt seve al tlmes I guess Scrlp s the newspaper because the name IS shorter I ll pay for It now What7' My doesn t come out t1ll June Oh' I guess she means the year book I want to order several of those so I can send them to all my relatives They ll want to see my plcture and the wrxte ups about me m there My advrsor IS callmg my name I won der what she wants Oh boy' 1t s a slrp to go to the ofhce Well here I am Whew' Dxd I get ln bad? That study hall teacher went and marked me absent How was I supposed to know that I should leave that lxbrary shp there? I don t guess It s so easy to go to the lxbrary Mar 8 1932 The day of days has arrxved' after Eve weeks of hard labor I m anxxous to have some reward Boy' thls report card w1ll be somethmg to wr1te home about I dont exactly expect four E s but I know I ll get on the honor roll Well here comes my first grade I wonder what my Englnsh teacher IS uttmg on my card I ll bet xt s an E and can hardly walt to see xt Here It 15 Hey' what IS thxs anyway? Only an M' why I slaved m Englxsh' ' Some trmes of course I got bored or sleepy and dldn t pay much attentxon I dnd my home work every day well almost every day Say I can t work all the tune Boy oh boy' Am I glad thus day of torture IS over Im even satxshed with that M rn Enghsh after Uettmg those other grades a P and two F s Say' th1s must be my red letter day I m scared to go home Oh, well what do they expect of a fella huh? There s Jimmy I promxsed to go see Skrppy wxth h1m tomght and I m gomg just to spite those F's Maybe I llhave better luck next tmme Optxmxstxc that s me' 191 THE DEWDROPS A mxllxon l1ttle dxamonds Were lymg ln the grass They looked as though a jeweler Had dropped them as he passed A mrllxon l1ttle sunbeams Peeped out at break of day They saw the lxttle dewdrops And stole them all away Marzlou Corcoran 4 HOMAGE FROM THE HEART Thxs heres what I ve got to say bout m1ster Abe Lmcoln the genelman who most everyone knows an who was born rn a han made log house all poor an lived thet way purt near all the t1me cept when he was presdent of the umted States ln a wh1te house There s some as wxll state twas just mxster Lmcolns luck and fate but I know thet folks who get to the top o thlngs hev lndustry ln em an a wish an will pushm out all over fer the great work xtself an of xt Well thet was the way wlth Abra ham an when I started seem hzs p1tchures m hxstorzes an all I just knowed he d have a vzsage lxke thet with the kmdest eyes an the powr of Hum showm throo em It makes somethm grow m my throat so thet I hev to close the book for me to start feel mn normal round my hart agm Thus great heero s lnf whxch stans as a lesson fer all human kmds teaches thet a great thmg km come from a meen begmm no matter how many txmes xt falls down on the way 31st so s xt has the spunk to gxt up and gmt rxte along Me thmkm thls I 51st let the know at alls talk on lf they care to thet they thunk xts a shame thet some folks hke to worshxp an ordmery man thets born of Hesh pst cause hrs acomplxshments hav bm recergmzed by hrs brethern Ive saxd m say now an wnt It out on paper so s to hev It corn on the cob an not corn m vegatable soup style an I ll leave off now seem as how I might be preachm so much It ll keep me from practicm H1ram Brown A small gxrl was purchaslng a tooth brush at a department store The clerk was helpmg her select the proper kmd and color After a few suggesuons he offered a pmk one The chxld qulckly refused with a shocked look What s the matter asked the clerk Don t you know all the advertzsements say not to have a punk tooth brush? was was the answer Edward Landers gn M, ' tf 2 1 'Y -Y V ff- 'r -J -v---9-Q ,f-,Y ,!- -:fig-23 ,A - V g , A , 1 x . 5 Y ' '1 1' I- - , -7 1 , Q-H E , -f Vn.l:.,, , Y- - D . I , . ' . . . . . , ' . 1 . , . . , ' ' I v 1 1 . I ' Y . . , . . . . , . . U 1 , . , M , . . . ' v 1 . 1 , . . . I 1 - , . . . . 5 , ' . 1 - , .. , 1 . . - . , . . . . , - ' ' v r - 1 - - 1 1 ' ' 1 advisor says that Scrip's Sl.25 and that it H02 ffl' the TIOHOI' ln han' Shakes thet come l ' . .'-' - 1 . - , 1 . , . . . 1 . . . , .. , . I , . . . . , . 1 1 u - ' ' 3 Y . . . ' ' 7 ' . .', . . , . .r ..... . , . , A I I . . ' , , , , 1 - 1 1 D -- , . , ' Y . . . . , . ' I .. 1 . ' I ' U ' Y , .. . H l I ' I ' ' I n . . . . . . , ' ' 1 - 1 y - - . - 1 - 1 , . , XP . -. Q Q , , ' 1 . . . . D , , , l , F . . - , , , , , ' Y Y I - . , . . - 1 l ' A , ...... , . . ' , . . . , ' Q . I 4 , . . . . . , , . 1. ' ' , , , .1 . . . . . . A . ' V U y . . . . . , . ,, . . . . 1 , ' 4 as ff? Qaigijai'-awm1 LEADING A DOG S LIFE Something is radlcally wrong around this place I ve never seen anything llke It smce I first came here last year I am sure there has never been a more neglected dog anywhere than I have been for the past week or so It s gettmg so they aren t a but grateful for anything I do for them For instance the other afternoon I always make a pomt of meeting Larry m the front yard when he comes home from school This aftemoon didn t seem to be different from any other so I naturally was m front of the house waxtmg for hxm to come As he came up the walk I could see that he had a very serious look on his face Now xf you knew Larry you would know that this IS very unusual As I ran up to heaven s sake Rags go and chew on a bone or anything else you can find but let me alone Let him alone' I should say so mf that s the way he felt about It I made up my mmd that I would do some very good lettmg