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Palestra

11-1-1925 Palestra 1925-11-01 Editors of The alesP tra

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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Palestra by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. ST. MARTIN'S GAME BASKETBALL TURNOUT NOV. 22 Palestra DEC. 1

VOL. IV. No. 3 SEATTLE COLLEGE, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON NOVEMBER, 1925 BLAMES HOMES FOR MARSHAL FOCH TO AMERICAN CHILDREN GAME— CRIME WAVE A public school in Detroit, Michi- ST. MARTIN'S gan, was recently named for Marshal POINTS TO WEAK SPOT IN NATION Poch. Marshal Foch wrote a letter to THE SEASON'S CLASSIC the children of that school, and this By Ray Young, A. B. '29 is what he said: DISTINGUISHED VISITOR AT Panthers Ready to Meet So many of our indignant citizens "My dear Children: COLLEGE are Old complaining of our police system, "I have been greatly honored by Rivals that it is corrupted, inefficient and having my given to Fr. Jerome Ricard, S. J., well known name your school, big that is The game of the year! That's Seattle a disgrace to itself. for I shall thus have an influence on for his famous "Sunspot Theory," ar- These the opinion among the students and persons, conscientious with- the education of hundreds of young rived at Seattle College, Saturday, members of the team when talking out doubt in what they say, persist Americans. Nov. 14th, for a visit of a few days in driving about Sunday's clash with St. Mar- through our beautiful, "All my life I have tried to be a on his way to Vancouver. The re- though corrupted, city tin's. ten miles an faithful servant to my country and nowned astronomer is traveling north- It's going to be tough on Lacey. Lit- hour faster than the prescribed limit, that is what I ask you to be. wards with the intention of buying tle do they realize what is in store for or when a policeman Is not watching "Work ardently without thought of equipment for his new observatory. they them when the Panthers take the field them will sneak across a down- self, learn to be your own master, Fr. Ricard has been a Jesuit for the in readiness for the kickoff. It will town intersection in deliberate defi- gain as much knowledge as possible, past fifty-five years, forty of which be a mighty struggle and if the atti- ance of the red traffic signal. but keep above all the ideals of honor. have been spent at his observatory in tude of the local gridders is any omen No, it is not the policeman's fault. With the aid of God you will thus Santa Clara. The Knights of Colum- the Laceyites are in for a beautiful Yet we (the public-spirited citizens), yourselves to bus will commence in the spring to make useful your coun- drubbing. because the city jail is crowded with try and to humanity. put into execution their promise to 'Twas away back in the dark ages crooks, caught by the corner cop, con- (Signed) "P. POCH." build a new observatory at a cost of of 1916 that our eleven last met St. demn the police department as inade- Courtesy of W. K. Scott. $500,000 in recognition of his life's Martin's. The locals won that game quate to handle the crime "wave." work. 7-6. Men like McAteer Bros., "Mighty Rather a paradox, is it not? It is California, Washington, Oregon and THANKSGIVING Mike" Pecarovich and Fred Riley, are like condemning the rat-traps in a British Columbia are solid for Fr. It has long been the laud- some of the old boys who fought and certain house as inefficient because Ricard, on account of his accurate able custom for the president won a bitter battle on that nearly for- of the large number of rats caught in weather predictions. Farmers through- of our glorious nation to pro- gotten but eventful autumn afternoon. them. out California appreciate the good claim a day of thanksgiving to So hard and so fierce was the play- To prevent crime we must first pre- work he has done for them by telling Almighty God for His blessings ing in that game that relations be- vent the criminal. There is no use them in advance of rains, thereby al- and mercies to us. This in it- tween the two colleges became slight- of painting everything pink to hide lowing them time to gather in their self is something to be thankful ly strained. That is all over now the dirt. Get the criminal and you crops. Fr. Ricard's many Seattle for. and, we hope, forgotten. have the approximate cause and there friends will be glad to know that the This year, we are informed, Still, Seattle has the traditions and will be no more dirt. If we seek the father will pay another visit at the the nation is teeming with abun- honor of that famous team behind cause of the criminal we will eventu- College on his way back from Van- dance, the result of a most fruit- them. They must glory in it and by ally come to the most nearly ultimate couver, and that he will be anxious ful autumn, and prosperity is all means not disgrace it. Those old- cause—the home. Every, criminal, to meet a few of the many whom he everywhere in our land. timers had more than the ordinary even the most beastly, had a father has been helping by his famous "Sun- Proper and just it is then, that man's share of courage, grit. We hope and mother and, therefore, a home. spot Theory." enjoying all these favors and this year's team has ev-en more. Re- And seventy-five per cent of our crim- gifts, we should turn to their member, fellows, you carry the same inal population are under twenty-five THOS. F. MAHER, S. J., ORDAINED bountiful Giver, and from hearts colors, are fighting for the same years of age—recent products of the truly grateful, thank God. against the same team. The home. Rev. Thomas F. Maher, S. J., a Se- school, time alone has changed. So no It is not the police department that attle College graduate, was ordained mat- to the priesthood by Archbishop Mar- ter the score, no matter who may win, needs reorganization. It is that tra- VARSITY INVADES chetti of Rome on 1925. Fa- let us play clean and hard with all ditional institution, the great Amer- July 26, ther of the strength and fight of the Panther. ican home, which is rapidly being as- PORTLAND Maher used the tomb St. Peter as the altar for his first Mass. The season's dope shows two evenly similated by the school, the theater GIVES SPLENDID EXHIBITION During his studies Father matched . Some sources and the dance hall. The three above abroad, OF PROGRESS mother passed claim St. Martin's has a slight edge named attractions, and many others, Maher's good to her reward consoled by the thought that in offensive power. We shall see. If are absorbing the ties and attractions Our Varsity invaded the Rose City she had given a daughter the sis- the locals use cool, calculating head- that made either log-cabin or mansion to for their annual game on Nov. 14 with terhood and a son to the Jesuit Order. work and are alert enough to make a home and not a boarding house. Columbia University. Though forced the breaks and take advantage of The reading circle has moved to the to bow in defeat by the score of 18-0. them, then they can count the game school; the games and entertainments it is no indication of the hard battle OUR CHRISTMAS NUMBER as theirs. are under new management in the fought on Multnomah field. The Blue and White showed last theatre; the social events are now The request for a great, big, Columbia with a much heavier team week in their tilt with Columbia that held at a dance hall; perhaps baby Christmas edition of The Pales- composed of veterans with many years they had fighting Irish hearts and has a hard time distinguishing its tra has been made. Very well. of experience, were favorites by an the go-get-'em spirit. Can they rise bridge-crazy mother from the