St Patricks High School - Shamrock Yearbook (Eau Claire, WI)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 52
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 52 of the 1936 volume:
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X2 A X My llfi. 11, k , 235 H W O37 wmv JJJAA, 4,51 4,-4, I Q J, A I: F 4 Mimi. K 'Y fy :i.?w:gQwm,'4 vdwx 7 wwsw EEEESE sk MW XX ff MAJ Woqjryy My Jkif MSQEVQWQQ My if ffwf W M655 fwfwg? Wjwwfwyfb MMM Nwy 1 it -wi , ff J, f,g w Y Q 1 9 fi 1 J if H! . W 1 M g J' ' i 3 , 'b , - . V 'W jj ff' fy www jj V N03 3 ' x5 ' 1 y. . Xxx' -Xji' fy MA p I Y :rg W W 5 S SB 2 .J ' , - b is 'xx 3 Og! W9 N i1 X E fly :V ff Z 5 , L 2 an Q3 KX .' ri Qa 2f N af V -A is XJ AN is Ag lx I WVfJ 69 f 4 y ' . Rai Q W ww 1 N Qylgqf 2 2 Q ffw ' A X? Q! f g L5 W Q22 x 4. 'P wx g m THE SHHMRQCK December, 1936 156,21 fax:-B1 -SL'C L, fb- -A- -N- fuk 13--.. L 'I STIEFF QM RAYMOND CRAEMER Edztofr DOLORFS CHAPUT 4s.sz9tant Fdztor 2 EILEEN McMANUS Ba smess Manager ROSEMARY Goss 1 Qezstant 'C VIRCINIA LUNID j A 7' PATRICK OBRIEN 3 'vw f-A ENHJLISH TEACHERS Lzterary Adusers REV HUGHJ DEENY Busmess Advzser JY' 1 ff' P ru G Q 13' Q ,QT PHTRICIUS HIGH acumen, EKU CLRIRE WISCUNSIN Ex 'bb' X N , 4 , ' I - gy Q Q 0 ' ,, ' ' A M -, ., 1 ' N ,AL ' 'E' A 11' E E w ft' Q. -1 . 1 L'2', ' , 1i'A-Q -Kr. f LE A ' ff V' ,Lv A J . , Al., Q:-A xg E JM. 1 Q . il. r I V.- ,zu Q .1-D x Y' .-f,,,,, If ..,-,..f::- Y li ' 'TI , -. , . , , .ii wg- S Xl -. I 75+ 2. .W1 I V qv' X' Q. x ' ' g' . fl, '52 Q52--. xgx. - . .Newt-an KN . ,Ati 1 3--1 4 ' - 1,1 ' 4 I ' ' : - 43. . ' 'W as in-. I a -A - - .fi Y 1 jj 5 .' , A! N A IX I V ' v ML A f' 1 fx ' x L I - 1 - t LL J-1 Q L . Ny ' 1 yr f ' 17' I XM X J J ' af J 'M 'f yr? X J X 'I Y . i .J A ff' '- 'N -.sb X ,A EX D QQ X gf 'X Qi . xx 1. Q' - ' ' 7' 'X KY ri . Lk .rw - 'Q Dx W Y R . ,. f I xv ' ' y by gc ' 1 Vx ' 'FA s N T J E ' Q x' Sn X Bxpk E 5 X lik AK X N' -A K3 lf .,1 WNY xf X x . ' , ' 'KK .4 R: . 'E X W wx 'ax -' PSX' ' E fr ? A XX. . D? ' ' ,l X X xx NN , X fi J N 5 Q -X VL nl. 3 . 5 xx V ' 'Q -J v gf -is 4: P: A E1 'O Q. J .ff-, X 4 xy 1 t' X A Q at X V ' I ,f :' XF! T - Q 3' W 'E' R Xi' WL X b ..-H gf, H ,W ,,,, ,,-,,, L- ..Ei..-ifi:,,gil,,i'gMi -,-,1,,,-,,,, M.-- .QM ,Mig if v l L--A f , , x f g A , x x E ' x 0 Y ' .1 -... ' - E 1 ' X ' Q m Q 0 0 V- i X x yo TH LEQFCQNTENTS Vownu: IV NUMBER I bTAFF FATHER MURPHY Qlllustx atxony I+ ATHDR MURPHY JI 1:11 ARIAN Cathuzm Pazelsl z INIPRFSSIONS OF Fu DPE WINTER SCEM: flllumtlatlonj TRAWELOGUE INXESTITURE OF IIIONSIGNOP Donn lIlluwt1.At1o'xl PRELATE OF OUR I-IOUSFHOLD Dolons Cham!! OWE THINC I ASK Do ofas Chapel! INCIDENTALS JOHN MCCORMACK Qlllustl atxony Iuzymond C mmm 1 THE NEW!-:QT ADDl'11oN:. T0 THE LIDRAIQY THE C' ALIERY Iohn Cmpcntn PICTURE REVIEWS FINE DAYS ON THE RIVER Bef mud 0 Brzcn J WLSTERN IVONDP ru AND QIllust1at1on:.j WESTERN YVONDERLAND FLASHES fwxth Illustratlomy EDITORIAL READING MENL FOOTBALL Lorne B7 cmd! 'JI BASKETBALL PUBLISHED BY ST PATRICK S HIGH SCHOOL IN DECEMBER AND MAY Students Subscnptnon Rates S100 a Year 7:nc a Smgle I opy MAGAZINE MEMBER ummm NATIONAL SCHOLASTIC Pxsss Assocwrxora Tm' Cnuouc S nom. Passs Assocnmon ml t . 1 I bv KI - X E ff I KJ X I .............................................,... I .' ' ' ........,..........,...... 4 ' 1 : Y , .' ....................,...... 5 cf 4 v g','J7' I u 4 'I ................................. 7 I ' 'l ' ' ' .,......,...............,.. 10 ' .....,.................. . ......,........,.. ll I . ' L' ' . ..,........ 12 U Su ..,......,................ Iii A , .,. . . ........................Y...... .. 14 I ' . , A . ,...., ..fS ........................U,,...... 15 ' ' . ....................... 16 A SING YE J0YEU1.LY ...................,................ 17 1 A 7- ' 2:7 . ' I . ................. 18 ' 1. I ................... ....................... 1 9 . I I - 1 his ' ....................................... 20 ' ' ....................,........... 21 .A , ' ,'4 ,!,S, D' 1 . ' ' .- ................,. . 22 I' ................................ . 23 I ' . .......................... 24-25 .. ............... ......................... .... 2 7 1 ' ......,. ............... .........,........ 4 3 I . ............................................ -1-1 I .I I ff . ' .............. , ....... .... . ........... ..... 4 5 4 I , . . . - '-I - - D t - D ,, , Y ll ll - - - ll 0 I' 'I - . A A K4 J' I ' ll' f ll 1 , I l l I ll fhzs N gl Up' .y Y, xl' , ,, 3 1? L 4 5 u ' v 1, V I I 4 YM 4 ,df ' f, 4 V0 A I ,f ' 3 IN, J f' 09' Two .'4l'lmf.fff'f!1If Il'11Lt'3 flfllf 114 1 HII4 fl 1'L,c'f ff-1 nf' fffrffffl H11 ffirplf H wi f In muff .917 ' 'llfff llH'fff'11f1.' Ht f 7 I Fuflzf r .-1 lly', 'f'l' Jl f1 ,rlkj flu 'ff .1If,, -fffflfli' IJ. wil lf ' 4 1 f21V1'n1w'rff 1f1 fl.4'.w an .MH Il I, 1 If llf HI , !'.x','lll'I Father Murphy jubilarian Gathf-rme Pavelskx, 37 Tho author of thas aftzcle tellb us of cr rwfcnt zmt mdk a 07 uf yncsf who 19 0, fvzcnd and IJ nefactoz of we Pau CA S OT long ago I had the pleasme of mvet mg Father AmbroQe Muxplw, a 111 long fzxend of the parlsh Jus b forx. hm Golden Jubllee, OL tobgr 28, my compamon .mu I vxem tc, St Jamfis Rectorv I La C x e to wxsh hlm happmess on hlS fiitxeth amux cr Q ly as a plxclt e wele 1,4 un into a con 0 Ln ut SIPIDIQ ful 11 hed llV1'lg'1OOI 1 Afteral f' ty X elcorve, Ffzthm Murphy 5 Ltled m L X J chaxr, as lf plepaled for 31OI g xx It O 0 c 1 Just D1Ct1I'C-I bun as he mt there, h 5 head lbsflllg on tnx bww ot die J 1 W1 11 me ' h'm our une xt o 1 ol t ue mit 1 tri T 9 r u e xmgef windy 'A vw ' Wm 11 hke all the lest fft ie nzebtu, I H we tl D 5.1 xx um es to vexfolm, Gm' T no thi 2. rm. tmub., xx enk ln and wa. R ui My u bt 11 'lpL9.a 101 or mm w 'ls that 110 mf-s the raoit r one t 1 san thaf I h. d e ef nwt Vhw we vc, 1 U W mm nucwtxons concexm, H1 5 me swu A I was told that he was born 111 Bmledune, T !'lD'i'X1 x fel 1 'fe a wenf Huff 1 SL Jul X Gan, of hxs hte V13 pale Lb b1ou 1t fum to Chvppewa Pills, Wx 011.511, a 11 he Vemlem' Notxe Darre School mdfuxe wo lrcelf B wx '11 me claws of If nd cf 1 L11 pl 5 l ski' J 1 e you wxl not be gomg to school tal uw a g1ade each year sw t0'1?V, bat We xdwg ml en corwdltlom M ould permxt, and rfoglfwslag afa rwmdly as poswlble Ut 18 mterl' tmg to 1 otf' tl t m tne Umxcx wtf of Chicago todzfy tuey me bxmg back this cactom of le tufg tue stu c Cx is px og' e t then' own rate and as 110151 lv 4, poo b' J Aftez Father 11111111 hd com wcfnd hxs plfnlnllfal v courxe, he docxdvd 'LH lt 1 5 rear wafs to be th t of 1 prxe t IY1 h1 1 e 1e too X L., C1L1O'5Q the mean to Wufope As he tuld ., uuomt antemhnq smool ln Bfflgxum, Ffauce and Ausbrv h enjoyed 10L, 11l1!g men ones of these school dam He Qtu I cd m Belgium two years be fore he went to Aubtln and attended the Un1veh1t,,f of mmbruuk there He also stud led 111 Pfuxb Mu h to hls dlsadvzmtage, he dldnt know oxw word of French when he xx ent mto th Lt 'foantly Imaglne yo .1 me-'f m that preuxmxrevt He told us about how he had tm t lnsl we hm co uwslon on a plece of vaper Id gnc xt to tHe ,Jf1C9t 111 the Study ma Father Murphy vs as ordaxned to the prxestlood the same year he I'9CD1VEd h1S mvnor O1dC!'S Three dads after h1S ordma t on he Qaxd IIS Hrst ma s Thls must have been the mobt sacred tune of has hre To be fmbfe to offer up the mass once would bn a gueat accomphshme at Father Murphy has offered thoufsavlg of :names ln hls l'fe Father Muxphy was appomted as HSSIS tant to the well known prxest and pastor of smxth I can 1magxre hxm as he lCC61Ved the ncxw tndt he would ba back m lus own home ton n, where he had Q1 ent hls chlldhood He told L S the stoxg of lub x mlf wlth tue In.11 ns He nent ti rough mavy hdxdsmps to get to MQ W1 0119 llveie nc ldqhlm were not bf' cause of the cfuclcy of me Indlam, bat bn cause of the d1fh..L'ty of traxel Lo 'd you DICUIII hum covered wxth blankets drxfmg along '11 1 Jw ffl as x 0.1 drn e along In a largn automobxle wxth a heats' and a rfmdlo m xt? I can unde. stand that the hfe of the prxnstfs m tue e. my bmefs vu-Q none too easy Two Vearx l.1te1 he vx 15 IIJUUD tv-d to 'awzct Famer Ldvm 01 S+ J 'rreq Pau v LL LQ Cu ww unom he sown 21'cceu!cf1 'exemtw 1xLr,f11 xenlwgn Ju ne Lorna cu' 1 Nw 1101 the prw H fn' L , wear Thwe x exe not N 01 I1 ln the ver, any . 5 , i f , , , . ' , I , , ' 0 1 - - .. I ,- . .. ., 1 .. . . , j D , . -- X ... . , ,. - v 7 L QA. N1 . . . 1 . . . , . , W . .. V I 1 1 , ,.,- ' ., , I A L. f ,.' , ' . ,, ' . .L..: .f, 1 v , , v u f L . f L w . - - ' v - w 1 1 -' 1 .1 L-4 A A K . .,, . . . . . , . - . -. .. , . . Q- , .. k cl f f - n .' ' 14' A fx 1 ' -, .' . .. ., 4 . . 1? G Y . . 1 , i ' 1 7 'L n fu' ' 'vw-mug ' ' . -' 1 , n ' ' Q Nr' 'J L41-. AJ , g, V . Q : . ' ' . . . V . V4 . , ,K h K A .. V , li 1' 1 1- 1 v - . 1 - 1- 1 . ' .u .. . 4 v ' . 1' 'I' A . 'I' , .. V 1. ' . - If 1-.x 1 b. J L . . W f h.- f ...L 1' J . . . . f. W, - .L -' .-2,-..' ' A 7- ., ,E , - - . .3-Ar v x Lu.. . Q.. . 1 . 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' A .. v . v, 1 .. , f' ., L f . , -1 1 ' . ' ' -Je-.V L 1 . .' cr., 'Jn L 1. . .L , 1. f -. V ' . . . . . . ., 1 G ' V, , . ANL., -. K., Y f -v 1 03 N v . ,L L AL D, f . A A . ' v rt , 1 vivn. .-'3 Q 1 1, -' ' 1' 'Y 4 'I'-.v ' ' r '- . 1 L ass. . 1 '. Ln L, .A A il - Y K A A-If 5 0 1 s a 1 ' 1- . 1..- 1- 11' - - ' ' Q 4 Q . L .J : 1. -- 4 A 1' - P , , 1 ' '..L na' .' VJ... -,.:1-- ' 1 :..f f' '1,- ' -- t 'L -1P. EL ,3 'ein 5 3.1 ul xt .- A, ibm R. . . . . L. 1 V- . '1 ' . .' .. 1 - 'V' ' ' .- v H, 1' 1 - . A N x Q, 'A A V , . . , , , , . , , 1. 1 , .L ' x .A -U ' ...Uv 1 1. A . ex . u.- : ' -. ' , .. .. ' 3 ' - ' A K L I -4- bn N - 4 ' V' 'w ' ,Lf ' 1 1 '- v -1 4 , rf 1 ' ' - , U , , , , ,,,. . ,, .A , .. .,.C,. .U H - .. ,K-, V -4 --n 1 ' ' ' - . nu . , .. , A 1 A s - - D . .. , , A- . . J I 3 A 1 - , -T A . V H ! H., . .,,.,.., ' , . . . ' ' ' Q 'v ' . 1 ., 4 A . - .ac -1. , A - 1 - f- - U - - , .M ,.,g ,J . . . 1 M ,, - 1 1 , . 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V U . - 5 THE HAMROCK tlmes and after the custom was adopted the prxests dld not wear them when they traveled It appears to me that Father Murphy has done much vsork m the hne of charlty H has donated many of his books to our own school llbrary He has also glven us many beautlful plctures Father Murphy has added many good books to the Aquxnas Hlgh School and to the School of Nursing of La Crosse One of the storles Father Murphy told us was about the seal that was sent from Canada to h1m as a glft A llttle boy passed the case the seal was ln and stood there crvmg H1s mother sald Tommy what IS the matter? Tommy rephed I want to take the teddy bear home He put the seal ln the Aqulnas Parish School for thc Slsters and chzldren to see The slsters thought thls a very fine seal so they took lt oyer to show the sisters of the Nursmg School Father Murphy XlSllZ6d the School the next day Sister sald Father I have somethmg wonderful to show you She brought out the seal He stammered a Very truthfully she told h1m The slstels brought lt over You better take lt back was h1s only reply Soon after h1s appomtment to La Crosse the church bu1 ned Wlth all the work to do Father Murphy dld not take a Vacatlon even over the week ends A real vacataon came twenty three years later He tl aw eled West A year or so later the 3SS1StdHl1S urged h1m to take another vacatlon but he only rephed I w1ll have to walt another twenty three years One can see that he IS not ln favor of vacatlons for hlmself I asked Father Murphy what he thought of the world cond1t1ons of today He sald I thlnk they are somewhat barbarous The Barbarlans fought and a new ClV1llZ2,tlOlI was formed If the wars contmue as they hate m Spam we w1ll have a new Chrlstlapnty Com munlstlc and Soc1al1st1c ldeas are bexng taught IH schools and colleges That ls why boys and glrls should attend Cathoh Instl tutes where tney are prepared to fight agamst thls Cathollc papers are wrltlnfr ar tlcles on world cond1t1ons lf people re fl these they w1ll have the rlght slant of thmgs I was very much lmpressed when Father Murphy told me that he had never mlssed one Forty hours Devotlon at St Patr1ck s since the tlme of hls ordmatlon untll later yeals He ha oeen prevented from attendlng be- cause of xllness Father Murphy IS an excellently s lcce s ful speaker He has been xnvlted to sp '1 1 at many banquets He pa sed thls 1e'narl I would accept all the ll1V1tatlO1IS gn en Ire to be to zstmaster at banquets I would be a vsanderlng toastmaste1 Aftex I had ootalned all the mformatzon a v1s1t to the church to see hxs co OLIZIOII of xelxcs The larger ones he has ln Q ses llke the ones that are kept on St Joseph s alta IH our church tHe has glven to St Patr 1Ck s a large collectlon of rehcs J The smaller ones are set 1n Jewels He can tell the hlstory of each large amd small relic Fa her Mulnhy has a rehc for exery feast day of the ve lr Ile took us to ee hlS ne at and well kept sac 1stw Exerythlng IS lmmacula c I got thls 1m pres slon when he opened the cablnets whe e hxs xestments are kept If you were to VlS1t Father Murphy I am sure y ill w ould get the same 1mp1 esslons as I O1 leavmg h1m that evenlng I felt as lf I were leavlng a fuend I had known for many years He IS kxnd hearted good humor ed and lox ed by all He xs a great puest f'5 fee af wi 9 , ' 0 7 Y . . , , , - . - . ' . '-. 71 7 . e 0 n . .C Q .- . . 1 . . . Q Q . . u 0 A 5 - . - ' v ' ' - ' 3 A , up I . , . I ' 99 J . ' . n I K. cc - ' n - ,v ' l U . I- F H . . - . . 7 ' . I 1 ' , , ' sc - ' S T ' Y ' . n , , ' ' , s . ' 1 ' ' ' . L L s. - . 'K ' N Z' . 1. l ' I' ec? ' - Y K ' ' I '. ' . c, 'fI . ' I y. . y 1 n ' ' ' Y 1 ' 1 I ' ' 46 , 2 L A , 1 , , , H A , ' . SL ,r.n bit and asked, Just where did you get that? Father Murphy would give me, he suggested ' H ' , -' - . El c - n as t ' A rr , ' 1 f 1 ' -rs V s ' , u , L c LA s. ' F , 1 A ' wa I , . . L . . ' 7 u n L 7 . . ' ' , . - . '- y I 1 . . L . . ' ' L' A 1 ' I. v . w ' s -Q v V .1 tl V Y . ' I I I v u o 0 ' 4 , . H c t . . l.f 4 ' k , , n F 1 0 . iw n 66 ' . ' V - Y . n - - . Q s 9 . if Y r L . v . . I . . . , . ' ' ' C6 . . . , ' . 0 . . - S ' ' - - 1 ' 1 I 'Il' x , , , I X 1 I . 