alone so I tumed and, with mv nose m the air trotted off to the backyard But I was terribly hurt I thought may be if I had somethmg to do I could forget it I tried therefore to hunt for a bone that I had buried My heart wasn t xn the work though because how on earth was I gomg to keep my mmd on an old bone when the person that I love best had just told me to let him alone? Seemg that I should never be able to fmd a bone the way I felt I trotted mto the house I went upstairs and when I passed the door of Larry s room I Just couldn t resist the temptatmn to go m Under the desk I saw our ball and on the chaxr were his nce skates It made me feel terrible to see all these thmgs and then to remember the good txmes we had had with them I crawled under the bed and evidently fell asleep because the next thmg I saw was a hght bummg on the desk and Larry seated there wxth a b1g plle of books all around just as I woke up he ran hrs fingers through has haxr and groaned pltxfully I'll never be able to do xt never ' Now what had he meant by that? He stayed there readmg and writing until supper time, when his mother called him downstairs He ate very lxttle and went right back upstairs to those old books agam He stayed up until late that mght and every once in a whxle he would groan desperately This went on for a week and I was very bored with everything A few mornings ago I was really worrxed Larry ate hardly any breakfast and left for school looking pos: tively suck He dxdn t look much better when he came home I-Ie acted this way for four mommgs and then he stayed home a whole day But he didn t play around or seem very cheerful I-Ie wouldn t pay any at 1190 tentron to me at all but just kmd of hung around domg nothmg This mommg he left without anythmg to eat at all Hrs mother called Good luck Larry' Thanks I ll need xt he moaned as he rushed out Hrs gomg left me wxth nothmg at all to do except sit on the porch and wonder what It was all about untxl he came home Ive been sxttmg here about a half hour now and For heavens sake here comes Larry running pell mell' He IS actually stoppmg to pet me and say How are you Rags old boy? Now he s runmng mto the house yelling Mom oh mom I ve passed ' What on earth does he wonderful because his mother IS saymg she IS proud of hxm but she stall doesn t see how he did it Now he s runnmg out to me agam Come on Rags he shouts Now that the finals are over I can begm to breath easy agam Let s go on a hlke What do you say? What do I say? I say xt s about time Larry was domg something The Idea of letting a little thing l1ke finals worry hxm whatever they are Fmals humph' Who cares about them anyway? They mean nothmg nn my young life now that they have let Larry alone So I say Let s go' The following paragraph is not punc tuated nor capitalized Test your skill by readmg it aloud before an audxence m sertmg the punctuatlon as you read If you go to the golf toumament you will see men drlvmg automobiles are convem ent methods of transportation have ad vanced ln recent years Scrap has improved literature ms pleasmg and essentxal to boot the polish are proud to llve a healthy life is the ambxtxon of many people says hamlet to be or not to be a monkey is very common m the zoo many animals can be seen play mg the comet one first takes a deep breath and swallows the mouthpiece IS an lmpor tant part m washing the baby care must be taken to clean hxs spark plugs should be the duty of every motonst does are female wxves forgwe husbands don't tell drew hrs bow and shot the arrow through the inside left raced down the field and shot a gaol cxvxlzzatlon being what xt IS IS necessary to lock up the undesxrables m the country many artists may be seen drawmg stumps as a sign that the cricket match xs over jessxe One of my ancestors came over to America with Columbus in 1492 james Puff puff that s nothmg I descended from an aeroplane Bernard Ezsenstern 2'-S . 3 A Y L . -'r 5 ' iff- -wil:-1 --JYF,-H ,Yi Y ,fe . I . 1 .f W i I W' af-A -1 C LJ, P l - - . , , . . . - - ' . . - ' 44 . - , U AA , I ' 71 , I , , 1 . , . . ' 4: an as as at . . , , . . . . 1 , I 1 I i . . .. ,, , . , , - , . . . ,, . , , , . , . him, he tumed away and said, For mean? I've passed! Must be something , U 1 . . ' 3 , ' as ' ' ' ' 9 - . . , . Y ' ' 41 Yl . . IK , , . I , . . . , . 1 , , - - , . . . . , . .S l v u v , I I l I 'I ' Q . . , . , . - .l , U . , . , . . , . Q . . ' . . 1 ' ! ' I ' , . . I . ' . . . . ,, , . . . i . . . , . G ' . I , , ' ' : - . . , . I - -WWW X 'GSS N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N V4 I '4 Vt 1 I N 4 4 Y N S L: For 40 Years- Rub1tam Busmess School has been tralnlng young men and young xx ornen for busme, l1te and plaelng them 1n the best setretarlal stenograph1c and bookkeepmg pos1t1ons 1n Sami: Louls Rub: am Crm Do the bame j 'lou DAX AND EVENING CLASSES XVr1tt or phone today for Catalog Rublcam Busmess School The School of Thoroughness 4f 1 DELMAR BLXD 469 H S GRAND BLXD on t f Laclede 0440 CHECK AND DOUBLE CHECK It was m a Southern Cnty A small colored boy ran mto a drug store and m quxred xf he mxght use the telephone On recexvmg an afflrmatwe reply he called hxs number and an elderly gentleman s voice was heard on the other end of the wlre Colored bo Hello IS thxs Mr Smythe s resndence9 dence Colored boy Well IS thxs heah Mr Smythe9 Voxce Yes what dxd you xxant7 Colored boy Well do you all have a great bxg state? Voxce Yes we have why? Colored boy Well does you