atten- Get busy on appropriate articles, overwhelming score. to even greater heights Sunday? We dants at the day nursery; the chil- columns of advertising, and the Our boys went to Portland, ani- think they can. We hope they will. dren are taught at the kindergarten next issue shall be as big as mated with a new spirit and deter- The team can be counted on to do that they must believe teacher and YOU make it. The Christmas mination that has been hard to arouse its share. What about the student not mother; and the children's hour season is a favorable time for but which has gradually pervaded the body? Are they going to back their is now held at the public library. It getting people to advertise them- whole squad. They went into the eleven with unswerving loyalty and is in such manner that the home, the selves or their business. Re- game bristling with fight, living up to steady, much-needed support, are basic unit of government, is being de- member the ten per cent re- or tneir name, "Panthers." they going to lie down as quitters and stroyed. How we expect the boys ward to the class, and the $10 can kicked off to Seattle Columbia's to the highest individual. let a handful of staunch hearts battle (Continued on page 2) (Continued on page 3) Continued on page 8) 2 THE PALESTRA

"Secure the shadow ere the substance fade." ALUMNI NOTES SEATTLE COLLEGE J. ARTHUR YOUNG game Artist-Photographer The coming with St. Martin's MOTHER'S CLUB Successor to Young- & Cogswell College will, in reality, be the College Accumulate! Honor Awards: 1922-'23-'24 The Seattle College Mothers' Club, 201 Northern Life Bldg. home-coming game, and we sincerely ELiot 2575 after months of inactivity, are prepar- | hope that it will recall to the mind of i ing to launch something worth while. Start putting —— our alumni, many exciting experiences away r f Last month's card party (Mrs. Lo- of the games with these natural rivals | gan, chairman) was a grand success. something every Fifteenth Ave. Barber Shop j of bygone days. We will expect Mrs. Bernard Brady, assisted by the and Beauty Parlor many "old soldiers" of the College to week. Then you '11 A, B and C's, are sure to produce a be in the grandstand, lending their CApllol 5023 record breaker this week. have something j Cut this ad out and bring it in; j hearty support to the team represent- good purchase The Club extends its heartfelt sym- for 10c on 50c | ing their Alma Mater. As this is the when need it, pathy to the family of our lately de- you resumption of athletic relations betwee r —————— — ceased member, Mrs. Raymond Egan. for or these two Catholic schools of West- college busi- May her soul rest in peace! J MISSION BARBER SHOP J ern Washington, we will expect to ness. I Hair Cutting 50c — Children 35c J find many of the older alumni in fond 1909 East Aloha St. S retrospection, while the game is pro- Blames Home for LADIES' BEAUTY PARLOR J gressing. We are sure that we will Crime Wave C\ M. Ireland, Prop. have the patronage of two of Seattle's Washington Mutual foremost lawyers, Chas. Moriarty and (Continued from 1) r —— page 1 Stanley Padden. With these will Savings and girls of today, who have little or Bank come a lumber baron, and a staunch Manning's no respect for their fathers and moth- 1101 Second Ave. supporter of all Seattle College activ- ers, to honor and obey the more exact- ities, Cyril iFairhurst. Funeral Parlors j ing regulations of a government? ESTABLISHED RESOURCES We hope to see "Tony" Klotz, who 11th and Hast 7484 When we adopt the assinine phil- 36 Years 936,000.000 | Olive is well known to most of the present j osophy that children must be free to i. — -i College men, and who is now occupied develop their own glorious self-ex- by Schwabacher Bros., attending and pressiveness, without guidance or com- rooting at the big game. The j panionship, we must not forget the at- Leo the famous drama- j METROPOLITAN PRESS Herkenrath, tire and the vanities; the decadent lit- J tist, and who is now in the radio PRINTING COMPANY erature read, the subject of conversa- (In ill It y nuil .Service business, will broadcast the success tion of boys and girls, the hip flask I 2107-11 3rd Ave. Main 8009 I of his Alma Mater after the game. t i and the automobile, the late hours and -i Many of our alumni journeyed to Cal- i. the early cynicism and the low regard ifornia to see the universities of j ￿ for human life and other people's Get It nt the and California play last j j Washington property. week. SEATTLE The law enforcement of two decades "Babe" McAteer, Jim Ryan and ago when the masked crook and train Harry McMahon drove down, and re- DRUG CO. j robber staged their holdups was com- mained in the "Sunny South" a few j ￿ paratively easy to the problem con- 23r

— but —— every contest r "» ian games, and won least that you at sufficient to guarantee { Have tried a j the bagpipe feature. When he left to LAKEVIEW BUTTER IvIST SANDWICH the price paid for wrongdoing will be to Gonzaga, the whole town I toasted in butter, served at I return in excess of the supposed gain or sat- GROCERY turned out to bid him adieu. | Bidwell's Confectionery j isfaction in wrongdoing. In other JOHN MATSON, Prop. at Broadway and Pine St. words, make the odds so great that 11 a. m. to 4 p. m. 10c J the chance is not worth while. Make m. regular price 15c \ Want Our Store to be j f After 4p. Compliments the punishment severe enough to We- r ■ cause law-breakers to do some cost Your Store and Your "The Pick the Far East" of J of accounting in advance. It is not Neighbor's Store A Friend what happens to the crook, it is what happens in the minds of all that have | GERMINAL not yet become like him. Let the 703 34«1i AVE. EAST 0512 j silly sentimentalists weep at the "ter- ! Meet all the boys at rors of prison." The punishment MANILA CIGARS should be terrible enough to stop the imitators from imitating. Awarded "Grand Prize" St. Louis GEIL'S PHARMACY George Rourke | Exposition 1904 Let us hope that an awakened pub- W. 18th and Union EAst 0566 lic opinion will smash fabric Two Brands: down the Insurance Agency of legal nonsense, expert testimony of j I 'Germinal' 'Los Angeles' purchased psychologists and alien- Dexter Horton Bldg. Strictly Hand Made ists, technical loopholes, delays, the j Long: Filler—Mild and Fragrant BROADWAY bond and bail system and corrupt trial Seattle j I The Los Angeles "Regal" Size FLORAL SHOP methods. Let the judges be not so j I is the "Cigar That Makes the loose with their divorce decrees, as 1533 BROADWAY - Nickel Worth Bit" -T a up create The Small Store with the Big Values by splitting the home they The most popular and one of P. B. Murray, Prop. 1 the biggest selling Manila H. H. WENZEL, Prop. embryonic crooks of the children of 2 Cigars on the Pacific Coast the alienated parents for the next For Sale Everywhere . WASHINGTON | Crime continues because the home & Dunham, the Biggest Candy | WOOLLEY CO., is losing of the child, thus MARKET Man on Broadway control Inc. forming untractable and law-breaking Phone Elliott 4005 X U. S. Agents and Importers Cigars and Soft Drinks citizens; and because of the judicial ! legal system out Street 1113 THIRD AVE. SEATTLE Dining Room in Connection and which holds 94-96 Pike promise of their immunity. T lIE PALESTRA 3 Basketball Prospects our backs, and Columbia was within scoring distance. A long cutback run Are Very Bright by OMARS Leuty, combined with a split buck by Martin, gave Columbia their Boy! It looks like a great year sure first touchdown. for the boys who run around on the In the fourth quarter, Columbia OASIS is no doubt hardwood floor. There scored two more touchdowns, due to about it; this team is to be the great- bad generalship and fumbling on the est in many moons and will give the part of the "Panthers." Leuty, opposition plenty to think about. Cap- Lamb, Jackson and Martin were the tain Tom Duffy is in fine fettle and As usual Omar's Oasis was the first faced, cross-brained, cock-eyed, side- prominent factors in Columbia attack. has fully recovered from his last to secure authentic pictures of the winding wart hog in the lamp the last Seattle got a bad break in the fourth year's injuries. The whole squad will California-Washington game. This time I SAW him." quarter when the referee allowed a

