I - ----- '

advertisement
r
~--...,
·
19011·5
il'
l\VRJL;
:
CONTENTS.
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I
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I
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: The Oratorical Conteat .... .... . . 77
l
l The Declamatory Conteat .... .. .. 78
Il
The Oration .... .. ........... .. .. 7~-
821
• Faculty Contributiona ...... .....
Exchange• ... ·: .. . .......... .. .. 87
I
Editorial ...................... ..
• Alumni .........................
88 I
89 1
• Atbletica ...... .. ... .... ..... .... 90
~
l Art
I
DeP.rtment: .. .............. 91
ILo..u ·· · ··
'
· · ··· .. I
l::~;: :~~- ~3
·-
*
'PI:T
*
E. A. ARENBEI'{G,
FRENCH CAMPBELL & CO.
The Leading Jeweler
YOU WI LL FII'ID
Flue Wntc h
Books, Magazines and Newspapers ,
Jewelry, Beads and Novelties,
Ho me•Mad e e a n di es,
lUI School Supplies,
Box eonfe c:tlons,
Pine Stationery,
Plctorea a ad Picture Framiag a Specialty.
.-47
Tot. 1073.
449 M•1• S t .
Schmitt
and
Knope,
~cpa l rlnu:
M ol~
n Specially.
St. . eppollte P. 0.
STEVENS POINT.
WISCONSIN .
ANDRAE & SHAFFER CO.,
Tl)e wide awal{e retailers"'?
DEALERSII't
Dry Goods,
earpets,
eloth i ng,
Hats and Fine Shoes.
E . l..J. RJ~HRLE I~.
Clotbierrs,
PI IO'J'OGRAPIIE ~.
S'J'U DfO:
H'l'.
Tailorrs and
Furrnisherrs, Scribner & Vaughn
~~ ~\I N
SUCCESSORS TO
BETWEEN TWO BANKS.
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS
.'UK
A~VTtii' U
"THI
1~1'1
••1 of U•• •••1••••• of troocb tlta t Dr•uhu C-arr)
~ ~'VlD
I. T0ZI9R & CO.
426 ELLI S STREET.
Ot'
DFl.UG-8.
or
e.
TEEm Dllll8'1'.
Groceries,
.... •1- ......
. 'tatiouci'Y aad Confectionery .
flo Stores: :~:',.:',!.;':,0_:~~!: Tel. ~.!::~1.,:""...~~
Two B l ocb south and west ot the Normal'.
TAYLeR BR(),, !>rugglsts. s.
Please give us a call.
•• p...,.mpt~.c-,..11410« . . -
((Palace of Sweets.
n
W e are pleased to fr}! and please !J?e Public.
(). B. GE()RGE, Proprietor
A. B . THURMAN, Manager
.~~
t Our wagon mates
Dirty Shirts
Dirty Collat·s ,
Dirty Underwear
.(
ARE
Best Cleaned
}
l). dally calls at
l '? the Normal.
~
AT
WISCONSIN'S BEST
LAUNDRY.
f
}
l
}
I
}
l There's a basket
}
l In the basement
}
tcnr-your
l
}
Phone 281 Red. f
515 Church St.
L~~-HADCOCK
--.....
~
QOOD,
SV1\LDING'S
elllolal
1\THLETie
1\LM1lN11.e
Stevens Point, Wis.
STEVENS POIN'l' DYE WORKS.
CLEAN ING, DYING auct ~EPAIIUNG.
Pn:ssiac done on short notice.
pecte 1 ettcatlo• a11c1 lowest
prices t o &tJtdctus .
12 1
A Complete Encyclopedia of Amateur Sport
Dentists,
OFF ICS1
438 JllalaSt.
s. T hlnt St. KRIENKE &
bundles.
Edited by
Por 1906
J. E. SULLIVAN
(Ctllr f of IHpanant•u of PllJ•I«-&1 C•lt•re,
l.oaWaaa !art.h:I.IM- Bxpotd tloa)__.
SII.Mtd be rMd br . .... ,.
u It rot~l&ID.~ t h l"f'f''nt. of
ttlllleat,
atll1('(f!t
•0::
!:!:::!::i~':~"::i:.!~r-::! ~=ie oa... fro•
tilt. Otki&J rt"port or Dlf'f'C'COr S•1U'"•• aac1 a '"••
liM of th two
dar- ...,.otf'd to •po,...la wllk'ta .. ,..,.,.. Wf'r'f' tbe oalr COA~'--
(2f),
~~!~~.;:!!~~~~::C~f:~~~~::::fi.!:'::::WJ!'i!
tiM lm Um"" Ia wbld• OM a.tllld:Jt' pnformaltftt of ..,.w...,.ll&'I'P
..lal,..n::r:.~:·.ul~~:t~~~
""' p•bll6~.
C!O ~. ;r.:.. ro•lll••t,.lloo• of protDhM!'Dl atlillf.We tod
«<IL&l»-
MRS·. ~D~ CR-~V
LERDING MILLINER
Mala S treet
Pboao !led 171
lra.c'kiMIIU.
PRICE 10 CEIITa
Yor MlP b7aH IH'W'1MSM&f',. ud
G. 1\. SPALDING & BReS.
~~~J:t:....
~~dflfO
~."
8 • 1a1o
Df.n,.,.r
Wullloctoo
"-«oa
&hhao,....
Vitu.-•f'l'
Min-. poll•
MOftllftl, Caft,
Clodaaad
SrrwliH'
~ ... Or....,..
Loodoo.IAI·
S+D4 lora~pror~paldlllll!['• AU.1nleGoo4t Catalo,w. J &~ ttH.
If you want fine
THIS IS THE MUCH TALKED OF
Stationery, Perfumes, etc.
DRUG ee. ~J!:..
Shoe Store.
oo~ MEYER
Tho pl1u:o t o a o t yourP ro-.c:r lptlon• tilled.
eur shoes attract
Or. 0 . S. RI<2E,
and
Phpsicia!l and Surgeon.
KUHL'S
'?
eur prices sell
BLOCK
F. L. DILLE,
We make the selection of shoes
a pleasure.
INS~RAN~f, RfAl
fSlAU, lOANS.
aud
Atwell Block.
Stevens Point Shoe Co.
~ooms
4
!5,
cA. J. CUNNEEN & CO.,
MEN'S FURNISHERS :A:ND H:A:TTERS.
455 MAIN ST.
ATHLETIC SWEATERS A. SPECIALTY
RETON BROS. ·& CO.,
eepltal
Stoo,ooo.oo.
Sl&te Depository. CooDtJ Depository. Cit} DeposltOI'J.
NonDal Sebool DeposltorJ.
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK.
DtR&CTOHS.
c.
A. Hamae\<cr. F. J. PHITocr. R. A. Cook.
Louis Brill. N. A. Week. John A . llura~.
G. E. McDill.
W. W. ltlwhell.
Geo. E. Whiling.
Stevens P oint,
Wis.
Q. OBEQLATZ,
JEWELERS and t)PTI<211\NS.
Eyes e .. mlacd.
Spectac les F itted.
. A l l :IIU111da o~ R.op atrb:1c.
R IN 0 N BSS,
TheShoeMon
HIGH GRADE Ft)t)T WEAR.
f iHE ~EP/li~IHG
\.,
lltSoutt) Third Street.
•
-
Stcvco• Point. Wit.
Grand Central Hotel,
M •• C-'SSIDY &t BROS.
TQerchant
Tailer~
161 Strongs an. Cor. Part st Stmos Polo!, Wis.
All
)loocrn
Tel. 163
Aecommooatiou.
ltcl<Onu hie.
Price"
Coraer Flr"t 811d Clark St M.
STATE NORMAL SCHOOL,
STEVENS POINT, W IS .
X J<;W BGILD l XG: '.I'TlOROU GHLY E QU lPP g D.
ALL MO DER N AI D S: A PP A R A T US: L7BR A R Y: CO M PLETE GYMNAS I U M .
~ETTER ~PREPARATION FO~
'TEA CHiNG.
A Largo Corps of Expet~C'\Ced Teachers fully abre.1st of the times.
A Large
attert<Ja'\CO of 03''\est, aJva'lced Students who are Actual Teacher•.
Tho no.v wing no.v cor11pluted, adds o~e-half to tt.e capacity of tl)e build1ng.
Thrco Advaac:cd CourM tt. t•o ~,·nrtil for UJOU·
'CIIOOt.~ (;HAUl.' ATF.S anti O'l'lll!l( cCltlljltltn~ ~lUd·
llo!ooT rraduatt Mutllt1 " In St-iton~. Lanse•
_., ' .
ua
• ( 'l•k• and PedaJ<ot:).
pto•a fqul"ateat to un: ~ATX C'DtTIPI(' ATY...
F.to ma•ta r yCouNte. t•o )fla~. for tho.-.e huld·
ln~or certllleat(•• or J•a ... ,in)! t•ntrln~ f'xuminatJon!il.
etcmca tary Cortlflc:atc. ('11uh•al!'nl to
I.IM•
ITt'J) STATV. t•t'.ICTIYICATY.. f OI' I \t" )f'&r!il,
~:::r~t~h!h~ ;~~~=~("~~:~~:.'·
'"' ~~~·lal
l>,!~~~'i:!1°iJ ~~~'":;n:!::n"b~!.~.f::~: · ~.:.},~~~
etas-iff'" are tauu-ht by l"f.'gular Xonunl tt"aetw.-.., or
under their dlreet O\·erslght.
Sclectlou of S h •dles J~rulhtPtl to tea chPr"
undt"r favorahlf• drcum ..tan<."t'ot.
Jllew CI•AM8 ton~ four tluw.. f'&th · )tar In
nnrl,y f'ffry .. ubJ"'' Lo lht' ...·ouf'M' ot .,.audyJ ~JC•.,..J•t
l..atln. C..nuan. and ~~ advanN"d Mit"OC'P <41iU•
~I-..
'MM' quart•,., bojrln l'~b. I, April II.
Boerd •~.:.0 '" ..,,,... - ·e<>k, all .t•hool charff••
ohout $1.2.'' J>t•r 4tuort<·r ( to W("t•k!C).
No tult ron
f(o{O~ in NOI'IIIItl (•1aM~s tor t h o,.f• ~XJ~llnar to
teaeh. Tuition u.·, ,,-.1\1"' 1)(>r WN'k or lf'u In p~·
parator~ g-radt•.
Write for ,.i~ular... or Hr.M"Y.H ATII..I.,. a._..k df!ft..
nitf' quf'•tlon .. about anr pat1 of tlkt ,.cbool work.
and '-'"tL ao hmllt"dlatf" (Wr..onal l"'!'ptr •
.\d~sil th,• PNO .. Ident.
T II ~:BON U. PRAY.
Steven~
Point, \\'Ia.
THE N0RM1\L 1?0INTER.
Vol. X.
Stevens Point, Wis., April IS, 190!5.
THE INTER-NORMAL ORATORICAL CONTEST.
Tho
lnt~r--Nonnal
Oa·ato•·ical Contest a' tho
No.7.
tl'
ebanoo to judge or tho work dono here und
regular program was carried out. under \'ery h·y·
but to those who Were )>resent on that occasion log clrcumstan~S.
In the orternoon tho Platteville band ga,·e an
b will ut"·ays be a pleasant 1-emcmbrunce.
Coositlering the number of visitors in attend· •xoollent ~-onoort which w all lntereporsed by tho
anoo from the othe•· Normals, the enthusiasm thnt school ytllo and oong• or the different Normals.
seemed twerywhero to per\•ado the air, nod tho J::nthuslum was M high tldo. Even the 11aually
friendly spirit of rivalry exhibited by the tHITerent rorlous and dignified seniors soomed animated
delegMions, it will be a long time before tho and Imbued with new lire.
League "·ill record a more su<:ccssful meetlne-.
The conoor~ was lollowocl by a bukot b'll game
between the Plattevlllo and
1•o Sten:.ne Point Normal
Stevens .Polo\ teama In tho
the resuh of the contest was
gymnaalum, an account. of
especially n source of great
whlob can be round In tho
satisfaction, our ornt.o•·, Mi ss
Alta M. Shermun, easily winat-hleLic co1umott.
lo tho monnt.lme a busln~""
ning Jlrst place In • splcnclicl
meeting of tho Inter-Normal
oratorh;al effort.
Leoguo wu being held on th6
'fl•econtcst for second place,
third lloor, at !"bleb otlloor•
awarded to. \Vuher H. Bu7.y·
witz, of Milwaukee, was i'O
for t.bo cnsulog year woro
close that. the tlecislon of the
olooto'l, •• follow•: l'rool·
deot.-l-'rAok J. Mauriuu,
jlulges creuted considerable
dissatisfaction. Yet, povulnr
\VhiS.CwAt.er; Vh.-oPrt>t~ldcnt.­
Eroeat. Elult.co, Rh•or l'""'alla;
opinion was so ''ariously
dlvldecl on the merits of the
Sccret.ary - Miss Ethn llnff·
Rh·er Palls, '\Vblte•·nter uod
mao, St.o\·ens Point.; Treasurer- F. L. Muaabaeb, ~Ill·
Plau.ovillo Ape2tkers for seeond place, that, on ahe whole,
waukee.
no more satisfactory deeil;lon
Tho coot.ract. for publiahlog
nould have been reached.
