W 4.8,-rrzq-mm.-v-,,,-f1.1.v ,4-..f-mg. :-- 1 ., -f--.v..'m,r.- Bmw .v A V U A w- -w, -,.-.-1-n.u.,.wf. Y . E577 r.!'jE!i!E53MEEm5B.'i1F Liiiihilifi 7 L .1'.LL1 :! 5'L:I'.GK!?,2E'4h?45lEf.?..X3HKi5iPS: iii11':Y2Z?AES5!QR.L'l!W'!!kk4f5!.'.3K'A, QYPJMHQZ iTix1F5i'E E 31 S 52 u 'J 5 J 5 H 2 3 P 1 Q I 5 ae E 5 3? 3 az Ei F 5 5 53 2 Q 3: if E a 5 3 S 3 5 22 3 S 3 2 5 Q 'W Q' J x - . V '- , - ' , ' ,, , - 1 , .2 - ' vi' W Ls' ,L .1 gS:.JM'111i'!ilEI'ffT!lHMiMT3l7x.u'!:liEMiAWmAZM8E:rX ,c'E-5,':.5f! '141J?:s'!IiHMHlWl'1iiQ S 2 CAD CEUS X 2 my ,ik ij! NJ PUBLISHED ANNUALLY By the STUDENT BODY ofthe CHICO HIGH SCHOOL CHICO, CALIFORNIA NlNE.TE.E.N HUNDRED TWENTY-TWO , ODE TO Tl-IE OLD BUILDING Old Building: Yesterday your halls were crowded with noisy feet, And your drab brick walls Echoed with gay young voices And the laughter of many. Today you are deserted, and stand alone- Empty, unused, abandoned. Your days of usefulness over, You are cast aside to be forgotten of us. Upon your poor, homely face there rests A somber look of sorrow. Sorrow not! For in this game of life There comes a day Wherein we all must meet and accept the fact That we are no longer needed in the life around us. And day by day, one by one, we all shall be discarded, Our days of usefulness past, To be forgotten by those whom we have served faithfully And however well. Such is the order of all being traversing the pathways of this life. Time and all things shall forever change, And they who change not with time Shall be left and forever lost from the way of life. Old school, you have not kept pace With the ever-lengthening strides of progress, And of recent years your four walls have been crowded to the very doors Now your successor stands, A great, proud building, Ready to accept the ru.sh of eager feet you can no longer hold. And now the time has come to say farewell. We leave you to stand alone, And go our way until we, too, shall be abandoned in old age- And shall give our places to the new and the young, And the day shall come wherein we pass beyond, Out into the great unknown void, And are no more. Farewell. Un Emu, QBIEI Ggzlqunl me Qgfhinaie thin the Nineteenth Eihitinn uf fllahwzeus TABLE OF CONTENTS ODE TO THE BUILDING .... ........................................................ DEDICATION ..................... TABLE OF CONTENTS ........ CLASSES ................ .. .......... . CLASS PIN . .................... . SENIOR PICTURES ...............-... ORGANIZATIONS ...................... Student Body Pictures ................ Girls' Student League ..................... Girls' Student League Pictures ........ The Sawmill ................................... Girls' High Jinks ........................ I. 8: 0. Club ................. I. ds O. Club Pictures ...... Block C Club ................... Block C Club Pictures ...... Wearers of Block C ...... Red and Gold ................... .. Red and Gold Pictures ....... The Band ................... Band Pictures ..... , ....., . Don's Melodious Six ........ Hi Y Club ..................... Hi Y Club Pictures. ....... I Wonder If CPoemJ ........ EXCHANGES ................................. EDITORIALS .................................... CADUCEUS STAFF PICTURES .......... LITERARY ....................... .............. . ...... . The Wandering Curse fPoemJ ....... The Tale of Elizabeth ................... Thoughts of a Farmer flfoeml ........ Spat and Spatette ..........................,...... The Romance of an Awkward Man ...,.. Such is Luck .......,...... - .......... i. .......... .. SOCIAL ............................. ......................... ATHLETICS ................................... Summary of the Season ........ Football ............... . .......... . Football Pictures ................ Page . ....... 5 6 'f.'f.'fffi'i 'i23 9 10 32 33 34 36 36 37 38 39 39 40 40 41 42 42 43 43 44 45 45 46 ........48, 150 ,.....49, 51 ......58, .........62, .........64, ......69, 70 The Cross City Race ....... ........ .......................... 7 3 , Cross City Race Pictures ...... ..........................-.---... Boys' Jazz Party .......... ........ ...........................----- 7 5 . Base Ball ........................... ....... 7 7, 78, 79, 81, 82, Base Ball Pictures ........ Track ........................ . Track Pictures .......... Tennis ............... ............... Tennis Pictures .................... .......84, 85, 87, 89, 90, 91, .....84, 86, .... ...... . ..... , .... ,....... . ....... Girls' Girls' Girls' Girls' Girls' Girls' Girls' Girls' Athletic Club ................... Athletic Club Pictures ....... Base Ball .......................... Base Ball Pictures ..... Hockey ..................... Hockey Pictures ....... Tennis ................... .......95, 53 54 55 56 57 62 63 65 67 68 71 , 72 74 74 76 83 80 92 88 93 93 98 97 Tennis Pictures ................................................................ ..... ........ ALUMNI ....,................... ................................................................................ JOKES ..................... ...107, 108,109,110,111, 114, 115,118,119, 122, SNAPS ....,........ ............................................................... 1 12, 113, 116, CLASS WILL ..................... CLASS ROLL ....................... .....-- ..127. LIST OF ADVERTISERS ...... ADVERTISEMENTS ........... 104, 123 117 128 95, 99, 100 99 .........101 101 iii? 1 HSE, 124 , 125 120, 35 103 102 106 121 126 , 130 131 160 CADUCEUS, oH1oo Page Eleven SENIOR CLASS J SSSS 1iTT HE Senior Class of 1922, through four years of High School T life, has made a name of which it can be proud. The class has always boasted of the 'beauty of its members, their lK1I'f'9 physical prowess and their mental superiority. As Fresh- lPf5i'V',5'i men, the Class of 1922 displayed unusual social traits and lfqf ' gave a Frosh Frolic. Resolved to show real school spirit. Qff ' - bf certain members of an ambitious athletic nature made rapid MQAZW strides in track, tennis, football and baseball. Honor cards were not all to the upper classmen for the records show that the 1922 class received a third of the honor cards given. The Sophomore year was much taken up with picnics, interclass meets and studies. The Sophomore Scud held an important place on the school's social calendar. Additions were made to both honor and athletic lists. Assuming the dignified role of Seniors the class was especially success- ful. A clever play entitled Her Husband's Wife was given by the class on the first of June. This, with Senior Skip day, Pioneer day, Senior Freak day, Senior Dance and final Senior Week, made the class of 1922 a memor- able one. Block C members and other '22 athletes are: Wesley Rumbolz Vernon Jackson Harry Ossenbriggen William Hamilton Euland Payne Frank Streeter Donald Brayton Dwight Carmack Arthur Johnson - Ray Allinger Honor students for the year 1921-22 are: Adalyn Honodel Catharine Hurtle Berta Boyd Henry Umsted Trammel Moore Katharine Waters Class officers are: Harry Ossenbriggen ............ - ...... President ........ . ............... Euland Payne Helen Kelly ,,,,................ .... . ..Vice-President .... . ........ Alice Camper Sidney Cheyney ,,,,,,,,. . ....... Secretary ...... ......... H elen Bond Page Twelve CADUCEUS, CHICO Y --fi, Page Fourteen CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Fifteen Page Sixteen CADUCEUS, CHICO I K CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Seventeen Page Eighteen CADUCEUS, CHICO El'b'6E AAAf'ud A A ' N M' F Page'NineteeH Page Twenty CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Twenty-one SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY ' THE breath of spring-time filled the air with the sweet scent of growing grass and flowers, the aroma of moist earth, and ,251 t,l.f-M , I the breath of forest pines, the bright spring sun hung it IQ is lazily midway across the great unbroken blue of the sky, as far as the eye could reach stretched pine-covered hills sloping gently down to be mirrored in the clear calm waters 51 'lfgysfswl of the crystal mountain lake at their foot. I lay upon a soft carpet of fallen needles from a pine, whose moss-covered roots formed my pillow. Surely this was an enchanted spot, and how long I lay looking out over the scene before me I do not know, but I slept, and the, future opened before me. I lived and saw what is to be. And in this way my vision of your lives twenty years hence began. I awoke in a berth on a trans-continental train and after dressing wan- dered through the train to the smoker, where I sat down to watch leisurely the fragrant smoke of a good cigar drift upward, and to await the call to the diner, which eventually came. Upon entering the dining car, I hesitated, as the tables were fast filling, and not wishing to intrude I awaited the steward, who placed me at a table with three women whose appearance was less modish than severe. While awaiting my fruit I took occasion to observe my table companions, and imagine my surprise when I recognized in them my old schoolmates, Doris Watts, Catherine Hurtle, and Vera Ann Nash. They were on their way to St. Louis as Western delegates to the Anti-Man convention, where they said a resolution was to be drawn prohibiting men from everything but work in order that woman might come into her own rights and take the place in life intended for her. Man! I lost my appetite from just listening to those ladies rave, and I beat a hasty retreat while still entitled to wear my trousers. I dropt off that train at Salt Lake for a brief period of relaxation, took a taxi and recognized in the driver the lady speed-demon, Helen Krikac, whom I asked to name the best hotel. Helen replied that The Fleece was by far the best, and added that it was owned by Frank Streeter, who used to go to Chico High with us, but was now the social lion of that Mor- mon city. Well, I went to Frank's hotel and when I paid the bill later I realized that The Fleece was appropriately named. That evening I thought I would take in a show and walked down the Broadway of Salt Lake City until my eye was arrested by a blazing line, Euland Payne Now Playing, The Greatest Hobo-Comedian of the Age. I walked no farther than the box office, and darned if I didn't buy my ticket from Helena Adams. She said she had been passing out the paste- boards there for three years. She had married Gordon Sigler, but he had been killed in an electrical attack at the battle of Santa Cruz during the war between Japan and the United States. Inside the theatre Euland had the audience roaring and a blind man could plainly see that he was making a bigger hit than any big league ball-slugger that ever walked across a diamond. Yes, and speaking of big-leaguers, I saw in yesterday morning's paper that the Pink Sox had sold Randall Gay to the New York Pigmies for' :B85,000, the highest price ever paid for a pitcher in the history of the game. Page Twenty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO But to come back to Payne. After the second act I sent my card around to him and arranged a meeting for after the show. I met him as We had agreed and with him found Dorothy Smith and Helen Kelly, who were playing in the same company. I had failed to recognize them on the stage, as they were pretty well hidden behind a generous smear of grease paint. They said they were playing leading parts and that I might by close observation have found Myrtle Wood and Elizabeth Yank in the chorus. The four of us went to the Two Moon Cafe, where we indulged in a lobster feed by way of renew- ing friendship and bridging the gap of years since our last meeting. As the conversation drifted around finally to our old school and classmates, someone mentioned Frank Cummings. Euland said he had seen Frank in Logan, Utah. Said he was bishop of the Temple of the Sacred Cow. After a pause he added that Frank had married Zephyr Tull, Winona Po-lk, Beryl Sisk, Elsie Meade, and Katherine Waters. It seemed they were all happy Mormon wives. I couldn't be sure about Frank'si happiness. Dorothy volunteered the information that another of the '22 class was in Salt Lake City. Lance Drane, she claimed, had followed her half way over the United States urging her to marry him. She refused to do so, as his first wife, Hallie Dollarhide, had committed suicide, and his second, Loveday White, he had deserted, going to Alaska, where in some way he had managed to rake together quite a neat pile of gold. Anyway, Dot said she wouldn't give up her career for the best man on earth. Here Helen broke in with I would, all the time looking at Payne, but the boy was wise enough not to notice that part of the conversation. The party broke up about one o'clock, as I was leaving next morning for Chicago. We bade each other farewell, and parted, each again to wend hisseparate way. Next morning I arose just before train time and rushed out to get a bite to eat before bo-arding the train. In the restaurant I dropped down at a vacant table and gave my order to a waiter at whom I did not glance. I had ordered my eggs over and the ones the waiter brought me were resting calmly sunny-side-up, for which I promptly proceeded to bawl out the waiter, being in something of a hurry and slightly fussed. But I stopped in the middle of one of my choicest phrases, thereby utterly ruin- ing it, for I realized I knew that plate juggler. It was Ray Allinger. I accepted the eggs as they were, but spoke no word of recognition, for I was, you might say, just a little mite bashful then. I devoured those eggs in record time and made my train in the twelfth, crawled on and set sail for Chicago. The trip was entirely uneventful and I arrived in the city of hams pretty tired of riding. As it was night I taxied to a hotel and tried sleeping in a bed again. Morning dawned windy and cold, but I didn't see the dawning for the maids were making the beds when I crawled out. I started down the hall and in turning a corner bumped squarely into Loraine Blanton. She was working in the hotel, making beds to support her husband, our friend J. William Hamilton, who had gone cuckoo trying to sell some of his poems to Margaret Balaban, the editor of the Chicago Blotter. The Sick State had Bill in a cage now, so Loraine had to make beds. I went to the dining-room, ordered a combination breakfast and lunch- eon, and picked up a morning paper from which I proceeded to wrest the CADUCEUS, Cinco Page Twenty-three current news. On the front page was the story of the latest great financial deal put through by our old friend Chester Hoar, who I might mention had acquired enough wealth and power to make monkeys of the bulls and bears of Wall Street. Chester was now floating a new scheme to build a tube from New York to London through which passengers might be carried in two hours, eighteen minutes, by the new Drobney car. Henry had in- vented this torpedo-shaped car, whch was propelled through the tube by a series of nitro explosions somewhat on the order of the long-range shell used in the World War of 1914. Chester had wooed and won Esther Patch as his lawfully wedded wife, and Hank had invented a new way to put a kink in a girl's hair, thereby winning Anna Hagerty, who worshiped him as a little mud god, it was said. Now comes a lapse of two months, during which nothing exciting hap- pened other than my finding Alice Camper, Sidney Cheyney, and Nellie Ferguson. This is the Way it happened. While in a small town in upper New Jersey I had sent some shirts to a laundry. Upon their return I found a large hole burned in my pet dress shirt, and went forthwith to the laundry, intending to raise cain and the price of a new shirt. I found the manager, Robert Meade, who led me from the office to the ironing-room in search of the party who had ruined my front. Bending over a pair of hotpoints I found Sid Cheyney and Nellie Ferguson. Sidney promptly left her iron to burn another shirt, and started the conversation somewhat after her methods in the days of '22. From the gabble which ensued I gathered first that another of my acquaintances was in that same laundry as a queen of suds, and would I care to come back to the washer room and meet Lillian Armstrong? I would and did. Before I left that laundry I had forgotten all about my burned and ruined shirt, but I had learned of two more of my old friends. Harry Ossenbriiggen had taken Nellie as his good fairy and mar- ried her. Harry was working in Louis Armahan's shop, which was adver- tised as the Peoples' Perfect Plumbers, Inc. I guess Harry was a good plumber, all right, but it kept both him and Nellie busy buying shoes for the two little Ossies and meeting his landlady, Dorothy Bornholdt, once a month. As Nellie had captured Harry, so had Sidney lured Dean Hintz from the home of his father. They were married in the old town of Chico, but had later moved about, trying to keep pace with Dean's restless fancy. After two years Sidney had given up the chase, but Dean was still ram- bling, a Weary Willie, the dean of the knights of the road. Eventually I escaped and leaving the Waterloo of soiled shirts prepared to resume my onward way. That same night I took an electric to New York, where I had business with Glen and Trammel Moore, movie pro- ducers. After giving the information I desired, they insisted that I should go out to their studio and watch the latest thriller of the Cosmetic Com- pany as it was being produced. The film they were turning out was played by an all-star cast, so Glen said, and I couldn't afford to miss it in the making. I didn't. At the studio I met Helen Bond playing the lead, ably supported by Lillian Tull and Vernon Jackson. Helen said she had been starring for the last four years and that the boy.s about the town still thought she was an eighteen-year-old girl. She looked good enough to kiss, all right, but I remembered the many years since '22 and asked her how she did it. She Page Twenty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO told me the secret of eternal youth and beauty as given her by Helen I-lassel, who ran a beauty parlor in New York and specialized in making honest faces lie. That evening while scanning the pages of a current daily I noticed an article referring to a recent surgical wonder performed by Dr. Berta Boyd, so I determined to look up the great doctor in the morning. I found her in the office of her private hospital and introduced myself. We talked of old times for a while and Berta said Edward Schoen, an old classmate, was a nurse in the hospital, I didn't see Ed, as the lady doctors kept him busy, I guess. Dr. Boyd said among other things that she had saved the life of Helen Stevens after other medicos had given her up as dead from exposure at the time of the dirigible disaster. The big passenger boat Whistler ran wild and roamed the heavens for four days before it was finally located and taken up, or rather, down. The same afternoon I went to hear a lecture in the studio of Elizabeth Conrad in the heart of Greenwich Village. The lecturer was an ex-school- mate, Hallie Parrish. She spoke very forcefully upon the immodesty of men in wearing half-hose and short hair. She claimed that as it did not help their beauty any it was mere immortal vanity upon the part of the dependent sex and should be discouraged by the women, who held power to do it. As an example of the force of feminine argument she referred us to the act of Margaret Bouton with her husband, Ray Schaller. Margaret was an eminent figure in Washington, supreme-justice in fact. She had learned through the medium of a pet dove embodying the spirit of Adalyn Honadel, who had been killed in a bargain rush some three years before, that Ray had been fickle and untrue to his marriage vows by leaving the house without permission, talking on the street with Claudia Notley, and smoking a cigarette she gave him. Margaret immediately banished Ray from her home and as he had nothing of his own, he had fallen from the plane of life she had accustomed him to. Ray, so Hallie said, was now employed by the city of Washington as a white-wing, sweeping the streets he had once ridden over in luxury with his great judicial spouse. I'll tell you I felt out of place at that meeting, so I sneaked out in search of fresh air and met Ruth Shier at the door. Ruth asked me to havev a bit of nectar with her as she needed a stimulant. When we were seated she explained that she was an artist's model and was exhausted by trying to hold a very difficult pose. You know, she said, that when Ava Baldock was president, the Statue of Liberty was removed from the mouth of New York harbor and that Anna Pierce was appointed to succeed the old hand- made statue. Anna has adopted a pose I can't copy, and Charles Sellick, the great artist I am a model for, insists on painting the statue. As Anna isn't on duty long enough for him to copy anything but her face, I have to pose for the rest of the painting. Next day Ruth and I started out to see the world's championship iight between an Irish heavy and our old friend, Arthur Johnson. Arthur already held the championship belt, but the Irish pug, Mike O,Hammer, had an idea he might put Art to sleep. Well, we did not get to- the fight as we were pinched for speedng by a cop who turned out to be Vaneta Longmire. We were taken before a judge and fined, and it was then too CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Twenty-five late to see the fight, but I will state here that the Irish boulogne stood not a chance with Art, who put him to sleep in the third frame. After being released by the judge we went out to dine early, and I learned from Ruth of the only two of the old class I had not already seen or heard of, Grace Goins and Wesley Rumbolz, both great scientists. They had made a trip from this planet to Mars via electrical transforma- tion. They had been sent off in 1940, Ruth said, in order that the people of this world might know of the life on the other planet. They had not yet returned, but several otiicial messages had been received from them by wireless. I was still eating when the vision ended, breaking off my meal, and I awoke to find myself lying upon the hillside beneath a pine. Seniors, though you may object to following the life outlined in my vision, you can- not escape. Your fates are sealed and in no way may your future lives vary from the course they have been seen to follow. For I did see and recognize those I have named in this prophecy as friends and classmates. Therefore, be resigned, for as the Spirit of the Mountains has given them to me to see and to record, so shall your lives be twenty years hence. WESLEY W. MOORE. MY POME My teacher said to have prepared A poem for class today. I thought and thought but thought in vain - No inspiration came my way. At first I thought that I would write About my little cat, But when I found nothing to sayg I had to give up that. At last I thought that I would find A subject in yon forest tree, And then I soon discovered that The tree was much too high for me. 'Tis plain to me, and you all know it, That I could never make a poet. -E. G., '24. Page Twenty-six CADUCEUS, CHICO l JUNIOR CLASS .gas-'y gggrggg HE class of '23 in its sophomore year was one of the best gl I classes in Chico High, and this year as Juniors we are steadily forging ahead and holding a prominent place in the l l school's activities. Orval Patterson, Student Body presi- dent, is a member of the class. In athletics we take a prom- inent place. In baseball, track, football, tennis and hockey we are represented by girls as well as by boys. The follow- ing Junior boys are among our best athletes: Lewis Hazen, Orval Patter- son, Hallie Caywood, Claude Stover, Vernon Jackson. The Juniors have given several social events, the largest being their dance given in November. We are full of school spirit and pep, the yell leader of the school being Joe Donohue, a '23er. The Class of '23 can proudly yell: Juniors-Rah-Rah-Rah-Juniors. The class oiiicers for the fall and spring term Were: 1 I l-twirl-I1 ,S A l 'hui' qffih, 'fa' isiigu First Semester Second Semester Jack McPherson ......................., .... P resident .... ........................ G ilbert Lester Joe Donohue ......,..... .....,........ V ice-President ....................... Lester Baker Ruby Blanton ..............i...... .Secretary-Treasurer ................ Vernor Anderson Edwin Van Sickle ....... ............. Y ell Leader .. ........ ,...,... E dwin Van Sickle CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Twenty-seven SOPI-IOMORE CLASS W HE class of '24 has shown itself to be the liveliest one of the year. As Freshmen we were an important factor in the school life. This year We have accomplished much and We hope to have still better results next year. Friday, the thirteenth of January, we had a lucky dance, which was a complete success both financially and socially. The Sopho- mores are Well represented in athletics. On the football team Elmer Allinger, Wallace Canfield and Dana Canfield have distin- guished themselves. The girls are now taking part in a real game, hockey, and the Sophomores are the best represented in this sport. The class is progressive in athletics, studies and social affairs, and has every reason to be proud of itself. The officers for the past year were: .1 ,. N . .L l':lFi'W'2'?,'a :g.,,gpu?3,g53Ng 727,37 lvvdzw vifgx ,,. .u-y - fl ...V 35:24-Qtek M 4 rf' .,Y fgvslivrl' 3 ..Q:,Ni,,,,, K ., 4AA.1l,.vsy fp ! gi u. i !,:, i gm -NLE First Semester Second Semester Dana Canfield .-.......,...l.....,........., President ,.........,. ....,.. S herman Dahlman Marjorie Terrell ....,... ..... Vice-President ........ .....,....,.. H elen Crabbe Helen Crabbe ......,... ,..,.. - .Secretary-Treasurer ....... ,..,......,i H azel Fuller Page Twenty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO 1 TI-IE F RESHMAN CLASS The Freshman class this year is larger than any before. Its enrollment equals one-third of the whole school. Its members have a great deal off class spirit and take part in all school activities. Many Frosh are also honor students. In athletics the class as a whole has shown up better than any other class in school. Both boys and girls have been very active. In football they were represented by Oliver Brouillard. On the second team there were Chester Ingraham, Albert Glendenning, Frank Adams and William Brouillard. Some of these men showed up very well for first-year men. In tennis Antonia Faulkner upheld the reputation of the first year class. She starred in all single matches she played, not losing a single one in the entire season. She deserves great credit. The Freshman dance which was held o-n March 25 in College hall was a great success. Those making this a success were Bert Hinton, Lester Gainer, Nettie Hawks, Dorothy Orrendori, Viola Tatman and William Brouillard. Altogether we may say that the Freshman class has proved to be a credit to the school and promises to continue as successfully through its next three years. First Semester Second Semester Oliver Brouillard .......... .......... P resident .......... ..................... B ert Hinton Pauline Quigley ........ ..... V ice-President ...... ........ W illiam Brouillard Stanley Lewis .............. ......... S ecretary ....... ............. N ettie Hawks William Brouillard ...... ......... Y ell Leader ....... .......... L ester Gainer :a CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Twenty-nine FACULTY JAMES FERGUSON ...........A,............ ....... ,,,,.,.,.,.,..,,,,,.,.......,.... ,,.,.,,.,, P r i ncipai M. A., Stanford University EDNA D. HOUSTON, English .... .,.........,........ ...,.........,,...,....,. ...,,,, V i c e-Principal Ph. B., Wooster College, Ohio C. B. VVHITMOYER, Physics ..............,....,,,......,,,.....,V......,......,,,...., .,..,...,, V ice-Principal Ph. B., Chicago University, M. S., U. of C. GERTRUDE BERNREUTER .........,.,.....,...........,....,...,......,.,.,,,, , ,,i,,,, Music and English A. B., Northwestern University IRENE BRADLEY ................,...................,...,...........,.....,........... ...., P hysical Education B. S., University of Wisconsin T. L. COSTAR .... .. ..... . ................................... ...... .............. ...... P h y sical Education B. S., University of Illinois GRACE CONCKLIN ...... ............................ . ..................... .................... E n glish A. B., College of Pacific F. D. CROSS ...... .. ......... ...................... ............. ............................. ........ C o m m ercial Wisconsin Business Collegeg C. S. N. ANNIE CUKRIE ............. .............................................................. .................... E n glish A. B., Grinnell, Iowa I . P. DAVIDSON ...... ..................................................... .,..... H i story and Civics A. M., Wittenberg, Ohio LILLIE EARLL .............. ............ . .......,,........................................,.........,...,...,,...,.. H istory C. S. N.g High School Diploma, U. of C. Ii. M. ELSKAMP .............................. ..... ........................ .... ........ ..... B i 0 l 0 gy and Science B. S., University of Minnesota ELIZABETH GRIFFITH .................................................,...... ..... H istory A. A. HELLER ....... JENNIE HOOD ...,. B. S., Iowa State College A. M., Sc. D., Franklin and Marshall A. B., University of Deliver Part-Time Education R. C. KISSLING ............................................................................................ Mathematics C. S. N., A. B., University of California S'I'El'HANlE LANGE ....................................................................... ,,,,, F rench, History A. B., University of California ' MARY MAHONEY ...................... .............................................. ,.,,.. C o mmercial C. S. N., Chico Business College ORRELL E. MCCROSKEY ............................................ ........ .,...... E nglish A. B., University of Kansas F, W. McLEAN . .........................................,.................,..................,.....,,,,............ Botany Ph. B., Yaleg Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University A. C. PHILLIPS ............ .............. .............................,.......................... M a nual Training C. S. N.g Santa Barbara Normal MABEL RESTON ...... ........ ....................,.......... M a thematics and Mechanical Drawing A. B., University of California T, O. HINKER .................................................................................................. Economics A. B., University of Nebraska IGLLENORE K. ROBBINS ........ ........... ..... ................................ . ................. C 0 1 nmercial C. S. N., Santa Barbara Normal: Heald's Business College FLORENCE SEVIER ,.,............................................................................... Latin-Spanish A. B., Stanford MARTIN SINGER ............. . ....... ........ ........ ......................... ...... N i I 1 th Grade, Paradise A. M., Stanford University ANGELINE STANSBURY ...................,..,. .. ........................................... .............. A rt C. S. N.: U. of C.g School of Arts and Crafts OLIVE VADNEY ,..,,...,,.,........,,,...,,,.,,..,,,,..,,.,....,..,.....,.,..,,.....,...................... Commercial C. S. N., San Francisco Commercial School WALTER WILLIAMS ....,,..,,....,..,.............,,..................................... ....... S mith-Hughes B. S., Oregon Agricultural College M-'-QQQ' 3 Q ' tixDUcEUs, cH1co CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Thirty-one Page Thirty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO i r I Page Thirty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO STUDENT BODY OFFICERS CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Thirty-five STUDENT BODY HERE is no more important organization in a High School than that of the Student Body. In an organized body every B JP' st-udent in the institution has a chance to give his views on ,WA a subject and the views are all treated impersonally In I . the Student Body of Chico High, was started the first sys- tem of Student Control to be used in Northern California. This was started under Caslyn Schwein and was used only in the study halls with student monitors. This system was not as suc- cessful as was hoped and so in the last election of Student Body officers every candidate's platform was based on Student Control. Orval Patterson, the successful candidate, had many conferences with Principal James Ferguson on the subject, and the original plan was revised and a more advanced system was started. When this also proved un- successful, true to his platform speech, in which he said, I am for good Student Control or none! -the system was absolutely abolished, the au- thority going back to the faculty. But the subject of Student Government is not the only matter that has taken up the attention of the organization. During the year a very en- joyable reception was given to the new Freshmen in the Woodman Hall. Also in March a sum of money was sent to Miss Opal McNaughton, the lone survivor in the Proberta bus tragedy. A new feature has been added this yea1'. This is the Friday assemblies. A different class or organization has charge of the assemblies and after the Student Body meetings a program is put on. There has been a great deal of talent shown in the programs. There have been rallies to support the different teams both during school hours and in the evening. During some of these there has been some friendly clashes with our friendly enemy-College. Now that we are in the new building with all the wonderful opportuni- ties it affords, we are looking forward to making next year an even greater year for Chico High School than this one has been. The officers for the year were: First Semester Second Semester J. William Hamilton ........,,,,....,.,, President ,..,..,..,,, ,.,,,,, O rval Patterson Anna Pierce ................... ........ V ice-President ....... ......... G eneva Hawks Helen Kelly ................ ........ S ecretary ........ ................. A va Baldock Ray Allinger ....... ........ T reasurer ........ ......... L orraine Blanton Kenneth Bybee ....... ,,..,,,, Y ell Leader ,,,,.... ,....,,, , ,.,, J oe Donohue Page Thirty-Six WW CADUCEUS, cH1co GIRLS' STUDENT LEAGUE With its ideals of true womanhood, courtesy of speech and manner, its desire to aid all worthy Student Body activities and to do everything for the bettering of the school, the Girls' Student League has finished its fifth successful year. The league is an organization which is all-embracing, as every girl in High School is a member. There are no dues. Dorothy Smith was appointed chairman of the program committee at the beginning of the term and has given very original programs at every regular meeting. In these programs it has been the wish to bring out all the talent possible and many surprises have appeared. As soon as the student body moved into the new building the league decided to refurnish the rest room. This is a very lovely room on the front of the building and its decoration is under the management of Nina Johnson. Many candy sales have been held. These sales are very popular and are a very easy way of making money. One of the most successful and enjoyable social affairs of the year was the annual dance given by the league in College Hall the evening of May 6. Also very interesting is the annual reception given to the Freshmen and new girls every year, near the first of the term. There are refresh- ments, a program and dancing. Here the upper class girls each have charge of a new girl to introduce to everyone. This is one of the best ways to get acquainted and makes the younger girls feel more at home in Chico High. The advisory board is made up of advis-ory officers o-f the league and representatives from classes. Chairmen of various committees for the year have been: Program, Helen Bond, first semester, Dorothy Smith, second semester: hospitality, Ava Baldock, first semesterg Nina Johnson, second semesterg civic, Vir- CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Thirty-seven ginia Allen, first semesterg Edith Mitchell, second semesterg ways and means, Loraine Blanton, first semesterg Catherine Hurtle, second semester. First Semester Second Semester Katherine Deuel ......... ................ P resident ............ ..................... A va Baldock Louise Brown ......... ...... V ice-President ..,... .....,... L aura DeMarais Helen Hassel ......... ....... S ecretary ....... ....... M ary Copeland Anna Pierce ....... ....... , A. Treasurer .......,., ........... H elen Crabbe Helen Krikac ......,.. ........ Y ell Leader ........ ....... M argaret Bruce THE SAWMILL Upon the hill the sawmill stands- For years it has been standing there. The cobwebs trim the rafters tall, And dust and dirt are everywhere. Long years have passed since last 'twas used- All of the engines need repair, And sawdust covers every thing. How hard 'twill be for men to make Those heavy wheels to turn again! Sounds of the hammer must be heard To echo thru' the wooded glen. All of the symptoms of decay That reek about the rust-worn den, Must be destroyed or swept away Before the wheels will turn again. 'Tis half past one. The midnight oil Dim and low is burning, While slowly and with heavy toil, Wheels in my head are turning. They, too, for years have not been used, I many more repairs must make Before the engine I've abased Into its mill my thoughtswill take, And grind them into poems fine That will make the whole world notice them. When I get my old sawmill fixed I'll write no stuff like this again. Page Thirty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO af -Ji - v 1 Q? ' 0 N '1 7 u ,, g, F of W . TQ dmv-ag-, GIRLS' HIGH JINKS The girls' annual Hi Jinks was held at the Masonic hall. The hall was smaller than the one usually procured, but that did not prevent the girls from having a good time. This year the girls had a banquet and served a regular French dinner. During the banquet toasts were made to the girls of the past, present and the future. The banquet tables were then cleared away and the dancing started. Between dances the girls were entertained by a program of which the faculty put on several numbers. As part of the entertainment, the world's greatest magician, Dr. Hassel, granted their dearest wishes to those who had waited many years. Fat were made thin, short made tall, age restored to youth, and the wild ones tamed. The costumes worn by the guests were cleverly designed, and prizes were awarded for the best. Helen Bond, as a butterfly, received the prize for having the most artistic costume. Alice Camper, as Fiji, was awarded the prize for the best sustained. Virginia Moulton, dressed as a flour girl, carrying a flour sifter, took the prize for the most original. Miss Lange, representing an express package, tagged and addressed to France, was given honorable mention for the best faculty costume. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Thirty-nine I AND O CLUB - W ' HE I. 8: O. Club is the most active organization for girls in T this school and now has about fifty members. It is the only if exclusively girls' club, and besides its social activities it We 1F f K' ' has done a great deal of good in other ways. Members are ff-'iii' ites , 'Q eager to respond when called upon, and always do their ' best. dDuring tht? year ngany interesting social events oc- L-ift -4m U curre . In Octo er, the rst initiation party was held. In December a hardtime party was given and in January the club had a candy sale. H The second initiation party was given in March. As is the case with all initiaticinshboiih activlg members andl alumni melignbers enjoyed it im- mense y. n pri two p ys were stage and a chic en supper given. In May the club gave a very delightful dancing party. Some of these entelrtailiilneints werehgivsn for the purpose of raising money for the French orp an, a e eine C an elier, whom the I. Sz O. has supported and sent to school for five years. During this year interesting letters have been re- ceived from her, together with her portrait. Miss Loraine Blanton, who has filled the president's chair for the past three semesters, deserves credit for her enthusiasm toward the I. Sz O., and the keen interest with which she has so well managed club affairs. First Semester Second Semester Loraine Blanton ........ ..........,... P resident ....... ......... L oraine Blanton Helen Gage ............ ........, . Vice-President ....... ....... K atherine Swain Donna Stamper ........ ............ .... S e cretary .... ....... .......... R u th Sundahl Mildred Heller ......................... ,... T reasurer .... ......... .............. H e len Gage Edith Mitchell ...........,... Chairman Program Com. ............. Katherine Swain Page Forty CAlJUCEUS, cuico BLOCK C CLUB THE BLOCK C CLUB is composed of athletes in the Chico High School who have made an exceptional standard in 53.1115 ,f. I their particular form of athletics. To be a member of the ffr' ,Q ,SYS Block C Club and wear its emblem on one's .sweater is an honor coveted by every youth in school. At present there fi are twenty-six letter men in the school. Although com- 51 'biysfswz posed of athletes the activities of the club are not alone confined to athletics. The Block C Club, which is only three years old, has come to be the strongest organization in the school. Many enterprises of no small note have been taken over by the club. During the semester the society undertook the payment of doctor bills for athletes and was suc- cessful after a series of sales were conducted. Several athletic contests have been staged under the auspices of the Block C which showed that the club was capable of handling any kind of business. The club dance was voted the biggest social affair of the season. The semi-annual banquet brought out many of the old members of the organization, who expressed their hope that the club would be everlasting. In the Block C club the school has an organization that it can rely upon at any time. Its members are all men of ability in the school, who have the initiative to get in and Work for an objective. Much of the suc- cess of the club is due to the spirit of the men who lead the organization. Following are the men who were the leading spirit in the club for the past year: First Semester Second Semester Donald Brayton ....... President .... .. ............. Euland Payne Orval Patterson ....... ....... V ice-President ...... ........ .... L o uis Hazen Vernon Jackson ........ .............. S ecretary .... .......... .......... D a na Canfield Frank Venos .......... ...... S ergeant-at-Arms ...... ........ M arvin Pollock CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Forty-one WEARERS OF THE Nothing in school life is more inspiring to a student than the thought of wearing a golden letter on his breast to signify that he has worked hard and made great sacrifices for his school. In all schools, the highest honor that can be given a student is to present him with the block letter of the school. It gives him that sense of feeling that he has had the spirit to get out and do things for his Alma Mater, which many students have not had the ability or spirit to do. The fellows listed below have earned their emblems by the sweat and toil of many a hard afternoon's work on the gridiron, diamond, court or oval. Football Baseball Track Louis Hazen Euland Payne Arthur Johnson Roy Nucholls Neil Cheyney Wesley Rumbolz Hallie Caywood Dana Canfield Dwight Carmack Donald Brayton Lee Canfield Tennis Claude Stover Vernon Wheeler George Rath Raymond Schaller Oliver Brouillard Harlan Lee Harold Clark Bernard Wilson Dana Canfield Orval Patterson Frank Venos Donald Brayton Dwight Carmack Clifford Bruce Wallace Canfield Yen Hong George Barkowski Kenneth Bybee Sherman Dahlman Glenn Richardson Stanley Lewis Arthur Johnson Roy Nucholls Orval Patterson William Hamilton Harry Ossenbriggen Maynard Murdock Frank Streeter Ray Allinger Vernon Jackson Louis Hazen Page Forty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO l RED AND GOLD HIYQWSQ WITH its sixth birthday, the Red and Gold finds itself one of IQQQQVQ the best student publications in California. Under the able bw' ply- we supervision of two newspapermen, first, Anthony F. Moi- teret, and then George Mullany, both of the Chico Record, A and ltiliss Anne Currie, instrguftor in Eknglislli, it thas becgnfe T ggi rv a rea newspaper an i s s y e one w ic as een wi e y copied. The editors this year have been especially able students. For the first semester Charles Cecil Pollock was in charge, but at the beginning of the spring term Margaret Balaban took the chair. The Red and Gold is in exchange with seventy diHerent school news- papers and thus keeps well informed on the work of other schools. The advertising columns are used as a medium through which the Chico mer- chants and students keep in touch with one another. Through its weekly columns the Red and Gold untiringly ridiculed cosmetics until their use was made so unpopular with the girls that many gave up the habit entirely. The midnight joy-rides on the school campus were also discouraged with glaring headlines, and many a valuable lesson was obtained from the editorials. New features that add greatly to the interest of the paper are the Mirrors of Chico Hi, in which the students are given a chance to see themselves as others see them, O Would-ja Believe It, with original poetry written on incidents in school life, and the Let Me See column, where well-known characters in school get well deserved publicity. These specialties were introduced by Charles Pollock, Margaret Balaban, Bill Hamilton, and Don Honodel. Though most of the staff are Seniors, there are many capable members of the journalism class who will be able to take up the work which this year's staff has so ably carried on toward making Chico High School the grandest, finest, high school east of the Golden Gate. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Forty-three mf- l THE BAND Chico High now boasts a. band of which any school might well be proud. Under the leadership of Mr. A. L. Neubarth, the boys have developed into a real musical organization which plays difficult music with ease. Several times they have entertained the student body with high-class music at the Friday afternoon assemblies. At other times they have been called upon by outside organizations to- play at entertainments. One of their biggest undertakings was that of playing at the Northern California Round-Up in April. The boys played five days against the com- petition of the famous American Legion band and made good. The officials and audiences at the Round-Up expressed themselves very favorably 'toward the band, and it will probably get the job again next year. The personnel of the band is as follows: Cornets, Randall Gay, Claude Stover, Pearl Woodruffe, Joseph Spurgin, Harold Mecum, Dean Hintz, George Gabelg clarinets, Yale Jewers, Laurence Thompsong saxophones, Sarah Carmack, Chester Hoar, Lance Drane, Jim Rileyg altos, Ivan Mas- ters-on, Charles Sellickg trombones, Elston Maxwell, Marion Plummer, Arnold DeMossg tuba, Harold Whitlock: bass drum, William Brouillardg snare drum, Walker Gageg baritones, Kenneth Stolp, Roy Miller. Page Forty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO DON'S MELODIOUS SIX This year an orchestra was organized in Chico High by a few musicians who had a lot of pep. The sextette did all in their power to enliven the days of work that now lie behind. At student body meetings, at special Friday assemblies, and at the afternoon dances held in the College hall, these dispensers of melodious music held forth in a joyous attempt to captivate the ears of those in range. Don Brayton handled the piano as though it were an old toy he had cut his teeth on. Don's work would make the champion heavy-weight piano mover tear his hair in envy. Don Honodel played the part of liberator and from hi.s saxophone many a wailing new note was set free. Earl Morgan ably supported Don, accompanying him on a brother saxophone. It would be hard to find a more talented pair in all the realm of junior Saxophonia. Art Amaral tickled the strings of his laughing banjo, drawing from it many peals of rhythmic laughter. Ray Taylor drew a wicked bow across his violin, creating a melody of squeaks all his own. Harold Whitlock with the drums would make any south-east islander weep and wail in envy and break his pet tom-tom on a convenient rock. This sextette has been one of the most popular organizations in the school during the past year. .gr-I0 Qfi12U9P2U?1QH1C0.-.- Y-.