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The
SENIOR SICKLE
fl Qeview of fhe
Nineleen fmenly-Iwo and lwenfy lfzree
High School Year
T
Volume Twenty-seven
Qbubzfshed by me
HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR CLASS
Jqdrian, Jlficlrigan '
gem mai
ADRIAN HIGH SCHOOL
ws e it ee rw
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
To
IRENE CCA YLOR
our class advisor, under whose kind direction we have
reached the end of our High School career,
we afectionately dedicate
this Sickle
'Uh
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
F I 5 D
ff , I Cb A
'N ' I A I I
, T I
x-' I vw
1 I Cf
In ,. I' Emuwwwz 1 H ,,., . H V,
I I I I Y I
DEDICATION
BOARD OF EDUCATION
FACULTY
SICKLE STAFF
SENIORS
COMMENCEMENT
CLASS DAY
'S
5
Z
1,
'F
n
6
Z?
: la
JUNIOR CLASS
FRESHMAN CLASS
SOCIETY
ORGANIZATIONS
ATHLETICS
HUMOR
ALUMNI
,JEL
Q..
KI
f -dw S
C751 - 'PW
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
BOARD OF EDUCATION
MRS. E. G. KUNEY
MR. F. WES1'Ki1X1'I5
MR. K lp. I5.x1.1mw'rN
PRESIIJICNT
MR. C. lI.Glmflf14:v
SUPIERIN'l'liNlJliN'I'
MR. E. N. SMITH
SECRETARY
Mlss NELLIE S'row
9 W .
MR. T. C. Knzmusnv
'Che SENIOR SICKLE I9
2?
MISS BUCK
MATHEMATICS
MISS PEKVK
FRENCH
W
MR. J. L. REED
I-HYSICS AND CHEMISTRY
1 I
FACULTY
MISS MOIIGAN
FRENCH AND ENGLISH
MR. IC. J. REED
DRINCII-AI,
MISS PATCH
ASSEMBLY HALL
MISS RICHARD
MATHEMATICS
MISS ARNISTRONG
ENGLISH
MR. LUSE
COMMERCIAL
MISS MARSIIAIIL MISS TAYLOR
LATIN ENGLISH
C'-wr s s A or-vb
"ZThe'SE.NlOR SICKLEI
Miss 15,-UQNUM
1'ux's14'.-xx, '1'nA1N1Nr:
MR. Sllxlmlfolcu
mmm
Mn. HALL
M l'2l'Il.-K N ICU. DR.-XWIN U
AN ll .XIAEIGIKIKA
Miss REM BIBLE
ART
2
Miss Hmm-:rr
M Vsu:
Miss GREEN
ms'1'onY
, M Iss Monm-:LL
TYP!NU-STENOGKAPHY
M lc. CAMERON
BAND
923
Miss lhznlurvx
HXGLISII AND HISTO
Mn. S'1'om1s
MiIiIf'l'l.'l'l'Rl'1
Mn. W,um1-:N
SHOP
Miss IQINNEY
DOMESTIC ART
m S ---l--'FW
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
EDITORIAL
LTHOUGH there have been many causes for pleasant memories
Rvv7V!.Il of .our last year in school, there is still one cause. for regret.
5 This is the disappearance of literary and dramatic societies
from our high school course. Several of our class took active
part in the various organizations and gained both pleasure and
profit from them. There were several reasons for their dis-
continuance. Among the most prominent are the lack of room for them,
and the lack of a teacher who could devote sufhcient time to do the work
thoroughly. The Senior High School is at present crowded to capacity
with no prospect for near future relief. Providing room for literary and
dramatic societies is just one of the smaller benefits that could be derived
from an increased .school capacity. Up to the present there have been
found no entirely adequate substitutes for these societies. The groups that
were formed in a few of the English classes are at best unsatisfactory.
They interfere with the working plan of the teachers and do not arouse the
interest and the enthusiasm of the pupils.
The absence of a dramatic club is of special importance. It takes
away the only means of dramatic training that most of the pupils have.
The plays and entertainments in the future are very likely to suffer con-
siderably by its absence.
Let us hope that some action will be taken on this subject immediately,
and that means will be provided so that our literary and dramatic organi-
zations can be reinstated in Adrian High School a.s soon as possible.
e SENIGR SICKLE. I9
Q
3
CKLE STAFF
SI
W-Il AAA A A AA W1
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SICK!-E STAFF I 922- I 923
ARCHER BENNETT CHARLES CHURCH HERBERT VVAPTS
CHARLES CHURuII-- ..... Editor-in-Chief
ARUHER BENNETT-4 ........... Business Manager
HERBERT XNATTS ....... .... A ssistunt Business Manager
CLIFFORD ARMIETEAD .E., ........... A ssistaint Editor
A N NAH PATCH ......
RUTH HCJSTETIIER---
JANE CTARLEToN---
HELEN HEWES .....
HARVEY GREENE ....
RACHEL RICE ....
AMELIA FRANK .....
MIIITON RAYMOND--
VVILLIAM .IEWETT III ....
MYRTLE NOVESKX'---
ARLIE DOBBINS .....
LOUISE VVESTGATE --
FRANCIS GUYMAN---
-- - -Assistant Editor
- - - -Alumni Editor
-- - -Society Editor
-- - - --Art Editor
- - - -Athletic Editor
- -- -Athletic Editor
- ------------ Campus Editor
-- ----- Assistant Campus Editor
--------------Joke Editor
- --Joke Editor
- ----Typist
- - ----.----------------- Typist
-- - - - -- --Undergraduate Editor 1924
HARRIET MONTGOMERH' --.. ---- U ndergraduate Editor 1925
CL 6 5 SQDHYQ
0:41 2- ------ 2 2 - 2 WN
YT h e S I2 PJ I CD Pl S l CI Fi 1- EL I 9 2 3
1,011.11 N NIlR1'flN
K'u.u:1.1cs CHl'lK'H
LI-:nov OYDELL
CLASS OFFICERS
Prvsimlont. ...,.
Vivo-P1'csi11e-11t
S0r'l'vt:11'y .....
Tl'6'llS11l'C1' ....
Murslml---
1922-1923
-------------I,ou,x1N NORTON
------ ------ --- ---JAN1-1 CAHLETON
--------- -------------Rwfr Hos'm'rLER
------- -----LELA
N D SCH XV1l'H'1'EN BERG
----------W1-Jsusx' W11,1.ET'r
1921-1922
President --------- -------- ---- C H ARLES CHURCH
Vice--Pwsiclvnt ..... ..... . XMI-:LIA FRANK
Sm-x'etm3'-- ......-.............. M1LT'0N RAYMOND
'I'mNu-p1---- ---- -------------- I 1l'CIl,E ROTHFUSS
Mg11'sl1g1l ------- .-... H Elmrzm' WATTS
1920-1921
President, .--.-.-----...................... LEROY O'DELL
Vicf--President- .....-. ................ I 1l'C1LE ROTHFUSS
Sf"Cl'E'1Li1'y ----- --------- ........ H E IAEN VVALPER
'I'I'C1ISll1'91'..-- .--.......... ........... A Homin BENNETT
Mm-Skull --------------------- ---.. C lu-:NUI-:NE SPELMAN
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
r
SENIORS
BERTHABELL ACKLEY
Hzzffr' ffsazzyff
"Her friends tind within her n wealth of good qualities
Girls' Pep Society
Oratorical Association
C LIF FORD A R121 ISTEAD
uclipu
"A tower of strength is in an honest name."
Captain Afflrniative Debating Team
Assistant Editor Sickle
Business Manager Senior Play
EVA V1o1.A ASH
nlEwee7J
Orchestra C29 C33
Senior Play
Cast: "The Belles of Canterbury"
ELLA LUCILE AYRES
"Ba.rkis i willinl"
Girls' Pep Society
RAYMOND C. BACHMAN
Hpetefl
"As for the women tho' we scorn und flout 'em
We may live with, but not without 'em."
Football Q35
Basketball C35
"Men may rome and men may zo. but I go on forever.'
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
E-LMIR O. BALDWIN, JR.
lfBubJ!
Football Q21 C33
HORTENSE MAE BAUMGARDNER
"Ten.s'ie"
Entered from Fremont High School
Girls' Pep Society .
Senior Basketball Team
Oratorical Association
ARCHER W. BENNETT, JE.
"Curley"
Business Manager Sickle
Treasurer of Oratorical Awociation
Senior Play
KENNETH S. BETZ
"Cherry" "Kermy".
"A moment's insight is sometimes worth a 1
experience."
Secretary Radio Club C33
Football C25
Cast of "A Dinner with Complications"
GRANT BIRD
i "A patient man's a pattern for a king."
i
I
"Men die from time to time, but not for 1ove.'
"A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance
"All things are less dreadful than they seem."
ife's
m f l f AA-mmmpwww
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
Doms VIRGINIA BLAIII
1 "Muggi12sl'
"A plvusuint, siniling L-lu-I-k, u speaking eyel"
Girls' Pop Society
Athletic Association
0I':ItoI'ic:1l Association
WAYNE H. Bovl-:E
lfpeepv
"A snddvr Zllld Ll wiser man he rose thc IIIuI'I'ow morn
Vicv-pI'osiIlvIIt- Boys' Pep Society
Football C21
junior Class Play
EMMA Bom
HBOIJII
'AA girl one vnu depend u1mn.'
l'II1te-Iwi fl'0'l1l Tvciiiuscli High School
Girls' Pep Society
Atllln-tic Association
lXIlAYIsI3LI,Ic BIIADIsII
"All must he l'lll'llL'Nt in XL world liko ours."
LI-Iwls BIII-:vvEIz
"Alrow our lift- we love u steudfiist friend."
PI'e-sideut Wireless Club
I.cuguc liusketball C23 C37
Boys' Pop Society
m em M M w
e SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
SENIORS
HELEN M. BRODBECK
"Quiet and unassuming but interesting nevertheless."
Girls' Pep Society CU C25 CSD
Oratorical Association
JOHN H. BRYANT
"Man is horn into trouble us sparks fly upward."
Treasurer Oratoi-ical Asociation
Basketball League C23 C33
Class Football C21
HARRY M. BURTON
"Marriage is a tnming thing."
League Basketball Champion C13
JANE CARLETON
"A daughter of the gods, divinely tall, and most divinely
fair."
Entered from Chicago High School in Junior year
Vice-President Class C31
Senior Play Cast
Society Editor Sickle
ARTHUR E. CARNAHAN
h'ATtU
"A guide. philosopher, and friend."
Boys' Glee Club
Lyceum CID C25
Lyceum Banquet Decoiating Committee C25
5 SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
MILDRED LEONE CARR
"Mill1f"
"A smile is the same in ull languages."
Girls' Pep Society
CHARLES -CHURCH
"I defies you!"
President of Class C25
Editor-in-Chief of Sickle
Senior Play
WAX'NE CLARK
"Merry as ii cricket."
Boys' Pep Society
Wireless Club
CHESTER S. COEBETT
ffchesf'
"Not a word speaks he more than there is ueedf
Orchestra C35
Oratorical Association C25 C35
Athletic Association C25 C35
ROY G. DANIELS
"Blame where you must, be candid where you cnn
VN A 'PW
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
CLYDE PRESTON DAVIS
ffnmeff
"Mens words are ever bolder than their dcedsf
Football Reserves C35
Class Football C33
PAULINE EDNA IUAVIS
"My mind to me an empire is.
Forum C21 C31
Cust: "Belles of Canterbury"
Girls' Glee Club Q25
RIOSALIND ELIZABETH DAVIS
"She ne-eds no eulogy, her work speaks for her
Undergr'ad1m.te Editor Sickle Q23
Iniperzitrix of Forum C35
Saliimtorian
HARLEX' DElJNIS
l'Who deserves well, needs not another's praise!
Lyceum C23
Boys' Glee Club C37
ARLIE M. DOBBINS
rlAhJl
"A rarer spirit never did steer humanity."
Typist Senior Sickle
District Typing Contest C29 C33
I Girls' Pep Society
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
SENIORS
FRED A. DOWLING
"A littlv fun in tlw long rim, will ln-lp zi mm uw miuglit
vlxi- cull."
Football C35
M:lIl2l,gt'l' Senior Football Tmnm
IQENNETH L. DREW
Claws of 1924
DOROTHEA EHINGER
"IJec" "Dorothy"
"A simple mnidvn in her Huwer,
Is iiorth ii hundred coats-of-iwms.
Girls' Pep Society C13 C25 C35
Czxrnivaxl Committee CID C25 C35
Capt-uin Girls' Newcomb Team QU
GOLDIE EMERY
"Buff
"Strange to the world she wore in ll2lNllflll look."
Girls' Pop Society
Athletic Aaiociation
Urzitoriczil Association
BLANQHE C. FETZER
nB0bbyu
"Good thoughts to spc-nk, and in good tongue to utter
thanx."
Girls' Pep Society
l Athletic Association
l Omtoriczil Awociation
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
DORTHIEL RUTH FOOTE
"Foods"
"Night is Love's holiday."
Girls' Pep Society
LESLIE FORD
rIHenry1:
"VVe feel that he is greater than we know
Entered from Morenci in Senior year
MARIE FOSTER
" 'Tis perseverance that prevails."
Entered from Weston in Junior year
Girls' Pep Society
Athletic Association
AMELIA M. FRANK
Hsisjl
"So jolly and sweet: so fully complete,
"She steals our affections away."
President Girls' Pep Society C33
Vice-president Class C21
Campus Editor Sickle C33
WILLIAM H. GIBBS, JR.
"Bill"
"He has the makings of It man."
Boys' Glee Club C35
Basket Ball League CD C23 C35
Cl1Ol'llS f'The Mikado" C33
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
C1lLADYS GILLIES
"Each minute is precious
Girls' Pep Society C13 C23 C33
Athletic Association C13 C23 C33
Oratorical As ociation C13 C23 C33
STANLEY A. GOODALE
"Stan"
Athletic Association C23 C33
Oratorical Association C23 C33
HARVE1' B. GREENE
"Deacon"
"My tongue within my lips I rein,
For one who talks much, must tu
Basket Ball C23 C33
Football Manager C33
Athletic Editor Sickle C33
EARL GORDON
"W'e know he is born for success
Baseball C13 C23
Football C33
EFFIE RosE HADDEN
"Midget"
Carnival Committee C33
Girls' Pep Society C13 C23 C33
Cast: 'fThe Belles of Canterbury"
"Man is the hunterg Woman is his game."
lk in w
"All women ure ambitious naturally."
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENICRS
ETHEL RUTH HADDEN
"Mindful not of herself"
Captain Class Basket Ball Team C35
Efficiency A C15
Carnival Committee C25 C35
VERN HALLENBECK
"Man was formed for society"
Class Football Team C35 '
Glee Club C25 C35
Orchestra C35
VERNEITA HALSTEAD
ffvew
"Mistress of herself though China fall."
Girls' Pep Society C15 C25 C35
Athletic Association C15 C25 C35
Oratorical Association C15 C25 C35
BERYL .I ENETTE HAYFORD
"Alas how light :1 cause may move
Dissension between hearts that love.'
Winner Declzimation Contest C15
Secretary of Thespian C25
Cast: "Hiawatha"
FRANCIS J. HELLEMS
"Jazzbo"
"Begum, dull rare! Thou and I shall never meet
Alvin Barry in "The Little Tycoon"
Nanki Pooh in "The Mikado"
Boys' Glee Club-Business Manager
6 is Riiiiiillo RS 5 S1 cz R Lia illl if
SENIORS
MARGARET H1-:LL1-:Ms
npeggyu
"A quiet, likeable girl."
Girls' Pep Society
Athletic Association
ESTER MAE HELMA
lfHans5!
"A suppressed resolvv will betray itself in the eyes
Girls' Glee Club C23 C33
Girls, Pep Society C33
Carnival Committee C33
LYMAN HENDRICKSQN
"Man views the world with partial eyes."
Senior Play
LORAIN Hmss
HCupU
"He simply makes R pinno talk."
Entered from Munistcc in Senior Year
HRLRN MARX' HEWES
"Helene"
"Her good humor is ix fountain ncvcr dry."
Art Editor Sickle C33
Girls' Glee Club
Opera. C23 C33
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
GLADYS J. HOFFMAN
"For she is just the quiet kind whose nature never varies
Girls, Pep Society C23 C33
Athletic Association C23 C33
Oratorical Association C23 C33
MARY RUTH HOSTEILRR
HRUJHSH
"Mental power is derived from well-fed brains
Alumni Editor Sickle C13
Secretary of Class C33
Valedictorian
LELAND MARTIN HUBBARD
"He looks the whole world in the face for he owes not
any man."
Captain Negative Debating Team C33
Boys' Pep Society C33
Oratorical Contest C33
FRANCES MARIE HYDER
1-'Curlyu
ii
Her very frowns are fairer far
Than smiles of other maidens are."
Girls' Pep Society
Girls' Glee Club C23
WILLIAM E. JEWETT III.
t'A'BillI1
"VVhy, what is Love but Fortunes tennis-ball."
Basketball Manager C33
Oratorical Association Manager C33
Joke Editor Sickle C33
mi . , A AAA-for wb
e SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
SENIORS
CLARE KAFER
"A noble youth, and mostly youth."
MA1'NARD C. KAY
"The good qualities of runny rolled into one."
Senior Play Cast Q33
Winner Omtorical Contest C3J
IUONALD A. KNOX
"Don" HIQTIOITTGU
"Those who go vusy will TIPVEI' grow old."
LUCILE E. KOEHN
"Buttons"
"She would rnthf-r tulk with n man than an angel
any day."
Girls' Glee Club C35
Treasurer Athenian f2D
Girls' Pep Society CU C23 C31
MARY GRACE KROUT
"Of manner gentleg of affections mild."
Girls' Pep Society
Girls' Glee Club
e SENIOR SICKLnE.4l923-H
SENIORS
VIRGINIA LEWIS
'fGi1m,ie" '
"NO is no nogntive in a wuumrfs mouth."
Girls' Pep Society
DONALD S. LLOYD
Class Of 1924
JAMES J. MCELR01'
lfJim!J HMac7I
"Men should be what they sl-mn
MARGARET MC7INTX'RE
'CBobby" "Mac',
"All that We see or seem
Is but n dreaxxl within n drealn.