5 1 H Y ' 'ff I-- .a W Imopressions of Europe As told by Miss Margaret Wilcox to Elaine Christiansen, '37. E salled on the beautxful Queen M ary whlch 1S the second largest boat IH ex1ste11ce The Queen lllcuu IS svn 1lar to a flostmg hotel It carrxes thre tnou s md people mth a c ew of fix e h11n lrefl It h s tl11 ee decks first class st cond C135 an l thud class O11 the first cl ss deck to lld be seen such p1om ment people asLadyAs 1 ley and Lac y Pecle The second and tlalfd class decks are for people of more l1n1t d me ms There IS ex e1vt11 10' aboard the sh1p th It one could fi1d 111 '1 great hotel 1 IH rrnw' pools o1ches tras fboth ,,1z a d ym, 1on,J, deck games ard l1b1 ITICS After we had made a short stop at Ch mourg to l t few pa s 11ge1s off 1 e sa1 ed on to Southampton The do lxl Ig t Southampton wx s a 0' vla affau There '11 ts so much snoutlnp' and tootvnfr Ol horns th t 11 seemed as 1f tlse wx hol c1ty h d tu1 rel ot? to see the large boat due c The ha1 o 1' 1 as lled w1th yachts 1 1a mallcrfusex Iam of vase small boats escorted the Quee z Mary mto the harbor Southampton IS most IHIZGYGSIIIIO' because It IS the place from wh1ch the founders of New Englmd sa1led and one of th last swhts of Eng nd that they saw Strange to say the c1ty has changed llttle slnce then S3ll1I1g Althouffl1 the customs took the fre ter 1 O1 tae afternoon th 19 1 1s enough to enable us to new the lands ape as me rode up to L01 dOll Ill Engl 1nd 111 11f11t lasts unt1l about 10 o clock I was ren rsuch d1sappo1nted 1 1 the Envhsh v1llaffes they we1e not the Cuunt Vlll ges of old England that I had 1 ll 01ned and read about We got our fi1st ghmpse of London at n1f nt Tne 1 tv of 110 don rem1nded me very FILILII of X l e c1ty 111 the Umted States, be au c of t 1 Ixeon electrlc slpfns that could be seen every Where We pass ed through the suburbs of the Clty and arrlved at VlCtO11a S t a t 1 o n where we all got 1nto bus- e s W h 1 c h took us to ourhotel the V1ctor1a Bu1ll mg of the Jub llee O tt e way we passed the Parlxament I?u11d1n0 Westmmst r Abbey, and the Palace o e Ix ll aff' Our hotel 1oom w as xery old and qua1nt place decorated ww ltll shmlng brass O lr hotel room 1' ted We 11rn1nste1, and durmg the nlght we could hear the famous ch1n1es of Wesfmlnster W L tmmster mfluences and donunates London as Notre D1me miluenc s and dom mat s Pans It IS much d1fferent however, th 1 Not1 Dame b c us It has the Tomb of Cl 1uf'f 1 an I otl 1 1amo tombs are all ox er the floo1 tombs of S11 Plnllp S dnev Words 1 on th Iord lml en a1d many Nullew 1 .Ill cu 1 and f mous c xxmfs 'll tu Cs ll 11111s L1 lb Goth1c lhedxem sl1 l1 toc ' - 1 ' 1 c o 1 t L L+. th ' , 1 1 A. 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THE SHAMROCK W8StmlDSter School bu11t behlnd the Ab bey IS a church school that at one t1me was Cathol1c Some of the most famous people of London have gone to th1S school We saw the school boys 1n their Norfolk Jackets and hlgh silk hats The Changll' of the Guam ds at Buckmg ham Palace was the next thlnff we saw This IS a ceremony that should not be mlssed by any forelgner who v1s1ts England When one sees th1s ceremony one begins to realize Just what the DOHIIHIOD of England stands for and what holds It together The people of England love pomp and ceremony and they show It As we traveled about the c1ty of London we saw Buckmgham Palace and St James Palace the present home of the new king of England and we pa1d a v1s1t to the Tower of London In the Tower of London I felt as if the walls of the building were closing ln around me All those horrible years of perse cutlon seemed to come marching back and in my lmaglnatlon I saw the cells of the tower filled with many people who were condemned to death by the many klllgS Here it was that Walter Raleigh were beheaded It IS in the Tower that the crovsn Jewels are on dlsplay The crown has a dlamond so large th t the klng cannot wear xt for any length of tlme In going from modern London 1 into wh t looked llke medieval London we passed through many suburbs and w1nd1ng passages which finally brought us into old London It seems very much as lf modem London had been built in fzont of old London Old London IS much the same as it was years ago In one of the old sections of Lo ndon they still have an old town cr1er who dre ses 1n lns ancient clothes and goes up and down the streets calling the hour and all IS well In splte of the fact that England IS P10 testant it he1 ever one goes one can see Sl ns of its folmer Catholicism One evidence lS the many crosses that may be seen even, where The country slde of England 1s much the same as the Wlsconsxn country slde exceut that the grass and trees are a much rxcn r green We passed many beautiful estates ore of whlch had a flagstone walk Frgush Country houses are bu1lt close to the road wlth SDRCIOUS gal dens Ill the back Beautiful roses are found almost anywhere VVe vlslted the very beautiful estate of the House of Warwlck It was bullt ln the twelfth century Each Earl that llved in the estate changed the arrangement of the house so now it has a comblnatlon of fifteenth SIX teenth seventeenth and eighteenth century f llIllSlllYlg'S Beautiful tapestr1es hang fx om the walls The estate IS filled vxxth many old and famous portraits 'lhele IS a beautiful Chanel whlch co italn m ny of Van Dyke s D3.ll'llZlll0'b Tle Eall of Warwick IS dea ly lox ed by the people of hxs x lllage In the h arts of these English people the Ball of W rwick ranks nefzt to the Kina YVh1le Ildlll about the countly slde of England we stopped at a small town wnere X e vlslted the cottages of Shake yeare and Anne Hatllau ay There lb a great contrast between cottages Shakespeares cottage ls x 615 small vu nh low cexlmgs rock hewn floors and an old time 'ire place Call h1s works ale there ln tl e1r or1g1nal forml Anne Hatha way s 1 x IX lox elx with 1 large g1I'tl8ll sulloundlng It Orford College is the Intellectual cenfer of E lgland We wx xtecl lt and sau the scvelal colleges of winch it 15 composed Each coll ge has 1ts own name and tne CI est of a klng on xt Most ot the great men of England and many renouned men of other countries have stud xed there The people have large features and soft vol es In England one finds gl eat wealtn and splendor and then again the cllrest pox erty but in that respect It 1S no dxfferent fl om any other country The Fng l1sl1 people use many amusing express1ons A dle s IS alwax s a mock any l1ttle trouble or Cl1Sl,Ll1b'iYlC6 IS a bit of bothei a hat IS al ways a bo my top knot everything IS ughto and Jolho and rawther , - - L , I , . . - . , . . ' S . 0 . 1 I . . . , s . - Q ' - 1'- - x -0 .J A s ' I n u n , ' .- O ' s . . , . 7 r - -1 . . , . . . . . 9 r ' . , ' , . 9 I . s 1 K . . s'p . 7 C ' s . 1 . . I 7 A L . i ' ' - I ' 1 ' qw n v 7 - -1 1 1 0 1 . Y , . . Y 1 ' K , . V .Q . . . . 1 1 ' . . ' ' j' . .I 6' W l Q I Q s L L D V' . g. ' -1 . - . ,. . G . - . , . . o 9 - r 1 . l . I V a 1 v : f ' a is: vs . ' 1 - V - C 1 - . such famous people as Anne Boleyn and Sir , . , - - 1 , , . . 7 ' f - ' i - ' s - . 9 7 . 1 A - u Q 1 , - ., KL v V '. - . .' , . . u . s e ' z 1 . . - 0 - 1 f a l - A . I 1 n 0 s f 1 . L f ,, 1 ' .t A . ,1 ' ' ' , N G, . ' ' Cl !9 . . 1 c I s ' ' 1 ' . ' l I L ' f - l ' .. nl 0 . , - . c s. ' , s 1 I . l c - , A , ' 1 y va I ' ' , . - u - n . a v - A - . , . e . . . . ' ' Klf ?D ' , . ,, . Qs , . . . , . Q , .. . K . , . , . . . . . , . H . .,,. , ' Q 1 R r . , ll - r- . H 1 .. H' ' ' ' 9 ll ,' 7? 66' ' I! ll !l ' I THE SHAMROCK Some of my lmpresslons of England were very marked for lllstance the Chrls tlanlty of the people Whlch prevalls They are not at all as we lmaglne them bltter and prejudlced but they are truly rellglous peo ple I feel Justlfied ln saylng that the Catho llc Church IS better off ln England that ln any other European country The first country we VlSlt6d after leavlng England was Holland Contrary to the lm presslon glven by the many storles people read about Holland It IS not a country of wlndmllls and flowers We saw very few wlndmllls The people are lmmaculately clean ln fact one can find them out sweeplng thelr steps at SIX o clock ln the mornlng As regards to thelr dress th y have llo taste whatever they wear abomlnable clothes The Women especlally are of GYCGSSIVG welght The language of the people IS extlemely dlfii cult to undel stand Whlle ln Holland we also VlS1ted the art gallerles and saw many famous palntlngs by Van Dyke It IS surprlslng that the Dutch could have produced such plctures as those of Van Dyke and Rubens Swltzerland IS a country whlch IS dlvlded lnto German SWISS Itallan SWISS and the French SWISS The SWISS are thrlfty clean lnterestlng people They love rruslc art and llterature They are a w ery democratlc people even more democratlc than the people of the Unlted States In thls country there IS no dlstlnctlon made between soclal classes In polltlcs there IS both a Cathollc party and a Protestant party Absolute toleratlon IS glv en to both partles On our wax through Belglum I notlced partlcularly that the tralns were very dlrty People Slt SIX ID one compartment and there IS no alr condltlonlng system on the traln The people could almost be called slovenly They seem to have llttle use for manners When we Wellt to Italy the most outstand lng thlng that I notlced was the Itallan peo- ple the old Roman Splflt seemed to have been lost untll the tlme of MUSS0llHl They now have galned back thelr mllltarlsm the Splrlt of medleval Italy has dlsappeared The Itallan people call thls the Golden Age of Italy There IS a powerful struggle golng on be- tween the Pope and MUSSOIIHI The Church represents the Splflt of real Italy the splrlt of love laughter and muslc Mussollnl IS try lng to brlng back the Splrlt of anclent Rome and lead the people away from the thlngs they loxe the thlngs for WhlCh they are famous Durlng my stay ln Italy I had the good fortune or havlllg an HUJIBHCG Wlth both the Pope and Mussollnl There was a Stflklllg colltrast between the two We vlslted Musso- llnl first We were told that we would have to salute hlnl and not knowing what else to do we complled Wlth the ofliclal s command Wllen Premler NlJSS0llIll came ln everyone shouted After the H0136 had subslded a mes sage was read to lllm fWe had no knowledge of what the message contalned although It was supposed to have conle from usj The featul es of MUSS0l1H1 showed hlm to be a man Our meetlng Wlth the Holy Father was a great contrast to our meetlng Wlth the Preml er of Italy VVe traw eled along the well known Applan Way to the summer home of the Pope Castel Gondolfa The Applan Way w s bullt ln early Roman hlstory a part of lt IS stlll ln use by the Itallan people When we reached the summer home of the Pope we found a great many people from all natlons of the world waltlng to see the Holy Father We were led through many rooms and finally reached the receptlon room Before long the Holy Father entered preceded by HIS person al clerlcal attendants He was the most salntly l00lilIlg lelsoll I have ever seen or ex er hope to see on 831th VVhen I loo' ed at hlm lt seemed almost a lf I were seelgw' a salnt Because the Holy F ther was not well he staved only long enough to glxe us tle Papal blesslng and to bless any altlClCS we lCont1nued on Page 26 . ... , - , . . 1 1 ' ' , - . 1 i U 0 0 ' - ! Y 1 , - n n 7 . - , 1 . . u L. . 0 Q n ' ' Y . . . . . 9 7 - . , .V . r ' ' ' ' J 9 ' . . 0 ' 1 u , .. Q Q l l . 1 . . 9 'l u A . . . , ' - 0 , . . . , , . . .. , , - 5' 1 Q . ' Y . n ' I 5 c , , , , , , Vlflth strong character and wlthawlll of steel. . . 1 1' l - . . 0 I l - - 1 1 , - . . , , . . s 7 , ' . . . . . a . l 1 I , u 4 l o n 0 u A . a v f I . , , , .. N 4 Q . . I 1 D ' L' , 1 , ' .- l . L - , L 3 . . . - f ' . lc ' Q n a 0 ' , I l A . S To , - ' . ' f a 1' ' , v in r ll ! A 41 0 '1 V Y . ' I THE SHAMROCK 'Hi'- QR O 1811 Winter Ziirtxstxfy Gerry Eldndge 38 chzld some years ago Rubbzng clear the mzsted pane I watched the fall of snow The glzstenlnq drop? fell softly do ln lzke fmefed streaks zn 'maze Of zntermz 1glzng crwtals fo blend in snony haze The crystals dfzfted slowly untzl dusk fell mto night I asked 'lf stars had fallen to paznt the pane hee u hzfe . 'X x Q e x e ef, . I M Y MR ' ' ba .. Q. , -- 0 I pressed my face to the window as a 1 1 'f 1. ' f , ,A 1' . .4 . . . . . Various Authors North, South, East, West-all directions beckoned students this year. In these columns we have some interesting excerpts from stories of trips. Wisconsin Leo Cary 38 T was early autumn and the day was CFISD yet balmy enough to be one of the rare days yyhlch Helen Hunt Jackson wrote of ln her poem October I was maklng a trlp to Plam and stopped to v1s1t the shrlne From my place hlgh on the h1ll I could overlook a hxgh way wlth 1tS speedlng cars the meadows and the llttle vlllage b yond The leaves and 'tcorns vsere Just begmmng to fall The shrlne xtself was no magmtlcent basl l1ca wlth the CllltCh6Q'l near the door proclalm mg the mlracles wrought thele No It was a small httle structure but lts xe1y smallness ln real. d 1ts beauty There yyele only four pews '1 fev statues and a small com mumon rall The 1 ace and qu et there an ay from the nolsy populace was a e mspumg stone statlons and on to the quxet httle vxllfw was among the most wondelful and peaceful moments of my llfe New York Mary Marshall 39 To me the East lb a dellghtful place to ylslt During our trlp there recently we Xl ltcl the mu eum and capltol bulldmg at Albany gre tt c ntels of mterest to people all oy er the cout try As we left that c1ty we notel signs talllng of the fireworks near the Sche uect tdy In td fe We walted for hours for the blllplbl, Il tl we saw lt beautlful amber lnfhts reilected 1n the runmng' water After taklng' ln the hlgh lxffhts of The Clty of Flectrlclty we retraced our course to Albany then to New York to see the great Queen Mary dock I remember the crowds of people swarm mg the long docks and spacmus rooms Whlle we were Freeport, Rhode Island we saw the opera Rose Marle on an open alr stage ir N ebraskal I zrqzma, Vzncent 38 Whlle we l1v etl at Columbus Nebraska on an an field where my f ther was an a1r pxlot them yy ls hlllltlllf 1llGWS'1lltS I always we mt alor g wlth one of the men who was a verv good marksman Vv c yy ould drue across the spacmus ficli yhuh was coveled yy 1th grass tall enou h to lude 1 pheasant In mv ch1lr1 lm yy 'ly thought I most of the success of hlllltlll f yy as due to mc 90 I ocl et cd It to be my L utv to pct th pl e y 11918 tl e pheftsft ts t ll fl td UWIUHLO e twcbuds X 1 X y cu 0 s ed vt hen 11V o e offexel to help me 1C ntnmcd on lug 3 U y, . I Q . . . , j Q I L ,V-V s sl C -- 1 , ' I ' y ' l 9 . -. I .vi S v ' , I . , , . . , 1 . L W 3 2 ' v f w .' , ' , , . 1 r nb . 4 w y ' U 1 - . ' v ,, 2 If K ' : ' O t l - I 0 . . K x ,, . . . ,, . 1 9 . . . . ,, . ' ca ' ' ' ' n ! 4 y . ' - , Y 1 3 1 , . , l, .. e . , , - Y . . . u . 1 5 0 ' '- 1 9 ln - x l Y - . K ' . -w i I n Cl , . , . 7 L . 1 u l v 1 7 ' K - f ' S I C CC u 5 1 ' , , y ,V.' . . . , ' . 'Q , - XD V 7 ' f . ,- . , , , .A , Y w W-. U .i .Y 3 b . y. 1 The Journey down the h1ll, past the beaut1ful I had many lnterestlng experiences- Among , .ge . 