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Show EXCHANGE We have enjoyed reading the following: "Pioneer," New Orleans, La.; "The Round-Up," Douglas, Wyo.; "The Stylus," Westfield, N. Y.; "The Argus," Gardner, Mass.; "The Rustler," Fremont, Neb.; "The Owl," Corry, Pa.; "The Blue and White," Manassa, Colo.; "Student Rays," Rexburg, Ida.; "The Register," Burlington, Vt.; "Preparatory Herald," Keyser, W. Va.; "The Anemone," Spearfish, S. D.; "Blue Owl," Attleboro, Mass.; "Student Life," Logan, Utah; "Utah Chronicle," Salt Lake City, Utah; "The Clarion," Salem, Ore.; "Columbia Collegian," Milton, Ore.; "College Chips," Decorah, la.; "The Kodak," Sapulpa, Okla. "The Cue," Albany, N. Y.; "Clarion," Appleton, Wis.; "High School Recorder," "Saratoga Springs," N. Y.; "Distaff," Girls' High, Boston, Mass.; "Gold and Blue," Salt Lake, Utah; "Gran-itian," Salt Lake City; "Orderly," Portland, Ore.; "Pacific Star," Mt. Angel, Ore.; "Oracle," Jacksonville, Fla.; "Shucis," Schenectady, N. Y.; "The Assembler," Wrentham, Mass.; "Tatler," Nashua, N. H.; "Tatler," El Paso, Tex.; "Tatler," Kinston, N. C.: "Courier," Milton Junction, Wis.; "Quay," Seattle, Wash.; "News," Eugene, Ore.; "Oneida," Preston, Ida.; "Register," Burlington, Vt.; "White and Blue," Provo, Utah. "The Tatler," Huntington, W. Va. Department headings are splendid. Why don't you put all your jokes under one single heading? ACORN 23 "The Oneida," Preston, Idaho We enjoyed the enthusiasm shown because of your school having won the state championship. We Weberites can appreciate this from our recent experience. We enjoyed reading your stories, "Crimson," B. Y. C, but we had to hunt a long time for your Athletic Department. A title would be an improvement. "Keramos," East Liverpool, Ohio You have an exceptionally interesting literary department. Your poets and poetesses are certainly "coming to the front." Your neat cover attracted our attention first, "Searchlight," Paris, Idaho. Your "Diary of a Freshman" is very original and good. "The Oracle," Jacksonville, Fla., may be taken as a model of what we would recommend as an excellent school paper. The entire arrangement is neat; the pictures, headings and the cover design all assist the literary department to make the book interesting. The artist of the "Orderly," Portland, has the idea; the cuts and headings are "great." Isn't the Staff page out of place? Your book is plain, "Pacific Star," but neatly arranged. The joke department of the Class Number of the "Red and Black," Salt Lake City, Utah, is a "rich" one something that we do not find in all our exchanges. "The Crimson," from Goshen, Ind., is dwarfish, but dandy. We have no suggestions to offer the "Gold and Blue," from Salt Lake City, Utah, becaues it fulfills the requirements of a good school paper. First Student "I am the flower of the English Literary Classes." Second Student "Yes, you are a blooming idiot." Sophomore "My mother explored my pockets last night." Junior "What did she find?" Sophomore "Oh, what all the explorers find, enough for a lecture." Be like a piano, upright, grand and square. At the Piano Hee "Some tunes quite carry me away." She "Tell me one and I will play it with pleasure." He "Fifty miles an hour! Are you brave?" She (swallowing another pint of dust) "Yes, I'm full of grit." A joke is never the same after it has been cracked once. |