- . . . , Wg? FQFFHYQ I-ll Y CLUB HHQMSYST CNE of the latest organizations to be introduced into our school is the Chico Hi Y Club. It was organized April 24, 91115 'iWi..,'11 1922, when Mr. Ralph Cole and Mr. Fred Duckles, state representatives of this club, were in Chico. It is a branch A Wy of the Y. M. C. A. and is represented in almost every high school of the United States. A few years ago Chico had a - Hi Y Club, but after a short period of existence, lack of intere.st caused it to disband. But the club of this year is accomplishing much work and will, no doubt, continue to exist and grow into one of the strong organizations of the school. An incident of interest is the fact that this club was the first organiza- tion to hold a meeting in the new high school. A special room has been set aside for its meetings and already the influence of the club is being felt in Chico High School. The purpose of this club is to create, maintain and extend throughout the school and community high standards of Christian character. A study of the Bible is taken up at the meetings, along with the business and entertainment. Frequent campaigns are put on and occasionally a banquet is held. On June 19 of this year a meeting of the representatives from the various high schools of the state will be held at Lake Almanor. Chico Hi Y is planning to send some of her members, so that they can learn how to better their club and make its presence in the school more keenly felt. Next November, the Older Boys' conference will be held in Chico. This is the largest event of the year on the Hi Y Club calendar and Chico will be very fortunate in having such a meeting. Mr. Ferguson, principal of the High School, Mr. Rose, president of the Business College, and Mr. Rinker, of the High School faculty, are the senior advisors of the club. Page Forty-six CADUCEUS, cH1co The officers and members to date are as follows: Dwight Carmack, president, Orval Patterson, vice-president, Glen Richardson, secretary, Raymond Taylor, treasurer, Harry Ossenbriiggen, Raymond Schaller, Du Bois Eastman, Elwood Honodel, Edwin Stolp, Gordon Sigler, Sherman Dahlman, Louis Hazen, Don Brayton. l WGNDER IF I wonder if the moon gets tired Crossing the sky every night, Shining down on 'Old Mother Earth,' With a mellow, kindly light. I wonder if the moon gets angry When clouds frolic across her face, Dancing to tunes of the old 'North Wind,' At a merry, lively pace. I wonder if the moon is happy When her night's work is done, And she goes to sleep in the west At the rising of the sun. I love to wonder at these things, Though one can never find out What the thoughts of the old moon are As she gazes round-about. P lv EADUCEUSTEBICO -W Mm EWS in 'i'iEIgLEI5lQI,I,QL i .1 l By MARY MYRTLE STEELE, '23 HE exchange editor wishes to thank the numerous schools 'T Wil 9?e'5- . ' .' . for the annuals received from them during the past year. n? Kiwi geo, 1- - f , - - . ffl'-f'Ff-My-f-' The c11t1c1sms we offer are given with the best of inten- tions, the idea being to help the different schools improve their publications. We heartily invite criticisms and com- I ments on the Caduceus, as we realize the value of an out- sider's opinion. Our exchange list is quite large this year, and we wish to see all the exchanges again next year. Following are the annuals We have received and the comments we have to offer: Tokay, Lodi: You are one of our best exchanges. All of your depart- ments are interesting, but we especially like your literary department. Shasta Daisy, Redding: Why not have a title page? You force people to look into your ads to find where you come from. Poppy, Winters: Your assortment of poems is excellent. Tattler. Willows: Our suggestion to the Shasta Daisy also applies to your annual. We think your book would be improved by the addition of a title page. Rose Leaves, Roseville: We like your attractive cover. Azalea, Sebastopol: More jokes and snaps would add to your already fine annual. Breath of Ocean, Fort Bragg: Your class prophecy is unique. Megaphone, Fortuna: Yours is a well-balanced book, with a most orig- inal cover. White and Gold, Yreka: Your snaps and cuts are excellent, but we suggest more jokes. Sequoia, Eureka: Your athletic department is unusually good. Sea Urchen, Pacific Grove: The literary department of your annual is above the average. We enjoyed it very much. Copa de Oro, Orland: Your book is well arranged. The class prophecy is original. Ilex, Woodland: You are one of our best exchanges. All your depart- ments are exceptionally interesting. Colus, Colusa: Your cover is very attractive. Come again. Page Forty-eight 'Ti illl 0 CADUCEUS, cH1co EDITORIALS We have tried to make the '22 Caduceus live up to the high standards set by the staffs of former years. None of the departments have been changed to any great extent. The cover and inside stock are new features which we think add quality to the book. The stock was selected by the art editor of last year's book, Charles Pollock. We have tried to improve the athletic department by giving it more space and more pictures. A new feature is the girls' athletic section, by Myrtle Wood. This has helped to stimulate interest in girls' athletics during the year. The staff wishes to take this opportunity of thanking Miss Anne Currie, our friend and adviser, for her untiring efforts to make the '22 Caduceus a success. We deeply appreciate the co-operation and help given us by our printer, Mr. Carson, and his assistant, Mr. Moore. The services of Mr. Thompson, the photographer, in helping to arrange pictures, have been invaluable. Miss Vadney's classes have helped much by typing our copy. The splendid block-print design on the cover was made by Wesley Rumbolz under the personal supervision of Miss Angeline Stansbury. The editor Wishes to thank each member of the staH for the splendid co-operation and faithful labor they have given to help make the book a success. Each member took complete charge of his department and turned in work which would be a credit to any writer. After the fall election of editor and business manager the following staff was selected: Literary, Sidney Cheyneyg boys' athletics, Frank Streeterg girls' athletics, Myrtle Wood, snapshots, Elizabeth Yank, society, Laura De Marais, exchanges, Mary Myrtle Steeleg alumni, Helen Kellyg jokes, Joe Donohue and Don Honodelg art, Helen Crabbe. ,lii Chico High School has reached a new chapter in its history. Many changes have come during the twenty years' existence of our school but none were so momentous as the one of Friday, April 28, 1922, when the student body removed from the old building to the new. The district was organized in 1902 with an enrollment of seventy-two students, classes were held in a portion of the old grammar school building at Oakdale. The next year, increased attendance necessitated the building of a new home for Chico High. On the spot where our recently vacated school now stands, there was erected a building much the same as the one which stands there today. The enrollment in the new building was one hundred and fifty students. The building was burned in 1911, and while it was being rebuilt, classes were held in the Presbyterian church. In 1913 an election was held by the citizens of Chico to vote on a 360,000 bond issue for the erection of a new building where the old one stands, but the public, realizing the amount proposed was not adequate, defeated the bonds, and we had to go on living in our old building. Our enrollment kept increasing by leaps and bounds, from 75 in 1902 to 500 in 1912 and 700 in 1918. Then the public realized that a crisis was at hand. A new movement was started which resulted in the voting of S440,000 for a magnificent new building to be erected at the corner of Sacramento avenue and Esplanade. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Forty-nine CADUCEUS STAFF Page Fifty CADUCEUS, CHICO After three years of waiting, the students have realized their main ambition, to have attended class in the new high school building. We moved in on the 28th day of April, and took possession of the recitation rooms, the spacious halls, and the magnificent grounds about the building. With the increase in space which we now have, we may look forward to an increased attendance, so everything now points to the rapid advance- ment of Chico High School, in the world of sports, dramatics and scholar- ship. - We feel that we must pause now and extend a sincere vote of thanks to the voters of Chico, who have made it possible for us to have this wonder- ful new building. We must justify their confidence in our future by striving to make our school the city's best asset. The statement that Chico High produces no more good athletes, seems to be Without foundation in view of the achievements of our teams in the past two years. We have produced few athletic stars, but the members of our teams have been consistent players and point getters in competition. We have, however, produced one real star. Carroll Canfield, '22, went from the high school direct to the Sacramento team of the Coast League circuit. He has created a sensation in organized baseball by his wonderful pitching abilities. The Chicago Cubs of the National League circuit tried hard to buy him this spring but his owner at Sacramento refused to let 1m go. Our teams have achieved wonders for the school. Last year the base- ball team played winning ball the whole season. It won twenty games out of twenty played and lost only in the game for state championship against San Diego High.. The team was a sensation throughout the season, but, and we regret to say it, most of the support for the team came from the townspeople, not from the students. The track team last year retrieved the beautiful Fiesta Arborea trophy cup by taking first place at the N. C. H. S. A. L. League meet in Red Bluff. It also sent men to the Northern Sectional track meet at Davis farm, where they added more laurels to the name of Chico High school by taking third place. Bill Schwein, our star sprinter of last year, took third place in the 220-yard dash during the state meet at Berkeley. The Boys' tennis team won from every school they played and were forced to stop only from lack of finances. Had they been properly sup- ported they might have also played up to the state finals. Such teams as these deserve the whole-hearted support of the student body. It is a, sad state of affairs when the members of athletic teams are forced to raise their own money to play games for the honor of the school they represent. The athletic traditions of the school should not be allowed to die out, but should be kept sacred in the heart of every member of the Chico High school. The glory of the achievements of our teams will continue to reflect credit on the school only as long as the students show that they are in co- operation with athletics. If a team goes, unescorted by any rooters, and conquers other schools, the glory will be only the team's-and not the school's, although the latter is the goal which makes the men sacrifice and play the game hard. CA 15ijEELE'f:i1E5w ' Page FiftyIm5eA ! CADUCEUS STAFF 4 H LITM IW Page Fifty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO THE WANDERING CURSE By WES. MOORE There is again that whisper, I hear it Saying once more to move on, Vital, impatient, commanding,-I fear it, But it won't be long till I'm goneg For whenever I hear, I obey it, I answer to the wanderer's call. Then home and friends-I must say it- Goodby and farewell to them all. If there ever was sadness, I fought it,- But I've got to be going again. If ever contentment, I sought it Here at home among all my friends. There's freedom somewhere, and I want it Before all my spirit is spent. When I get it, some day, I will flaunt it In the face of that devil then. The longing for travel just fills me, And I will go to some silent place Where God is nearby to thrill me, And slow down my nervous pace. I could not stay put if it killed me, When I'm hit with this wanderlustg But when I think of the future it stills me, Oh! God let me stop it-I must! AL, CADUCEUS, cH1co Page Fifty-five THE TALE OF ELIZABETH It is an ancient lizzie, And she stoppeth one of three. By thy rotted tires and broken clutch Now Wherefore stoppest thou me ? , CWith Apologiesj filvl OU ask me if I was always a dilapidated, dirty, rundown, Yflat tired thing as you see me now? No Once I was a . brand-new green Ford bug. My Master s.dad gave me to ? him just four year.s ago today. My I was happy in those sq, ' 1 Y 'i days! On the mornifig I was presented to my Master I was ' shining my best. My tires were pumped up. My gasoline Lff+4'l!'L tank was filled with the best gasoline I ever tasted, not the old kerosene that's in me now. I well remember the first school day after that eventful Christmas. All the way to school the prettiest girls smiled and spoke to me, CI thought they were speaking to me, but I later found X if 1. eat: 0 in 4Mh.uf.Lv ' 1 ff iw! T a 9 'G kJ 1,!u..l U3..l'L-.. out that it was my Master they were thus honoringl, but I didn't even smile or skid at them because I was so intent upon getting my Master to school. At last we arrived. The first words I heard were: Hello, old topper! Gee! that's a swell lizzie you've got. Give us a ride ? This isn't a lizzie, boys, my Master said. I've got to draw the line somewhere, so I do it here. This is an Elizabeth, not a lizzie. Certainly I'll take you for a ride. Hop in. So in they piled, eight of them. My springs wanted to groan with pain., but I wouldn't let them. Everything went well for three years. My Master and his Elizabeth were known all over town. I loved him and he loved me until that night! It makes my carburetor leak whenever I think of it, and sometimes I have cried so hard all of the kerosene leaked out of my gas tank. I will tell you about it to see whether I can get it off my chas.sis. One day after school my Master drove me home terribly fast. For a while I regretted this, but soon I was happy again, for when we reached home he gave me a bath. I didn't shine as I had shone when I was new, so when Master's dad came out to see me that evening he said, You'd better take her up and have her repainted. My clutch jumped with joy. I was going to have a new coat of paint. Hurrah ! ' Page Fifty-six CADUCEUS, CHICO But that night! My Master was going to take his girl, Betty Harrington, to a dance away up in the country, and he was so excited that he forgot to fill my gas tank. Every time we passed an oil station I jumped and kicked, but my Master only said to his girl, Elizabeth is not running well to-night. I tried and tried to tell him I was hungry and my oil was running low, but of no avail. We were about half way up the mountain, when my oil gave out completely. I smoked and fumed, but Dick still drove me on. At last when we were almost to Nimshew my bearings stuck together. I couldn't move. Master applied the brakes and since they hadn't been re- lined since he got me, they wouldn't hold. I felt myself sliding down the mountain. Dick steered me very well, so I stopped pretty soon on a little hill. Betty was frightened, Dick said she was pale, but I wasn't as close to her as he was, so I couldn't see. They sat and talked until an automobile came up the road. In it were some boys and girls that knew Dick and Betty. One of them said, Did Elizabeth get stuck ? Yes, said Dick, the old lizzie is about to fall to pieces. It was a shame to try to take Betty out in an old car like this. It is only junk. Those were the first mean words ever spoken to me or about me, and by my Dick, too! Betty and Dick got into the big car and went to the dance, leaving me alone. The next day two men came up, tied a rope on my front axle and towed me into town. Now the only consolation I have is in waiting for Dick to return from school so that I can get a glimpse of him as he speeds by. Once in a while he pokes his head into this old, dirty, smelly garage and shouts, Have you sold my lizzie yet ? THOUGHTS OF A F ARlVlE.R'S SON I'm not a farmer, or a farmer's song Yet I know darn well how the farm is run. I will now attempt to tell all thee, How the thing is run from A to Z. The first thing that I learned to dog Was to chop oak wood, like the dickens, too. But what the deuce are your brothers for If you cannot use them less or more? When you rise in the morning at half past three, And light a smudge-pod under a treeg Then's when you feel that you're much abused 'Cause you'd lots rather lie a-bed and snooze. But now I have no more to sayg I guess I'll stop and hit the hay. But if ever you run a farm you'll know That it's easier to sleep than to wield a hoe. CPIDUCIIUS, CHIC6 Page Idgty-seven SPAT AND SPATETTE . IIIYQWQQYI SEVEN mischievous, amusing, and at times even naughty cats live in our back yard. Midnight Coffeemill Black re- QQWF' M-w-I cently enriched our collection with four coal-black kittens: ,wig Midnight Junior, one A. M., Two A. M., and Three A. M. AW! They age thelincagnation of playiuhpless,talwayslactivei clirliciligg giaaioltnigiispapeitgie angci o t eir wo we -namef Spat and Spatette are the only disturbing element in our backyard. They are utterly different from Midnight and her kittens. The kittens confine their activities to playful tumbling and sham encounters, but their uncles often disturb the neighbors' sleep and my peace of mind by vain attempts to settle their Balance of Power. The occasion for one of the indignant neighborly calls which usually follows these disputes, I remember especially well. lt was a peaceful Sun- day night and the whole neighborhood seemed to be quietly sleeping. Just as I was mounting the porch steps the cats' choral society was called to order and started practice on an apparently new and very difficult selection. Almost immediately there was trouble, very serious and inartistic trouble, too. I could hardly blame the neighbors for their protests. Spat had evidently decided that his brother needed assistance in the rendering of his part, and had deserted the baritone for the bass. Spatette objected strenuously. The rest of the society was politely silent. There followed a duet which started in bass and raced all over the known key- board and even improved on it. They used minors and majors, scales. arpeggios, thirds and chromaticsg they changed the time and rhythm at will, but not always together, and finally ended in a wild crescendo which I ci Page Fifty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO was followed by the sound of bumps and scuflling, a long hiss, and at last silence. ' V-Nl f Next morning, as I said, Mother received several calls. Spat and Spatette' never knew how narrowly they escaped the chance of singing their duet in another world. THE ROMANCE OF AN AWKWARD MAN ASPER DALE lived alone in the old homestead, which he I had named Golden Milestone. In Live Oak this fad of 'hligijgwfitw giving ones farm a fiame wflsklooked Lapczlgl as a fifigce of ag- , Q ecta ion, ut, if a pace mus e name , eneig ors Sai , why not give it a sensible name with some meaning to it? Dale had lived alone at Golden Milestone since his mother's death, he had been twenty then and he was close upon forty now, though he did not look it. But neither did he look young, he had never at any time looked young with common youth, there had always been something in his appearance that stamped him as different from the ordinary kind of men, and, apart from his shyness, he had built up an in- tangible, invisible barrier between himself and his kind. He had lived all his life in Live Oak, yet all that the Live Oak people knew of him or about him, although they thought they knew everything, was that he was pain- fully, abnormally shy. He never went anywhere except to church, even with most men he was distant and reserved. As for women, he never spoke to them or looked at them, if one spoke to him, even if she were a mother in Israel, he was at once in an agony of painful blushes. He had no friends in the sense of companions, to all outward appearance his life was solitary and devoid of any human interest. Jasper had no housekeeper, but his old house was cleanly, even daintily, kept. This was known because he occasionally had his hired man's wife, Mrs. Griggs, come in to scrub for him. On the mornings that she was expected, he always betook himself to the woods and fields, returning only at nightfall. During his absence Mrs. Griggs was frankly wont to explore the house from cellar to attic, and it was always the same, neat as wax. To be sure, there was one room that was always locked against her, the west gable room looking out on the garden. Mrs. Griggs knew that in the lifetime of Jasper Dale's mother it had been unfurnished, and sup- posing that it still remained so, she felt no special curiosity concerning it, though she always tried the door. Jasper Dale never so much as thought about a woman, Live Oak oracles declared. Oracles, however, are not always to be trusted. One day Mrs. Griggs went away from the Dale place with a very curious story. It made a good deal of talk, but people, although they lis- tened eagerly and wondered and questioned, were rather incredulous about it. Mrs. Griggs' story was as follows: One day shef had found the door of the West gable unlocked. She went in, expecting to see bare walls and a collection of odds and ends. Instead, she found herself in a beautifully furnished room. Delicate lace curtains hung before the small square windows. The walls were adorned with pic- CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Fifty-nine tures in much finer taste than Mrs. Griggs could appreciate. There was a bookcase between the windows filled with choicely bound books. Beside it on a little table stood a very dainty work-basket, and near the basket lay scissors and a silver thimble. A comfortable wicker rocker was near it. Above the bookcase hung a woman's picture, representing a pale, sweet face, framed in loose masses of black hair, with a wistful expression in the dark eyes. Just beneath the picture, on the top shelf of the bookcase, was a vase of flowers. Another vase stood on the table beside the basket. All this was astonishing enough. But' what puzzled Mrs. Griggs com- pletely was the fact that a woman's dress was hanging over a chair, a pale blue silken affair. And on the floor beside it were two little blue satin slippers! Good Mrs. Griggs did not leave the room until she had explored it. But she found nothing to throw any light on the mystery. The fact that the simple name, Alice, was written on the fly-leaves of all the books only deepened it, for it was a name unknown in the Dale family. Because many people thought she was romancing when she talked about the mysterious west gable at Golden Milestone, she thereafter in- dignantly held her peace concerning the whole affair. But Mrs. Griggs had told no more than the simple truth. Jasper Dale under all his shyness and aloofness possessed a nature full of delicate romance which, denied expression in the common ways of life, had bloomed out in the realm of fancy and imagination. Left alone just when the boy's nature was deeping into the man's, he had turned to this ideal kingdom for all he believed the real world could never give him. Love, a strange, almost mystical love, played its part here for him. He shadowed forth to himself the vision of a woman, loving and beloved, he cherished it until it became almost as real to him as his own personality and he gave this dream woman the name he liked best, Alice. In fancy he walked and talked with her, spoke words of love to her and heard words of love in return. When he came from work at the close of day she met him at his threshold in the twilight. One day, while in Charlottetown on business, he had seen a picture in the window of a store. It was strangely like the woman of his dreams. He went in, awkward and embarrassed, and bought it. When he returned home the sunset flaming on the windows of the west gable kindled them into burning rose. Amid the splendor he fancied Alice's fair face peeping archly down at him from the room. He then determined to fit it up for and to hang her picture there. He was all summer carrying out his plan. Nobody must know or sus- pect, so he must work slowly and secretly. One by one the furnishings were purchased and carried home under cover of darkness. He arranged the room as he thought she would like it. One day while in town he saw in a store a pale blue tea-gown and satin slippers. He had always fancied her as dressed in blue. He went in and bought them and placed them on the chair. But the Live Oak people knew nothing of this. To them, he was just the shy, simple farmer he appeared. One spring Alice Reade came to teach music in Live Oak. Her pupils worshipped her, but the grown people thought she was rather too distant and reserved. She boarded with Mrs. Armstrong, who lived beyond Golden Milestone. Page Sixty CADUCEUS, CHICO At first she went out to the main road by the long Armstrong lane, but later she was wont to take a shorter way, down the pine path across the brook and