Af.'fA ~1. SIIEIUIAN.
the ora~iono and mlnu~ o f
However, all of t-he orations •·ere of Auch high t-he bualne88 meetciog wa.s let to THE ClTC~
rank and so ably delh•ered that a place on the GuXEE, the Superior Norma1 paper, to which wo
program at all was a great l!.onor.
refer you for det.all1.
At 7:30 tho opera bouse began to Oil up, abou~
Tho vislto,.,. beg~n coming Thursday, when the
Whitewater and Platte,·llle delegations arrived, 000 Normaliteo belog admi~tcd, taking all tho
headed by the •uperb Platteville band. The other available room.
delegations urived Friday, bringing the grand
The diiTcreot delegi\IOoJ oe<:upled ..parate oect<>tal or vlslto1"8 to about GOO.
tiont, each vielng with the others in llllldog their
An au.emp\. wa.s made. to pursue. the regular work
IOCaliOn known by echool yelle, wa vlog baooera,
1-'rlday mornlnJ so that the visitors should have a lnolrumcntal noise ahd ochoolsonp. · Tbodcaionopera hOU86 on Mareh 17 is a ntn.Ucr of history,
78
T ilE I'IOHMA I~ POI~TEH.
Tho muolcal numbers on tho pro11ram wero or
•trat1on of lho afternoon was only an lottmatloo,
~ whlopered prel ude, of •hM •ould really be a high ordor and much appr.claled.
l 'ho dcolslon of tho Judges wno followed by an·
OWOllll)llihOd.
Altho O.hkooh and S!<lvena l'oln~ round IL dll· "other outburit. or ODlhuslaem, In "·htch SlOVODif
ncuiL to compete wilb the> PIMWvlllo bl\ad and lbe Point and Mllwaukco performed t1 duel. • aller
Mllwaukro drum corpo Ia 1be molter of produclog "bleb an adjouromcQY Wfl takca 1<1 tho Normal
noiH, all are ogreed lb•t thor ocqullled lbem· where ~n Informal reception wu bold •
..,he• nil.
The ftnal chapter of the ora10rlcal work fur lbe
Arter aD hour·• dem()attra\.loa lh\t woul•l havo rear canaol bo nitun until alter tbe Inter-Stale
dlthcarleocd a bond .r lad loot, Pruldeal
conleJII ll :\Jllwaukco on May 12 when Mlu Sherw. Shaaaon railed tho meeting 10 or<lcr ond I be man will rep CJCnL Whrooooln In 1 •onion with the
tollowhtg program was readcrtcl:
orall\rl from tho at.stcl CJf Mluourl, Kaneu, llll·
Wynkon, Blynkcn and Nod .••.• •.. • NnJin Osgood DUll, and (OWL
nurut.t: CLEF Ct.uu, STX\' t:ss PotsT.
A larao deiCI(atlon will accompany our oraiOr
Soprano Obligato, ~JlSS !:11<11\' 1"'
10 Milwaukee, ond there will undou~ly bo large
VIolin Solo, Si.llb Air Varle, ...... .... . f),&ri<>t delqatlont from oome of 1bo olher Nonnalt o f the
:\JtSS :\JARJOS \'OSUOII(I.
ahLO. Whern before our lnlc!root wu divided,
AddN-<• or President,
on Mar It all ll'loconoln Noriiiillteo will boa uol\
JAMF.S \"\'. SHA!<SOs, Milwaukee.
In chcerlnr )Jiu Sbennoo ond Wloconoln on to
Ora lion, J}(«her's :\les5agc to Llvers.fOOI,
vlciOry.
A lirA ~1. SH.EJUI.AN, Stevens Point.
·'&"'""
Oration, Tho TriUmt?h or Pc.RC(',
WAt..Tt:Jt R. Bozvwn•t, Milwaukee.
TH E l ~TS~ ·SOC I ET Y CO~Tt!!lT.
l:!olo Sprlnl! ......................... • C~aminade
'rho Annual lnter-Soelcly O.:clom~IOry Contest
~laSS ADI!LY!< S. DOWN ISO, O<hkoth.
wu hold In the assembly room F'riday evening,
Oration The Need of True Palrlotltm,
Mareh 2-1, before a large audlcnoo. II wa~ the
~RANK J. liARRJOTT, Whitewater.
10001 tnlbuJiastle meeJing of tbe rear, barring lbo
Oration -~ ObllgaLion of Suflrall",
oratorical conteSt. The membera of tho three
GRACE 1\osKa.. Surertor.
"""ltlfu were In ftne form and ohowed that lbo
Solo ;\ t'orest Song .................... IV.l~/q
pracllcc of 1he previous week wu Invaluable.
Mil'S Lr'-'IA Lro!<AIW, ltlver Fallo.
_,. The judgu were Prof. 0. E. Ciifvcr, Rev. f'atbor
Oration The Spirit of tho Well,
lllcc, ami Attorney Ceo. B. Nelson. ,.rhe Arena
CLAUDE B. F.t.Dtum, IUvcrl'&lll.
president, Mlso t:dlth LaRue, Jltetl~cd us ohalrOration - Hobert LoUis Steven8on,
'-..
:I.AOI!E I. Bovu~ O.hkooh.
wan ot the evening.
l:!<'l o A Son of the De.ert ............... PltilliJU
The ~·orum carried orr tho honors of the evening,
IJOIY ARO VAS WERT W~ti.1'Y.
Mr. Elarold Martin w~lng ftrst1•la"" by a oplen·
lion Robert Em.,.u,
did "'ndltlon of "Tile New South,'' and Mr.
Wu.t... C. Bt<KHS1 l'laltevlll~.
Howard Wehy winning ~•d. pia~ btlll• matMuole IJT l'la~vllle NonnallJond.
lerfullnlerprelallon of a scene from VlciOrllullo's
JUDGI'.S.
"Le8 Mlaerab1et."
ThoNt:ht aad Cotapotlltloe •
Min Buck, of tho Arena, wa• accorded tblr<l
nos. t'RANK liA':_t, Madi'IOo.
J>laco for her renclllion of •'Tho ll<·~lefJed Cutle,"
PliO ... f\ 0. HODIIARD, Madison.
from t v~tnhoe.
SUI»T. C. Jo"'. Vtr.J:IAns, \Va&ert.own.
Oethory 1
F. F.. Darv, Madioon.
0. H. UA!\"TISC, Waupaca.
OIL n. C. Doom:s, ltlpen.
lie -61 Now, g-rammatieallrspeaklng, would rou
""II a Iris• conjunction?''
Sh<> - "I don't know. Whate•er It lo I eao'v
II."
- F.x.
d_.,ll~
T il l-: NO R)IA L J>Ol :'\'1'1-:R.
7!1
Beecher's Message to Liverpool.
A lta M. Sherman.
lo tbe .!toea~ that wa"'h the ..hore"i of ~~tem
I.. a little lt.l{\, for from ant-lent ch~lltza­
tlon, called by Uu, Horuun world llrilunnia lnlulalile of Britain.
"Thl• rortress built by :'ioture for her...,lf
Aga ln.st.lnfectlou and the hand of ••ur:
11>18 little world,
This prec.loU3 atone set lo a sll'"er ~a,.,
wa,. &eparatc<l by t\ barrier of waters frotu tho
encroaelwliC-nt.§ of A.slatle Uespotl'm •·hlth threat·
eoed to 0\"trnan the ~ntloeot of t-:uro~. To thl ..
safe retreat ••• de>tlncd to be brought the ;\nj!IO·
Saxon spirit or freedom; here, In this chosen -ifJOt,
wero laid th~ roundatlon• of liberty and ri'J>I't'S<'n·
tath•e government, and were planted the ..~Iii o f
lho hlghc.t ct ..lllxatlon the world has e•or known.
f·ar awa1 to the 1rf'4it•ard lay bid a va,t land,
waJhed by the waH·:!l of two rulJ.thty ~•n~-•
land to bo discovered In the fulllu•"" of tlum tor
tho fo~t.ering (>IIL"e of this .r\oglo·Saxon lli)lrlt, a
land that .... to become the ~·t O<:hool or f-dom for the seattered branches or the Aryan ra..,.
1-'lvc ocnturl~" a fter the ir an<:e$l0rs tuul wn:&t.ed
the~lagoa(.'harta from an unwilling f:Ogll•h king,
the people of thf~ new rontineot malotalnf'd by
F:uror~o
ur~, the ... must be a
7r
-,tanch ami slron~ ~·•lrlt
unlon,3nll a tinn ~nlllovloloblesplrlt of mora lily
In the atrnlr8 of the notional .:o,•ernnwnt. Hulr a
Ol"otury ago, lo our own land, these •hal fac·&.ors
were ftghllnl( for ulste.,.,.., In the critical P.rloll
or ou•· hlJ~otory. two men c1uno forth w plead that.
tbese elt-nl'•Ot~ ml~rln.Jh·"· In the 6~\. ureaLerbiJ1
Daniel \Vc&ter w1u the champion of the c:au~ of
unlun. In the second c•·lsl8, II&SR\' \ V AUO BEI'.CIII'JC
was
the
e.xponeo" of an arou~ national
(''OO.SCi~.
another ~gll•b klnl(. lo both cuuntrl~•. the
people ba t"e flt>er stood for the det"eiOJmtent ot
f n.--o personality, until to·Uuy, \!Yt.•ry••bcn:" thru·
OUL the length and bl"t'atlth Of lhtlr domain. 'the
soul of mao can walk abroad In ILc own majHt1.'
Tbe•& two Mtlono, tho dlvldA!d by the e•eN•hang·
ing M."as, are united hy thc- J:•~hlt'.!!t JJO•tr 01\
earth I he bond or romtoon lnt.en--h: 3 <"'mmoo
Hoeaat, the aame lilt-'rature. and abovt> aiJ, the
samo t'Jnn belief to moraiiLy, liberty, ju:;tk'(", and
ll wn.~ 186,1. T110 1\mcricun nation hutlB••aken\.'d
to demand that jthtlto ba done tim ala\'e. l'"or
n• orly tb,..... yearo. the •lol•oce of the Civil Wor
had lahl "'"(4\e our qule&. •allftl'~ and no man
rould the end. ~ngllsh rooQdenoo In tho
Northern ause 'O'Uered; )lacaulay and Lord
Lytton hou prophesied th;, downfall of our
ll.eJ)ubllc;. oven OladstooC', 1-:nsrlantl'"' most. con·
serf'atl't"ft sta~man, s.aid, "'Jefferson Davl~ hes
made an anny, a oa•1, and a nation •• , 1•ho
1\!ilturan<:tl of Engll11h ~ymp1uhy • ·oultJ hl\vc been
\h the North •~ martlalmuslu to a •·eary regi.tocot;
but Eogll•h mo,.,.l Instinct• nre bluntro by
mutonal jealousy aml love of gain. And thU
~:O~:land where ahno•t a century before tho Lord
Chief Ju.tl"" bad declared In ao opinion that If
ooy sian~ t>ut ..et hi .. foot on fo:.OJ;Ciisb solf, by virtue
of that att h~ becomC'-. a free mao; • ·heN butt.blrty
years befo~, in advao(!e of all the nation),~'
Emaoclpatloo Act ..., pa .. 't('d, freelo~ the A1a,·es
In all til<~ ti(11Mmdtocle't o r tho cro•·n "" tho cost
of one hundred million dollar•: tbat t.:OI(Iand now
~anetlollf'CJ tbe contln~ tn"laviog of a rate
amonf.! the IJeOJJfc Imbued whh her own Ideas of
Jaw.
frl~om.
fOl'\,.'0 their Oe<:laratlon
or
fnd('J.K:Dden~ t&)otuio,.l
Sotlonal a• .-ell "lndl<ldual de•elop!ll<'ol 13
a tta ined onlr thru connie:&. So, America, to
becomo. a oatJoo g~at. and gootl, wu~t ha•e her
time of Slrargle. lo ordor to prH<'rve a nalioa'a
The South wa•ln a state of etr..,tl•o blockade;
and for two years and a. halt, t-:nglantl was ln tho
throes of a terrible rotton famloe. Tho poor
Eotrllsh lplooer, while he beard bis c:blldreo err
80
TilE XOIOJA J, I'Oii\TElt.
ll<!<Jcll(>r. He steps to the oeolcr ol lhe plallorm.
The awne changes-tho crowd beconl('s a IOulng
sea of angry races, waving arma, swaying bodlosof right. Not so the rich- tho arl.stocracy, the lodeserlbablc couluslon. They hlso, they groan,
prof,·-i~lon.s, tho t)ress, tbe Mlnl•try- none could'" 1001 howl and ohrlek, they slamp their leel and
sUJlpurl principle when fortune was at stake. shakelhelr ftou. The .ccne Is ao terrible and awe'n>e ........,.. ol lha w~akeolfti Nol'\h blog<!d oo 000>0 as lhe oulbu.:si> of a raglngllorm a1 sea.
International favor: tot.eroatlooal faYor was Thero •Ianda lha speaker bolore lbea>-calm, determined, lmtJCI'\urbable. The angry IU iUrgto
wallln~.r lor F!oglish lead; llngll•h sympathy
twuna: on th~ sentiment of the grea\. middle clan, round him; yeL unftlnchlng and .....,ne, whh ne•er
lhO bulk or ·~gllsh l)()t>Uiallon. Wllh lhe labof'o a sign or lear, he wah• lor lhe ftroL lull. II comes.
