Annual (May 1900) . aps at everything on sight. Monsieur Grummanne—Sprint champion, in his great feat of crossing the arena in ahop, step and jump. Herr Yule—The dumb-bell and sledge-hammer juggler. Iron and steel are asfeathers to him in weight. Signor Van Allen, Herr de Brown—Toreadors in the hair-raising bull fight. Ourspecial feature. Monsieur Hester, Don Bean—Fire eaters. This diet has had a peculiar effect onthe heads of these gentlemen. D. T. Weir—Lightning corraller and thunder-maker. Sahib Hall-—The Hindoo midget, in his hair-raising tight-rope scene. PART III Minstrel Show. By paying
Annual (May 1900) . aps at everything on sight. Monsieur Grummanne—Sprint champion, in his great feat of crossing the arena in ahop, step and jump. Herr Yule—The dumb-bell and sledge-hammer juggler. Iron and steel are asfeathers to him in weight. Signor Van Allen, Herr de Brown—Toreadors in the hair-raising bull fight. Ourspecial feature. Monsieur Hester, Don Bean—Fire eaters. This diet has had a peculiar effect onthe heads of these gentlemen. D. T. Weir—Lightning corraller and thunder-maker. Sahib Hall-—The Hindoo midget, in his hair-raising tight-rope scene. PART III Minstrel Show. By paying five sestertia extra anyone may stay to see this following is only a partial list of the many and varied attractions. Center Man and Leader of String Band—Crescendo Diminuendo Campbello. Bones— Tambourines— McLeod Noyes, Don Cox, Sambo Covert. Herr Thisselle. Cox and Covert—The rag-time artists. Noyes—Buck and wing dancer. Thisselle—Hoodoo doctor and fortune teller. THE ALUMNI. --^ It is a surprising and an interesting fact tliat in the five years life of the M. T. H. has produced so varied a list of graduates. Through the medium of the Alumni Asso-ciation we are able to keep track of our graduates, and it would be perhaps interesting tothe pupils to know the whereabouts of these alumni. There are at present about sixtyteachers, among whom we find teachers of high schools, a critic of thecity normal school and several teachers of language in schools out ofthe state, as well as in. Fifty students doing good work at various colleges are an additionaltestimonial to the excellence of the courses of study. Among those students who have entered business life we are equallywell represented. Forty alumni hold positions as clerks in banks, officesand business houses ; seven are foremen of departments in large manu-facturing establishments, while six are bookkeepers and sixteen stenog-raphers. In public libraries, here and elsewhere, we have f
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