Elfieiency A C13
NORMAN E. MCKENZIE
lfN0T1n!I
"No man is a. faithful judge in his own cause
Cast: Senior Play
Boys' Pep Society C35
Athletic Association C15 C25 C35
e SENIOR SICKLE -l923C
SENIORS
JAMES M. MCNULTY
fIJim!I
"Somelmw folks rzin't lu-lp but like mv.
Boys' Pep Club C33
Athletic Association C23 C33
Oratorical Association C13 C23 C33
I.i1.BUnN MESLER
4rMes71
"That cheerful grin will let you in
Where the knom-ker is never known."
Yell Leader C23 C33
Boys' Pep Club
Um.to1'ir-al Association C13 C23 C33
GRETCTHEN M. Moonm
"A man may kiss a, lmnny lass,
And nmy be welvonwil buck ugnin."
Carnival Colnniittee C23
Girls' Pep Society
WARD MORRIS
"In south, u. goodly youth.'
ALDEEN NACHTRIEB
"Deen"
"A rosebud set with little wilful thorns
Carnival Committee C23 C33
Girls' Glee Club C23 C33
pm A BBN Bn-ee eeeeee eeeeeee me
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
JOHN F. NAH'LOR
fljayll
"Love will have its hour at las
Boys' Glee Club C35
Chorus "The Mikado"
Basket Ball League Q27 C33
B. LORAIN NORTON
ujvortyu
'Smash 'em, and bust 'em, thnt's my
Basket Ball C21 C35
Cust: t'The Mikado"
President of Class Q39
MH'RTLE M. NOVESKX'
rrMyrt1J
Assistant Joke Editor Sickle
Girls' Pep Society
Camnivttl Committee Q33
LEROY E. O,DELL
ffDeuy7l
t'Mnny may he liked but few much
President of Class KD
Football CU C3D
Basket Ball C23 C33
ANNAH RUTH PATCH
IfAnnl!
"A friend to all."
Treasurer Girls' Pep Society C33
T Sec1'eta,ry Athletic Association C39
' Cast: "The Mikadol' and t'The Littl
t U
custom."
"A noble mind makes women beautiful and envy blind
liked ,"
e Tycoon
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
I
SENIORS
C LEROY PAWLING
"Bn wiser than other people if you can, but
them eo."
Boys' Pep Club C33
Athletic Association C13 C23 C33
Ol'2ltOl'iC3,1 Asociation C13 C23 C33
EATHA MARJORIE PEAVEY
"Necessity does the work of vouragef'
Girls' Glee Club C33
Girls' Pep Society C13 C23 C33
Thespian C23
MARY FRANCES PULLMAN
"Not only good, but good for something.
Girls' Pep Society
Carnival Committee C23 C33
GEORGE B. RAESCH
"Men are meng the best sometimes
Athletic Association C13 C23 C33
Oratorical Association C13 C23 C33
Orchestra
MILTON RAYMOND
llM,iZtH
"He's best at ease who meddleth the least
Secret-ary of Class C23
Campus Editor Sickle
Football Second Team C23
don't tell
forget."
1-
m se w
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
CLIFFORD RICE
rrclipv
"Mens faults do seldom to themselves appear."
MARY E. RICE
nlziceyu
"Most women have small Waists the world throughout
But their desires are a. thousand miles about."
Girls' Yell Leader
Girls' Basket Ball Team C23 C35
Efficiency A CID
R RACHEL .ICSEPHINE RICE
"Age cannot wither nor custom stale her infinite variety.
Debating Team C25 C33
Secretary Girls' Pep Society C33
Junior Play
CARMEL ILEEN RICHARDS
"XVhoever wears :I happy face does service to humanity.
Efficiency A CID
Oratoiical Association C23 C33
Thespian C2D
DCROTHEA V. RISLEY
llsonnyli
"Her soul is an enchanted boat."
g Carnival Committee C33
' Girls' Pep Society
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
LYSLE RETTER
Class of 1924
LUCILE A. ROTHFUSS
UPeg!7
"A heart to resolve, a head to contrive, and
execute."
Vice-president Class C13
Treasurer of Class C25
Senior Play Cast
Louis E. SAWDY
"More sinned against than sinning.
Boys' Pep Club C35
.Athlete Association C21 C33
HELEN F. SCHOLL
HSis!!
Girls' Pep Society CD C25 C33
Athletic Association C13 C23 C31
Oratorical Amociation C11 C2D C37
IJELAND SCHWICHTENBURG
"Swim"
"Alone, I did it."
Class Treasurer C33
Debating Team C35
Questor-Forum C25
"A clear conscience is u sure card."
a hand to
C SENIOR SCICEKLE 1923
SENIORS
Orrrs SEARS
"A man is never too old to learn."
Football 117 C23 C35
ELEANOR M. SEEBURGER
"Never make a defense or apology before you are
, accused."
Ring and Pin Committee C23
Oratorical Association
Chorus "The Mikado"
JOHN A. SEETHALER
nJ0h1b7b'I:6v
"Men of few words are often the best men."
Athletic Association
Captain Senior Class Football Team
Football Reserves C21
IRMA A. SISSON
"Many a shot at random sent,
Finds mark the archer little meant."
Girls' Glee Club
Class Basket Ball Team
Girls' Pep Society
FLORENE SMITH
"Smitty"
"Women's bright story is told in her eyes.
Entered from Britton in Junior Year."
l
m -me e E ' w
e SENIOR SICKLE I923
SENIORS
VERDA J. SPAUR
"A man has a will, but women has her way."
Carnival Committee CU
Girls' Pep Society C17 Q27 K3J
WILLIAM GLENDENE SPELMAN
"Shorty"
"Read not my blemishes in the world's report'
Stage Manager for Senior Play
Treasurer Thespian C25
Debating Team Manager Q31
LUCILLE M. STADLER
Irlluceu llstadll
"Keen sense, common sense, no room for nonsense
Junior Play
Cast: "Hiawatha"
junior Program
LORETTA E. STEIN
uBeuyn
"I was not born for courts or great aHairs.'
Girls' Pep Society CD C23 Q39
Athletic Association C13 C21 C33
Oratorical Amociation C17 C25 133
MILDRED Isis STOUT
"A kindly heart blooms in its ownex-'s eyes."
Entered from Tecumseh High School.
Girls' Pep Society
Athletic Amociation
e-WSENI6R SICTKLE. 1923
SENIORS
GLADYS MARIE SWARTZ
"My dearest need, a iriend's esteem and praise."
Girls' Pep Society
Oratorical Association
Athletic Association
PERCY W. SWARTZ
"On their own merits, modest men are dumb."
J UANITA SWENK
HJackH
"A guardian angel o'er his life presiding
Doubling his pleasures, his cares dividing."
Cast of Opera. C23 C35
Vice-president Oratorical Association C25
Scriptor of Forum C21
MARIE F. TERRY
"Never did anger make good guard for itself."
Girls' Pep Society CD C23 C35
Delphiau Program Committee CID
Senior-Send-OH Committee C23
JOHN S. THOMPSON
"Man is of soul and body, formed for deeds of high
resolve."
Member of A. H. S.
pm, YW, 77- , ,. - W arm
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
I ,
i SENIORS
AUDREY J OSEPHINE ToMs
r1TOmmy::
"We would there were others like her."
Girls' Pep Society ill C25 C35
Oratorical Association ill C23 Q37
Athletic Association CD Q21 C3l
NORMAN TRADA
"Sheik"
"A day, an hour of stolen liberty,
Is worth u whole eternity in bondage."
Basket Ball C25 C35
Football C39
RUTH VAN DOREN
"Charms strike the sight but merit wins the soul."
Girls' Pep Society C15 127 C33
Oratorical Association CU C23 C33
Athletic Association ill C23 Q35
FLOYD W. VOGEL
"I'll be merry and free, I'll be sad for nobody."
Entered from Tecumseh High School in junior
Ye-ar
HELEN WALPER
"Nell"
"Beauty itself doth of itself persuade
The eyes ol men without an orntorf'
Secretary of Class C17
Senior Play
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIORS
MILDRED M. WARNER
"Michey"
"Neither a borrower nor a lender be."
Girls' Pep Society
Athletic Association
Oratorical Association
HARLEY WATSON
"Man always knows his life will shortly cease
Yet madly lives as if he knew it not."
HERBERT P. WATTS
"Man shall ever be the friend of beauty in distress
Assistant Businem Manager Sickle
Football C33
Tra.ck C25
Louise E. WESTGATE
"Billie"
"I'll never bet-ray the heart that loves me."
Typist Senior Sickle
Girls' Pep Society
District Typing Contest C25 C31
MABLE LoUxsE WRAIGHT
"A tender heart, ll loyal mind."
Oratorical Association
Athletic Association
i
m e ew e m eee-W w
e SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
SENIORS
RUBY M. WRIGHT
"Fritz"
"Near acquaintance doth banish any fear."
Girls' Glee Club 123 C35
Girls' Pep Society f3D
Class Program CU
VVESLEY F. E. VVILLETT
flwesii
"Mun is a creature of im wilful head,
And is hardly driven, but easily led."
Delphian CU
Orchestra CID 123 C31
MYRTLE VIOLET YOUNG
"I think that life is not too long.
For now and then a little song."
Glee Club C25
Efficiency A CD
Girls' Pep Society
VICTOR BATES
Class of 1924
MYRON BAILEY
Entered from Clayton High School in Senior Year
am IFJ
e SENIOR SICKLE 1923
i
i
E
I
I
z
I
"Love and a, red nose can
President Boys' Pep Club
....,.gn31...,..
SENIORS
EDWARD ELKINGTON
'n be ma
rw a l-l sa . ww
'Che SENIOR SICKLE I923
Class Day Program
GWENWHE
METHODIST E.PlSCOPAl.. CHURCH
WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 6, I923
-'FEIS'
'tExalbaltion" lCocrncJ--- .... High School Orchestra
Invocation ........... ..... R ev. Montgomery
Salutatory ..... ..... R osalind Davis
Class History .... .... W lilliam Jowett
Vocal Solo ..... ..... A nnah Patch
Prophecy .... .... B cryl Haiyford
Class Poem .... .... R achcl Rico
Piano Solo ..... ..... L orain Hess
Oration .... .... Il Iaynard Kay
Giftatory .... ................. E lmir Baldwin
Quartettye .... ..... A nnah Patch, Juanita Swank,
Francis Hellems, Lorain Norton
Presentation of the Gavel ................... Lorain Norton
Acc-eptunc-e of the Gavel ..... ..... C laire Connin
V aledivtory ........ --- .... Ruth Hostotler
Benedic-tion .... ........... R ev, Miller
March ..... .... H igh School Urchestra
The SENIOR SICKLE l923
Commencement Program
GIVEN AT 'IHE
CROSWELL THEATER
THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 7, I9Z3
AT EIGHT O'CLOCK
---'gsumv
'Zampan Overture lHeroldj .... .... H igh School Orchestra
Invocation .................... ..... R ev. T. J. Hopkins
"Song of the Vikings" llfaningl .... - .... Boys' Glee Club
Introduction of Speaker ....e... .... P rincipal E. J. Reed
Address ............... .... P rof. C. O. Davis
Vocal Solo-Selected ..... ............. J uanita Swank
Presentation of Diplomas ....... Superintendent C. H. Griffey
"The Ye:1r's At the Spring" lBeachj ........ Girls' Glee Club
Awarding of Adrian College Scliolurship
President H. L. Feeman
Benedietion .... ..... R ev. B. Z. Stambaugh
"Frat" lliarthl .... .... H nigh School Orchestra
me v -g+.--.em ----- --- --an -new
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
SALUTATORY
ROSALIND E. Davis
three years ago the class of 1923 chose for its motto 'fThe end
crowns the work," Class Day, which is always one of the very im-
! portant days that crowns the end of a high school course, seemed
very far in the distant future, but we looked forward to it as one
of the glad days of our lives. As we look back it seems but yesterday
and instead of its being wholly a glad day we come before you to-
night with a feeling also of sadness and a greater realization of the fact that
after all, life is made up of just such experiences.
Adrian High School has meant much to us and will mean more as we come
to realize better just how important a factor it has been in the molding of our
lives. For those of us who shall attend higher institutions of learning, our
Alma Mater has been a place of preparation. To those of us who shall enter
industrial and commercial work, it has afforded excellent training. In fact, each
one of us i.s better prepared to enter his own field of endeavor and as we begin
our journey into the world, we feel that our training in Adrian High School
has enabled us to realize better the responsibilities we shall owe to our com-
munity and to our nation, and which, as the citizens of tomorrow, we shall soon
be called upon to assume.
Parents and friends of the class of 1923, to you We owe much for the
privileges we have had these past three years. Through your efforts we have
been able to enjoy a personal contact with teachers of the highest qualifications
and to them we are most grateful for their kindly interest in us and their desire
to help us at all times-even when we little deserved such effort on their part.
Through your sympathy and interest we have been encouraged to strive harder
to attain the goal for which we were aiming.
Your presence here tonight bespeaks a further interest in us and we trust
that as those of our number who appear before you depict to you some of the
achievements of these past three years and prophesy a fitting future for the
members of our class, you will not only be entertained but you will feel that
your efforts in our behalf have not been in va.in. We, the class of 1923, extend
to you a most cordial welcome to our Class Day exercises.
can -e as as V -M g 'rch
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
CLASS HISTORY
WILLIAM JEWETT
NE bright day in September, 1920, Old Adrian High School received
within its walls new blood, one hundred fifty strong, the largest class
that had ever made the journey from Junior High School up to th it
time. It was the class of 1923. We have just cause to remember well
that day in September, for it marked the beginning of our career in
4 W' 43 Senior High School. We had had many victories and honors to our
credit while in Junior High, and when the staid Seniors and the puffed-up Juniors
witnessed our arrival that morning, they trembled, for they realized that we were
destined to win even greater honors and victories than they, before we should
pass forth from those Halls of Education. We chose as our president Leroy
O'dell, one whom we knew would lead us safely over the rocky road of the
Frosh, and as our colors we selected gold and purple, the purple to symbolize
our power to be. As our motto we chose, "The end crowns the work," and with
this in view, we started out to conquer. For our Junior year we selected as our
pilot Charles Church, the present editor-in-chief of the Senior Sickle. Under his
regime we gave one of the best and most elaborate Senior Send-offs in the his-
tory of the school.
In dramatic ability our members were the shining lights of the student
body. A large percent-age of the principals in "The Little Tycoon," of 1922,
and "The Mikado" of 1923, were from our class, and the Senior Play this year
"The Importance of Being Earnest," by Oscar Wilde, was certainly worthy of
much praise. A member of our class, Maynard Kay, won the local oratorical
cont:-st and took second place in the sub-district contest. Our class programs
were considered the best that have been put on in years. We excelled in athletics,
having had a good representation on the football and basketball teams for the
last three years. It is worthy of notice that this year four of the first five men
on the basketball team were '23 men. In the class games, we have had a goodly
number of victories to our credit. All the cheer leaders chosen in the last three
years were members of our class. Look at our cla.ss publication, the Senior
Sickle, the mirror in which our accomplishments are reflected, and judge for
yourselves of the power and merit we have achieved.
Under the able leadership of Lorain Norton, We have finally attained the
great end for which we have long been laboring. We are now inclined to believe
that we understand fully the meaning of our motto, but we shall learn in the
years to come its fuller meaning. The work we have striven to do and the
character we have been forming in our school days will be tested as we go our
appointed ways, and we shall realize the greater truth of our well chosen motto,
"The end crowns the Work."
ma. se. -rw
'Che SENIOR SICKLE l923
CLASS PROPI-IECY
BERYL HAH'FORD
yr: 'ya INCE my graduation in 1923, over twenty years ago, it has been
a great consolation to me to be able to keep in touch, from time to
time with my classmates by means of the wonderful and scientific
instrument, the radio.
Just last night I tuned in on New York and heard the Lorain Hess
fl SF musical comedy, t'Ohl Betty Oh!" .lane Carleton is starring. Her songs
and dances were greeted with much applause. The chorus is made up of many of
the class of 1923, consisting of Verneita Halstead, Goldie Emery, Blanche
Fetzer, Carmel Richards, Marie Foster, Grace Krout, Maybelle Bradish and
Violet Young. The fun makers, Vern Hallenbeck, Floyd Vogel and Clyde
Davis caused continual laughter. Under the very capable direction of Glen-
dene Spelman, the orchestra with Messrs. Raesch, Rice, Swartz, Bailey, Sawdy,
Corbett and Bird is one of the main features of this opera.
Not long ago I heard that famous speech of Maynard Kay, senator, which
was said to have changed the entire vote of the senate.
I was always interested in the returns from the county elections. Ray-
mond Bachman was elected to Marshal. Norman Trada was made chairman of
all Tag Days. Wayne Bovee is the present Mayor and James McNulty, Earl
Gordon, John Naylor, Ward Morris, Leroy Pawling, and Harry Burton are the
new council.
Charles Church is the editor of that weekly paper, "Criticisms on Flappers,"
a favorite of all bachelors. He does a great deal of advertising for the various
business places, such as-
"Go to Doris Blair and Dorthicl Footc's Beauty Parlor. Lasting Youth
While You Wait. Make appointments with Virginia Lewis, business manager."
"Buy your flowers at Rachel Rice's clever little floral shop, 'Rose Restf
Roses are her specialty."
"Ladies' Latest Lingerie, designed by Elmir Baldwin, at Amelia Frank's
'Fashion Emporium' Modeling done by Ella Ayres, Mabel Wraight and Hor-
tense Baumgartnerf'
"Hear Margaret Hellem's silent reading at the library every Tuesday and
Friday, under the auspices of the Literary Club of which Gretchen Moore is
president." Cccasionally the program is varied by a tenor solo by Frances Hellems.
"Visit T. Edward Elkington's 'Comfortless Shoe Parlor,' Main Street,
Sylvania." T. Edward is also Mayor, Treasurer and Council of that city.
"Heart Throbs" is another literary production of one of our class. This
magazine is edited bv Helen Brodbeck and is attracting much attention. Sig-
mv sees we e-- A A as me
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
nificant cartoons are furnished by Lewis Brewer. Gladys Hoffman is the very
capable business manager, while the position of proof-reader is ably filled by
Eleanor Seeburger. The three most popular contributors appear to be Dorothea
Ehinger, Leslie Ford and John Seethaler. 1
The last I heard, Keith's Vaudeville had many of our members. The
Hadden Sisters had a clever act, "Eternal Youth"g Lyman Hendrickson sur-
passed Karyl Norman, as a lady impersonatorg Harley Watson, that renowned
singer, was the headliner. The Comedian, Lela.nd Schwichtenberg, was so
funny that he laughed at his own jokes. One of the most popular numbers
on the program was an operetta in one act, featuring Lucile Koehn, Loretta
Stein, Helen Scholl, Margaret McIntyre, Donald Knox, Clare Ka.fer, and James
McElroy.