InK ;lass for tho N'onh, and llbeny and the mon· Ue begins to spcnk. He llrsl atlt>ealo to the F.ngllah
cyetl chu8 for the South t\n\1 slnvory, tho moral love o r ll•lr play. Ho catches tbolr aucntlon by
or lhe greal t;nglloh onlddlo cia.. must be bls wlulcl811ll and ready answero. Some one In
orou..,.l. Groal Britain 1romblf'<l on 1he verge or 1he crowd •rles 1aun1logly, "You oald JOU co1.1ld
n,._"CCJrOlaing the SouthernCoofedenu:y a.s a nation. wblll lhe South In slxly days. Why didn't you
l;on10 one must plead lor llbel'\y In lhe land where do 11 ?" Qulok •~ a ftaoh CO!Ile!l lhe reiOI'\, "We
11 had Its bil'\b; aod lhb was Ibe "re•l minion or have American• 10 ftgbt: nol Brill lb." The mob
Jltnry \Vard Be-echer.
respocts 1he challenge, Out the loterruplloos
1Jt' 'llOke with greatsurcess In tlte ''arious man· eontlnue.
lor bread and saw the rkh 8Urrounded wllh opu·
1'-•net, with wondtrful forc...lllght antl unselflshness,
l'l•ulb..cd that the cauw of the Negro wa.ll tho cnuso
•••..o
urat:turtns: \.Ul\'OS or En,;land; but hi.s ~reat~l
lltlllrt•rN were tobo brou~ht hno JllA)' In lht- supl"(!.mc
fl.trn~tu'c 1.U
Lh•crpool, tluu, hotbt.'(l of Southern
8JIOI1Uihy. n~re II ... that Sou them reluj!eeS
and ploue ... J(albert'd: htre It wa• lhal lhe Ala·
b•n•• hatl been bulh and put 10 '"'"· Ll•erpool
~OliO . . . . faoatlt>al In h.t ~UI)por\ or tbe
Suutb: unly a few ttftk• bffo"', a man bad been
1hrown Into lhe lor openl7 delending lhe
Norlh. Blood-red hondblll• - ·••• ..,.uered broadtail, J)I'OChilmlng tbal ll~nry \Vartl lleecher was
a dansrcrou.!l ml\n, anti would do all In his powe1·
tu 8tu:k and burn Lh>erpool. 1\\_"CCh(w's frlemJs
I
I
beeame alarmed: lhey be1t1<ed him 10 tum back;
"' would be IOro 10 plf«'• by lhe mob. A weaker
11n would hue quailed bul DenryWard Beecber
did DOl dloc:h.
The IIO>O lor lbe ._llag I• ..1. Tbe ~•ealng
""'~~~'"· AI lbe appolated hour, lhe groat hall is
p~~<:kro to lhe crushln~r polnL wllh stem·laced,
de-J»erate men, whh only he.-e and there a few
llmltl, l"'mbllng' women, clinging closely 10 their
t'WOr\-1. There Is a ten~e,~tralned, ominous quiet,
broken no•· aod then by t-a&t-t-aiiA, groans and
bl•~•· ThehourSirlkes. UnhtrullTacrygOH
16
UJ),
Betc.ber! Beecher!'' ~ ,..bble l~ impall~nl at lbe dela7. Tbe ehalrmao lnlrodueeo )lr.
As he .peaks, be grows more ami more eloquent;
ho Jll008 1he tllnllorm like a cuged lion; he hurls
his 1-emtu·ks nhovo tho confu&lon In a thunt1crous
volt-.. lie lo beglnnln~ 10 Ore hla audience whb
enlhuola•m: Ihey ore beeomlog 1pellbound. The
OllllOShlon lear he will carry the day; lhey break
lniO a fearlul aiOrm or bl~ ood groaoJ. Be b
Ioree<! 10 a10p. l'or 1hree houra relgno thlo ..,..,.
or demoniac conluslon. PhraJe by ph rue, ....
tcnloe by M!llltooe, the undaunted orator delive-rs
his •ness a""' In closing, hereachC8 1ho hlgheJI
moral elov•tlon, ami whh a tloot•• protlhctle In·
•i~ht, coun~~Cis the nations 10 81and together lor
the beot lnlerests of mankind. He
'"And now In 1he lulure II b lhe work of e•err
good man and pall'IQI nol to create dl•ltlono, bul
10 do lhlng• *hlch will make for puc.. Oo our
par\ It shall be done. Oo rpur par\ It oughiiO be
done; and when In any or tbe c;on•ulolon• lbaL
oome U(lOII lho ..orld 1 CreaL Britain ftnd• he-ll
SlruKgllng single-handed again"' tho glgaollc
!lOWers lhal •pread oppresolon ond darkness,
lhere ought to be such COI'dlallly lhaL 1he can lurn
ond ny 10 her o... vborn and mosl lllullrfou•
child, "('ome :" I will DO\ say thai England eao·
Dol &(Cain, •• hllbel'\o, s!nglo-haoded manap ant.
power; bu1 I will oar 1ba1 Enlfl&nd and AmeriCa
••1• :-
't~IE
t<>rt~>er
NORMAL POTNTF:It.
for rellgloo and liberty are a maid> for
the world ...
Se«ber bad a meo<age lo r En11land, and 1M!
gue II d<Aphe tiM! mon fearful odds whh whleh
any orator, anelent. or modem, ever had to con~nd. The meelln~r was no~ broken up. Bet'<!b~r
bad spoken, and t~ngland had hear<!. t:ve ry
f:nglllh oewtpAp<'r l>rloted his vi~··· He no~
only touched Llverpoo1, but he stirred Enlfland
\0 Ill center. Tho Southern eau.se wa.J lrretrlev·
ably loll. ConJCitnce ruled over conon, and the
morsl lorots In tiM! t:ngllsh cb arac~r were again
triumphant.
ln Beeeher'a t"DH.sa~ to Lh'erpool, the ftr1t ahn
wu to arouse English sympathy lor ~be North In
the otrurgle aplnot slnery. .\Od the !otCOnd
eltmtOL, tilat will caute h to be revered lor ceotu·
rlts to eomo, lo the suggeotlon to the nation• to
join hando and lead ll•e way toward a world·wlde
J)f.acei tO untto Britain's inheritance of the 1>48\.
wllh Amel'loa'a promise of the future: to join her
Anglo·SOJ<on aplrlt or sell· proteetlon whh the
Amerlean •plrlt of protection or the rlghta o r oth·
era In the formation of a union "'hie!> will work
the aal. .tlon or tho world. Tbls Is our manlle•t
dual dest.lny- to aubsthuce law for war, rta!On
lor TIOI-, )u•tloe for oppression ; to so eher!Jh
~be diTioe prlndple or popular government round·
ed on the moral taw, that eYery mao oo eanh will
IO'fe the lloo-deektd standard and tho Amtrlcao
ttan a nd ttriP" aa ~be symlools or llbert7,
juntee, peace; '-0 stand among 1.be oatloo• for
those moral fOr"Cel more vital tban commtree or
~urcts, and more powerful than armies or
t\ectt; to write our morali~y, nolo in our llbrarlet~,
but In ouroltbenablp and publlo service; to allow
to tpread abroad to all the world tbe lnftuence o r
Anglo-American lnitltutlons, a power •• lrresl•tablo a1 the forces o r Nature, ao genllo a nd all·
per•atlvo at t he sunlight..
'""
..
With America and t:nglaod setting tbe example
~be • orld will follow u ~bey lead. As t he wloe
- o or old followed thelrgulcllogttar of ~be Ea>t,
so will the ooa~van1 of nations follow ~be pldlng
otar or AO«Io-Amerlcao preoedeot. In the happt
time tha\ r. to nome when Ameriea and Britain
bue performed t belr mluloo, ~be suo • Ill smile
81
upon a joyou• world; lleld and nllty will laullh
whh pl~nt7, and e•·tr)'Where will the hu•band>nan
enj07 tiM! 11'\llb or blo toll; the sea• will t..,m with
ships from every shore c.xebang-ing cornmodlllell
In lrlendly lree<lom; then will the many bleo<ln~•
whleil we enjoy to-doy become the berlta~:c or the
nattonil that sh. In darkness; ln C\'Cry lAnd will' /
pcaco and coutcnuncnt reign; tnlll\ • •Ill Jove his
neighbor :u hhnselt ; tho legend of tho t\ndcntr~
will be reoll•ed- ll>e Colden Ago will return "1>0"
the earth. TI1us, Henry Ward Beecher, wltll nob!"
courage, limply did his duty, trv.stlnll Provldtnee,
and lllce the prophets of old, 1M! build('<) better
than 1M! knew, leaving behind him a thouaht which
tho fl•en ftltyyean ago, meet• the n...ts or to·
da7, and will meet the Deeds or ~be nation, thru
the y•aro that are to come, a thou11ht who~ full
slgnlfteanco can now be but dimly rea!IIU'<I-the
prophooy that the hlgbes\ and bes\ ora of whlcl1
man has a ver dreamed will be Ulilheretl In thru tho
ogency of Anelo-Amorlcan unity.
CoatiD1H'd from pi.&'f' N)
Wo look at tho F'alls for • long time and aee them
froD\ many I>Oints. Then wo go to ...., the Rro\
house tbol ••• built In Mlnneupollo. Ills just a
llnle whll<> bouse. The onan that lived In thl~
bouse wa.s named Mr. SteYeru.
Thenextdayi• Thursday. ln tbemornlng I jrO
ohopplng, and lo the al\ernoon Oowonl and I llO
lO Sl. Paul, where I meet mr aunl Said«!. I go to
I"U•t r Falla to opond Sunday 'll'ltb h•r. I have a
ftne time there. I ride bone-back, and go boatrldlog, and do Iota ol tblo~rs.
Tuesday I return to~llnneapolls, anti thalnll(hl
I at an for home. l do not Hko to say "Oood·bye,"
but I must. I am In &he brakcman•tc eara. My
journey home Ia ''er.r tiresome. l reach my hom
In tho nl11h1. I take the back home, and my mother
and at•tc.r are very glad t.Q see mo. I ha~e ao
ntany, many things to tell thecu abouL ruy Journey.
The neJCt. morntog I do not feel we11 enouJth to
go II) oebool. In the alterooon I (10, and my
~adler..,... me In the crowd aod of cou....., I tblnk
•he will not like It that I have bf<:n alMont lor two
daJ•· But she just asked me to wrl~<t a Jtory
about my •aeatloa, and thlo Is the .eaton I have
wrl~n thla llnle story for you.
R I1TU Ross.
April 13, 11100.
Filth Ora~.
TIIF. XOR:\IAL l'OI XTER.
82
F1\eULTV e0NTRIBUTIE)NS.
CO!ICORD SCEIIES AIID PLACES.
F.
:s.
SPISOI.I<JC.
~ ("onc:ord of to-dar 1, 1M mo'l fl"&C<'ful of
•lila!;('•- • •lllagc of ~morit•, of historic and
tlltrary Interest unequaled on thl• continent.
Pa..tngdo.m a long a•~ouo of beautiful elm< one
oom•• to the s!to of the bollle. The pro...,nt bridge
18 n new 110ld North Brldjlt 1" uml not a rude
Un<lco· this bridge
8 tructure !Ike the orlglnol.
lto•·s the placid ri\·er, and nont~ more q,uleL or
calmly beautiful could oo lma)llned. The day we
were there, happy, care-rrt."e young men and maid·
en..•, dressed In the most modem of ~ummerouting
sull.f, we"' poddliog \heir light blreh·bark canoes
awlh.Jy along under the OYtrhanglng tl"t'eS or
drifting lightly under the bushy banks. Tho quiet
wa• unbroken except by the dip of tl1o paddles,
tho merry laugh of the ooottro, tho •·hl•tlo of tho
quo !I and bobolinks, or tho crooking of tho frogs.
All wa• 80 peaceful that il seemed lhnl war never
could havo bctn there. But visible tlgns were
befo"' u•. One hundred and ten f<'<!l from the west
en~ho bridge, In line with !.. oeo..,r, •tandt
lhe bron-te atatue of the minute man on the '·ert
spot where Oa•ls lett. The otatue Ia a noblo ftgure
of heroic pro(>Or11ono, b<'!ng 10\'tn root high.
The ftgure combines thellghtne•• or n man skilled
In woodcrnrL whh the 8tl'(!nglh of tho rarmcr.
Thc anatomy and t><>lse are natural, tho clothing
orlca!!ycorrect,lbe pocket• heuywhh bullets,
mu.-ke&. gra.llped in tbertgbt hand,themu:M:ular
t arm ball ba...d, the , _ ~ardle.s, noble
clearcul, determ!IW'd and pure. All tho faith
and eourage, the a<plratlon lor r_.tom ot the
men or 1~ Re<olutlon ...,m embodied In this
noble lace and ftgure. Some fault hu bctn found
with th~ youthful face of the ftgure; but. wh~q we
reflec-t tha~ Davis Wa~ buL lhlrt,., aml Ro~mer but
h'ent1-two, these two who W\!re killed at the first
Brltlth •otley at the Bailie or Concord, and thaL
the bo1• were probably no ltn prewnt In tbe
R<l•olutloo than In the ll<-belllon, we may graM
that the ""ulptor wu rigbL Aoro•• the mlddt<. of
~the
peM•tal, In Incised and bron.OO lollcno, are
the.e noblo line• of Emen.on:
"By the rude br!d~that arched tho ftood,
- Th•lr ftar In Aprff's breeze unrurled,
litH·~, onct', &ho ernb:utlec.J far~r'• etood,
And ftred tho ahot heard round tho world."