all have some boy xx hat takes care ob dat state9 Volce Yes we have but vxhy do you ask? Colored boy And IS you all very Satls fied wxf de boy what does de takm care? Voxce Yes I m very well sahsfied Colored boy Well thank yuh suh Good bye Clerk ffeelmg sorry for the boyj Say boy lf you re lookmg for vxork why I ll gxve you a Job Clean up this store and I ll gnve you some extra change Colored boy No suh Ise got plenty ob work to do I xxas Jus checkm up on myse f EX lil THE IRISI-IMAN AND HIS MULE General Shendan was once asked at xx hat mcmdent he had laughed the most Well he said I do not know but I always laugh when I thmk ofthe Irxshman and the army mule When I was rldmg down the lme one day I saw an Irxshman mounted on a mule whxch was klckxng xts legs rather freely The mule finally caught the Irrshman exclalmed Well 1f you re gomg to get on I ll get off' That Reminds Me The clerk m the lost property office xx as askmg the traveller a few questlons And what ms your name SIT, he quired Andrew B dofwnexprsomvm return ed the traveller The clerk groaned mwardly How do you spell lt? just llke xt s pronounced rephed the traveller -! V C. QS . 3 Q. . W A R . 3 - , , . 'C ' D ' -ov' ' y Y K K I 3 v 1 1 , 1 . . JF 53 7 . 3 'T' . 7 . F 'Q Illfl X A I . ' tl YY ' lt , ' ' - - v v v , h , I ' . . Q I ! . y, , . . . . . , . Volce' Yes' thls 'S Mr' Smvthe S WSI uts hoof m the stlrrup. In the exc1tement . - - ' 1 . - - V K 7 . . . - . , H , . . , . ' 1 , , ' . V l ' 1 1 v ' . . - , - ' . , - . - Q - I ' v - ' I -1 - y - , nv in- : , , . . - ' AA D ' 7? - . ' - , . , . Y , . Y . . . . . , , - . 3 .. - --, . . , . , - , .. - . , H . - , ' . . Ex. 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S cl 1 4 '1 sw TI1' 'W :Q 1 1. 1 Q 'L' 1 4, I 1' 1 1 . , 1 , ' q'1 1 4 1 I1 f SLILLS LLdLd L Lx, x L L :L ,L 1d1,' 'A . 5 k A I1 c1ds f 3' 155. ' '1 1 1' 5 z'11af iC'2 11 z1 a I1L. -,fs -. LL 1 1 1 4 . 1 , . 4 ' L 1. : by 5 L L 5 I Y L 5 L , 2 5' 1 12' ' L 11 1 1 5 ' . ,127 .31 ILL .L f L .d L -fm 4322 3, A L L L . , L 1 . Lx: ,?:f,.,.Q'1 n , 'J L- , 11 L L L 'L LL E 42. Z' : I .VL S 4 L L5 Q L L LM 2 - Si, 1' 51- 31 is -1 1 ,L L L ' 3 5 1 'xg if T - N - -, i 'x'1.l61J-, 1 X ' ' 4 L ' L A 1- - 252,12-1 4 ' ' .-, XXL L 1, . 1 1- . 'L - 1 ,Le 1- 1 ' L ' . . 1 ' gff '- Q A XX 3123, 1 ' ' Z ' f an- , ,T , xg- . . - 534325. LQ! I - -I - . -1 n his N KN 1, 'Q 1 x ' I ' si ' 'X fx- 'L ICT' for the i11Qtr11't11111 of c'11'1f ,,--,L-ff Wigs, f H1 - I1 ,V-f H .. 5 1 ig- J: '11 -.xg L Y L :LL L1 L , A311325 P5 L 3 ali ' ' L ' . 5. .L I -. - I . . f - -L 1 If r , L L 1 sf ,Img , 4 f 9 Lf 1 , 1 A - 1 g , af 4 , q I 1 ' '- by-I'-fii fxl-qr f' if if , Ili 'I . 1 , ' . , ,,r-4151, 1,41 ,I y 1 g I I ' 1 YY O - ' - ,W'f . f! Il-7 ,f- 'I - - L if? 1 9.4':?i V? Z IVTL ffl 11 - , ze ew: ,4 fe 1 ,pc A - :ff 3 .1 7 f .'.1 1 f . ' f fly gf' f1y', :f-11 16? 67:2 fi W' I 'A +1 I 'Nz I . A fffff d M: 7? -- 'lf ' :. A !p ' f - 1, 4 . fx. 4 d xf .' -few V, 'Y 1 . . ' L' -..::fj' ,, ,- 'Iwi . .I 47:-.41 1' f 1 2'--'1 ' -l--- V 'j51:jf,,-- 5, . 114- ,.- ., --.f 4 - 0931- fr- - if Comphments of A FRIEND Who Sells and Manufactures Fratermty Emblems Class Rlncf Plns Medals Etc Flowers and Plants Have Them nn Your Home Always A BRIX Flonst Wxlham F Gr1mm, Prop lal8 ST LOUIS AVE CE 1907 Slvmlnr I lurlsls If-Ir1..r :ph Ili Ilu rv OPEN EVENING to 9 P M SUNDAY 5 30 P M Cnntnnued from Page 182 last seventy five steps We rushed to the drmkmg fountam near the stalrs where some thoughtful person had placed xt Davld began pomtmg out the spots of mterest but I refusej to look No Dav1d lead me to the other sxde Now that I was at last at my goal I wanted to see nothmg but the vxsta as I had planned 1t nothmg first As I was led the wmd rushed through my haxr Oh It felt good' It was good to be alive' Thls couldn t really be I' All rmght open up I opened my eyes only to close them agam quxckly wxth a feelmg of pam a sudden smartmg Yes It was really I Lodged m my eye was a cmder' jane vin Herwynen 4 Even the fllhng statlon operators on natlonalhlghways are worried by I W W act1v1t1es motonsts who stop only for Informat1on Wmd and Water Boss You re late thls mormng Rastus' Rastus Well say when ah looked m de glass dxs mornmg ah couldn t see myself there so ah thought ah d gone to work It was only sometxme afterwards dat ah dxs covered dat de glass had dropped out of de frame' Boy s Lzfe The curfew tolls the knell of partmng day A lxne of cars wmds slowly 0 er the lea A pedestrxan plods hxs absent mmded way And leax es the world quxte unexpectedly Teacher johnny can you tell me what a waffle ISD johnny Yes rn xt s a pancake wlth a non skxd tread Why should a traffic cop after wmnmg a swell race always seem so mad about 1t9 X Phone CHesfnut 5790 LOWE 86 CAMPBELL ATHLETIC Goons co 915 PINE ST ST LOUIS MO 91 . - 9 . ., . , , . . ' . . j ' ' ' ' I , . . .: . , ' ' S - .. - ' Y L. . A - I - I 1 I v A ' 1 ' I ' ,W I-I I - KA ' ' . . , - . and then I wxll open my eyes. , I I I . , . , - . . ' T , ' V - ' A , ' ' Ex. .. - H , . , . . I ' , - C , : . . ' . Ex. T I 5 ' Y ' . l. C 1 llllg CN ass Dm- F1 1te1 mty Pms bl A Buchroeder E? Co College Shop -W l.oudtrmm Xl im 44 w F1 IKLX mty lux tll y EHIHP L It Finns Mtd T1 ophlu rm gl rllllk , St.1t1c :nu y K XL lll '.KL tt 1 ILRK HM A stout old lady of txxo hundred pounds xx as strugglmg vahantly up the steps ofthe street car Step Ixvely Ma urged the conductor wlth more famlllarxty than she liked If a grrl you cl