It was reported that Leroy O'dell has gone on a farm out west and is hoping
soon to get more land. QMoreland.J
Kenneth Drew is a famous naturalist. He has a large collection of butter-
fiies and moths, but devotes most of his time to the study of 'tMillers."
Herbert Watts has been studying Chemistry for some time and is now try-
ing to extract the raisins from the Raisin River.
There are two great inventors from our class. Harvey Green invented
a smokeless pipe, and Milton Raymond invented holeproof hairnets.
That very popular book, "Sleep, Slumber and Snooze," was written by
Wesley Willett. It is especially enjoyed by his classmates as they realize he
gathered the material for this book in his high school days.
Esther Helma is leader of the choir at Birdsall, but Ruby Wright insists
on singing all the solos. Gladys Gillies, Audrey Toms, Marie Hyder, Harley
Dennis and Fred Dowling are also in the choir.
John Thompson has discovered a mistake in "Hamlet', and is now abroad
trying to induce some of Shakespeareis descendants to correct it.
Research work is being done in Tecumseh by Lilburn Mesler and his as-
sistants, Wayne Clark, John Bryant, and Clifford Armistead. They are hoping
to find the riches of some Indian chief.
Helen Walper is traveling in California searching for the dear ones lost in
the late war, especially "Germans"
Berthabell Ackley is a missionary at Wild Water Beach, Devils Lake.
As the name signifies, she has much to work against. Emma Boyd, Gladys
Swartz and Mildred Stout are her assistants.
The parson of the New Methodist Church is Kenneth Betz.
Annah Patch is winning her way into the hearts of the American people in
the role of Carmen, in that famous opera.
A new private school has been opened by Ruth Hostetler, Rosalind Davis,
Ruth Van Doren and Pauline Davis. It islsaid that the best Latin course
offered in any school, is given there.
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
Eva Ash has won fame with her elocutionary ability in the role of "Little
Eva." It is said that no one ever died a more effective death.
A few of the boys, William Gibbs, Roy Daniels, Norman McKenzie and
Arthur Carnahan, have bought a large farm in partnership and are making
a fortune by scientific farming.
Hollywood has many of 1923's class. Lucille Rothfuss is rivaling Gloria
Swanson. Bill Jewett is the new sheik. The part of the powerful Katrinka
is played by Mary Pullman. Florene Smith, Verda Spaur, Mary Rice and
Lucille Stadler are with the Mack Sennett bathing beauties.
Many have won honors. Arlie Dobbins, Louise Westgate and Marie Terry
all won prizes for speed records in typewriting.
Helen Hewes and Myrtle Novesky are champion golfers.
Dorothea Risley and Mildred Warner both succeeded in breaking the
world's endurance dance record.
Every class must have some tragedies, but our class has only three.
Aldeen Nachtrieb is pining her life away, unmarried, because she does not
know which of two to choose.
Archer Bennett is a traveling salesman for electric fans in Alaska.
Leland Hubbard is selling woolen goods in Cuba.
Juanita Swenk and Lorain Norton were married but soon parted, as Lorain
never reached home in time for meals.
Irma Sisson and Etha Peavey are confirmed old maids. They were dis-
appointed in love in their high school days and have never recovered.
Now I am content. My radio has served me well, for I have learned some-
thing of everv member of the class. Each has been so successful in his ovim
work and has upheld the ideals of "Old Adrian High" so loyally that I am proud
just to have been a member of that talented class of 1923.
- 6710
4
SENIOR SICKLE.
I 9
23
CLASS POEM
ASPIRATIONS
We shall shed no idle tears
As we stand
Facing all the coming years,
For 'tis grand
Just to feel this task is done,
Just to know this victory's won,
And another's now at hand-
Yes, 'tis grand.
We have studied long together
As a class.
We have seen some stormy weather,
Let that pass.
Stifle each regretful sigh,
For our morning sun mounts high,
And the dew is off the grass.
Yes, that's past.
The day of life comes on apace.
Let it come.
Fill it full of strength and grace,
Make things hum.
Show your manhood in the fight,
When others need some truth and light,
Let your lips be never dumb-
Make things hum.
There's much of work for us to do
So be strong.
Keep the finished task in view,
Short or long.
Have lots of courage, for 'tis fun,
Have conviction, see it done,
Then you'll sing a merry song-
So, be strong.
If, in what you do, you fail, .
Never mind.
Though other baser spirits quail,
Seek and find.
Make the work you call your own
Strong enough to stand alone.
Thatls the nobler, grander kind-
Seek and find.
Classmates dear, we all can Win,
So be glad.
We can conquer hosts of sing
They are bad.
With high ideals and purpose true,
Trust in God and hope in view,
Victory will be surely had-
So, be glad! -Rachel Rice
cw -A -A as aw
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
USURPERS OF OUR GOVERNMENT
MAX'NARD KAY
" 5 ' W' WONDER how many of you know that there is, within this nation, a
secret organization, so powerful that in some of our Southern states,
it has utterly caused the collapse of constitutional government? How
many of you know that it is spreading its influence to the Northern,
Eastern and Western States? It takes the law into its own hands,
and by whippings, scandals, tar and feather parties, claims that its
aim is to teach and inculcate the purest ideals of American citizenship.
Usurpers of our government-I am speaking of the Ku Klux Klan. This
present Ku Klux Klan should not be confused with the old, which disbanded
when its purpose had been served, namely, to protect the Southern white man
from possible domination by the negro, and t-o protect the negro from the designs
of unscrupulous Northern politicians, following the Civil War, when a dis-
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organized system of justice in the South, made such an organization as the old
Ku Klux Klan necessary, to a certain extent. The new order has appropriated
without leave the name and disguises of the old, without appropriating its
aim or its ideals. In its own phrase the new Ku Klux Klan is the only Gentile,
White, Protestant, American-born organization in the world because it excludes
from its membership Jews, Negroes, Catholics and foreigners. It makes a
special effort to enroll in its membership, sheriffs, mayors, governors and other
public officials. This really is worth serious consideration because of the fact
that the oath of the Klan makes obedience to its orders obligatory, with no
guaranty that they will not be unwise or un-American. Of course none of the
orders will be un-American, because the Ku Klux Klan is the only American-
horn organization in the world.
But when men and women are beaten, tarred and feathered, when girls
are ordered out of their homes and threatened with being ta.rred and feathered
if they do not go, when homes are broken up by the husbands being murdered
without any kind of trial whatever: when the services of a church are stopped
by hooded figures marching up the aisle, and requesting the minister to ask
the congregation to pray fo-r the Ku Klux Klan, because it is so many thousand
strong, when the peacefulness of a community is shattered by neighbor being
arrayed against neighbor, brother against brother and in some cases father
against son, do they mean to say that their aim is to teach and inculcate the
highest ideals of American citizenship?
Reviving at a time when the Commission on Race Relationship is building
up a better understanding and co-operation between the progressive, self-
respecting negroes, and the white people of the South, the Ku Klux Klan, is
7
Wil IF'-Y
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
tearing down all that has been accomplished by this p-art of our government,
because even the name Ku Klux Klan strikes terror to the heart of the super-
stitious negro.
The very disguise that it uses is a menace to law and order. It is true that
there are, among various races, nationalities and religions, secret fraternities,
that have robes and regalias, secret meetings, pass-words and so forth, to which
there is no objection. But there is no place in America for such an organization
as the present Ku Klux Klan, with its secret membership, outdoor activity in
hoods, mysterious orders and warnings. Revolutionists, anarchists and crim-
inal bands find it necessary and convenient to work secretly and in disguise,
because they are at war with most of society. American patriotism does not
have to operate secretly or in disguise, because American society has the power
of public opinion and the ballot to make known and to carry into effect its
wishes. If, despite these mighty powers, it has to work in secret, then surely
it is a failure.
This is why Governor Parker of Louisiana went to Washington and laid
the Ku Klux Klan situation before the President. This is why there have been
in Morehouse County, Louisiana, recently, state troops, federal detectives and
the Attorney-general of the State, investigating some of the crimes committed
by hooded bands in the community during the past few months, one of which
was the outrageous murder last August of two men, one a World War veteran
wi'th an honorable record. Those of you who have been reading the papers
already know that this investigation has been very successful, especially with
the case of the murder of these two men.
Even if members of the Ku Klux Klan did not commit all of these crimes,
the organization is indirectly responsible, because these outrages were not
committed a few years ago, before the Klan sprang up. It has promoted the
activity of persons working secretly and in disguise.
A short time ago, two large crosses, wrapped with oil-soaked burlap. were
burned in the night at Fostoria, Ohio, causing much excitement. One of these
is known to have been burned by the Ku Klux Klan. And only last month, the
Superintendent of Schools at Springfield, Ohio, admitted that he was a member
of this organization. In this same city the police court has held a hearing of
the alleged leader of the Klan, there, charged with inciting to riot. Fellow
students, cannot you see what the situation in this country i.s coming to if the
Ku Klux Klan is permitted to go on?
Hundreds of people look upon this organization with its grand dragons,
wizards, cyclops and so on, as a huge joke-but it is not a huge joke and it
must be stamped out now.
That this order is very well organized, is shown by the fact that one of
its members in Texas, was elected last year, to the United States Senate. There
vw- e -rw
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
were six Democratic candidates running in the primaries-three were Klansmen.
Just before the primary election, the Klan held a primary of its own and elim-
inated two of the Klan candidates, so that the other would have the backing
of the entire organization in the state. The dissatisfied members of the
Democratic party united with the Republican party and put up a candidate, but
the Ku Klux candidate, having 120,000 votes to start with, was elected.
In Oregon, the Ku Klux Klan is in the Republican party. Here, there is
no negro problem, but religion and anti-alien questions have served its purpose.
We have no objection to the Ku Klux Klan having meetings in halls or in
the woods at night and surrounding them with as much secrecy and mystery
as it wants to but, fellow students and friends, the Ku Klux Klan as it is today
must go. Masked men should not be allowed to hold public meetings, parade.
through the streets, address the public from platforms, harm or threaten to harm
any man or woman, in the daylight, or in the dark. This organization as it is,
must not be allowed to continue in this country. There are plenty of us who
are 100 per cent for America and by getting together, we can suppress and
finally extinguish this order, which is menacing our government. I plead with
you, my friends, to help bring about, through concerted action, the abolishment
of the Ku Klux Klan in its present form, forever.
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The SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
GIFTATORY
ELMIR BALDWIN
many years it has been the custom to hand down to the Junior
Class some of the characteristics of the Seniors, as a goal for which
3 they may strive. This year, because we are much brighter and more
learned than our predecessors, it was decided that a Giftatory would
be appropriate, a Giftatory for the benefit of the Senior Class in
recognition of the outstanding characteristics of a few of our number.
At great expense these gifts were collected from all parts of the world. A
few are priceless antiques.
Honors for the last year were evenly matched between Harley Watson and
Leroy O'dell for the Gorgeatorian. The Faculty, after grave deliberation, gave
Leroy O"dell the Gorgeatorian and Harley Watson the Eatatorian. Although
not quite as important as the Gorgeatorian, the Eatatorian is still a high honor.
To Floyd Vogel goes this 21 jewel f'Big Ben." It is guaranteed to ring in-
termittently for fifteen minutes and can be stopped only by completely destroy-
ing it. I hope it will enable him to get up on time in the future.
This beautiful hand Wrought comb, direct from King Tut's tomb, I present
to Miss Jane Carleton.
Since the beginning of school history an easy way to get through school has
been sought. Many plans were tried but none were successful. At last the per-
fect way was found. One of our brightest classmates originated this idea, and I
am sure you will all agree that he takes this prize without question. He found
that the best way was to Walk in one door and out the other. Mr. Elkington,
please step forward.
For Beryl Hayford, this baby vamp. The dress is made from the hides of
several local monkeys.
I present to Otto Sears this beautiful mustache set, made. especially for the
German royal family before Kaisers went out of style. They were bought
at great expense, the total cost being nearly two million marks.
Everybody knows Lucile Koehn, so nobody will wonder why she gets this
little man-doll.
Rachel Rice has expressed a great liking for Rose. Here is one to remem-
ber him by.
I have here a car, which, though a rarity in these parts, is not unknown
to a. number of you. It is seen on the highways in all forms. This species is
generally seen in North America. They originated a few miles from the heart
of Detroit. It seems most fitting that this one should be placed in the hands of
one qualified for its acceptance, Milton Raymond.
cw A :rw
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
This yardstick will be very useful to Lewis Brewer to keep track of his
rapid growth.
As we all know, Eva Ash is so quiet and retiring that her voice is rarely
heard in our midst. We take pity on her dire plight and give her this megaphone,
so that she may be heard in the future.
I sincerely hope that Lorain Norton will have his biography in this book
some day: "The Lives of Our Presidents."
The book, 'tHow to Improve the Mind in Spare Momentsfu' is of great value
to young gentlemen who have a desire for higher things. It should be a mighty
factor in the success of Lyman Hendrickson.
We donate to William Jewett a cake of W0odbury's Facial Soap, "to re-
duce conspicuous nose pores."
Aldeen Nachtrieb needs this pamphlet, "How to lose five pounds a week."
For Wesley Willett, the only "A" he received in his life.
Here is a book which Charles Church should thoroughly enjoy, the latest
edition of the "Senior Sickle."
To keep Archer Bennett's curlv locks in order, we give a jar of "Stacomb."
And to the last, but by far not the least, I give this little token of gratitude
by which the Senior Class wishes to express in part its heartfelt thanks for the
labors of their yell leader, Lilburn Mesler. He has led us for several years, and
has made od Adrian High School shake on its foundations at every pep meeting.
I hope this baby cab will be of service to him, and may he lead many yells in
the future.
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
VALEDJ CTORY
RUTH osTE'rLER
A: 1 A the life of everyone there are certain times and events which mark
the climax of great accomplishments and achievements. We, the
graduates of Adrian High School of the Class of 1923, are now ap-
proaching the culminating point of all our foregoing school life.
.Q It was twelve or more years ago when we started on our journey
through school. We were just little children then and our brains were
unmarked by the dents of knowledge. How swiftly and with what incredible speed
those years swept by! On the way some dropped from our ranks, seeking pursuits
in the industrial world. A few of the original number passed on to the "un-
discovered country from whose bourne no traveller returns." Even though these
are not present in person tonight, the memory of them abides with us all.
To some of us, graduation signifies the termination of all school training,
to others it means only a critical change in our school lives. While we were
in school we were bound together by a common interest and relationship. From
now on, each of us will seek a different occupation, some will seek employment
in the cities, some will turn to the task of tilling the soil, while others will attend
various schools and colleges where they can further their education. Each one
of us cannot be a leader, in the general sense of the word, but in his own small
way each may rise to greatness for, ttthere is nothing so kingly as kindness and
nothing so royal as truth."
Our class has always taken special interest in a.ll school activities. Among
our number are athletes who have starred on the football field or on the basket-
ball floor. There are forceful debaters and orators and gifted musicians. These
talented persons did not use their abilities to gain personal honor or glory
but they strove with all their power to give good old Adrian High a boost.
During the three years we spent in High School we acquired a certain
amount of valuable knowledge and formed certain habits which will remain
with us throughout the rest of our lives for "habit is the deepest law of nature."
But the majority of habits acquired in High School are due to the healthy
environment caused by the noble example set by you, our worthy principal and
you, the members of the faculty. To you we are indebted for the superior
training we received during our school life. We, the graduates of Adrian High
School, of 1923, extend to you, the members of the faculty, and you our beloved
principal, our heart-felt gratitude and esteem. To you also, the members of
the Board of Education whose good judgment and indefatigable interest have
made Adrian High School such a worthy institution, we extend our sincere
appreciation. But for you, our dear parents, who have piloted us through many
a difficulty and supplied the means by which we were able to attend Adrian
High, we reserve the warmest spots in our hearts.
The time for separating, dear class mates, is swiftly approaching. We
graduate from High School with great regret because we now realize that we
can never return as students to that place where we passed so many joyous
times. It is a cause of sorrow because we must depart from our teachers and
friends and go forth to seek new acquaintances and form new friendships. But
it is an occasion for joy also because we have now reached the goal toward
which we have been aiming and because we have made certain notable achieve-
ments. As we depart from High School and separate from our classmates, let
us not make it a lasting separation, and bid f'farewell," but until we have
the pleasure of meeting again, let us just use as our parting salutation that
simple word, "Good-bye."
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JUNIOR C
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President .....
Vice-President
Secretary .....
Treasurer .....
M arshal ....