out through Jasper Dale's lane. One day, as she went by, Jasper was working in his garden. He was on his knees in a corner setting out a bunch of roots. It was a spring morning and his heart was filled to overiiowing with a realization of all the loveliness around him. At that moment he looked up and saw Alice. She was standing outside the garden fence in the shadow, looking at the beautiful bloom of the plum trees in a corner, unconscious that any one was near. For a moment Dale believed that his dream love had taken visible form before him. She was so like his dream. Then her eyes fell upon him and the spell was broken. Jasper remained mutely kneeling. A little smile ilickered about the corners of Alice's mouthg but she turned and walked swiftly away down the lane. He saw her again that afternoon on her way home. She did not pause by the garden, but walked swiftly past. It was the next day that he failed, for the first time, to put flowers in the west gable. Instead, he cut a loose handful of daffodils and looking A furtively about him, as if committing a crime, laid them across the foot- path under the pine. Then he slipped back into his garden half exultant, half r pentant. From a safe retreat he saw her pass and stoop to lift his How s. After that he put some in the same place every day. hen Alice saw the flowers she knew at once who put them there, and ivined that they were for her. She had heard all about Jasper Dale and his shyness, but before she had heard about him she had seen him in church and liked him. When she heard the story of the west gable, which most people dis- believed, she believed it, although she did not understand it. Thereafter, every day she found flowers under the pine tree. She CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Sixty-one wished to see Jasper to thank him, but it was some time before she found the opportunity. One evening she passed when he, not expecting her, was leaning against his garden fence with a book in his hand. She stopped under the pine. Mr, Dale, she said softly, I want to thank you for your flowers. Jasper, startled, wished that he might sink into the ground. His anguish of embarrassment made her smile a little. He could not speak, so she went on gently: It has been so good of you. They have given me much pleasure. I wish you could know how much. It was nothing, nothing, stammercd Jasper. His book had fallen on the ground at her feet, and she picked it up and held it out to him. So you like Ruskin, she said. I do too. But I haven't read this. If you would care to read it you may have it, Jasper contrived to say. She carried the book away with her. One evening Jasper walked shyly with her from his gate up to the pine hill. After that he always walked that far with her. She would have missed him very much if he had failed to do sog yet it did not occur to her that she was learning to love him. In August came a day of gold and blue. Alice, coming through the trees with the wind blowing her little love-locks about her wide blue hat, found a fragrant heap of mignonette under the pine. She had hoped Jasper would be in his garden, since she wished to ask him for a book that she greatly desired to read. But she saw him sitting on the rustic seat at the further side of his garden, his back turned, and he was partially hidden by a clump of lilacs. Alice, blushing slightly, unlatched the garden gate and went down the path. He did not hear her footsteps and she was close behind him when she heard his voice, and realized that he was talking to himself in a low dreamy tone. As the meaning of his words dawned upon her consciousness she started and grew crimson. She could not miove or speak: as one in a dream she stood and listened to the shy man's reverie, guiltless of any eaves- dropping. How much I love you, Alice, Jasper Dale was saying. I wonder what you would say if you knew. You would laugh at me, sweet as you are. I can never tell you. I can dream that I tell you my love. Oh! Alice, we should have a beautiful life together. It's sweet to make-believe about it. You will sing to me in the twilight, and we will gather early flowers together in the spring days. When I come home from work, tired, you will put your arm about me and lay your head on my shoulder. I will stroke it, so, that bonny glossy head of yours, Alice, my Alice. All mine in my dream, never to be mine in real life. How I love you ln The Alice behind him could stand it no more. She gave a little choking cry that betrayed her presence. Jasper Dale sprang up and gazed upon her. He saw her standing there amid the shadows of August, pale with feeling, wide-eyed, trembling. How dare you? You have spied on me, you have crept in and listened. How dare you? Do you know what you have done? You have destroyed all that made life worth while to me. Oh, I love you. I will say it, laugh as you will. Is it such a strange thing that I should have a heart like other men? This would make sport for you. I, who love you better than my life, better than any other man in the world can love you, will be a Page Sixty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO jest to you all your life. I could hate you, you have destroyed my dream, you have done me deadly wrong. Jasper! Jasper ! cried Alice, finding her voice. In that moment she realized that she loved him, that the words he had spoken when uncon- scious of her presence were the sweetest she had ever heard, or ever could hear. Don't say such dreadful things to me, she stammered, I did not mean to listen, I could not help it. I stall never laugh at you. Oh, Jasper, I am glad that you love me! and I am lad I chanced to overhear you, since you would never have had the coura to tell me otherwise. Glad! Glad! Do you understand, Jasper ? Jasper looked at her with the eyes of one who, looking through pain, sees raptures beyond. Is it possible ? he asked. Alice, I am so much older than you and they call me the 'awkward man? They say I am unlike other people. You are unlike other people, she said softly, and that is why I love you. I loved you long before I saw you, said Jasper. He drew her into his arms tenderly and reverently, all his shyness and awkwardness swallowed up in the grace of his great happiness. In the old garden he kissed her and Alice entered into her own. SUCH IS LUCK Wlnwiiffl AT first Schuyler Radford had planned to take his dog Di- ablo, and go hunting a hare, but the lonely look of the club- bvvkyllligwi house had lured him to the golf links. He would play till l noon and then see whether he could find some left-over A crackers and possibly a gan oft sardgnes in 'ge kilub-hloluse 6: lj, 1' pantry. Thus determine , he s'oope to pat ia o. ow watch me beat the world's record, he said to himself, and giving his club a muscular swing, sent the ball flying down the green links. There, he said triumphantly as he eyed the ball cutting through the air, I guess that would make old Dave open his eyes- Z-z-ipp-Fore, he called out, and ran after the ball, humming to himself. One-two-three-fore! Sometimes I wish there were more. Why this ditty entered his head when he wanted to be alone was a question. All in all, it was an ideal day to play golf. The cold air had a stimulat- ing sting in it and a breeze which swept his forehead added color to his face. The club-house was deserted, the gang had been invited out to various Christmas dinners, but Sky, as his friends had sportily nick- named him, wished to spend thi.s one day in the year in solitary enjoyment. Come, 'Di,' we'll see where it carried. Diablo started joyfully ahead after the roaming ball. and was quickly out of sight. Schuyler jogged along, slowly musing to himself. Soon he pulled out his watch. Guess the gang's all sitting around a roaring fire, looking bored and dissipated by now. About time Lorieta was powdering her nose and Mame was fooling with her hair. Ugh! a lot of fun a fellow gets playing golf CADUCEUS, oH1Co Page sixty-three with them. They'd do better in Mack Sennet's studio. What a fellow needs is a real pal-. He was startled by a distant bark which echoed through the canyon. By mackerel, if it isn't 'Ole Faithful! Found my ball and is signaling for me to wake up. I'll wager I almost forgot that l was in quest of my world's-record shot. Again he heard the sharp anxious bark, and this time he entered into a trot which caused his pockets to jingle with the shot he had left in them He formed his hands into a niegaphone and shouted to Di, so as to quiet the impatient dog. As he drew nearer he heard Diablo's low whine. the day before. Right here, my boy. Well, that shot wasn't so bad after all, what sa- What Schuyler saw was enough to make anything stop, even the golf ball. Huddled in a heap was a mass of black and white checks, a red scarf lying carelessly beside a forgotten golf-club, and Di licking away some nut-brown hair from a much swollen forehead. Diablo looked up at his master and wagged his stubby tail, but his master was looking down at this disheveled heap. He stooped and care- fully turned a girl's flushed face skyward. Quickly he folded his handker- chief and softly laid it on the bruised spot, where the ball had hit her forehead. He looked at Di, half radiant, but talked to himself. When I shouted 'Fore,' I didn't mean that it should aim 'fore-head,' but perhaps it wasn't such a fool play, after all. The heap by his side made a move as if to rise and the eyes slowly opened and then closed. Wake up, Schuyler pleaded softly, for I know who you are. She opened her eyes wide this time and he propped her head on his knee. What ? she asked faintly, but a smile came on her lips. As I was saying, before Di's bark interrupted me, what a fellow needs is a real pal. And Di wagged his tail in assent. 'fr' e- .Fl 'N .fe MSE, K- gifs? ,YM ai' 03 f cl K rx I ILFWHID 5 f X Y, .4 . f. 1 A -1 1 . W W Aga . .I I 1 2 ' -15 f' ae Ok! f - in... . .4 ', Q04 ':'.5:l'1':' I? I 'W .M 1 . , 3 I , yi 7 l ' A I f ' lv 4 X, Wfmsn tl e I if -191 -1 if f , Page Sixty-four cilibucnus, Cinco T l 1 c By LAURA DeMARAlS VIQESIIMAN RECEPTION first event that thc students look f01'W2l,l'Cl to is the lfreshinan re- ception. This year it was held in the Woodman hall, September 30th. President Hamilton gave a speech welcoming the class of 725. ln reply Oliver Brouillard, the Freshman president, told of what he hoped his class would achieve in school activities. After a very enjoyable program, the dancing started. The dresses, pointed The society f ore so 7 Freshman girls forgot to wear their pretty hair ribbons and party but even though disguised as upper-classmen they could be easily out. BLOCK CU DANCE crowning event of the social year was again given by the honor the Block Cf, January 11, 1922. The Normal hall was never be- elaborately decorated. Red and gold streamers and colored block C's hung from the Wall and ceiling, and the lights Were covered with Japanese parasols. Punch was served between the dances, which helped to make the dance a social success. The programs were in the shape of a gold block C on a red background. They were given out through an enormous red C made for the occasion. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Sixty-five SOPH SCUD Friday, the thirteenth of January, the Sophomores held their lucky, enjoyable, and successful dance. It was the most highly advertised dance of the year, and many attended, knowing that it was going to be good. The best music in town was secured for the occasion, which made the dance still more enjoyable. The dance was a financial as well as a social success. JUNIOR HOP The Junior class gave its dance on the 18th of November, following a successful game of football with Marysville High. Many members of the visiting school were present, which helped to liven things up. The hall was tastefully decorated in autumn leaves. The Juniors did not have to pat themselves on the back for this party, for the Marysville geople voted it a swell affair. Good music and programs featured the ance. SENIOR DANCE The Senior dance was held in the Normal hall, November 4, and was an especially good party. As it was held a few days after Hallowe'en, the lights were covered with orange paper and jack o'lanterns, which gave the hall a festive atmosphere. The music was furnished by Russell's four- piece orchestra. Every one had been promised a good time and the Seniors fulfilled all expectations. FRESHMAN GLEE March 24 the Freshmen proved their ability in directing and enter- taining by the dance they gave at the College Hall. The hall was artistic- ally decorated in red and gold. Good music and a good crowd helped to make the dance a success. GIRLS' STUDENT LEAGUE DANCE The second annual Girls' Student League dance, given on May 5 at the Normal Hall, was declared by those who attended to be one of the very best dances of the social calendar. The hall was artistically decorated in poppies and lupins, carrying out the colors of the organization. Music was furnished by Trimbles Orchestra. Mothers of girls of the league acted as patronesses. Page Sixty-eight CADUCEUS, oH1oo SUMMARY OF SEASON HE athletic season of 1922 has been one that can be looked Q 4, back on with a moderate degree of satisfaction. In track, Q.. although we lost the N. C. H. S. A. L. cup, we had an extra T ,NU -, - 3 gl J5PT 7' . :X J' 'As I , 1 A strong team, which was second only to Sutter City in the territory north of Sacramento. There was an unusually large number of new men out for track this year who have shown great promise of being good men later. By next year these fellows will be ableto make fast time in their chosen events. As only a few members of the track team were Seniors, next year will see the team stronger than ever. Since the advent of Coach Costar, track is becoming more popular and more students are becoming interested in track events both from an ath- letic and spectatorial point of view. When the students get to the point where they appreciate the athletes of the school and are willing to make a big fuss in order to help them win, we shall be able again to turn out a track team of championship calibre. As Bidwell Park has no equal in recreational value and the lure of the tennis court is limited to no season in particular, it is not unusual that Chico should be able to put out a good tennis team. Nevertheless. it takes a lot of work to stand up to all comers as our tennis team has done this: year. Everything that has run against their invincible tennis rackets thus far has been beaten. For years we have boasted a team of tennis cham- pions, but the school was hardly aware of it. Tennis is not a major sport in the 'school and is n-ot talked about so much as baseball, football and track. To make the school realize that it has a tennis team to be proud of, the members of that team must be regular dynamos of pep, ready to take their own part and to let the world know they're coming. The mem- bers of the team this year were equal to the job. After the dazzling and spectacular career the baseball team has had for the last few years its inevitable decline since the loss of its sensational pitcher, Carroll Canfield, has brought about a strange reaction. The same team that was supported by the enthusiasm of the entire student body a year or two ago is now supported by Husky Williams and a few friends of the baseball team who are faithful to the last. The last game of the base- ball season, which was to decide eligibility to the Northern State champion- ship, could not be said to have been supported at all by the student body. If the school expects to turn out a good baseball team in the years to come they must support the team that is trying to keep up the reputation of the present. The biggest incentive to make a man go out for athletics is the support and preference he is given by the rest of the school. If the majority of the students do not make it worth three hours of another student's time to get bawled out by the coach and knocked down by his opponents just to keep up the reputation -of his Alma Mater, they are robbing themselves of the pleasure of having a strong team in the future. Football at least received a fair amount of support. As a result the team picked up amazingly and was a great improvement over the teams turned out by Chico in the past few years. The men this year showed a more thorough knowledge of the game of American football, probably be- cause of the joint efforts of Costar and Williams to turn out a good team. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Sixty-nine The way in which the men picked up toward the last of the season, their marked improvement, is good proof of the fact that the only reason for Chico's poor team of former years was because of their lack of knowledge concerning American football. From now on football is scheduled for a rapid rise. .li-..-.... FOOTBALL ALTHOUGH for the last four or five years, ever since the 'Ni' ' ii! days of the rugby game, Chico has not been extraordinarily -,- 'U'l'v,- strong in football, this year showed a marked improvement. ll The material that shows up for practice is very promising, p' and though light, under the management of Costar and Williams will soon be able to play as good a game of foot- KNH- 51' 'K' ball as the best of Californian high school teams. So far as popularity is concerned, football is well among the first of sports. More students come out to the football games than come to the contests in any other sport. We have had no basketball team for the last two years. This makes football the only athletic activity during the first semester. This fact naturally should make the team stronger and better special- ized. It would also naturally give it stronger support, especially because of the fact that there is no other pastime to rob the students of their en- thusiasm. Many schools purposely specialize in one branch of athletics each season. In some schools it is basketball and in others football. Schools that do this are able to turn out a better team of one game or the other. In Chico High School there is no choice, as we have no gymnasium in which to play basketball. On the campus of the new High School we shall be better able to turn out a good football team. While we are still a little dumpy on our feet we have the future to hope for. THE GAME WITH MARYSVILLE CAt Chicoj After having won a game with Chico on a previous occasion, the Marysville team came to Chico. It was a bright sunny day in November and the grandstand was full of spectators. On this trip the out-of-town men were defeated, and at the end of the battle the score stood 13-12. The battle was a wicked one. The two teams put up a hard fight and they played a clean game of football from start to finish. There was no time during the game that the teams remained long near one goal or the other. Plays were made on all parts of the campus. On several occasions it seemed as if our goal was in danger. It was not a long suspense, how- ever, as the score line was not threatened for more than three minutes at a time. Several men were badly shaken up on both sides. Harry Ossenbriggen received a broken leg which put him on the shelf for the rest of the season. Time had to be allowed for the Marysville team, who had an unconscious player as a result of some of Melve Deter's lunges through the line. The boy came to, and in due time continued to get his head bumped. Deter Page Seventy lkwbw-MW-A-MAAWWWWiW CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Seventy-one was also laid out soon after, but not for long. He was back and on the job for a touch-down in the last quarter. The .scores were made in the first and fourth quarters. The team was weakened because of losing Captain Harry Ossenbriggen in the last part of the mix-up. Art Johnson, whose rib had been broken earlier in the season, had to confine most of his work to forward passes. Deter, Nucholls and Pollock made a fine showing, the former making several spectacular runs during the game. Nucholls has the game down to a fine point and plays either on the line or in the back-field. He makes many long runs and always hits them hard. Although weighing scarcely one hundred and twenty pounds, Pollock, by his speed, tackling and dodg- ing, makes a formidable foe for any antagonist. This game showed us that football was being played better in the Chico High School. Next year we may well expect to have a winning team in football. THE THANKSGIVING GAME Of all the fall athletic events the Thanksgiving football game is several laps ahead of the field. This year especially was full of expectations and doubt concerning the big turmoil on the Normal Campus. Most of this extraordinary excitement was due to the fact that Normal had one of the strongest teams since the war. It has been sad but true, that the Teachers College had been beaten by Chico High ever since the war t-ook so many Normalites for gun fodder in 1916. This year, however, times were changed and conditions were back to normal. There was also a large gang of loyal members of that aforesaid college who had recently been members of the Chico High School. The way those fellows stood around and bragged about their team made more than one high school fellow spit on his hands and start counting to one hundred. Although many series of first-class debates were held on the subject, every one who was not prejudiced in the matter agreed that both teams had certain advantages. High School's team was made up of lighter but faster men than those that fumbled the ball for the embryonic educators. On a Wet day the odds were against lighter men, as churned adobe is not favorable for a secure toe-hold. In spite of the fact that our only hope lay in speed and foot Work, on November 25 the clouds sprung a leak and made the campus more slippery than a French dance-hall. Even when handicapped by the mud, our team's speed showed up to a great advantage. Less than five minutes after the first kick-off, Nucholls took the ball over for a touchdown. From this time on the boys fought hard, but the odds were against them and Chico High died sliding. Score 20-7. Our best licks were given by Pollock and Nucholls, whose speed and footwork showed up well in spite of the slippery field. On a dry campu.s it is hard to tell just how long it would have been before the score would have stood 20-7 in the opposite direction. Page Seventy-two CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Seventy-three Tl-IE CROSS-CITY RACE FAWY' IHEN Bill Hamilton came to school one morning about the first of December, he had a grin on his map five yards long , and a message for all the rest of the would-be athletes y ,NNW 1 4 around school. Bill did not know that he was going to win 'TWV' the Cross-city race, at least that's what he says. If he did, I ' he kept it up his sleeve until he got' his track-suit on. The fr' Cross-city race is something new in Chico. It was got up by the Chico Record and prizes were donated by various dealers around town. As a result many high school boys were lured into the competition. The boys trained for three weeks before the race, and were able to get into pretty good shape by the second of January. Coach Costar called a meeting of all those who had signed up and laid down somye training rules to be observed. The boys ran through the park every nig t after school. Costar believed that the two-and-a-half-mile run was a good thing and advised all track men to enter and get in condition for an early track season. Many sprinters as well as distance men signed up for the race. Endurance is almost if not quite as important for sprinters as for middle- istance runners. There was much competition from other institutions about town, and although there were more High school entries than any other, there were enough of the others to make it interesting. Of course, as track work is closely connected with the athletic routine of the High school, from a cer- tain point of view the High school boys would have a better chance of winning the prizes. Nevertheless, many men have had years of track ex- perience added to their High school track career, and men outside of school would naturally have more time to train than the High schoolers. It was hard to lay off a big dinner on New Year's day, but it had to be done. On the day of the race twenty-six runners assembled at the Nor- mal gymnasium. They were transported to the Sandy Gulch bridge in automobiles. From there they ran down the Esplanade to First street, from there to Fifth on Broadway, down Fifth to Orange, across to First again, where they finished in front of the Normal. Getting