'af g 1 . ' ' x . . ' . 1 : U , ' . . , L l r, . ' , Q ' s to v ' W' f n . ' . ,. ' .54 . . ., , at . K 1 s V , 1 f V 1 . A n , ,L , ... rf cs r L I I 2, , rg L' x K I '1 ' ' v I - - . , M , X. . SA I Q fllif' V. , ' I, 4 Q4 ll Ex cl . . u - sf- I V1 v v v 1' . 1 , ' c the.. gg lt ,lx ' .. I vas er, sout- ' - ' ' .3 ' S- ' ax n ' 1. . . . SCENES FQOID NIC IDUQYTII UQ6 0fl720l2.by00R D000 Brellate of Qur Househo Dolores Chaput, 37 Thrs artzcle concerns our pastor, Monszgnor Dowd who was recently honored by Pope Pzus XI Tne pzctar es on the page opposrte were taken on lnvestztuve Day AM proud of the work of the clergv and the ever mcreaslng zeal and enthusl asm ln the mstructlon of the young sud h1s Excellency Most Reverend Alexan der J MCG3Y1Ck, at the lnvestlture of Mon slgnor Dowd October 7 at St Patrlcks Today one of our clerfry has recelvefl a speclal honol from the Holy See and I am happy to be mstrumental 111 brxnglng that We all hea1d the br1ef appomtment read by Father Brady first 1n Latm and then ln the vernacular Father Dowd was formally aopolnted Dorrestxc Prelate He IS now con sldercd a 11811 bei of the Popes household even thougn he does not reslde m Rome, and IS granted penal nrnlleges ln the Holy C1ty 'In chmax of the event came when Fath er Don d knelt belore the BISIIOD ln the sanc about We have clothed hun 1n pur ple, we have halled hlm as Monsignor, and thls great hon or, to be properly understood must be known to come from the Vlcar of Chrxst hlmself Any day ln Fall IS beautlful 1n Eau Cla1re but Nature seemed to lend more ture day the day on wh1ch papal hon ors were g1Vell to Monslgnor Don d Brief of Appointment Received by Monsignor Dowd Beloved Son health and apostolzc benedrctzon We have learned from the Bzshop of La Crosse that you as Pastor and Dean at Eau Clarrc rn hrs Dzocesc have clzstmgurshed yourself rn fosterrng youth and have seen to the buzldzng of a school and gymnaswrn wherefore we are pleased to as sent to the prayers of the Brshop who asks us to honor you wrth a speczal reward by whzch also we extend to you publzcly our own good wzll Wherefore by these apostolzc blessrngs and our authorrty we choose and make you and pro clazm you a Prelate of our household And to you therefore beloved son we concede the rrght to wear the purple even rn the Roman Court and to the rochet and lzlteuzse we concede to you that you may use and enyoy each and every honor przvzlege and prerogatrve that all other ecclestastrcs who have thrs drgnzty use and enjoy or can use and enjoy all other thmgs to the contrary notwrth standzng tuwry to read the prescrlbed profes svon of fa1th and recelve the purple cassock After that part of the cere mony was complete, he left the sanctuary and returned ln a f w mmutes, wear mg the newly bless ed ga1ment Next, tle B1shop blessed the rochet and plac ed It on the shoul ders of the newly appolnted monslg nor, and lastly the mantelletta was fas The clear a1r of an autumn day, a beau tnul blue sky a gol den sun all these combmed to make the day glorlous The DYOCSSSIOU was begun hom the rec toly led by the subdeacon Fatner Doran and sex vers Robelt and Donald Wollman Follow 11 g ww ere the NlSltll'lL' slsters the Knlghts of Columbus the clergy Cover one hundred 1n numberl our pastor and h1s Excellency Blshop MCG3XlCk Out on the chulch lawn the school band attlred ln thelr umforms of glecn and vshlte played the hy mn Ecc Qfzc erdos lBehold the great nr1estD W1th1n the church, the same melody was bemg su lg by the mlxed cholr of forty volces E Cardrnal Pacellz Secretary of State tened over the cassock On specxal occa SIOUS Monswnor Dowd wlll wear the vlolet colored cassock xx 1th 1 fa tened trall a sxlk belt x utn double pendant on the left side and a mentelet ox er the 10Lll8l, The plam chess consists of a black cxssock with red trlm mmgs and a xlolet belt Solemn Hilfll Mass began lmmedxately aftel the lnvestlture Father Plttz was cele brant Fathel Dem y w as Deacon and Father Doran, sub deacon Hls efccellency, Blshop McGas1ck QSSI ted mn cappa magna Hundreds ol Monslgnon Dowds fmends came to enjoy the d v w 1th lnm About one hundred clergymen sw exe served a luncheon ,r 5' f . 1 ' I ' x . X Y , , . , V. ' . t I . A l U s ' . . ' 1 1 . . . ,, , , . z ' , - , . . - . f' ' ' ' - 'e r 1 ' ' , . . , . , . . J 1 - - H y A D 1 L , S I 1 A Y u ' s , W ' A , Av .- . . . . i L ., . . . . . . c , . V X X .h Y X 5 , . s - H . ' . . l Q 4 l . ' - . N I 1 Q .I -4 ! - 1 1 . 1 Q u n 5 , , ' V , . . . - ' H I . 1 l n A ' v , . xr . , A 1 n - . K ff ' ' ' 1 . l . , v ' Y' 1 ' A fm , A .. ' , ' 2 . . ' 1 1 ' - COl01' on the 1I1VeStl- wear' the lznen tunzc wrth sleeves, commonly called ' u . Q, cl 1 , . . n . . ' . 1 . 1 V ' , . . ,, , - - - ' . ., I lr 7 V V i Y V YY Y iw A777777 V . -. , - . . v . . . - T - - o . ' 7 c S 5 l I . , V . ' - ' e 9 Q Q I 1 Q 1 -, ' a l . Q ' H . . - ' V ' n n s C A , I 0 i . 1 Y . . . L , . . . t . , . A . r , . . X ' ' 7 -KJ ' . I I . . . v - 9 I ' 3 ' . ' , ' C Q . ' . l ' 'L , 1 , , . U , K ' 'L 4 P . - 1 .1 7 1 , N' 1 rf A f ' I -7. y .3 r . 9 . 1 ' . f, 1 ' - ' ' .C ' - n 7 ' w ' A ' . L sJ ' 2 f ' a, ' . . . . . . I Q V V i THE HAMROCK after the mass Guests from Ill1no1s M1nne sota Massachusetts and from all palts of WISCOHSIH attended the ceremony N1ne prlests who vsere h1s classmates at St Fran cms Semmary were present Out of town guests and members of the parlsh enjoyed a few hours w1th h1m at the banquet 1n the evenxng The hall was decora ted beautifully for the OCCBSIOH mth baskets of multlcolored dahllas chrysanthemums and roses Honorable Judge Wlckham was toast master at the banquet and the program was not lackmg wlt Among the speakers for the evenlng was John Keegan a graduate of St Patr1ck s Hlgh School Hxs words re echoed the thoughts of all If our school IS tops today Y VN' and we know It IS we hate Monslgnox Dowd to thank for he certaxnly has been behmd all of our endeavors Grade and hlgh school students recognlz ed Monslgnor Dowd s preference fol p1 ay ers A few days before the lnvestlture both schools asked that a solemn hlgh mass be read at which they mlght recelve Holy Communlon for his lntentxons It was a glft they knew he would l1ke The cooperatlon of all the unlts was de monstrated ln an unmxstakeable way 1n the parlsh on the 1nvest1ture day All worked to make the event a happy memory ln the hfe of Monslgnor Dowd It was a great day for our pastor It wx as a great day for us 21:1 il li wel' erik- as? 151' cafLlbU L'Z4 0neThin 11893 W Dolores Cgaput 37 M MMW I pray each mght one qzft From God To cheer my heart as on I plod' The uorh ea It day has proz ed Much more Than I can do o er books I pore I f God would grant me One request I uould but ask To pass His test I4 . . . . . Y . . 7 - r ' 9 vl I I W - ' ' , I 1 , - . . . U . , . . . V l - . . Q U - ' ' ' 7 1 1 y -1 - ' ' . . . . . . ' v . - V . . . . , 7 U I u I u n , ' 1 ' I . . . . , U 5 c . I ' . . , . ' - ' J . , . . . Y , aa ' 4 v . , . ay. Q K gg- , .A if-f Q. v- x jz 'WZ' S W1 ' -G - 35, 21 ,ll-, ' - , - .v 1- fx? JNKQ 4 fd 3 .iw I- X, ,- ,- 1' , f N ' . r X L, 1 . ' 1 . r 1 3 ' v , n , , , . . . IINCIDENVIFALS Thzs group of selected themes on mzscellaneous subjects was chosen from the Englzsh files for thzs sectzon Daughter Takes the Wheel Anna M arze Fesenmazer 39 IDING along a beautlful country road m1d sunshlne and h1lls I suddenly was lnspxred I gathered my coura e m both hands and popped thls questxon Dad w1ll you pl ase teach me now to dr1ve H s reply was at first negatne but wxth a b1t of persuasxon I finally won nun we At last my dream was golng to come true As I sl1d behlnd the wheel the queerest lma glnable sensatfon enveloped me Why were my knees playmg ta '7 Why was my heart playlng Knock' K lock' 'P I dldn t have t1me to answer Who s there? because Dad was g1v1ng me mstru txors Was I paymg atten t1on Yes D1d I haxe It stra1ght'7 Yes Oh d fferently for as I sh fted gears and engaged the clutch the c 1 se med to be performmg IIS own verslon of Rock of Ages After havlng been assured that all was well that the bolts were st1ll there I pro ceeded to try agaxn It soon became monoton ous and not unt1l the unth t1me dld It prove successful An appx oachlng llmouslne was seen about one fourth of a rmle ahead .l sudden feehng of panu, sexzed me What was I to do? Should I stop? What lf he smashed mto us '7 The dr1ver of the other vehlcle came very cautlously and as he passed I heard a rasplng VOICE yell somethlng about these out and out road hogs I shouted back that I was n t a road hog and d1d he want to mal e some- thlng of lt? For sew eral mlles all was well untll one of Farmer Brown s blue r1bbon hens had the n lsforture of vsanderxnff across the h1glm ay at the same t1me that I came along But as I sald afte1 ward what s one chlcken more O1 less? Then too there was the boy on the b1cy cle who escaped a few broken bones and a smashed blke by slx 1nches The cllmax however came later as we approached home I dldnt reallze how long a sex en passenger automoblle really IS untll I turned the corner fDad had the dent ln the door fixed the n 'ct day but the bark IS stlll gone fx om the treej The samts ln Heaven were certamly praylng hard when I drove 1 to the ydld Had I but gone one 1nch more to the rlght Dad and I the car and the gar age would have been ln the repalr shop wlth Do not Dlsturb signs on the door The next mstant all was at a standstxll Dad s hat was m the back seat h1S plpe on the floor and h1s face strangely whfte I looked none the better rather as though I d been through seven wars and any number of hurrlcanes I have no drwor s ll ense The Four Hundred Cofrmze Fzsher This Four Hundred IS not a tram I hasten to say It IS a two wheeled buggy My pal Sped and I have remodeled It putting two lwnts on the back of xt and It looks l1ke the Four Hundred We dont need any llghts on the front as we are always passlng cars on the road We named It the Four Hundred because It goes four hundred mlles an I mean four hundred feet an hour I mean four hundred feet and breaks down But Sped and I do not mxnd We wa1t tlll It has gone thl ee hundred nlnety ewht feet and then we hop out and fix We go only three nlnety elght on Satur days because we haxe to slow down to nsten to the rad1o Yes we have no radno We hsten to the advert1ser s car fContmued on Page 301 X x -,X x x ' .. . 'X - f . .. z ' - --D -A H- -A X714 - l I . . , . - , , 1 7 , . , . , . . . , - ' ' ' ' . I . . . , H , el , . ' . . ' er . c ' ' . 1' ' - I N 0 V J u . - 9 I 7 I . , .r Q ru 'H e , . Q . - 9 s . ' 9 . ' sc ' va ' I ' . Y g Q A , - ' ' 1' ' g. . . . ' . ' iK i n 9, ' 3 ' 7 I 1 1 0 0 ' ff 7 Y, ' 1 , . -. 1 . . . , C . 1 n . - , I yes. That's what I thought. I soon learned I beheve It le needless to Say that' as Yee' - . ' 7 ',1 P: 1 ' 1 e ' I Q , a ' e .-i ' .' , ' li Y, i V ' X V v I ' I I J - v ' 0 y ' , Q . - . - . . y .. x ' - . . , ' ' I I 9 1 - . -' ' A, an' a ' ' A- 1 ' ' ' C 7 . .1 . . , , 7 . ' 7 -W - -1 , L I Y ' ' I - J ,, . I ' 1 . ft. 1. 1 , . o . Y . - . M - ' . , . - 1-. -. . , . , . , . mix ,pam ffifwnufkl Z .YJ Xqj Sing Ye IoyE11111ly Raymond Craemer, '37 The author had the opportumty of hearmg and m etznq John M cCormach at a concert here recently In thas artwle he 1 evtf tt 9 some of the lzttle known facts of the Izfe of the Q7 eat smgcz LL those who heard the famous Ir1sh tenor J onn Francls McCormack ln ou1 c1ty Octobel 30th were one ln ac cla1m1ng h1m the great world famous teno1 Although he has been s1ng1ng for a number of years he IS st1ll the beloved golden VO1LCd favorlt Durmfr the concert he sang a w1'le varlety of numbers ranglng from ar1 s from th operas to old famllxar m6lOd1ES The en cores that I enjoyed most were Just for 'I oday and Belleve Me If All Those Endear 1ng Young Charms John McCo1matk has had an lnterestmg career IIIS l1fe sto1y appeals to everyone Born on July 14 fifty two years ago ln the tmy plcturesque ullage of Athlone Ireland, he was the fourth chlld ln a famlly of eleven chxldren Hls talent as a s1nger became ap- parent at an earlx ge In fact lt IS Sald he was a born slnger Even as a chlld he was S1I'l0'1I1g constantly ax ywhere and every where He attended what IS now known as Summerhlll College 111 Sl1g0 Dur1ng h1S school he was tralned 1n xocal work 1n ad d1t1o'1 to hlS r gulfu st dIeS At fourteen he two shlllmgs for emch p 110 ma 1ce 15 1 s frrst pald engagement When stlll III h1s teens he was persuaded by hls frxends to enter a MUSIC Festlval 111 Dubhn Encour aged by hlS succe s he gate concerts IH the st rround111g towns Hou ex er 1n tl esc caxlv app arances h1s olea lllg Ir1sh brogue 11 as brot ght to h1s attentlon Then and the e he resolved to corre t h1s Enghsh pronouncm tlon To quote hxs own YY ords I had an ob Je t1ve an-.1 I steered towaxd It wlth tenac 1 He even lald au al e mffhts rehearslnff and rehearslng words m h1s songs untll todav h1s enuncxatlon IS perfect Ile graduated w1th honors at Summerhlll and at elghteen he had def1n1tcly decxded on hlS career smgmg He then set sall for M1lan Italy, to study under Slgnol Sabatlm and under his tfallllllg and fruldance he developed lnto one of the most famous tenors the world has ever known And yet wh n he tr1ed to begm h1s mus1 cal ca1ee1 he had dnscouragements wh1ch seem 1I1CI'9dlb1e now He turned down hls f1rst offer of a place ln a chorus Wlth a Dub 11n Opera Company and mstead became the tenor ln the Marlborough Street Cathedral ln Dublm wlth the magn1f1cent salary of one hundred and twenty fne dollars for the year Maklng hlS operatxc debut as Tur1ddu ln Cavallerla Rustlcana the young man was acclalmed a declded su cess Then followed numerous other oper at1c appea1ances ln Italy and on Octobel 15 1907 he was en gaged for Covent Gal den London Here he sang for seven consecutnve seasons and net ted as much as S360 000 annually 1n concerts By 1915 Mac was an outstandmg box of f1ce attractlon the world over In America he has been aflillated wx 1th the 'Ietwpoh an Clnutgo Plnladelphxa and C111 cfvfo Gra d Opela compames However he was not only a ballad smger When m Chl cago NVIIII the Symphony Orchestra he sang Handel and Morfart 'md Beethoven 111th the Orchestra accompamment Cr1t1cs accl.11m ed hlm the greatest class1c s1nge1 of the day And I' 1ec'er1ck Donaghey cr1t1c for the Chxcago 'lrlbure remaxltetl No other man ln the PIIOVSI world to dav can sine' Handel as vsell as Jol1n McCormack II1s XOICC IS also 1f!ll1101tB,llZ0d for future generatmns on phonograph recor ds For o le 1ecord alone he recened the tulx sum of S10 000 vshxch was more than Gereml Per h1ng recelved for one wear s S'1l'1l v I7 . l l. 1 Q D ' v fu , I l . -I - I 4 s. 1 1 I . 