Aldrich, Beulah
Atkin, Leland
Avis, David
Barnum, Catherine
Barrett, James
Bishop, Arloine
Bournes, Philemon
Bovee, Max
Bovee, Seton
Bradish, Leigh
Bringman, Ronald
Brock, Lillian
Brown, Ronald
Burkert, Helen
Burton, Elwyn
Campbell, Lawrence
Carlin, Anna
Carson, Leora
Childs. Edmund
Cole, Helen
Connin, Claire
Cox. Lula
Daniels, Kenneth
Daniels. Milford
Davis, Hartwin
DeFoe, Elizabeth
Dunsmore. Mary
Dusseau, Charles
Demaree, Marion
Deming, Helen
Derby, Iris
Ehrbright, Lester
Elliott. Alice
Fairbanks. Dorothy
Feeman. Margaret
Fisher, Lillian
Ford, Cleo
Forsman, Alice
Gallaway. Eva
Gibson, George
Gobba. Archie
Gira, Clement
JUNIOR CLASS
CLARE CONNIN
Greene, George
Groth, Carrie
Guest, George
Hagerman, Howard
Hellems. Fern
Hess, Wanda
Hill, Florence
Hoisington, Clarke
Howe, Esther
Huebner, Viola
Hunt, Mary
Johnson, Evelyn
Jones, Paul
Kiersey, Harold
Knepper. Mildred
Kuney, Kathryn
Kuney, Natalie
Lash, Maurice
Lawson, Wellington
LefTerts, Orville
Lemke. Esther
Libs, Kenneth
Little, DeMotte
Lloyd, Donald
Loveland. Russell
Mack. Harold
Marshall. Marion
Metler, Velbert
Michiner. John
Miller, Francis
Miller, Harley
Miller, Isabel
Miller, Roland
lwobbs. Marv
Milner, Harold
Montaeue, Doris
Moreland. Thelma
Morse, Jennings
Nixon, Thomas
Olmstead. Wayne
Osborne, Noel
Patterson. Zeddie
------ CLARE CoNN1N
----DoaofrHY PRANGE
------HEI,EN DEMING
------- THOMAS N1xoN
LESTER EHRBRIGHT
Peters, Clifford
Peterson, Alex
Prange, Dorothy
Prange, Harry
Rainey, Marjorie
Reed, Claris
Retter, Lysle
Roberts, Beatrice
Roberts, Frances
Rose, Henry
Rosentreter, Florine
Ryder, Esther
Schaible, Katherine
Schoen, Wilfred
Scholzen, Caroline
Schultz, Mary
Schwichtenberg, Doris
Sears, Kenneth
Shove, Charlotte
Shultz, Eleanor
Shultz, Ruth
Slayton, Zulah
Smith, Henry
Snedeker, Lavern
Stearns, Marion
Stevenson, Leland
Swift, Rachel
Symonds, Keith
Tidswell, Hobart
Tobias, Florence
Tubbs, Carl
VanDusen, Kenneth
VanMarter, Gladys
VanOrder, Theodore
Vogel, Cletus
Ward, William
Weaver, Helen
Willett, Beatrice
Willis, Kathryn
Witt, Cecelia
Wotring, Helen
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
JUNIOR CLASS HISTORY
FRANCIS GUYMAN
Efz R two years, we, the members of the illustrious Junior Class, have
WM carried on successfully the work and pleasures of our High School
j life. We set the ball rolling by entering into athletics with a vim,
contributing fine material in men who became energetic fighters for
old A. H. S., in football, basketball and track. Not only the
fellows, but the girls helped make our brilliant athletic history a fact.
Not alone did we excel in athletics, but like our old Roman ancestors,
could apply ourselves to our studies as well. Speaking of Romans, our class
was the first to form as many as four classes in Caesar and out of that number,
twenty-one have elected the advanced studies of Cicero and Virgil.
Among the pleasures enjoyed by some of the Hsong birds" of our class were
the two musical productions, "The Little Tycoon" and the 'fMikado" in which
a number of them figured.
So brilliant and satisfying has been our career, that we would earnestly
advise the incoming classes to follow closely in our footsteps, for we assure them
that by so doing they will attain great heights of glory and everlasting fame.
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Trekrub, Amleht
Retueprac, Edualc
Rrac, Trauts
Esahc, Ecnerolf
Esahc, Elicul
Fschc, Eriuqs
Yensehc, Semaj
Hcruhc, Trebor
Krale, Semaj
Kralc, Derfiniw
Htabloc, Ecila.
Snilloc, Knarf
Ardnoc, Thims
Yelooc, Amlez
Xoc, Ssetnuoc
Noswad, Atsev
Elbied, Naillil
Yespmed, Ya.r
Yewed, Enyaw
Nosnikcid, Sydalg
Suinid, Siwel
Ekard, Dnylasor
Selrae, Naiviv
SSALC NAMHSERF
Rexfusaert, ....
TNEDISERP .....
Yraterces ........
Tnediserp-Eciv ....
Lahsram .......
Retsar, Ecinreb
Regnlhe, Erodoeht,
Thgirbrhe, Eel
Nosreme, Dlareg
Elgne, Nreva.l
Resislive, Naillil
Reztef, Leirum
Yrolf, Ynothna
Rendrag, Aloc
Rensag, Dlorah
Trahpeg, Ave
Trahpeg, Ttereve
Nosbig, Nacnud
Arig, Drawde
Nodrog, Arev
N oltrog, Retsel
Leurg, Htennek
Naniug, Yhtforod
Namyug, Sicnarf
Notgnirrah, Nivlem
Sirrah, Htebazile
Seweh, Drahcir
Eniltfih, Esiuol
Ttoniddoh, Nelle
Ttoniddoh, Essej
Yawolloh, DerHiw
Ztloh, Atte
Ztloh, Derf
Dooh, Noel
Dra.woh, Rialc
Llewoh, Neleh
Llewoh, C. J.
Sehguh, Nerraw
Snehctuh, Enyaw
Noskcaj, Trebla
Noskcaj, Terbor
Noskcaj, Dleifniw
Repsaj, Eilsel
Sniknej, Nyleve
Na,droj, Dyolf
Nadroj, Eilsel
Namdik, Ecila.
Hguaphsik, Enidlareg
Thgink, Ecila
Thgink, Llessur
Zlok, Trebla
Renal, Lezah
Eel, Erialc
Siwel, Elrojram
Rekcabmil, Dralliw
N-locnil, Neleh
Rehtul, Drahcir
BmocCm, Neleh
14l1'ytniCm, Llorun
Lia,hpCm, Nodrog
LiahpCm, Neleh
TreborCm, Oelc
Smai1liwCm, Sydalg
Nagillim, Siuol
Llihctim, Anna
Subom., Trebor
Yremogtnoru, Teirrah
Ratsgninrom, Ahtrod
Esrom, Elicul
Nosnum, Neleh-Yram
Yhprum, Ecila
Sreym, Semaj
Hmm, Enerol
Gnuleben, Dnomyar
Lessen, Ainevol
Noxin, Derdlim
Egdirtrap, Haluz
Nosrettap, Ateen
Keep, Erialc
Snikrep, Derdlim
Drofkcip, Remoh
Ttalp, Amleht
Rettop, Nnelg
Egnarp, Tsenre
Hplodnar, Noiram
Dvnomyar, Derdlirn
Kcer, Hpesoj
Sumer, Arnoel
Nosdrahcir, Nref
Strebor, Dlareg
Kciror, Ecila
Retlas, Evilo
Egavas, Lezah
Elbiahcs, Retlaw
Rerahcs, Namron
Ztluhcs, Dlorah
Ztluhcs, Trebor
-----Ssn-nw, EDURTREG
----HcRUHc, TREBOR
, .... BMOCCM, N-ELEH
-----NAN1Uo, Yrnonon
----S'rnEnoR, DLAREG
Bawhcs, Luap
Ztrawhcs, Retsehc
Relahtees, Tnecniv
Tlobdahs, Rotciv
Knahs, Htebazile
Namrehs, Namron
Rebohs, Allibys
Yawallis, Derdlim
Nossis, Secnarf
Htims, Teragram
Htims, Ainigriv
Elwos, Eitt-ah
Ehnats, Aralc
Krats, Enilorac
Rehtaewkrats, Lebam
Hiets, Avi
Niets, Retsehc
Nettets, Atinauj
Sremmus, Ecneralc
Kciws, Aer
Ellibret, Elicul
Nospmoht, Ehcualb
Nospmoht, Worra,d
Yelgnit, Aroled
Smot, Derdlim
Rekcut, Ysnap
Elttut, Sacrod
Hcirlu, Drawde
NerodNa,v, Elicul
Edaw, Ecila.
Renraw, Krik
Regnisiew, Retlaw
Ssiew, Edurtreg
Etagtsew, Hplar
Eebrehtew, Dlora,h
Mahkciw, Derdlim
Smailliw, Yram
Gniw, Ecila,-Yram
Eflow, Eirojram
Doow, Ave
Doow, Teragram
Flurdoow, Knarf
Ruttuey, Lebam
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY
HARRIET MONTGOMERY
HEN we made our debut in the Senior High School, September 1922,
we felt that after successfully surviving nine years of strenuous
'Q FT
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5 education, we might be reasonably sure that we knew everything
iffy worth knowing. However, such was not the case as we soon found
E' outg for bv the aid of the faculty we were doomed to learn that there
J Y were many things we knew nothing about and others about which
we had only a hazy idea.
We were placed above even the Juniors and Seniors-in the balcony.
However we leave others to decide wherein our superiority lies.
We have been well represented in athletics. Twenty of our boys went out
for foot-ball last fall. Nine Freshmen are in the Orchestrag eighteen in the
Girls' Clee Club and twelve in the Boys' Glee Club. Our girls took an active
part in the Carnival given bv the Girls' Pep Society. Last but not least, Chester
Stein, one of our classmates, won out in declamation at the sub-district contest
at Hudson this year.
Ours has been a history of mental struggles. We have wrestled with un-
known quantities in Algebra. Some of us have even pursued the Immortal
Caesar. Manv of us have swallowed large doses of Webster's Dictionary and
live to tell the story. On the whole it has been a decided victory for us even if
some of our number have been worsted in the struggle.
We chose as our class colors, green and white. By means of these colors
we shall keep our youth even when we become aged Seniors.
They say that Freshmen do not count for much. We regret that we have
not made ourselves count for more. However we hope to do better in the future.
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
SENIOR PLAY
g': Aga HE Class of 1923 presented, as has been the custom for some years,
1 the annual Senior Play in the High School Auditorium on the evenings
of February 22 and 23, 1923. The play, "The Importance of Being
Earnest," by Oscar Wilde, was under the direction of Miss Edna
Hedrick. This play, which is in Wiides usually charming vein,
I N i Lx derives its chief comedy interest from the play upon the word earnest.
Algernon Moncrief was a young Englishman who was greatly hampered by
an aunt, who wanted him to take a leading place in society. He had a fictitious
friend Bunberry, an invalid. The friend furnished Algernon with many excuses
for avoiding social engagements arranged for him by his aunt. John Worthing
was another ba.chelor who lived on a country estate and covered his escapades
by telling hi.s young ward, Cecily Cardew, that he had a brother Ernest in the
city, who was always getting into trouble. In the city, John Worthing was
known as Ernest Worthing and he was paying court to Gwcndolen Fairfax,
who said she loved him just because Ernest was his name. Lady Bracknell was
the mother of Gwendolen and sought social position for her daughter and insisted
she should marry a man who was socially eligible.
The play opens in Algernonls flat. He is being visited by John Worthing
and is expecting a visit from his aunt and Gwendolen. While there, Worthing
has the chance to propose to Gwendolen and is accepted. Lady Bracknell how-
ever, refuses, as Worthing cannot give an account of his family.
The Second and Third acts are laid in the garden of Worthing's country
estate. Algernon comes there posing a.s the brother Ernest, meets Cecily and
falls in love. Lady Bracknell and Gwendolen come there also. Lady Brack-
nell explains she is looking for her nephew.
The whole situation is cleared up when Lady Bracknell recognizes in Miss
Prism, a governess of her sister, Who was responsible for the disappearance of a
baby many years before. Miss Prism explained that she mislaid the child in a
railway checking station in a period of absent-mindedness. Realizing her
blunder, she had ran away. It develops that the baby was John Worthing,
whose real name is Ernest John Moncrieff, an elder brother of Algernon. With
the situation cleared, Lady Bracknell gives her consent to both marriages.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
John Worthing ............... - ............................. Maynard Kay
Algernon Moncrief ........................................ Charles Church
Rev. Cannon Chasuble, D. D. ..... ..... A rcher Bennett, Jr.
Lane CMoncrief's servanth .... ..... N orman McKenzie
Lady Bracknell ............. ...... J ane Carleton
Hon. Gwendolen Fairfax ...... ..... L ueile Rothfuss
Cecily Cardew .................. .... H elen Walper
Miss Prism fCecily's governessl .... . ....... Eva. Ash
cw --' e A we
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
CARNIVAL
W' 3 iv' EHOLDI wl1at is happening to the Gym? The sound of many noisy
hammers can be heard throughout the school and now and then a
l
la., . . .
l j saw lends its voice to the tune. Everywhere seems to be Pep, it
seems to fairly hang from the ceiling. But what could be more ap-
propriate? The time nears for the Girls' Pep Carnival! All is ready
A 'T in the many gay-colored booths. The Senior booth of purple and gold,
the Junior booth of maize and blue, and last but not least, the Freshman booth
of green and white! Above all these, stands out the dear old blue and white,
the colors so dear to us all. At these booths can be bought candy and popcorn,
hot dogs, ice cream, etc. Other attractions are the Country Store, the Fun
House, and Lovers' Lane. Music is to be furnished by some of the students,
also a short play is to be presented. The last streamer is put into place and
the last worker leaving with a sigh, hoping for the success of the Carnival that
evening. A
And now it is all over and but a memory, but one that will remain with
us for years to come. The success of the Carnival is undoubtedly due to all
those who attended it and the committees in charge can feel well repaid. The
Athletic Association accepted thankfully the help received from the Society.
FOOTBALL BANQUET
The Hrst and second squads of the football team and Coach Shadford were
delightfully entertained at a banquet given by Supt. Griffey in honor of their
good work for this season. The dinner was prepared and served bv the girls of
the Senior Domestic Science Class.
SENIOR PLAY DINNER
Miss Hedrick, who so successfully directed the Senior Play, was hostess at
a dinner at Gussenbauer's Tea Room, for the members of the cast. Miss Arm-
strong, and Miss Taylor who helped in the plans for the play, were invited guests.
COMMENCEMENT
The Commencement exercises for the class of 1923 were held on June 7th,
at the Croswell Opera House. The class was one of the largest that has ever
graduated from Adrian High School. A large number of relatives and friends
were present to see the awarding of the diplomas by Supt. Griffey.
'Che SENIOR isilcklgri 1923
CLASS DAY
Class day exercises were held at the Methodist Episcopal Church on Wednes-
day, June 6, 1923. A program was given by some of the class members and
was unusually well presented and interesting. As has been the custom for many
years, the Senior gavel was turned over to the C-lass of 1924, for a year's keeping.
BACCALAUREATE
On the evening of June 3, 1923, tl1e Baccalaureate was held at the Methodist
church. The Senior Class and their friends were present, and greatly appre-
ciated the address given by Rev. Rice. A
SENIOR SEND-OF F
The Juniors delightfully entertained the Senior Class at the annual Senior
Send-oii' on Tuesday, June 5, 1923.
The gymnasium was attractively decorat-ed in the class colors, purple and
gold, and shaded lights added to the beauty of the scene. Everyone voted the
Send-Off a great success and the Juniors deserve much credit for the splendid
efforts they have put forth.
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ENIOR SICKLE I9
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
THE FORUM
ROSALIND DAVIS
OFFICERS
Irnperat-rix--- ......... -- -, ,...,--.,- ,- ,-,..- RQSALIND D,w1s
Legata pro Imperatore--- - ..... Doaoruv PRANGE
S4'l'iPf0l' ............ .... ..... I s ABELLE M1Li,Ea
Quafstor ......... ..... ..... j OHN Micunmmn
areas? Forum was organized tl1is year, as has been the usual custom.
Due to thc fact that there has been both Virgil and Cicero classes
this year, the society is the largest that it has ever been, having a
if', membership of twenty-nine. The members feel that the monthly
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meetings which have been both instructive and enjoyable, have suc-
' ceeded in their purpose to acquaint the Latin students with thc
customs and life of the Romans.
One of the most enjoyable meetings was held in December when Miss Ella
P. Irish, formerly art director in the Adrian Public Schools, gave a talk con-
cerning art and sculpture.
A very interesting meeting was held before the High School Assembly in
January. The general theme was Italy and the contribution that she made
to civilization.
The motion-picture, "The Last- Days of Pompeii," was given before an
audience of four hundred. About fifty dollars was realized and was turned over
to the Sickle Board.
We, of the Forum, feel that this has been a year of many accomplishments
and we hope that the year 1923 and 1924 will be as successful as this one has
been.
e SENIOR SICKLE I9
Q
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SOCIETY
GIRLS'PEP
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'lfhiz SENIOR s1CKiLsiiii923
GIRLS' PEP SOCIETY
AMELIA FRANK
71" ERE'S to the Girls' Pep Society. They never fail to be "The Boosters"
for ,High School affairs. Basket-ball-Foot-ball-Base-ball-they
1 are always there, cheering, encouraging, urging the team to do its
level best. They are always at the game with their cheer leaders
in front and acting. ' r
A' A 'T As to membership and activities, other than 'tplain boosting," they
are still on top. Practically every girl in school is a member of this "pe-ppy"
society. The main object has been to instill "Pep" A small booklet containing
all the popular yells and songs of the High School, was published by them, the
boys' "Pep" society standing half the cost. The Carnival was bigger and better
than has ever been given before. Over two hundred dollars was made and one
hundred seventy-five of that sent the boys' basket ball team to the tournament.
Too much praise cannot be given to our president, Amelia Frank. A pcppier
girl is nowhere to be found. The success of the society this year was due to
her untiring efforts. Miss Armstrong, as faculty adviser, helped the society in
its varied activities and proved herself a natural leader of girls.
Girls of Adrian High, continue your work in the Girls' Pep Society. Prove
yourselves worthy to be members of it. Preserve it and make it go down in
the records of Adrian High as "The Society, Instiller of Pep."
ww - 1 we
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
BOYS' PEP SOCIETY
President ......... .... E Dwaan ELKINGTON
Vice-President ...... ........ W AYNE Bovnm
Secretary ......... ..... C LAIRE CONNIN
Treasurer --- ...... LILBURN MESLER
Marshal ...... ..... K ENNE1-H Bsrz
Nfl: QM' HE Boys' Pep Society is the youngest of our High School organi-
zations. There has been felt in the past a need of a society for the
TNQ boys which would correspond to the Pep Society of the girls and
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would assist in enlivening the student activities. This last year the
need has been satisfied.
The two Pep Societies joined together in publishing in pamphlet form,
all the A. H. S. Songs and Yells.
This organization has a great future. There is plenty for it to do. It is
to be hoped that next vear the fellows will start the vear's activities with a rush
and uphold their end of the school work instead of leaving it to the girls as has
been the custom in the past.
TO OUR SUCCESSORS
The selection of the Sickle Staff for next year was unanimously declared a
noble work of the faculty, for we are sure there are none better suited for the
strenuous duties necessary for the publication of the annual.
The editor-in-chief, Francis Miller, has been prominent in all school activi-
ties and will be assured of a fine backing from his many friends inthe student
body.
The business managers, John Michener and Henry Smith are hustlers, we
all know. and there can be no doubt as to the financial success of what We
earnestly hope will be the most successful publication in the history of Adrian
High School.
m g . --v vw
The SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
ORATORICAL ASSOCIATIGN
FRANCIS MILLER
President ........ .... F RANCIS MILLER
Vice-President ..... .... . IUANITA SWENK
Secretary .......M ....... R ACHEL RICE
Treasurer ......... ..... A RCHEI1 BENNETT
Sergeant-at-Arms .... .... C lrEORGE fllBSON
"fi 1 If HE Oratorical Association has carricd on for its third successful
X -X
year with Francis Miller as leader. More people have been out
for Debating, Declamation and Oratory this year than lilly
previous year. Maynard Kay, eliminating twelve other con-
testants, won first place in Oratory and represented the High
School in the sub-district contest held at Hudson, winning
second place.
