Ask the Scholar

Page 26 of 101
I can add historical knowledge about this page.

Page image

Page 26

OCR

000 H L 000 000 Junior Page FOOTBALL LOEP PENN CHARTER, I2; ST. LUKE'S, O. thirty-yard line. SHOEMAKER made THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND. have changed color. They are of a O N October 7, Penn Charter opened twenty yards on a forward pass, and its football season with a victory IN the middle of a lake in Canada darker, richer green, and the blossoms LUMLEY made five on a line plunge. SHOEMAKER carried the ball over the lies a solitary island. So desolate, seem to be more dainty and delicate over St. Luke's School at Wayne. The lonely and cold does it look that one than you have ever seen them. score was I2 to O. Penn Charter out- line for another touchdown, then kicked shudders at the thought of approaching The trees are not the only things played St. Luke's in every point of the the goal. game, except kicking and forward In the fourth period Penn Charter it. Those who have ventured near which seem to have changed. The have come back with terrible tales. grass has suffered the same change as passing. again had the ball on St. Luke's three- yard line, but was unable to score. The Some say vile odors and cold, damp the leaves and the flowers the same as SHOEMAKER was easily the star final score was I2 to o in Penn Char- winds come from the mouths of many the blossoms. You look out over the player of the contest, making consistent caves and caverns; others say hideous fields and the daisies and buttercups are gains both through the line and around ter's favor. The line-up : creatures and serpents dwell there, and much more beautiful than during the the ends. He made all of Penn Char- still others tell of castles where misty day, and it is the same with the other ter's twelve points. The entire team PENN CHARTER, ST. LUKE'S. white and ghostlike figures dart hither flowers. did good work, but LUMLEY'S tackling KOONS left end HARVEY ALLEN and line plunging and INGERSOLL'S end left tackle and thither. The birds are changed, too. I have COIT ANDERSON left guard NORTON If anyone chances to go ashore on often thought that the birds must be running deserve special notice. It was (ANDREWS) the island he never comes away, and very doleful creatures, as they were al- decided to have seven and one half CLARKE center MOODY ORLEMANN minute quarters. right guard SHAKESPEARE people can only guess his fate. No ways working hard or else on the look- (POHLIG) birds ever take refuge from the com- out for cats. I knew that some birds The game started at four, and after LUMLEY right tackle MOORE ing storm there or even approach it. were happy, as they often chirped out three minutes of play SHOEMAKER car- DANENHOWER right end BAINS quarter-back CARMAN DAVIS, into a beautiful song, but I thought WARREN ried the ball over the goal line for a PRICE SHOEMAKER left halfback SCHROEDER Then of Quinta. they must have a very unrestful life. touchdown, then kicked a goal. INGERSOLL right halfback PUTNAM Indeed this is SO in the daytime, but There was no scoring in the second JOHNSTONE fullback WHITNEY THE EARLY MORNING. in the early morning, when there are period, though Penn Charter carried FEW people have seen the beauty of no cats and bad boys to be on the look- the ball within three yards of St. Luke's FOOTBALL SCHEDULE, 1910 the early morning. They may rise out for, they are quite different. They goal line. St. Luke's intended to kick, Fri., Oct. 7.-St. Luke's, o: P. C., I2. early, but they do not watch the go about chirping busily, and after a but were prevented by the Penn Charter Fri., Oct. 14.-Chestnut Hill, o: P. C., o. changes which come over the world. morning meal has been gotten for their ends, and SO made a forward pass, Tues., Oct. 18.-P.I.D., o; P. C., 3. Fri., Oct. 21.-FRIEND'S CENTRAL, o; P. C., If one rises early when the first of young, they sit upon the limbs of the which netted them twenty yards. They O. the sun's rays are shining on the beau- trees chirping merrily to the little birds, kept the ball in midfield for the re- Fri., Oct. 28.-EPISCOPAL US. Penn Charter tiful trees and flowers one seems to be while the latter swallow the worms se- mainder of the period. -home. Fri., Nov. 4.-DE LANCEY vs. Penn Charter in perfect bliss. You seem to be in a cured by the hard work of their par- In the third period Penn Charter -away. world by yourself. Nothing related to ents. The birds seem to be more like kicked off to St. Luke's. ANDERSON Fri., Nov. -Swarthmore US. Penn Char- mankind can be heard; in fact, there men and women as they talk to each tackled the St. Luke's man on their ter-home. Fri., Nov. 18.-GERMANTOWN vs. Penn Char- are no noises at all. It is true now and other in their language. twenty-five-yard line. Penn Charter ter-home. then the leaves rustle in the early morn- All this the early riser takes in and held St. Luke's for downs on their I. A. A. A. games are capitalized. ing breeze, but SO soft is the rustling he thinks how lovely it would be if the that one does not notice it. world were always like this. He re- If you have never seen this picture solves to rise early soon again and view before, you look around and try to find this beautiful sight. the beauty of this scene. Ah! Now His thoughts are interrupted by a you know why some people like to rise distant sound. What is it? A hor- early in the spring. The trees seem to rible screeching, SO unlike this quiet be different objects than those you see morning. One seems to awake from a 16 during the day. Their leaves seem to dream. He listens. The sound comes I7