1 , , . l 1 1 I ' - , Q . - . . , . . v D 0 ! ' ' v - .I , . I u ' - za t Q - I Q so 'I , . . Y Ln. , IA I, U 9 . , . . . . ' .I I I 0 1 n sa ' - , , 7 - 19 , . . . L ' ' 4 1 - ,I ' . . . . ,, . ,, 9 ' I 7 ! ! , . . . . C N 1 I ' Q r . . . i v ,,' 0 - 9 9 1 ' . ' ' 0 h ' 4 1 ! ' . . X - o J 1 ' ' , , , . . . . . . ,, ,, . , - ' ' 1, - - , 5 - J . I 1 e . ' 1. . - - ,- sang at a concert 1n the town and recelved in , .t -q , . . . . 4 A , 1. , . - ' ' T . l 1 . e' r fr as 1 1.1 I N , - , , . . . fc: -A 0 7 ' . . K 1 1 . . . '- a , . , 4 2 i - - v v' . . . I c ' iv 7 I 4 I Q I .J . L, . , D a ' I L - l . ' ' , I ' ' ' . ' at H - v , n n on n V C ' 0' L 1 . -A . 7' 1 v ' ' ' - . . ' ' a l ' . . 1' V ' 1 ' . . . . u I I I A ' 3 c , . - - x , I . - - . . ' 7 H . o - - 1 ' r 1 , 1 77 - ' v ' ' I 1 I I ' 0 f ' - a . 1 e . , Il A V ty . . . .1 . O - -, . A ' 7 I . ' 0 I I . n. O 1 5 7 ' 7 L , f N V . . . Q . ' . l 1 . ' c 1 'c S . . . . u , v , - V n C L . 4 THE SHAMROCK In hrs anx1ety to do hls part durmg the World War he asked President Wilson low he could best serve By your smgmg came the reply So he enhsted ln concert tours to ralse money for the Red Cross Benefits Dur mg the war he ralsed slngle handed the al most 1ncred1ble amount of over a half a mll 11on dollars In h1s acknowledgment for hls outst nd mg char1t1es and Chr1st1an lxfe the Holy Father Pope Plus XI conferred on h1m the tmtle of Kmght Commander of the Order of Www St Gregory the Great Kmght of the Holy Seoulcher a Papal Count and Prlvy Cham berlam He IS also Chevaller of the Leglon of Honor 'md a Freeman of the Clty of Dublln The Umverslty of Notre Dame avtaxded the Laetre Medal to the smxhng Inshvnfmn and Holy Cross College of Worches ter Massachusetts conferred on hmm the degree of Doctor of Lxterature Hvs hfe s motto was Non progredx est 16U1edl Not to go forward IS to go back x ard 4 THE NEWEST RDD1TIOHB T0 THE LIBRRRY Rzm of Chrzstendom by I-Ie1 bert Bolton Fzre on the Earth by Paul Furfex Etiquette by Emlly Post Book of Old Shzps by Cult er and G1 ant North to the Orzeht by Anne Lmdbexffh A Watch m the Nzght by Helen C Whlte Sun Up by Wlll James Papa LaFleur by Zona Gale Green Mamzons by W H Hudson Joan of Arc by VIOIB Lone Bzrds of Amerzca by T Pearson Jumor Book of Authors by Kl1llltZ and Haycraft Sunshme and Samts by Dalsy Moseley Legend of Samt Columbo, by Padra1c Colum Book of Muszcal Knoztledge by Arthur Elson Mystzcal Body of Chrzst by Fulton Sheen I wang Authm s . . . . . 5 . . ., . . 1 ,X Q . v 1 1. 1 t H . . ,, . . . . . , . . . . I C L 9 - I . . . . . - - Y H . . . . 1 - - 1 - . , f. , I D ' I ' 3, - . . . . . . . . . , . U . 1 - - ' s . . 1 v 1 .,, v . 1 Q - 9 ' . . ' V . 2 .V A - .. - 4 4 ' , ' f gf 7' Q . , .- L 1 , - c -' , fi ., X24 V u 4.-, 'n . . v- e Agri . , A, I. ' x ,X fn, . U ' , - - - .. - f . . . N ' v v l . - - - -1 . 1 ' o . .- .. - .. .. . . - in un s Q . 7 . . an - 1 - - P1 . . 'I l - - - - - - . .P I ' J a AKE a walk wlth me down the congested halls of St Patrlcks The day IS any day The tlme IS rlght now We step mto the bulldmg and the door IS held open for us by that chap who would rather stop a mmute and hold the door rather than to let xt slam m your face And say take a look at Mary Isn t she pretty? She never mlsses a morning without some greetmg Whoops' Whats that? Oh thats Flash He always makes that touchdown dash at th1s tlme He makes me feel llke Ive played the Whole Mxnnesota team more than once Does he play on the team? Oh yes but he usually warms the bench He d rather plow mto a crowd mn the corrldor where there s no oppo sxtlon Thank you for saymg that my locker IS neat but you tell that to my mate I m sort of careless about my locker but J 1m has the easy hablt of polltely pushmg my books over That fellow IS on the wrong stairs It IS Just a bxt of thoughtlessness on h1s part He ll make up for It by helpmg that tmy freshman get h1s books out of that oversxzed locker See that lad down there? He makes a habxt of hlttlllg you on the back of the neck wlth a rubber band and earnestly studymg' at the same tlme He can t help lt Isn t she n1ce though? I thmk so too She often helps a poor fellow out on one of those bram-crackmg Latln verbs I thmk she has more admirers than anyone else ln the plant She has class but the mcest part of It IS thxs she doesn t know It We have all kmds of her type around here It makes the school somewhat mterestmg Well here we are at the Old Mam Aren t they a swell bunch of good lookmg' folks? We certamly have some masterpleces ln our gallery THE GALLERY John Carpenter, 38 If-fq.N'NH Y lm Ffh vu-lntninqr QHQIMQAIQS-I -4.-nnuroowlvlbiif' if A .J 3'--f Qi 'Fmt Ali A M f 1 v ... . 1 it ' , ' RIN .. . , 7 - HW' 1 . 4 ' 1 - a ' -' ' ' ,,-': ' 'f . . . V VV jk VV' 1 Z V V-LVLV . . , .- V A , A :N .VV V . . . . pf . ', .' -: gin- 'f ' '- 'f' ' , gpg: .V - QL . W, t ..., , . w .- -.-nw ' f. V - . V.' V if ., .V L, , wie ,. ' ' , 4 X , .V-A-f, fl, ,Q rw L ,. f 5 f . ' num - ', -. ' ' as-EQ... 2 raw I 33- , xl . . . ,A V . if-1 I .3 - - v '?? 1.,cm H .V 1.4 -s 5 y 9 VA.'1'. ., '1 ' LV ' x . . K J . lg 5 . -f 1 - . 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THE SHAMROCK PIQTURE REVIEWS Greenfield History Joseph Feeny HIS vlllage IS an unusual one for It has hand1craft arts of our ploneer ancestors and the actual bu11d1ngs 1n the1r or1g1nal state Th1s c1ty has never made progfes l1ke other one s have Old fashloned horse dla vn xehlcles carry the v1s1tors about the vlllag and ln wlnter old fashxon sle1ghs go Jlllfflllflg along the curved carr1age roads The1e are all sorts of anclent shops 1n whlch mxlhng blacksm1th1ng cardlng Weavmg shoemak mg glass blowxng and many othel snops too long to mentlon are carrymg on bus1n ss ln the old fashlon way There are no faetorl s to take the place of these shops Because th1s v1llage has made no progress Mr Ford preserved th1s town for the pub'1c so the people may see how busmess was car rled on a hundred years ago Robert Fzsher The Last of the Mohzcans was the best hlstorlcal mov1ng plcture I have ever seen It portrayed the battle between the Hurons and the French agamst the Enghsh The French had a much better army Hawkxe and the two last Molncans w ere a great help to the Lnghsh 1n gettnw two OL the general s daughters away f1 om the Hurons The picture showed many 1nterest1ng thxngs about Indxans especlally the cruelty of the Hurons The scener3 was pretty and the '1 1ay of troops glonous Every man ln the Engl h army was dressed ln red White Fang ' Jack Kzttelstacl Anyone who hkes annnals surely hkes a dog for a dog IS man s good fr1end And any one who hkes a dog would llke the show Whzte Fang The place settmv of the story 1 Alaska where dogs are u ed more than rn my other part of the world for there they ale the only means of transportatlon The story show s the usefulness the keen 1nst1nct and the ffuthfulness of the dog Whlte Fang San Francisco Mane Klecl ner San Franczsco was a mov1e that was very real I was entranced from the very moment lt tal ted to the end The people d1d not seem to be octmg at all It seemed as 1f I were there s nw tl real thlng The fallmg of the bu1ld ll s md the openmg of the ground were 1 1l1st1c It seemed that when a person was ex ushetl under a wall 01 fell 1nto the opening 1 1 the earth I was that person A beautxful tene was shown where the r1ve s of old San I' ancx to f ded out and 1n the1r place was the ne S1 1 Franclsco What lmpressed me most xx s that It seemed to me that God show ed h1s 1 rath to the people by destroymg the w 1c1ted 1 It of San F1anc1sco Queen Diary of SQQCIHQCI Lozs Nzelsoz Th1s mov1e IS one of the best h1stor1cal IIOVIL I have ew cr seen It touches the he xrts of the p ople w1th sy mpathy for Queen XI Ly The l lOV18 brought out very clearly the 1111 lst tt of the bl other to Queen Mary and 1n u twt wh1 h only meant a means to h1s ow ll end wealth and pow er Quee 1 Bess of Lngl nd was a schemmg ty rannxt l leader and loval blood meant noth 111 to hel as long as her ow n power rose The horror of Queen Elxzabeth s deed ln lll'Jl 150 ng Queen Mary and later behead hex xt 'ts almost too real and the sy mpathy of the publlc was for the Queen of S otland The PIOVIG also zevealed the fact that al tl ough Queen Bess was all for herself the hfe s -1 hapx y chxld was somewhat lackmg and slee b1 or ht up w 1th her the mea to grasp all the pow er she could obtam by any means O , , F 1 Y K ' ' .11 f . X V - - ' u 3 ' ' -L.. L X .0 , , Q . -.1 s .. , ,D .J . . V Y I - I V 5 L , X . ' . - r . . , , ,, . . , ' 7 7 . , . . . rf T I 0 . N Q 1' I , I3 - ' ' - ' -A ' 1 ' 7 ' . . 0 I c u Q I ' r , U, ' . S ' . . . . , cv , A I u Q u . ' ' ' ' - LCC O 113 . c 1 - 1 9 1 , , ' ' . 1 N :QS I v ' ' . . Q - . S N . C5 ' I. gl L 1 , , v: '1 Y 1 - Q ' ' - . . e . 1 . , . ' . . . S ' e. ' T . . 'r' Vs' a ' ' . A v' N u 0 . 1 H' .. 1 . 1 ' -Q Y - 7 . ' xi' - X ' 7' 'r Last oi The Mohieans ' 5 1 , , l V r ., ' v, 11 , , ,. ,W ,nr , - ,, ,A - I V l x . Y A - . as f . , ., a r 1 . . c - l ti . 1 r 1 ' ' ' Y' . . - v 1 V ' -f F . :s L .lvl 1 ' A' Q 1 , . . . . . S D c- A . ' I Y 7 Y . . 1 , ' 1 ' . 2 , , .N . - .. v - ' 'y 0 7 v L, f 1 - ' ' , . T - I - 1 - 0 I 4 u A ' . . 1 ' - 13 1 -' - ns - . - r '41 9 ' iii? ' .' ' ,w Y 9 -......- , ' ' c . an , y , ,Z l 7..- . A. L ' U I 1, ' l -, , - B KJ- I. A' . , . H . . , 1 - - 1 ' 'S+ . . , ' . . 2 Five Days on the River N these days of Zepher Stream lmes Queen Mary s transcontmental Grey hounds and China Cl1ppers many people know a great deal about hlffh hat parlor cars and nrst class travellnfr but few have had the experience of belng themselves and doxng some real 1ndependent traveling however But aporeclatxon for the Joys and pr1vat1ons that surrounded the p11m1t1ve travels of the pioneers IS not entirely lost to tlre world I speak from experience Some months ago Vernon Olson Dan 114 Wollum and I built a 1aft of such materlal tnat lt could be abando 1ed at l1ttle loss We fitted It out x 1th four large Oll drums to keep lt afloat On the front end of the raft We bullt a lean to ln whxch to s ep Two could have slept comfortably lil 1t but we could not build 11. any larger for iack of tlme and materlal After vse had bought a meagre food supply we started M e encountered our first obstacle near the Kelsey Street bridge 111 Shawtown where the cu1 rent stopped The s ater was aeep there and we could not use 'C le poles that we had so we pulled the raft along the shore until we got 1lltO some cur ent igam It surely sur p lsed us to find tl ct rlent very svn 1ft for abaut a half mne after we got out of Eau Cla1re Noon foul d us in fro lt of S rn Davey s cottage neal Porter s firIlllS and al er eat1ng our dmner we resumed our voyage Not much farther down the rn er we began to h1t sand bars ox er wh1ch we had to push the raft When we found th1s out we kept o 1 svslmminff tl unks on all day so that we cr ul.l wade or swim at any tlme Havmg sx un' about thle m1l s that day we were vorv tired and as uncomfortable as lt x as IH the lean to that night n e all slept x ery sound lv We reached La1yv1l1e the mgnt before so xx t 1ougnt lf we hur11ed 'we might make the t11p Ill four day out '1 fe K miles falther on w n1t another place where the current stop 2 . Bernard O'Brien, '38 ped and we had to push the raft by swlmmmg to get past the place We swam beslde the raft for a long vs ay that day On the trxp we must have su um about fifteen mxles We had a lot of trouble eatlng our meals regularly because we could not get to shore whenever we wanted to Sometimes We went as long as ten hours without food On the second day we went many m1les without seelng a person or any slgns of l1fe along tne shores Bes1des that the wind blew ui stre n so le id that It stopped us com pletely and It made so much H0156 we could hardly hear each othe1 speak For the first tlrne we became v1ct1ms of the malady known as Rner Monotony that the logging men used to get when thev floated logs down the r1ver The monotony vias broken but our sp1r1ts not ralsed when we encountered vs ater snakes They are not like the snakes we are accustomed to seeing around here because tl-ey dont crawl away when you go near them but 1nstead they coll up and make ready to strlke They may not be poisonous but they gave us an eely feellng From a ferryman whom we met on the th1rd morn1ng we leal ned that we would find the cur1 ent much swlfter beyond Merldean than we had found It so far He told us that there Wl a twenty three foot drop between F au Llan and Meridean and a twenty n1ne foot dron between Merldean and Durand After leawlng Merldean, we found out that the man on the ferxy was right because the cur1 cnt was much faster than it had been In fact It was so fast that wherever We saw a suitable place to camp we were unable to stop thus salhng till dark About elght o clock W hit a sand bar and tried to push the raft near s 1ore so that we could build a fire to cook our food Perhaps you are falfllllal' with the sensation of xx adneg through water when you are unaw are of what the next step may mean lC0ntmued on Page 3.0 - . . . . . ' 1 1 Y' ' - ' , . . . . 7 - 1 1 , . ' - - . 1 ' c 1 ' .. O , 9 ' ' v 1 ' 1 ' ' A . .. . . . . A . ' . . 1 . . . 4 , 1 . . 4: ' 9 . . -1- ' cv- -1 'f ' - , A , , l L M , A ..r N. Q . J , ' . . , c r 1 - - . .A 1 . . 1.1 V . . u - , 1: - . . , . . 1 . , - . 19 . . I , . . . ' , A . , . , , Q 1 14 1 c . 4 7 7 . ' 9 . ' 1. . 7 1 TT . ' ' ' . . . 3 . . , . . I If 1 . . ' , v Q ' , 1 - . fr , L . 1 ' i b . -v 1 ' ' ,. . N 1' L . - r 1.' , ' . ' ' . . 1. ' 13 l ' ' ., - . c. . ' - . ' 1- 1 ' . 1 e I 1.1 ZS ' - I 9 Q '. yr Q A u 1 A I ' ' ' 2' J S .. - . A . v , - y A V. . ' V . 1 , . 4 ! 1- X 1 . , . x w . 11 1 -1 v' 3 Q w - r ' Ll S C, . T r v V. . .Q , ., , ' . 9 '. 1 . . Q 9 N', . . . . , . . . , , J , V l o A . , . , - , l , - v.. A . , e . A 1 . , 1 , ' ' 1 . L! .. - p I u F . ' . We 5,1 , . , V . .An 1 'vm 11 A- V ' ' 1 . YP ' Y ' ' o. c. v . 5 ' in , . , Y - V v ' Nr fgffg 4 1.11.1 Awysr- Cha ff' X f Q'fi5l fe I , c 1 ,Q- Of' rfx .VCLLOLJATUNE Oyofa ,, ,Lggp flea, -Cake -Q., .se Q' Q-. 