Chester Stein took first place in the local Declamatory contest and
first place in the sub-district contest held at Hudson. The following people
were awarded medals for work done this year: Maynard Kay, Chester
Stein, Amelia Frank, Francis Miller, Clifford Armistead, Rachel Rice, Le-
land Hubbard, George Grcenc, Leland Schwichtcnberg, John Michener and
William Jewett, Manager.
mere are
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
KENNETH Dnnw
First Semester Ojficers Second Semester Officers
President ........... KENNM1-r Dnnw President .....,.... KENNETH DREW
Vice-President ..... Lvcinn Ro'rHFUss Vice-President ..... LUciLE Rofrnruss
Secretary ............. ANNAH PATCH Secretary ............. ANNAH PATCH
Treasurer ................. Mn. Lush: Treasurer ................. MR, LUSE
Sergeant-at-Arms ..... HENIIY SMITH Sergt.-at-Arnis-WE1.uNG'roN LAWSON
Yell Master ........ LILBURN Mnsuan Yell Master ......... LILBURN MESLER
X" N' HE Athletic Association has put over it.s program with a rush this
' year, under the leadership of its able president, Kenneth Drew.
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fi factory. The financial end of the business and dating of teams has
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I The receipts at the close of each successful season were highly satis-
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Z! W A been cared for by our Ci0lIT1II16I'Cl3..l teacher, Mr. Luse, and the
balances have always come out on the right side of the books.
The great part of this success is due, we are certain, to the untiring efforts
of our managers who have put forth everv possible effort to gain funds and
advertise our activities.
The Girls' Pep Society provided the funds to finance the basket ball team
at the Ypsilanti tournament by giving their Carnival and handing over one
hundred seventy-five dollars to the Association.
The school certainly has supported the Association loyally this year and
we hope the feeling will continue in the future.
The SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
AFFIRMATIVE DEBATING TEAM
CLIFFORD ARMISTEAD AMELIA FRANK FRANCIS MILLER
N4 the Atlantic by vs iy of the bt Liwrence River, as proposed
ll X
311. Qing, in the report of the International Joint QOH1II1.1bS1OIl submitted
W .51 . .
4 ff to Congress, January, 1922." The sustzuners of the aH'1rmat1ve
Eff' :Hai question for debate this year was: HResolved, that the United
States and Canada jointly should construct the deepwater way
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View consisted of Clifford Armistead, Amelia Frank, Francis
Miller, and John Michener as alternate. Winning by a small margin from
the local negative team, they were sure of a hard fight at Monroe, their
first outside opponent. They were the losers at Monroe but came home with
courage and a better View of the question than they had before.
Their next debate was with Dearborn from whom they took the victory
unanimously. It was a hard fight all the way through but by strong points
the victory was conceded to Adrian, 1-losing its work with an "al1's Well
that ends well." In view of the fact that Francis Miller, John Michener,
and George Greene are to be bac-k next year, there is a great chance for
Adrian High School being at the top of the list in debating next year.
s
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The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
NEGATIVE DEBATING TEAM
LEEAND HUBBARD RACHEL RICE GEORGE GREENE
gf Tw"-' HE upholders of the negative view of the question were Leland
' Hubbard, Rachel Rice, George Greene, and Leland Schwich-
tenberg, as alternate. Although the negative lost in the local
contest they were hard opponents to convince. Their objections
, if
A, ,W were conclusive and hard to overcome. This was found to be
niilh' ith 37:7
7 T true also by Ypsilanti Normal Hi and Ann Arborg Adrian set-
ting up to them both, one of the hardest barricades they had ever met.
Although defeated at Ypsilanti, and at Adrian by Ann Arbor, the
team came through the season the better in every way for the experience
in debating which they gained in these two attempts to bring the victory
to Adrian High School. Leland Schwichtenberg debated in George Greene's
place in the Ann Arbor contest at Adrian, filling the place with marked
talent.
VW 0799
e SENIOR SICKLE I9
"THE MIKADOU
mee- ee e e ee. are
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
A. I-I. S. MUSIC CLUB
Miss HIGBEE
Supervisor of Music
OFFICERS
President ........ ................. ..... F R ANCIS GUYMAN
Vice-President .... .............. Z ORA ASH
Secretary .......... .... C LIFFORD ARMISTEAD
Treasurer ........... ....... L ORAIN NORTON
Business Manager ..... ..... F RANCIS HELI.EMS
The A. H. S. Music Club, organized this vear, has taken charge of all the
High School musical productions. Of first importance was the Second Annual
Glee Club and Orchestra Concert. It was given December eighth with a great
improvement over last year's entertainment and showed the hard Work of the
organizations. The following program was repeated at Petersburg at the annual
meeting of the Bank's stockholders.
Overture-Zampa .... .... . ., .,,,...,,,... ..... H erold
ORCHESTRA
Arn1orer's Song ..... ..--,,.A.-,,.-,.,....... .... N e win
Bovs' GLI-in CLUB
Cai-menia ............ ........,.,....,...... ..... W i lsfm
GIRLS' Gl4EE CLUB
Serenade-In a Canoe .... ........................ .... Z a meenik
ORCHESTRA
On the Road to Mandalay ......... . .................... .... ..--- S p Saks
BOYS' GL1-:E CLUB
S0l,0IST+FRANCIS HEI.I.EMS
' -Miss May Noble
Reading-Selected .... ........ . ........................ - --
Water Lilles ...... .......................... .... ..... L i Tl def-S
GIRLS, GLEE CLUB
Overture-Cavalry .... ....................... -... F . Suppe
ORCHESTRA
Over the Morning Seah-- .... . ................. --- Wilson
Bovs' GLEE CLUR
Piano Solo-Romance .... ...................... .... S 6 belius
THOMAS NIKON
I Hear a Thrush at Eve ............................ .... C' adwwn
GIRIASV GLEE CLUB l
Plantation Patrol-Ole South ................. . --- .... Zameemk
ORcHEs'1'RA
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:Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
The greatest achievement in the yearls work was the production of the
"Mikado" All the work was done by the Glee Clubs and Orchestra under the
able management of our instructor, Miss Higbee. The cast was as follows:
The Mikado of Japan ............................ . ................ LEROY OyDELL
Attendant to Mikado .......................................... KENNETH Dnmw
Nanke-Poo, his son disguised as a wandering minstrel in love
with Yum Yum ................................ - ........ FRANCIS HEI.LEMS
Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of Titipoo .--. ................ FRANCIS GUYMAN
Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything Else ....
Pish-Tush, a Noble Lord ................
Yum-Yum Three Sisters
Pitti-Sing ward of
Peep-Bo l Ko-Ko
-..--LORAIN Noa'roN
------Lns'rnR GORTON
----JUANITA SWENK
-----------ZoR.4 Asn
----ANNE MORELAND
ANNAH PATCH
Katisha, an elderly lady in love with Nanke-Po-0 ...... .....
Chorus of School Girls, Nobles, Guards and Coolies ........ ...... G LEE CLUBS
All accompaniments .............................................. -ORCHESTRA
The Orchestra has played for a number of High School entertainments, in-
cluding the Senior Play. They have also provided music for the Chamber of
Commerce and the Father and Son Banquet at the Y. M. C. A. and out of town
schools for Commencement programs.
As this article goes to press the organizations are putting in intensive
preparation for entering the State Contest of Music held at Mt. Pleasant the
twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth of May.
As a final activity, the Clubs will supply the Commencement music in June.
First Violin
Dorcas Tuttle
Mary Helen Munson
Thelma Burkert
Squire Chase
Lovenia Nessel
Eva Ash
Clarinet
George Greene
Archie Gobba
Flute
Henry Rose
Clifford Armistead
Harvey Berndt
Clarence Brown
James Chesney
Arthur Carnahan
Lavem Engle
Lavern Hallenbeck
Orville Leiferts
Robert Mobus
Thomas Nixon
Esther Helma
Alice Angell
Elma Bayles
Laneta Beckenbaugh
Doris Benfield
Maybelle Bradish
Juanita Swenk
Countess Cox
Zora Ash
Winifred Clark
Lula Cox
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ORCHESTRA
Second Violin
Vincent Seethaler
Janice Betz
Florence Chase
Leland Atkin
Arloine Bishop
Lavem Hallenbeck
George Raesch
Piano
Juanita Swenk
Gwendolyn Bassett
Thomas Nixon
BOYS' GLEE CLUB
Leroy O'dell
Ottis Sears
Chester Stein
Lorain Norton
Lester Gorton
Archer Bennett
Hubert Brower
Victor Bates
Robert Church
GIRLS' GLEE CLUB
Zelma Cooley
Gladys Dickinson
Rosalind Drake
Alice Forsman
Helen Hewes
Charlotte Armistead
Lucile Koehn
Hazel Lauer
Anne Moreland
Comet
Joseph Peck
Seton Bovee
Howard Hagerman
Mellofwphone
Ottis Sears
Trombone
Jennings Morse
Sousaphone
Gerald Roberts
Tympani
Wesley Willett
Harley Dennis
William Gibbs
Wellington Lawson
Gordon McPhail
john Naylor
Harold McIntyre
Gerald Roberts
Norman Sherman
Kenneth Drew
Francis Guyman
Marjorie Lewis
Mary Mobbs
Harriet Montgomery
Aldeen Nachtrib
Rachel Rice
Mildred Raymond
Eleanor Seeburger
Sybilla Shober
Mildred Wickham
Ruby Wright
Annah Patch
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ORCHESTRA
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The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
FOOTBALL
HIS year has been one of the most successful that our football team
Jay? has had in several years. About forty men responded to the call,
5 of whom only five were HA" men the preceding year. Thus it was
necessary for Coach Shadford t-o pick more than half the team
from men of very little experience. From this material our Coach
developed a team which came out even in every way. Out of nine
games we won four, lost four, tied one, and scored eighty-one points against the
same number scored on us by our opponents.
Our season opened September twenty-second at Blissfield. During a hard
fought game, in which there were many fumbles on both sides, Miller carried
the ball over for a touchdown and Drew made good on the trial for points, giving
us our first game by a 7-0 score.
A Week later Clint-on came here, only to receive the small end of a 13-0 score.
On October 7th, Ann Arbor came here. The game was played in the rain
on a very slippery and muddy Held. From the first, Ann Arbor's heavier and
more experienced team had the advantage. They succeeded in piling up- five
touchdowns while we failed to score.
Th following week we played at Coldwater, and, as in the preceding year,
neither team scored. The teams were evenly matched in weight. The ball slipped
from our hands after a pass over Coldwater's goal line, thus losing our only
good chance to score.
October twentieth brought Marshall. Although we outplayed them, luck
seemed to intervene every time we threatened Marshall's goal. We lost by a
score of 6-0.
At Albion we suffered our most overwhelming defeat. Two of our regulars
were absent from the line-up and Captain Drew was ruled out of the game by
the referee before three minutes of play, for fouling. This seemed to take the
heart out of our team and Albion scored almost at will.
The next Saturday Hudson came here. We easily defeated our country
neighbors by a 36-0 score.
Then came the biggest game of the .season-Monroe. Having a heavier
team, Monroe came here expecting to crush us. We soon showed them their
places, however, for on the kick off, Drew received the ball from Miller and
ran ninety-five yards for a touchdown. Sears made the next touchdown on a
pass given him by O'dell. The last touchdowns were made by Miller. On the
hrst he laid way out, unnoticed by Monroe, and received a long pass. The final
touchdown was made possible by a shorter pass from Drew. The game ended
25-0 and Monroe was completely humbled.
F. MILLER ........... ...... Ri ght Half
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
Our fighting team, the excellent loyalty of the student body, and the methods
of our Coach all combined to defeat our oldest rival. If we can defeat Monroe
for the next two years, as we certainly shall, the silver cup played for this year
will be in possession of Adrian High School forever.
Our final game of the season was played on a muddy- field at Hillsdale.
Drew was injured early in the game and had to be taken out for the day. This
further weakened our team which had suffered the loss of Murphy, the quarter-
back. The field was so slippery that we lost our chances of scoring by dropping
a forward pass over Hillsdale's goal line. Hillsdale had the heavier team and
succeeded in defeating us 3-0.
THE TEAM
K. DREW lCaptainJ .--- .............. ..... F ull Back
H. WATTS, L. Ohm.:
C. MURPHY ...........
H. WATSON ....
, ....
G. GIBSON .... - ..........
O. SEARS ...................
W. SCHOEN lCaptain-elect! ---
N. TRADA ....
E
E. CHILDS ......... . .......
-----Left Half
------ Quarter
------Left Guard
-----Left Tackle
------Left End
--------Center
---Right Guard
------Right Tackle
. BALDWIN ...... . ......................................... Right End
The players used as substitutes were F. Dowling, E. Gordon, W. Lawson, C. Hoxsington
J. Seethaler. C. Carpenter, T. VanOrden, R. B1'inzrna,n, R. Bachman, and C. Baldwin.
SCORES A
Opponents Place Oponents A. H. S
Blissield ....... There --- ......... 0 .... ..... - --7
Clinton ...... .... H ere .... ....... 0 .... ..... 1 3
Ann Arbor ..... .... H ere - ...... 32 .... ...... 0
Coldwater --- ...... There ..... 0---- ------0
Marshall --- .... Here --- ....... 6---- ------0
Albion --- .... There --- ...... 40---- ------0
Hudson .... .... Hl ere ..... 0 .... ..... 36
Monroe .... .... H ere ..... 0 .... ..... 25
Hillsdale --- .There ..... 3 .... ------0
Total ..... ........ .... 8 1 .... ..... 8 1
--I2
e SENIOR SICKLTE 19
FIRST BASKET BALL TEAM
CW UF'-7
H 'Z-'h2TASBDNTIOR SICKLE 1923
BASKETBALL
af: iw, in previous years we have had an exceptionally good basketball
fa gs . . . . .
X1 '49 team. With six ex erlenced men from the recedm year, Miller,
Ml, Jr, p
,llgfaylqfj L Green, O'dell, Drew, Trada and Norton, Coach Shadford developed
a team which won nine of eleven games on the regular schedule and
2jJlT,,91,'g
, , scored two hundred and seventy-six points to one hundred and forty-
two of our opponents. If we had scored eight points more, we would
have had an average of two points to every one scored against us.
The first to go down before our attack was Albion, on January fifth. To
even up the stinging defeat administered us by Albion during the football season,
Albion was forced to take tl1e small end of a 53-8 score. Scoring seemingly
at will, we ran up thirty-eight points in the first half. Captain Miller was the
scoring star, making ten field goals from under the basket. Green, O'dell, and
Drew followed with seven, three, and three respectively.
The following week on January thirteenth, we defeafted the Ypsilanti Nor-
mal Reserves to the tune of 20-4. It was largely due to the work of Trada and
Drew at the guard positions that the heavier Normal team collected only a
meager four points. Drew was the high scorer with four free throws and a
field goal.
On January nineteenth came the most important game of the season. It
was with our former Coacl'l's team at Ann Arbor. Greene being out because
of sickness, Norton played the forward position. Every man was fighting with
such determination that the outcome of the game was never in doubt. We
gained the lead early in the game and it was only in the final quarter when
Ann Arbor scored seven points, that our lead was threatened. The game ended
with the score 15-14, Holloway's team being completely humbled.
January Twenty-sixth we met Birmingham on our floor and received the
first defeat of the season. Birmingham found it a hard matter to penetrate
our defense and found it necessary to rely on long shots, at which they were
extremely lucky. Drew and Miller did the principal scoring and the game
ended 16-18 against us.
February second found us in Hillsdale. During a fast but rough game,
Miller, Drew, Greene and O'dell scored consistently, netting us twenty-two
points to the sixteen of our opponents.
Un February third we journeyed to Hudson. Because of our rough game
the previous evening, we did not feel the need of exerting ourselves more than
to defeat Hudson by a 17-7 score, 0'dell doing the principal scoring.
A week later we pitted our strength against the Ypsi Central High team
on their floor. Ypsi started with a rush, gathering six points to our three in
the first quarter. The second Quarter the tables were completely turned and
the half ended 16-8 in our favor, Greene, Drew, and Trada doing most of the
scoring. Trada made two beautiful long shots and Drew and Greene came
through with three and four respectively. Drew also made good six free throws,
making the score 28-14.
February seventeenth the Detroit Cass Tech team came here expecting an
easy victory over the small town team. They soon found it an easy game,
cw gggg -g -2 -1- e - me
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
not for themselves as they had fully expected, but for us. Our defense was
practically impregnable and our basket-shooting deadly accurate. With clock-
like precision, our plays all made connections and the Detroiters were swept
off their feet. Drew seemed to be all over the floor at once and the teamwork
was perfect. Cass Tech was entirely overwhelmed by a 32-11 score.
A week later we traveled to Detroit to meet the Detroit Central team on
February twenty-third. They handed us our second defeat by a 20-28 score.
We seemed lost on their larger fioor against their short double passes and only
found ourselves in the final minutes of play, but could not overcome the lead of
seven or eight points which they kept from early in the game.
March 2nd we won a decisive victory over Howell. Howell forced Ann
Arbor into an oventime period, but was beaten by Ann Arbor, so we were ex-
pecting a much more difficult game. Greene made six of our twelve field goals
and Trada made two long shots. The game ended with a 26-16 score for us.
The last game of our regular schedule was played with Monroe on March
ninth. Cwing to the ability and co-operation of our guards, Drew and Trada,
our old rivals succeeded in getting only one flibld. goal. 'lhc scoring was almost
evenly divided, Greene making five field goals and Miller and O'dell each three.
In the last few minutes of play, the other five first string men went in and one
of them, Bachman, made another field goal. The final score was 27-6.
Two weeks later our team went to Ypsilanti to take part in the district
tournament. ' The first game we played was with Port Huron on March twenty-
second. With its usual dash and accuracy, our team defeated Port Huron 20-18.
Trada was the star of the game, making two long field goals and spoiling nearly
all of Port Huron's chances to score near the basket. The next evening we met
Highland Park. Starting with an unusual rush, our team scored six points before
Highland Park could find themselves. Then Highland Park began to score and
we changed our defence, but to no avail. O'dell scored most of our points, but
we lost the game by a score of 13-23, and with it our chances of going to the
finals at East Lansing.