be 'able to rxse better Yes young man she retorted and rf they d gwen you '1 lxttle more yeast you d be better bred x Humph' Your papa IS a shoemaker and you haven t any shoes Humph yourself' Your p pa dentlst and your l1ttle slster has only four teeth Trinslt New s IxRl MMPX ACHFR S BETTER DRUG STORE HIS I ll hs Newly I qulppe d ll tlnr I llllllUlill Ne-rule 5llld5!lllI1l A lady motorxst was drnung along a country road when she spred a couple of repaxr men clxmbxng telegraph poles Fools' she ChCl8lI'llCd to her compamon They must thunk I ye nu er drxven a ear A P COHEN DRUG CO Efl:lC1CDt and Dependable E Cor DELMAR and HAMILTON Ave St Louis Holdup Man Your money 1 r your lxfel Vxetlm Take my lxfe I need my money to hte on Wmft Tomorrow xs our tlurd nmlvtr sary Sh all I ltxll the turlteyl usb md No l ar ht tx n h nt nythlngb to do auth lt 3 ' . Bldg. Ph:-tie: . . 34' lass l ' s ,l 1- l' 3 .2 ,. ' s -N. - 'als I7 I ., K, A E 1- E I'Ul.ill flllll' L41 A ' S' ICI' yu ' ' 'Try und il tht' j 'clry 1 'N ,' . K .. . . . H .. - , v, ,V - they'd given you more yeast when you was bCf0f'f lu EX. - Y I V .. H l , vu tt - . . , Y - - 1 y H I S. . . 1- H! K ' - , . a ' is a YV' ' L . T K S V-N. , 7 . . , N IA A I 4 A IAN KWH. I AH N'I' li ' l I , A YA- . , ,fn .Hin lk, l H sz : . ,cc:, -ld! 2 1 A h A I l ' 11 ' V l 'I I , EX. ,. . . . - , . . ln: Saint Louis ssoum PRINTING G1 QUALITY SERVICE 'Wai 552221 0 011 l Continued from Page 183 been attempted by the students as yet Rather they appeared to take keen delight in the discomfiture of their fellows I may truthfully state that watching the bricks descend has supplanted sailing paper air planes as a scholarly recreation Surely the effect of transferring interest from a light matter to a heavy one CI refer gentlemen to the comparative weights of paper airplanes and bricksb is a commend able one As a whole therefore it is clear that my device product of a lifetime s research in such renowned centers of learning as Vienna and Osceola City serves a worthy pur pose and is eminently successful in prac tice I therefore commend the Kunning Klassroom Kranium Krusher to the earnest consideration of this committee Frances England Post Graduate ZVSUSIC CO 5l6 LOCUST ST MOST COMDLETE MUSIC HOUSE lN .ST LOUIS Modern Artist To what charitable institution would you advise me to give my last painting? Critic: I suggest that you give it to the institution for the blind. Berna rd Eisen stein Father: Yes, my boy, I'm a self-made man. Son: Gee, pop, that's what I admire about you. You always take the blame for everything. Ex. APPET ITE AND ECONOMICS They were giving a small dinner party and for a special treat the little son of the house had been allowed to come down They had reached the dessert stage when he remarked in loud confidential tones to his mother Will dessert upset me to night mum mie or is there enough to go around9 Doubleday Doran Book Shop R10 N Sth Between Ulne and Locust CIRCULATING LIBRARY ll llll kb nl ill I Ublliihvrl LIIQNIIIIIY 0880 She You seem to think more of your old radio than you do of me H Well I get less interference George Sxegelman GOOD EYESIGHT Do You Enjoy It? It s a matter first of proper at tentlon to you r eyes throu consultation with your oculist Then the skillful grinding H mg of the proper lenses Th1s service plu s frames of style, grace and smartness, you will find best at Aloe's. Sixty- two years at it have taught us how. LOEIS 707 Olive 537 N. Grand I raisa ' ' ' I . . IAA. . z ' H60 Euston .-fr. 5 , --:- Established H . - . - ' '. if 1 9 1 9 - , - ' FR Ol 1 -- Ex' ' . , e: , ' l . .' ' v , gh . . . tl t' . U c1f1fPf50z'ofz11Jhf 1111111111 ffl x 19, WHITE STUDIQ5 QXURIHC RAND MP ANR IX U mf f ll If 1 1 JC X 179' 5 ' I JW 7 L' 1 I .ff xv-J N N K Upprwsitc lfwx 'l'luuru' FR. Q 'L 3 I-41 f R.-XY Ii. XYlIl'I'Ii I,. XY. XVXIDEI Y . U wr gf' ffm' PM og' u jfbeziv ,l,v.m'1'f fox gf' .fu u1'1'f'ff 55 51' GETTING EVEN' A young mmdshxpman reported to the Commanding ofhcer ofa battleshxp for duty Capta n Crihtrec 'a gruff f ld sa1lor xxho had xxorked hls xx ay up from the rfanks sxzed up the youngster xxlth anythmg but a frlendly alr and send Well sir I sup pose that as usual they xe Sent the fool of the fannlj to sed The young, nndshaprnan QI11Cn4lX rc s ondel Oh no Tac xe chgangel that smce your tune r Aznerzcan GIII NELSON S 440 DE BALIVIERE cfxbany 5016 cAbany 5017 COLLEGE INN TEA ROOM Curb Service Flrst Dog, I xxent to za beaetly ffalr last m ht Second Dog, My xxh at xx as 11 nencan Gul Gu1de Tlns IS a slxysc r apar Dumb Oh nay' I xx oul l loxe to sm xt yxorl-x IOLII S CXNDX W XC ON Hot Dogs, Soda Water Candy, Ice Cream Fresh Daily PArkvlew16001Z 3 Burr 8C Zeller Catermg Qin Weddmgs Receptuons and Teas Supplied on Short Notice DCBHIIVIBYC and Waterman Aves Samt Louls Yr u xxnre spa alxmg of anxm als runem herang, s url the 1 all elderly na an When xs lylrln Lax ICIFCLI aaa 1 stlek of strlpecl L andy Well9 After that whenever that CIYCLIS xx has to parade m the traxxn the barhers had to tfalse m therr strlped poles Bo ston Tra n scrrp t 1 Xl STOP AT KENNEDY S AFTER SCHOOL I1 ook s 1 Hoxx sxx ect to xx 'llxcn IH the morn When sunhe uns hrst hegm to Crccp Across tha le a an I then to he at h ck na and go to s LL 1 A physu 1 an s ays th at 'all fe ar rc actlons orx IIT an ua the hr am Noxx xxe unflcrst and xyhy some pnoplc are not afrful to flI'lNL the xx ax they do W1 you :xy ine ten Cents to hnlp the Oli Ladaes Horne? Vkrvat' Are they out am Av Av, U ' 'r' 2 e 1 ' . ' - . ' 'z Q -' , v - . 