7179 Pzllf? Jafar: fhounfufns fltnr Ktkg Lavhso' '-1 ln... xiii 13,1 1.149 .Luv be ana-2.1 Western Wonderland The West zs descrzbed somewhat tn detazl by people who have seen zt Pzctures on the opposite page were taken by Althea A1 nold and Patrzcza Johnson whzle m the West Mexico, California, Canada AltheaA1'1wld 37 UR trlp began from Mmneapohs on a day when the red mark of the thermo meters regxstered over 103 After three day s travel we arrlved at Grand Can yon The slghts there are lndescrlbable eve1 ythmg IS so huge and vast From there we crossed the desert through the San Bernardino Mountams to San Ducgo Exc1tement ran hlgh as we boarded a bus bound for MEXICO As we left San D1ego we could see along the road large groves of orange lemon llme and walnut trees Upon entermg the Mex1can customs we had to de clare that we were Unlted States c1t1zens The mam street of the town of Tlauana was l1v1d wlth racks of brlght colored blan kets and baskets Many donkey carts were also 1n evldence When these curb merchants found we wanted to buy some baskets a small not occurred They wax ed baskets of every descrlptlon under our noses descrlbmg then color hlstory durablllty and prlce Fxnally after much bargalnmg I bought a H109 round red one for one plso-that IS about for ty cents We passed by Agua Callente a former hot sprmgs wmter resort only to find It closed and guarded as also were the churches Agam we passed through the customs thls tlme Amerlcan And we were speedxng back to the city on Sllver Strand beach A few days after thls our fuends met us ln Los Angeles and took us to thelr ranch home where we were to see western l1fe most of the tourlsts miss The ranch IS a fine thousand acre stretch of land The plants are watered by means of lrrxgatlon dztches a method qulte new to me 23 The house IS located about a mlle from the ocean and at mght when the wmd comes m od the water to cool the dry axr you can smell the heavy perfume of the magnolla blossoms You have no doubt heard the say mg It never rams ln Cahfornla ln the sum mer Would you belleve lt-we hadn t been there two days when we ran rlght lnto a regular summer shower We enjoyed the spatterlng of the few b1g drops whlle our fr1ends worrxed over the condltxon of the beans ln thls unusual weather He1e we vt ere also treated to a real barbe que wlth halves of chlckelns dlpped ln olxve o1l roasted over an out door plt Thls w1ll always stand out ln my memory of the West Near the shore of the ocean behmd the house was an 011 well Here I had the oppor tunlty to see one ln actlon It IS fun to Jump the huge breakers and try to keep the r1p txde from pulllng you out m the general dlrectxon of Chlna Western pomes were another new BXDGYI ence Much to my horror they elther lope along rather slovs ly or run llke the wlnd Wlth mane and tall Stledmlhg' after them Further along Gonzales road there IS another large ranch Thxs was formerly an old Spamsh gr ant The owners are Spamards and are noted for thelr stables of beautlful whlte Arablan holses No other rancher 1n Ventula County raxses pure Whlte horses After such a happy two weeks we hated to leave the ranch but several days m San Franclsco lay ahead of us the most excltlng of whlch vs as the day spent ln Chlnatown We had chop suey 1n a Chmese restaurant far above the street We were served on teaku ood tables llllald wlth pearl by silent vnaltexs ln beautxful kxmonos fCo'n,tmued on Page 3 J ' . I .. X I f . . W , 1 0 ' s . . V . ! o 0 - H I . . - . . 7 ' 97 ' ' ! , - o - S ! . Y u Q . . . . , n . 7 n 0 Q u a - 1 1 ' , ca 1 r . 1 - - - ' - , - . 7 . . . I , a V Y s ' I - - ' ' ' Though you can't really swim in the ocean, sa - ' n - - i , . , .. . I . u . . . ' Y , 5 x f . . . . I 'R ' 9 l , . J 1 1 . - ' , . . I . 5 . 1 n I ' - , s 1 , K . . . , . . . - A , , l . ,. D . ' 5 e - 'Y' 'i f-'f vi me 1. , -+11 wif If '1 1 fy -WU F5- .-fm' is Q E LE S ll E S People in the news are shown opposite. Looking Ahead fly : Jim Kiernan and Jim Caton gaze into the future, and wonder what chances they have to win a place in the chorus this year. They tied as chorus president. Studying Up C21 : Billy Baumgartner, Tom Hagen and Rodney Schwahn, caught memorizing the rules and regulations on how to conduct a freshmen class meeting without their class president, Dave Donnellan. Dave's been out of school with a fractured ankle. Too Busy 131 : Virginia Vincent is so absorbed in her study that she couldn't even give us one of her rare smiles. She is planning the activities of the Junior Business Club, now that she's president. Will We Win The Next? C41 : Coach Richgels and his eleven certainly hope so. From a Pont to a Grin C53 : The four horsemen of the sophomore class demonstrate reactions. Keegan and Egan are class ofiicers. Kauffman and Goethal support all the issues. Captains C61 : Lorne Brandl, Fred Miller, Art Prueh- er and Robert Trimbell agree that they haven't much time left to plan senior class activities, but they're on their toes. Left, Right 173: High School servers march in the procession at the Holy Name Rally, held at St. Patrick's, October 18th. They served for the first Pontifical High Mass ever read in the Church. Auxiliary Bishop Griffin was celebrant. Accepted C85 : Bernadette Couture, president of the junior division of the chorus snapped after her ap- pointment. She'll help things go! Shine C91 : Elaine Christiansen, newly-elected presi- dent of the senior girls' chorus, is shown here, making plans for the chorus party. Thirty 110: Ray Craemer, editor, looks satisfied as he writes his last 30. He has been plenty busy, we will admit. Side-Show CID: Carroll Napoleon Kierstad tells Roger Bacon Brown what he would have done at Waterloo. THE SHAMROCK Surpmsed 1121 Althea Arnold and Mary Marshall caught whlle dlscusslng plans for the Scouts Perplexed 131 Presldent Art D1ckerson and hls staff of J un1or ofiicers J 1m O Br1en Frances F1sher and Gerry Eldrldge face a busy year of events And who ll play for the Prom they already Wonder Carefree 1141 Oh for the l1fe of a fresh man! These Smlllng freshmen ofiicers have no worrles They are Presldent Beverly Shea Dolores Johnson and Shlrley V1dal Contemporarzes 1151 W1ll I ever grow up? asks llttle Dorls Dressel Helen Rudy a freshman classmate encourages her and advlses splnach Juggler 1161 Art Dlckerson knew why he hesltated taklng the Baton xt s qulte a Job he admlts hlmself Adventure 1171 Barney Mark Twaln O Brlen tells how he spent five days on a raft and descrlbes hxs route Ready 1181 Mary Jane Lange and Marv plan to glve the boys some competltlon ln the conservatlon contest this year Stv aw Vote 1191 Prosperlty IS Just around the declared Gerry Eldr1dge durmg the famous campalgn held before the elect1on And dldn t her side argue' Senously 1201 And who ll w1n the Lee Trophy and the four medal awards thlS year? Raymond Craemer Rosemary Goss and Do lores Chaput are shown here examlmng the prxzes whlch w1ll be granted at the end of the year for outstandlng work ln J ournallsm Mr and Mrs J ullus G Lee are the donors of the awards Pmma Donnas 1211 Heres a group of sophomore glrls ready to glve you any wocal selection Phylhs Glguere Dorothy Galton Mary Flynn Vlrglnla Cosgrove Anna Marle Fesenmaler Marjory Craemer and Rosemary Berard Sfmzle 1221 Members of the J unlor Busl ness Club agree that thelr projects wlll be eas1er lf they all work together Impressions of Europe 1Concluded from Page 91 had Durlng this tlme a perlod of about five mmutes It was so qulet that It would hase been possible to hear a p1n drop Thus ended our meetmg wlth the hlghest Church au thormty We saw the very beautlful Salnt Mark s Cathedral Wlth 1ts doors of sol1d gold We attended a concert at St Mark s Square The concert held out of doors was glven by a large orchestra v. 1th a chorus of one hundred voices At elex en o clock the concert ended the orchestra and VOICES frxghtened the doves from the1r steeple beds and the blrds ascend mg to heat en along VV1th the musxc we heard made 1. very 1mpress1ve slght When I vxslted France I found that Pau IS IS the center of all actn 1t1es It IS more or less the mtellectual center of all France as xx ell as the soclal center All affaus of the goyem ment are carrled on from thls city 0 me thlng I notlced partxcularly about the r eople or France IS that they are very UI Iflblld y to about a1e them elxes The c1ty llfe of Parls IS very Gay Thls IS due to the many for 91 ners vs ho are constant ly VlSltlI1g Par1s and also due to the many students who come there to study The gay l1fe of Pans remlnded me very much of a musical comedy Anyone who ever has the oppol tunxtx to take a t1 xp abroad should certamly ral e d vantage of lt One ought not to owerlo all the xmportance of London and Parls They are after all two great centers of the world T RZRVELOGUE Ccmtz-nuod from Page 11 South Eugene Kazser 38 Dallas the over ballyhooed town of the Texa Centenmal' The falr was a xery poor take oif from the Ch1C'lg0 World s Falr Among the good eXh1b1lL10l1S were the Ford bulldmg and the cattle shows The long ave nue of hghts whnch played upon great murals 26 1Co'ntmued on Page 281 , . . . : , , 1 . . . 7 u . . , . ' ' 1 I ' , - , . , I . . , : , ' - - I l , I V ' . ' , 1 ' 1 . . O ,, . ' . f ' : n ' ' - ' V . . , . . - ' ' . Y . . v . . ,D ' '. F . . . , . . I . 1 '- I . ' ' 4' L 1 4 w 14 K , U ' ll I . p . Q r V I1 1 V ' . , . . K . . A - I X ' ' '. I 1 : e ' . ' ' 1' 'H E Wilson, officers of the Sophmore girls' class, Americans? the only People thel' really Cafe . 1, . I .I . 44 ' ' ' ' S' ' ' ' - H u . . . . , . . . , D . , l . . . u I . , Q I . - L- 1 I . .Y ' ' ' L Q vu - 1 I ' 1 ' y - V 1 ,J - . . . , . . I 9 e - u n . I 6 ' ' ' ' 1 x' ,4 V I 1 1 f . . I ' , Q ' ' 1 N I , . : . . , , , - . , , F l 1 U 1 , .. 1 S ' . ' 1 ' ' 0 c . , '. . In . 7 :p . .- v . .. v 1511,-AJ ,UM-f, ix. -L--A-L,. ,fied 0 parents faculty members contrlbu tors advertlsers frlends and students we wlsh happmess at Chrlstmas On the feast of the NatlV1ty of Our Lord Jesus Chr1st, all people 1rrespect1ve of creed or race are cheerful Humamty turns to Chrlstmas wxth dehght Charlty IS the dom lnant note everywhere One can b1 eathe gladness ln the atmosphere It IS the Mass of Chrlstmas Day that makes the dlfference for Show Craze Leacung educators of the countly tell Us that the amount of energy needed to grasp the story of a modern plcture show IS verv shght Famous men have also p1 edlcted that lf young people don t learn to read more and re d more lntelllgently that sorretlme 1n the not too d1stant future people wxll develop some vhat Hat heads flue moue ploducers have gn en us ex cellent D1Cll.lICS 1n recent yeals Some of the great st class cs have been reproduced fox the screen Yeung people get the ldea that 1f One can Juuee a plcture mol e 1nt ll109l1l.l5 lf he has read the book The classlcs ale on the snelf 111 many of the newest ed1tlOllS They xx ere purchased fox you Courtesy Is Contagious Good mormng Mxss Etlquette says as she meets h r fuends 1n the mormng She knows she s not the only pebble on the beach and penhaps other people hke attentlon She steps asxde when she meets people on the street to ploude a few 1nches for passlng In the classroom she sympathlzes wxth those who are less fortunate Mr Speaker addressed the student body one mornmg M1ss Et1quette knew she could learn some thmg so she dlsregarded the questxon of Mxss Dlscourtesy How much longer w1ll he last '7 27 EDIT 0 REELS Mr Manners stlll efnsts He ls not alto gether concerned with m kmg a pass through the corrldors las IS his less cultu1ed school mate I He s not the Jan1tor but h does stoop to pxck up an occasxonal gum wrapper f1 om the floox There ls loom fo1 mole such people ln school Today a good many lllffh school students plan to e mter schools of higher lear nng Ac cordmg to bul'et1ns publlshed by varxous colleges and unxversltles these requlrements hold two years of mathematlcs two of sex e lce and two of a f01elg'l1 language Four years of Engllsh are requn ed All wxth the exceptlon of a forelgn langu are are made a requlrement at our h gh school Is theme ny posslblllty of pelsuadmg ex ery student to mal e the fo1e1gn language I'6C1ll1I'L.1'YlC1lt9 The faculty and students e tend then' SIICCIG sympathy to SlStel Plus whose fath 91 Thom1s Keaxemy and recently M15 hls Congratulations' To B lnadctte C outure 1nd Mary Wllson SJ,Jll0l'I1016S uno xx on tcutlon scholarshms tom thxs semester also to Vllgllla Dlrks sefnor vsho wx on .1 slmllar schola slnp The three au 'uds x r fox excellence ln school actxvxtxes To Mary Jane Lange sophomore and Edward Menard 'md Gordon 'llon who w on lmproxement 'l.YV2ildS and u e1e granted tu1t1on cholax hm thls semeste To Angellne Neary tltst puze wmner L1lah Mane M lby second and Paul Whxte slde thnd u lnner 111 the essay awards grant- ed by the Con elvitxon Commxttee of the W omens Club and the C lthohc Womens Club QContmuerl on Page J ,, f x f, A. 5 . . 1 ,, - ,J ....- . T- -..X - . A y . .N - , 7 ' . . n . Y 7 I a s . 1. he b. - . , . . - - .. . , e s ug a . . 1 G . , . . . . . . ', , , , ' .. . v ' . 1 Q , . . u n ' I D K us. 1 - - - I . .f 9 '- ' 0 Q 1 . , v ' Q ff l' , ' . ' . 5 31 w - 4 '1 ' . n 1 L . , . n . 1 , ' - ' u n - 3 5' , ' 1 . . . . , ,A .Y . . .. 1 Q , - - k , H 1 1 I A s . . ' v 1' 1- r ' r ,. 9 . U ' ' . - XL ,, . M: . . 'Z . Y '. . ' , ,. ., Q c. .. . . . V ., .c ' , ' , L. . 1 , V . .. ' they see the p1cture, they have read the book. soul rest 1I1 peace. ' J ' - ' Q ' - - 1 l-.ii Q ' b ' . f. ' ru- ' ' . ' ' t 1 ' , K .. f ' F f - - 9 .f .Y . ' ' ' 1-.T... .t' ' ', ' ' L r. . L. . r . , 1 , ' ' I . , f If .v 4' , 7 v . ' ' 1 fra H. f- - H - - '1 '. ' . vc e ' ' . , I 7 a Q n an s 0 V 5 e . . l ' 7 , .. ' . A , , . . ' ' 1 ' . c ag . l TS, ' ' 1 v ' - a yu - , . , . , f . . s . S, ,D . sr. Y 1 - ' 1 . . ' f u'-3 y, K-1, :L C ' - ' 7 u . , , , W. . - S UL . i . . . . . , , ,B . ,1 , 1 -n - ,H s sy . . . ' 15 THE SHAMROCK DINNER cooks wlrhour arrenhon Wlfh a modern auto mahc gas 01 QIGCIFIC range Get a new range and enlog more lelsure hme 35 down 1nsIaIIs one balance ln 24 months J5 NORTHERN STATES POWER COMPANY Ill! 1 PIONEERS PUBLIC SUUIQ 1 TRHVELOGUE fContmued from Page 261 dep1ct1ng the rxse of Texas from a terrltory to a great state was lnstructlve I brought bad: wlth me memoues of a few b1g blllldlllgb 111 gaudy colors mlngled wlth small clolvds of from slxteen to tvs enty thousand people I compa1 ed lt wlth the fifty to one hundred fifty thousand people th1t attended the Clncag,o fa1r And th1s from the town I had heard so much of' Michigan James Kzermw 38 YVIIII I was t1 avehng IH Mlchxgan a few month ago I had the ple1su1e of seelng 31 unusual slght a celery field It W is q lte by 11001161111 that I saw It alt :ou h there are nmnv LQ ery telds 111 Mxchxg, 111 I h d been t1axe1n1g on a state lng,h V As tl1e11u111g, xx as xe13 monoto ous I Lhou t I would go down a county h1ghway I d1ove along, and the see 10 cn Illgtd Instead ot the flat saucy pln IS hxll Ulu deep fo1e ts ap road leau111b don Il Inn D1 nnuge dltches could b seen on both s1des of the 1oad Just then there came a new as unexpect ed as snow ln the tl oplcs a celery field It was a p1 ture of freshness The crxsp looklng green rows of celery 2151111 t a bacLg1 ound of coal black eaxth xnadf a pntuxc no artxst could ever pamt All fnou 1.1 the held water plpes made a fine spray vyhxch dlntel oxer the field lxke fog, I stopped my car and walked over to the edge of the held Phe 11earer I approached the better tle celerv looked Tl1e b ids of vsater on the stalks made one thlnk of dew on flowels It x xefr eshxnff to feel the mO1bt damp earth x hlch I crumbled between ney IIYHDCIS Th t atte1noon I dro e away relue tantly from one of the most beautnul slghts I had seen ln a long tlme Minnesota Alzce Deroum 38 I hall ncx cr fO1 et the 1mm essxve s1gl1t I saw at the convent of St Bened1cts St- Y II 'If' . t . . . . r Xl Y. ' '. 