The Tiptonian . he streets and in the stores uptown. The seniors who are now doing secondyear work are the only class taking thegrammar method. They are using the VosGrammar and are doing excellent read Storms Immensee the first termand are now reading Baumbachs DerSchwiegersohn. Several of the class are al-so translating Storms Der Schimmelrerterfor extra credit. This class holds the rec-ord for having made the greatest number ofA + s in German. Der Lehrer Gottlieb Emil Lochmuller istein echter Deutscher. Er hat von Jugendauf Deutsch gesprochen da seine Elternbeide von Deutschland k


The Tiptonian . he streets and in the stores uptown. The seniors who are now doing secondyear work are the only class taking thegrammar method. They are using the VosGrammar and are doing excellent read Storms Immensee the first termand are now reading Baumbachs DerSchwiegersohn. Several of the class are al-so translating Storms Der Schimmelrerterfor extra credit. This class holds the rec-ord for having made the greatest number ofA + s in German. Der Lehrer Gottlieb Emil Lochmuller istein echter Deutscher. Er hat von Jugendauf Deutsch gesprochen da seine Elternbeide von Deutschland kamen und seineMutter nie eine andere Sprache lernte. Da-heim sprach er Deutsch und er ist auch vielin die deutschen Schule gegangen. ImSommer ist er der deutsche Lehrer in derCentralen Muster Schule und wird auchdiesen folgenden Sommer dahin gehen. Seininnigster Wunsch folgt, Moege die DeutscheSprache immer mehr und mehr ihren rech-ten Platz in den Hochschulen in den Ver-einigten Staaten finden. 30 THE TIPTONIAN. SENIOR GERMAN CLASS. THE TIPTONIAN 31 LITERATURE MICHAEL. A Paraphrase of Wordsworths Poem. The traveler who has been venturesomeenough to penetrate the wilderness ot flow-ers which separates the main road from themore picturesque, though wilder regions ofGrassmere Vale, plunges at once into a laby-rinth of sweet scented grasses, trees andshrubs, a miniature Paradise it this flows a silvery brook babblingand dancing between violet lined by the margin of the brook may beseen a curiously arranged pile of stones andnot far from these the ruins of what wasonce a home. The stone walls have longsince crumbled to decay and the wildernesshas overrun the threshhold. An old shepherd who watched his flockson the neighboring hillside relates this sto-ry of the vale. Many years ago, there dwelt in Gras-mere Vale an old shepherd named had reached the age of SO when a sonwas born to him and his good wife, who wastwenty years younger than he. This


Size: 2646px × 945px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidtiptonian191, bookyear1901