'I 1' ' . . .Y M.. 1 ' 1 ' A ' ' -- . .p r, . . l 'y ' ' -1 all 1 , 1 I A -' f. :z' -1 - f z . - Ix'za: ga no , ve 1: 'cz ' sclqlxntz 5- , . ' . . . c , A ' . K. ,' 1 - ' I V C - . ' 1: 'a , za ' ,,, h . lfllr-st .MII IIIZIZ I UN 2, g . h F Y ' y: , ' z 'Q 9 First Dog: A clog show. I1 la: 4 HIGKWI. -onxw xxn Vxxlnlals 'Af '- UI -ll 'l'ry Our llonn-1' 1-tl 43 K. WI.-II l'. Nl. Wlvzll :llll N:lnlInil'Iln-s : '. ' Q '- ' -zfz r - 'a Riggl eat' zagza' z 1 rl-1. Ex. v -1 . - Y N ,V , I 2 - 1. I . 1 . fi z . -1 -2 A ' ' kg' z V - 'z' . ' 'a sz ' ' r - A A 1 - J: ' V' - , Ex. he . a ' ag ' ? Ex. IHS St Louls UHIVCFSIYY Founded In 1818 Th School XV1tl1 a Ccntmx 0 Honomble Suuct All Schools Class A Undergraduate Schools Arts and Sclences School of Educatlon Co 1 dur 111011.11 LXILLS L ILLN P' 1 llh S School of Soclology C Xlcc IL 1l f,0HlllCdIlOIldl ltbl llcntil ' S Catalogues and Bulletlns wlth full mformatmon as to courses terms fees requlrements etc sent on apphcatlon to The Registrar St Louls Umversxty Umverslty Statlon, Grand Boulevard, St Louxs, Mlssourx It was necessary for taxatxon purposes to decrde on whlch snle of the Canadxan and Umted States border a farm whxch an old lady had Just purchased actually lay Surveyors finally announced that the farm was Just on the Amerxcan slde ofthe border The old lady sxmled with rehef Im so gla-d to know that she sand Ive heard that vunters xn Canada are terr1bly severe Aznencan Gzrl The center of populatxon seems to be at the street mtersectlon where the traffic cop has just asked you 1f you don t know how to drlve a car He lbraggmg about ancestryb Yes my father sprang from a lme of peers Bored Lxstener D1cl hc drown? The fellow who boasts that lu doesn 1 gnc 1 rap IS not ntcessarmly careless person He may carry '1 My POLITE A Scotchman was accosted by a mlhtary p1cket Who are you? challenged the soldler Im fine answered Sandy Hoo s yersel 9 When w ater becomes 1ce saxd the professor what AS the greatest change that takes place? The prxce slr X S39 00 All Expense Trip 5 Days June 20 24 See Great Amencan Pageant Washington D C Phone Forest 5950 5579 Cates ANN THOMAS I Nl 0 0 0 0 H' 7 , I 'v - - a'1. all L .1 CC 79 ll-gfwi' 13-.f---5 .X.ll.. ILS.. lll1.ll. .'X.ll. 111 l':1lllL'1lll1ll IRS. in l':flllC1 Anil .Xlsu c11111'.-cs 111: - , llr-, 'l': -1' ' l'1'e- . fffzl IJ1-g1't-cs ll1'C-Ell fxncerin 1' 51.11, in S111-i11l.1--'v 2. U t f.. Pre- ' I lr.. . Ill 511L'I11l11g'5' Z3 . ' ' 1 1 Y I 'Y I ' ' 1. n 1 U . . . . , , . .. , ,, .1 - 1 Y! l I . . ' , . 1 . '. : ' ' ' . Ex. O I fA 2 l ., ' El 2' A , . . '- . Ex. I 7 111 ffl Illlflllf 1 Piofofffz 11 O SID WHITING STUDIO UI IXI at Pl NDLI I JN ww u. Xl RX I Iffffw Pfam 0 lfnlzzf ac 7ZN' QQUZIIXV ' wc - ' A if I3 ' pfv' SI. I, HIS, NIU. N N I, 'fl' if 'INCL' NIICIIQCISOH 729+ K1 fllf ,III and SIC 'IC C ' VW l',Ll!1 1' -' J IIA 'c' cf Ilt IH I I Taxtldlozcx Id Amerlcan Lady FOOD PRODUCTS DISTRIBUTED ST LOUIS The master to rmpress on h s pupzls the need ofthmkmg, before speaking., told them ta count hfty before saymg anytlnng, un portant and one hundred 11' at xx as xc-ry nnportant Next day he xxas speakmg stfmdmg xxlth hrs back o the fire vxhen he notleed several hps movmg, rapxdly Suddenly the xx hole class shouted Nmety exght nmety nme '1 hundred Your coat s on hre snr' x An ocuhst xx as tx nnmmg, the eyes of 1 pfxtrent 'md had requested hun to read the top llne ofa test carl the letters of xx huh r Ill thus HPRTVZBFKH When some moments had elapsed the OCl1I1St sald Do you mean to say you t an not re id letters of that SIZCQ The patzent ansxxered Oh I can ste the letters all r1ght but I can t pronounce the xx oral x FISCHER MEAT COMPANY 415 MORGAN STREET De Luxe Ham and Bacon I xxent to the shoxx last night and s xxx The Four Horsemen The Four Horsemen' Who irc they esse 'unes P lul Rex ere Theodore Roosexelt md B arney Google of tourst Te aehtr Wh It dld ulxet s ly to Rome I x' en she met him on the hulco yf o mny: C uls n't 'Ju get st-1 s in f urclie-strn? '. 'A 's x'et-pin xx' . mt-I si s tt-1 9 For Rufus Rnstus Rand. 'mlixln' ' ' 5 -1 '- ' : ' wu 'tick' 5,11 ' :I . IJN ga-Ness vxwpv-D' 'Q X H Y D R O X the famous cream filled chocolate b1scu1ts They are xv1dely 1m1tated Better say Sunsllme Hydrox to your grocer. They have no other name 12055-wins scun CEJMPANY 'VIIIAQSII l-'IIIXIS SI-Illxlfl THIC S4 Illrlxx Iiltplxi L1'y.'1H:.nIAl 7' I IS h ' g gig . Brand BY ' ' MO. . ' ' , . K ' ,' . K 'I 'K ,S , ' , A f Q ' K ' 1 ' - ' . , 1, Y, , . . '. Y. .L Q ' V I A .X .5 S . Y U U Y 1 ' ' 1 ' . z . f' -A ' . 'f y ' f. ,' , K I 'A ' . 2 ' -' .Q - J, - I 0111-l':ul1'll I nllvr lloxc-rllnn-ll! lnsln-1-liun 1: -ma , fstvdgs- Y , ,, ,, f.- an :Zjx .gpg-, x-'x 'I .xr 'xg-.fiv .- , . . X ', I yi . 'A , 2 1 I 1 -, ' Ex. - . . . lg W y I I . J .4 .hz It cr ' sr , xh t n 1 J l rv l 54 1 ll lllt Ex ' llu x sgxxlllo sl I t Irs Hx t tlnnls. she tl lt axt thc rw nl Tl t s Ill' ul lxxr h nfl Ex I Thzs Annual IS Becktold Covered to Endure N1 x H11 I I1 LIAXC, 111 61111 I 1. 