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Page 13 text:
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March, Nineteen Thirty 11 THE TOLO CARNIVAL. The Tolo Carnival which was held February 5 was a success as usual. The program included stunts, a cake walk, and a dance. The cake wralk proved very popular. Twenty-six cakes, which had been solicited from members of the school, were given av ay. Tickets were sold for ten cents and a ticket entitled the holder to a cake if the number drawn corresponded to the one he held. Many people won cakes during the evening. When the cake walk was finished, there was a final showing of the stunts. Then came the dance. The music was furnished by Chick Hurt’s Orchestra of Kewanee with Berneice Dee, daughter of the pianist, as vocal soloist. There were four stunts given by the four classes. The Freshman stunt, which was given in the English IV room, was a model schoolroom. Some of the lessons taught were the advantages of having a teacher’s pet, and the importance of being able to write the alphabet backwards. We wonder if the Freshmen always follow the example they set. The Sophomore stunt was held in the Sewing room. Their stunt was composed of two short sketches, “A Meller Drama,” and “How We Make Pictures.” The first concerned a rich young Spanish nobleman, Lee Bur-key, who is in love with a beautiful girl, Katherine Goodwin. When Manuel, who is Lee, is about to lock the beautiful Kathryn into a tower, her own true lover, George Murray, appears in time to save her. The second part of their stunt concerned the making of moving pictures. “Ikey” Gerard, as director, made himself famous. We wonder if he intends to be a movie director? The Junior stunt took place in the History room. Its name was “The Mayor’s Dream.” The story concerned the Mayor’s dream of Heaven and Hades. He met a number of prominent townsmen in both places. The cast of characters was as follows: Mayor...............................................Edmund Hickey Dr. L. E. O’Keefe..................................WTilliam Dewey Dr. J. C. Williamson.......................................Philip Pyle Gatekeeper of Heaven........................................Brady Ham Gatekeeper of Hades......................Emmett Fennell Devil....................................Woodrow Dillon Angels........Virginia Davis, Frances Titlow, Eleanor Rist Robert Griffith read the skit and Dorothy Puckett and Elizabeth Tomlinson directed it. The Senior stunt was given in the Assembly room. It was a clever piece called “Leapin’ Lena.” It concerned a family who had gone out for a pleasure ride in a new car and had had car trouble. Various people offered to help and the car was finally started with the aid of the baby. Those taking part in the stunt were: Keith Brown, Marion Martin, Mar- garet Claybaugh, Eloise King, Karl Howell, and Clifford Swank. —E. T.
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Page 12 text:
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10 March, Nineteen Thirty stable compound and will not break down into its parts very easily, when he heard the unmistakable sounds of an argument raging outside. He went to the glass and beheld two members of the Chemistry class engaged in discussion, apparently very much absorbed in their conversation. The noise had aroused the instructor, so the students were told to keep quiet on pain of punishment in the form of a request to please stay after school. So the arguing boys calmed down and began to work, which is an unprecedented occurrence in this class. One of them picked up the bottle of sulphuric acid, and poured part of the acid into a flask which was upon the desk. Bill was among the liquid now in the flask and he wondered what was going to happen to him next. He was not kept in suspense for long, however, for the other boy returned to the desk with some sodium nitrate, which is NaNo3, and put this into the flask. With an arrangement of glass tubes, corks, beakers, and test tubes fitted to the flask, the boys commenced to heat the flask with their burner. Bill began to feel uncomfortably warm, and he cried out when, under the influence of the heat, the two Henrys tore themselves away from him and departed. But Bill was not alone for long. Pretty soon a couple of nice looking sodium atoms came along, and Bill decided to enter into a combination with them. This did not take long and was much more enduring than our own marriages. Bill’s old friends, the hydrogen atoms, had also been active during this time, and each was now comfortably settled down in the test tube on the other side of the apparatus with a little nitrate radical for a bride. It would seem that Bill’s adventures would end when he became once more a married man, but, like most other men, he was not entirely satisfied with his present wife. So when our friends, the chemists, emptied Bill and his bride down the waste pipe, he thought that a marriage with one of the wealthy iron maidens would be advantageous, so he became part of a molecule of ferrous sulphate, which means iron sulphate. You see, that is just as it is with us mortals, the groom gives his name to the blushing bride. Of course, this is not the end of Bill’s adventures and journeys, but it is all that I can tell you about, for I don’t know any more about it. —Robert Griffith. GREASE, NOT FUEL. Leslie Matson, who had run out of gas north of Toulon, saw his schoolmate, Bill Jackson, coming down the road with a big tin can. Leslie: “Say, Bill, I hope you have gasoline in that can.” Bill: “Well, I hope it ain’t. It would taste awful on ma’s pancakes.” Cop: “Say there, young man, pull up to the curb. What’s the idea of going 55 miles an hour in that flivver?” Don Aby: “Honest, injun, officer, was I making 55? Lead me to the judge, I want it put on record.”
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