THE TEAM
F. MXLLER fCaptain and Captain-electj ..... . .... Right Forward
H. GREENE ............................... ..... L eft Forward
L. O'nmi.L .............................. .......... C enter
K. Dimw ....... .... ........ Ri g ht Guard
N. TRADA ...... ........... Le ft Guard
R. BACHMAN .... ..... G uard and Forward
G. GIBSON .... .......... L eft Forward
C. HOISINGTON .............. Center
W. SCHOEN .... ........... .......... R i ght Guard
L. NORTON .... .... . . ........... ....... G uard and Forward
SCORES
Opponents Place Opponents A. H. S.
Albion ................... Here ........ ........ 8 ....... ........ 53
Ypsi Normal Reserves .... Here -- ...... 4 ..... ...... 2 0
Ann Arbor ............... There - ...... 14 ..... .... 1 5
Birmingham ............. Here -- ...... 18 ..... .... 1 6
Hillsdale .......... ..... T here - ...... 16 ..... .... 2 2
Hudson .................. There - ...... 7 ..... .... 1 7
Ypsi Central .............. There - ...... 14 .... .... 28
Detroit Cash Tech ........ Here - ...... 11 ..... .... 32
Detroit Central .......... There ...... 28 ..... .... 2 0
Monroe .......... ..... H ere - ...... 6 ..... .... 27
Hiowell ....... ..... H ere -- ...... 16 ..... .... 2 6
Total --- - 1-LE 2-2-S
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The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
THE SECOND TEAM
Much credit is due to thc men of the sec-ond team as a fact-or contributing to
the great sueeess of our basket ball season. It was these men who helped to drill
the first team into such shape that they might win nine out of eleven games. The
first team knows from experience that it was no easy matter to beat this second
team. Every night these men came out to take the hard knocks of the first team
and give them the necessary practice. In their games with out of town teams
they experienced little difiiculty in defeating Tecumseh's second team and Clay-
ton's first team. With the experience they have had this year the second team
men should make valuable material for next year. D
NIOR SICKLE I9
75
TEAM
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
THE TRACK TEAM
2 1 HIS is the second time in several years that there has been enough
interest shown in track work to produce a team. Soon after the
basketball .season was over, a group of fellows started working
out every night at the college field so that there were several entrants
in almost everv branch of track. Owing to the fact that we had
It A A very little baseball other than the inter-class games to represent
Adrian High School, much interest was shown in track work and many fellows
were able to devote their time to it who would otherwise be playing baseball.
After an inter-class track meet, held about the middle of May at the college
field, Coach Shadford decided to send a team to represent Adrian in the State
Track Meet which was held in Ann Arbor. Now that enthusiasm has been
aroused, it is very probable that Adrian High School will produce good track
teams as well as football and basketball teams in the near future.
GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAMS
always ready and willing to help. She was loved by all the girls and was just one
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
HE Freshmen put out a fairly good team this year. Although they
lacked experience, they were able to force their opponents to work.
The forwards, Muriel Fetzer and Dorothy Guinan, played a good
game. The centers, Frances Sisson and Captain Lorene Nash fsidej,
were the backbone of the team, and Worked well With their speedy
F C 'F guards, Pansy Tucker and Charlotte Armistead. The subs for the
Freshmen were Winifred Clark, forward, and Neeta Patterson, guard.
The Juniors were a scrappy team.. Katherine Schaible, Captain, and Mary
Shultz at center played their positions well. Anne Carlin and Dorothy Prange,
forwards, have the reputation of making the prettiest baskets. The guards,
Marian Demaree and Esther Ryder kept their forwards covered. Junior subs
were Helen Wotring, forward, and Doris Schwichtenberg, guard.
The Seniors were the champions, easily winning all their games. They ex-
celled in team work. Their forwards, Ruth Hostetler and Ethel Hadden, Cap-
tain, eluded their guards and made baskets with perfect ease and rapidity. At
center, Amelia Frank lsidel and Irma Sisson snapped things up and had'a mon-
opoly on the ball. The guards were Rachel Rice and Hortense Baumgartner, and
they worked in harmony with the rest. This is the third year, with the exception
of one member, that this team has ,played together. The subs, although seldom
playing, were always ready. They were Lucile Koehn, forward, and Mary Rice,
guard, and Effie Hadden, Center.
Miss Barnum must be given credit for her work with the girls, for she was
of them.
The scores
for the Class Basketball Contest are as follows:
Jan. 13 -- .... Seniors 23 --- .... Juniors
Jan. 18 --- .... Seniors 30 Freshmen
Feb, 6 --- .... Juniors 18 Freshmen
Feb. 8 -- .... Seniors 16 - - .... Juniors
Feb. 17 --- .... Freshmen 10 --- .... Juniors
Feb. 17 -- .... Seniors 11 --- ...... Alumni
Feb. 20 -- .... Seniors 15 Freshmen
Mar. 13 --- .... Freshmen 2 -,- .... Juniors
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'Che bENlOR SICKLE 1923
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
JOKE DEPARTMENT
THE other day
AT eleven-tliirty .
I walked Qui ' '
OF the back.door.
OF the assenibly-room V
AND Miss Darin'
NEVER said. atword.
AND then in thetafternoon
I went to Miss I3reen's room
AND she forget to assign a lesson
FOR the next dayi
AND then I Nvent.to Physics
AND J. L. Heed riever said
HINCIDE-N'I:AI:LhK in passing,"
DURING the virhole hour.
He-"What's your name?"
She-"Helen Winter."
He-"What is it in summer?"
AND then I went to Latin
AND Miss Marshall
DIDN'T say . i
-AM-M-M-Ilia! Qin do.',
AND coming' out of Geometry
THE next daiy K t
I saw that Ahne .
HAD forgotten.to.wait for Delly
AND then, th dap. the climax
EDDIE ohiidsafiid me
HE had a datetwith
SIS last niglit. ' '
WHAT is this old World
COMING to. ' '
ANYWAY??i? ' '
Fish Drew igetting sentimental in Botanyl-'tAlI! Mr. Storrs, what would
old pine tree say if it could talk?"
Storrs-"It would say, I am an oak."
Herb's Dad-"Son, when I was your age I was earning an honest living."
Herb W. frather crockedl-"Mighty fine, gov'nor, but whatch a change
or?"
"So your father died because he was suspended? What was he suspended
for?"
W. Bovee-"He shot another guy."
Professor Adolphus O'tDonnel McGink
Was hunting one day for the missing link.
At last he arose with a shout and 21 cheer
For he'd found it under the chiffonier.
-Gargoyle
cw - -as -..ees e -e -r-'J
The SENIOR SICKLE. l923
IN A STREET CAR
Heavy Footed Yokel-"I beg your pardon."
V. Hallenbeck-"Oh that's all right. I walk on them myself occasionally."
Native-"Yes, these razor-back hogs are shua sma't."
Jane Carleton 1Touring through Southj-'tYou don't say."
Native-"Yes'm. I was looking for one last week and I found him hiding
against a picket fence so as to look like a safety razor."
J. L. Reed-'fWhat is the best conductor of electricity, Mr. Sears?"
O. G. Sears-"Why-er-"
J. L.-"Right, and what is the standard for measuring electricity?"
O. G.-"The what, sir?"
J. L.-"A very good recitation."
"Here's where I pull a good one," said the dentist as he fixed his tweezers
on a sound tooth.
"What is all that loud talking in the dining-room, sister?"
"Father and mother are swapping animals."
"Swapping animals?"
"Yep. She passed the buck to him and got his goat."
There are two kinds of women
I cannot fathom yet-
The one's a gay and dizzy blonde
And the ot-her's a brunette.
C. Connin-"Andrew Carnegie was a very rich man and left a good many
memorials to himself in the Carnegie Libraries."
A. Bennett-"That man Lincoln must have been pretty wealthy, too."
C. C.-"How's that?"
A. B.--"He left a lot of Lincoln pennies around the country."
Miss Green-t'Wl1ere was Napoleon crowned, Mr. Van Orden?"
Tutie-"At Waterloo."
F. M. G. fGrowing impatientl-"And by whom?l'
Tutie-"The Duke of Wellington."
"Heine, did you hear aboud the awful accidend vat did to my poy come?"
HNo.H
Q "Vel, you know that there in the Anheuser estate a big bush is. Mv poy
Frdedie jumped into the Anheuser Busch and tore Schlitz in his pants, and then
a sad Bud Weiser poy he came out."
"WoWl that was a hot one," said the tramp as he swallowed the pancake.
cw, .
fzrhe SENIOR SICKLE 1923
"Who are you going to take to the dance next week, Bill?"
"Well, I like Stearnsie's form, Beryl's lips, Kay's eyes, Peg's hair, Jane's
arms, and Betty's dancing. Which would you take?"
A green little boy
In a green little Way
A green little apple devoured one day.
And the green little grasses now tenderly Wave,
O'er the green little apple boy's green little grave.
Bill Gibbs-"When Cleopatra taught school, why did she mark Anthony 'A'?"
Pawlins-"Because he saw Julius Caesar."
GeorgcP"You're not afraid of snakes, are you?"
Louise-"No, dear. I feel perfectly safe with you."
We don't know to whom to give the "Kindest Man" medal-the guy that
lets the children carve their initials on his wooden leg, or the one that lets them
play marbles with his glass eye.
WHY WE HAVE FROSH
We hafta have the movies
To spend our evenings at g
We hafta have our craniums
For a place to park the hat.
We hafta have the faculty-
Or we might have something worse!
We hafta have the Pater
To doctor up the purse,
We hafta have the boulevard
To do our fussin' on,
We hafta have the midnight oil
To work off last year's con.
We hafta have silk stockings
To appreciate the calf,
And we HAFTA have the Freshmen
To make the high school laff!
-Ex.
"Gee! that was a dirty one," said the frog as he hopped out of the mud-puddle.
Jim Miller-"Why do you call these long ,skirts side shows?"
Milt R.-"Because they hide so many freaks of nature."
John Bryant says that down his wav they tell of a man so hard that he
could ride a porcupine through a bed of cactus and never get a scratch.
e7g,.., I -, , u. .1 W., H, KS
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
A ray of moonlight thrown slantingly across the room from one of the largest
windows furnished sufficient illumination so that the more pronounced objects
were readily discernible. Huge shadows here and there bespoke a sense of
secrecy which the occupants must have desired. Reposing leisurely in the soft
depths of a great davenport could barely be distinguished a mass of brown hair
resting in wild abandon on the willing shoulder of the amorous swain. Here,
indeed, were two hearts that beat as one. No sight but for themselves, no word
or thought but of each other. Blissfully ignorant of all else, they clung in pas-
sionate embrace. A full moment of breathless silence, when suddenly one of
the two stirred.
"Eddiel" whispered a sweet little voice, "there's a rap at the door."
"I know it, Mamf' came the answer from the enamored devotee. "It's my
coat. I hung it there when I came in."
The saying goes, "Every knockls a boost."
Milt Raymond says that a Ford is its owner's best booster, then.
"Where are you going, my pretty maid?
Why do you pass me by?"
"I'm on my Way to gymnathtic school,"
Said she as she heaved a thigh.
-Jack-O-Lantern
Willett-"Where did you say you were shot?"
Retter-"Beleau Wood."
Willett-"What do you mean, in the neck?"
FMYRXZPFT
A Bolshevik Army in Zpflquk,
Was fighting the Russians in Plzsukx,
With a shout and a wrench,
They climbed out of the trench,
And captured the city of Sxzylmfp.
-Lemon Punch
Mrs. Moreland tof herb-"Anne had the cutest dimpled knees when she
was a child."
Dellv-"Well, as a matter of fact she still ha-- er- ah-I mean most
children have."
Hess-"I call my girl snapshot, be-cause everywhere I go she wants to be
taken."
Bachman-"Is that so? I call mine film, because she's so well developed."
L. Hubbard-"Why on earth don't you laugh when Mr. Reed tells a joke?"
O. G. Sears-"I don't have to, I'm leaving school at the end of the week."
ww A as eeee e+i--wa
The SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
"I think Herb Watts is the most modest young man I ever knew."
"How come?"
"Why, his girl called him on the phone the other morning and he wouldn't
answer because he was in his pajamas."
"Looks like rain," said the polite caller as he sipped his tea. ,
"Don't cry, little boy. You'1l get your reward in the end."
C. Baldwin-"S'pose so. Thatfs where I allus do get it."
Wanda Hess-"I think the long skirts are so graceful."
Sis Marshall-"Yes, I'm knock-kneed, too."
The stingiest fellow we've heard of yet is Lon Moon. He had a toy balloon
vulcanized yesterday.
There was an old lady in Worcester,
Who had a melodious rorcesterg
But he met his destruction
By midnight abduction-
And now he won't crow lie he yorcester.
"The old boy kind of chilled you when he gave you that 'E,' didn't he,
VVatson?"
Kid Biff-"Yesg I didn't give him enough hot air to hold him."
Miss Peck-"Now, Mr. Betz, don't you think you had better turn the page?
You have already translated the first ten lines on the following page."
Gibbie fto desk clerkl-"I tell you mush hav, 'nother room."
D. C.-"What's the matter with yours?"
Gibbie-"Mush hav' 'nother room."
D. C. fhumoring himl-"Can't you tell me what's tl1e matter with yours?
It's the best in the hotel."
Gibbie-"S-sh! Don't tell 'nybody. Ish on fire!"
Darkness. Tropics. VVhite tropical moon. Chilling breeze crawling among
impenetrable darkness of trees. Heroine alone and downcast. About her the
same black, dingy forest with its decaying vegetation and despairing lonesome-
ness. Humid chill of night descending. Fears creeping into her mindg loath-
some creatures, .small but clumsy, creeping over herg slowly the night creeping
on. A rustle, a stir, two balls of fire amid the rain and mist. A snarl, a crash.
Bitter reckless moments of waiting. Silence. More silence. Still silence.
Silence still.
Only a man-eating tiger. Heroine is safe. Allah be praised.
i -Gargoyle
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
"That physics prof has not smiled for several months now."
"He is one prof who practices what he preaches. He believes in the law
of gravity."
A dapper sportsman made the train,
And vainly sought a seat,
At last he found a place beside
A lady, old and neat.
"Oh dear!" cried she, and eyed his gun,
"It isn't loaded, pray?"
"I fear it is," he said, "but here,
I'll fix it up this way."
Right in its end he put a cork,
And said: "There now, all's Well."
"O thank you." From the lady's lips
A great relieved sigh fell.
-Gargoyle
Numerous tales are told concerning the remarkable wit which Prof. J. L.
Reed of the Science department exhibited when yet of tender years. One typical
instance is in order. When only three years of age he had been unusually naughty
one day. The punishment accorded him by his mother was to lock him in a
dark closet. A short time after she had locked him in, the noise Within sud-
denly abated and going to the door she asked, "Are you ready to come out and
be a nice boy now, Lewis?"
Little Lewis turned his innocent blue eyes toward her and said with evident
composure, "Incidentally in passing, I should say yes, mother."
And while we are recalling some of these childhood sayings, We must not
forget the time when Omar Hall ran breathlessly into the house and announced
to his mother that he had just seen a dog without any tail. "But," he added
brightly, "it had a pla.ce for one."
Mrs. Waton-"Harley, don't run so fast around the house. You'lI fall and
hurt yourself."
Harley-"If I don't run fast I'll get hurt anyway. Dad's chasing me."
She told me did I drink
And when I asked her no
All she said was laff?
Wanda Hess-HYou know, my brother is so careless with his jewelry."
Nat-USO?"
Wanda-"Yes, he went out the other day and left a ring in the bathtub."
I4
m as wa
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
Beryl-"How did you get that cut in the head?"
Lysle-"Hia-musta-hic-bit m'self."
Beryl-"Aw, say, how could you bite yourself up there?"
Lysle-"Musta-hic-stood on a chair."
Pa Kuney lafter examining expense account!-UDO you think silk stockings
are absolutely necessary?"
Kay-"Certainly-up to a certain point."
Marion-"You raised your hat to that girl who just passed. You don't
know her, do you?"
Watts-L'No, but Prosser does, and this is his hat."
Bub-"Why the crepe over the washbowl in the bathroom? Who's dead?"
Eddie-t'Crepe? Oh, that's the towel."
Seethaler-" 'Ja hear about those cruel policemen?,'
Hoisington-"Nog what did they do?"
Seethaler-A'Cut off a burglar's retreat."
Peg-"Why didn't you find out who he was when Miss Armstrong called
the roll?"
Nell-"I tried to, but he answered for four different names."
He iover phone!-"Wanna go out for a ride?"
She-"Is this party formal or informal?"
He-"Whadda' yu mean?"
She-'tHairnetfor no hairnet?"
"Kiss you? I should say not! Why, I don't even know your name."
4'Pardon me-it's Jones."
"Oh, that's different."
AT LAST! A GOOD SCOTCH JOKE!
Sandy-f'BraW gowans! Ma bonnie wee lass! An' wi' ve ha' a tassie 0'
grid-Willie wangh, ere ye raike conty t-0 you manyz kirke?"
Mac-"Shame, mither! Is your pow beld, that ye ken not you mooted
Corby ha' left her lauf land i' the bughto?"
Voice from within-"Hae it your ain way! Baith 0' you!"
-Brown Jug
The She-"You've got nothing on me."
The He-"Well, you're got very little on yourself, my dear."
-Princeton Tiger
m . mf.s. ow
'Che RSENIOR SICKLE 1923
"Get a nail in your tire?"
Vogel-"Nawg ran over a fork in the road!"
Ikey Vogel fat the seashorey-"Must be a deuced lonely job keeping that
light house over there." I
Old Salt-"Yes, the last keeperused to play poker with himself all the
time until one night he caught himself cheating and shot himself to death."
Armistead-"What are you doing up there, building a bird house?"
G. Green--"No, Foolish, I'm erecting a service station for fiying fish."
Miss Green-"Nurse, did you kill the germs in my boy's milk?"
Nurse-"Yes, ma'amg I ran it through the meat-chopper twice."
Mr. Storrs-"What are you clipping from that paper?"
Mr. Hall-"An article about a woman who was sued for divorce for going
through her husband's pockets."
Mr. Storrs-"What are you going to do with it?"
Mr. Hall-"Put it in my pocket."