a lead from the start, William Hamilton took first. He was able to maintain a lead of three or more blocks till he reached the tape. By doing this Hamilton won three prizes, a Stradivara phonograph for the best time made, a gold medal for taking first place and a diamond stick pin for being the first to pass Dreiss' jewelry store. The time was a little more than fourteen minutes. Second place was won by Louis Hazen from High school, and third by Maurice Collins of the Teachers' College. Fifth, sixth, seventh and ninth places were taken by High school runners. The men taking these- places were Streeter, Martin, Brouillard and Honodel. The only difference between a cross-city and a cross-country race is that in the first you have to run on pavement most of the way. This makes it rather hard on the runners. Without this one fault the cross-city race is a great thing because it helps to develop distance men. The man who goes out for long distance runs must have natural ability added to much vigor- ous training. In European countries where distance races are so popular they develop their athletes while in the grammar schools. The game of Page Seventy-four CADUCEUS, CHICO hare-and-hounds, very popular in England, often covers a distance of three or four miles. As distance running is not so popular in the United States, the European countries took nearly all of the long runs at the Olympics in 1921. CADUCEUS, Cinco Page Seventy-five Jizioislniv H F f 0llVW' Owing to some technicality of the law, boxing does not hold a very stable position i11 the athletic program of California high schools. The boys' jazz party is an annual event which helps to keep the manly art on its feet in Chico High. Although it is impossible to have interscholastic box- ing matches, much pep is created by matching men among the different classes. A whole bottleful of class spirit may be accumulated in this way. The jazz party was held for the first time in 1921. It was created as an occasion for having a good time, because eating and fighting are the best way the Irish have of celebrating a festival. We are not all Irish in Chico, nevertheless we all have enough cussedness mixed in with our good humor to enjoy a good ight before a good feed. The Jazz party this year was a grand success. It had all. the fun the first Jazz party had and then some. Anyone who was fortunate enough to attend both of these annual affairs was certainly a lucky dog. On January 26th the day was set and the excitement was on. It was decided before an assembly on the night of the event that a little new excitement should be created. The motion was carried and it was decided that a prize was to be given for the best costume. As a result there were people present who had never been seen in Chico before. The first prize was a tin cup, beauti- fully smashed, tangled up in a ribbon of red and gold. When the prize was held before the amazed and breathless audience it was announced that the winner of the costume contest was Arden Crabbe, with the features and dress of a female vamp. The second and third prizes were received in order by Streeter and Mecum. Streeter was attired in a darky costume, while Mecum impersonated a sailor in the U. S. Navy. The prizes awarded for the second and third prizes were a banana and an apple. The costume-judging being over, the two small sons of Paul Roberts were led into the ring and the mix-ups began. Although only five and six years old, the Roberts boys are remarkable boxers, and it is great sport to Page Seventy-six CADUCEUS, CHICO watch them dig in and pummel each other around the ring. Paul Roberts has often been requested to allow hi.s boys to box on big boxing cards in San Francisco. He has always refused, as he has no love for the profes- sional game and wishes his boys to remain amateurs. At any rate, we were lucky to have had this added attraction. Next on the program was a turmoil between Albert Glendenning and Frank Streeter. This match was fairly fast and was won by Streeter. The fighters tipped the scales at one hundred and twenty and one hundred and twenty-five, respectively. The next bout was between Elmer Allinger and Robert Kindig. Al- though slower than the first, it was very interesting because of the hard hitting. The first two rounds were fairly even, but in the third and fourth Allinger showed up much the better man. Following this was a snappy mix-up between Pollock and Silva, which was action personified from beginning to back again. Pollock slapped his opponent both in the face and body with untiring diligence, but Silva was too tough to be knocked out. Although exhausted and battered at the end of each round, John would revive at the sound of the gong and keep up a stiff resistance until the time-keeper yelped out time. Pollock won the decision. Murray and Hazen next came to the platform, where the former was knocked out in the middle of the second round. In the first part of the first round the boys showed up well and were evenly matched, until Murray received a blow to the jaw which made him dizzy. The next round Hazen delivered a solar plexus punch that finished the job. The heavyweights then waded in and ended the dispute for the cham- pionship. Bill Hamilton and Euland Payne, both winners in the boxing matches last year, put up a battle exceedingly interesting to all concerned. Bill, though lighter on his feet and shiftier with his gloves, could not stand up under Payne's terrific punches. Payne floored Hamilton twice, but each time Bill was on his feet again before the count was half over. In the third round Bill again Went down, and this time out, after three rounds of hard fighting. The most wonderful part of the Jazz party was the feed which came after the fights. The supper was put on under the direction of Ray Allinger, who agreed to do anything under the sun to put over the best feed in the history of the world so long as he didn't have to wash the dishes. The Freshmen offered to clear off the table, but didn't, and the feed was de- clared to be a splendid success. Speeches were delivered by Mr. Paul Roberts, Mr. James Ferguson and Mr. George Blount. All of the speakers approved of the party as con- ducted and hoped that many more would be held in years to come. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Seventy-seven Venos, W. Brouillard, Vvilson, A. Tlrouillard, Patterson, Drayton CCapt,ainJ, D. Canfleld, O'l'3rien, Rath, Clark, Schaller, Carmack, Lee Wl7,QW'3-YS BASEBALL, the great American athletic pastime, has been through one of the hardest quality-testing seasons of its Qw1yf,lINL,,v-1 history in the Chico High School. The absence of an ex- A perienced pitcher weakened the team considerably, but they A 5 put up a bitter struggle throughout the entire season. Some of the teams that our boys met this year were of an un- - usually high standard. Four pitchers, all of them lower classmen and inexperienced, have made their appearance in the box on different occasions. Their work has all been about the same, one being about as good as the other. As all of these men have never pitched before, the showing they have made has been excellent. Coach Williams has been on the job all the time, giving the team hard practice and keeping a watchful eye on their welfare. Husky is always ready to roast the fellow who is not loyal to the team. The first part of the season consisted of .a large number of practice games with the Teachers College, Durham High, and other neighboring high schools, to get the pitchers practiced up and to prepare for the heavy work that was to come later. All of the practice games with other schools than the College were held before the league games started. B.aseball as well as track began its season earlier than usual. During the month of April Williams took the team on a barn-storming trip to the central coastal region of the State to play teams that were used to playing a good brand of baseball. The team left Chico Wednesday, - 2 Page Seventy-eight WW CADUCEUS, cH1co April 14, for Palo Alto, where they played thee Stanford Freshmen. On the way home they sojourned at the capital and played a return game with Governor Stephens' boys. Both games were played well. That the Chico High boys were worthy of their opponents the final score testified. The game with Stanford was the best played game of the season, the strategy and careful head work of Chico being the main feature of the game. At this time the weather for playing baseball was exceedingly poor. The last chance in the race for the N. C. H. S. A. L. pennant came on May 6, when we played Marysville on our own campus. Marysville had a hard time of it until about the fifth inning. The Yuba county teams' mainspring was their pitcher, who later pitched a no-hit no-run game in a controversy with Red Bluff, which was played on the Chico diamond on Senior day. CHICO VS. MARYSVILLE, 6-9 The last chance at the Northern State championship came to the base- ball team on Friday afternoon, May the fifth. A final appeal was made to the fickle Student-Body and the old stand-bys were out as usual, but no more. The home team put up a good fight but could not withstand the well placed hits of the Marysville team. Many times the visitors made a base on short hits. Although our team's performance with the bat was just as good if not better than their opponents, the fielding was not. The expert fielding ability of the other team was its strongest feature. The victory was lost by Chico, but as usual the sportsmanship was rigidly maintained. Wop Canfield warmed up for the first part of the game, holding the visitors down to no runs for five innings. From then on his pitching be- came less effective, until Clarke took his place about the fifth inning. The significance of the contrast between the work done by Canfield before and after the third inning is important. It all goes to show that when Wallace gets his growth and endurance, he will be able to pitch from nine to eleven innings of excellent baseball. All of the boys out for the pitching staff this year are less than sixteen years of' age. This and the fact that this is their first attempt as pitchers gives a glamour to their already efficient work on the field. The rest of the game was pitched by Harold Clarke. Clarke allowed but one run after the fifth inning. Seven runs were made altogether at this time. Chico made two runs at the last of the sixth. Things began to brighten up a little in the eighth a11d Brouillard scored another run. The last out was made by Clarke in a futile effort to steal third. The ninth inning showed some of the best fielding of the game. If Wilson had not overthrown first this spasm would have been free from errors. Even this play was over-shadowed by the classy pickup Wilson had made before he delivered the ball. Chico's last turn at the bat was a glorious attempt to rally. All of the boys responded bravely to the bleachers and when Brouillard met the last streak of bad luck on third the bases were crowded. SACRAMENTO AT CHICO The only game of the whole season in which the team blew up was the first game with Sacramento. The weather was hotter than usual and the CADUCEUS, crnco 'WTC H Ci'M' A' if2Q2f'seQpQHiE hard luck the boys had might easily have been caused by an epidemic of spring fever. For the first two or three innings the Chico boys allowed but one or two runs and were putting up a good fight until the Sacramento gang began to knock the ball out into First street after every other trip to the bat. The fielders then began to lose their hold on the ball until their defense was entirely lost and the ball was pummeled about the field for a total of ten errors. The mixup ended 10-2 in favor of Sacramento. C HICO VS. OROVILLE The first game with another high school was the one with Oroville. This game was a comedy of seven acts on a muddy field. Many errors were made on both sides although Oroville made the majority. The Oro- ville pitcher, even though rooted in his good old mother earth with spikes, could not get used to the slippery character of the source of his being. His pitching was the wildest part of all the untamed town of Oroville. Dana Canfield hurling for our own team pitched a steady game all the way through allowing but two runs for the whole game. Heavy hitting was displayed now and then whenever the pitcher from the court house town could get three strikes across the plate before the umpire yelped ball four. Patterson and Schaller led the local batting averages, at the same time knocking two and three baggers that would have been good for a home run under ordinary weather conditions. At the end of the dream Oroville woke up at the small end of a score reading 10-2. The return game which was played at Oroville a few weeks later proved that even the best of baseball teams suffer from the lack of good alibis. Nevertheless Chico again had a stroke of hard luck that comes with painful regularity to every team, company or individual. The team was badly crippled. Patterson, Carmack, Wilson and Clark all failed to show up to take their old school over the top to the strawberry shortcake dinner vs. ice cream pie and Chico lost the v-i-c-t-o-1'-y. The score was 8-5. Canfield pitched a good game but could not make up for the team's weakened con- dition. Canfield again pitched when the high school met Oroville for the third time in the first league game of the season. The team was all there this time and Oroville was beaten by a ratio of 5-1. While things were beginning to liven up a little Oroville again came to Chico for another celebration of defeat. Schaller, Rath and Canfield as usual were the heaviest hitters of the day. The score was 8-11. While still in the first part of the season a game was played at Oroville that had to be called off on account of rain during the fifth inning. This made a series of five games played with the county seat aggregation. THE NORMAL GAMES In the good old days, before the war and while it was going on in 1916 and the years following, the Normal or Teachers College, as it is now prop- erly called, did not have enough male constituents to compose a baseball team. During the last two years, however, our old rival has had an in- crease in gentleman attendants which enables it to turn out a fine team of ball players. The friendly antagonism that is created between the two Page Eiglity CADUCEUSL CHICO CADUCEUS, cH1co Page Eighty-wie schools is a great help to those institutions inasmuch as it creates a good- natured rivalry which is a great benefit to the athletic activities of both. All the practice games which result from this rivalry help to build up their respective teams, as there is no expense to these skirmishes other than the depreciation of uniforms and the occasional breaking of a base- ball bat, caused by an excessive amount of energy stored up while enjoy- ing the recreation of dances given by the double Z club in the College hall. About half a dozen games have already been played by the two schools. So far the games won by each make a good example of an algebraic equation. Two games remain to be played after the Caduceus is in the process of construction. The results of these games will never be known to the person who depends upon the annual for his total stock of athletic information. Of course it would be just like the team to win, but every once in a while accidents will happen. That the High School team deserves a lavish amount of credit for the showing they have made with this team can be realized when we remember that most of the college players were once members of high school teams. Bruce and Larkin, both pitchers for the College, both at one time were on the Chico High School team. Nevertheless the High Schoolfs battery. composed of Wilson, O'Brien and Venos as catchers and a pitching staff maintained by Dana and Wallace Canfield, Rath and Clark, was able to qualify themselves in spite of this imposing opposition. The first College game which marked the opening of the season was won by excellent pitching by Wallace Canneld. The receiving end of the dry cell was choked up by Bruno Wil.son, who backed Canfield up in great shape. As the first game of the season nothing could back this one off the side-board. The game was well played from every point. The fielders. three of whom were on the team last year. gave a good account of them- selves. The batting also was exceptionally high both in the average made by the team and the drives made by individual batters. Bob Bruce was the heaviest hitter for the College team and was the responsible factor for the only run made by that team. The heavy hitters on the High School side of the argument were Rath and Brayton, who walloped the pellet far into the distant landscape. The final score was 6-1 in favor of High School. The next game was not so complimentary, but the team had not re- cuperated from a hard battle with Sacramento and could not do its best. Another reason for the poor showing was the fact that the team had re- ceived no warning before the game. Many of the best players not know- ing that a game was to be played failed to appear. For this reason the team could not come up to the high mark they had made in the first ,frame of the season. Other games on which these two schools figured were well played, but are not important as they were played for practice more than for any other reason. It has been a deep conviction in the mind of Husky Williams that baseball should be played until the closing of school. Now that the Teach- crs College has a team to offer stiff competition, Husky Williams' wish has come true and baseball can be played until the end of the season. Page Eighty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO THE GAMES WITH DURHAM This being the first year that Durham has boasted a high school, the Durham vs. Chico games were watched with interest. Some of the Dur- ham players were playing ball for Chico but a year ago and were some of the star members of last year's team. The biggest part of the Durham team, like that of Chico, was made up of new material. Such a small school naturally could not be expected to beat a burg like ours the first year of operation. Just the same both games were interesting and the small town boys put up a good scrap to the finish. Pitcher Red Vice has a wicked twist on the ball and gives Husky Williams' hopefuls good bat- ting practice. The score of the two games played with Durham were 6-3 and 12-6 respectively. THE PALO ALTO TRIP This season, for the first time in history, Chico High has sent its base- ball team out to win real laurels for the school. On Wednesday, April 12, thirteen husky fellows. composing Chico High's baseball squad, embarked on the Sacramento Northern, enroute to Palo Alto. They arrived in Sacra- mento at three o'clock and whiled away the afternoon hours waiting for the six o'clock boat to go down the river. The river trip was uneventful, except that the porter made up one of the beds wrong and Sap Wilson almost had to cut holes in the sheet to get his legs straightened out. The meals on the boat were fine, weren't they, Dana? Especially the mashed potatoes. The boat docked at San Francisco Thursday morning and after limber- ing up their necks on the clock at the ferry building, the squad set out to see Frisco until nine o'clock, when they were to catch a bus for Palo Alto. If anybody wants any information about lowering a window in an auto bus, just inquire of Red O'Brien. He's a specialist in such matters. The squad arrived at Palo Alto at eleven o'clock and were fed bounte- ously at the expense of the Cardinal coffers. Goof Lee and Babe Venos even insisted on taking on a little ice cream for theirs. The game was called at 2:30. Venos, the stocky little lead-off man, received a pitched ball on the rear portion of his anatomy and was handed free transportation to first base. Brayton, the next hitter, gave up life at first but perched Babe on second. Patterson grounded out to second, but advanced the little bambino to third. Schaller, the lanky cleanup man, might have made a hero of himself with a hit at this time, but struck out and ended the chances of scoring in the initial frame. The Card Babes got two hits in their part of the Hrst, but were retired without a man passing second base. Everything went along finely, neither side able to score till the fourth inning. Canfield was working like a champion in the box. The fireworks started in the fourth when Carmack, playing center field, dropped McCandles' easy fly and let it go for an extra base. McCandles scored a moment later on Johnston's double to center. Connor hit safely and advanced Johnston to third. Canfield struck McDon- ald out, and hit Hoffman, filling the bases. Mulckay, the Stanford lead-off man, got his second hit of the matinee and scored Johnston and Conner and left Hoffman on third. He stole second on the next play. Right here the headwork of Catcher Venos spoiled the chances of the Stanford scoring machine for the inning. He CXPUCEUS, cH1co - Page Eightflhfee figured that with one out, Stanford ought to try to squeeze in another run. So he called for a waste ball and, sure enough, the batter swung wild and the runner on third romped in, only to be tagged out at home by Venos, who then completed his plan by doubling the runner at third, retiring the si e. The Babes scored three in the sixth on hits by Connor and Hoffman. aided by two errors by Patterson and Schaller. Chico woke up in the ninth, Venos hit and was forced out on a later play, Brayton was hit by pitcher and Patterson singled. Schaller was hit by the pitcher and Lee walked, forcing over a run. Patterson scored dur- ing the process of a double play which retired the side. Score 7-2. The fellows were royally entertained at various fraternity houses that night and the next morning returned to Oakland to witness the San Fran- cisco-Oakland baseball game. In the evening the boys caught the boat for Sacramento, where they were scheduled to play the team of Sacramento High School. This game was a real exhibition of baseball. The fellows played like champions, knocking Pendergast, Sacramento's star pitcher, from the hill in the fifth frame. Clark worked the game for the locals and handled himself very creditably. It had been previously arranged to have the game go only seven innings and that was just the time that the Chico boys began to find their batting eyes. They attempt no alibis. but the boys honestly believe that if the game had gone the full nine innings they would have won. They lost, however, by the score of 7-5. The fellows feel that they gained much experience from the trip which will do them worlds of good in their playing next year. They caught the train home at eight o'clock and arrived in Chico at eleven, very well satisfied with the trip and the results of the games. Page Eighty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO 1 i Upper Row: Hazen CCuptainJ, Murdock, Smith, Nucholls, Ossenbriggen, Johnson, Hamilton, Richardson, Costar CCoach3 Lower Row: Jackson, Hong, Lewis, Barowski, Petch, Sellick, Dahlman, Bybee TRACK THE MEET WITH SACRAMENTO It takes more than one little knock of adversity to down the Chico track team. Even three such jolts are not enough to eclipse the good old gang of track stars. The little unpleasantness with Sutter was not enough to destroy the deep-rooted faith of C. H. S. Of course we did not expect to walk away from the town that made the Capital Candy and Cracker Company famousg but we at least hoped to make the aforesaid aggregation work up a good sweat. In some of the contests we were able to do all of this and then some. When the dust of battle blew off Sacramento was slightly in the lead, with Chico nipping her heels at every jump. Sacramento sprinters were too much for the local talent as well as all other sprinters in the northern part of the state. The relay team made up of Sac's best sprinters took the meet with a great lead. In the distance runs Chico took first as usual. Nucholls took the shot put and Johnson the javelin. The rest of the field events were closely contested but were finally won by Sacramento. Dahlman was out of the pole vault on account of a sprained ankle. This was another point that we had hoped to take from the list of the Capital City's victories. The one-hundred-and-twenty pound team did exceedingly good work, although they were outclassed in most of the sprints and in the broad jump. As the last meet before the N. C. H. S. A. L. this one was of great CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Eighty-five benefit to the