On the rear race of tho loedr&lal I• th!o !n..cr!ptlon:
l7 7S,
N1x t:r•:•~NTt r
-o•·-
APRIL.
l87S,
One thing lmpre.,ed me with poeul!ar aadnc..
atthl• banlefteld. .\t the tert of the road, eut or
the brid11e, lluck In the"''!.!!!!. wall, It a undJIOoo
with A ntdo !nser!pllon, "Oravo or nr!Uah Sol·
cl!ero." Boro pine noodles cover the ground undor
which they Ito, and n rusty chain otrotehed !rom
ono pine La"'O- t.o nnother fences orr their "ro,•c•
from tho rontl. I could nol hel1> but reel how they
mun have bctn thrown Into this hole; }oow hat..t
they wero; how tad their fate, rottlnl( In a d!ahon·
or<'ll and naonele.. grave; yet they did but their
duly , Th!o tympathylor the!~ laiO was augmeo~­
ed when I l.. rned that alter tho bailie an A mer!·
can boy oom!og along and ftndlnlf a nrh!sher
wounded but not dead, dl•palehed him with an
ax. Thl• •t<>ry llawthorno ·,;;-akeo tho baolo or
hi• novo!, Scpllmu• Felton,
Al tho lolL of tho banlcftold, ourroundetl by lb
stono fenC\11 1 with o. large ohadtllr'OUntl hounded
on the •e<t by the ri•er, I• the old monte w!M>ro
11-red 1~•. William ~rson, and later Ralph
Waldo l'.lnenon, and w!M>re Rawthorno l!rtd and
wro~. h Ia a great square w.ootlen &lnaeture of
t•·o 'torltll, with added ante roonut beneath an
o<rrwhelmln~e gambl'(!l roo!. Tho window• are or
muhi·Jlaned ~:I all. Tho whole Ia what one would
expe<'t tho 'Old ~lanse' 10 be, groy, antiquo, and
mndeot.
I cannoL 110p 10 desert be tho h!tiOrlo old ta•ern
or the later hO!IMl of Emerson, or the home of
11loreau, or or Oron.soo and fAufaa Aleou, but.
will onenllon what was 10 ""' the moot beaulllul,
'l'IIE NOHMAL P01N'l'EI1.
and nullO the baule-ground the most impressive
place in Coooord, which Is, "Sleepy Hollow"
Cemel<lry, the lau ...,sllng·ploce of the Illustrious
Concord company of wril(lrs nnd poets. When
Hawthorne ij,•ed In Concord, his f1>vorito walk
was to "Sleepy Hollow." Here on a piney ridge
~bat skirts tbe hollow be would rest, and often be
mcube:re with Emerson, Thoreau, Bronson Aleou.
Elizabeth Boar, and . Margaret Fuller-truly a
noble company; and ho•· 6ulog that they should
all sloop now in tbal place they loved so well. I
wish tbal I could :ldequately deseribe it, but I
cannot.
A kettle shaped hollow surrounded by a ridge
of constderabte otovat.ion, tho orlginnt trees and
vines untouched, nature Is at her bc.s~ hero-that.
eha.stc and beautiful best, reftoed and not ovcrlaxurlou• thai characteriZ<>S Now England nook~.
No sounds but the singing of tho birds, tho hum
of Insects, and t-he weird yet. sweet soughing or
tho wind through the pines- a soun<l most sweet
to \Vestern cars, brt"aks tbe summer sllllnc.ss or
this sacred spot. The Hrst to como forever to this
beauutul place was Thoreau, and under the grass
and fallen pine oO('dlos ho lies, his gra<e marked
by " simple stone, gr1> ven with his name ond age.
Nex\ came Hawthorne, tba\ weird yet. s•·eet souJ,
our only novelist, the Inspirer of thousands. His
grave ls on the ..·estern ridge, 4nd u ooe stands
there be ecems 10 bear the cooing of Hilda's
doves, to feel the nearness of that nature "·hleb
Oonatello loved, to rea llze tbe aorro .. of Bester
Pry nne: but al tho same time tloe lovelin~ss of
tbe soene recalls to cheer one. tho bright swee'
face of Phoebe Pyneheon. Hawthorne'• friends ·
tried to mark off ~be lot in which his gra vc Is,
with hawthorne shrubbery, but a 100 rigorous
climate prevenecd; hence a more hardy northern
shrub does duty there. Bis gr~>,•e Itself I& marked
by a low marble on wblcb Is ctlt the one ,...,rd,
"BA WTHOR~E, n wblle cJoae ellngJng vines t.en·
derly cover tho ground al Its base.
Bul last and greatest e~>me 10 this plaoe,
Emerson, " followed," say1 Dr. \Volfe, "by n van
-concourse, and mourned by an the world.,
Emerson, the leader of the tronsecndental llluonl·
nail on In America, who dare<! 10 ,break loose from
83
the then prcvolllng theologl01>l limitations, from
ancient creeds, from hardening formalism, who
dared to look up and beyond religious forms to
God Himself, ~·ho started o. movement which hu~
truo.sformctl Christianity In America from hursh
and Inhuman ecclesiasticism to a broad, true,
hopeful. humonitorian religion.
Elere on
th~
"hilltop, hcarsed wllb J)loes," rests the body or"/
Lhts mate-bless soul. Tho ferns and Rowers un.
hindered gro•· around. Ills gro''" Is marked but
by a massive cone-shaped boulder or pink quftrtz,
with simply a bronze tablet of bls name thereon.
He need! no eulogy. "Thousands rise up 4nd
call him blessed."
As wo linger for a lnst look in this haiJowed
J>laoo, the pines t\1"0 throwing their long shadows
across Cbo hollow, (WCn tho •·lnd is still; the scene
seems to embody all the serenit-y of Emc,rson, tho
sirDJ)Iiclt>y of Thoreau, tho weirdness aoll bcuut.y
o f fla~.,.thornc, in one picture of indescribable
eharfn.
SE LP·DEVELOPMEI'IT.
C. B. BAOO>I.
Self·dlrectlon suggests that changes brought
about by tho director, have lmportanoo to him.
l:lo self-directing being Is known wbleb docs not
de,•elop. I almply wish to show tho onturc and
conscquenoes of the species of ch~>ngc called •elfdevelopment.
Incessant> change, tho common root of sorrow,
Is found throughout the world, no less in the life
of man than hubat of tho lower animals. Thero
arc many kinds of ehange,-the accidental change
of place; the destruetlvc, by which organic whole-
ness Is lost; the transrormlng where the origin•!
qualltlesdleappear and now ones are substituted·
the de,•clOJ)mental ..·hero a goal or mark l-M the"
end, and In which process the later stages dis·
close t.ho value of thO earlier; finally, self-de,•el·
oping or so·called personal changes. Tho last
Is the ono I wish to dwell on In this P•t>Or.
In penonol changei, the mark )0 be reached lo
In the conaclous keeping of him who Ia 10 ...,ach lt.
It Is possible for one 10 more or tess direct ht.
course toward lt. ln this goal, an enlarged 11lan
of life and unrealized possibilities may moe\. It
Til~; XOR~IAL I'OI~TEII.
olghl, pooolbly a lllmulut 10 oome oao lor further
rcoeareh.
Was I\ beo&UIO hO WRSIUCh 1\ gron\ loYOOIII(IIOr?
IIMdly lhal, lor aa a nalurallll In tho llrlc&ell
"eeose of lht word he wa. not. It wa. lho con·
lhoughl of a beller lhon by lhe hler. of a com11rucll•o oldo or oa1ure lh~l chr.l'lll<!d him moll.
plel<'d, perftcl oelf. We 8<-'e a llmh 10 our preseol
lie e~udled biology a~ oo mucb for blol<~~rr aake,
tielt. and are al once eoo.!CIOUIIJ of a self ~yond
u for lho uaderlylng and uhlmale prloelplea
lhalllmiL locompJt,&eoeu of lhe p.....,ol whelher
or &bought. Bo .... Indeed qulwo .. mueh lo~ero­
..-e be aiOdeM or &e~r lurolol..- uo whh lhe
..led to phtlotophy, for l hoso who know him !.eat
aut:atf""tlon for a oourso of future endea,·or.
~ell us lha\ hlo laboro exleoded over lhe widen
t\dvance 11 made by our •llorl 1<> bring oul all
llcld or biology ood philosophy oovorod by any
&haL I• •lgnlflMnl In our prc•enl 81\uallon. We
man tlnco Arlttollo.
l<""l our a(\ vance by a.5klnt: whNher or no it ts
'l"ho moro we look lol<> blo life lho moro aro wo
coni(MIOUII wllh our pa.Sl or present. Often what. coovl~ I hal I he ooe lhlog lhr.l made hit lr.meaealready •xls\5 more lullt developed In our sur- curo wu hit cre&lalruggle and ulllm~wo •leiOry
roundlnl(ll will aulsl our own proc:HS or devel- lor lho f_.jom or lbougbl.
Ao R...,kJe>wu lhe !1"1 on lhe ooolloeol, ao
op<IK'nl.
wu Ou•l•Y lbe ftn l 1~ Eoclaod 10 cala r. <lear
;\\ant moment we are lncomple'-fo. Persooalhr loalght tal<> O~rwfn"t theln'y ol ovolulloa. Coo·
to r. ~toal. Rl~thlly do ..-e say \hal one man Is tcquenlly ho wao amooc 1hc earlleal 10 1ako uplhe
mOl'(', and another man le..tt.. a ~rsoo. To ask cudgel In Ill defeoot. Wblle for lhlrlyytart he wu
whtthtr \lr ne-t •·e are tn6nlt.e h• no&. tho true 11.1 erea~ expotiiOr and defeodor, yo~ It It r.o u·
toundtnc locllhat be nevrr conlrlbuled any orlg·
que~tlon. but. rather whether each atep forward
laal or novel Idea 1<> hand u rar ao 1h01 11 coo·
~1uler1 another more or leu a)()ot~lblc. If each
oorned the whole o r lho eon&emporaooouo hlol.<>ry
peroonal oe1 lnere....,. loo J>OUibtllly of &he next, of Evotuuon mighi ba>·e been wrlllen wllhoul \he
Is &here any provloloo for cheelcaliC In peroons, mentlonlntr ol hlo n.-. Bul &I lhO creal ex·
pounder and High Prl..t ol Evolulloa ho 1100d "'
~re lo In lhlogst
lbe heod. llero II wa• lhal lie gah•ed blo prom·
Thu• our ~roals are ftylnft o..._... Doeo lhl• dlslneoco.
c.ou~ '! No, for tbe5e a\lr \0 Jtrt&tt.r endeavor.
Ult wu olwayt an open warfare for he be11~1 are, lodced, coollnually belnJC aualned, and
lle•·ed In "&oel>llcltm u 1110 hl'het\ du~y aad
really lurnlab lor us lhe ba•l• or nrc, bolh J>resen~ In Mind lallb 11 1be one unpardonr.ble ola.•· La·
bored alwr.yt In ~be pureuh or 1ru•b for 11.1 own
and Ideally complel<'d.
oako. ond evor &rue 10 hlo eonvlctloo bo rlwty• mel
hlo opponcn.s In a learlel8 man no~, llrlkln~t rl~hl
Tho•al KIIXIO)'.
and left with oledco hammer blowa. to 1hete dlocuoolont
be 10<!1 men of the hlehen calllop In
C. A. TALlli<KT.
chu"'h ond otawo, ll~d h may be !alrlt tald lhll
1"bere are comparUI•ely lew of lhe creu blo- whllo Clachi.One, SiJiobury ancl Blobop Wilberlotlealworhn wbo ba•a arNIIed \M auealloo of foro• ,......, trfaala Ia tb•lr own apcclal work, 7Dl
\he W1y. TIM> great maJorhy, 11 far -u \he &bey madelbe mloake of t~r I hOI when \hey me<
Uuxley In debai.O upon tclentl&o oubjecu.
mat101 a.re cooceroed, ha1'e Uvtd Ia compa.rath·e
lo cooolutloo I~ may be uld \hat wbllo be wu
obocurlty. Yel !here are r. lew creol tclent'ftc
oon11an1lyunder 1be are of advcrtO crlllolam and
••••tllpiOre wh9 ha•e becom• unl••raally known. olton mlarcprc.co~, ycl ho pataed lhroueh 11 all
To lhlo lUI clau lhcro belong few more eom· wllbout making a reo! enemy.
fllo
pupil Prof. 0. B. Uowea aayo-"To
mandtnc obr.roelen tbaa Tboo.lluxloy. It mlgb~ be
or aome lnlereal 1<> Inquire ln10 hlo life and k oow nuxley ••• to lovo him; to cxprete oae·a
app..,.,llllon of hit work and tndeb4ed-• 1<> hit
- •bat \here •u lhu made him aud> a a engaele~bln~r Ia but lntdeqaalely 10 atato lbe obllp·
log ftrure. Owtae to the •ant or
a de~alled lion under wblch be baa piO<'>IICI mankind at
IWlCOUnt will be lm-lble--Ju.t a mere lo· ••reo.·•
hi: • ha~ the man a\ presrnL '" no\-, thalo ts the
mo\•lnt: flOWer of the present. Mo~L of us do not.
h11vo ~ perfected pl:.n of our "''OM. \Vo como
111>011 11 pt...,.,.meal, and arc roilier gul<led by lhe
_j
'"'at
•P-
THE NOR~JAt POINTER. -
Tlio l'for oaal 11i ........