Document source description

This file includes poems, articles, and letters relating to Admiral Robert Peary, the ship Roosevelt, and North and South Pole expeditions.

Page data

Page
26
Source index
0
Type
photo
Media ID
c32e8dfafba90dbe
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
518258626
Core
doc
Type
document
DTO data
{
    "id": "518258626",
    "sourceUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626",
    "contentType": "document",
    "title": "Records relating to Polar Exploration",
    "description": "This file includes poems, articles, and letters relating to Admiral Robert Peary, the ship Roosevelt, and North and South Pole expeditions.",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626",
    "collections": [
        "Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary Family Collection",
        "Memorabilia"
    ],
    "iiifBase": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "thumbnailUrl": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "largeImageUrl": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "imageCount": 101,
    "hasImages": true,
    "source": "import",
    "hasTranscription": false
}

Context sent to Scholar

Document identity
{
    "localId": "518258626",
    "label": "Records relating to Polar Exploration",
    "core": "doc",
    "dtoType": "document",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626"
}
Document source metadata
{
    "id": "518258626",
    "sourceUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626",
    "contentType": "document",
    "title": "Records relating to Polar Exploration",
    "description": "This file includes poems, articles, and letters relating to Admiral Robert Peary, the ship Roosevelt, and North and South Pole expeditions.",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626",
    "collections": [
        "Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary Family Collection",
        "Memorabilia"
    ],
    "iiifBase": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "thumbnailUrl": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "largeImageUrl": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0001.tif",
    "imageCount": 101,
    "hasImages": true,
    "source": "import",
    "hasTranscription": false
}
Document source extras
{
    "url": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/518258626",
    "naId": 518258626,
    "coverageEndDate": {
        "logicalDate": "1912-12-31",
        "year": 1912
    },
    "coverageStartDate": {
        "logicalDate": "1904-01-01",
        "year": 1904
    },
    "levelOfDescription": "fileUnit",
    "recordType": "description",
    "ocrSource": "nara-archive"
}
Page context
{
    "seq": 26,
    "pageIndex": 0,
    "type": "photo",
    "url": "https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/coll-xp/4499090/518258626/4499090-008-005-0026.tif",
    "mediaId": "c32e8dfafba90dbe",
    "ocrText": "000\nH L\n000\n000\nJunior Page\nFOOTBALL\nLOEP\nPENN CHARTER, I2; ST. LUKE'S, O.\nthirty-yard line. SHOEMAKER made\nTHE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND.\nhave changed color. They are of a\nO\nN October 7, Penn Charter opened\ntwenty yards on a forward pass, and\nits football season with a victory\nIN\nthe middle of a lake in Canada\ndarker, richer green, and the blossoms\nLUMLEY made five on a line plunge.\nSHOEMAKER carried the ball over the\nlies a solitary island. So desolate,\nseem to be more dainty and delicate\nover St. Luke's School at Wayne. The\nlonely and cold does it look that one\nthan you have ever seen them.\nscore was I2 to O. Penn Charter out-\nline for another touchdown, then kicked\nshudders at the thought of approaching\nThe trees are not the only things\nplayed St. Luke's in every point of the\nthe goal.\ngame, except kicking and forward\nIn the fourth period Penn Charter\nit. Those who have ventured near\nwhich seem to have changed. The\nhave come back with terrible tales.\ngrass has suffered the same change as\npassing.