team, giving them the final work to get themselves into shape for the Championship meet of Northern California. All of the dual meets this year indicated that the fight for the big cup would be between Chico and Sutter. As S-utter was strong in the sprints and Chico in the distances it was hard to tell which team would be on top in the final outcome. Then all we had to do was to wait and seeg now all we have to do is to turn over a, page and find out. THE N. C. H. S. A. L. MEET The N. C. H. S. A. L. track meet occurred as usual on April 2. We expected to keep the big cup this year, as our only rival was Sutter, with whom we had put up a good scrap two or three weeks before. With a few other schools to split points with Sutter in the sprints, by figuring close we could see where Chico had a good chance to win the track meet. Every- thing went along fine, until the day of the big meet. Saturday morning we hit the bath-tub about five A. M., cranked the old nerve grinder and struck out for Marysville hitting on all four. When we got to Marysville We found the boys sitting in a corner with the cuss words streaming out of their mouths at the rate of sixty miles per. We didn't know what to make of it. The sprinters that were going to take all the points away from Sutter City forgot to come, and instead milers and weight throwers from all parts of the country turned up to split points with our home town team. It certainly was a dirty trick. Sutter took the meet more than twenty points ahead of her nearest opponent, who was Chico. The boys did their best and many good records were made by them in both distance and time. Dahlman's hard luck continued to pursue him. As usual his ankle could not stand the gaff, and he was forced to quit long before he had reached his usual altitude. Through lack of training, caused by lack of time in which to take it, Hamilton lost the half-mile to Hoon of Marysville. Bill had beaten the Marysville miler before, so it was obvious that he was not in his usual condition. The time for this event was slower than it had been in Chico a month before. Nucholls took first in the shot and Jackson took a first in the 120 class of low hurdles. The relay was won by Sutter in fast time. The most important feature of the meet was the large crowd of spec- tators. Rooters from all of the schools were seated in a part of the grand- stand reserved for each rooting section. School bands hit up Yankee Doodle during every intermission and bedlam reigned supreme. Students from Chico who were able to get so far from home to see the N. C. H. S. A. L. got to see the big cup for the last time. That is, unless we Win it again within the next three years. TRACK MEET WITH RED BLUFF An unusually good start was made in track on the day of the meet with Red Bluff. The meet was scheduled for two weeks earlier than it occurred, but was postponed on account of the rains which have managed to celebrate every week-end this year. As is usually the case, these delays proved to be a blessing in disguise, for the boys had longer to train. They also were able to enjoy a trip to Red Bluff, another thing they would not have done Page Eighty-six - CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Eighty-seven had the meet taken place as it was scheduled. An added advantage was the good condition of the distance men as a result of the training for the cross-city race and jazz party. But for the presence of the flu germs in the track team, the boys would have had every advantage possible. As it was, a better beginning could not have been wished for. There was little competition in any of the events excepting the pole vault. Chico had an easy time of it and maintained a good lead through- out the meet. The mile was the first race to be run and was won by Chico in five minutes and eight seconds. Hamilton was half a lap in the lead at the finish. Red Bluff's main strength is Kaer, who continually hops over the string above the eleven-foot mark in the pole vault. Had Buck Dahlman's ankle not been weak Kaer's victory in this event would have been made only with great difficulty. Dahlman has tied Kaer before in the pole vault and if his ankle were not going bad' all the time he would undoubtedly have given the Red Bluff man a run for his money. The one-hundred-and-twenty-pound men made a good showing in the meet and proved to the world that if they would only grow they would be great stars in the near future. Some of the boys will have a tough time of it, however, as they will be old enough to vote in a very short time. Size does not make much difference in track men as a rule, but as in all cases of advantage extremes can be carried both ways. New material is always showing up in track. Several promising fresh- men turn up every year to give the team a veteran or two to be big brothers to the freshmen in years to come. It is only with the addition of men and healthy material that a strong team can be carried over from one year to another. When Ray Smith, who is one of the gentlemen referred to, gets his growth and a few more years of experience, Chico High will be able to look forward to the javelin as a sure thing for her side. Curtis Petch, who belongs to the same crew of the same boat, aspires to be a distance man and bids fair to succeed. He has the right build for distance runs and has all the beauty that is necessary for a person who doesn't care a rap how he looks. We would advise Curtis to keep plugging away, for he is sure to get there. THE MEET WITH MARYSVILLE Aha! The plot begins to sicken. The Marysville track meet showed many things that were interesting to those who love to gloat over the deeds of the High School track team. Probably the most exhilarating revelation was the fact that Chico was again well toward the front in the race for the big cup of the N. C. H. S. A. L. We could also see by the out- come of this meet that Chico will, beyond a doubt, have a strong, healthy track team for many years to come. Cin case they don't get wild and start to smoking.J The reason for this optimistic forelook is the number of lower class men who placed in both the main team and the 120-pound division. The 120-pound team is comparatively a new thing in the track teams of California. It is a very great asset to the sport, not only because it helps to make more points, but also because it gives younger and lighter men a chance to get on the team. In this manner many freshmen get a chance to prepare themselves for years of grueling competition for their Page Eighty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Eighty-nine Alma Mater. Men who shine well in this class are Yen Hong and Stanley Lewis, both underclass men with bright futures, hardy constitutions and keen desires to abstain from playing tiddledy-winks and other bad habits of deadly nature which spell certain failure for promising young athletes. With this and other new material which caused us to sit up and snicker, we have every reason to be cheerful. Although the team was handicapped by the loss of many men who had been knocked out by old man flu the meet was a complete walkaway, and in the final count the points stood 67-93, Chico. We were able to take first and second in many events, thus making the meet easy picking. Keen competition was witnessed in the 880 between Hoon and Hamil- ton. Hoon is a distance man with a well earned reputation, having run the mile under 4 minutes and 48 seconds. In the 880, however, he was forced to eat Hamilton's dust and take second. The mile, which wa.s won by Taylor, of Marysville, was under-estimated by the judges and was cut short by one lap. In this way the outcome was influenced and the result turned out to be different from what had been expected. Most of the field events were won by men from Chico. This year we are stronger in the field events than we have been for many years, which is another featu1'e in our winged foot when we come to the N. C. H. S. A. L. In looking it all over we can safely say that in spite of hard luck spells, the track team did fairly well at that. THE INTERCLASS TRACK MEET Somebody deserves a great deal of credit for the arrangements that were made for the interclass track meet which occurred during Harry Rimmer's visit in Chico. A better time could not have been chosen. The date chosen for Chico High's pioneer day, track meet, baseball game and Harry Rimmer's reception was Thursday, March 2, 1922. Rimmer was given the honorary position as starter and everything went off in great shape. Harry was a champion boxer and marathon runner himself one time and so knew the job. He also gave some of the boys good advice concerning their athletics. For once the interclass affair was witnessed by a large number of spectators, both students and otherwise. Several of the events were run off before the crowd arrived, as the meet began at 12 :30. The track events were thus speeded up to make way for the baseball game at three o'clock. In spite of the fact that Chico had no veteran sprinters this year, new men showed up in the school that gave another optimistic outlook for the future. Glen Richardson was the star of the meet, and surprised the school as well as himself by taking first place in the 100-yard dash and the 220 and the high jump. Orval Patterson showed up exceptionally well, coming in a close second in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. This was the more remarkable because Pat was in his baseball togs and had made no previous arrangements to enter the track meet. With all this ability running around loose, the sprints will be the school's strength instead of its weakness. Louis Hazen ran the quarter in fast time, although he was not pressed hard at any time during the race. The time was 54 seconds. Hazen also won the half mile. Although captain of the track team, Louie bears his Page Ninety CADUCEUS, CHICO responsibilities lightly and does not worry. He considers his troubles over when he has won the 440. Field events are Chico's long suit this year. N uchols and Johnson from Oregon are a great strength to the team in the weights and hurdles. There was little opposition in the weights, but a stiff fight was put up by Jackson and Bybee in the hurdles. The results of the interclass had a stimulating effect on the whole school. The students realized that they had a top-notch team, ready to hit the cinders at a minute's notice. It is a sad but obvious fact that the students are more willing to support a winning team than a losing one. A student must have the support of the team or he will get disinterested. The relations of the team to the rooting section is fifty-fifty. Tommy Costar was well pleased with the prospects and foresaw bright prospects for the team. The men themselves were intoxicated by their victories and were hard to keep sober. On a whole, the interclass track meet left an exhilarating sensation in the whole school. Home brew wasn't in it. TRACK MEET WITH SUTTER CITY The track meet with Sutter City, April first, was an event which was looked forward to with great interest. Sutter City, who always has a strong track team, was stronger than ever this year. Their main strength lay in their sprinters. This being the case they were able to win some of the short races with little opposition. As our team was strong in weight and distance men, it looked pretty good for the home town. Another cause for the breathless attitude that this game created, was the fact that Sutter was the strongest contestant to be entered in the N. C. H. S. A. L. The only correct method of calculation concerning track meets is on the principle that what you can do once you can do again. That is the most nearly correct way to predict a championship. The day of the track meet, however, it was hard to tell whether any predictions would hold good or not. Our two best distance men were not in the best condition and one of the sprinters was just getting over a serious attack of the flu. From this angle it can be seen that there is no form of mathematics that is absolutely certain to determine the outcome of a track meet. The 440-yard dash should have been won by Louis Hazen. There is little doubt that Louie would have won if his innards had been in the best of condition. The time for this race, which was won by Sutter, was much slower than the time made by Hazen on previous occasions. Most men in Louie's condition would not have endeavored to run, but Louie is not that kind of fellow. He will run himself to death, and Costar and the whole track team can't stop him. His greatest virtue is his worst fault. Although the week had been full of hardships and late hours, both on and off the job, Bill Hamilton won the half-mile in extra fast time. The race was close and hard fought from pistol to tape. Hamilton maintained his lead by only a few feet at the finish. Bill was not in the best of con- dition, in spite of the fact that he won the race in two minutes and five seconds. When a man is usher in the Majestic theatre, training for track is a strenuous, uphill job. It is impossible to hit the mattress before mid- night when engaged in an occupation of that kind. Johnson, our muscular Indian athlete, took first in the javelin and Nuchols, his husky partner, copped off the shot put. These men, who hail CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Ninety-one from Oregon, are athletes of high caliber and have supported Chico High school loyally in both football and track. Nuchols is also an adept at the national pastime, but rather than neglect his studies and ruin his health he confines his spring activities to track and field work. The events in which he specializes are low hurdles, the shot put and the discus. Johnson is an all-round man but is best satisfied with the javelin, broad jump and high hurdles. The mile race was a great disappointment. Because of Hamilton's in- ability to stand another race, Louis Hazen was called upon to bear the responsibility of winning the mile. Thi.s was too much to expect, as Hazen was not any more able to run than Bill himself. Yen Hong is too fast a man for the 120-pound stars to cope with. He took an easy first place in the 100-yard dash. The time was eleven seconds. Hong's speed is nearly equal to that of the unlimited class. After a hard fight and a long string of tough luck the meet ended with a score of 68 to 89 in favor of the visitors, showing that you can never foretell the outcome of a track meet. Summary of Events 100-yard dash-Fleming, S., Patterson, C., Brown, S., time, 10.2. 100-yard dash, 120-pound--Hong, C., Norris, S., Andrews, C., time, 11. High hurdles-Trimble, S., Bybee, C., Johnson, C., time, 17.1. Low hurdles, 120-pound class-Jackson, C., Lewis, C., Payton, S., time, 16.2. 880-Hamilton, C., L. Brown, S., H. Brown, S., time, 2:04 4-5. 220-Webber, S., Fleming, S., Patterson, C., time, 23.2. 220 low hurdles-Trimble, S., Griffeth, C., Nucholls, C., no time be- cause of shortened distance. Mile-Carlson, S., Hazen, C., Randall, C., time 5.8. 440-Webber, S., Becker, S., Ossenbriggen, C., time, 54.2. Discus-Juaquin, S.: Nucholls, C., Becker, S., distance, 110 feet 6 inches. . Pole vault-Griffith, S., Beecroft, S., Thatcher, C., height, 10 feet. Shot put--Nucholls, C., Ossenbriggen, C., Wilkie, S., distance, 42 feet 3 inches. High jump, 120-pound class-Norris, S., Jackson, C., Lewis, S., and Hong, C., tied for third, height, 5 feet 2 inches. Broad jump-Trimble, S., Johnson, C., Griffith, S., distance, 20 feet. Broad jump, 120-pound class-Norris, S., Hong, C., Lewis, C., dis- tance, 17 feet 4 inches. . Javelin--Johnson, C., Joaquin, S., Smith, C., distance, 144 feet 2 inches. Relay race--Sutter City, time, 1.3 7-2. THE N. S. C. I. F. MEET The Northern Section California Interscholastic Federation track meet took place at Biggs, this year, on the twenty-ninth of April. Only the most vigorous members of the team were represented in this meet, as the large number of schools represented made it necessary to reduce the num- ber of contestants to a minimum. The schools sending athletes were the strongest in Northern California. Naturally Chico High could not expect to take first, as she had already been defeated in the N. C. H. S. A. L., in Page Ninety-two CADUCEUS, CHICO which a much smaller number of schools were represented. Two men who took first places were Nucholls and Jack.son. Jackson's starring event was the low hurdles in the 120-pound division. Nucholls' strong feature was the shot, which he shoved out into the field for a distance of 45 feet. The elimination of the javelin throw was a great disappointment to Chico, as Art Johnson's ability in thi.s event was the greatest Point-getter on the team. The revelation at the end of the meet proclaimed Chico fifth in the long column of schools entered. The end of the C. I. F. meet meant a great deal to the track men, for they had been through a strenuous season. The strict rules were getting irksome to a number, who were beginning to look forward with hungry eyes to the day when they might break training. As no more meets were to be held, the track season ended, much to the satisfaction of all, Captain Hazen included. .gr-b CADUCEUS, cH1co TTMTTATTMMAAlWT15age Ninety-three human, Anderson, Delrick. Wheeler, Stover TENNIS One of the best tennis teams that ever played under the Red and Gold colors in the history of the game upheld the Chico High school this season. The team has had five tournaments so far this season and has won four of them. This year's team is composed of five men: Wheeler, the N. C. H. S. A. L. singles championg Anderson and Luman, the doubles team, and Stover and Detrick, two alternates. The first tournament the team played was at Red Bluff. The Chico boys were greatly handicapped by the graveled courts. Red Bluff won this match by winning four out of the six matches played. A return match was played at Chico, April S, and the Red and Gold boys avenged themselves. Fo-ur out of the six matches this time went to Chico. The next meet was with the county seat lads at Oroville. This tourna- ment proved easy for the Chico racquet wielders, who took the meet, five out of six matches. On April 22 Oroville came to Chico for a return match but were given the same treatment here as the Chico boys gave them at Oroville. The Chico State Teachers College boys issued a challenge to the High School tennis team. saying that the Red and Gold boys were afraid to play them and were hiding behind the fact that their schedule was full. The match was arranged and was played April 29. The college team was de- feated, the high school winning two of the three matches played. The sectional meet was held May 13 at Oroville and the N. C. H. S. A. L. meet was held at Red Bluif May 20. ?f?PUCEH5f 9fllQQ - .- i .L LL A L YM .. .1-Ef3Ef,Hlil? Viola 'l'aLinan, Marjorie Terrell, Tincie Miller, Miss Bradley Qffoachj, Katharine Nvaters. Thelma 'Ferrell GIRLS' ATHLETIC CLUB The girls of the Chico High were not to be outdone by the boys this year. At the beginning of the athletic season they organized a club for all girl athletes. This organization was known as the Girls' Athletic Club and corresponds to the boys' Block C Club. It was organized for the purpose of arousing the interest of the girls of the school in athletics and of making them more enthusiastic and more ready to get out and 'practice to put out Winning teams. Very few individuals will work very hard with- out some definite goal, and the Girls' Athletic Club furnished such a goal. Many new and interesting competitive events were introduced such as track, hiking, folk-dancing and swimming. The constitution of the club sets forth that positions on teams shall bc based on health, scholarship, spirit and technical skill. Seventy-five points were to be given to each girl making any of the following varsity teams: Hockey, basketball, baseball, tennis, swimming, track and volley ball. Other points were to be granted as follows: Squad leadership, 15: management of team, 15g additional year on team, 353 perfect record, 253 hikes, forty miles per semester, 20: posture, four months' run, examination every three weeks, A, 153 B, 10. In tennis two finals were played in each class. There were class teams, pre-finals, and a sub-team. Contestants must have been in school one semester and must have passed in all their subjects. No one can enter after the first two weeks of a semester or make more than one team each semester. Page Ninety-six M ' CADUCEUS, CHICLC The executive board consists of a president, vice-president, secretary, and head of sports. Honors to be awarded are as follows: To members of class teams, class numerals and initial of sports in which place was won. Small emblem, 200 points. Large emblem, 350 points. Final emblem will be given f-or spirit, service and scholarship. Final emblem committee shall consist of director of physical education, one other faculty member elected by the association, one Senior girl, three Athletic Club Seniors, and two Athletic Club Juniors. The executive board was appointed, which consisted of the following: Thelma Terrell, organized play: Tincie Miller, baseball: Viola Tatman, hockey: Katherine Waters, tennis: Marjorie Terrell, basketball: and Miss Irene Bradley, director of physical education. Anna Pierce was elected president of the club at an election held April 21, and Ione Holmes was made secretary. ORGANIZED PLAY The winter season in advanced organized play was devoted to folk- dancing. The dainty misses became very well skilled in the art and were on programs at many social gatherings, among which was the Anniversary of the Parent-Teachers' Association, held at the State Teachers' College on the 19th of February. The Virginia reel and Captain Jinks were the two most popular dances. The girls taking part in the Virginia reel were: Hope Lewis, Alice Herman, Flora Rugh, Sarah Carmack, Marion Allen and Miriam Guill. In the Captain Jinks: Thelma Terrell, Marjorie Terrell, Ione Holmes, Rosaline Roche, Dorothy Smith, Adalyn Honodel, Hazel Fuller, Ruth Polk and Ernestine Austin. On the 5th of September all girls in the Chico High assembled for organized play. They were divided into sections each of which elected a captain and yell leader, and selected a name. Several original names were chosen, such as the Snap Dragons, Yellow Jackets, Hi Steppers, C. H. B.'s, C. D. D.'s, Boomerangs and Whizz Bangs. As there was no special athletic field, the girls took their exercises on the front lawn under the direction of Miss Irene Bradley. After ten weeks of hard practice, the semi-annual Field Day was held, in which all .sections participated. There was much strong competition and the judges required some time to decide on the winners. The C. D. D.'s, under the captaincy of Helen Crabbe, were finally declared victorious. The judges were: Miss Mabel Reston, Miss Edna Houston, Mr. T. L. Costar, and Mr. Walter Williams. HIKING Seemingly, high school girls can think of but one thing at a time and as the minds of our fair damsels were filled with thoughts of baseball, track, basketball, and tennis, hiking has been almost forgotten this year except by a few faithful followers of the sport. Each girl who hiked forty miles during a semester was awarded twenty points in the Girls' Athletic Club. Only three girls succeeded in winning points, but it is hoped that more interest will be taken in this sport next year. EUADIECEUS, CHICO Page Ninety-severi Page Ninety-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO ORLAND FIELD DAY About forty-five Chico girls journeyed to Orland May 13 to attend the Field Day exercises at which girls from Butte, Tehama, Glenn, Sutter and Shasta counties were in attendance. The trip was made in automobiles and the girls were chaperoned by Miss Irene Bradley and Miss Grace Concklin. The girls were all very hopeful and were confident of victory and a good time and their hopes and expectations were not altered after they reached their destination. Chico took second place in the track events which were the first to be held. Red Bluff came out first and Orland third. Because of lack of prac- tice and the new track, the Chico girls were unable to do their best burt their spirits were not dampened in the least. Emeline Greenhalgh made first place in the 50-yard dash and Esther Troxel came out third in the broad jump and second in the 60-yard dash. The track girls making the trip were: Emeline Greenhalgh, Esther Troxel, Hettie Hughes, Lillian Wiggins and Louise Gravitz. In the baseball throw for batting, Tincie Miller of Chico tied with Wil- lows for first place, making 7 out of 10 throws. In the basket ball throw for accuracy, Gladys Kolbenson of Chico took second place, making 7 out of 10. Orland won first with 9 out of 10. In tennis, Chico was not so successful. Anna Pierce of Chico was de- feated by Marjorie Lane of Orland by a score of 6-2, 6-2, 6-2. She also lost to Willows. At noon the girls met in the assembly hall for a basket luncheon. Speeches were given by the different athletic managers and directors and school songs were sung and yells given. At 1:15 three baseball games were played. Chico defeated Willows, Biggs defeated Durham, and Orland bowed in defeat before Red Bluff. The Chico baseball girls who made the trip to Orland were: Elsie Mead, Gladys Harris, Tincie Miller, Gladys Sloan, Lila Mankins, Nellie Long, Myrtle Wood, Mary Hornback, Lucille Jackson, Violet Ellis, Eileen Parrish and Ruth Sundahl. A magnificent pageant was presented on the lawn of the Orland High School in which all schools present were represented. The object of the pageant was to get Education and Physical Education acquainted. Many beautiful and original numbers were put on by the different schools. Chico was represented by Adalyn Honodel, Dorothy Smith, Thelma Terrell, Mar- jorie Terrell, Sarah Carmack, Dorothy Orendorff, Alice Herman, Helen Singleton, Ruth Polk, Iva Ewell, Dorothy Gray, Gladys Kolbenson, and Esther Bechtel, who presented the Jockey dance, Captain Jinks and the Irish Lilt. The posture tests were delightfully brought into the pageant. The girls were attired in fitting costumes and were tested by very severe critics. Chico came out first in this contest. The girls tested were: lone Holmes, Helen Allison, Sarah Carmack and Irma Wicht. At the close of the pageant the girls assembled in the gym, where an hour was spent in getting acquainted and dancing. Thus ended a perfect day and the girls returned to their respective homes, tired but happy, hoping for many other such days. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page Ninety-nine Upper Row: Lila Mankins, Gladys Harris, Mary Hoi-nhzick, Myrtle Wood, Nellie Long, Hallie Parrish, Lorene Carmack, Lucille Jackson Lower Row: Ruth Sundahl, Elsie Meade, Tincie Miller, Violet Ellis, Ethel McGuffm BASEBALL Girl baseball enthusiasts decided to put out a star team this year and on the 4th of December, thirty-five girls reported for roll-call. Practice was fast and by the 7th of February two teams were chosen. Many inter-class games were played and the following team was chosen to uphold the honor of the school: Gladys Harris, Tincie Miller, Lila Mankins, Lucille Jackson, Lorene Carmack, Myrtle Wood, Nellie Long, Violet Ellis, Mary Hornback, Ruth Sundahl, Elsie Mead and Eileen Parrish. In the first inter-school game of the season, Chico High's fair ball- tossers defeated the Durham High School girls by a score of 28 to 7. The game was played on the new High School diamond and was a walk-over for the Chico girls from the beginning. Although the Durhamites were good at the bat, the Chico nine were there when it came to picking them up and kept the visitors on the small end of the score. CHICO VS. WILLOWS The second and real game of the Chico girls' baseball career was played in Orland on May 13 with Willows. It was a bitter pill for the here- tofore undefeated Willows team when after the dust was cleared and the arguments settled it was discovered that Chico was on the long end of the 11-10 score. At the end of the first inning the score stood 4-2 for Chico. The game Page One Hundred CADUCEUS., CHICO was rather slow for a time, the Willows team ever confident of victory, until at the beginning of the last inning the score was 10-8 for Willows. It was then that Chico began to play real baseball. Sundahl walked. Parrish struck out, leaving Sundahl on second. Long popped a weak fly to the pitcher, who dropped it, and then threw it over the first baseman's head. Long raced to second. Mead tied up the game with a long hit to left which scored Sundahl and Long. Harris hit a hot one to right field, scoring Mead. Sloan struck out, short to first. Score 11-10. Willows failed to score in their half of the last frame. GIRLS' BASKETBALL As far as outside competition was concerned, the girls' basketball team was a complete failure this year. There were no games with other schools, as there have been in former years, but a weak attempt was made on the part of the girls to struggle through and make the best of their disadvan- tages by forming inter-class teams. This failure was not from the lack of enthusiasm shown by the girls, nor was it from the absence of good coach- ing, for on the 3rd of December seventy very enthusiastic co-eds, including three players from the 1921 team, were on the campus dressed for the fray, with one of the most able coaches in Northern California in charge. It was the most promising prospect Chico High has had for several years. No! It was not the fault of the girls or of the coach. The true fact is, there was no inside court on which the girls could practice, the same difficulty that confronted the players last year and caused their many defeats. What can any team do without a court and regular practice? Nevertheless, the girls took their misfortune bravely, practiced as often as possible on the dirt court, and finally formed three teams, Freshman, Junior, and Senior-and-Sophomore. The line-ups were as follows: Freshman-Lillian Bacus, center, Hetty Hughes, side-center, Gladys Kolbenson, Lillian Wiggins and Edna Sigler, forwards, Doris Cobb, Pauline Quigley and Dorothy Crum, guards, Elizabeth Whitlock and Genevieve Smith, s-ubs. Junior-Agnes Shalz, center, Ruby Blanton, side-center, Helen Allison, G-ladys Gilbert and Mildred Molter, forwards, Joyce Vilas, Loretta Brandt and Rhoda Musselman, guards. Seni-or-and-Sophomore-Nellie Long, center, Daisy Miller, side-center, Marjorie Terrell and Myrtle Wood, guardsg Bernice Cummings, Gladys Meline and Hallie Dollarhide, forwardsg Emmeline Greenhalgh and Loraine Blanton, subs. The Senior-and-Sophomore team far outclassed their young and inex- perienced opponents, the Junior and Freshman teams, in several inter- class games. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred One Upper Row: Pulley, Tatman, Truesdale, Stamper, Copeland, Wilson, Kennedy Center: Miss Bradley fC0nchJ Lower Row: Perry, Rodriguez, Swift, Brooke, Faulkner HOCKEY Notwithstanding the fact that hockey was only recently introduced into California, the girls of Chico High have made a wonderful showing. The game was first enjoyed by young women attending the universities in the middle-western and eastern states, but the craze soon hit the Chico misses and the result was that many of the girls were at school at eight o'clock every morning to practice the favored game. Besides this, two periods a day have been given over to this sport and the girls have been out three times a week for practice. Two teams were chosen, one for each period, and some very interesting and exciting inter-class games have been played. The closing game of the season was played on Pioneer Day, when the fourth-period team defeated the fifth-period team by a score of 2-1. It was a good, fast game all the way through, and each player showed speed and skill. Carrie Pereira and Viola Tatman, captains of the teams, proved their ability both in playing hockey and in leading the players. The line-ups were as follows: Fourth-period-Viola Tatman, captain, Mildred Brooke, Vera Carey, Bessie Carpenter, Alice Copeland, Dorothea Gunter, Geneva Hawks, Annie Kennedy, Rita McClard, Mary Pulley, Alice Welty, Martha Rodriguez, Saima Swift and Opal Wilson. Fifth-period-Carrie Pereira, captain, Mary Copeland, Laura Boyd, Gertrude Barbour, Charlotte Ames, Antonia Faulkner, Clarice Kelly, Norma Perry, Eva Sears, Ruth Shier, Donna Stamper, Jennie Truesdale, Elizabeth White and Zella Wilkin. l?age One Hundred Two CAIDUCEUS, CHICO Sidney Cheyriey, Katharine VVaters, Laura De-Marias, Helen Kelley GIRLS, TENNIS AT OROVILLE The Girls' tennis team played their first match at Orovilie on March 28. The team was embarrassed by the small space between the base line and the back fence, which made it difficult to return long balls. Though Chico was defeated, the team felt that it had gained by the trip, learning their strong and weak points more convincingly than it is possible to on the home courts. The doubles team put up the best match of the day, featured by clever placing and fine serves. The singles seemed to play evenly, but were unable to find any conspicuous faults to place to. A With the exception of Anne Pierce, the team is the same one that played in the C. I. F. last spring, Laura DeMarais and Anna Pierce, singles, and Sidney Cheyney and Helen Kelly, doubles. The scores are as follows: Pierce vs. Andrews fOrovilleJ, 6-0, 6-03 DeMarais vs. MacGregor, 6-3, 6-25 Kelly and Cheyney vs. Andrews and Stokes, 5-7, 7-5, 5-7. GIRLS' TENNIS AT RED BLUFF The two things that most impressed the team at Red Bluff, April 8, were the cold windy weather and the sincere hospitality that the Red Bluf team extended to the Chico girls. Our opponents expected to play three matches singles and one of doubles, and, since there were only three girls on the team to Red Bluff's CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Three five, DeMarais and Kelly were forced to play both singles and doubles. Cheyney was under doctor's orders and disqualified for the season. When the doubles score stood 6-4 it looked like a certainty for Chico, but the match ended in favor of Red Bluff. In singles DeMarais started with a 4-0 score, and held her opponent down to 7-5, but showed plainly that she had played too long. After the tournament, the Red Bluff girls took the visitors through the buildings and entertained them at a delightful luncheon in the domestic science rooms. The team was composed of Pierce, Kelly and DeMarais, The scores were: DeMarais vs. Hughes, 5-7, 1-63 Kelly vs. Etzler, 1-6, 1-65 Pierce vs. Bloxham, 3-6, 1-63 DeMarais, Kelly vs. Lang, Etzler, 6-43 3-65 1-6. OROVILLE AT CHICO A return match with Oroville was played on the Chico courts, April 22. The day was excellent for tennis and the outcome proved good for Chico. As the original team has become broken up for one reason or another a new team was formed of Kelly, Pierce, and Faulkner fa lower classman who has been rising in the tennis circles latelyl. Faulkner played her first tournament game against Stokes, winning by a good score of 6-23 6-2. Pierce again went up against Andrews, losing by a score of 6-13 10-8. Though she lost the game, great improvement was shown on her part. DeMarais and McGregor played some fast games, finally leaving the honors with Chico and a score of 6-45 3-6 g 6-4. Kelly and Faulkner, for the first time together, tried their hand at doubles against Andrews and Stokes, losing by a score of 6-43 6-0. GIRLS' TRACK Members of the fair sex of Chico High are more and more devoting their time to athletics. Instead of spending their extra half hour or more each morning before the mirror, as they formerly did, they now come to school and take a lap or two around the track. The girls have had almost a monopoly on the track, but the boys are quite willing to let them have it, since a girls' track-team would be a great addition to the athletic activities of the school. Long-distance running was not included in the list of events, but the girls got into real action in the 50 and 100-yard dashes, the broad jump and the high jump. Each class formed a team and several fast interclass meets were held. As this was their first year, the girls did not compete with outside schools. CC. S. T. CJ 1920 Page One Hundred Four CADUCEUS, CHICO Cora Adams Wilma Barta Blanche Bowman Ida Browning Bertha Hinton Leonard Hoar Pauline Kirby Stanley Krikac Amy Doolittle Zilpha Doolittle Frances Adams Arzola Alleman Catherine Allen Audrey Aisthorp Muriel Anderson Rosina Bassler Verna Boyd Reveal Boydstun Ruth Brown Lyrel Bullard Robert Bruce Maurice Collins Cordelia Cheney Wildarene Cole Frances Evans ALUMNI OUR BACK NEIGHBORS Willis Bartlett, O. A. Frank Camper, U. C. Nellie Goebel Ethna Gray Homer Grifiith Johanna Schreiter Thelma Sharp Lisle Shearer Emmaline Smith Janice Merrill Leila Parrish Pearl Power QC. S. T. CJ 1921, Hester Grimm Ruth Klein Marie Hamilton Dorothy Hughes Katherine Kelly Chester Kennedy Ruth Kleine Homer Knight Alice Kennedy William Larkin Alta Lewis George Locey Jean McClard Muriel Mclntyre Mildred Merrill CCollegeJ 1920 C. Anna Fay Pulley Harold Spicer Mildred Cleek Richard Oliver Amer Stolp Ladrue Stolp Holland Spurgin Dorothy Tripp Estella Vogelgsang Lurline Miller Ruby Mullen Helen Pierce Edith Reimer Frances Requa Frences Stevens Paul Singer Howard Strode Dorothy Taber Wilma Thatcher Margaret Ware Irma Whittlesey Harold Wicht Helen Woodard Mabel Yank Ethel Bohannon, U. C. Richard Holmes, Polytechnic College of Engineering. Grace Carlton, U. C. Charles Weahunt, U. C. Russell Freeman, U. C. Homer Mitchell, Junior College, Chico. Golden Pryor ,Chico Business College. Margaret Devine, Sacred Heart College, Indiana. Norman Deuel, Stanford. Vera 0'Brien, U. C. Ivan Rummel, Polytechnic College of Engineering. CADUCEUS ,CHICO Page One Hundred Five fCollegeJ 1921 Millard Beekler, Virginia Military Academy. Myron Bunger, 0. A. C. Elizabeth Cheyney, Mills College. Devere Detrick, U. C. Venable Eastman, U. C. Joyce Edwards, Stanford. Sam Eubanks, Pomona. Raymond Hill, University of Chicago. William Kidd, Business College, Stockton. Aretha Long, Chico Business College. Donald Mathewson, Chico Business College. V ernetta Mathison, Heald's Business College. Wilma Morgan, Business College. Beryl Schroeder, U. C. Caslyn Schwein, Davis Agricultural College. Elvie Wardell, Business College. CWorkingJ 1920 Carleton Anderson, reporter, Sacramento Bee. DeWitt Davis, R. E. Roberts Co., Chico. Viola Dean, Oser's, Chico. Earl Fogarty, Durham Land Colony. George J effery, J effery's, Chico. Vada Johnston, Vallejo. Albert Lee, Marysville. Albert Maybem, San Francisco. Nat Woodruffe, Chico. Ralph Baxter, farming, Durham. Alma Blomquist, D. M. C., Chico. James Wiggins, Enterprise, Chico. Mary Preisendanz, Vadney 8: Masterson, Chico. fAt Home and Marriedj 1920 Nova Bartlett, Castella. Ruby Butler, Mrs. Albert Gruenberg, Chico. Marie Jackson, Durham. Martha Orendorff, Mrs. Prentiss Broyles, Chico. fAt Home and Marriedl 1921 Marian Summers ,Mrs. DeWitt Davis, Chico. Ocie Brandt, Mrs. Albert Watt, Westwood. Ruby Price, San Francisco. Waneta Bvown, Oakland. 1 Ceres Clifford, Chico. Mary Jane Hughes, Chico. Irene Johnston, Mrs. Guy Alldridge, Chico. Janice Merrill, Mrs. Charles Martin, Chico. Estelle Edwards, Chico. Arnold Howard, farming, Chico. Page One Hundred Six CADUCEUS, CHICO Aleta Johnson, Chico. Carl Kiolstadt, Chico. Metchor Mathison, Chico. John Moore, Chico. fWorkingJ 1921 Hiram Bassler, farming, Chico. Harold Bickley, farming, Chico. Frankie Cameron, T. J. Kelly Co., Chico. Carroll Canfield, Pitching, Sacramento. Hayden Davis, First Street Groceteria, Chico. Hamilton Hintz, reporter, Record, Chico. Eugene Powers, Marysville. CDeceasedJ 1921 George Curtis. EASTER MORN The air was clear and all was still, A grayish color tinged the sky, A shining cross stood on the hill, As if to guard the town close by. The sky now grew a lighter shade, And many a murmur filled the air. The rising sun a glory made Upon that rolling hill-top bare. Page One Hundred Eight CADUCEUS, CHICO Sam Cheyney fdescribing accidentb- I turned turtle. Eastman- Get in an aquarium. Teacher Cafter passing out booksj- Did you get an old book, Curtis ? Musselman- I'll say I did, mine has the name -of Methuselah in it. fEditor's Note: This joke is impossible, as Curt never had use for a book.J F. P. D.- Andrew Jackson was a profane man until his wife died. Goof- Maybe he had no use for profanity after she died. Brayton- What did you malgin spelling ex? Albright- One hundred and ten. Brayton- How come ? Albright- Fifty this time and sixty last time. Davidson- Have you had civics ? H. Hassel- Yes. Davidson-- Did you recover? Bert Hinton- Track is great stuff l Nucholls- How so ? Bert- A hold-up man stepped out in front of me and- Nucholls- Did you beat him up ? Bert- No, outran him. Ray Honodel- I lost my Watch. Payne- Be an optimist, maybe you'll have a good time now. Yale Jewers- Ma, I'm good these days, ain't I? Ma- Yes. Yale- You trust me, don't you ? Ma- Yes. Yale-- Then why do you keep the car locked ? Teacher fbraggingj- I've been through all of those books. Goof- Very remarkable. . Teacher- Why ? Goof- Going through a book and not hurting it. Mr. Davidson- A congressman is a smart man, whether he is a man or a woman. QLaH'.J Albright- I've got a cat at home that died eight times already. Dana C.- Huh! That's nothing, our old cow kicks the bucket every morning and night. Davidson- What were the weaknesses of the Articles of Confeder- ation ? Margaret Balaban- They weren't strong enough. Well, I'l1 be dammed, said the creek, as the fat lady fell off the bridge. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Nine As his arm stole 'round her waist, He ,saw her slyly grin. Now he knows the reason why- 'Cause he struck a pin. Mlle. Lange Ctalking about the Hundred Years War, and of a bridge over which the enemy had passedl- If that bridge had a tongue, what terrible things it could tell. Ronald Russel- Oh, naughty bridge ! Mr. Kissling in Algebra, speaking to Nettie Hawks: M. K.- Miss Hawks! How much time did you spend on your lesson? N. H.-- One hour, railroad time. M. K.- What do you mean by railroad time ? N. H.- Including all stops. Mlle. Lange Chearing noise in back of roomj- Who's that rattling? Gladys Kolbenson-- Please, Mlle. Lange, it's my brains. Goofy Lee- A general once stopped to talk to me. Johnson- What did he say ? Goof- Say, kid, don't you ever salute? Carmack- I saw a strange guy riding with your girl. Andrews- Must 'a' been a strange guy. Davidson- Does it say something about the general welfare ? Paul Woodward- I think he was a colonel at the time. Mrs. Stamper tas Margaret comes inj- That's the latest in skirts. Margaret Balaban- A thermometer is very educated. Dorothy Armstrong- How so ? M. B.- It is graduated, with many degrees. Don Honodel- I have but one friend in the world and that's my dog. Thelma- Why don't you get another dog ? Judge-- What's the charge ? Officer- Loafing on a street corner. Judge- Ah! impersonating an of'Iicer. Mrs. Stamper called for Morgan in the study hall. Earl Morgan- What initial ? First Boy- Do you like high school? I do. Second Boy- Yes, I like girls, too. Mr. Davidson Qhistoryl- When did the Pilgrims land in America? Answer- 1620. Mr. D.- Where ? Voice- On a stern and rock-bound coast. Page One Hundred Ten CADUCEUS, CHICO Mr. Davidson- The Star Spangled Banner was written during the war of 1812. Goofy Lee- You don't say?,' Mr. D.- But I do say- Goofy- What do you say? Mr. D.- That your ignorance is shocking. Catherine Hurtle Ctalking of Senior programj- Now we want to put on something silly. Harry O.- Just act natural. Marble Talk- Kiss and lag over. Bybee- Kiss and die of painters' colicf' Frank Compton- He stuck him in the side with his sword. Teacher- He defeated him, then? Mr. Mullany- What is the most effective way to criticize a theatrical performance ? Miles Hendrix- With a cabbage. Miss Reston--'iThe Angles were named so because they were fisher- men and consequently used hooks. As the hooks looked somewhat like angles, they named the people Angles. Kenneth Bybee- Yes, and they used angle worms, too. S. Cheyney-- What's that noise ? Sam- That's me falling asleep. ' What's R. I. P. on the headstone for? Payne- O, because he died on a tear. A teacher was Miss O'Stew, Had practically nothing to do, But rise at six-thirty, Clean a house that was dirty, Then correct some old papers 'till two. 9? Margaret B.- Do you think Glen is still attached to you? Lillian A.-- Yes, but I have to string him once in a while. Waiter at Dads - What will it be, tea or coffee ? Bill B.- Pour it out and let me guess. Mr. Davidson Ccalling rolll. JOB- H61'6.,, Earle- Here, Euland- Yo, Claudia Cabsent-mindedlyj- Hello, F. P. D.- Vernon, will you go up and take a look at the stove ? Vernon Wheeler- I can see it from here. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Eleven , . i ml - , If 9 A Mr. Average Student ' I as he sees himself. gt E31 we 5 2 'PN .7 '13,-f a Y if TP? if 'if 3 O ,468 1 1 'QXQI Q N' 1! fJ ,W As others so l i ,LH i,',' Lili JI , I, , v, J ,f if n ' ' ' I 'W . i , ,ff N A793 And as the faculty sieze him. Jeweler's Clerk to Don Honodel- Would you wish the young lady's name engraved on the ring ? Don- Oh, no! Suppose you put 'To My Honeyf Elskamp- Did you ever see a cat with nine lives ? Geo. Boyd-- No, but I've heard a frog croak hundreds of times. John S.- So those are your new ties? Rather loud, I think. Ralph W.- Don't blame me, I didn't select them. My brother did, and he's rather deaf. A clever young student named Art In class was as quick as a dart. He explained it and said, With a hand to his head, Sloan's linament sure makes me smart. Vernor A.- See that girl over there? She mistook me for her brother and kissed me. Wallace C.- What did you do ? Vernor Crighteouslyl-- As the kiss was not for me I returned it. Page One Hundred Twelve CADUCEUSQ CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Thirteen l3age One Hundred Fourteen CADUCEUS, cH1oo . D 47 C30 5 ' 7 'Z' . t o ,,,Q f' + XT 5 .... S ' 1 ::::2 l2!2... f 4 ' '? ,5:::: .... ...il Y ff ' ' ' ' -muvvpaugw g .... .1 ll ly 'if tml! ll 4 ,f I ll , ' 1' Q52 tt 4--- llllllllllll SR f Z I I . Ill A 1- Among our truly great athletes are those who daily strive with and for their sustenance at the local bean foundries. Nora Skelly- How was the dog show ? Norman- Wasn't any. Why ? N. S.- I heard someone say you were going to the bow-wowsf' Rollin D.- So you know what makes the tower of Pisa lean ? Wilma Look- No! If I did I'd take some myself. A. Anderson- What's the matter with you and Dot? I thought she just doted on you. Hugh- Yes, but her father proved to be an anti-dote. Garrison Patrick- I ran across a friend of yours. Hester- Hurt him much ? Ruth C.- I gave Lewis the 32 degree last night. Wilma L.- I didn't know you were a Mason. Ruth C.- That's freezing, isn't it ? Raymond O.- I wish I had some fire insurance. Don B.- Why ? R. O.-'Tve got a date with Ferguson. ' IN ANCIENT HISTORY Mlle. Lange- Tell about the death of Caesar. Genevieve Opsal- Why, one of his friends stabbed him in the back. Gladys Kolbenson- No, in the capital. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Fifteen 4 . 6 S Q 'IH' X . Wh ' or fo 0 HS JiLL5oN 5565 H5 I5? His 451530. 5 We agree with the wise philosopher who said there is nothing new under the sun, after working hard to get a few new jokes and then to be told, Yea, I saw that one in the Pelican. It is sure a great life. VII. In Ancient History Mlle. Lange to Ivan Masterson: Ivan Masterson! Sit straight! Wilma Look- He can't, Mlle. Lange. He's too crooked. He stole my marble. ...il VIII. In Miss Currie's English Class Martin Tull making a speech on good English: Yep, it ain't right to say 'ain't,' 'cause it ain't right. Miss Currie- Do I understand you to say J-oe Donohue is one of the best known joke writers? Dwight Carmack- No, one of the writers of the best known jokes. Wallace- Could you care for a guy like me ? Esther- Yes, if he wasn't too much like you.', Maynard-- What would you say if I put my arm around you '? Helen- At Last. Vernon W.- Why do they send alarm clocks to Africa? Wesley M.