* be heartened by his insurmountable startling picture below shows Capt. # * touchdown, which was caught outside checking and fine shooting ability. Elmer Tesreau of the Huskies going Radigan: You think you are plenty the end zone. Another bright light on the horizon through tackle for the winning touch- educated, don'tcha? Seattle College Columbia is the return of Jimmy Logan to school down. "Wee" Coyle can be seen run- Stuckey: Sure I do. Duffy L.E Hagen this year. He was sadly missed last ning interference for the mighty Radigan: I betcha can't even say Scheurman L.T Pubols season and as no team has yet been Elmer. two words in Greek. Cummings L.G Day able to stop him he is sure to con- Stuckey: I can too. Gorman C Gavin tribute many markers in the games Radigan: Let's hear you. Cosgrove R.G Scheulmerich to come. Tom Glenn and Earl Doyle, Stuckey: "Shine, Mister." Young R.T McParland two of last year's stars, will be ab- * # * Mattingly R.E Weymer sent, but it is possible that Doyle may Epitaph O'Neill Q.B Lamb be back in the lineup before the sea- Beneath this sod Paul (Capt.) —F.B. Martin (Capt.) son is over. O'Connor and McKay, A half-back lies; O'Hearn L.H Jackson guards of past campaigns will be He hit the line Haughian R.H Leuty back in full strength and rarin' to go. And closed his eyes. Substitutions—Seattle College: Mc- Art Duffy, Logan's running mate, is # # * Clain for Mattingly, Penoza for Cum- improving every year and there is There's no sense to this one: mings, Monaghan for Scheurman, good reason to expect a stellar per- Our foemen took an awful fall, Bradley for Cosgrove, Mitchell for formance from him. Haughian and They met the stiff arm of John Paul. O'Hearn, J. Meade for O'Neill, T. Denny McLaughlin also have a good Excelsior! Meade for Gorman, Pigott for Paul. chance to break into the lineup. —By Joe Penoza. Seattle was beaten more from inex- And what is more, we are going to * * * perience than any other factor. But it have one of the classiest schedules Another Scoop! was encouraging to those in charge to ever made up for a school of our size. Lottie Murphy see the great improvement in the It is one that includes such big games At the risk of life and limb, our squad and their showing speaks well as the University of British Columbia, daredevil cameraman took this ex- for our football future. the U. of W. Frosh, St. Martin's, Gorman: "Say, Monohan, 1 was just clusive view of Miss Lottie Murphy, Duffy was the bright star. His de- Columbia, Mt. Angel and Bellingham talking to Berry and he said you and Ziegfeld's newest beauty, as she fense work was of high class order Normal. But our hard-working man- I were the two most colorful players looked while playing badminton with and he showed marked ability car- ager has gone even farther than this on the team." Senator Ford on the top of the Wool- rying the ball. Mattingly also shone in an endeavor to make a more at- Monahan: "Ah, bologna!" worth Building. Lottie is Zieg's star at end and kicked like a big leaguer. tractive schedule. He has established Gorman: "No fooling; he said you're Charleston dansewer. O'Neill and O'Hearn were in the midst communications with Gonzaga Uni- yellow and I'm green." * * * of every play. The same can be said versity and if the men from across * * * Hot stuff! said Jack Meade as he for Scheurman, Cummings, Cosgrove the hump want to play us, a trip will stuck his thumb in the fcocoa. and Young. Rumor has it that Seattle and Ta- be arranged which take in such * * * will It was a fine exhibition. It was a coma are engaged in a controversy notable teams as Ellensburg Normal, Mister "Pa" Draper, that is, Tom fine team that won, and a great bunch over the birthplace of Gene Patten. Cheney Normal and Spokane College. Duffy, is recuperating from an attack of fighters that bowed to Columbia. Seattle claims he was born in Tacoma, This is enough to give any team a of hydrophobia brought on by a tus- while Tacoma swears that Seattle is chance to show their worth and if it sle with a vicious hot-dog in the co-op JUNIOR SODALITY his birthplace. comes up near to expectations it will The hot-dog was severely pun- Regular meetings of the Junior * * * store. be worth plenty. ished by being passed on to Tubby Sodality are being held every Tues- College Club Chatter Meade. day afternoon in the Students' Chapel. "Say, Murph, I think tell * * * Duffy: I'll From the reverent attention of the the boys that Irish story. Varsity Invades Portland Well, as the man said when he felt Sodalists during the meetings it is Murph: "Better not. You're liable be oc." all seriously striving his intellect slipping, "I'll (Continued from page 1) evident that are to shock 'em. to make themselves worthy sons of Duffy: "Alright then, I'll tell them "shock troops," who immediately lined He Must Be Mary. All the new candidates are night." up a punt. But the Panthers, car- the one you told me last tight-wad!" for anxiously looking "Bah! The old through forward to the Murph (after a moment's thought): rying the fight, charged and "Eh?" Feast of the Immaculate Conception, them the Irish story." blocked the kick, Young recovering "Tell three cheers with- when they hope to be admitted as "He wouldn't give twenty ￿ * * on Columbia's yard line. This out doing it grudgingly." members of the Sodality. At present was the great opportunity but the There's no truth to the rumor that some thirty boys from First and Sec- backs failed to see the big holes made "Stork" Carroll is going to take the Coming Down ond High are attending the meetings. by the line, and ended by grounding strong man's job in the circus next At a Maryland camp was a certain MARK CARMODY, H. S. '28. a pass in the end zone. Lieutenant Farr, whose chief claim to summer. During the rest of the half, aided * * * fame was that his cap stood six feet by Mattingly's superb punting, Seat- four inches from the soles of his j Old Grad (to Father Mullen): Didn't tle College more than outplayed their Dutch Boy Baking shoes. evening, coming into camp I take Latin from you? One big rivals. The defense was airtight, Company late, he was stopped some distance Fr. Mullen: No; but you were ex- tackling vicious, and the line charged away by a sentry who demanded: 100 West Mercer St. posed to it. hard and low. there?" * "Halt! Who's GArfield 7030 SEATTLE { ￿ * The Panthers received at the be- "An officer of the camp." ginning of the second .half, Duffy English Notes through the semi- The sentry peered with a great Soph: Do you know Gorman? catching the kickoff, and darkness, then ordered: through the Columbia MISSION BARBER SHOP Frosh: Sure, I soaked that bottle-, sprint dashed j "Dismount, officer of the camp, and 50c men, a touchdown being averted by Hair Cutting | faced, cross-brained, cock-eyed, side- to recognized." 35c advance be part of the Co- Children winding wart hog in the lamp the last a great tackle on the 1909 Enst Alolill St. | him. lumbia safety. The break came in time I SEEN PARLOR | middle of the third quarter when LADIES' BEAUTY Soph: What awful language. You BEAT the L. D. STAL/EY, Prop. I badly handled by one of should say, "I soaked that bottle- ST. MARTIN'S a punt was 4 THE PALESTRA