Willett fin orchestral-"I'm the fastest man in the world."
Miss Higbee--"How's that?"
Willett-"Time flies, do-esn't it?"
Miss Higbee-"So they say."
Willett-"Well, I beat time."
Gibson fat Sweete Shoppej-"I sure miss the cuspidor since it has gone."
John Dunn lalways on the jobj-"You did that when it was here. That's
why it's gone."
M. R. P. fat A. B. Park'sl-"Have you a match for this blouse?"
Haughty Salesgirl-"Yes, and I'll give you some kerosene, too."
"That sure takes the cake," said the tea-hound as he admired his right
hand.
Senior-"I would give five dollars for just one kiss from a nice little innocent
girl like you." I
Innocent Freshman-"Oh, how terrible."
S.-"Did I offend you?"
I. F.-"No, I was just thinking about the fortune I gave away last night."
THE MAIDEN'S PRAYER
"Dear Lord, I ask not-hing for myself l Only give mother a son-in-law."
vm v A e e -e ir-'J
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
THE SEVEN AGES OF WOMEN
Safety-Pins
Whip-pins
Hair-pins
Fraternity pins
Diamond pins
Clothes pins
Rolling pins
-Anon.
First Stude-"Say, fellow, how did you like the girl I dug up for you?"
Second Stude-"Well, as far as I'm concerned you can bury her again."
Miss Buck-"Why were you late?"
O'dell-"Class started before I got here."
Girl-"May I call you Jack?"
He-"Yes, but the irony hurts because I never have any."
-Ex.
Billie-"Don't you know why I refused you?"
Drew-"I can't think."
Billie-"You guessed itf'
First Freshman-"What is your idea of capital punishment?"
Second Fresh.-"Paying a man what you owe him with German marks."
--Ex.
WOTTA SLAM
Prof.-"If the gentleman in the back of the room will kindly remove his
hat, I will point out a concrete example."
HOW ABOUT ADAM
Miss Armstrong-"If Shakespeare were alive today, would not he be looked
upon as a remarkable man?"
W. Willett-"Sure, he would be. He would be 300 years old."
Miss Green-"Give what you consider the most memorable date in history."
Norton-"The one Anthony had with Cleopatra."
A comedy of errors-any student's recitation.
Love's Labor Lost-any Freshman.
Merry Wives of Windsor-any Sorority meeting.
All's Well that Ends Well-Final exams.
The Tempest-Explaining one's scholastic standing to the Pater.
-Ex.
CW
H we -rw
The SENIOR SICKLE 1923
L. Wesgate-"Isn't it terrible the Way we have to work these days?"
A. Dobbins-"Ra.ther! Why I typed so many letters yesterday that last
night I finished my prayers with 'Yours truly'."
Chemist Reed-"The price of Nitrates has gone up."
S. Bovee-"What do We care? We never telegraph."
-Ex.
C. Gira-"I asked her if I could see her home."
Flory-"Anti what did she say?"
C. Gita-"She said she'd send me a photo of it."
Professor-"I wouldn't call any man a liar, but I might suggest he was 9.
Terminological Inexactitudinarianf' -Ex.
"How did Jim lose the fingers of his right hand."
"Put them in a horse's mouth to see how manv teeth he had."
'LWhat happened?"
"The horse closed his mouth to see how many fingers Jim had."
He didn't hear the warning,
He didn't hear the bell,
Miss Patch became imperative
And told him to go down and talk to Mr. Reed.
-'16
"Order!" yelled Drew, during a noisy outburst in an Athletic Association
meeting.
Voice resembling Bill Jewett's, half asleep-"Cheese sandwich and a cup
of coffee."
Bob Mobus-"I don't see how you tell those Smith twins apart."
R. Schultz-"That's easy. Mabel always blushes when she sees me."
Nixon-"I saw you shake hands with Mrs. De Cool."
Betz-"Yes, she must have been a bar-maid, gave me two fingers, you know."
R. Church-"What are you doing these days?"
Chet Swartz-"Working on' a ranch where they raise liornless goats."
Church-"But-"
Swartz-"There are no butts."
Coach Shadford-"Lawson, what would you do if you received a letter from
the Ku Klux Klan?"
Wellington-"Boss, ah'd read it on the train."
me ---
'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
L. Hood-"How much did it set you back to get your hair bobbed?"
Mamie Demaree-"Oh, about four yearsff
Lovenia Nessel-iglancing at summer's collection of snapshotsl-"Who's he?
He looks familiar!"
Pat Rosentreter trefiectivelyj-"He was!"
L. Hendrickson-"There's not a piece of chicken in this hash."
Waiter-"How do you know? Did a little bird tell you?"
Hendrickson-"Yes, a little swallow."
P. Jones-"Did you hear of the silver that died?"
C. Kafer-"What was the matter?"
Jones-"He starved in spite of his plate being filled."
The other night when we were leaving our girl and we had kissed her several
times, the girl said: "You had better run along home now. You've had your
share, more than your share."
And since then we have been endeavoring to find out who the other share-
holders are.
Father was no Congressman,
But the Gift Bill made him pause,
And he said, "Oh, mother dear,
When you draw this bill next year,
Just leave o-ut the costly little Santa Claus."
-Gargoyle
When Alice was home from Wisconsin during the Christmas vacation, her
kid brother asked her what an air pocket was.
"Well, Bub, an heir pocket is what your sister has her good times on."
Newspaper item-"The members of the Women's League sipped tea a few
minutes, in silence."
D. Risely-"I have a hunch that this bath house is built out of second-hand
lumber."
L. Rothfuss-"How come?"
D. Risely-"Just look at all the holes in the wall."
SENIOR'S CHRISTMAS PRAYER
Itls Christmas time,
Now I should say,
Old Santa Claus
Might leave one HA."
-Anon.
VN- ' 'F'-1
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
E. Gira lUnsuspectinglyJ-"I'm glad we have something to talk about in
common."
His Girl looming tol-t'You do make a good subject."
There was a glue factory near the railroad and as the train passed it each
morning the odor was very evident to the passengers. Miss Marshall knew
of t-his and when she started for Jonesville for the Christmas vacation, she pro-
vided herself with a bottle of lavender salts to counteract the smell. A farmer
was sitting across the aisle as they approached the glue factory. Miss Marshall
opened her bottle and held it to her nose.
The horrible odor soon filled the car. At last the farmed moved in his seat
and said, "Lady, will you please put the cork in that bottle?"
Mr. Barnum-"Did you want me to take your picture?"
K. Betz-"No, I wanted to get one so as I could take it home."
Bub-"Hey, Eddie, were you waiting for a car? I hear one outside."
Eddie-"Whaddya mean car?-that's Bill gargling his sore throat."
Jasper-"Yes, she's a Cash and Carry girl."
Bringman-"How's that?"
Jasper-"She's got the goods, but she won't deliver."
Ikey Vogel l with malice!-"Something is the matter with this carg I guess
we'll have to stop."
His Girl linnocentlyr-"Your clutch is slipping."
Ikey Vogel lmore maliciouslyfb-"As soon as we stop, I'll attend to that!"
"Do you play bridge?" she asked, as they stopped before the swollen brook.
Tony F lory-"Can you name anything that is both rough and sfmoo-th at
the same time?"
Jasper-"My gowsh! Do you know her, too?"
Eva Ash-t'Now remember, I don't want a very large picture."
Mr. Barnum-"All right, Miss, please close your mouth."
F. Guyman-"I was over to see her last night when someone threw a brick
through the window and hit the poor girl in the side."
Bovee-"Did it hurt her?"
Guyman-"No, but it broke three of my fingers."
Clara Stange-"Say, Pat, what makes Tom act so sad and funny at times?"
Pat Rosentreter-"Oh, he's acted that way ever since his mother told him
there wasn't any Santa Claus."
UPU
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
O'dell fat Dobbin'sJ-"Please bring me some prunesf'
Waitress-"Stewed, sir?"
O'dell-"None of your darned business."
Miss Green--"Why is History hard?"
C. Baldwin-"Well, we've had a sto-ne age, a bronze age, and an iron age,
and now we're in a hard-boiled age."
John Bryant-"It,s a funny thing, but the biggest fools always get the
prettiest girls."
Gretchen Moore-"Oh, how you flatter me!"
Betty DeFoe-"How shall I draw this construction?"
Miss Buck-"Extend your sides in all directions."
Mary Rice says-
"Blushes may come,
Blushes may go,
But freckles go on forever!"
G. Green-"If I had known that tunnel was so long I would have kissed you."
Countess Cox-"Good heavens, wasn't that you?"
J. L. R.-"What form of energy is displayed in this room?"
Watson-'tKinetic energy in the form of hot air."
Miss Buck-"John, will you explain Theorem three?"
J. Bryant-"I can not explain Theorem three."
Miss Buck-"Why not?"
J. B.-"It don't come to me."
Miss Buck-"Then you'd better go after it."
E. J. R.-"Why do you drink your coffee from your saucer?"
J. L. R.-1'If I drink it from my cup the spoon gets in my eye."
Mr. Reed fAlgebra class just before Christmas vacationl-"Now I hope you
won't forget all you know about Algebra during vacation."
Bob Mobus fwaking upj-"Same to you, Mr. Reed."
Pres. Drew fspeaking of basketball game at Mass meetingl-"I wish that
every fellow would be there and bring his family, too."
J. L. Reed--"Where do they keep the standard measure of the Metric
system, Mr. McNulty?"
Jim McN.-"In a glass case."
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
Miss Taylor-"What caused the explosion in the Chemical Laboratory last
hour?"
Jasper-1"One of the fellows got hot around the collar."
Miss Taylor-"What?"
Jasper-"Well, you see, it was a celluloid collar."
Miss Armstrong lthe class had just finished reading "Cranford"J-"Miss
Wright, what part did you enjoy most?"
Miss Wright-"Well, to tell you the truth, I like the part where the cat
swallowed the 'Old Maid's' lace and she had to give it some sort of powder to
get it back again."
Mr. Luce Q in Commercial Geographyl-"Esther, will you tell us something
about the character of Alaska?"
Esther Helma-"WellQI don't know but I never heard anything bad about
her."
G. McPhail-"Have you read 'Freckles"?"
A. Rorick-"No, that's just my veil."
Mr. Griffey's Patch got Luce so he took it to a Taylor at the Storrs. On
his wav back he met a Buck which he overcame with his Armstrong and he also
picked a Peck of Green Reeds to put in his Hall.
Miss Green K in Historyj-"Miss Wright, if a mouse should chew to shreds
some paper money, who would be the gamer?"
Miss Wright I rather nervouslyl-"The mouse would be the gainerf'
A. Flory-"You are the breath of life to me!"
Gladys Dickerson-"Then suppose you hold your breath once in a while."
Clark Baldwin f calling up one of our worthy female seniors!-"How about
the dance this evening?"
Female Senior-"Certainly not! I can't go with a baby!"
C. B.-"Pardon me! I wasn't aware-!"
TOLD OF NORTON YEARS AGO
"When I looked out of the window, Lorain, I was glad to see you playing
marbles with Harvey Greene."
"We wuzn't playin' marbles, ma. We just had a fight, an' I wuz helpin'
him pick up his teeth."
Drew 1 at the big cityj-"Say, honey, I'd like to see you apart for a moment."
Lady Clerk-"Say kid, whadayah think I amy aa puzzle for the little ones?"
IK'-P
cw W e - erm
'Che SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
I can tell by looking at your eyes,
Your lips tell me,
The red of your cheeks and
The Way your bobbed hair gets into my eyes,
They all tell me
That you dressed in a hurry tonight.
Retter-"I had an awful fright last night."
O'dell-"Yes, I saw you with her."
You wouldn't slam the jokes We use,
If you could see what we refuse.
YY
-Ye Ed.
Octopus
EH
'Zfhe SENIOR SICKLE 19623
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'Che SENIOR SICKLE 1923
ALUMNI DEPARTMENT
CLASS or 1920
Harley Alcock, Palmyra
Delta Allshouse, Battle Creek Sanitarium Nurses'
School
Florence Anderson, Woolworth Co., Adrian
Milton Armstrong, Adrian
Sarah Backrack, Adrian ,
Alice Bailey-Force, Adrian
Linford Barager, Adrian
Arthur Bassett, Adrian
Carl Benner, Adrian
W'inifred Betz, Detroit
Gertrude Bird, Adrian
Clara Bohkle, Adrian
Lutrelle Bradish, Adrian
Phylli Bradish-Smith, Adrian
Thelma Brock-Smith, Adrian
Zelma Brock, A. H. S. Office
Leland Brower, Detroit
Ruth Bunkervliourget, Adrian
Thomas Carter, Adrian
William Chaloner, Adrian College
Luella Clark, Adrian
Marian Clark, Teaching
Geraldine Colvin, Lansing
LeRoy Comfort, Adrian
Nellie Cook, Teaching
Ina Crane, Teaching, Howell, Mich.
Mirian Darling, Adrian College
Gladys Dawson, Palmyra
Vivia Dawson, Adrian
Owen Decker, Nat. Bank of Com., Adrian
Elton Deible, Adrian
Roy Denius, Adrian
Donald Dibble, Adrian
Carol Doty, Ypsilanti Normal
Lena Dowling, Clayton
Iona Driscoll, Raymond's Garage, Adrian
Hudson Earles, Detroit
Gladys Ehinger, Teaching, Riga
Wanda Fisher-Haine , Sebina, Ohio
Evelyn Foote, Huntington College, Ind.
Meyer Frank, Washington, D. C.
Jesse Furbush, Standard Oil Station, Adrian
Clifford Gobba, Adrian
Mary Goodluck, Toledo
Nelson Haas, Adrian
Lynn H.a.m.ilton, Com'l Savings Bank, Adrian
Elizabeth Hart, Adrian
Blanch Hines-Barrett, Hudson
Mabel Hinsdale'Case, Sand Creek
Nina Hoag, Adrian
Clifford Hood, Adrian College
Emma Hopkins, Ann Arbor
Donald Hostetler, Adrian College
Theo Howard-Poling, Adrian
Edgar Hubbard, M. A. C.
Ina Hutchinson, Teaching
Mary Illenden, Ypsilanti Normal
Leora Ives-Kaiser, Adrian
Alice Johnston, Adrian
Wilma Jones, Adrian
Oda Knight, Teaching
Elmer Krout, Razor-Strop Factory, Adrian
George Lighthall, Detroit
Irene McElroy, Adrian
Vida Messier, Holloway
Reo Middleton, Ypsilanti Normal
Linford Miller, Adrian College
Gwendolyn Morden, Grinnel's, Adrian
Ralph Morris, Hart-Shaw-Miller, Adrian
Ollie Meyers, Hart-Shaw-Miller, Adrian
Lilah Near-Taylor, Palmyra
W'alter Novesgy, Notre Dame University
Lilith Onsted-Baldwin, Onsted
Dorothy Palmer. Adrian
Helen Peebles, Adrian
Alma Peterson, Teaching
Ellen Peterson, Adrian
Louise Porter, University of Michigan
Eila Powell, Adrian College
Earl Rehklau, Tri-State University
Mildred Prange, Adrian
Geraldine Reynolds-Baily, Adrian
Harold Rice, Adrian
Carmel Ritter, Onsted
Katherine Robbins, married
Lucille Rogers-Henderson, Panama Canal Zone
Laura Rose-Bovee, Detroit
Howard Sawyer, Lenawee Co. Sav. Bank, Adrian
Dorothy Schaler, Adrian
Fern Schneerer, M. A. C.
Irene Schneider, Adrian State Bank
Ernestine Scranton, Adrian
Edward Seeburger, Adrian
Leah Sell, Fairfield
Caroline Sheldon, Adrian
Harold Sherman, Adrian
Helen Shields, Bloomington, Ind.
Dorothy Shorten-Hackett. Hudson
Alice Smith, Adrian
Carmon Smith, Flint
Forest Smith, Adrian
Marjorie Smith-Youngs, Adrian
Edwin Spielman, Adrian
Alice Stark, Adrian
Lydia Staup, Teaching
Josephine Stearns, U. of M.
Lillian Stein-Eldredge, Lansing
Cecile Strong, White's Hardware Co., Adrian
Eleanor Swanson, Hillsdale College
Gladys Terry, Adrian
Kenneth Terry, Adrian
Harriet Tobias, Adrian
Kenneth Tolford, U. of M.
Leon Valentine, Adrian
James VanOrden, M. A. C.
Kenneth Walworth, Adrian
Prosser Watts. Security Trust Co., Detroit
Norris Whitaker, Adrian
Doris Whitmarsh, Nurses' 'I'rain'g School, Chicago
Miller Wing, Springfield, Ill.
Vernon Woodcox, Fort Wayne
Florence Wooster, Detroit
an CCW--. .1 QF:
The SENIOR SICKLE. 1923
CLASS OF 1921
Claire Aldrich, Detroit
Fern Allion, Adrian
Thaddeus Annis, Training Camp, Ratoul, Ill.
Melba Baird, Ypsilanti Normal
Carrol Bassett, Adrian
LeRoy Bauerle, Adrian
Allison Belcher, Adrian
Genevieve Bertram, Adrian College
Muriel Bovee, Ypsilanti Normal
Francis Bowerman, Adrian College
Merle Brewer, Shepherd's Drug Store, Adrian
Mildred Bragg. Nurses' Train'g School, Ann Arbor
Myrtle Campbell, Adrian
Robert Campbell, Adrian
Guy Case, Hart-Shaw-Miller Drug Store, Adrian
Ray Collins, U. of M.
Ella Cook, .Lenawee County Teacher
Hazel Oulver-Hill, Adrian
Harold Cutter, Adrian College
Lets Daniels, Lenawee County Teacher
LaVerne Dersham, Blissfield
Edward Dobbins, Adrian
Inez Drake, Cleary's Business College, Ypsilanti
Halsey Eggleston. C. F. Smith Store, Adrian
Charles Ehinger, Lumber Mill, Palmyra
Ernest Engel, Ypsilanti Normal
Mildred Engel, Jasper
Hyrtle Feeman, Adrian College
Lucile Fowler, Ypsilanti Normal
Helen Fraley. U. of M.
Hildreth Gasner, Adrian College
Ethel Gilles, Adrian
Thelma Goodes, Detroit
Gayle Goodes, Paper Mill. Palmyra
Agnes Gwynn-Leonard, Adrian
Aileen Hare. Adrian College
Leola Harris-Harrington, Pontiac
Helen Hensey, Adrian
Mildred Hensey, Adrian
Ruth Hoisington, Adrian
Harold Hough, Adrian
Edward Habrick, Adrian
Alma Houser, Adrian
Sumner Howell, University of Michigan
Alvin Howland, Adrian College
Verna Hoxie, Frances Shimer School, Mt,
Ill.