1111I11fJ1' I1 1y 11111 xx111 g11ow 1111111 g1d11101'OU El t111 y11r pass t 1 st11 11 the 19'1 '11r1p 1115 11111 I1 BeL1xtf11C1 Comr 1 11115 3 11 t 1 11.111 1111111 13 11111 q1111tyo1 1 111111 fxoxu 1.15 1111 1111 1 1411 11111111 1 1X1l111PL 111 11 llf w111 111 31 ll to 1111 1111 Q 110111111111 your 1111 155 1111111 r 121111111 11.13 BECKTULD CCMPA Y 200 212 Pme St Samt LOUIS A small boy f111111'1r111 11 1111 111111 door of '1 1oe'11 r1s1111111 s 11111111 1nd xxh111 the matron op1n1d 1111 door 111 fr111111 111r 1 1111 1111111 11111111111 S111 r s11o1111111 11111ro11r11111v 1111 so1111w1111 LL1f10llS1V to tell you SOlI1Lt1'l1!1 You know my 111611111111 IQ awiy on '1 vmt to gr11111111'1 s Yesterd1ymor111n p 111 1 1111111111 1111 hr1'1k fi 1n11 111 15111 mid 1111 111se 1111 xx 1 er 111111111 11111 o1'1111 s11 11111r 111111111 1111 1111 11 11111 Q119 Yes n11 'un And 111111 111 1111116 up 1115 1111nd he would hx 1111 St1'1m1r so 1t xx ou111 I1 t h'1pp1n ig 1111 W111t 11111 h1 11117 Thxs 111or11111g., 111 11111 som1 xx '111r I1 1111 1m1r 1 1111 111111 11 1 1 It s XLYQ 11111r1s1111 1 I w 11611 yo11 1' 11111 ox 1r to 111111119 Yes M1 1111 1n1p'1p'1 says xxo11,1 you 111111 h11n your s1e111 lC1C1C1 3 Whit 11o1s 111 xx fmt xxxth 1111 stcp 1adder3 You see 111 xx 1n1s 11 so he e'1n s1r'1p1 1111 ro111d 11 11s off 1111 1e11111g., An 0111 colored man was b11l'Il1I'1 Urass when 21 xx1Se guy stopp1d 1n11 s 1111 You re foohsh to do th'11 U111'1c E11 11 w11l 1nr1111 111c1111111ow 18 bl 1111 IS y0l1 1r1 Don 1 xx orry ho111 11 It S111 1'LSpfJ!lf1Lf1 Uncle E11 D11 gr1ss xv111g.,row out 111 111 Moth1r Iohnny 1 w IS It 11111 y L1 11 1x1 1oxx1r II11I'1CS 111 j111111ry 111111 111 D1 Cernbera Johnny Oh 1x1ry1111ng 12 lI1'lf1xLL1 dowr1 after the hohdays' Boy s Lxfe P'lL1gCf W11y 11111 yflll 11111-1 1111 1.,ro11r 111 p11y th1 111ss drum 111 your 11 1111 Gadget Becwuse he s an 11o111s1 f111oxx and gn es F1111 xx e1g11t to ex ery pound T111s 15 food for r1f1eC11o11 s'1111 1111 1'1111y goat '1Q1'1C 111 I11C'1001i11'1g g,1o1ss Ex Q I C1 I'1i1'..' ,1'X'1. eel 1 o por '1 ' 111 ye 111 1 y 1' 11115 1 ' ' ' 1 ' 5 5 1 32 5 '54, 111 Q2 1' 1' L. 13' 50 115. Fo' 1 'cz '5 111 ' ' -5 ' 51111 ' 1 1 211 ' 301' 1 1 1 11- 11 1111 11 t1c 1151151 51: 1 1. T115 1111- 311111111 1' 'A 11111111 1111 'jc 5 p 111ii '1 11' 5 11 ' '5. . 1 '- 3 '. 2 ' A ' I Y 1 2 ,z' : xx'i11 21 1111 1 ' gg. - 11- 1' C ., .E .25 2 . ZA. I .-11 - - 1 A1 -V, z 1 : - ' 2 1. . V . I V ,, U 1 . 'pf 1' 1 z 1 MfS- Blank. 11? Said' UI Came OVC1' as green as yoL1 is, -Montreal Star. ' 2 I ' 'K . j 1 H.. L. I E ' gl Z I 1 r, 1 ,C , .s1, 1 - 1 1 --1 5 A '21 . 1 x V ,O . - Z 0 ' 'Z ' ' 'f -1 :H '- 1 z 1 1 ' -- Is 1 . . , 12 , A 1 e '. 2 . ' '. 1 '1 511-2 - 21111 11 - s11l11 1 ' 2111113.11 f 5 M V 'j' 'A 'tT1z '- ' ' f ' gg, 1111 is 11z1t Q .A KK' ' I l' Us 41 1 1 1: ' 1 f , 5 u' ' I ' I - I I' L ' ., ' Ex. fu A '- . ' A - - ,1 r M f. Ex. ' 1 1, 1 ' 11., lem Washington University School of Nursing Offers Two Courses in Nursing A FIVE YEAR COURSE leadmo to a dlploma and Bachelor of Science Degree 1n Nursmv which consists of two years in the Colleve of Liberal Arts or ln any other accredlted college two years in Barnes Hospltal St Louls Childrens Hospital St Louis Maternlty Hospital and Washmoton Umverslty Dlspensary The fifth year may include courses in teachmv supervision or publlc health nursmo A THREE YEAR COURSE leading to a dlploma 1n Nursmo which includes nursmg practlce 1n the hospitals named above For information apply to the DIRECTOR OF THE SCHOOL OF NURSING 416 South Klngshlghway, Saint Louis, Missouri Bus1ness Man What do you do with all these pictures you paint? Artist I sell them slr Business Man Well name your terms my man I ve been looking for a salesman llke you for years Passing Show One Ha' Ha' I just thought of a good joke Another Aw get your mmd off your se I' X Rags How did you lose your toot Tags Oh just shmftmg gears on a lolly pop AUTSFICHII Girl A certaxn firm had the following legend printed on lts salary recupt forms Your salary is your personal hu mess and should not be disclosed to any one The new employee m signing, the receipt 'added I won t mention it to anybody I m just as much ash amed of t as you are X Judge Cto Chmamanj What is your name? Chmaman Me Foo Lmg Judge Are you fOOl1Hg9 Chmaman Yes me Foo Lmg judge Fave dollars fine No foolmg m this court Daughter But father why do you object to my becoming engaged9 Is t be cause of my youtha Soap educates your eyes because t makes them smart Radzo Tcachtr Tommy what 19 tlu mlxm as of a story' Tommie The climax is where xt says To be continued Aznencan Girl - 5 5- fs 7 Y ' Y ' 9 S . es- rs- - S, . I Y- V , . g , ' , I Z i . , . .. . ' - . - U ' . Ex. : , ' - 5 1 V , l. ' ' I Q . Father: Yes, he's hopeless. Ex. 3 ' ll? : , ' ' ' . i ' ' 1 'T' L . . ' ' z . 'V : -I ' , . , ,,.' .. - - M - , ' ' , ' , . 's- s ' - ' - ' -, ,- . . I .. . V . ,. .. E,-, f . - -L ' , :no You are always welcome and wxll be courteously treated at Consczemlous Sefuce Smce 1876 EVERYTHING MUSICAL FOR THE BAND AND ORCHESTRA Convenient Terms 709 PINE ST SHOCKING MANNERS There had been several premomtory tremblmgs rn a certam chstrxct so a mar rled couple sent thexr boy to an uncle who hved out of the earthquake danger zone A day or two later they recexvecl a tele gram Am returnmg your boy Send earth quake W1 fe john IS xt true that money talks7 Husband Thats what they say my dear here to talk to me durmg the day I get so lonely Dad what IS mtluencej Influence my son IS a thmg you thmk you have untxl you trv to use mt I ve been trymg to thmk of a vt ord for two weeks How about fortmghta Im very tlred saxd the lady at the head of the supper table one Sunday evenmg You should not be sa d her m nlster who had been asked to the evenmg meal You haven t preached two sermons today No saud the lady absentmmdedly but I have hstened to them Toronto Globe Prof What IS the d1fference between I wall hxre a taxl and I have hxred Student About seven dollars and a half What s your son takmg m college About all I have Chapter One Maxd one Chapter Two-Mald won Chapter Three Made one A D1st1nct1ve Busmess and Secretar1alTra1n1ng For Hlgh School and College Graduates Modern Courses Gregg Shorthand Indlvldual Attentlon Lxmxted Enrollment Day and Evemno Classes Enter Any Monday Brown s Busmess and Secretarlal Schools 818 Ollve Street 5858 Delmar Blvd K. W. . ' . ,, .. . V - U - . A I ' Z' - ll on - - - V , , . I ' . , A ' tl y I ' H ' I l. u- S - - 'yy A Ex. in ' .VV : ' , - . . - 4. ,- - -H n - a Wife: Well, I wish you'd leave a little taxipn . Ex. Z . Ex. .. - - .