ALBERT B. SA:<l'ORD.
Thooo perooos who are aoqualoled wllh lhe faet.e
lo t:b o case are genuinely aurpr!eed a\. t.be. ease
wll.b which !.be rellce In the Hlaterlcal Museum al
lbe Normal School have been accumulated. Wllh·
ou1 lh& e.xpeodlture of oao cenl and with com par·
atlvely ll"lo ell'on, 1\rlloles now Olllurlhree casco
have comolO uo, lho moal e f them unoollclled.
Oorlai lhe early years of the aobeol few mls·
ccllaneous objecw were colleeted, many of lhem
belng Iadlaa rellce don&led by uudeats and their
frleada. Pruf. C. H. Sylvesler •ave lhe school
a brlok from tho old church Ia Sleepy Hollow aad
a otene mill from Mexico. The real maklnr of the
mu.aeum aad lw proper dlaplay begaa Ia !.be fall
of 1903 wben .Yr. E. H. .\Illes, then a JUDior, loncd
'blo largo collection of Indian ateae Implements,
numbcrlni 180 aepar ate !lema, and rare coins, 123
In number, besldea Olher rellco. 0 "' e•·ealoi a•
about thll dme the wrlll!r accompanied Prof. Cui·
•er 10 the hom~ of Mr. E. M. Coppt who bad tome
geologlo.J speclmeoalbat be waa ,.Ill log 10 dooat.e,
and "perhapa & few other trlfto1." Tho rooulta
proved to be much more v&lu&ble along the hitter·
leal !.ban lh& geological line. For Mr. Coppa had
ver1 l.bougblfully preaerved aome exceedingly In·
lerestlnx rellca of bit Cl•ll W ar experleoCC8;
amon~r them wero the blank forma for the
., parole, and "amoee.ty oath,., eomo paper can...
rldga, aad , moat lmportan~ a Confeder&t.> 81000
bond. We had no sooner made publloackaowledr·
meol of this gilt than there came other oll'ers of
gltw aad loaaa, aom~ lafiO and olhero omall, from
nudeo&a and ch-lztna.
Throu~rb lhe ell'orll of Milt Sadlo Dorney tho
•b> muae11m acquired u a loan from Mra. N. ~· .
Clark t"o swords of lbo Civil War lime which &re
hlchly valued b7 their owneri 11 family belrlooma, and ano~r aword tllat. wu t.akea from the
•Ide of a dead Spaniard oa 1he ~letleld of
Saotlaro. Tho advaolap of leaving theae anleleo
In the Normal muoe11m wu &p.,.rent 10 Mra.
Clark, for the7 were r&pldly booomi•IC damaged
by abuao a1 tbt bando or earoleu peraoaa. Bore
we hue tbem under lock and ke7 In a place "bore
a
es
1ho7 are much Ieos liable lO bo los!, or dca\royed
by firt, lhan lbey would bo In & prh·a~e bouse.
~r. W. 0. I.amoreux gave to t.be museum a land
pateol, d&led 1 8~. boarlog lbe algn&lure or Presl·
dent Fr&nklln Pierco. A loan of Indian relict
ca.mo from Mr. P. A. Roclc:woll, cla11
or 1000,
and
a gill of old newspapero from Ml88 :\!&rJ Baker.
Moat. receatl1 aome valuable artlclet ba,·o bee.o ~
donot.ed bv Mr. B. B. Park aad family and by Mr.
M. J. Dickinson of Stevens Pvlnt. Lack of opaco
forhlds tho complele enutntratloa of lbo arllclea
lhuo obtained, bul among Ihom are a eoll<-ctlon
or old almanaC'•, some dating from Revolutionary
times, and a keg Ct\ntec.n that. wu carried In t.be
Rovolullonary \Var.
In our mueoum the volcet of t.\.e pMt.lpcak: to ua
t.b rougb lho medium of l.beso laaglblo objects, &nd
lbuo blatery It made a ll"lo more real than books
alone could mokolt. Tblols lhuolc object In mak·
log such & eolleclloa. Ills not dono In tho aplril
of t.ho mero cu riosi ty seeker, but. 10 that. o f tho
blotery lludca\ who strives 10 gain for blmaelt uad
lor his puplu a clear view or tho pall ftotl a doaer
lntlmacy w'lth tho men and womtn who made
hlolory.
It b&S been o&ld lh•l lhlo collection wu m~e
with turprlllnt cue. In acari!' e'·ery ca1e-, t.be
ockno,.lcdgmoat In the ne" tpapero WM hnmedlat.cly followed by another dooallon. Tba~ Ia all.
Our cxperlonoe should furnish good evldenoe lhal
In every eommualty " olmll&r collecllon can be
made aod lb&t lho school Is tbe oalural place for
Its dlspl&y. In everJ communiLy there are Civil
War ve.t.er"na, their numbers fuL dlmlnlt~b1ng,
who eon &ld the aebool·mMIO< In molrlnr a ll"le
collon'oa of rellca.
One mora leuon m&y be drawn !rom thlt ex·
pcrfeaco. We ebould have no musoum were 1L no' "
for lho kindly tboughtlulnus o r tboso who '"'""'
ured up lbe&O arllclei lo tlmea pl\111.. Thoy muol
hue had a generous aupply of blawrloal I nollnel..
A ad now, bo w we blee! the memory of t.baL 1reat·
rrea~o~rro.od-mot~er who banded. down lO her
doughlt'ro and 10 tbelr children's cblldron the old
eoloalal st.eelyardo and tbe quaont l<>1ther pocket·
book atamptd "1183"'! Bow 1rat.c.ful we aro &.0
1ome old lo•·er of rellco who saved 1ba1 ploeo of
r
THF NORMAL POl NTE1t
66
ConiLDCDtal paper money, and to him a lao who
treuured up the old almanoca that tell how much
lblo money wao worth from the tlme It was lsaued
•antlllt ceucd to be ·•worth a cootlnental!" But
have .. e no obligation toward a tho~ who ..will
come after us? May we oo1. auls1. them as we
have been helped in the elfort to recall the pao':_!
The lime to begin the collwtlon of articles that
will soma day be valuable "" rollc• Is now. Tbe
!coal newepaper of to·day It the "source
material" for Ute bl&torlao of to-morrow. The
eouveot.rs and mem~otos ol Important. ovcots to
our clly and ocbool life will eomc da1 a,ld the stu·
dentin reviving the pu1. In this
the echO<>!
ahould acth•tly assltl In kooplni pcrfoet the Hol<t
that blod the pa1t to tho prcacnt Ia our aoolal aod
pollllcalllfe.
••1
STI!Vf!I'IS POI I'IT ARC H I TECT URE.
J.
v. COLLINS.
When the ed.il<>r of THE Pot>ITI<Il asked me to
write something lor liS !>ages, It occurred to me
lhat I anlghl reproduce the subetanoo of a brief
talk oo Stevens Point archli<!Cture I gavo at morn·
log exerclS<!S several years ago.
Napoleon, addresalng his troops before the
~amldt of Egypt, sold: "Forty centuries look
down upon you." h may be asserted with almos\
oqualtruth lbat on lbe people of Stevens Polot
fully lhlrty oooturles look down. This Is a strange
nylng, but II Is easily capable of proof by retereooo to our laoguagc, di'OJis, social aod pollllcal
customs, and arebltecture. Of these, pcrbaJ>s
at'Chltecture le as good an examplo to use as any.
A very lnteresllng lhlng about our present day
architecture .'• the curious mingling of ancient
Ideas with novel modern oo~, and the mlngllog
of lbo various atylea of an:hltoeture, separated In
origin, perhaps, by thousands of years, lb one aod
the same building. II tho reader will but take up
a poslllon before our Normal building be can see
all this fully jllustrMed. To begin, liavo you
nolloed that lho windows of tho second story are
like lbe Greek lempleo square acrou tho top,
tbose In the central paa"t being covered. by little
triangular pediments just as lbe temple• had peel.
·lmeols, wbllo tho windows and doorway of the
ftrsl story oil follow Roman arcblteeture "'ltb Its
rouod arches. Look agalo at tho front of tho
building, and see the pilasters, I. e., pillars appa·
rectly sunk In I he wall, on either side of tho doorway. These belong to tho Corinthian or<lor of
an:hltoeture, while tho pillars In tho third story
in tho the OIK!rri"s over Mr. Culver's room are
Ionic. To dlsUngulsh lhom, ooto tho acanthus
leavos nt tho top or tho pilasters and tho plain
scrolls at tho top oft he Ionic columos. Tho small
pediments already rercrred to over tho upper win·
dows In lbelr plainness suggest the oldest order
of Grecian arehlteeture, the Dorio. The fino lao·
torn al lbe top of the building would 1>robabcy
be classed as belonging to lbe Roman order of
arehltecture. Other features of the building are
enUrely modern, especially tho arrangement or
the third story wllh hs breaks In lbo root. Thus
In this ono bulldlog..,nt a single glance, may be
seen tho Ideas of men separated by a hundred
g~tnera&lons.
Gothic arelalteoture Ia well lllullrated In the
Episcopal and Presbyterian church buildings.
ln tho Episcopal building ono soos moll of tho
featu.r es of all the great cathedrals and cburehee
of this country and Europe. Thus there Is tho
Nave (the audience, room), lbe Choir, tho Transepts, one arm of lbo Jailer belog the Sunday
Scllool room, and tho olhor tho vestry. Then
there Is tho Sldo Aisle on the south side of tho ·
nave lor tho processions (lll.lhls cbun:h separated
from the malo audience room by a parUIIon.)
Over lhls pol'llon of tho church 18 tho c•mponlle
tower, doubllesa tho ftnen slnglo pleoo of arehl·
teeture the town possesses.
Note, also, th'l, largostalnodglasswlndowln II••
choir, aod that INaces lbe.easl, and observe that
tho wlndowa are all or the Gothic tonn having
the pointed arch. In tho Presbyterian church
the malo points of Interest are the tine largo
staloed glass windows on the south and weotsldos
,a nd I be form of ouppol'l of the roof. The windows,
II 1 mistake not, arc of the tonn called Early Per·
pcodieular. Jn tho roof, ono soos two archet cross·
log at right aoglee. The form of bracing loloterestlng from both the mechanical and arehlteelural
standpoints. In St. Stephen's Church, ao, aloo
Tm~
KORMAI, POINTER.
In every church In town except the McthodisL, one
"""" the Gothic fonn of ...!ndows.
It Is lnl<li'0$11ng to nol<l thu we have In Sl<lvcns
Point not only the classical and modern type$,
but the Russian as well. The (l<!Cullnr to•·crs on
•h~ Polish church are eminently characteristic of
Russian archll<leturo. If you will take your stand
on tbe Public Square and look around, the eye
will soon catch some to~ors of buildings whleh
follow the s ame lines.
The main pan of the Carne~rle Publie Library
is Grecian, tho tlno columns both tn.sldo a.nd out.
belonging to the Ionic Order. The don>e over 1\,
ho"'"ever, Is, of course, Roml.\n.
81
of tho arch, or the arch reversed, or tho pointed
arch, or the triangle: one In which the pre•·alllng
llne.s are either horizontal or ve.rtleal, orobliquo.
But nlmosl every time whate••cr the Idea Is it Is
shnilor to one In nrchltectu ro, and Is repeated as
In archll<lcture. What one needs Is only an
observant. eye to J)ercelvo what. is before him, and
ho c:.n ge~ all ~ort.!J of ide:u of arc. without over
-.,
looking Inside a book.
Stevono Point Is historically little more than
fifty yoars old, but arohll<luturally, and lo other
like ways, there are mnny things In It "" old as
Athens Itself, almost as ole! as the hills.
Then tho new
~asonle
building Is an example of Doric art.
Note the slzo and proportions of the pillars and
plainness of the pediment over Lhem. I think tbe
bevelln!l' of tho porch attbe outside would be considered a fault. II Is greatly to be regretted that
tho Court Bouse Is so badly Jl ropordoncd and
generally Inartistic. Tho H.i gh School building,
on the other hand, is a good eJ<ample of mcxl•rn
arehit.eeluro which makes use of some of tho old
Ideas.
The porch of the McDill residence on Main street
ls an oxoollen' example of the Ionic order
of archi<OOturo. Observe tho beauty of the pillars
and scrollt. I have not space 10 speak or other
residences, or of store buildings, (sa•·e to call
aLtentloo to tho two national Bank buildings )
which lllua~rate the dlll'erent kinds of such
architecture.
A~ al ready Intimated, there tlre many features
of arc'lll<letul'e which are re;>roduee<l In porches,
ptcturo frames, furnilurt", etc. Take a.s a s1ngle
example the small table on the west side of the
President's omoe, formerly In the maio room.