"PALESTRA" You hold in your hands a self- A BOY'S ESSAY ON The Gazette prints this es- POLICY evident proof of the PALES- "THE HORSE" say on "The Horse," which TRA'S new policy. Seattle Col- it credits to one of the lege has decided on a new system of selecting small boys in the fifth grade at the Galena school: Palestra the staff; not because the old was found wanting "There is four kinds of horces, hobby horces, nite A Monthly Devoted to the Interests of but rather to establish a precedent in staff selec- mares, saw horces, and Charley horces. The Seattle College tion. Under the new organization the editor hobby horce is about the gentlest, because very must from the Senior class, his associates small children can pull their tails EDITORIAL STAFF come clear off and working up from their positions until they reach not get their heads kicked off. Nite mares is Editor-in-Chief Edmund O'Connor the top. In this way every representative gets a about the worst kind of horce. They live on Assoelates G. Egan, Thos. Duffy, Ray Young thorough training in newspaper work, will be mince pies and fruit cake and green apples and DEPARTMENTAL absolutely familiar with the duties of each de- they jump up and down stiffflaiged on your stum- Literary L. Booth partment and capable in the highest sense to mick in the nite and make you kick your brother College Sports J. McLaughlin, N. McKay Feature B. Monohan edit the paper. Those who formerly carried the in the ear, and he pounds you before you wake Alumni B. Bowling of responsibility cheerfully fallen up. Exchanges D. Doyle burden have The nite mare is just between a saw horce Staff Artist G. Young in line with this plan; they are giving your editor and a hobby horce, because it makes you cut up and and REPORTORIAL much of their valuable experience time and it is a hobby of some people. Enuf has been Debates, Faculty, Plays, Mothers' Club, Etc. are helping in every way to make the present sed about saw horces. A Charley horce ain't a Edmund O'Connor regime a successful prosperous one. We at but player High School Classes and horce all, when one football kicks owe much to the sacrifice of the old staff and another one on his shin, then it is a Charley Clair Marshall Talbot Carroll are happy in feeling that we have their sincere horce. That's all I know about horces. Ned. John Lyons James J. Galhraith John Meade John Dillon and priceless cooperation. P. S. —Most horces has 4 laigs, 2 front laigs to Sodalities separate his neck from his , and 2 other Clyde Lockwood Mark Carmody ones to fasten his tail on."—Horton Commercial. HERE'S THE DOPE Sports High School ON WASH.-CAL. Vincent MacAdam Frank MacLellan CLASSIC Club, made the trip to THE EDUCATIONAL "sunny" last MANAGERS ( California* CONTROVERSY AND week to see the Huskies take the honey away Business A. Richardson THE JESUIT ORDER from its self-satisfied Advertising F. Hoffman from the Golden Bears. Manca is a former Wash- complacency when Glenn Circulation L. Barton student like the rest of the Wash- ington and, Franks, president of the University of Wisconsin, trip, ington adherents that made the southern came forth with the declaration that the present nothing praise Bagshaw'si grid has but for; system of education was leaning towards final THE they walloped machine and the manner in which corruption of higher learning. RETREAT the southern idols. He says: "When Tesreau from a man of his distinguished posi- or are we trying day after day to touchdown the much-advertised Cali- made that it rocked modern pedagogues to their flimsy live the lessons taught in it? The retreat time sun its face a startled cloud in fornia hid behind idations, and they had scarcely recovered their is a period in which we go back over our past shame and even the 'Frisco graybeards lost their lomingith from blow when the Governor Roland C. and see and correct our shortcomings and by the predicted a accustomed poise and straightway Hartley hurled such a thunderbolt into their examples of others shown the value of the are midst that now they have risen in panic-stricken retreat. Did we go into this retreat with the idea terror lest the apple of their misguided eye that we had to, or with the thoughts that we were The Life That should be taken from them. getting away from our studies, or did we enter For one in the ordinary walks of life, it re- into it with the idea of bettering our condition quires more than the average amount of courage and learning how to protect ourselves from our to fly in the face of that which public opinion has failings of the past? There were good, sound accepted as being perfect. When the president, lessons to be derived from the words of the of a college lifts his voice against the part he is and his reference to His Last Re- retreat-master forced to play in order to retain his position, then treat ought to set some of our boys to thinking we must conclude that there is some cause for about themselves. In our ordinary school activ- investigation. But when the governor of a great ities we can practice the very lessons taught. jeapordizes his political career by speaking The retreat was very well conducted and not legislature may ■ lis about an evil, then they a student could have made it but who wouldn't Counts ertain that the evil is great and the cause just. The life that counts must toil and fight; re cannot agree with all that Hartley says, but Must hate the wrong and love the right; may assure ourselves of this: he is out for Must stand for truth, by day, by night— truth and has got down to the fundamentals COLLEGE NIGHT- This is the life that counts. rue education. That being done, he is on the ARE WE GOING TO t track. HAVE ONE? nearness of College Night. hopeful The life that counts must be; "The president a modern university no Something should be done Ie of need In darkest night make melody; longer a a now if that old traditional event of the school be scholar, he must be business man." Must wait the dawn on bended knee— "The criteria of a head of a university is not year is going to be preserved. The College Club This is the life that counts. what is he teaching, should be interested in this matter and it is up but rather, how many build- ings lobbied from legislature." Hart- to them to see that something is started and has he the The life that counts must aim to rise ley's words are the echo of Glenn Franks' and started right away. Of course this paper realizes Above the earth to sunlit skies; they both point with a warning finger the that many activities are taking our time and to Must fix its gaze on Paradise— handwriting on attention at this season of the year. Still we feel the wall. This is the life that counts. Would they learn how to conduct colleges, that the students should know that one of our grand knowledge might prevail? Then let them delve old institutions is being neglected and something The life that counts must hopeful be; into of and the should be done. We know that a word to the wise their history education gather The cares and needs of others see; secret the is however. of how the Jesuits have become fore- sufficient, — Must seek the slaves of sin to free most educators of the world. This is the life that counts. About 1542 A. D., St. Ignatius Loyola founded THE ORDEAL the only system of education that has stood the The life that counts is linked with God, IS OVER- test of time. We have had pedagogues with bril- And turns not from the cross—the rod; ARE WE SAFE? over. We can hear a fervent liant ideas, but if they did not have Loyola's But walks with joy where Jesus trod— sigh of relief in the top floor foundations, sooner or later they were found This is the life that counts. corridors. We do