- I A L. v ' ' jnv ,, . . . I . . v. : H In Ex' K. in Ex. K4 U ' - v 1- ' I V YY , ' . ' Ex. - . Ex. . . . . X . . . . 1- S 1. , . . :ul Samt Luke s Hospltal Delmar Boulevard and Belt Avenue Samt LOUIS, Mo Q15-Q FX N111 hum 1 xx lg L llllxll I1 I H xl! LL! L Il I 1 ll U g L rue I tx Ll'yl1lllLl f9X.Q,LDQx vw CNG' PHONE FOREQT lf N 1 lNursL Why Bohbu you xrlhsh htth Prob ably tha rr mon the Qrcmh took to l V my rut rr OlflIlSlLllOllLI'lLlxll Ol l7lSCl5lll1'Nl7LL xusn ruby x l x S itll S X pl mt rm and h up ix hola mah lI'Ll1fSllL N p itunt u hu 4 vu m ag, surm us Go Rx Tcruhlr lmlxs L addy tnrrxhlr' LIL Q an ou your in LX am x 1 ac dy Sorry, s thesr 1 1 L lml-ls Ep c rr I hkr m IQJJILS you got oft thrm rn hour 5 w WALTER T MIESSLER N 1PT1o DRUGGIST PRESCR N Carlton Flowe1 Shop S E Cor Delmar at Umon F and H T HESPEN 1123 Umon at Hodl1movtTr1cks St Louis anal lor I Open Evenings to 9 P ndiy 30 P f X ll O , Q 5 O I Q50 r .' su! Tr. Q Sqluuol lx nmihmhcrl hy' rho Hrrfpxml. 'l 're young xxw N rpm y1'cp.u'c lcniclvcs for rhu llllfrlllf pr rcs, ru uulx' the most aulv1111tx1gco11Q so alto s, Th so irmtclrstcel :nw im' 'l o rnrll amd ssc lc S I 'ulcut of Nurses I A. , A Y ' V 4, Vx' 1 R. ,: ,i , K. rx, ' , I . , .2 k. A L , , . hryx Wl ' clil ' you gin' y' ur sister Ll gg ' 5 -1: ' z 2 ,A piece of your apple? the fcx'.'1rrti11u-S :1 golfhullialmit. thu longer B l ': I gn '14 lr-r ihe souls. he can 1515- 4 '- . Q Tu- ': Th' I'llx 'F lf: r' 'z. '. - ' -. big. Erii' -z y Ha 11? Cal ': My pir. sir' A llV: 1' Ex. -' j x - ze , aw. Ex. .X Ifirlihs 'l'1'ihm1- In 11 llollurl I.1 1111.1 In-xuriwll-v I l I.HXl'lfllS ,XNIP l'l.,X. I'S llrsrf Iv - iq v . A '. 1 '. . ' NI - n-rx nf I' isis' 'l'vh-:.:r:lph Iln- in-rx ' . M. Su . . 5: , M. Soldan Mothers Club SOLDAN HIGH SCHOOL OFFICERS 4 X X X PLIIPU e ft the org 1n1z1 Cl II lf ll be to deyelop oO on L1 mon tween t L meulty ot L 1 the vu 1s mt 1 e 111ot1e1 1 wt 1 .mn lu 111 LKJIIIINLIIIIIY sp1r1t 111 the THE ART OF EXPRESSION IIOIIS or artmul 1t1nf your 1rt1f1c1al scntl 1nent'1l1t1es and armcable phuosophlcal or psycho1og1ca1 obserw atxons beware of platrtudmous ponderosxty I. t your con wersatxonal Lommunxcanons possess clsrlfiel Qonu enfss '1 Compact compre hen IIDILIILSS 1 to xlesccnt conslstency 'mal 1 nom lt nxtecl togeency Eschexx flll Lon f,IOlIILI'IllOI'lS of il1tulLnt glrrullty mal ycjune b xbbluuult Let your extempor ine ous clescintln s and unpremedltated ex pitmtlons h 1ve1ntdl1g,1b1l1ty and Veraclous my 'iuty xuthout rhodomontade or thra sonrcil bomb ist Sedulouslv avoxd 'ill polysyxl 1b 1 prokundlty psxttaceous y'1cu lty Xlllffll wquul ynrbosnty and vanllo qucnt y lplillty In otl cr xxorcls talk plfunly brxefly 1'1tur1lly senslblx truthfully purely Keep from slan don t put on a1rs say xxh'1t you mean me 11 xx hat you Say And don t use bg xx orcls' K Fussy You xull et all cl rty sxttmg on that Lhmxncy' Feathers Soots me all rxght Amerzcan Gul C lutxous F lthcr My dear 1fyou xx 'int rt xlly and truly loyes you Daughter How doyou know that dadj Cautlous Father Because I ve been borroxyms., money from h1m for Svc months md stlll he kups comlng Should Mxss Ou 1 lull WI1ss1ss Ippl her New Jersey wh It would Delx ware Al'1sk1CIllf1sk herj 14 N1t Where s your hat, Wlt On my head N11 I don t see xt Wxt Wall you told me I lost my he'1cl th at hght b'1c1 there md my hat nent Wltll 1t MONARCI-I GARAGE n re s ' 2318 Unlon Blvd Louns J WISSlCl St Louls Mo 'I : 'e11E':1' . 0 MILS i.l'1Sl.llQ4' l'U5'I' Tllc ' is 1 3 I I' l-' N' Xi-- l':'--ill-1.1 'U 4 f 1 s v Q , , .ll , .NlllS l1'lY lIll.lllL5 ' S-11111 XJ' l'1 e11l'111 WI bf mx hx V I .NHI5 lllfi ll'rXX,XN A tht seluul, XI pli,a l zll XIIZS, ll V Yl'4ll'Il.SlN - , thx lw 1t I 1pls,' lto 'I'1e- JSIIIW 1' A lll1S.XX'.Xl 11, 1:1'1'111 .AN Q 1- ' ' 5 ' 1 .X1ixie11l'5.' IL11..1'f1 Qchrlul Xllli ,X. lf. Xll'llSI'lNl7.Xf'lI MHS Nl Xl If 'ANS M115f'lll1IS'l'l,XYKICNNICY In promulgating, your esoteric cogita' 5' llfmfl huglmndv marry Mr- Eilsic- HC '52 ' 2 5,1 ' zu - 'L f A- - I T ', , , : ' , . 5 , 5 . 5 I 5 , ' ' ,' . .e - ,- , - - v ' s A A I , R . I I, If A f. . . . A L 5- , 5. 5 EX. F' - 2 2 A '. , 4 z ' 'z ff z f ' 1- ' . J 'C - - F- , 5 5 ' , 1 -z' 9 1 - fe ',z ,. ,EA . , 2,,,,g . . 4 t '. - 5 .5 . 5 . L ,I. .. . 5 .IA , 5. L , ,' 5 '. 5 in z lf . 3: -, 2 'A :C 2 '. 5' -n J. , 1 - 'I 4 ' EX' ' C ' . : 'zz ' ' . l V ' ' 'A E mum I I-1 xl: 'ruuus xxn 'I'l :I-1' . . 1 Q I 4 ' 5 5 , ' 5 'l'1'lt'Ilh lu- I-'0 -.'t 1il1.b0 . ' . l , . 