Jasper Haxel, Toledo
Kenneth Kaynor, M. A. C.
Alta Knapp, Adrian
Ruth Koehnlein, Adrian
G-lendora Kolz, Adrian
Anna Mae Lewis, Adrian
Robert Lighthall, Detroit
Elizabeth Lloyd-Kuitert, Grand Rapids
Frieda Lutz, Adrian
Florence McComb, Adrian College
Clara Marrow, Lenawee County Teacher
William Matthes, U. of M.
Florence Messier-Harris, Cleveland
LaVerue Moore, Holloway
Sylvia Morse, Lenawee County Teacher
Lenwood Meyers, Adrian
Courtland Munn, Adrian
Linda Nicolai, Adrian College
Mildred McIntyre, Teaching, Portland, M
Margaret Osgood, Adrian College
Francis Pennock, Adrian College
Eryl Rainey, Adrian College
Mildred Reed, Adrian
Harold Rice, Adrian College
Anna Rhodes, Indianapolis, Ind.
LeRoy Richardson, Adrian
Fred Ridge, Chicago
Rita Roberts, Toledo, Ohio
Edith Salter, Teaching
Welcome Schneider, Detroit
Marie Sherman, A. B. Park Co., Adrian
Leota Rogers, Adrian
Claire Shutes, Adrian College
Clayton Smith, Adrian College
Etha Smith, Adrian College
Bernard Snedeker, U. of M.
Catherine Snyder, Greenville, Mich.
Edna Spielman, Adrian
Luella Stegg, Adrian
Donald Swartz, Adrian
Honert Sweet, Adrian College
Warren Van Orden, Adrian
Ernest Wild, Ypsilanti Normal
Florence Zumstein, Adrian
CLASS OF 1922
Cleo Aldrich, Detroit
Burdette Andrix, Adrian College
Karl Angell, Vancouver, B. O.
Robert Argue, Ogden
Ruth Ash, Adrian '
Elwood Bancroft, Adrian College
Hilda Barber, Weston
Blanche Barnes, Lenawee County Teacher
Ada Bird, Normal School, Indiana
Ward Bradish, Cadmus
Sarah Breese, Lenawee County Teacher
Dorothy Brown, Adrian
Irma Brown, Manitou Beach
Matilda Cheney-Messing, Blissiield
Edith Church, Adrian College
Ray Clapper, Adrian
Florence Cole, Teaching
Francis Collins, Assumption College, Ont.
Forest Cook, Adrian
Sherman Coy, Adrian College
Lester Crandall, Adrian
Edwin Davitt, Adrian
Frances De Bow, Adrian
Muriel DeLine, Ypsilanti Normal
Ivan Eggleston, Adrian
Clarence Ehinger, Lumber Mill, Palmyra
Carmel Evilsiser, Ypsilanti Normal
Fred Fairbanks, Metamora, 0.
Reinhold Filter, Adrian
Owen Goodes, Adrian
Carrol,
ich.
"'C'he SENIOR SICKLE 1923
CLASS OF 1922 Ccontinuedl
Helen Griiiith, Adrian
Carl Groth, Teaching, Dundee
Eldred Gruber, Brown's Business College, Adrian
Margaretta Haier, Ypsilanti Normal
Eugene Hall, Adrian College
Dorothy Hanover, Adrian
Melva Hawkins, Adrian College
Bernadette Hayward-Shafer, Jackson
Lawrence Hayward, Ypsilanti Normal
Martha Hicks, Ypsilanti Normal
Elda Hlilftline, Telegram Oliice, Adrian
Ruth Hoffman, Palmyra
Elizabeth Hood, Adrian College
Velma Hopkins, Adrian
Alma Howe, Knitting Mills, Adrian
Leta Jackson, Nurses' Training School, Ann Arbor
Ernest Kapnick, Ypsilanti Normal
Leilah Kerr, Western Reserve, Cleveland, 0.
Harold Knight, Toledo, 0. -
Marjorie Knowlau, Cadmus
Clara Kloz. Adrian
Esther Krueger, Ypsilanti Normal
Marie Krueger, Ypsilanti Normal
Fred Kuney, Weston
Allen Long, Adrian
Alyce Lowth, Cadmus
Thelma Lowth, Cadmus
Alzada Maltman, Pentecost
Annett Marquis, Teaching
Dorothy Miller, Adrian
Walter Miller, Adrian
Gertude Moore, Adrian
Anne Moreland, Post-Graduate Course, A. H. S.
Frank Morse, Jasper
Edith Myers, Adrian
Doris Nicolai, Adrian
Helen O'Bryan, Adrian
Gerald Osgood, Adrian State Bank
Clara Procknow, Adrian
Violet Reed, Hart-Shaw-Miller Drug Store, Adrian
Donald Richardson, Adrian College
Hazel Sayrs, Adrian
John Schmitt, U. of M.
Lolita Schomp, Ypsilanti Normal
Myrna W'il1iam , Manitou Beach
Bernard Seeburger, Adrian
Gladwin Sell, Fairfield
Marguerite Shaler, Adrian
Doris Shutes, Adrian
Irene Skinner, Jasper
Carl Smith, Adrian
Margaret Smith, Adrian College
Evelyn Snyder, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Hall Spelman, Adrian
Sesta Tuttle, C1eary's Business College, Ypsilanti
Marion Van Doren, Lenawee County Teacher
Alvin Vogel, United Electric Co., Adrian
Eileen Warren, Morse's Jewelry Store, Adrian
Walter Weiss, Palmyra
Herbert Wilkinson, Chicago
Everal Wines, Adrian
Zelda Wood, Adrian College
Helen Wooster, M. A. C.
Moida Wright, Ypsilanti Normal
Gregg Shofiit, Toledo
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'JI THE Adrian State Savings Bank has
resources of over S2,000,000.00 and is
in the hands of the following:
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
B. E. TOBIAS, President
R. H. WATTS
Vice President
F. A FAULHABER
Assistant Cashier
C. K. WESLEY
Assistant Cashier
W. W. COOKE
President Adrian Wire Fence Co.
President Exchange Bank, Clayton
CHARLES Cr. WESLEY
The Wesley Co., Clorhiers
WM. E. JEWETT
Physician
CLARKE E. BALDWIN
Attorney
CHARLES S. WHITNEY
Vice President-Cashier
R. P. WATTS
Assistant Cashier
A. V. RIDDLE
Extension and Service Department
W. O. HUNT
President and General Manager Lena-
wee County Telephone Co.
A. D. ELLIS
A. D. Ellis Co., Blisslield
R. A. KAISER
Real Estate
ERNEST E. TOBIAS
Secretarv and Treasurer Michigan
Wire Fence Co.
OLIVER T. ROSE
Director Wilcox
Hardware Co.
President lVlcl.achlin 8: Company State Bank, Petersburg
We Solicil Your Savings and Checking Accounts
ADRIAN STATE SAVINGS BAN K
Main Ofce: Maumee and Winter Streets
Branch Ofce: Tecumseh and Church Streets
fotm B. Stetson Hats Cheney Silks Cravats Manhattan Shirts
ltis E-Z
to distinguish the Best
from the Rest
in
2 lality
Style
Value
WESTGATE, CO NDRA 81 COMPANY
Estate
l-leatrola
Let us show you this
wonderful heater. It
looks like a Victrola
and heats like a fur-
nace. just what you
want where a fur-
nace can not be
OG installed.
Bennett-Hoxle
Hardware Company
I34 NORTH MAIN - PHONE 433
Lewis, Coe CS' Howell
Dry Goocis, Miilinery
Women's Wearing Apparel, Rugs
and
Decorative Accessories
FIOWCYS Scizrafqs
fo' DELICIOUS
All Geeasions CHOCOLATES
8? Q
from
, M B .C .
wATsoN s OREE,j21'j,,,fjf3S O
Say il with flowers ADRIAN MICHIGAN
BRIDGES
Q60
RIDGES afford easy access
from one side of a river to the
other side.
Savings accounts are often bridges
that lead from small means to pros-
perity.
The interest we pay helps in
transporting people to the side they
Wish to reach. -
SAFETY - SERVICE
STRENGTH
AAA A A A A A sou
COIVIMERCIAL SAVINGS BANK
OF ADRIAN
'08-I I0 South Main Street
3 Z Interest Paid on Savings Deposits
A. B. Park Co.
DRY GOODS, RUCS, DRAPERIES
6' READY-TO-WEAR
...
RELIABLE GOODS SINCE I877
1
N. B. HAYES 8: CO.
GEO. W. TRIPP CO
For over Fifty Years AcIrian's -E
Leading Shoe Store
Fasfzionfs Latest Styles ADRIAN TECUMSEH
MANCHESTER
N I1 Main S ADRIAN, MICHIGAN
"Hoi Foo! It lo Fooie's'
COUCTCICIIC CUT-RATE
The South Main Street
CIotI'1ier 6 Furnisher
TIRES - TUBES
AUTO SUPPLIES
Adrian Tecumseh
1909 AMP- l923
SW.. sgfews. Y .
S
Ge,
1 i
i
Home of
The National Bank of Commerce
The .Bank Thai Service Built
We pay TM interest on savings accounts
if left one calendar month or more
Ojfcers and Qirectors
R. C. ROTHFUSS, President C. H. LEWIS, Cashier
W. H. SHIERSON, Vice President H. E. GRUEL, Asst. Cashier
A. E.. ILLENDEN, Vice President L. W. PIERCE, Asst. Cashier
F. E. KANE., Auditor
W. CHATFIELD S. O. ROTHFUSS
J. W. HELME. C. W. SELLECK
C. L. ROBERTSON F. G. WESTGATE
A GOOD PLACE TO TRADE
Kinear, l-luelaner 81 Kells
The Store for Men ana' Boys
1
l.
.,. NX
5-if ....... BOE M me Ph 672
gf HB dd: as
l g -I V Everything Electrlcal
If 1 0 "4'5'In-:vw -www www cu'-wfwmwunXlwv1u10K NNN
W. G C Edison Mazda Lamps Kalamazoo Cleaners
QUALITY MEATS
RICHELIEU CANNED eoons
Ballenbergeris
QUALITY MEAT SHOP
Dobbins, Tea Room Mothers'
'43 SOUTH MAIN Two Special Chairs for Cutting
. . I Cl1ildren's Hair
Special attention given to
Banquets and Parties Reedle'S Barber Shop
I I3 South Main Seven Barbers
Lenawee County
S avings Bank
"The Bank on the Four Corners"
i9l l9E'
Old - Reliable - Conservative - Safe
i
f
.
' 4
Qur Free Service
We give Free Inspection Service
to aII the users of our current. No
doubt our Inspector has called on
you by this time.
This Free Service is rarely given
by electrical companies in cities ten
times Adrian's size, and very rare-
Iy in a city of I 2,000 population.
The Inspector will carry Mazda
Iamps for your needs and a few
appliances in his service truck. If
you are interested he will give you
a demonstration.
Any customer wishing this service
remember it is free for the asking
The
CITIZENS LIGHT 6: POWER
COMPANY
STRICTLY HIGH GRADE WORK
TELEPHONE I 2I
EXCELSIOR STEAM LAUNDRY
Efcient Experience Gives Qualify and Service
CORNER MAUMEE AND RACE STREETS ADRIAN, MICHIGAN
EX PERT WATCH REPA
Home of
I-I. IVI. Judge 8: Son
fo, I-Iart, Schaffner
Class Pins - Class Rings 85 Marx
Class Invitations
You will always find just the
right GIFT for the graduate
al
I'I. IVI. Judge Sc Son
Qgality jewelers
" Where Gems and Cold Ale Fairly Sold"
Clothes
Rochester Clothing
Company
JEWELRY AND CLOCK REPAI ING
Unusual Good Harvey
Things to Eat
at
BURNS 6: SPIES
CLEANING WORKS
Dry and Steam Cleaning
Pressing - Dyeing - Repairing
A oss from the National Bank I C mmerce
GT13111 ell Bros
Pianos - Player Pianos - Victrolas
and everything in the realm of music
just the thing for the High School Band and Orchestra
can be found in our stock of
Band and Orchestral Instruments
ALL LEADING MAKES
ecards, Sfzeel Music and B
Large slack of Player Rolls, R
n
I I I E t Maumee Street Adrian,
35
oaks
Michig
I
The BUSY BEE
and
SUGAR BOWL
Candy Works and
lce Cream Parlors
A ppelizing
Lunches
West and East Maumee Street
Respectively
E. L. Thompson
8: Sons
See us for
F arms, City Property
Fire, Auto
and Cyclone Insurance
Always pleased lo show
you our list
I05 E.. Maumee - Adrian, Michigan
FOI'Cl Cars - FOl'd TIUClCS
and Fordson Tractors
The most car, truck and tractor for the money begins with Ford
and ends by leaving the most dollars in your pocket.
Our USED cars are all so good that the buyer is sure to be
happy or he gets his money back.
Oh!-but ou certainl will miss it if ou don't see our tires and
,Y y Y
get our pnces before you buy. They are money savers. The same
thing is true on anything else that yoo need for your car.
Lei our shop Overhaul your car auzl you can't help bu!
smile lo see her go. Call and see us, anyway-we are
alway lonesome when no one is around.
S. W. Raymond Auto Sales r
Phone 931
Adrian, Michigan
Co to
Barnum ,s
for t
First-Class
Up-to-Date
Photos
He is the only photographer who makes a specialty of
Babies, Pictures
SPECIAL RATES TO SENIORS
n
All photographs in this Sickle were furnished
by Barnum
Q
F. S. BARN UM - Photographer
Underwood Block,
corner Main and Maumee Sts.
ADRIAN LAUNDRY CG.
We do all ihings well
222 South Winter Phone 9
, i Aclriragnis Finest jewelry Store
Thai 5 All Iflf e Do '
Examine the Eyes
and
Furnish Glasses i
' ' The Store for Young 'People
k O ' Where you will always find the new things fir
l 06 East Maumee
N t to H ' Sho Sto
Our System of Dry Cleaning is
0dOIlCSS
Clothes pressed while you wait
For results see us
Sanitary Cleaning Works
If it comes from
FISI-IER'S
it must be good
Phone 914
' NORTH MAIN STREET
You go to High School for instruction, ancl to the
Hart-ShaW- Miller Drug Co
for anything you expect to find in a first class
drug store
Three Rexall Stores
Two on the Four Corners
One at IZ4 South Main
Realities Us.
Habits of Though! Va lu 6 ,Fb-Sf
There is an apparent glamour to that
which is farther away, but like the pot
of gold at the foot ofthe rainbow, it ex-
ists only in the imagination.
That better merchandise and better
prices exist somewhere else than at the
store at home is merely a fancy or habit
of thought.
lf you want low prices, you will find
none lower than our prices for our qual-
ity of merchandise. F or quality-values,
ours cannot be equalled anywhere at
our prices. For styles, the newest are
displayed in all of our 37 l Department
Stores as soon as they are shown in
New York shops.
Try our store.
J. C. Penney Co.
CLOTHES
for
Men and Young
Men
Trunks and Bags
HERMES 6K MARX
Ice Cream - Candies - Lunches
PHONE 600 WE DELIVER
QW!! u
We serve only ' Z Our line
the best Lunches of Candies is the
and W1 Ifweeie Zfkioppd' best
lce Cream . - F. W. G., Mgr.
jdlldllf ......... Jfdcix
Established 185 4
WILCOX HARDWARE CO
Hardware - Plumbing - Heating - Tinning
F arm lmplements
"QUALITY GOODS AT FAIR PRICES" IS OUR MOTTO
garfers
9
x A I Q
dy 'Y C: JW
O
s
138 140 North Mam St
0
,52"fJRffS Arr, 0
Adrian's Greatest Underselling Store
The
TAI EOEDFITI N G Shepherd Drug Store
Prescriptions Our Specially
call at
CARL F. STARICS
l23EastMaumeeStreet 107 NORTH MAIN STREET
Coast to Coast 5,
f TP Q
' qw " il
Y' Over 40,000 dealers tfcen ws
MDL N are selling
.Wie
fmwfw
Consisting of Suspenders, Garters, and Hose Supporters. There are no
suhstitutes so good. Every pair of Nu-Ways is fully guaranteed for loads
of comfort and long service.
JWUZ5 offrecl C512-S: e z' 65
THE S ' A
EAT
Purity Ice Cream
for ITS FOOD VALUE
You will flnd Qualiiy Always in our
servings at our new S H E I-A D 0 N
All-White Soda Fountain The jeweler
Notice how clean it is G
CLASS PINS 6' RINGS
BENFER 8: NACHTRIEB PRIZE CUPS
DRUG STORE
The best is none too good-ask your grocer for
I-H FLOUR---it flls the bill
THE CUTLERDICKERSON COMPANY - Distributors
Phone 907 122 N. M S
'cSay If With Flowersu
from the MAPLE CITY FLGRAL COMPANY
FISI-IER'S Y5:35Sl" BOGK STORE
ADRIAN, MICHIGAN
We Make Clothes and Know How
ROBT. T. SIVIALTZ - The Leading Tailor
We Sell t l: When
better tires can be made
S s ' t
ew
K II s ' fi ld i ii 1 .
6 y prmg e 'x,l:45rl'l,r L! Kelley will make
Tires if them
:Zia ,,- bf",
ADRIAN HARNESS CGIVIPANY
When lneiier automobiles are buili
BUICK will build ilzem
ADRIAN BUICK SALES
F Rentals, Testing and Filling "There must be some re
WI LLARD S E RVI C E STATI O N
The Only Oflicial Willard Service Station in Lenawee County
Ph 94 M MAPLE CITY BATTERY 6: TIRE CO. 129 M A L
j. C. VAN DOREN
Agricultural Implements, Wagons, Robes, and Seeds
HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES
C L A S S O F I 8 6 9
Walk - Over Shoes
M Styled forutge Young
5'W"i'-'W7"f'f1'f'fff" H Moderately Priced
WM. I'I. EGAN CO.
U We ft your feet"
M I C H I G A N
INTERSCHOLASTIC
,Sf Wi
P mimi 'Sus
ISSOCIATION
T an II
S. F. F INCH PRINTING CO.
'Prinling - Gngraving
Binding
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