In thla table we -the row of spools cori'O$pondlng 10 " frieze, the edge o! the top correspondlnlf
10 a eornlee, tho row of beads tin tho table correspondin~r 10 the beads in architecture. We see tbe
ftutlng of the leg• of the table corresponding to
lho ftullng of columns Ia architecture. And so on.
In tho ume way one can see in anistlc ladles'
dresses tho oame Ideas he sees In arcblt.eeture
whh tbe added charm or color. Thus, one ma,.- see
a d.,.. In which the prualllng lin"'! are the curve
6jeH1\NGES.
A man often gets light on a subject by SC'ratch- t~x.
lnJr his head; a match •l••ays does.
She-·Pupa is pl'<)nchlng a •ennon, to·night, on
"Lo,•e Ooo Another."
HO)-And •·e are staying at home practicing
what ho preaches, aren't -.·o?
- Ex.
"Ravo you any talcum powder?"
"Do you wan\ Mennen's?'' asked tho clerk,
polil<lly.
''No, Wirnmen's." was the ignora.nL rcpJy.
-Ex.
College Students ( looking at an old lady's
Olb1o}-"0h! Mn. 1 wa've found a grammnll·
cal error in your Bible."
Old Lady- "Oh ! kill It I kill It! I kne.- something was eMing tho. lc.n.vcs !"
- \VYOXINO STUDENT.
"A ftshy old fisher named Fisher,
Fished fish from the edge of a ftssuro;
A cod with a grin pulled old Fisher In,
Andnow,tbey'roflshJ.og theftssure forFlsbe r. •
-MlUI"OII CoLLEGE REVIEW.
First. Freshman-Thoro's going to be murder Jn
thl. .ehool In a low days.
Second Freshman- Bow do you know?
Flnrt Pre.'hman-Why, I beard one Senior l<lll
anotbor that they were going to like the liveo of
three more autbort~ fn a few days.
- BlOB SCHOOf. l NDU.
'-..
88
Tm~ NOR~t AL POJNTEJt
Rah, rah, rob lor S. P. N. I
Rah, rah, rah tor \Vlscon.sin!
APRIL 15, 1906.
Published monthly b~· the students ol the sixth
St.ato Nonnal School, Stevens Point, Wtscontln.
Entered at the pon ollloe at Ste•·eno Point a
second claM mall matter.
Ter•!i of S~tbscrlptloa -Loea! dell•ery 50cents
per annum, payable in advance. Post. Ofttee dc-lh'ery 75cents per annum. Single copies lO cents.
EDITOIUAL STA>'P.
J. EDWIN FULTS, '011 .............. FAitor-ln-Chlel
="~.~\r:~~~or.:·:::::::: ·:It~r:t~~ ~m~~
JULIA B. ANDlli!SO>~, '011 ... Editor Jolly Columns
J. BOWARD BROWNE, '00 ........•..••..••. Censor
OEOROF. J. BAKEll, '06 ......... Exchange Editor
EDITH M. RlL&, 'Oil, .. l
Loe I Ed't
HAROLD CULVt:R1 '05 f · · · · · · · · · · · ·
8
1 ors
NELI.LE BRENNA >I, '00 ......Trulnlng Department
Who said that there was no acloool splrlt at the
Stevens Point Normal?
_ The date ol the '~ter-Stato Oratorical contest
at Mllwaukoe, has been changed 10 Friday, May 12.
On account. o f vacotlon, and othor pardonable
reasons, Tar; POINTER was a little late In geu!og
to press this mooth.
- ---
too bonus I OthoNI noocl not apply. AII evidence
tends to confirm tho suspicion that graft Is sUI! a
healthy, thriving ()!ant.
Tho onnual school debate between Milwaukee
and Stevens Point Is to be belt! here on May 6.
An lntereltlng time li"'lnlllclpated.
ALTA ~1. SUKfULAN, '05 ...... • .. . Art. Depa1'1menL
W. EUOE>IE S>nTI,I, 'CU ........... Alumni Editor
JOHN F. MORSE, '06 ........ . . .. Business Manager
OY.RBARl> O&.~F.LL, '06, ~
Ouv W. MALWR\"1 '00, Assistant
JOHN J. WYSOCKI, '07,
Business ~_tanager-s
PREss ASSO(:JATIO>I.
l..ORO>I D. SPARKS, '06 .................. President
Joa.-.: F. MORS&, '00 . .................. Treasurer
~>:F. Il=L, '06 ............ .. .... Seeretary
Address all literary material to the FAitor-ln·
Chief, and all business communlcotloos to the
Business Mananr.
In this lsoue, a
sii~M departure
Having conoelvcd tho Idea o l making thlo a
Faculty number, eontrlbullons from several mem·
bert o l the Faculty wore sooured which will bo
found In tho literary columns. THE POt:<TY.R,has
al ways bad tho liberal auppo~ and encouragement
of tho Faculty, and we are sure our readeMI will
be Interested In reading wbal they have to l<lll us.
MO~E HONO~ P0~-5.
ITORIAL
Work on The S~mmum, theschoo1annua1, which
the Senior cl••• bu undertoken 1<> publish, Is well
uader w•y. The staff Jt very busy these days es·
peclaUy t:dltor-ln-Cblel Welty aod Buslneu Manager Mathe. The prlco ol The Summum thl.s year
wiU be 75 cenLS.
has been made
I rom tho general po!ley puroued by Tar: POINTER.
P. N.
Our Juniors met and defea ted theOtblcosb Junl·
ora at Oshkosh on ~'rlday ovenln~r , Aprlll4, In
the annual debate between tho schools. The
qucsllon lor debate was u lollowe :
RESOLVED, Th•l \be r allroods of the United
Sl tes ehould be owned, oper•ted, and controlled
by tho Federal government; It being oonceded
I. Tb·t the go•ernment Ia lloanclally and con·
81ltutlonally able to •cqulre the rallroodo.
2. That all employees, except thooe commonly
termed unskilled laboreMI, be appointed under the
cl vii service system.
The Othkosh debateMI were Mesors. Fred Abel,
Henry 0. Hotz. and H. C. Hansen. The Stevena
Point debaters were Miss Ann. Cha resl, and
Messro. J. E. Sazama and 0. M. Appleman. Tbe
decision nl the judge• was unanimously Ia livor
ol tho negative, the side u pheld by our dcbate'"t,...
THE 2\0R~1AL POIXTER.
H UMO~
Ill THE
SC HOOL~OOM.
" A hear they hae oao examtnatton ln humor a&.
the colle11e: lis an awfu want for II would keep
out moo1a drleth body," aald ao old Seotcb Jad1
lo apeaklng of ministers.
The above would hc.ld equallt true In regard 10
acbool teacllera. No clan of people exoopl sales_., and oollchors, need so much to have a proper11 developed aeose of humor.
The school room life Is lrJiog .on the oenous
IJSI.em and a good laugh now and then relieves
the strain, In tact, Is thobc.s t oervetootc. If your
teacher, who lo a bundle of nerve•, whoae forehead
It nlnkled In a perpetual frowo, whose e1u ahlf\
coostaollr from one pari of the room to another
trrlng to discover some petty oll'ender, would unbend her brow In a good lau~rb onoe In a while,
ohe would not ro home oo o ften with a opllulng
headache and look forward with dread to another
wearr da7.
Think, also, or the pupil's aide or the matter.
What a relluf Ills to them to feel that a laugh Is
not a crime; that., It aomethlog funn1 hapl>eDS,
the1 mulL ttruggle with coostaolly -urrlog
lp.. ms Of laughter. They 100 gel tired of COD·
llaol mental AJ)pllcatloo, and a good laugh II like
callslbeolco; flLHhem to continue with proftt their
ttudr. Nor need 11 caU<e dborder It tbet Indulge
lo a heartr laugh oooe In a wbll~ W~o the
puplla uodentand that they are expeeted to ba•e
their laugh and th"o return to work, they do not
commonly abute that privilege.
89
The other day we were dlocuulng &he character
of tho Colonists. In Montgonl;lry's History, thai
noted simile I• uaed which say a that '"tho t;ngllsh
people can nil ba compared to a keg of thelrowo
ale: Froth on top, theArlstocraer; drego on 1ho
bouom, tbe wortblet.s lo•·er elau; sound ale In
the ceoler, tho solid middle class. The Colonlau
eamo mainly from this solid middle cl..v." Ono
member of the cl..s said, In reJpoose to a quer1
oo the character o f the Colonlst.!l, that "tbey wore
like a keg of beer." NotbelngabloLOexplain hlo
remark, another member enthutlastieaUy volun·
teerud the explanation, " They were like a ke1r of
beer; because lhet are small at bolh endo and
laege In the middle.''
The children were wrlllng about Franklin. One
or tho alorles they had read contained tho ex pre...
ion "be wa.s tlrod ot candle• and soap." \ Vas
II • recollection or Franklin'• slx~<>en brolhera
and sisters ahat eau.§ed them to write " he wu
tired of cradles and aoup ?tt
Here It an example or reasoning :
Propbe&-.Man who fore~tll• tl>lngo.
Prophecy-Woman.
Teacher-If ahoop cost f3 a bead, what will 17
aheep costt
Pupil- How many aheep In a heat! t
Teacher-The mao was oeoc.enood 10 ll>e j!allon. What are gallo ..s?
Pupli-Suapeodera.
AN ALOMl'IUS.
Mea OouelaaHd.
Sttt<-Womeo mar goulp, aomellmes, butlhe.Y
Mao1 a child Ia punlahed,lor lblop that are .
notreallr Yerylmportant-. 1\ c.eacber with a aeoae ba•• belter control or lbelr toogu.. than men
of humor will judge theoe lncldenu at their proper haYe.
HE-You ao:e right. ~,len have no control whd·
value, and pats tbem over with a word or leu,
ever ot women's tongues.
- Ea:.
to the llre&t aduntage or pupil& and teacher.
Rumor, then, 11 the auln~r grace, mal<lor ocbool
llte plea.. nt, relle•lng bolh Leacber and pupllM,
and gi•lng a lrue ..,.,.., of proportion 10 the LUD1
pe11111111e locldeniS or echool-room life.
Wbal becomes of the rlghleOus?
Everlaotlng
bllu.
What
bllator.
become~
of lbe wicked?
E•erlaOIIng
- P.ll.
'?
90
Tm:
NOR~IAL
POIXTEJl.
THLETIC S
On ~larch 10, the baskCI ball team went up to
M ar.hftold to pl~ty the l'()turn game.
The U..m wu In gootl shape, and wa• l>repared
to make a bard ftgbt oo the slippery ftoor.
Tbe game wu called at 8 P. ~I., and started
with our boys slll>plng and making a poor show·
lor, but as aoon all hey got uted to the ftoor their
bani WOrk during the pUt tWO weeu began tO
tell, and from then on the game belonged to
' Ste•eoa Point.
The game was last, both teama making good
pi&JI, bul lhe team-work by our team far outeluted that of Mal"'hfteld, while the forwards had
rood eyes.
The Marsbneld crowd are n£ce people, and gave
~boys a good lhne.
Tbe 1c:0re wao •• follow.:
Field Ooals. FreeTh rows. ~'oul•. Olfto.
Dolton ............. 3.................... 3 .... 2
Mallory ........... 2 ..................... 4
Cu1Yt.r•••••••••••••• 8 ......................5
Sparko.............3............ .. .... .. I .. . 1
MII~I,Captalo, ................ 14 ........ ,r, ... . 2
!lOORE - Stevene PolO\, .43
MarshDeld ..... 16
Umpln>-E•ersoo.
Ml11 Allel10o IUlCOmpanled the boyo and acted
thoe--keeper."
&8 u
baoked by such oolhusiBStic cboors •• wei'() tho
two "1-"hns" n8 they camo upon tho floor.
The •lsltors were at a dloadvantage, not being
uoed to the door, and not ba•log been practldn~r
u hard as our boya.
The go me was fa.~ from Alar~ to nn14h, our boys
thowlog up well against the weaker &eam. The
teamwork was opleDald, and showed up espeelally
well as Platteville was unable to break I~ up.
Cunls Livingston, who got his lrainlnl( here,
was easily tho star for tbu vlaltOMI. altho thor all
played a plucky game.
Bolo did eepeelally well at free lhrows.
Scor0-18 10 63
Line up at follows:
t' .. Sparu.
F .. Helo.
C .. Culver.
O .. Mallory.
C .. MIIes.
Refe,.__Evcreoo.
Umplre-PoW'Crs.
This was Stevens Polnl'a Orst garoo with Platte·
ville; bul we ho1>0 it will nol be tho laot, as tho
boys areGn6fellowa and took lhelrdefeal in good
aplrlt.
--
Substitute.-Wadleigh, Ora.ure, )Jolfeti, Heln.
Tbe team returned on the mldnlgbltraln. All
report a good time.
f'lrst Studcnl-"Wbal aQO you taking up, thl•
term?'"
Second Studeo&-"Aoytlolog I can ftnd; the lui
was a pair or o•cnhocs.tt
- SI•IWTROM.
One of the pleasant eventa of th<> Oratorical
conlelt waa a baeket ball game with Platte•llle.
On Friday at 4 P.)J., the 11ame wu called with
"he bouoe paclted. Seldom If ever were two teamo
Teacher-" Why arc tho days lo auouner loorcr
lhao &.bote So winter?"