not know as yet how many wanting, and such is the case with the modern have fallen by the wayside. Still, the test is system of education. —From "Heart Throbs," Volume 11. over, the result is all that remains to be heard. Down through the centuries to our own time, Has not Tammany Hall a choice box of El Ropos this system has stood out from all the rest and that would melt the hearts of the professors? there is no doubt in our minds that it will last We urge that some active personality make use as long as education is considered worthy of of our suggestion. KGpt! I being attained. THE PALESTRA 5 r j "von"~kapff~ j ! A-l DYE WORKS } High School Activities t INHALATORIUM }A new scientific gas treatment for Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Colds and all diseases ? CLEANERS and | FIRST HIGH "A" FIRST HI B I I of respiratory organs. We seem to be subject to changes Our class extends to Francis Mac- C. T. Cannon, R-. N. the | 815 Pike Street DYERS in teachers and class officers. Mr. Clellan its profound sympathy in j IOOG MILLER STREET J Berry took charge of the English class death of his father, which took place was to have a j Alterations and Repairs I last week. Our new athletic manager last month. It decided | Hats Cleaned and Reblocked J is George Handley. Mass said for Mr. MacClellan. | The Kaufer Co. CARPETS AND RUGS We have shown our "stuff" in foot- In the ticket contest for the Mt. j RENOVATED CHURCH GOODS ball; now watch us in basketball. Our Angel game, our class came second. making good MA in 4173 PHONE CAPITOL 2217 j interest and support is always with So far, we are a show- ranking high 1 1007 4th Ave. SEATTLE the college team, and we're behind ing in collage activities, | j * them in Sunday's game. in advertising for The Palestra, four teams using the gym for JACK DILLON. The basketball are getting much beneficial practice under the careful supervi- Montlake Pharmacy Basketball HI B of Mr. J. THIRD sion O'Neil, S. SEATTLE ICE CREAM Since the beginning of the term, JAMES J. GALBRAITH Equipment Free Delivery i Third Hi B has been demonstrating 0036 the meaning of their watchword, PEP. 1000 23rd Ave. N. EAst j FOR IMITATION *4 As was shown last month, each letter HAHN'S of this motto stands for one of our A prize each month for the clev- from Piety, Eloquence erest expression. One allowed MEANWELL SHOES specialties, namely, each class—selected by the class and Prowess. Palestra reporter. | Barber Shop In the first department, the boys 4th Hi 10th Ave. N. 515 OLIVE ST. have endeavored to take advantage of 240-3% New Prof.: "How high are you in all the spiritualities that are afforded now?" FIRST CLASS WORK - - » - school A.- . ■ them. O'Hearn: "I'm so high that it will In the way of eloquence, the class take sirty digits to let me down hon- has placed three men on the S. C. orably." High School Debating team. Besides When at Broadway and Pine I * * * this, the class has two debates regu- ! 3rd Hi Stop at Dunham's j BEVEN'S larly every week, and Mr. Maddigan I arm is in a for speakers. Teacher: "I see your is training up,a fine squad of Light Lunches—Soft Drinks sling, and I hear that there is a blot I ￿ And when the question of prowess "Courteous Service" on your reputation. What happened?'' j BAKERY comes up, Third B believe they have O'Rourke: "I was hit by a Ford." share, placing five men on done their * * * the Varsity football squad and six Bread Is Our Specialty Ist Hi B more on the Junior squad. { Lakeview Pharmacy Teacher: "Are you eating your lunch We are trying to do our share to again?" Cor. 34th and East Cherry St. 1914 E. MERCER ST. EAst 1257 make the scholastic year of 1925-26 a Walter Scott: "No, sir; it's Corri- Phone East 9628 huge success, and our student body gan's." ready to Delivery Courteous Service officers find us co- * j Free will ever * * J with them in any undertak- operate 2nd Hi r ing. JACK MEADE, H. S. '27. "We are proud of the fact that we Compliments of are not only the largest boys in Sec- CANARY BIRDS SECOND HIGH ond High, but we have also more stu- We fellows are noted for being mod- dents than any other class." j est but still even in "The world knows noth FOURTH and very humble, Schram: Thoroughbred Rollers i due conformity with these virtues we ing of its greatest men." * * * Trained Singers are convinced that Second High is j HIGH the t without doubt the best class in 3rd Hi A t that "When is the grave accent We will bet any class $10.00 school. Teacher: MISS SCANLON we can sell more tickets to the Tubby Meade, our president, mod- used?" dies." minstrel show than they can. Who estly and humbly states that if it had Bob Lord: "When a Greek of * * * j will take us up? a more worthy leader the class 1117 31st Ave. PR ospect 0255 { 1928, would be the idol of our grand- FIRST HIGH A I I children. But we are afraid after Teacher: "The third person plural r j-™---" such an assertion that "Tub" doesn't number, pluperfect tense, optative realize the height to which his most mood, passive voice of voco, is what, [ "] HAIR CUTTING SHOP Compliments of able leadership has attained for us. Gallagher?" J "It Pays to Look Well" Three First Class Barbers to But there are others whose spirit is Gallagher: "Yes, sir." Serve You writer has a Beezer Brothers Ladies' Hair Cutting also praiseworthy. The We cut your hair the way you like it report of a proposed fistic combat be- 815 E. Pi lie St. EA»t 0267 J ARCHITECTS Appointments Made tween the famous lightweights, "Cal- I I ...... t...... ------— ifornia" John Lynch and Harry Ha- r zel Jr., the battling lawyer from Twin sHsmsss | HAVE YOUR HANI CUT BY Falls. We had already given heavy Meet all the boys at ED AN® ROY" at the odds to the Twin Falls prodigee Auto Barber Shop when informed Promoter Ed Harry j Geil's Pharmacy ! not be able Beat 152® BROADWAY O'Connor that he would Hair All Styles of Ladies* fight because he was spending all Bobbint? to | 18th and Union EAst 0566 | E. A. Barthell, Prop. of his spare time selling tickets for i - -< the Seattle College-St. Martin's game. St. | Although both of these stories are as mythical as Aesop's Fables, the EFLLEVUE DYE WORKS Health Comes First working his imagina- I writer has been Martins CLEANERS AND DYERS Use Pure Italian Olive Oil at tion overtime so that everyone inter- PARENTE GROCERY & ested may be sure to know our senti- !' 2356 10th Ave. N. MEAT MARKET ments on the "beat St. Martin's" Capitol 0756 Near Miller St. 1002-1004 Pike Place MA in 5317 idea. TALLY CARROLL. 6 THE PALESTRA LITERARY GLEANINGS

STUDENTS: are no longer boys but men entered THE BIOGRAPHY OF A PIECE OF was forced on it, it became hard or This is YOUR page. We want you upon man's estate; we seek the open COAL anthracite coal. to make it worth while by contrib- field of life, the world and all its "Thousands of years after it was a uting stories, essays, humorous or cares. By Harry Hazel Jr., H. S. '28 tree, a miner picked it up out of a otherwise. With your help this can dark mine where he was working." But again Mother Nature comes It was a raw, gusty evening in the be made the brightest page in the "Where else do miners work?" inter- upon the scene, this time with the late fall when Al's father said to paper. Hand your contributions to rupted Al. "Do you want me to tell whisper of autumn on the chilly him, "Al, go down and fetch a lump the Literary Editor and, whether pub- you this story, or don't you?" queried breeze. The leaves begin to fall and of coal for the fireplace." "Aw," re- lished or not, they will always be ap- his father, and without waiting for a rustle to and fro, while the farmer plied Al. "Go on," reiterated his fa- preciated. reply, "A miner picked it gathers his crop into his barn to