Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 26 Jan 1933, p. 25

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EARLY TO RISE... Perhaps, you haven't thoughit of *what. a.glorious feeling.ý it is to gt iii) froni asoft ivarm blid, drcss iM a aru rbooml, and.cat a substanitial breakfast.. ,bYu have .had sucli.a: feeling Ail our life. -If 'vour rooni.. ivere co4ï, you'd fuss an(! fume. Well, therle are mnany hundreds of people wh& o(. not slecp on ma-t- tresses, do iimôt have a warm room a.nd w~ho get, niany timnles. only a sandl- wich, a day. Th.ey are mio re deserv- ing'and more in necd of such. thinigs than wve are, for they traip the streets daily. Thie least, vrv least,. ve can do0 is to bring our, sandIwiches weekly.ý It doesn't hurt to,.rise a few minutes earlier- in ordée to. make. them. Think of the great joy it wvill bring to sonie poor soul. flIow wôuld you le e if, vçm .had just, one or two sand- wiches a dav, and nothing more? * Staved! eli so do these people. - Liv.e and let. iv.' Ve're living, so let ils help) others live. Comie on, t.wentv-one or twentv-two, boxes donit go very far. Iet's start a cami- paign. Ail out for 'sandwiches. Feed those emaciated, depressed, , sad, huniigr\- people who do flot have ani- bition or hope. Raise tli from that living deat.h. Fui their stomiachis and give themi a ray of hope that soon- *verv. soon-thev will be able to do for theinselves. 1* .\erv% Wednesday yÔui have a duty oniewh%-ièhishotdld b.e> more of a pleas- uire. Sandw,%iches. -one. twvo, or anyý amnount. Everv littie bit lhelps. Lightweight Cagers Give Deerfield Tough Tussie The Grey-Green lightweight cagers wvere downed by Deerfield last Fei- day, 28 to 21, in the Leslie F. Gates' gymnasium. The gam-e was iclose ail the way to the fourt.h quarter when the taller lively numor and inimshed wvith a strong (and serious) appeal for whole-hearted support for the anhual. Néxt, Helen Shepard, class se cre- tary, described two sections sched- uied for this year's *Echoes. ýThey wvere theý club section and- the pic-, turc collection, both of which. promise to be.,unusually fine, with more than two hùndred snapshots in the latter group. .Then Bob -Seiler, class iresident, eloquently' urged, thé CIassý of 1933, to set an xample of school1 spirit for the underclassmen and to maintain its> splenidid record. of achievement by putting over the book, in face of ail '!iscouragenent-an, anniual of which to l)eproud.. Following these appeals by the class officers; the co-editors-for this year's g.lipes tddiçd their. eticor-. agemient. Victor Hanson explained that if 1,000 students. pledge a dol- lar ecdi with the renîaining dollar payable in June, the school can have an Echoes as fine or finer than any that. New Trier has yet seen. Emma Bickhiam further ixnpressed this mes- sage on the miinds of ber classmatcs and told them that the 1,000 pledges miust be securcd lw Fcbruary 15.- ard's sonige Saul: "Sure, 'JUST A LI>ITLE FOAM. FOR THE OLD SOAKS."' ti-lim: -Whiat kind of. toothipaste dot voui use.-, Femmn: " 1 don't use an,%; atl my teeth aàre hi tight."t Mae:"utis certainly a 'goodà .Cgg!" 'Sable; "At least he's strictiy fresli."t Duiquane:, "How ,did you know \Vaverton wvas drunk?" Perkins: "f saw hîm step inlto0 the. lank to get his balance." Subseribe othe. cE chocs! a s Pen ieaksý-said ,the 'prisoner as te rindripped throughtthe roof. Porterlbouse: 'e a square meal at the Circle cafe just 'round the corner.?' Parkerhotise: -Yeali, and get my mQouth fui! of feathers froin those~ sausages made of 'bird dogs? Not-*a chian.ce." Have you hieard about the two saij- ors whio went fishing just for the halibut ? took.dQwn his opponents. Othier in- dividual, honiors went tu, McKinley, Evantston,. second: Born.. New Trier, third;. and Eilersten, . New Trier, fourth. To, these contestants . .vere awarded miniatutre ping-pong paddlcs.. Of gold,,silver and bronze. according te the order in whiëh thev finished. Bill Condy of New 'jTrier,- the: fav- orite, who was to have, captained the New Trier tcam, was unable to play l)ccause' of. another tournament, in Chicago in: which lie was; entered. The tournament was,- played on a loser-drop-oDut ,basis ,with ,points axvarded to contestants miho entered the third round of play. The stand-, ings of the sèhools' entcrcd were a fôtlows:l New Trier, first with. 36 poinits: Eývanston, second with 12 points, Deerfield, third with nine points.; and. Morton and Provisê. brinigijig up the rear witli no points. The naines of point.winning memi- bers of the victorious teain will be put on a silver plaque. New Trier was reprcsented by twenty-five out of the total of sixty-four contestants in the tourney. Coach Is letters an d Dwvight Green added a few ex- planatory remnarks and F. C. Win- does, senior boys' adviser chairman. made a fcw 'iwise cracks" before the assenmblv closed, The senior campaign bas run this' week and the underclass campaign %vill start. the first week of the ncw semester. Flunger-ability to cat Spaish rice. dash, Alex Newton ran the required Usher-one 'Who takes a, leading distance in :5.4 which is the best time part in a theater. that lias ever been run in the 'New Echo-the only thing that can Trier ficldhouse. In the finals, New- cheat a. woman out of the last word. ton did nôt rmn, and Charles Brown Echoes-THE O N L Y T H I N won it in :5.5, with Rex Martin,, THAT CAN C H E A T THE DE- 5econd, and Bill Çormany, third. PRESSION OUT OF A VICTORY! Maxwell won the senior higli hurdles froin a large field in -7.3 .and 'ubscribe to the Echoes! Hall was second, followed by Hoza. The low hurdles. were taken by New- Flynn 'ï -1 2 Barteinian 2 O00 Umberger 2 2 1 Davis 0 1 4 Anderson 1 O 1 Leoflard O 1 O 8 5-8 35 00 0 If4 present plans inaterialize, this " 3 4 2 will be continued *within the next rcply, 2 0 e three weeks. champ 0 20 ger al 2 1 MORE NEW. TRIER NEWS get ai 10 88 ON PAGE 27 ckel back on the arge boouîe. 5 lU IOOKS J

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