7 . 1 ' 1. ' v . . A 1 , , p. . . J r u I - f ,, ' l - I, I , . D v H . . V W.. . e . s- ' , 1 zu '- 1 ' 1 O v . . . .7 : . 2 ' . , ' . -31 I of LI L , . D 1 I I ' 1 ' T' ' ' ' V 1 ' 1 . - V2 . a' 1 ' ' 'f, . 1 v - v. v av 'I v 'X -I . f 1 11 ., 5511 v . v u . y- I- 1 1 i .' i y- , 1 . ' 0 0 ' ' 4 . .. f,,f.f1 J' ...- n L A , 1. D I Q I pcared. Suddenly, I came to a dxp 1n tl1e 0 K , , 1' ,,. ' , 'nv' .2' ,I ' 1 e . ' . ' - V. r'1 - Q . . . ' ' 1 ' 1 ' V , c . .. - . V81 VY yd D S r Q , - w ,A I .E Q .5 v 1' . 1-w if ' , Y ' ' - 1 1 fy 1 y v 'V Q 1 7 . r' I 1 I I ' D 1 V . . ez ya w A 1 ' '. was ' ' ' ,, 1 s 7 . V , V A -,,,r- --TTAE T 1 . 3 4- ' . 1-V fy I , 1- 5 u Q N 1 L., . 1 , - il ' ' , My , ' ' . I v,, ', np- I I xx , ' , I X, ra- I I - . I . , ' 7 f 'g A ' . L ' 7 ' 9 fwff HQ -or X, Y THE SHAMROCK Joseph Mmnesota on July 11th when I W'1t nessed a class of S1 ters pronouncmg then' pe1 petual vows The solemmty of the Whole ceremony w ll hngel long ln my mmd Minnesota Lakes Bermce Ezsold 38 W thm the range of slxty three m1les thele are tvso hundred lakes W1th1n the dls tance 01 Ve1 gos to the Detl Olt Lakes whlch IS about fourteen mxles we passed seventeen lakes Alon f the dxxve tall ox erhangxng branches bend and through the blanches one can s e large bodxes of smooth blue water 'lhe s ht of the Water 'vt event1de wxth the sel oe o oe sun sml nw' mto tl e West IS lncesfn ibable After darkness sets 1n the blg yellow moon wlth 1ts xenectlons on the st1ll smooth water IS most beautiful After the qu et crenlt, of such a scene one dreads to leaxe for a crowded busy c1ty IVUlzcwn Fzsher 38 F 1 two d w I YISII d the Mllwaukee Zoo tue nw t 1 lt IC tmff place I ever happened unor I 1 us of ex ry color and s1ze from the tlny huvnnnnff blrds to eagles nd ammals flom llfll e to C ph nts could be seen ln al moqt ny nun bel Bw-.l 'md Lnnm ls xre as n uch s possxble ln thexr natul al ent l1O 1lYl9l1t fl he be Irs hm c cites and trees the buds have trees and H'll.lll'l.l food The only food XXl'l1Ch IS not found 1n the blrd haunts IS bread The ele phant the gu1des say eats two bushel of bread and two bu hel of gleen leaves and grass a day When the 'nnmals ale bemg fed 1n tl after moon a crowd of onlookers g ther no en or twelve but one or tuo llulldl ed Duluth Geraul Haus 38 O1 mx x1s1t to the c1ty of Duluth I V, as gre ttly nnpressed by the sentmel h1lls lll the background Th se huge gual ds make the c1ty look llke a toy town When one ascends Sell that Furnlture .- or any Household Goods wlth a Want ad ln the Eau Cl8lF8 l..GadEfl The Daily Telegram ' Y x. .l V 60' . 54 .X F 8. 8 W L '4 N' ,J l sk ., 27- JV W' .V x. Up, 1- ky ix , , 8 ' r-' , 4 0 I 1 I ' r ' 'Wi 'I ' . ' I c S Q1 1 . 1 vi ' ' ' ' . , A ,,e, 8-.- I , , I-- . . , - , ,, 1 - - ., . . . ' ' ' - v L' . - Q ' ' 7 A . , . f 1' v Y I cr .. E, , ! I Q - ' W ,1 c . , . , Q . . . lg. L. - y j--l '.'- reno' ' ' Q C 1 , ' 1 N .' , . , W ' ' W. - . . . . , 4 1 v . . i . . 2 I 1 4 ' 1 I . . q Q, ' U . . . s , , . 'iw lc Z Mt- ,femunee -boo Q . . 1'. , P 9 'o' ' ajs ' e ' . . 1 f., 'w Gels ' i -- . .. n 1 V lo O 'QU - ' L, A. J 1' 'S ,, . . . M n . -1- .C c . , ct A ' c ' ne a ' - - A - a, 1 '. . ' 1 -' a. 2 4. 2 a is ' '. .' z'.' , . . '. 1 . . 1 4 ' . c , - 1 Y I . C L a C u ' l V Y J K 9 1 6 S ' f, f - ' 1 ' L 4 L - , -,fl I -I V 7 n v Je. 1 , on ,..x 4- L - 'if L Y , I ' . 1 ,V I - , , l 0 ' K , c .1 f . '11 I . ' 5 , 1 ex. . ' , Q, ' r - 1 , . THE SHAMROCK The New Health Mzlk UECKE S Now C per QUART A Pure Pasteunzed Mlllc w1th greater nutntlonal value Accepted by the Commlttee on Foods of the Amerlcan Meclxcal ASSOCIBIIOD ASK YOUR DOCTOR OR DENTIST At Your Dealers or Phone 4104 or 4105 these h1lls the great blue Lal e Super1or ex tends to the hor1zon l1ke a pra1r1e Br1ght colors of the Sh1pS and boats lend a new 11fe to the p1cture From the summxt of a hlll 111 West Duluth the town looks endless for xt stretches twenty SIX mlles l'lO1thYV3.Id though 1t IS less than a m11e w1de 1n some places Womderla nd. Ln Winter James O Brzen 38 I thmk the grandest s1ght I have ever seen was country lands 111 wmter Heavy snow had fallen and the drlfts were huge The snow plow had taken care of the drlfts before we d1ove through but lt was grand to see the h gh banks of snow towermg over us on both sldes Clean wh1te snow ghstened ln the sun 11ght The trees round looked l1ke great wh1te sentlnels guard1ng the vast xx onder land The whole scene gave me a thr1ll that I can not descr1be for I felt as 1f I were ln an entlrely new and spotlessly clean world It made my day happ1er and my tr1p more pleasant INC IDENTZSLS CCrmtmued from Page 153 Once we were gomg down the M3dlSOH Street h11l and the wheels came off As I re call It so d1d Sped We have been trymg to get a horse for It four Four Hundredj but It IS no use Sped sald I would have to do untll Pres1dent Roosevelt was re elected Then I could get the mule Every t1me we pass a car Sped yells Get that trash out of the road Once a car came floatmg dovsm the Delaware-I mean Bell1n ger Street and Sped yelled Get that trash out of the street I had seen the blue coats ln the car but Sped hadn t so I yelled Who 1S go1ng to make me '7 They thought we were arguing and went on All the Four Hundred needs 1S a poet to tell 1ts story It would read l1ke The One H oss Shay . , i G 7 1 . - A . 0 i . . . . . . . . . , A K 1 l r Y ' 7 ' 1 1 - ' n n I - Y 5 , . , .. . . a , . u Y ' . 10 V 7 I , 1 ' a 1Continued on Page 401 . . . X X ,V . A T ,J fs.. Q N, , , . ' 1 ' n ' GI gn- , .--....,, -....- - 1 9 77 Cl 7 I ' !! I Y If 7 Q Y - - 11 , . THE SHAMROCK Zin Irish Hunt Cathwmc Pcwelslcz 37 Heres the way my great grandmother Ellza Bacon met her Romeo Men and women m Ireland who belonved to the upper class spent a good many days a yeaz on hunts They kept thelr dogs lndoors for a tvne dr rxng the huntmg season then they turned them loose Gentlemen and lad 169 zode thelr horses and followed the dogs on the cha e A 1 rrxed woman was net er permxtted to go horse back Ilfllllg or on these hunts If sue d1d she was COl1S1d6l8d dxsloyal to her famllg and xx as leferred to by the undes1rable term maxrved horse back uder However to mg ladies were aln ays welcome on these hunts For ler huntlnv costume a lady wore a Sklft not of ankle length but much longer When she was seated m her saddle the dress hung two O1 th1ee feet below her feet She he1 knees It was on on of these hunts that my grandmotm r met Mxchael Duhlg whom she later maxued That Theme Dolov es Poesslcr J Sax how many tunes must I tell you to stay out of my stuff That also mclueles my letter svw eatel Sxsl Do you hear me? asked my brother as he came down the stalrs and nearly fell on his nose ln hrs haste Now what are you 1n to Can t I have a thmg you don t have to snoop 1nto'7 Tln ou h all thxs I had been sxttmg at the table looking over h1s note book and 1tS con tents qu1te unaware of h1S statements Ah what IS th1s'7 Looks l1ke a theme Ctrorn me ln my best VOICBQ C lnme at I wanna lead lt I don t want you to I m gonna 3l Northwest s Finest Service Station Glllette TIFGS and Bauenes Waahmg Greasmg Brake Testing Brake Lmmg Wheel Ahgnmg L1ghtTestmg Crank Case Servnee Storage Battery Chargmg GILLETTE COMPLETE SERVICE 3l8 South Farwell St Telephone . 1 -' Q ' 7 ! 7 - y v f - r ' . g . . e , . D 1. S' T . z . - 7 I' - I A 4 - . . . s V V C' .s . ,. . f 7 . . . . n ' I c , . Y . , . y I. . . 7 7 ' 1. 1 cz , - ,- as - ' a , 1 f '. . 1 n 1 , 1 . . - D 1 V4 1 ' - . . . . . - . . . .. , 1 ' . e always rode slde saddle, and wore boots to . 'as e ' , . . 1 C , - u I y , V .we . , , 7: - I L 1' ' , Jf H Y . Y . e F ' ' a 0 I L - v 1 - ' 77 . . . , ! . . Cl ' 3 . ' s - n , r . ' U' , 5 . N . . , . ,, . . . ,, - ,, . . . ii 1' , 3 Sl as , ' u It ' 5 6 1 4 . H 3 l! . Cl Y Q! THE SHAMROCK 4- 'I lfre S JH' Sgzundrq OTS: F we F amzlzp Services lfzve Przces eiifilreiieeien Launderers 8: Dry Cleaners 9 :susan so noon 'GA MEMS e: P. ahonal ssoaa or or Jcrsanb eanevs EAU CLAIRE WISCONSIN Have It Master Cleaned IT cosrs N0 Moms' Don t you dare I Il call mother Call her and see 1f I care I wlll 1f you don t glve that paper to me What are you flghtlng over now? saxd mother from the kltchen SIS you come here Georve you do the dxshes and see lf you can behave Heck thls 1S Sis s mght to do the dlshes I don t have to wash dlshes t1ll Wednesday George' Mother s VO1C6 O K I m coming and as he passes me once agam I hear that same old phrase Ill get even with you Haw Havx If you do I ll get It back on you You know Geolge vou do look kmda cute ln that apron I thml Ill make you a p1nk one Wlth a ruffle around xt Everythlng xvent smooth'3 for 1 few weeks Well that zs as smooth as Il11!1L., S um I must admlt I d1d look for that theme but I could never fmd xt At last came the blg day at school The Sham? ocls vxere publlshed Everx body was readlng hls ISSUE and I heard a fexv cracks about dlshwashmg that were qulte over my head Fmally I got a chance to read my Slzamfo 'c and xvhen I got to my b other s artlcle I knew the source of the dlshxx ashmg clacks I went home and told mv mother about It She admltted lt was a good p oce but really It xx as quite broad She tho lght somethm f vxould haxe to be done about It and some thmg xx as Almost any mght noxv vou xx1ll fmd mv brother m hlS pmk apron vxlth the ruffle 31 ound It domg the dxshes Well I got even The Amateur notographer Mcuyorze Craemer 39 Amateur photography land xt certa1n1y was amateurl vxas the hobby of mv brother for a short tlme It xvasn t xerx s tlsfactory though because usually Just the head of a person or persons appeal on the picture nex er the vxhole body 32 7 J V Y' u v a va . . u , - n , . 371 P cc . . y - ar Y - lov ' H ' ' rr ' ,.,,,,-,. I-' to ' . 5 ' Y' -fl X -' ff- ' n ' en 't lt I V ' - v fi Q -f--L - 1. f 'A ' ' - Q 1 - , fn is -5 . n . I I . . . . . A.l.MGn H ' , . . 9 - - n u vs s - O I I ' ' m . .. u 1 - u ' . n , ' n Q . . , ' Y, ac , r - 1 1 I I Q ' . , , V - . . y , A K . . . ,, 4 A l Y L Y 1 , , 'S xi 3 . , f' wma V ,Q N 45 wh-,Mft go. . l ,I a n ,.,,,, , , 5,4 ,5 f. I- fav:-1 . ' ' v , if . . .QQ . . , K . TI' - 2 . 7: ,D IG ' c. ' ' . j '. .1 1 ' . . . of wnmrn vu no :muon ' , , ' .'1 ' V . Y 7 ' I . Af, I fu p Y Y 7 N I of , I . . V Y . . U 1 . 1 L . I 0 u a f , , , V I . I , L 1. ' . . '4 L ' ' I., ' 7 , 4 ' x, , , . ' 1 . A 'A I e ., . . ., Q V. I I u l 4 . , . ' . . ' , I - . , c K ' 7 1 Y . , . v , ., , . L a . , ,5 . , - . L 5 n I ' , 1 Y I THE SHAMROCK But not being satisfied in taking just the ordinary outdoor snapshots Cmaybe because they were such failuresj , he decided to try to take indoor exposures The day was set and also the time noon A roll of film was purchased and the object of the picture my nephew, was made ready The curtains on the windows were drawn back to afford more light It was a sn h1le before the first picture w as taken because the subject being only a month old did not realize the effort being put for ward to accomplish this great feat. Finally by some trick of fate the infant lay at the right angle and the picture was quickly snapped The amateur photographer s ambition soared and it wasn t long before the whole roll of film had been used Being very eager to see the results of his efforts my brother hurried the snapshots to a studio where he was told to call for them in three days After three days of waiting and wonder ing he inquired about the photographs but was informed that they were not yet ready That meant another two or thi ee days of more waiting and wondering The second time he went for them he thought they surely would be ready but they weren t They must be going to be either very good or very poor but of course the My brother was thoroughly convinced that this third call at the studio would be suc cessful and it was He immediately scanned the snapshots but the snapshots werent Just six pieces of lS1I1glaSS I suggested that maybe stamp collecting nn ould prove a more successful hobby We have brilliant scholars but few lead ers Today we need leaders badly Haven t more people the courage to take responsibil ity? Someone has said If you want to be nobody then say nothing and do nothing 33 F ASCl'llNG'S DRUG STORE Prescrzptzon Druggzsts Eau Claire Wls F W REGLI SeIR1te Grocer Phone 4818 420 Bellmger St Eau Claire Wls Eau Claire Elevator Go GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Complzments senvlcs Q Q GOLD GOLDEN RULE XI Eau Claire Funeral Home H M FESENMAIER , . , . , . 1 , - Y ! ' ' o o 7 ' ' 0 - 9 7 ! l . 1 e ' ' n , s I , v ' Ein ributurs of l . ! ' ' 7 ! ! latter was impossible even to think of. Y . I . . m . , 17 5 , . 5 ' ' ' ' ' Mnsunfn - N01 av- - Y b - mn IV 2 I lx me ... U , of '- ,uf . . , - . 