pre- ther, and emphasized his statement continued. TEACHERS: up, loaded it on a cart and carried pare for the coming winter. So with with a gentle cuff on the ear. Al Your cooperation will greatly as- it to the daylight where it nearly man; he has tasted life's sweetness, went. "And when you come back, 1 was sist us in presenting the cream of blinded. "It hasn't got any eyes," Al now he shoulders its burden. He has have something to say to you." the school's literary talent on this a family to provide for; he has all the said. "Next it was put on a coal car," page. Students are sometimes back- "Aw gosh! Another lecture about troubles and cares a teeming world his father said, ignoring him, "and ward in offering their work and you prompt obedience or sump'n'." Al can set before him. He is becoming shipped to Seattle where it was pur- be doing a favor both to them thought to himself. But it was not will advanced in years. They are slipping chased by our coal dealer. and to us by turning in the best com- to be. When he returned his father —slipping irretrievably away. And as "Here one thousand nine hundred positions you receive. Due credit will said that he would tell that piece of his children gather around him, mem- and ninety-nine pounds of coal were always be given for authorship. coal's history and probable future. ories of the days of his youth and sold to me as a ton and that piece LOOK! "I wonder how he knows anything the different stages of life as he has happens to be among those pounds. A monthly prize of at least one about a chunk of coal, he being a den- found them are recalled. Like the "I sent you down to get it and dollar will be offered for the best tist." Al thought, but nevertheless farmer, he gathers together all he can there it is, soon to be converted into contribution to this page made by any prepared himself to listen. in order to assure his children of an ashes and carted away and dumped on Seattle College student. In case of education when winter comes. Thus "A long, long time ago that piece the ground where it started." worthy manuscripts will be doubt the the world of was part of the trunk of a they will be enabled to face coal "That's a bum story and—" submitted to an impartial judge. All "Oh, as he did when the cage was opened tree which stood in a damp swamp." manuscripts for the next issue, the go to bed, you don't know a good story and its prisoner set free. "All swamps are damp," Al inter- number, must be in the when you hear one." Christmas rupted. "Oh, keep still will you? hands of the Literary Editor by De- Onward still moves the hand of Na- Who's telling this story, anyway? As cember 12. If you MUST write on ture, and now comes winter. The Time loosely spent not I said, it was a part of a tree in a will again be both sides of the paper, leave room trees are laid bare. They are no won, Greene) swamp where there were lots of alli- (R. on side so that the name longer able to withstand the storms the reverse gators and crawlies, if you get what What shall I do to be forever known? can be clipped off for judging with- of life, so down they fall. Man, too, (Cowley) I mean. out losing any of the matter. is weak and feeble, and falls as the But now the wane of life comes tree. Death, a blast, "After a time this tree was covered like wintry darkly on, (Joanna Baillie) strikes know not the up dirt and rocks that subjected "AGES" suddenly. We by After a thousand mazes overgone; During the exact moment, but if we are true to it to great pressure. (Keats) the right ideals, we will never be course of ages it became bituminous By R. J. Marlotte, H. S. '26 In this brief state of trouble and un- as more pressure caught unprepared. or soft coal. Later rest, (B. Barton) Spring runs laughingly down the And never is but always to be blest. forming her side of Nature's hills, (Pope) signet of emerald on every tree of the BY POETS Time is the present hour, the past is she passes. young sap ONE POEM FIFTY-TWO forest as The fled, (Marsden) lings up and, putting out their look O! Thou futurity, our hope and dread, delicate tongues of golden green de- What strange infatuation rules man- All is but change and separation here (Steele) (Elliott) spitefully at the giants that tower kind (Chatterton) o'er its How fading are the joys we dote them, seem to say, "Wait What different spheres to human bliss To smooth life's passage above upon; (Blair) awhile, you old folks up there; we assigned. (Rogers) stormy way, (Dwight) done Oh! while I speak the present mo- reach you someday, and then we To loftier things your finer pulses Sum up at night what thou hast shall ment's gone. (Akenside) shall see." "Many have we seen in burn, (C. Sprague) by day; (Herbert) finer in if in Lo; thou eternal arbiter of things, our time, saplings and men, and many If man would but his nature Be rich patience thou gudes (Dunbar) (Oldham) shall we yet see; so goes the world," learn. (R. H. Dana) be poor, sight How awful is the hour when con- is the rustled answer of the older What several ways men to their call- So many men do stoope to un- science stings; (J. G. Percival) trees looking down on the saplings. ing have, (B. Johnson) sure. (C. Whitney) virtue most Conscience, stern arbiter in every also with this life of ours. In the And grasp at life through sinking to Choose out the man to So — (Rowe) breast (J. A. Hillhouse) prime of life we are saplings looking the grave. (Falconer) inclined, behind. The fluttering wish on wing that will up at those who have gone before us Ask what is human life? The sage Throw envy, folly, prejudice (Langhome) not rest. (Mallet) Probably our mother, father, or some replies, (Cowper) This, above all, to thine own self be friend of ours to whom the Wealth, pomp and honor are but Defer not till tomorrow to be wise— dear old true, (Shakespeare) scythe of death is near, are the giants empty toys; (Ferguson) (Congreve) not truth Learn to live well, that thou may'st of the world. Youth in its prime We trudge, we travel but from pain Wealth, heaped on wealth, buys. Johnson) die so, too, (Sir J. Denham) looks up and says the same things as to pain, (Quarles) nor safety (Dr. worketh her busy To those that list, the world's gay the young saplings of the forest. Weak, timid landsmen on life's stormy Remembrance with scenes I leave, (Spenser) But Nature pushes forward and main. (Burns) brain, (Goldsmith) Some ills we wish for when we wish then follow days of happiness and We only toil who are the first of Care draws on care, woe comforts (Drayton) to live. (Young) bliss, days of sunshine and laughter things. (Tennyson) woe again; —Exchange. that bring to the saplings and giants i From labor health, from health con- On high estates huge heaps of care i of the forest that untold treasury of tentment springs. (Beattie) attend, (Webster) . an was sweetness, a joy in spreading green Fame runs before us like the morn- No joy so great but runneth to Some time ago an American foliage to the picturesque landscape ing star; (Dryden) end; (Southwell) traveling in Australia, when he came And as Nature blends from one sea- How little do we know that which we No hand applaud what honor shuns ! to a sheepherder's deserted shanty. shanty he son to the other, so with the growth i are! (Byron) to hear, (Thomson) In some old papers in the . Who off shame should likewise < found a poem which to be a of youth; it is no longer in its prime. Let none then here his certain knowl cast proved off fear. com- It now blooms into manhood, like ten- edge boast, (Pomfret) cast (Knowles literary curiosity. The poem is ' too to be lost Grief haunts down the precipice of ' posed of lines and each line is der wildflowers that slip up tenderly Of fleeting joys certain us 52 alongside the flushing spring. It is ; (Waller) years, (W. S. Landor from a different author. free from the embrace of a loving' For over all things hangs a cloud of Virtue alone no dissolution fears; Above is the poem and the author mother. The time is come when we i fear— (Hood) (E. Moore) from whose work each line was taken: 111E PALESTRA 7 SPORTS