Bright Pupii-"JI Ia warmer Ill aummer aod
Ihoy expaod."
-EL 0ADILA N.
THE XOR)lAL l'OH\TEU.
91
T DEPARTMENT
l lllllflllfiUIIUIIIJffflfft iiUUtUU UUIUifll
OUR WORM S OF AR·T .
The following It a list of the moil famoua Iorge
picture• tO be found In the Normal School building
and lbo room• In which the)'a..., lllaoed u pre..,nl:
Mala Room .
Vlgee LeBrun and ber Oaugbler. By Vlgee
LeBrun.
The Roman Forum.
A Scene In Venice.
The Arch of Constantine.
The Caatlo,of the llaldeos.
Madonna of \be Lou•""· Boulaelll.
Yoecmlte Valley.
Aurora.
Hall , Secoad Floor.
Morning. Corot.
The Water Fall. Ruyadale.
Slatlne MadonnL Raphael.
Brldp of Sight.
S'- Bart..ra.
The lleeUne of Bum~ and Scott.
l'llrltana Oolne to Cnurcb.
llelum 10 the f'arm.
'
Orcaklng Home Ties.
M•.,•lc: Room.
Moul'\ Cbantant Son RequiM>.
Beolho•en.
Warner.
Bandel.
Meoclel.obn.
IIIIIJJIIJJIIIII
f II fllfU
Gooarapby Room.
Grand Canyon.
Matho111atlc:s ~oom, 238.
Pyramids of Eir1P'·
Mlu £doa,.acl'& Room, 207.
Poat'o Comtr, Weatmlnsttr Abbey.
Pilgrim Exllt~.
Plra t Floor. Hall,
Song of the r..ark. Breton.
Portrait of Man. Rals.
The Flgbllng Temeralro. Turner.
On the Tiber.
Primary Room .
Sir Galabad.
I Hear a Volee
Oram•ar Room.
Sistine Madonna.
ln tbe ~;oemy'l Coun\r1· Ro1a Bonbeur.
King Arthur. Lucy Fitch Perk Ina.
There are many other beautllul plcturoo In tho
bulldlnr bealdes tho ones mentioned. There arc
small etehlnjCs and engra •lngs LO be found In
eY~rr room.
The atudonu of Ste•ena Point
Normal School should be proud of the fact that
no other Normal School In the stale bu '""h a
line eolleetlon of plc:turu u we, and we are nu\
to the younces\ tehoot. The faculty and otudenu
reaII"" ll>a\ apl>...,.latlon of beautiful plcturu and
statuary lo neoo.. ar)' to complete dovel011ment
ond cuaure. A person •••rounded by "beautiful
covlronwen\ will be likely 10 tblok beaullflll
our lntellecl.
though\J. Our aesthetic ao well
ual na\u..., oeedJ cle•elopment, and thru -Inc
and app...,.Jatlnc worb of art and '-ring !Jood
mutle lh'- end will be aeeompllsbed.
a•
Tm ;
~OR)I.\1, POI ~TF.R.
TH I RD QUARTER.
l'llat b Week.
Jobn Kamopp, of \Vlld Ro~, wa.J a visitor at
..,hool this week.
~ll•s 1,17.%io Murphy, ol Sparta, lo the gucs~ ol
her ~i"'wr, Mh~§ £Janie.
\\"oher AJ;:"oew ha ~ returned, aft.er ~wo we-tk~
a ~n~ on account o f lltneu.
01"1ot Ca•~l~, of Tomah, a fon-Mr Sonna1
student. '" vlsillng 'IChOOI thiA W«'k.
~h·. )1. J. l)lckenoon rcoonlly gave three Interest·
lng Hcvolutlonary relies. These are ap11recla~
by the acbool.
Proles.ar ~~~ ga,·o the l!ChOOI a talk u
morning e.xcrttlse.s, Tue1day, on the usbd and
unused book• In tho •ehool library. Fie dwelt
•...,..,rally on Bo...•ell's "Life o r Johnaon," tell·
lng how It was written and IO!IMI of tho thlnJCS It
contained.
seeiETY NeTES.
The lollowln~: oiHcero wore electo<l lor the
~t. nl•k ho• been called to hi• home In
Fourth Qu"ter:
ARI! IU .
Frl•nohhll•· on oc:count or Ilion' In the family.
p ,...ldent.•....•..•............ Julia D. 1\nd~noo
A!rM• Tardttr returned on Tue<day mornln~:. VIce P,...hlcnt •.........•......... Mb• Lindsay •
alter hetng eonOnoo to her home bccau"" o l Corre•pondlng Secretary....... Nellie MOOJIChler
Roeordlnlf Secretary •...••. .. .... Mary Robul60n
olckne••·
1'ruaurer... ......... . ...•...... Annie K. Nelson
Profe•jor Oyer wUl ao to New London t.hl$ Wfotk Chairman of ll usle Committee .•. •. FMincet Baker
to «)oduN. ao lnn\tute, lo tb.at plaef',wllh Prof~5Wr Chairman o l Pro;ramCommluee. .• EIIen Hotrman
W. n. Cbee.. r of Milwaukee, on Friday and ~1ar$b&l... •. . .. . . . . .•.....•. Wlnnlf~ Nelson
PO RUM.
Soturdoy.
ProAl dent ... .... " '. • •.••...••.••.••. 0. J. Baku
On Thurs.!•I morntn~:, tho I{OMral ne,..• of tho
VIce Pretldent ..•.•.....•.......•..•. J. E. FOit•
•«'k wa~ gl•en by Katherine Poll•. Ruth Wad· SeeretarJ ..................... .. . Harold Martin
l•lgb - " cbai'Jta or the ron-en~ eanooM, and Treasurer•• ..•.........•. :: .•...•... Jerrt Madden
Sergeant-at·llrmo ..... ... .......•. Harold K" ller
Milo Wood ~av e a talk oo tho metric o:rstem.
Board of Councllloro .....•..... J. H. Cairns
Ml•• Mortba ~'ln1c, who I• a\ tho head or the
0 . M. Appleman
Klnolel'lrarten• In Fond du U..,, waa tho )!uen of
ATHI!I'IAI!UM.
herob~r, )lis5EIIa,fron> Tburoda:ruotll ~tond ay,
l'ruldmt ...••......•........ .•....•••. D. Dug~
VIce President. •.............•. ..•••..... R. Judd
eomlo~: up to atr..nd tho ooot~t on Prldayevmlog.
Seereta•1··· .................. ..... .. J. Wtoocld
Mrs. Wesley King bas p,..,n~ to tbe muoeum Treasurer....................... .. .... 0. ~forte I
ao old lroo abo,•el aod a ualr of ftre toni•· Se11reant-at-t\rms:.......... .............. . L. Hill
---..:!.'·
T il E NOHMAL
Prof. T·l+.,_.rwhat Is occehary before you
can ftoat oo the watar ?"
M·M>· V·I·U·II'- " You bavo 10 be bo(u)yed up
ant."
t;.- M·t,.O (afler recei•iog a compllmeM UIO his
aeeompllshments) -''Ob, my! you are casting
pearlt beforo swine.''
- ---
Subttllule Teaeber (in music, 10 11uden1 who is
unable 10 recite)-·' Did you lludy your le..on
ta.st otrht ?"
Studenl-"Y·e-s."
SubsllluleTeach•r-"On whaL did you .pentllhe
mos~ tlmo 'I"
Studen\-"On the rest~V'
~lr.
Pray (In review grammar, I>Oinllng 10 IWO
wonls 011 board, •' bird, " de.struethe :")
K. C·at,.ll· - "Some blrda are deilruc:tlve
anlmala."
Mlu 1)-o- .. -11 (10 llr. tl·r-ey who It reading a
&torr, uThe Second Vtolln•')-" \Vhat are you
reading that. for 1''
Mr. H-r..ey-" lt ts very apJ>ropriate for me to
read this, because I play l!eCODd ftddlo myself."
Mr. H er (In re•lew grammar) - "Can you use
lhe pronoun as objec:l of a ftnll<l verb?"
~llu S·h·a--1- ''They made blm il."
)Jr. Hooer-"Yev1 or uyou are II."
Mrs. U·a·f·rd (In pra<:llc:e ~achers' nwellng)"Wbat duel It mean 10 mark tlapers on tho ac:ale
of \en Y"
,
t'lrst Teacher-" ~lark each queollon teo If
correet.''
Mrs. B·a·f·rd-"How mueh, then, would you
mark a question only ball rlgbt '/"
Second Teacher-"One ball of ten."
lllu F-dd-a (ln primary melbodi)-"Wbo •role
'Tom. Saw1er?'"
lii.JJ Ur-w-11- "Huckleberry Finn. "
POI~Tt::H.
!J3
Mr. Uy r (I n review grammarJ-"•'om> lhe plu·
rat of loaf."
~llu K·m·ll-"Wblch kind of loaf Y"
J. 11. ll-<>·ne (looking at drawings In the h all
marked wllh the lnhlal• N. F.) - " N. t•., Nollie
Phillips"/"
Ml•• ll- -t,.er-"\'ou bad hel~r cowr tho opsll·
log cla~J, Mr. 8---~·''
----
Mr. Sp-n·l·r (In tbeor1J-"GI•e me an llluotra·
lion of a ntgall•e judc-nt, uslnr worda dough
and iron."
MI .. 0. J·h·s·n- "lron lo hot;
Dough ts not.''
~tr. t;.·er (on train nearing t::au Clalre )-"My,
but you look happy!"
Mr. Or--8·r-- -u l am."
ltr. &--t-r-"1 don'&. blamo you. I would be,~,
It l was aJ near home aJ you are."
Mlu )1-r-hy ( •lshlng advaooed phyalology
cla.Jt) - ulDou't you enjoy this workY"
Mils ~t·rr-11 (drawing a nerve)-''Oh )til, 1 Just
Jove lo atudy peoples' ner,·e."
Mlu J·k·m·n (In re•·lew history) - "The ••rcnch
did llnle ex1>lorlng after the death o r LokoCham·
pla.ln."
:.Jr. S·n·l·rd ( In re•lew buiOryJ-"The way to
beglo I• 10 beglo. But we can't alwaya begin
with Adam; forthat'a ~~beglnnlntl·
)Jr. W--d ( gadn~: at ftower bed on front campus)- " Why, what do you think? Thoto onlona
1ha1 Mr. LlvlngsiOn plan~ las17ear are bios·
somlngl"
)Jitl N-ls·n-"Out those are 111\eo."
,
Mr. w--d- "Well, I ~aw him plant onlono, jusl
tho sa~."
Heard l e tbe Hall .
"Eia•e TOU bad your atudy sUp atamped 'I''
"No. 1 am plng to ue myoid ooe--•Dd •••e
St.alemGDeJ.
'?
T ilt: NORMAL P OINTF.J(.
91
TRAINING
DEV1\RTMENT
MY SPIU"G VACATIO",
II I• my SJ>rfng Vacalioo. We h ..e had our
ftnal te•lll and are dl<mll.-1 for twelve day• or
re.t and run. I burr1 homo lrom Rbool and
li&)' to my maunuo, "Momma, I wish 1 mlgb&. go
toMinncap611• to visitfloward." Howard Is my
brother, and ho works In ~llnncaJ>OIIa.
~lamma uys, "Go to Minneapolis I Well, 1
will think lt. over." The nex't morning, I &8k my
mo&ber U abo has made up her mind, and •be says!
'"Yu, Ruth, rou may go#"
I am 10 happy, ob! so happy; and we oend a
letter oaylng !hat I am .R'Oing.
W'hen Sundar comes, 1 am Yery excited, because.
Sunday nlghl I am to start. Sunday ulwrnoon
my jlriJ> Is paekcd and every thing lo nmdo ready.
It ha. be\!n orranged tha\ 1 shall go In chargo or
tho ~'OD<Iuetor who Is my uncle.
It Is Sunday nlgbL I go to bed, and my papa
.a. tho alarm elock, because I h ..e to otart In the
nl11b1. I am lo bed, aod oh !- I can aeti"Cely Jrel
10 ol~p, becau.., I am so restJe.. and excited, aod
beeau~ lhlnklog Of all tho thiDJCI that will
happen when I gel to the city. finally, l ou1 ofT
In Oreamlond.
unu&h, ge&. up, tt. 1e time to u-o to tho c.lepot !"
I hoar my ''"I"' ••Y.
So I getup and dross, and m)'J>apa andmamma
are up 10 go 10 lhc depot whb me. I aay "good·
bto" to m1 al•te.r aod grandpa and arandma,
and ...., flart lor the de poL
We areln IMdepoL, and I hear the train whistle.
I ~t 10 nervous and excited. In Ju•l a mlnuto
tho eonduetor eets oil' the ear, but he lo not my
uoole! Pas)a
to mamma, 11 \Vell, shall we~
let her goY"
••1•
Mamma thlok8 a minute and nnawcra, uyes, 1
will lpeak to the brakem!o and 1<!11 hlrn to take
care ol her. 01 oou....,, I bad all or my dlrec:tloO!,
oo In eue no one waa at the otalloo 10 meet me 1
would know Ju•t wbat 10 do.