9 . . I U . . ' ' H , . THE SHAMROCK Dzd You Know 'P os E Balclerston offers you the best pnces and finest ap parel ln ladies ready to wear LOOK CHIC DRESS SMART BUY RIGHT JOSEPH E BALDERSTON I7 South Barstow St 1: G HOEPPNFR P a W PAUL x H E HOEPPNER s g T Phone 3811 Hoeppner '- Bartlett Company GENERAL CONTRACTORS Lumber and Bulldxng MGTGYIGIS 631 East Madlson Street Eau Claire W1s Five Days on the River tConcluded from Page 211 The raft was stuck fast and the water was too deep to enable us to wade to shore so x e ate on the raft There were very few pro v1s1ons left ln the food box but we d1d have a can of sauerkraut None of us hked sauer kraut xery well but we were so hungry that we ate It wlth rel1sh The fourth morn1ng We shoved the raft off the sand bar and pulled lt to shole After eatlng we started out anew At noon we reached Durand an l lestocked our prox1s1ons The Fl r ot 1. eper past Durand so we h1t xcry few and bars Along the shores trees h tl fallen lnto the wwer The w ter 31Olxld thc e trees vas so do p and smft that we could not contl ol the 1 alt w lt our poles We c muld do nothmg Lut brace our selx es and hxt tnern Ole bra len on a fallen tlee almost swept the lean to off the raft tlt dzd sweep me off but I get bac' onj That nlght w c out later that th1s w as a beacon to the t1 ans port planes that go up the IWIS 1ss1pp1 Rn er The f1fth moxnx lg we wele proffresslng nlcely when suddenly the current stopped and large waves came l'0ll11lg' up the rlver Once more we were compelled to pull the r ft along shore We soon c one to 1 large body of water Wh 1ch we knew to be Lake Bepm We sw am and pushed the laft a ross the l me On reachlng the M11 ne on sxde we took our blankets and utenslls off the laft and put lt adrift on the lake We then walked to Wab asha wn1ch IS thx ee m1les from the mouth of the Chxppewa and on the way we saw a large coal boat called the Mark Twaln gomg up the rner It was a pretty slght to see the large water wheel which propelled lt It looked as though It churned up more water than there was 1n the whole Cmppewa Ru er We an 1ved at Wabasha a coup e of hours too late to take '1 fx ew ht home as we had planned so we hltch hlked arrnlng at home just ln tlme for a much appreclated d1nne1 1 Q '-Y i H ' J' f O I , w , J . . , . - . , - - n v r C :Ito ' , 7 1 . . . . . , , 1 -v ' .' ,' .VD U' ,lil F W , ,Y ' .V L, c , -at- :Q 1.. t ct . 'a '15 , , , L' ,' h 3 VN' v - C . 'X akv Y ,Lv ' I 1 x s ' s I ' 1 1 . A 2 A n ' . could see a beacon on a dxstant h1l1. We found -1 ' v 1 1- 1 wh . . . , resi en! l Q . F. . , ice-President ' I 7 ' 6 . . A' , eo .- real. - , Z ' 3 q .Z A R . Y ., V . . . 1 -1 'r ' ' A C f . , .1 S 3 , , , I N. u . . n 7 - , . . 1 . t - ' , 1 1 . Q c 1 .u H ' ' H . P . . L l ' a . G ' . 1 . . L Y 7 7 Y . .' 1 ' 1 I . 4 ' w Y ' ' .., c 4, , .. ' 7 7 THE SHAMROCK WESTERN womnmnnmmrn Have YOU fContmued from Page 231 The streets of Chmatown are gally strung wlth colored lanterns and the fronts of the stores are lacquered a br1ll1ant red w1th great gold dragons over the doors It IS Just llke stepplng across the Pac1f1c Ocean and IS a perfect paradlse for the person who Qllke my self J enjoys buying useless thlngs Here we glor1ed ln s1lk k1monos slant eyed dolls boxes wlth trlck doors and many more curlos Later we lunched on Chmese nuts and gasped at the beautiful orchlds and gnarled pme trees However by the tlme the paper lanterns were hghted we sald goodbye to Chmatown My arms were loaded wlth packages wrapped ln rlce paper and my money all spent but I was completely happy In Portland the Clty of Roses we vlslted the Grotto of Our Sorrowful Mother We also toured the Columbla River Hlghway to see the splendxd Muttanomah Falls and the dell cate Brldal Vell If alls F1 om the Vlsta House we gazed down on the Columbla R1ver and across at the carpet of pme trees 1n Washlng ton Wlth a tlny rose pxnned on our coats we bade adxeux to Portland and set out for Mt Ran1er From Tacoma by bus We traveled to Para dlSe Valley Inn sex eral of us took a tr1p up 8000 feet on horseback where we crossed Paradlse Glacler and rode through the clouds Txred but thrxlled we left Mt Ran1er to cross the border to the Jewel of the Cana dxan Rockles We crossed Puget Sound on the S S Prlncess Kathleen stoppmg at V1c torla and Vancouver From there we took a tram for Lake LOUISE At Lake LOUISE l1es my ldea of perfect peace and contentment By the shore of thls b autxful blue lake who could help but be happy Banff Sprlngs Hotel IS a beautlful bu1ld mg somethlng l1ke a feudal castle set on a hlgh P1606 of ground on one slde the rushlng Ta.9tedIt9 EXTRA HEAVY MALTED MILK C The Karmelleorn Shop A N CLASSEN CO PAINTS WALL PAPER DECORATORS SUPPLIES See Us at Our New Locatzon 308 Eau Clanre St Eau Claue Wu GET IT AT CARROLL S GROCERY Meats Grocenes School Supphes H02 Sth Avenue Dxal 731 5 GIGUERE AUTO CO Garage General Repamng FEDERAL TIRES AND TUBES Phone 9832 208 Graham Ave Eau Claue Wu . -i J ,, x , 1 W 1 ., 1.1 ,---1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , - 1 n . . Q Q C . . y - .. . . . I , . . . . 1 -r . . . . 9 1 . . . . . , . i . . . . . , I . . . . . . . . . . , ' 1 . . - 1- nu . . Y . r . . . . , . cc - .. - - n . . . . . - , . Q -. .. . . . - 1 . . D . v s . . . . . . . . , 4 g a . . D . . , ,, THE SHAMROCK Hanson Shoe Repairing 511 bellmger Street Pho e 9033 Oualltp Photos at No Ihgher Prices AAN I' S STUDIO 708 South Farwell Street Dial 973l Lau Claire Wisconsin DFUmmOnd PaCl?lI'Ig Co Arbutus Brand HANIS and BALOY Eau blulre, WVIS Barfingule Companz EAU CI AIRF, ms Bow Rlver on the other the high cliff from which springs the hot sulphur water In our bus rides through the surrounding dlSt1 lcts we often saw that romantic figure ln the red coat the Canadian Mountie As we turned homeward once more across the dusty Dakotas I could see in my m1nd s eye that same old sun setting on San Fran cisco harbor as the Golden Gates to the West swing shut I 've traveled m the mountams And tasted de ert azr But tn all thzs a orld around as There s 'no place lzlte Eau Claire Black Hill B Kathleen Kelly ?0 The vast fO18Stb of pine cox ermf, many miles of hills and flatland in the loc l1tv of Rapid Clty South D xkota gnes the appe r ance of blackness fl om whxch the name Black Hills is derived A few miles south of Rapid Citv we enter the foothills of this scenic Wonderland point of lnterest is the Strato Bowl from which the most recent ascension into the stratosphere was accomplished by United States army officers Thms natural bowl many hundred feet in diameter made a pei fect wind protection for the construction of the lmmense gas bag used in the ascension The winding scenic lnghuav leads 1 past many points of interest eath an oddzty ln ltself For this reason we will only be able to describe the most outstanding features of this The Wonderland of the VVorld Motorists are delighted to dlscoxer that tunnels throufrh the hills are so sltuated as to form telescopic vievs s of Rushmore Memorial This memorial is best descr1bed in the u ords of the late P1 esident Coolidge We have come here to dedicate a corner stone that was laid bs the hand of the Almighty On this lowering wall of Rushmore m the heart of the Black Hills la to be inscribed a memoiial vs hlch will repre out some of th outstanding events of American H1story by portraying l . , . . . , i - . ' ' ' I n : ' ' , . V. , , 3 . , . i Y f u - - n ' ' ' ' ,Nfl - I 1 1 - . , ,, , .. A L 1 -1 ' 1 v ' y .- I A , . . w 1 . 3 A . . , I , . Y L '88 - I xc ' U ' ' . ' 'H ' ' ' ' u 5 sr Ascending but a short way, we find our first I as n I ' . 7 , 1 N w W . - ' . - L L - - . L L' ' . ' 15. . O . . , V . . V L IS Q I1 'Y K 5 ' . ' u A 17 , . C, l . 1. . 1 . I 1 u Q 1 l J ' ' ' , ' ' , 61 1 1 1 y w ' an I I THE SH wxth sultable 1nscr1pt1ons the features of four of our presldents lald on by the hand of a great artlst 1n sculpture Wxth these words Presldent Coolldge handed the tools to Mr Borglum to beg1n the carvlng of the work on August 1927 The memorlal deslgned by Mr Borglum now shows the head of W3ShlDg'tOH and the face of Jefferson The heads of Roosevelt and Lmcoln are yet to be carved on the slde of the mountam Slyvan Lake wlth 1tS plcturesque back ground on hlgh cllifs r1s1ng from the lake edges IS an example of the result of the glaclal perlod Proceedmg by the way of Gordon Stock ade a mlnor pomt of mterest we arrne at Mt Coohdge Thls IS the lnghest po1nt ln the Hllls whlch can be ascended by car Retraclng some of the hlghway whlch we had already drlven over we reach Harney Peak the most elevated peak 1n the H1113 It was sllghtly snow capped at the t1me of our v1s1t North of Rapld Clty the general scenery IS very s1m1lar to that through whlch we hax e just passed It 1S along thls northern drlve that The Tlmberland of Ages a petrlfied forest IS located In thls forest we see what were at one tlme huge trees but whlch have been turned to stone by water and atmospherzc condltlons A short dlstance from here and a few mlles from the mam hlghway are located crystal and Wonderland caves In these caves one walks under dazzllng stalactltes and sees many odd formatlons such as Mary s Llttle Lamb and bears head One of the oddest features of these caves IS that thelr tempera ture never varles a slngle degree alvs ays remalnlng at forty degrees F Our return to Rapld Clty was by way of many other mterestlng S1ghtS the most noted of whlch was the Home Stake Gold Mme at Leads, South Dakota The mme IS one of the AMROCK 45.35 HOM5 Printers of Productlve Advertzsmg Eagles Pflfltlllg Co COMMERCIAL and jOB PRINTERS IO3 Grand Avenue East Eau Claire Wls Dla 6531 37 . . . . . . . , . . ,, . ' Y . . . 0 l I ' f Q 7 v . , . . . . C Q Q ' I . . . . I ' 1 9 Q , l ' I . . . . Y I Y 7 ' . . K 5 W - CC ' 7, ' . 9 ' U - YI , . . . . u . . . . 1 . Q n u . . . . U . ,, . . 1 J . . . ' T T y . . . . . . Y ' 1 ' if 1 ' 77 l . . . . . - ' . . . V 1 . . . , I . . . . . 7 . . . . . . E HAMROCK CONRAD FURS FINE FURS Slncelo97 D T O G G E R Y Styles of Tomorrow TODAY 120 South Barstow Street Telephone 3433 Flemlng Bros GOOD WATCHES Svend Lund 8 C0 TILIE HOUSF OF KUPPENHEINIER Good Clothes EAU cLA11z1: XVISCONSINI rlchest and longest ln ed of am gold mme ln the Unlted States HQYIHO seen the manv oddltles a11d scemc wonders ln these Black Hllls one reahzes vthy lt IS called the VVonde1land of the Wolld Yellowstone Pat11c'u1Joh91so11 27 Yellovx stone D1 obably the best known of our natlonal parlts p1 ox ed to be x ery 1nte1 est mg to me It had been one of my great st deslres to xmt Yellow stone and my hopes VNCIC i111ll5 1e1l1fed x hen I h d the opy or tumty to m :ke tl11s gl 1116 tmp M est I tl 111k that the most lllte est11 g pftrt of the P uk 1 as the Yevlo tsto I6 ea IX mn W1 1m Insplrutlo 1 Po nt vt h1Ll1 1 the one anl mly fzom uh1ch to Q t a Hex of the eIXo11 a QSIICIOUS tl 1111 se sation came ox el m I that such gorgeous 1ed blue 1nd 5ellow hues xx 1th a d'1sh of gl1tte111 g xx l11te he e and tleete had bee 1 pnnted 111 I1 tu1e The Pd 1det.r ox the spectacle made me fe l sm xll an 1ns1g111 ficzmt I could h-ue stayed the-1e Ior houls dreammg and V!Ol1d91llI0' but there were so rrany thlnvs to see and such fl short txme ln VVIIICII to see them VVh1le on the wax to see the befu' feedmg we entounteled one of the Hold up b ars These bears park them elx es 111 the mldcile of the load mo often hold up a lo xg s1111 g of autos 'Ihs b er smffled out our car and fused hlm elf uo 1est1ng hxs fxont pavss on the w 1 dot sul I ua slttxng next to t'1e xt 111do v 11d l1e urelx made by heart Jump to my mouth Hou ex er we 61 allx ar11x ed at the feed mg grounds Oh vt hat tortule we went through bec xus of the mosqtutos but xt was x1 Ol th lt At the grounds we sau many lal ge grlzzll and a few black be rs and a good tight betv, een two mother hens We were so busy sluppmg at mosquxtos that we V616 not 38 . - . 7 I . . ' . .. 1. Y L-,' U I . 7 . . . 1 . , . 7 . . ,, . , , u -, I ,' - , 1, . - 1 ., , , 's , -5 T, . . , . - . O . . .. . 7. . . ,, N. , v , , li . ' ' Q '. 1' ' at 1 3 - . ' ' , . ,' xr f 2 , . 1. L R' . ' ,,,. I ' . I 1 I c 1 1 xv. v q D Y-vw 1 'IN ', yr -, 1. V I fn , H L A I A K . .L 's s - 1 1 , ' ' 1 e 6. . v R59 . v X, 7 1 ' ' . '..,, ' ,, N ,,. - ,, . ,. 0 L A543 :5 L Jun .1 K4- ' was as one 111 at d1'ez1n1. It did not seem real v' . . ' -' - v ' . I -- ' 4 t I f I., A . . , I , . 0. . ,, ., , - L. ct . C . J . . . . . e : 2- -1 1 - . c 7 c I 1' 'I' 1 V I. Y bi . . . . A , . D O 1 . I 7 V! x f ,L ' X.. , ' r fa - U , e 1 1 1 1 . , 1 1 ' Q Q. ' . . . 1 e t C, 4 0 . w Q I . Q 1 1 . 1 S3 A- , , , ,f i1 1' ' s ' ' . l ' 1. , zz. s j D O . V 7 Y I 7 1. y - A A A , ' L.. it O 2 me ., . 7 1 ' y v 1 4 1 4 V , 4 A 0 ' V es - a . , . . r I . 1 ' 1 ' . 7 . . . ,., THE SHAMROCIX able to hear much of the lecture glven by a ranger That nlght at Old Falthfnl we saw the Geyser erupt It was hghted up by flood hghts and truly xt was a magmficent spec tacle My tale would not be complete wlthout ment1on1ng the Stmkers These sulphurous sprmgs have the putrld odor of rotten eggs g ms The hot water pools of varled colors were also very beautlful they were all coloxs of the I'3111b0W The large standlng spec1men of a petrlfied tree also mterested me I V1Slted the museums and I only regret that I could not spend more t1me there I thmk that lf I ex er go there adam I shall try to sp nd most of my t1me thele studymfr the flower ammal mse t an I mxneral specxmens The only wolds I can find to descrxbe every thxng are these It s wonderful SR an Life Arthur Dickerson 38 In Llncoln s t1me everyone was born fx ee and equal Nowadays that statement doesn t hold true they are Just born equal Even though they are born equal each mothel thlnks her baby IS the best ln the wo1 ld When that same baby grows up he begms to behex e It hlmself When people are young they wx ant to learn to walk When they are able to walk they buy a car Chlldren of rlch parents are not satlsiied they wlsh they were poor so they could wear old clothes and roll around 111 the d1rt wlth the rest of the kxds Children of poor parents wlsh they were rlch so they could have good clothes When people ale young they don t want to work When they get a httle older they want work but can t find a Job By the t1me they ve found a Job they re too old to work The people who hay en t Jobs are 1 t the ones who would spend the money lf they had WILCOX WILCOX 6: SULLIVAN Attorneys at Law 500 Umon Natnonal Bank Blllldlllg EAU CLAIRE WIS PATR ON I ZE OUR ADVERTIZEIRS Rlver Street F1-un Store p Il 0 n FRESH F RUITS AND VEGETABLES Sherman Jewelry Store Everythmg In Jewelry 7 . i . . . - f U . ' ' I6 ' 77 ' ' ll 77 , . ., ' ... . l IW Y . . . . . Y . . Y . Q r D . Q . . V ' C . . I1 r . 1 - , , sf L I fl . Y ' 1 . u 1 n . xl . , - H ' 1 ' , 4 f 'V 1 Y Y I I 'Y ' 1 ' . , . s ' ' . Wes oasis I . . 7 , . ,. s . ' , . . 1 . I V , I . 7 1 . 