\nagain had the ball on St. Luke's three-\nyard line, but was unable to score. The\nSome say vile odors and cold, damp\nthe leaves and the flowers the same as\nSHOEMAKER was easily the star\nfinal score was I2 to o in Penn Char-\nwinds come from the mouths of many\nthe blossoms. You look out over the\nplayer of the contest, making consistent\ncaves and caverns; others say hideous\nfields and the daisies and buttercups are\ngains both through the line and around\nter's favor. The line-up :\ncreatures and serpents dwell there, and\nmuch more beautiful than during the\nthe ends. He made all of Penn Char-\nstill others tell of castles where misty\nday, and it is the same with the other\nter's twelve points. The entire team\nPENN CHARTER,\nST. LUKE'S.\nwhite and ghostlike figures dart hither\nflowers.\ndid good work, but LUMLEY'S tackling\nKOONS\nleft end\nHARVEY\nALLEN\nand line plunging and INGERSOLL'S end\nleft tackle\nand thither.\nThe birds are changed, too. I have\nCOIT\nANDERSON\nleft guard\nNORTON\nIf anyone chances to go ashore on\noften thought that the birds must be\nrunning deserve special notice. It was\n(ANDREWS)\nthe island he never comes away, and\nvery doleful creatures, as they were al-\ndecided to have seven and one half\nCLARKE\ncenter\nMOODY\nORLEMANN\nminute quarters.\nright guard\nSHAKESPEARE\npeople can only guess his fate. No\nways working hard or else on the look-\n(POHLIG)\nbirds ever take refuge from the com-\nout for cats. I knew that some birds\nThe game started at four, and after\nLUMLEY\nright tackle\nMOORE\ning storm there or even approach it.\nwere happy, as they often chirped out\nthree minutes of play SHOEMAKER car-\nDANENHOWER\nright end\nBAINS\nquarter-back\nCARMAN DAVIS,\ninto a beautiful song, but I thought\nWARREN\nried the ball over the goal line for a\nPRICE\nSHOEMAKER\nleft halfback\nSCHROEDER\nThen of Quinta.\nthey must have a very unrestful life.\ntouchdown, then kicked a goal.\nINGERSOLL\nright halfback\nPUTNAM\nIndeed this is SO in the daytime, but\nThere was no scoring in the second\nJOHNSTONE\nfullback\nWHITNEY\nTHE EARLY MORNING.\nin the early morning, when there are\nperiod, though Penn Charter carried\nFEW people have seen the beauty of\nno cats and bad boys to be on the look-\nthe ball within three yards of St. Luke's\nFOOTBALL SCHEDULE, 1910\nthe early morning. They may rise\nout for, they are quite different. They\ngoal line. St. Luke's intended to kick,\nFri.,\nOct. 7.-St. Luke's, o: P. C., I2.\nearly, but they do not watch the\ngo about chirping busily, and after a\nbut were prevented by the Penn Charter\nFri., Oct. 14.-Chestnut Hill, o: P. C., o.\nchanges which come over the world.\nmorning meal has been gotten for their\nends, and SO made a forward pass,\nTues., Oct. 18.-P.I.D., o; P. C., 3.\nFri., Oct. 21.-FRIEND'S CENTRAL, o; P. C.,\nIf one rises early when the first of\nyoung, they sit upon the limbs of the\nwhich netted them twenty yards. They\nO.\nthe sun's rays are shining on the beau-\ntrees chirping merrily to the little birds,\nkept the ball in midfield for the re-\nFri., Oct. 28.-EPISCOPAL US. Penn Charter\ntiful trees and flowers one seems to be\nwhile the latter swallow the worms se-\nmainder of the period.\n-home.\nFri., Nov. 4.-DE LANCEY vs. Penn Charter\nin perfect bliss. You seem to be in a\ncured by the hard work of their par-\nIn the third period Penn Charter\n-away.\nworld by yourself. Nothing related to\nents. The birds seem to be more like\nkicked off to St. Luke's. ANDERSON\nFri.,\nNov. -Swarthmore US. Penn Char-\nmankind can be heard; in fact, there\nmen and women as they talk to each\ntackled the St. Luke's man on their\nter-home.\nFri., Nov. 18.-GERMANTOWN vs. Penn Char-\nare no noises at all. It is true now and\nother in their language.\ntwenty-five-yard line. Penn Charter\nter-home.\nthen the leaves rustle in the early morn-\nAll this the early riser takes in and\nheld St. Luke's for downs on their\nI. A. A. A. games are capitalized.\ning breeze, but SO soft is the rustling\nhe thinks how lovely it would be if the\nthat one does not notice it.\nworld were always like this. He re-\nIf you have never seen this picture\nsolves to rise early soon again and view\nbefore, you look around and try to find\nthis beautiful sight.\nthe beauty of this scene. Ah! Now\nHis thoughts are interrupted by a\nyou know why some people like to rise\ndistant sound. What is it? A hor-\nearly in the spring. The trees seem to\nrible screeching, SO unlike this quiet\nbe different objects than those you see\nmorning. One seems to awake from a\n16\nduring the day. Their leaves seem to\ndream. He listens. The sound comes\nI7"
}