~ h Ia about two ~uodred and ftl17 mil.; 10
)lloneapoll•. ~17 jou...,y wu a very loo~r and
llrelOmo one. When 1 reached Abboulord, 1 was
made very happy to aco eonduetor WaltcNI' lamlly
coming Into tho car. There are two 11lrl•, Bculo
and ~:the!, thut I kno,.. very woll. '£hoy used to
go to our Normal School. We hnd a vury h&J>i>Y
llnlo meeting, and, or course, we had a great many
tblnga to talk about.. They are going 10 St.l'aul,
so 1 will have oompany nearly all of lhe way.
Finally, I hear lhe brakeman call out MloneaJlolls! Mlnneapolla!
I get mrwrapo on, and am all ready. Tho train
pulla In, and I got mr 11"4> and a paclcaio and
get ofT tho car. Thoro are a great many peoJ>Io
there, and I am ~ercally oxclted. T look all around
and do not soo my brother. A lad)' 8C('8 mo and
talks to me and wHa me not to worry or cry, that.
she will -that I nod my people.. Tho lady and 1
go tbru the Ia..., gates and Into the dtJ>Ol, and I
metl Boward. We are very glad 10 oeo euh other
and we have a great manythlnas IO,telleaehotber.
Boward boards on the North Side, and wo take a
ear 10 hlo homo. On our way we moot my couoln
Ethel. We reach tho boarding hou.., and there 1
meet all or tho J>eoplo who llvothore.- ln tho alter·
noon, Howard ancl I go to tho m&llnee, aod ufWr·
warda wo go thru the big siOre~, and then home.
The neat day It Tueoday, and I go 10 the olll011
whb my oouslo P.thol and slay all !lay. About
lour o'elock wa do our shopplnr and then go
home.
"C"
Tb6 next day, Wednesday, I go 10 vltlt aebool.
In the al~moon Mlu s - and 1. go out to
Mlnnehoha •'aile. lllo not a plouant trip for I
do not enjoy riding on slroot caro. Wo rooch tho
park fit tho ~·oll8. II Ia very J>rotty thoro. Only
~be beara and door arc there now, becau•e ltlo too
· cold lor tho other anl>nals. Finally, wo como to
the •·a no and they arc just beautiful- to hlllh and
pretty. The wal<!r s«:mJ 10 Ia lk, and l beetn 10
say to mr.e1f u l.llnM:baba_, LauahlnfC Water!"
( CV~~Lia...aoe....-11)
Badger Drug Co.
We invite yon to open
an account with us.
D~UGGISTS
no ollt t .... t at all '-"k,urd
.... t la.: for latur-.atl•ta
,.....,.lac oor __..ltod 11t ,,._
no·hl•x O,.po..t~. o.r ,.• .,.. fvr
~Ja:c a.t"nH~at-.
_, _.,,...,
t~l aati- s...a._.... -..r ra.t- ""' 1..
, ..rftot.
Te ....._.,- ·~ ..........
ol IMali•J I· ~lac .,, a
a~t
.,w.........,.,.,..
a
Ci1EMISTS.
Pre scriptlol)s our Specla lty.
ljUYLE~" S
CANOY.
Dol)"t forget to get a l(ey.
al•a.fll clad w "'1•1•1•
10 Olir t"II-.40•I"r- ll;jtltlq l ....j
do ntl't ,l.. arlr uncl•nol.aud.
Buck & Banows C().,
First National Bank,
NEW OOODS.
Stenu Poillt, Wis.
IL_...,
Lates t Styles In Fine Millinery.
M'oiD &tree1;.
C. G. IACNISH, At Ye Sign of Ye RED SHOE.
Bas a G00D SH0E Reputation. Try Him.
SHOES ONLY.
109 Strona,.. Avenue.
Rensselaer
~
If.
4"'cPolvtechnid~~
~..~~( 0_.,. Institute,
-9.t_.6'
Troy·N.Y•
1..-
......
-=.,..--;;;;:;:;:;...._ .. •••• •••••••..,
Manitowoc,
Milwaukee,
i
Chica::~neopolis, ~j
St. Paul,
Ashland. Superior.
Duluth.
i I...
L
MY PHOTOS WILL
PLE~SE
YOU.
S T UD IO:
liS Strongs An.,
Simas Polal, lis.
Citizens' Tonsorial Parlors,
:!(. ~ERENS, ~rop.
t
... ......... . .-....:I
L. a . PIIM"BLL Aaool Slo,.•• Polo!.
JA~ c:. POftO. a. P. A· .MII•••k••·
.b-,ROST.
P HOT0CR'A:PHER.
.................................... ...,z..~,.......
( WisconsiJ~Central Railway 1
l
~.J .
BATH ROOMS I N CONNECTION.
u• II.-· ,......;)....--smm I'OI!IT; wa.
H1\IR'S H1\LL
For Pri vate Parties
OFFI C E OF
1\TL1\S <21\SU1\LTY eeMV1\NY
Ll\KE MlLLS, WIS.
JJI'J'Il:ES fiJIIR, 'Dist.
Jl~ent,
Corner -<:)lark and Chu rch Sts.
Por Rrtlatlc 111'rlntlng Go T o
TA B LRRGBST AND M\!IST eeM111'LBT B
PRI N TING O FFI CE
Ia l hc Cit!'
Con talnlngalll11tesu~ylcs ony1>6an<l last
:J:R. V:J:NO.. & . EI:'O'LL.
:ll llllltdltSll"ftl
Dry Goods,
FU ~NISI11NC.S.
CLOTJ1 1NC..
BOOTS. SJ10ES,
I1ATS Ol)d CI.PS.
::':r.~,:~·,b~:,:l~!:.~:~~~~~ r:~~
~ol<lr.
Printing In all modern languages.
Es~f:!:!:S,..-::.1.~"~ ~-.:~~~!'tf~~~·•~t
1
uo ftgure on your printing. +
+
+
Dr. J. M. BISCHOFF,
J. WeRZJ\LLJ\' S SeNS,
Dentist.
Publlshc ra a a4 Geac rat Boo!( aa4 Job Pr latora
Corner Main and Third St8.
Crown nnd Bridge Work n Specially.
S t even• Point ,
Wleconeln.
J. WORZALLA &: SONS,
WE CAIIIIY A
~AIIOE
STOCI( OF
Dt:.y Goods, Clothing,
Sl)oes, t-tats al)d Caps.
G&JI'lS' FURXISIIIIIG GOODS, WATCHES, CLOOIS, JEWELRY.
Ia coaa.c:t loa wiUt. oar Jowot ry dcpert:•oat we
ot.o ,..,.lr Watd aoo, CIOC:Illh oad Jewelry, o ad
. .anta t . . aU •orll: to kflrat-cta•... Oar Prices
oa ~ a ad work.,.. alwa,.. re-.soaablo a ad as
lowueaa t.toaad aaywa.o....
+
+
+ +
J. Wf)RZ1\LL1\ & Sf)NS.
P. 1\. Sf)UTHWH.~K. M. D.,
Plrisician and Surgeon.
Telophono 32.
SleYeM Pola l,
B.
s.
646 Church Sroo~.
Wlaeoasln
ELLE-N:W:OOD,
Bicycle Repairs and Sundries
Wheels made to order +
+
Bicycle Livery
+ + +.
142 STRONOS Av~STEV!:NS.J'(),UIT.,WlS.
eor. M ala and Third St~
lllfl1.
Lady In attendance. Cor. Main St . .t Stroo~rs ave.
I IHU.
UNION CBNTRAL LIFB INS. CO.
Before taking a policy eeMII1'ARB .
Then take h where you can do beot . .
This Is falr and may sa •·e you money.
G. W. HBIN.
W. W. OQEOOIJY,M. D.
Phpsician and Surgeon.
Oftloo Hours 1 and 1 p. m.
313 Main Stroot, up Sift II'S.
Res. Curran Hou""
Tolepl•on<rOmco 126.
Stovoaa Polat.
WIBCOaa la.
Glu.et Accurately a nd Sclenllftca llr Fhl«!.
J . W. BIRO, M. 0 ,
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Spool al Rates to Students.
00\ce, .w~ Main St.
•
Srovon& P ol llt, WI&.
J1\e0BS H0USE,
W. H. WILSeN,
D. D. S.
Kuhl's Block
D. N. ALCO~N, M . D .,
r.....,.
.,• •_.. .,., ............~ r.r 111t r. ~
a.l'fu, ~PKialtl'" l Dl'-'"'" .... Opt.... a.- ftor 1111•
~"
" · .JACOBS, Prop.
Leading Hotel in City.
Eye, Eor , Nose ond Throo t .
WlaCOtlllltt.
Giuwe t":a~o~~:~.:,~ ~~::l=~":-1\i:i~a.t'"- ttt.
H. o. MceULLeeH ee., Lr·n.
Stationery, Books and School Supplies.
orowi~~ ~~~r,. M~~mm~ oom~ ~M ~~~w~m~m~ liD~~.
Dr. F. A. WALTERS.
Cor Ellis and Church.
Who's next? U
Nelson's
Barber Shop
n
118 S . TI"'IRD STREET.
G<> TO
CHICAGO CLOTHING.STORE.
We carry a nice line o l Tailor Made Clothing.
HATS, CAPS, BOOTS a.cl S HOES.
G o 'k>
MOLL-ROTHMAN CO.
Tho most OOm)llcte
llno or u1Ho-da1e
To bo fo u nd In tho Cit y
Dr. G. M Houlehan,
DENTIST.
Om Postomu.
1. HAf'TO,., Prop.
Stmas PolDt, Wis.
:E 111 broldery Silks, Pillows, Patterns
And all Material lor laney Work Patterns.
lJrlck, Ll111e and Ce111ent
.'OR SALE AT
~ t!':'!~l? t he largest atock. but we carrr
410 M at • St.
DRY GOODS
147 Mal• sr:
LANGENBERG'S,
I
CHINESE LAUNDRY
Guarantees First·Class Work
W. B. PETT,
OeALeQ l r-1
Paacy aad Staple
1006 Dl•ls lo a S t.
AND CH EAP.
Goods called for and delimed.
116 STRONGS AVE.
GROCERlE
Fine Fruits a Specialty.
J. 1
v :EIEU51C>N",
0..1•1'1•
\\alf'~ i)b~, l"nor''M•St_...• .lt-w~l!f.blt>r-U~~IIt otr
'"'"'''"UMI T.bha,...,UJ1114'1 ttoocb. orwr-a t·~ t'ott•r..J•
I~ t'ftM> UIIIU
• M C•t t:tat.. (;IIlla"'- Ma ....)lf•• iUMI )fwJ.
H. WING LEE. n~;:!'~~~i;cl....-lllt ..... IVId _.. l~oNI..,..t.oo "
.
1'"~~-\··
:"'!.'~~~·~
roalf'riaJr... h
Buy only
~me
'"''.....t.k•""'• .,. .......
Fl• • '-'•t-c k ltc.,.lrl•t: • S,.CI•Ity.
St('\'4!-n~ Point. \VIIi.
IJit )fain Slr'\'CC,
BENNETT's •·br<!ad
• •m"'"""'"'xed
J. S . P IPE .
and I• '""'
nEAD
trom •·on••mfnatlon
B~
In mlxln.: antl hauuJ· CITY LIVERY AND TRAN
SFER LINE.
114. 8 .
8e~o1t4 S t.
Te l . 6 'l..
I
ling.
"'"" ,... ,. fl,..,.,..,..t-, ,, ...If'''"' •• IHJi#'t"o
Jos. ~ttause,
lYIEAT lYIA~~ET.
622 :El.l.IS S T.
Offlc:o o• •r Cltlzou• rletloaal Beak .
::=:-......
R aoi ne U ndonvoe r l'vlills
Uaderwear made to order.
Qunli t~·· \\"orkuuuo•hip11ud Fit (;unnuol('('(l.
J. L. JENSEN,
... Ita~
C. S . BOYINGTON & CO.
GROCERIES.
458 Moln St.
C. F. MARTIN & CO.,
J,eading Photog raphers,
PHOTO STOCK OF ALL KIJDS.
) lmt lditt_!.'>! aud Fr.uuc...
114 S. ThinJ i't.
FRf\NK rODf\GH & SON.
f~ES t1 ,
SfllT
and S MOI(ED
1.\I.XE.A.TB.
320 Jeffersou St.
Bl• J • ftlee r. ·~••• 6 Sa••• r• Tu• ••d eerteea
4.:1"1 Jl•l• ••uJ ~:I I N•I•N,.,.,., TN. 44.
ST&n:"s ~llo'T.
,.j8.
Fruita, Yezetabtes, C01fect1oaery, Clcara, Tohcco. Etc.
GATE, DAHL & NELSON,
1\ tto r n e YS•a t•L a w.
r~,
HACK AriD BAIJGAOI!,
<: or. NonnaJ &\'e. anti N. Third fit. Tel
ST~\"F.NS POINT, WIS.
WISCO"~I"·
W . B. BVCKINCHJCt711t,
P. WOZNICKI
DEAJ.F;R IN
S e:H:.icwr e:. Y <'>t1R
High Grade Bicycles.
FIRE INSURANCE.
O('nfra'le'(>palrlnJ: prompt)~· tlont. Bic~cle Livery .
Give me a call.
OOR NEH C LARK !11'. ood !!THONG A VF:.
t24l 1'f, Tlllrd S t.
.
••
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