7 9 - , ' 9 a Q . . , , ,y ' 7 ' '11-1 , .AD , . THE SHAMROCK MOONEY BROTHERS CO Eau Claire Was MOONEY S FINE CHOCOLA TES NEHER PHARMACY 225 North Barstow Street Eau Claire Wls LINDSAY S GROCERY Fresh Meats Fruits Grocerres Dral 7615 We Delrver SUN LITE DAIRY CO Eau Clarre Wrsconsm Phone 69l4 It And those who have Jobs are too old to go out and spend money The result rs poor clrculatlon whxch causes an economlc cr1s1s One of these lndlvlduals wxll buy some furmture on tlme paymg for lt for the rest of hrs lrfe Let hrs wlfe ask hrm for a pa1r of dollar nlnety n1ne shoes and just see what wrll happen If a man has a Job and IS maklng good money he w1ll go wlthout decent clothes and the proper food so he can save enough money to retne and hve ln luxury when he lb too old to Work When he comes to the age where he hould retrre and lne comfortably on hrs savmg he can t eat because he hasn t any teeth Ewen rf he drd have teeth he hasn t any stomach to dlgest the food After the mother has rea1 ed her ch1ld1 en and lt IS trme for her to take It easy her hus band goes 1nto hrs second chrldhood and she has to start all ox er agam She has to humor h1m feed h1m put h1m to bed and help h1m walk Frnally when she 1S the only one left ln her generatlon she gets a l1ttle fussy her self She wouldn t thmk of rldmg to the poor lf she couldn t r1de out rn a sedan Well you couldnt blame her for wantmg to rrde over the hlll m class for the chances are her sons all have had a good edu atlon and novs have good posltlons and can afford lt TRHVELO GU E 1Co'n.tmued f1 om Page JO! Holy Hill Angeline Neary .38 It took us a long trme to climb the hrll that led to the beautrful church at the sumnnt of Holy H111 near Mxlwaukee It was Just as It had been descrlbed an u musual structure Someone told us of the spxral stalrs Up and up we chmbed untrl we leached the top of one of the steeples We could see for mlles around On our return tmp we watched a mmrature stage performance The church bell rang the , . A , l . , . . n - o - 9 , . 9 s . ' ' ' '. ' U I , 1 S, c , . Y . . , . , 1 1 ' . .' . t . , . , . , . ' ! ,. A - , . . . house in a Model T. She would put up a kick . , . . 7 l , , . . . . ' ' 9 3 , C ' , ' . - . . . , . . . , If , f 1 , , , l . . . . h- ! , . ' I 40 THE SHAMROCK doors of the tiny church opened lights flashed o 1 and m1n1ms marched lnto the l1ttle bu1ld 11101 For me lt was a very mberestlng place Lzlah Mane M elbu 38 I too took a trlp to Holy H111 As we W 'ned up the w1nd1ng road We saw the 1m DFGSSIVG statlons of the cross each of wh1ch was IIICIOSQCI by a t1ny g1Ol1lC0 COV616d w1Lh vmes and ilowers Whe11 we reached tue last st'1t1o11 we were at the top of the h1ll Tne church IS a bplelldld bJ1ld111g so lar e th It It hterally ta' es one s breath away F1 om the church steeplc we could look over the cou11t1y for mlles around Fargo Shzrley Koemg B1g Hubert 1 as a novel play tl at I saw VVIIIIS on a tr1p to E argo Nor h Dal-.ota I saw the pelfor mance on stage at tne L1ttle Coun try Theatre tnen IH a ta1k1e at tl1e Fargo It to1d me sto1y of courtesy much more force fully tn tn I had ex cr heard It before Seutn tovvnm Dolm es Page 8 IS somethmg new and d11'fe1e'1t--exe for Clucago On ente 1110' the lobby one sees the orches tra 1n dress su1ts p1ay1ng request nurrbels on a revolvmg platform O11 entermg the next lobby one se s a Inge b aut1tul pond glass bottomed filled w1tn beautlful swans and sea blrds Just below the stage of the theatre proper there IS a de Slldlfl orchestra p1t Illlb IS used for stave shows Ihe l1g'1t1 1g effe ts are very beaut1I .11 All 0 'H 1lSt L 1ents 1n th or l1estr speual ught so tney can eas1ly be seen It IS a beaut1ful slght TASTIE BAKERY SERVICE Oven Fresh at Your Door Phone 3522 807 Mann Street Speczal Orders Taken Care of W1ndow Shades Drapenes Carpets Wax Lmoleums Lacquers Varmsh See Us In Our New Larger Store KEEGAN S COMPLETE INTERIOR DECORATORS 104 East Grand Avenue Dxal 8029 Dnal 841 I H H KLEINER CO BUILDING CONTRACTORS Dealers In 1128 1130 Fxrst Avenue Eau CIa1re WIS PARKER MUSIC CO G A BUESCHER TRUE TONE BAND INSTRUMENTS SOPRANI PIANO ACCORDIANS HADDJRF PIANOS GIBSON GUITARS NSTRUMLNT RENTAL PLAN FOR BEGINNERS SHEET MUS' RECORDS ACCESSORIES GOMPI.. TE REPAIR SERVICE 7 1 . . y . . . - ' ! o' 3 1 . . , . 1 1 9 . ' - ' . I n ' -L c ' ' I . 1 D . ' . I , . K g A 2 . ' 1 I xi - Q7 a 1 I . - Q . - . - - Y sa - , u v I ' ' Ir 1- r 1 v ' 1 1 , 1, . 1 , .,.. . , 1 sc ' - , v . 1 ' ' . L , . 1 11 A , , , . - -Y 1 TJ . . . , , 1 V, I - . in - , ,J Southtown isn't just another theatre. It LUMBER. MILLWORK. ROOFING. INSULATION v' ' . 4. D , A 1 ' . . y , 7. 1 1 ' , e 2 ' ' e ' , f ' . , . . . . , II3 1-and venue East , L , 1 ' WSC ., ' g ' . 'I ' I, . .ou n rn - rl ,-X C 1 uv. . 1 , !' . . AJ. f the 1 1'I1'Y , e c have a ' 5. 1- 1 , , ,Q ' .. . ' . E THE SHAMROCR STEINWAY PIANOS an Other World Famous Pranos CONN BAND INSTRUMENTS Accessories Records Sheet Musrc Edmund Gram Musrc House 1 10 Grand Avenue East Keep Famzly Health Up and Eating Costs Down Tn State Selected M1112 WM SAMUELSONI DRY GOODS COMPANY Eau Claire s Qualify Store for 43 Years Vlslf Our 26 COMPLETE DEP ARTMENTS IN STEP with the LA TEST ln FASHIONS We re Always Pleased to 'Vleet New I'r1e11ds Whether They Buy or Not Drop 111 and Feel at Home STEVEN SON S Eau Clalre Wlsconsm Rib Hill ,lame s Cafow 29 Rlb H111 It IS claxmed IS the hwheet p1ece of land IH the state We stopl ed there wht e on an automobde t1'1p th1oug'h cemral Wh con 1n The lefnes were beg11n111g to tt rn gorgeous COIOIS on the 11111 108 VV01k1'116l1 were ba 1 lmg roads alone the 11tt1e mou1 taln-'41de 1 hele ox er1ook111g the 111118 0116 C 111 see the vs 0116110115 xx 01148 of Cod I wo 11d surely hte to next th xt sl ot ef 2 1111 Nevv London Vvnovzhff :fu 1? VVh 11 We the Au 0 1C'1 1 Levxon .tumor bi eb tllte 1111 del wtej fsh'u1d'1tR1 La e 011 tle 111, o ce 11 t ll1I1'l t 1tI cvs Lo11 D1 VJ11111x L 1 1 100 1 o my W1 co1 11 Q 111 TITOJUITX C111 lot H0110 beceu e VK e h 1d 1911 ned to lose 'ts 1 ell as wx 111 The Capitol Jane Illclfaul is Among t11e Le tut1ful rooms I Q tw when I 1 ent tl rough the Ca1 xtol the Assembly Room 11111 lmger 1n my mmd the lonffest It was 1 111 and SIVTCIOLN ron m X3 1th 41 d c fo1 efxch conffrossnfan I coul l 0.1 11V mtttue 1m5 mmd CLI ox 11 co1g1e S I'7'1l'l f om 0111 L11 uct ext 1 des 11 om the 11atf1 m t t e 6111 of the long Wllldlflg ture one can eujov a good VIQVJ of the e1tx Copper Falls Park Ffhelyne Wezg 38 'lhe park 15 ITOIG 111 a Dallltlllg than a reulltv Th g,,1as 1 hhexenet 'md the trees btIC1.C11 thou DY0l,i,Cllll5f, ums ln flout and '7.l0ll1d1t A 1' 111 box -, tor 1101 s t11e sprays 0 xx t C t 11 the ray, of th sun ae ey e mpc from the 1'11 ua,te1fa11 The sful bemg COPDG1 c11o1ed ands to the 11 tural b auty of the ecene 7 1 . I .ff ' ', :I L d 1 u u u u an my 1 9 Y ' C L ' ' 4 L 'w , A- S . 1 ' ' ' ' ! 1 1 ' , . '. ss . . ' l , u n o ' 12 1' ,, . 1- ' 1 ' ' V' - y ' ' 1 1 X1 f i v v nl A1 E1 ' . f L ' 1 'If' z Q 1 'zga' . ' ,. I, ' 71' - f I if U A , - 4 KIYY F! 1' ' Y ' e , . 1,1 1 .1 ,, ' v' . 1 ' ' 1 .h :fs 1. L , e:.tf,1.-. he ,, ce 1i, - v - - Q' -K --.-. - ' , -.- - we xx 1 ug. t uuyete 1 the state .. - . .Y ,T T . . 4 -YW ou ' 1. en . N - 1 1111. 2, 1. 'a :rv- ' ' Y ,, . 1 . ' .- , ed at Lev L01 . 1, v-c learned that V10 11211 1 - , ,- .',r,, 1 1 '- 1 , t plz rs 1 s, 11 zz Us. ' 5, 'J 1 1 1 1 'G CREST MlLK ' ' ' ' L MORINIIN Succeed 111 Vv'l1l11l11g', the tmp was well north Y' . K 1 v 1 u 1 w V ' 21 c c ' 1 c 1 ,v 1 V. . . - m , ' , w rf w , f , I 1 ' 1 1 1 z ' ' S .11 V ' R' .1 Q , . 1 ' ' 1 . . . . , A , A , S ,l ' 1 an ' rv , , ' .' 1 1 'ge . .' 1' ' 1. 1 - .esl 1 ' 5 -n L n 1 -1 ,fs t A ' ' 11 ' .1' A ' uw -. - fl 1' e 1.1 .4 T' 1 ' S. . -L A SL S JE CG . 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THE SHAMROCK BIWKHWQ THE HOME 0F MUSIC' Wzllzam Whzte 38 Out ln the Black Hllls of South Dakota one can find Indians l1v1ng in much the same way as Redmen l1ved y ears ago While 1n this ILQIOH we saw the place from where Stevens set out ln h1s balloon It s out there that one should go to hunt pheasants for farmers tl ere don t even use a gun The pheasants are so fat that the dogs chase them fr yn one S106 of the field to the other untll they are too exhausted to fly As one drives alonq he can sometimes see as many as ten or fifteen along the road The limit catch is ty elye a day but anybody can get the 11m1t out there Reading Menu II4 East Grand Avenue Eau Claire Wisconsin Anything nn TYPEWRITF RS ADDING MACHINES CASH RECISTERS All Makes Repalred by Luctlle Jollvffe V21 qzma Dzrks Sm, tg, and Lzlah Mane M elby THE LEGEND OF ST COLUMBA by Padraw Colum l1l es le ends It is beautifully lllustrated Though the book IS small there are tears and smiles in It as the storles of the Druids the fairies and the S3.1lltS are told BOUNIDARIES by L onard Feeney This dellghtful book of poems will fui msh enjoyment for an evening It should be read after Feeney s first volume IJ TOWNS AND LITTLE TOWNS GOODBYE MR CHIPS by James Hilton The slmple life of an old type schoolmas tel is told ln a yery odd and entertaining stvle It furnishes excellent readlng for one ey emng BLACK SOIL by Donovn ra If you like Iszstorical novels the story of pioneers this book will move you deeply I thx book the tragedy and suffeungs of stur dy settlers in early days of Iowa a e dis closed CConcmued on Page 453 43 -nbll ag m -xii xg fl 'lu Sgt ng M 'iffigiis iff 19? Q E kv Il Qf Eau Claire Typewriter R J BLAKELEY M4 ge Mxdelfart Clmuc Bldg Phone 3762 PBFSOHHIIZCA GIFTS I GREETING CARDS 2 SOCIAL STATIONERY OODS 3 LEATHLR C 4 FOUNTAIN PENS AND PENCILS 0 PORTABLE TYPEIWRITERS 6 ATHLETIC GOODS 7 BOOKS Make a Selectzon of Smart Usejicl Gzjla for Every Me I 1- of the Famzly THE BOOK STORE for permanent glhs .1 I ,Q , U 1 . . . , ........-,...-,-l.,-,, -ii-..............,i. ' ' 1 1 4, if . . - . 54 A - ' - 5 I ' Y . I- - - .F . .1 - , I A. . u , If il , U . ' 'f-if Q ' 9 I ' 1 ' . ' ' 0 u . o ' U . , . 7 Y ' ' S J ' ll ' ' ,Y ' 'V 7 . . , ? Y s ' I . I I - , ' I ,. , NX ' I , I f , . A.-ruff 5 'L :HQ ' ' a , ' ,Q '- fy Pr:-. .w'A . - . A A ,, J 4,7 . I A I ,f 44- - yr 3 ' 1 . ,.4,,f : , .. -2-qi'-fb , ,cj , 4 Q. ' ff f ? ,.4-f',n:Il - - I V' -'Q,.'-n':.:,----.,' .3 V .4 if Y li ' - legs ' E V- Q.,-.g,js:3 I- 'jg .1 Thls book w1ll appeal to everyone who 5,-,,?f, i ' 3' S . ' - ' QF iz esilii? S if A - 1 -is -2 -e it . If ' ' ' 'f -B.. ..va'l,., an' . . . . . ' -n wr, AQIAIQ I -j3',,g,. f ' ,ji Y N' Ulu GPS ' I'2l 1' - ' ,-'.2 E47-'Q - ' - I ' V-, If :In un-.X gf ' ' ' '- ef' . f 41' gg i .U xsx g Thi., ' A ' I D , f lr lf 4 - V . ' fi null ' ' . Ji - ' I :O . , 7 V. . , L ' . . , na r , , - ,, , i ' ' - - u . 17 . . . 7 A . . V . Y ' ' A 'A p. t I , . . . , . Y 7 , - . . Il . . . , '. .I ' . I S , , ' . ' 771,13 7 ' . ' Y Y . 1- , . . . . HE SHAMROCK 2014 133 waist 3 in I ApRlCo xv 02,06 Ml Ilona Sexton Ergo. Mmgfm umm oqaoxzsqrienqtens tiempo ,Bqoom1v'Nt- FOOTBZ-'ELL Lorne Brand! 7 Zlp bang, znwo and St Pats fifrlmtmw I1 xsh wele off on another football season A number of boys re yorted for the open mg practlce and only a few dwlndled aw fn The team thlS year was smaller GSQCCI Illy the back field men The hne awe -we lb bout 155 Wh1Ch IS below most schools The batk field average IS about 135 x h1eh IS far b low the h1gh school ax 81 age Althouffh the as er ge 1s low speed and qumlt thxnkmg ougnt to make up fo that a gre It defxl C0 h Rlchffels had been drxllmg bout thrc solld xx eel-.s whel the mst game was plax ed w 1th 'Slow-'lou 'l ne game with Mondou vs ab played O00 ber 14th ard St Pet s managed to v.11 1 to 0 It was the lust playxng em er1e e fox all the boy evept Jo eph Dlckez son who pl ayed wele neuous tt the start they S001 fou ld tl emselx es and began to funct on eoopela tn ely 'lhe game brought to lxgnt sew eral weak pomts IH our team wlnch weze coxxeeted t the next pxactlce Probably errors were due to over xmousres , IFCXDEIIG amd tle lfxck of adequate pra tue befor the game Houevex the game was not a fan test as he fl d x as o rouh1thwn1 E1 d me teams mum-mg bxlxty At mst the team thought th y x exe runn ng cross country Twice a touchdo' n would haxe been celtam had the lunner not fallen on er hills or stepped 11lt0 valleys The Mondow team fooled St Patrnzk s on spmners and rex ex ses and double ISK er es A revel se IS play ed by a te zm stal tmg oil to the ight and sudtle ll., char ffxng dlrectxon and gomg to the left If me lme follows the nunnex mstead of gomg, r ght strfugnt m lt may 09 and x 111 be Just too bad for tnat te1m 1f the other team T ' . 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' 1- THE SH runs a reverse Thls was done many txmes but St Pat s always held when lt came to a bad spot for them St Pat s falled several tlm9S to break up passmg attempts Mondovl completed many passes 1n the flat zone Although St Pats lntercepted a few there should have been fewer passes completed for Mondovl Then too there was hardly any downfleld blocklng Art Prueher and Bud Rafferty played a good defenslve and OHQIISIVG game mtercept lnv passes and golng for long gams When we mentlon these players we are not unmmdful that they were enabled to do thelr work by the l1ne Wh1Ch opened the holes for them We must g1Ve the l1ne cred1t so many people only thlnk of the backfield St Pat s trled only a few passes and com pleted none of them Because the game was so close there VW616 only a few subst1tut1ons K1ernan relleved Pavelskx at guard and Va carro subst1tuted for Mertes at guard Tr1m bell replaced Bower for a tlme IH the th1rd perlod The 11st of the boys who were out ls as follows Guards Klernan Pavelsk1 Vacarro Mertes and Gllboy Tackles Joe Dlckerson Kalser Craemer and Brown Centers Goethel and Luhm Ends Bast Caton Fxsher and Donnelland Half backs Trlmbell Brandl Rafferty Bowers Egan Deroum and McAuley Quarter backs Gallagher Rafferty and Kauffman Full backs Preueher Newton and McSorley Congratulations ffloncluded from Page 273 To Betty Lou Wollum Iirst and Roy Chaput second and Marle Kleckner th1rd 1n the poster contest conducted by the Con servatlon Comm1ttee AMROCK BESKETEHLL2 QF'z1'st Announcement of Schedule! December 4 December 11 December 18 January 8 January 10 February 5 Granton fherej Cadott fherel Chlppewa Ctherej Altoona Cherel Cotter Ctherej Cotter fherej Chlppewa fherel La Crosse Ctherel February 20 February 19 Reading Menu fConcluded from Page 431 EARLY CANDLELIGHT by Lovelace In th1s story one learns of the growth of a small settlement 1nto the great St Paul that we know In It one find adventures romance and bravery SAINT AMONG SAVAGES by Franczs Talbot If you lxke books wxth v1v1d horrlfymg desc11pt1on th1s one wnll appeal to you The letters of Father Jogues are prmted xn the book gxvmg first hand mformatwn about h1s struggles wlth the Indlans CAPTAIN BLOOD by Raphael Sabatmz A typ1cal pmrate story of a qulet doctor who becomes a V1Ctlm of circumstance lady s love a swashbucklmg buccaneer and who 1n his heart was a man of vlrtue It ll keep you m suspense and youll be glad you read It PERE MARQUETTE by Agnes Repplzer Although the author dld not learn to read untll she was ten years old she certalnly made up for lt 1n later years MISS Reppller was seventy one years old when she pubhsh ed th1s book The story of the l1fe of th1s mlsslonary prlest IS mterestlngly told One can almost see Father Marquette travelmg down the WIISSISSIIJDI encountermg the not too frlendly Indlans 45 . . 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