BASKETBALL HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL SPORT SPOTLIGHT A call was issued for aspirants to SEASON IS HERE the 90-pound and 120-pound teams by Mr. O'Neill last week. With this good CAPTAIN DUFFY With the St. Martin's game the foot- bourne breaks out of jail. The guards SPEAKS turnout and fine coaching they are be- ball season of Seattle College will be on the other side of the line mean ing rounded into excellent shape. The closed. It is the end of a wonderful nothing to him, and although he is "The best team two quintets will be hard to beat schedule, reflecting with credit on the not the world's fastest human, the ever to represent when the hoop season opens. prowess of our athletic manager, rival backs have learned not to come Seattle College in Interclass Basketball Granville Egan. While the team this too close to his deadly grip. the hoop game." Several teams have been selected season was not a winning one, they * * ￿ These were the from each high school class, and words must be accorded all praise for the used by One of the main cogs in the line these will fight for a place in the noon spirit they showed in fighting to the Tom Duffy in de- was "Tubby" Mead. Though it is his league finals. Each class will have scribing last ditch against stronger teams the prospective basketball first year of varsity football he has its own day in the gym. Much inter- tea mof With most of the letter men back, the present year. Long Tom worked like a veteran and has ap- est is being shown and the gym is is captain-elect next year should see a more experi- of this team which peared favorably in regard to any op- always crowded with spectators. enced squad and a winning team. bids fair to eclipse all previous posing centers. * * * marks set by Panther quintets. f * * * He is much heartened by the re- This year's team showed in more Seattle, Wash., Nov. 12, 1925. Art Duffy proved to be the Red turn of the inimitable Jimmy Logan, ways than one the value of real Grange of the team in the Columbia whose shooting eye is enough to coaching. Under Coach Tom Berry Dear Sir: game, taking the kickoff through the make any rival team in the country the spirit of the players and of the Enclosed find check for two dol- whole team, being brought down by wish for a stronger defense. Also the student-body alike was at least one lars. Certainly wish I could help the safety. Had he been running on captain pointed out that the enthusi- hundred per cent better. The boys a little more to "Berry" St. Mar- a dry field he would easily have got- asm evinced by the students over the showed that they had a lot to- learn tin's. Fraternally, ten away for a touchdown. advent of the season is bound to have but they also showed that they were W. HICKEY. * * * an effect in producing pep for the willing to be taught, and next year , j games. the seed of that spirit will bear fruit. Big Brother Tom and his staff of "We feel sure of winning our games * * * warriors occupy the stage for the will Mitchell and the cool headwork of with St. Martin's and Mount next few and make the Columbia, Captain John Paul has consistently months will Carroll made the victory a thorough Angel," said Duffy, "and we also in- chill winter air warm with lively shown his driving and fighting power one. The brilliance of Meade and tend to turn the tables on the U. of in the gym. Duff says he during the season. When John hits tussles O'Brien showed in the Junior line W. Frosh for our 35-18 defeat of last the line something has to give and wants a large squad out and it costs play. year. We will be ready to give Bell- you nothing, so be there for the ini- makes them give till it hurts. For O'Dea High, husky Tom Sher- ingham Normal a decisive drubbing, * * * turnout on December tial 1. man was the scintillating factor; his and, in fact, expect to go through the * * * Monahan, the left-handed philoso- line bucks being their chief source of season undefeated. runs a scared pher and official wisecracker of this Earl Doyle, who like yardage. publication, has been playing a good deer, does not expect to be in shape JUNIOR FOOTBALL steady game, yet he has not yet sur- for the first of the basketball season. After several weeks of drilling un- the passed his work of last year. How- Doyle sustained a broken ankle in der Coach Tom Berry, Mr. Kane, S. anyone to get past first Fort Lawton game and will not J., Gaffney, ever, who tried and Mr. S. J., the Juniors able any athletics REFERENCES him for yardage found hard stepping be to take part in were soon able to take on the "Rail and was brought clown in his tracks for some time. He may be in the Splitters," downing their Prosh team * * * lineup during the latter part of the to the tune of 44 to 0. does it Ed. Cummings breaks through the hoop season, and if he will In this game Mr. Gaffney tried out to the team. line like the well-known Alvah Kil- be a great asset everybody. Mitchell, O'Hearn and Matson showed up well as half-backs. HIGH; the last chalkmark. Meade converted In spectacular end runs Matson JUNIORS TROUNCE O'DEA with a drop-kick and the score was showed his heels to the whole Lincoln SCORE 20 TO 7 R. has the Pan- tied. team, scoring two touchdowns. A new opponent felt Later in the game, Matson, a fast In their next game they rode the ther's claws. Last Tuesday afternoon and clever back, ran the ends so well "Rough Riders" ragged. The Roose- the O'Dea High School eleven strut- the old and so often that the O'Dea secondary velt Frosh were trampled in the dust ted out on Broadway Playfield, FREDRIKSON oozing from defense became dizzy and weak. They with a score of 13 to 3. self-confidence fairly modestly sub- were so busy watching the midget The Broadway Frosh team was their their sweat shirts, and flash they neglected the center of next victim. In this hard-fought con- mitted to a sound drubbing. The final that foe their line and let English again stroll INTERIOR test Mitchell and O'Hearn in the back- score was 20-7. The unrelenting through for a second score. Meade field and O'Connor on the line may who turned the trick was the College again converted. DECORATING well be given much credit for the Juniors. played safe and victory. The Panther litter, still thinking of The Juniors then tactics. They punt- They next journeyed to Ballard and their class room tasks, were surprised started defensive ed often and kept the opposition in returned victorious with 24 points to at the start and let the Cathedral lads GENERAL territory. Then when one the good. shove over an easy touchdown at the their own one of the O'Dea backs, possessed PAINTING Then came the big game with St. start of the game by straight football. did, however, for with the idea that he could make fif- Leo's. Lacking in weight and experi- That was all they teen yards on the fourth down while ence the preps suffered their first de- the College youngsters soon showed standing on his own ten yard line, feat, the score being 28 to 0. Ed their stuff and the final outcome was tried to run with the ball, they threw English was the star on both defense evident. his tracks. When this mod- Office Phones and offense. Clever split-bucks, long end runs him in too ern Merkle had too English had ELiot ELiot 6663 The next game was with St. Al- and vicious line plunges were come 6662— be- made another touchdown. Meade this phonsus, the said school being defeat- much for O'Dea, as they gaped in convert. Res. Phone: MElrose 7066 ed 13 to 6. Matson again starred wilderment while the Juniors manu- time failed to The Junior team played to- with his trick end runs. "Stork" Car- factured j three cleverly executed entire acted like veterans. To roll gave the spectators some thrills, touchdowns. gether and ran an out any one individual star would as he ran through the St. Alphonsus To begin with, O'Hearn pick sixty be indeed. The good work 123 NORTH 48th STREET line for considerable yardage. O'Dea kick-off back for a mere a hard task took of the backs was made possible by The last game of the season was yards and then the Junior backs turns at bucking the line until finally the united work of the forward wall. Ed. English rushed the oval across O'Hearn, Matson, the drives of Page Eight THE PALESTR*