203 The ewish Hospital School of Nursing Establlshed 1902 THREE YEAR ACCREDITED SCHOOL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS Hugh School Graduatuon rankmg an the upper two thlrds of the class and presenting at least 15 creduts Health Certlflcate by a physlclan References as to character and personal fitness must be presented Age 18 to 35 years PREPARATORY TERM Four months averaglng four to flve hours of class work per day AFTER PREPARATORY TERM Eight hour duty two half days off each week Seven to nlne hours class work per week VACATION Three weeks per year RELIGION Non sectarlan EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES Four splendldly equipped class rooms mclud mg Demonstratuon Room Chemistry Laboratory Lecture Hall Dnetetncs Laboratory LIVING CONDITIONS Llvmg condltuons excellent Each room IS an outside room steam heated and beautifully furnished Nurses Oraduatmg from the Jewlsh HOSp1t3l are elxvlble for rev lstratlon ln the State and recxproclty 1n other States and mem bershlp 1U all state and natxonal nursmo orgamzatlons WE WILL BE GLAD TO HAVE YOU VISIT US NOTHING TO IT EDUCATION How are you gettmg along wxth rxth metlc Sam? Well I done learned to add up the noughts but the Eggers st1ll bother me Boys Life Mr Smxth was a commercxal traveler and came home at long mtervals On one of these he was tellmg hxs five year old son about hls wandermgs And then I came home he Fmlshed And dxd you come on a tram daddy? asked Johnny Yes sonny And dxd you see the ears ofthe engmcr' Of course not' laughed hxs daddy Engmes do not have ears Oh yes they do' persmsted the small boy Havent you ever heard of the engmeers daddy? x A ctrtam young man says he knows has gxrl can keep a secret because she had made up htr mmd to marry hun for months before he even suspected such a thmg X 204 Freshman I don t know Sophomore I am not prepared Junxor I do not remember Senxor I don t belxeve I can add any thlng to what has already been sand Ex Dr Brown Hello Farmer jones how 9 Farmer jones Not so good doctor not so good Dr Brown Dxd you take that powder I gave you? Farmer jones Yep but It seems as If It dldn t do a b1t of good m fact I feel worse than ever Dr Brown Dld you take the rxght amount enough to cover a dlmeg Farmer Jones Yes slr I dxdn t haxe a dune so I used ten pennxes Radio Goodbye Betsle' Goodbve Aunt'e May' I hope I ll be a great blg gxrl before you come to see us 'xgam : ' , ' ' : 5 . . : ' 3 . I I Y Y D . , . 4 5 . Q -. f b 3- , - ,O . It - - , - Q . , ' 11 I . . - . .. Y U n . ,, . . v ' . , . . Y . . , I I '- A . I 1 Y , ' . . ,, do you feel today. ,. - 3 1 - ' ' nu ' ' 7' ' I ' . .. H . I - . , .. - - ., : , . . . , . I . K4 V! ' 7 An ' I! ' 44 il ' ' V I v I ' -1 I An ' ' ' , Q N . -A ' k- .11 I , . . . . t ' . . ' USC EXTRA DRY Ameruca's Finest Ginger Ale ts excellence IS evldenced by the wxde patronage of d1s cr1m1nat1ng students who are parucular about what they drlnk ANHEUSER BUSCH ST LOUIS Rollng Prmtmg Company Pzzblzcafzofz H PRINTERSH Coffzmef cm! 2331 Plne St CEntral 2400 0 0 Q O O I Inc01'po1'z1ted U 2011 A lm In ff rx!! I' 1 fffkllfl' flrl vzf fffffffxwf O' fjzfbffxbzff ff lil N 7 I 0 I K. f K f l i ' 'cj '11 1 ,-'., 11 ',-1. A4-.va 721 fix A 1' ffhpv ff jffflz 3 fi! fffw fxyffff 1 V , . , . . I ' I S N lf'm1Mf 1 ' Xgfffy ,'f'l'f'!!!1f' 115 fin fm In 1 N 1 1 ' fm 'ljl'QR. Qf f!f'Qgm.. :.1 ff' l,f'. '. 'f.f'fx .N,w,'. of.mfj' mmf l .fw,',f1v .S1!,!Vr'V l,f'fu 1u1,'1r1'f' maui' I l l44Af'Quw'.'7:n l'z'. v,fl.f i IIIQITY' fJfx,f.X'ff,XVf' Pl lvl INIHXI, ff! f -X . 'f 1 ?'3r4+-f-sol, . 345GB 11296139 Qjqdverhsers Index CATERERS Dorr 8: Zeller DeBal1v1ere and Waterman Kennedy Caterin Co 1123 N Union Blvd Nelsons Inc 440 DeBal1v1ere Ave DRUG STORES A P Cohen Dru Co 5898 Delmar Blvd Krummenachers 1121 UHIOH Blvd Walter T Miessler 5270 Delmar Blvd FLORISTS A Brlx 1518 St LOUIS Ave Carlton Flower Shop 1123 Union Blvd JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS A S Aloe Co 1819 Olive St College Shop 403 405 Louderrnan Bld MUSIC Hunleth Mus1c Co 514 16 Locust Ludw1 Music Co 709 P1ne St PHOTOGRAPHERS Whlte Studios 520 N Grand Blvd Wh1t1n Sid Studios 4322 Olive St PRINTING AND PUBLISHING MISSOUFI Pf1Ht1U Co 3160 Easton Ave Rol1n Pr1nt1n Co 2331 P1ne St SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Browns Business and Secretar1al School 5858 Delmar Blvd ew1sh Hospital School of Nurs1n 216 S Kin sh1 hway Rub1cam Business School 4931 Delmar Blvd St Louls Un1vers1ty Grand and P1ne St Louls UD1V6fS1ty School of Comm and Fmance Grand and Plne St Luke s Hosp1tal School of Nurs1n 5535 Delmar Blvd Washln ton Un1vers1ty School of Nurs1n 416 S K1n sh1 hway WHOLESALE FOODSTUFFS Fischer Meat Co 415 Mor an St Haas L1eber Groc Co 301 S E1 hth St Loose W1les B1scu1t Co 1427 Clark St UNCLASSIFIED Anheuser Busch Inc St Louis Mo Becktold Company 210 Pine St Doubleday Doran Book Shop Inc E1 hth and Olive Louies Candy Wa on Union and Cates Lowe 85 Campbell Sportin Goods Co 915 P1ne St Monarch Gara e 2318 Un1on Blvd Soldan Mothers Club 0 2 2 ge -:eff fhif-if Swfm 9?q,:,.,., ,,- .7 0 fr, IT ' X F' i Jx 4 6 Y-,QA-JJ P ,B ' ' .......................l.u..,........ece,,.... 195 g -, ' g . i ................l....,..........,..........,. 195 ' , -, ....l.Y,Y..,.,................l.......,,.,.........l,,,....,. 195 . . g ., .I.........,,.,,.....,..Arre,.,,,...,e,,.,,,.,,,, 192 i , i ......Y,Y.,.........Vlv.........l..l......l,,..l........l,v.e 192 . 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Suggestions in the Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Soldan High School - Scrip Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


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