H. S. DEBATING IS ATTRACTING [ r— MUCH ATTENTION "THE 1926 MINSTREL I I Eyes Examined ELiot 5602 I CLASSIC" Sexton Debating in the high school is at- ! tracting more attention than ever. , Optical On the evenings of December 14th i The dramatic talent will furnish the J Company Two months ago no I Successors to one dreamed that : and 15th j the follower of Seattle Col- ■ jokes, stories, imitations and dark- ￿ Eversole Optical the high school possessed such fin- Co. i lege dramatic productions will be : town comedy in the sedate interlocu- j Established 1889 j ished talent as displayed itself on sev- I 1431 Fourth Ave. Seattle f treated to the most sparkling college i tor and colored endmen; the glee club ) i eral public occasions. The boys are production that they have yet wit- will supply the snappy dances and working hard to make the team I 1 nessed. The vehicle that the com- vocal harmony in the chorus, while which represents the entire high bined thespians, songsters and musi- the orchestra will accompany all with , East Mercer school. Competition is keen since so cians have chosen for the pre-Christ- a brilliancy and finish that will be a many boys are deeply interested and Pharmacy mas play is "The 1926 Minstrel revelation to even the most optimistic. 1 are practicing earnestly to perfect Corner of 15th and Mercer Classic," and from every indication Students of the College and High themselves. The have the M. Peres Dix, Prop. we cannot but be convinced that this clamoring honor and the distinction of possess- School have been for just show will furnish an evening of real such an entertainment a ing the ability to make the debating for long time. fun and entertainment for the crowds The squad. Jack Meade, Ed. Brandmeier, enthusiasm with which the first that pack St. Joseph's auditorium. announcement of play Ted Parolik, Jack Taylor, Paul Ma- the was re- MARKET ] , f| Stalls 30-32-34, Sanitary Market I The dramatic club, the orchestra ceived was very we lone, Jos. Schlosser, Fred Stuckey, noticeable, and Lower Floor and the glee club have all been con- are confident student John Burns, and John Lyons. From that every will I J BETTER QUALITY MEATS I centrating their efforts on making do utmost to pack St. Joseph's J Moderate Prices—Courteous Z this squad the team is picked to stage this his ' I Service—Satisfaction Guaranteed Z the raciest and still the cleverest auditorium to overflowing on Decem- Z Fair to Organized Labor an outside debate. As soon as any | show in the PHONE MAIN 5252 j history of the College. ber 14th and 15th. ■ -- boy in the Senior classes of the H. S. proves his ability to debate he is put — -t on the squad and if he works hard HARD EARNED WAGES CHARACTER FORMING BUY NORTH END BREAD he will soon make the team. Scouts J are out looking for talent to perfect An artist who was employed to Have you ever noticed how an icicle Ask Your Grocer renovate is formed? If you have, you noticed the team. If a boy is found who has a.nd retouch the great oil Also Cookies and Sweets i more ability and who will prepare his paintings in an old church in Belgium how it froze one drop at a time until ir~ MEL. 0128 debates more seriously than someone rendered a bill of $67.00 for his serv- it was a foot or more long. If the »- already on the team he is immediate- ices. The church wardens, however, water was clear, the icicle remained ly given a chance and the other hoy required an itemized bill and among clear, and sparkled almost as brightly ' has to withdraw until he can demon- the items the following were found: as diamonds in the sun; but if the strate to the satisfaction of the coach For correcting the Ten Com- water was slightly muddy, the icicle MANCA'S CAFE j that than on mandments ? looked foul, and its beauty was spoiled. he is better someone else 5,12 108 Street the team. Thus the finest talent is Renewing Heaven and adjusting Just so our characters are forming Columbia recruited, everybody is given a chance. the stars 7.40 —one little thought or action at a Between Ist and 2nd In the several outside debates Jack Touching up Purgatory and re- time. If each thought be pure and -i Taylor's team has invariably defeat storing lost souls 3.06 right, the soul will be lovely and spar- r 1 of Jack Meade. new ques- brightening up happiness; if impure ed that A For the flames kle with but and Phone MElrose 0119 | tion is being prepared now and the of Hell and putting a new tail wrong, there will be deformity and two rival Jacks are looking forward on the devil 7.14 wretchedness. The Home Market to contests that will not be charac- Mending the shirt of the Prodi- What sort of a character are you MEATS, POULTRY and terized by mildness. gal Son and cleaning his face 8.00 forming for yourself? SEA FOODS J Only the Best Handled Putting a new tail and comb on | 1904 North 45th SEATTLE { St. Peter's rooster 15.12 BEAT t A ST. MARTINS GAME The bill was paid. ST. MARTIN'S

_ _ ~ _ SEASON'S CLASSIC MM* CAPITOL HILL BARBER SHOP (Continued from page 1) William Stebbins, Prop. on alone? Sunday we will get the answer. 15th and MERCER Come on, students, rouse yourselves. 9 *• It's up to you and me. Get the true r t Seattle College spirit. Fill the root- | Don t I t DENNY BLAINE MEAT j ing section that is being reserved for MARKET your benefit, and yell. Yell until 3421 East Denny Way you're hoarse—and keep on yelling j Choice Meats, Fish and Poultry Z Forget- | Quality and Service Guaranteed j the team you are man I Show with them j 0549 .Thomson, Prop. ! | EAst W. J for man. Nobody can ask for more; & THE BIG EVENT—"The 1926 Min- S nobody will brand you as quitters strel Classic." then. I I Look at the situation seriously. Re- 1 THE PLACE—St. Joseph's Audi- i CHARLES R. SCOTT member the splendid courage of thai ? torium, 18th Ave. N. and E. 5 team of '16, that would not quit until { Violin Studio j the game was theirs. Realize the sat- 2210 CALIFORNIA AVE. THE TIME —Sunday, Dec. 13th, isfaction that will be ours in defeat- 1 i ( 2:30 p. m., Matinee for children. Phone West 0857 ing our ancient rivals. Then do the f Monday, Dec. 14th, 8:15 p. m. # right thing. Tuesday, Dec. 15th, 8:15 p. m. I Capt. aul and his stalwarts are Compliments ready. They know their coach wants Y THE ADMISSION—GeneraI admis- ? this game in the win column above all J sion, 50c; Reserved section, 75c; I of a others, and they're out to get it for I Matinee for children, 25c. I him. A victory Sunday and a, so far, Friend THE BIG EVENT—"The 1926 Min- | mediocre season will be turned into i strel Classic." a glorious triumph. The squad is not J Songs, Dances, Jokes, Stories, drilling day after day in the mud and 1 i Music, Jazz. rain for nothing. Compliments of Every single student in the College is bound by honor to do his part. That James Kane is all. The stage is set. Up with the H. curtain. • x—A/I**■' WA/IC ■ wAfl» ■