- To cure the savages of sleeping-sickness. Ardon A. Cto preacherj- Can you marry us inia hurry ? Preacher-- Yes, I can do 30 knots an hour. Rinker- If you had money to invest how would you do it Y Caywood-- I'd go to a dealer in stocks and blonds. Payne came into assembly only to find all seats taken. As he was already standing up he addressed the president: Mr. President, I make a motion we all sing the Star Spangled Banner. When all arose Payne secured a seat and sat down. 77 Page One Hundred Sixteen CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Seventeen Page One Hundred Eighteen CADUCEUS, CHICO I I C ulllillllllfi f H 6 lf i illml l. . .I K I : Z N I: THE0'ET'S?VER THECKVJSKER BLQSSIEWLL THEs0'eLiE5'J?'i Organized by Jack McPherson a n d Kenneth Cooke in order to pour a cooling fluid on any project that was started for the good of the school. Officers Kenneth Cooke, President Jack McPherson Vice-President Raymond Orendorff Secretary Club Motto: Knock and the world The only reason this started was that Bill Hamilton raked up a straw one at home and wore it to school, which reminded the other boys. Officers Fat Meade President J. VVm. Hamilton Vice-President John Stevens Sec. -Treas. To join this so- ciety one must have dark deeds in his 'd t ll t' . mm a a imes To this society be- longs the honor of having done all the mischief in the school since it has been organized. Officers Claude Stover Thick Skull James Holmes Numb Skull Sherman Dahlman Cracked Skull This society is as old as the school. It has definite aims and purposes. It is now omcered by Charles Andrews, Francis Brayton md Earl Morgan. knocks with youg boost and y o u boost alone. , N. Brown- Dad, what kind of a boat is a blood Vessel? Dad- Life-boat, now run along. Our Jackie threw a bullet up And on a rock it struck. We hadn't bought his new suit yet. Were we not in luck? --Exchange. ' ENGLISH Ossie, Ossie, the rancher's son, Stole Geneva and away he rung Ossie was sweet and Geneva neat, And they went lovingly down the street. Mr. McLean--Tell all you know about cells. Harry O.-Well, I don't know much. You see, I was in only one. EVER NOTICE HOW I. Teachers thro-ugh winter frown and scrap They say cold weather makes their tempers snap. II. In summertime they are never sweet. They say they are breaking with the heat. III. In spring and fall while its equable And weather is on a lull, They say things are awful dull. Ever notice? !! CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred hlineteen 'L-ggtlg :io Bi 5 fy Yami s g 9 4 N : E 46 2 9' x 'if , x Z ' N E In-47571 E x nfs fr 33.2. f' Z ' Ear-new Y Qc 'N X at Qi X I 'rx Wi if X x . X I 4 EX!-4h5?'T ,K .Qv Le,,f Exuiufr L I l + Exhibit A.--Jack McPherson, prominent baker who has been putting forth his efforts to reduce the size of the hole in a. doughnut. Exhibit B.-Kenneth Cooke, president of Anti-Tobacco Society. Exhibit C.-Joe Donohue, city slicker who is selling electric fans to the Eskimos. Exhibit D.-Claude Stover. who is punching cows and men on his range at Chester. Exhibit E.-Owen Stevens, who is selling his hair and Whisker crop un- nually to the Sano-Tuft Mattress Company. Mr. Whitnioyer- What is steam ? Raymond T.- Steam is Water gone crazy with the heat. Lillian A.- At a Wedding who generally gives the bride away ? Bill H.- The newspapers. Kenneth- What a trim little waist. lone- Yes, there's no getting around it. Page One Hundred Twenty CADUCEUS, CHICO CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Twenty-one Page One Hundred Twenty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO A Senior in freshman class: Miss Houston, don't you think this English is too hard for freshmen? I don't savvy. Mr. Elskamp- What is a centimeter ? Ray Allinger- It is an animal with a hundred feet. Boy Cto Louis Hazen's motherj- Louis got a peach of a lamp from boxing last night. Ma- I knew Louis would win something in athletics. Bill Hamilton- Anybody got the time ? Dahlman- Don't be in a hurry, Bill. I've got lots of time. George Peterson-- Mr. Elskamp, would you mind turning off the light? It keeps me awakef' II. Ray Orendorff- There was a. fellow here who wanted to lick you. Musselman- What did you say ? Ray- I told him I was sorry you weren't around. Claude S.- I'd like to buy a Sunday hat. Clerk- A Sunday hat ? Claude- Yes, to wear on my week-end. C. B. W.- Three states of matter are: solids, liquids, and gas. What ones are concerned in fire ? J. H.- Ashes are solids and gas comes from the heat. C. B. W.- Correct - J. H.- And liquid is put on the fire. CHEAP SKATE There was a young fellow named Clyde, In the funeral procession took prideg He was asked who had died, He just smiled and replied: I don't know, I just came for the ride. Miss Houston- Don't ask too many questions, Irving. Curiosity killed a cat. I. Cleek- What did the cat want to know, Miss Houston ? He- I have half a mind to kiss you, dearief' She- Well, what's wrong with the other half ? A HINT TO THE WISE He who wishes to rise with the sun should not stay out too late with the daughters. I see that you got a shine. How much did it cost you ? Fifteen cents. I'll bet they would paint a barn for a quarter. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Twenty-three WHOO THERE!!! Here lies the remains Of Chester Sappg He drove his car With a girl in his lap. Poor Chester might still Have been alive Had he only taught The girl to drive. The moral learned From this sad loss, Is, drive a buggy And a gentle hoss. But even then The hoss might balk- It's safer far To take a walk. -Exchange. Peanuts- What's the score? DeBock- Five to five in our favor. Mr. Kissling Cexplaining Algebral- Now, watch the board and I'll run through it for you. LAUNDRY AD Why kill your wife? Let us do the dirty Work. Question-What is a button? Answer-A small event that is always coming off. Lillian A.- Did you hear about the awful fright Margaret had at the dance last night? Dot A.- No, but I saw him at dinner. THE TATTLERS Age and her little brother will always tell on a girl. Louis H.- Did you see those girls smile at me ? M. M. Steele-- That's nothingg I nearly laughed my head off when I first saw you. Berta Boyd- Doctor, it's awful. I've gained fifteen pounds in the last month. Doc.- You should worry, when chicken is worth fifty cents a pound. Tillie K. Cyawningl- Is your watch going ? Bob Kindig- Yes. Tillie-- How soon ? Page One Hundred Twenty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO Ione Holmes- You would be a good dancer but for two things. Kenneth B.- What ? I. H.- Your feet. Neil- You look sweet enough to eat. Anna- I do eat. Let's go to the Jack-o-Lantern. Goofy- I was knocked flat by two box cars. Husky- Impossible ! Goofy-- Very unnatural. Shot two sixes in a crap game. Stranger- Hello, son. Bill S.- You are mistaken, sir. I was raised on moonshinef' Dr. Heller fabsentlyl- Will all those that are absent please raise your hand. The Greeks used to play an igtrument called a lyre. The instrument is still in use, but is a mouth-organ now. Barber- How did you get your mustache into this condition? Guess l'i1 have to take it off. Senior- All right. I tried to steal a kiss from a girl who was chewing gum. Mr. Cross- Did you shoot any wads sticking on the wall back there ? Edgar J.- No, sirg mine didn't stick. Helen H.- Has Margaret any musical education ? Alta- She certainly has. Show her a record and she can tell you right off what's on the other side. Elwood C.- Now, can you find any thing particularly wrong with this poem ? Miss Currie- No, one line is as bad as another. Mr. Davidson- Why are you absent from class so much, Kenneth ? Bybee- I'm working for my 'C,' Mr. Davidson. Mr. Davidson- You'll get a 'C' all right, but it will not be a block 'C.' Mr. Davidson- I wish you pupils would take better care of your books and not lose them so often. QA few moments laterj : Does any one know where my book is? He'd bolt his food in two minutes He had no time to spare, But a girl's picture in a window- He'd stop an hour to stare. Mr. Ferguson- I hope that you will have a very pleasant vacation and come back knowing more than you do now. J. Wm. ftrying to be politej- The same to you, sir. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One-Hundred Twenty-five Cuyler L.- All Gaul's divided into three parts. Norman- But yours isn't. U Gilbert Lester tmusingj-- There's something dove-like about her. Jack Mc.- You mean she's pigeon-toed. Mr. Elskamp- Now, Hallie, do you understand the meaning of the word 'extinct'? Hallie C.-Yes, sir. Mr. E.- Name a bird now extinct. Hallie- Ring. Mr. E.-What kind of bird is that? Hallie- My pigeon. The cat got him. Norman's Mother-- Norman is getting more and more like his f atherf' Neighbor- Have you done anything for it ? , NOTICE TO STUDENTS Mr. Davidson once lived in Ohio. This is a fact. After many months of sleuthing it was finally learned. Lance Drane fgiving reportl- The men had to camp in the wilderness over the winter, but as they had some tobacco they had a pretty good time. She sat quite all alone. T'ling, went the telephone. He asked was she at home. She said, No, l'm in Nome. He then hung up the phone. She stayed at home alone. He who fights and is carried away May never fight another day. Mr. Ferguson-- Pluck, my boy, is' what makes success. Luman- Whom shall I pluck ? Mansfield Priel--Mother won't let me have the machine any more. C. C.-Why 'Z M. P.-Forgot to clean the hairpins out of it. Page One Hundred Twenty-six CADUCEUS, CHICO CLASS WILL wg WE, the senior class of '22, being of sane mind and free will, do, collectively and individually give and bequeath all our 5354 ip K I scholastic possessions and honors for which we shall have gp' ,Q no further need, as follows: To the Student Body we leave the new building in good order, with the charge that it be ggi'-Q taken care of as this departing class would do it, To all 4' 'iiivfw-J the teachers we give and bequeath one four-inch jailor's key-ring each, to be worn upon the arm, with the hope that bars may be furnished to replace the glass in the classroom doors, To the Sophs we would leave something if 'twere any use, but they are beyond human help, To the new-wise Seniors, the class of '23, this advice be left: Be original as we have been, be superior in all that you do, like your immediate predecessors, be dignified, haughty and over-bearing, but get away with it. In all that you do be like the class of '22 and court success, hon-or and diplomas, To Mrs. Stamper we leave 14,000 reams of yellow slips to be distributed with her usual joyous abandon, To James Ferguson, our erstwhile principal, we bequeath the undis- puted right to run the school according to his own lights in the future, To Orval Patterson we leave a rusted tin cup that he may keep a moist throat in Student Body meetings. To the Frosh we leave the hope that some day they may be one-eleventh as illustrious and accomplished as we have been, To the Juniors we do bequeath in some measure our athletic prowess in all major sports, to take the place of the deep-rooted habit of marble shoot- ing which now possesses that class, To Tommy Costar we leave our heartiest esteem and an honest wish for future welfare, along with our thanks to be evenly distributed and divided between Misses Bernreuter and Bradley after deducting his own shareg To the Red and Gold we leave nothing, as all scribes of worth are finish- ing up this year, and to Miss Currie, the teacher of journalism, we leave our sympathies in view of what she has in sight to work on, To Rose lone Holmes, I, Phoebe Adams, will my ability as a vamp, I, Ruth Shier, leave my quiet demeanor to one Goof Lee in order that he may get next to himself 3 I, Euland Payne, leave to the janitor, Mr. Boyd, my oversized overalls, We, the graduating class of '22, being of sound mind and extra lucky, do this day afiirm and swear to this as our last will and testament, the same being duly witnessed and signed in legal manner. QSignedJ CLASS OF '22. Witnessed by The Rock Heaver, Spirit of '49, The Old School. CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Twenty seven Adams, Mary Helena Albright, Lloyd Allen, Virginia Allinger, Ray Armstrong, Lillian Balaban, Margaret Baldock, Ava Bassler, Elsa Blanton, Loraine Bon.d, Helen Bornholdt, Dorothy Bouton, Margaret Boyd, Berta Brayton, Donald Bruce, Carlton Bruce, Margaret Burleson, Doroth Burns, Eunice Bybee, Kenneth Camper, Alice Carmack, Dwight Carnahan, Lois Cheyney, Sidney Y Collins, Maurice, P. G. Conrad, Elizabeth Cummings, Frank Detrick, Devere, P. G. Deuel, Katharine Dollarhide, Hallie Drobney, Henry Edgar, Irma, P. G. Ferguson, Nellie Forward, Agnes Adams, Phoebe Aisthorp, Harry Albright, Louella Allison, Helen Ames, Henry Ammerman, Mabel Anderson, Esther Anderson, Vernor Anderson, Walter Armstrong, Dorothy Barnes, VV-esley Beebe, Olive Bell, Hugh Blanton, Ruby Bowman. Clyde Boyd, George Brandt, Lorita Brown, Louise Bruce, Clifford Bruce, Edna Carmack, Sarah Carpenter, Bessie Caywood, Hallie Cheney, Neil ROLL CALL SENIORS Fowler, Holner Gallardo, Perfecto Gay, Randal Goekler, Adalyn Goins, Grace Grimm, Hester, P. G. Haggerty, Anna Hamilton, J. William Hawks, Geneva Hassel, Helen Heath, Fay, P. G. Heller, Mildred Hind, Mary Hintz, Dean Hoar, Chester Hurtle, Catharine Jackson, Vernon Johnson, Arthur Kelly, Helen Krikac, Helen Lee, Harlan Longmire, Vaneta Maloney, Helen Meade, Elsie Meade, Robert Moore, Glen Moore, Trammel Moulton, Edith Nash, Vera Ann Orendorff, Raymond Ossenbriggen, Harry Parrish, Hallie Patch, Esther J UNIORS Chittem, Julia Chittem, Pauline Cockrell, Lois Compton, Frank Cooke, Kenneth Cooney, Katherine Cooper, Elwood DeBock, Joseph Decker, Violet DeMarais, Laura Detrick, Hale Dickenson, Roland Donahue, Joe Doolittle, Venice Fowler, Francis Gage, Helen Garrison, Margaret Gilbert, Gladys Gray, Dorothy Guill, Meriam Harris, Gladys Herber, Shirley Hicks, Louis Holmes, James Payne, Euland Pierce, Anna Pierce, Vernon Polk, Winona Pollock, Charles Rath, Roetta Rockholt, Lila Schaller, Raymond Schoen, Edward Sellick, Charles Shier, Ruth Sigler, Gordon Sisk, Beryl Stevens, Helen Streeter, Frank Taylor, Raymond Tovee, Juanita Tull, Lillian Tull, Zephyr Waters, Katharine Watts, Doris Wheeler, Vernon White, Loveday Whitlock, Harold Wilson, Charles Wood, Myrtle Woodward, Paul Yank, Elizabeth York, Laura Zink, David Moore, Wesley Notley, Claudia I-lonodel, Adalyn Honodel, Raymond Huges, Lawson Jacques, Mildred Jillson, Edgar Johnson, Della Johnson, Nina LaGrone, Frank Luman, Cuyler McCompsey, Alice McClard, Rita McPherson, Jack Messinger, Ruby Mitchell, Edith Mitchell, Margaret Moulter, Mildred Morgan, Earl Morse, Margaret Mulkey, Pagie Murdock, Maynard Musselman, Rhoda Nelson, Paul Nucholls, Leroy Parrish, Francis Page One Hundred Twenty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO Parrish, Rita Paul, Purva Paul, Wanda Pillsbury, William Richardson, Glen Rumbolz, VVesley Sample, Marie Shalz, Agnes Sisk, Homer Allinger, Elmer Ames, Charlotte Anderson, Arden Andrews, Charles Austin, Ernestine Baker, Lester Bacus, Earl Barkley, Burnell Beebe, Spencer Blomquist, Cecilia Bell, Claudine Boyd, Ava Brakebill, Horace Brewster, Clyde Bronaugh, Helen Burk, Roy Burt, Cornelia Cantield, Dana Canfield, Wallace Carey, Vera Carmack, Lorene Cai-mack, Ralph Cheyney, Samuel Churchill, Howard Clark, Marie Clarke, Alfred Clayton, Kenneth Coker, Harry Colman, Erol Cook, Elmer Cook, Lloyd Cook, Thelma Copeland, Mary Crabbe, Helen Craft, Goldie Crawford, Dexter Dahlman, Sherman Davis, Kenneth Eastman, DuBois Elliott, Harold Euselio, Mary Evans, Cordia Evans, Robert Franklin. Ella Fuller, Hazel Garish, Thelma Ginsbach, Aubrey Slaback, Della Smith, Dorothy Smith, Carl Snyder, Inez Spurgin, Charles Stevens, John Stevens, Owen Thompson, Sherman llmsted, Henry SOPHOMORES Goekler, Ernest Gray, Etta Greenhalgh, Emeline Grigsby, Velma Hall, Halbert Harris, Velma Hazen, Louis Hale, Dorothy Gordon, Helen Hemingway, Elmyra Herman, Alice Hersperger, Nathaniel Hoar, Wendell Honodel, Don Houck, Edith Howard, Roscoe Huffman, James Huse, Geneva Jewers, Yale Kennedy, Annie Kidwell, Eva Kidivell, Mabel Kindig, Robert Krueger, Ruby Lofton, Ethel Lewis, Arthur Long, Nellie Lowry, Ray McCrary, Mae McGuffin, Ethel Meade, Irene Meline, Gladys Millard, Frank Miller, Adell Miller, Daisy Miller, Roy Miller, Tincie Mills, Gladys Mills, Verna Mitchell, George Moulter, Rowena Moore, Clyde Nevis, Emily Otterson, Lenore Parker, Georgia Peterson, George Pereira, Carrie Van Sickle, Edwin Vilas, Joyce Washburn, Elizabeth White, Emma Wight, Roland Wilson, Bernard Winters, Marie Yeager, Ethel Zinn, Twila Polk, Ruth Rath, George Roberts, Florence Roche, Florence Roche, Rosaline Rodriguez, Martha Roohr, VVesley Rumbolz, Harry Russel, Allen Sears, Eva Shoesmith, Ruth Shreeve, Walter Silva, Goldie Spencer, Harold Stamper, Donna Steele, Mary Myrtle Stokes, May Stover, Claude Sundall, Ruth Swain, Katherine Swift, Saima Silvia, Mary Taba., Harold Terrell, Marjorie Thatcher, Ira Thompson, Lawrence Tong, Yee Tull, James Tull, Martin Van Nuys, Ethelyn Vaughn, William Venus, Frank Vincent, Helen Washburn, Raymond Walburn, Ruby Watts, Bulah VVelty, Alice W'hite, Carlton White Elizabeth Wicht Irma VVilgers, Robert Wilkins, Zella W'illiams, Ralph Woodward, Earle Yuhnke, Violet CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Twenty nine Adams, Frank Aisthorp, Fred Allen, Dorothy Allen, Marion Allison, Alice Anderson, Agnes Anderson, Arthur Anderson, Winfield Austin, Meta Belle Bales, Aleta Barbour, Gertrude Barkowsky, George Barnes, Kieth Bassler, Louis Bechtel, Esther Bennett, Grace Bennett, Ward Bennett, Zelda Benninger, Beryl Blomquist, Ethel Bornholdt, Florence Bowles, Russell Boyd, Laura Boyles, Gladys Brewster, Ralph Brooks, Lloyd Brooke, Mildred Brouillard, Oliver Brouillard, William Brown, Norman Bruce, Evelyn Burnight, Gertrude Butler, James Bybee, Orva Byrne, Donald Byrne, Wendell Canfield, Lee Carleton, VVayne Carpenter, Beatrice Carpenter, Oscar Carson, Berwyn Chambers, Vera Clarke, Floyd Clarke, Hazel Cleek, Irving Clifford, Ruth Cobb, Doris Cole, Geraldine Compton, Raymond Cooper, Evelyn Copeland, Alice Cory, Vesta Crawford, Charlotte Crawford, Wesley Croissant, Wenda Crum, Dorothy Cummins, Bernice Cummins, Mary David, Deane DeMoss, Arnold DeMoss, Georgia DeMoss, Earl DePine, Dorothy FRESHMEN Detrick, Lucille Dickey, Leona Dodge, Gwendolyn Dolan, George Doty, Warren Droege, Mabel Dunn, Vvillard Durbow, William Dutro, Alta Ednuston, Virginia Edwards, Louis Eggers, Wilma Egleston, Roy Elbolt, Margaret Ellis, Violet Estes, Harold Ewell, Ida Flano, Anna Faulkner, Antonia Farmer, Wesley Fogarty, Willis Fowler, Muriel Frances, Ida Frank, Marion Franks, John Franks, Sarah Freeman, Miroe Fukahara, Seitaro Gable, George Gage, William Gage, Walker Gainer, Lester Gallagher, Helen Ganow, Wilbur Gaskell, Anna Gerard, Verona Gerard, Roma Giroud, Guinevere Glendenning, Alfred Goebel, Norman Grawitz, Louise Guerin, Sam Gunter, Dorothy A. Harlen, Pearl Harned, Pearl Hawks, Nettie Hayes, Clovis Hendricks. Edwin Hendricks, Josephine Hinton, Bert Hattone, Heroshi Holmes, Ione Hong, Yen Honodel, Elwood Hook, Velma Hopkins, Kate Hornback, Mary Harvard, Agnes Howard, Irene Hudson, Ruth Hughes, Nettie Hall, Marguerite Husa, Blanche Ingraham, Chester Jackson, Lucille Jefferys, Vera Jenson, Lester Jessee, Norvial Johnson, Watten Johnson, Arthur Keefer, Clifford Keeley, Violet Kelly, Clarice Kelly, Eugenia Kempley, Ray Kline, Clarice Kline, Clara Kolbenson, Gladys Kroninger, Raymond Kusel, Nueta Kusel, Ursul Laughlin, Elizabeth Lawerence, Ethel Lawerence, Roy Leman, Beulah La'Valley, Maurice Lewis, Edwin Lewis, Hope Lewis, Stanley Long, Fred Look, Wilma Lowry, Ray Lucas, Carey Luehning, Gertrude Luendry, Lucille Mahon, Enoch Mantice, llay Mankins, Lila Mann, Lester Martin, Ora Masterson, Ivan Maxwell, Elston Macray, Iva McPherson, Earl Mecum, Harold Mellow, Irene Millegan, Alta Molinella, Terisna Mitchell, Elwood Moore, Elnora Moore, Kenneth Moore, Rose Moore, Terisa Morgan, Darrel Morris, Warren Morton, Leslie Morton, Wilfred Moulton, Virginia Mulkey, Bertine Munson, Star Murray, Carl Musselman, Curtis Nelson, Betty Nelson, Culios Neubarth, Dan O'Brien, Raymond Page One Hundred Thirty CADUCEUS, CHICO Roberts, Mabel Opsal, Genevieve Orendorf, Dorothy Osborn, Roberta Parker, Bernice Parrish, Emeline Parrish, Ida Patrick, Anna Marie I-eachart, Thelma Pierson, Frank Perry, Mary Perry, Norma Petch, Curtis Picanco, Alfred Plumber, Marion Priel, Mansfield Pritchett, Warren Prosser, Evelyn Pulley, Mary Quigley, Pauline Randle, Edwin Rea, Agnes Rinemer, Mae Rice, Howard Riley, James Roberts, Daisy Robinson, Leona Rawlinson, John Rosabough, Lola Rorke, Cecily Roth, Meriam Rugh, Flora Russel, Ronald Shalz, Lawrence Sigler, Edna Singleton, Helen Skelly, Nora Sloan, Gladys Smith, Adeline Smith, Geniveve Smith, Harry Somes, Wayne Sorenson, Donald Spurgin, Joseph Stark, Alice Stautler, William Stolp, Edwin Stolp, Kenneth Story, Herbert Streeter, Theodore Sulloway, Harold Summers, Lillian Silvia, John Tatman, Viola '-. Taylor, Elizabeth Thomasson, Harold Thompson, George Tovee, Trillis Truesdale, Francis Truesdale, Jennie Troxell, Esther Van Nuys, Vernon Wahle, Arthur Vowell, Vera Wagner, Opal Ward, Lila Warwell, George Watts, Vera VVelch, Len Whitlock, Elizabeth Whitman, Nathan Wiggins, Lillian Williamson, Vivian Wilson, Opal Wilson, Ruby Woodward, Lyrel Wright, Alva Wyatt, Agnes Yank, Lena CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Thirty-one Catalogue of Advertisers Adams Grocery Allen, Dr. Nellie Andrews, C. A. Asser, John Barth, A. Bartlett Drug Co. Bennett, Dr. Guy Bilkey, C. A. Bond 8: Dierup Bowman, W. J. Boydstun, Mrs. Breslauer, Dave Butte Co. National Bank Cameron K' Macdonald Chiapella, Dr. Chico Chico Chico Chico Chico Chico Chico Clark Book Store Business College Cleaning Sz Dye Wks. Enterprise Meat Co. Paint Ak Oil Co. Vecino Market Hardware Co. Clifford, C. A. Currie, Dr. Daly, C. E. David, E. V. DeMarais, C. C. Deveney 8z Enloe Diamond Match Co. Dreiss. C. A. Dupen's Jewelry Store Electric Shoe Shop Emporium, The Enloe, Dr. N. T. Estes Boot Shop Fair, The First National Bank Fleishmann Yeast Co. 1-'ord Garage tiatchell, Drs. Gem Store G-olden Poppy Golden Rule Golden West Bakery Grand-Royal Ice Cream Co. Grist Mill Coffee Co. Griswold Lumber C0. Hamilton, Dr. P. L. Hamilton, R. J. Hannah, F. E. Hassler Bros. Garage Head, Dr. I-Iintz, H. A. Home Bakery Honodel, Dr. W. R. Hoover, P. A. Hotel Oaks Hull's Chico Exchange Jack OtLantern Johnson, Dr. W. B. Junction Bakery Kennedy, Guy R. Kennedys Kandies Kornls Kloak Kr Suit House Lee Pharmacy Lemon House Lobdell Bros. M. 65. M. Grocery Mann 81 Morgan Marsh's Shoe Store lVlaX's Cafe li2cManus, J. A. Miller Auto Co. Model Hair Cutting Shop Moulton, Dr. Murphy, J. G. Nelson, Henry Neubarth, A. L. hichols Hardware Store Nopel, J. H. Notley, Clark Oakdale Drug Co. O. K. Bakery U. K. Fish Market Oser, M. 85 Co. Parent Teachers Assn. lark Service Station Peoples Sav. Q Com. Bank Peters, Jerome D. Polly Ann Bakery I rotzel, J. l'u!lins, J. U. , Richardson Furniture Co. Robbie, Wm. 62 Son Roberts, Paul Roberts, R. E. Robinson. J. R. Roth, H. A. Ilothe, Wm. E. Schley, Geo. C. Stanford's Ice Cream Parlor Steele, M. C. Stilson, Eleanor Swain, C. B. Swain, Homer Thompson Studio Tochterman, Dave Treat 'Em Rite Shoe Shop Vadney, Ed. Vadney, Geo. E. Variety Store Vartabedian, A. N. Vaughan, J. H. Waffle House Waters, Dr. Webber, C. C. Wellsfry Kc Heck West, Dr. Wood Auto Supply Co. Woolworth Store Wyatt Tire Kc Suuply Co. Ye. Liberty Theatres Young, Dr. I Page One Hundred Thirty two CADUCEUS, CHICO 27........,.,......,..,,......................................................... ....M,................,.....-.......-.,....,., Q 5 3 z 5 5 : .,.. U3 .4 C E-1 0 ul -va- .g..g..g... --. 3 'U O 1 1-1- 1 D3 I- . 9 C -1 Q -0--Q -1- ..Q..g. 51-U2 -U12 2 'EQZ 'U '04 U91 O so Zig Q CDES? -IEE Sim 'ESS 5 5 Q-0'-0'-0--0-0-Q--ha-0-vw-0-0-4-9-O-Ov 0'-0--Q--0 4- -0-ra-0-+4-k MAIN STREET af FOURTH RICHARDSON SPRINGS BLDG. PHONE 582-j O E 0 Q O nf C 'Tl o no Z nf A Q Q 6 9 Q 1 Q 2 Q Q Q 9 Q 2 6 Q Q Q 9 5 I Q Q o I ' 0-400- CADUCEUS, CHICO Page one Hundred Thirty-tiugee , . . .1'.'1 . f . . . .'. .' +-0--0--o--0--Q--0--0-0--0--v-0--0--0-Q e . .0.4'9'. . . f '.l'. . .' llvC0QllQ'44'.'0'4'.4'0 'f . . .'4. !, Q Q I Q I, - I 3 'UK ZGIZQB 5 jK1ZQjgf fKZ'Gf fQ4Gp:70fJlzjQggjhK P A R K S E R V I C E STATION H. A. HINTZ 3 TABER AND RICHARDSON 5 Q GROCERIES FRUITS GOODYEAR TIRES , SPORTING GOODS 5 AND VEGETABLES CHICO, CALIFORNIA Phone 137 Q I Corner Main and Humboldt mwZDJZJZZJl2ZJ ulmZQ1Z Q 1D4'D RUDZQ?7D l Y 3 . 6 4'0K'4 -0--0--0--0--O--0-'Of-0--0--0--O--Of-0-0 Q10--0--0-0--Q--000-vt--01vm--0-vm-an--vwwtmwvvwn--N0-an 6 OWO O'lO O O O'lO O'-O'lO O O 0,'C'-O'-O O O 0MO'-O OvOvO O 0' Q O O O'-0'lO'lO O--O O l O O0O' -OvO0O0Ol'O Ol'Ol'Q'-l C Ol'.0Ol4O'v! M. OSER6 CO.: IBO WMA g Q Brand 'I' 5 ICE 2 3 SODA , S ICE CREAM Q Q LEADING DRY GOODS ANDI I Better Products LADIES, READY-T0-WEAR 5 BOWMAN ICE AND SODA STORE I WORKS 2 ' WHOLESALE and RETAIL Q I Z CHICO CALIFORNIA I 4333 Sixth St. Phone 991 Q 5no-v-o-o-o-v4voww0-O--0-+-v-o-ow-4-o-v4-4-4-4-o-o-o-5 5-v4-4wv4'+'0'-0 '0 '4 '4 '0 0 0-4'0'5 Page One Hundred Thirty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO 2.4..Q..g..g..g..g..g..g..Q.4.....g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..,..g.....Q 9.9.5 gem.-lug-.Q Q gag..g..g..g..q.-Q.me-9-Q--5--Q-eg........g..g..g..g..g.....g..z 2 MRS. S. E. BOYDSTUN 3 3 1 ooRsETlERE 5 3 Carries the Following Artilles: DeBevoise, Treo and Warner Bras-3 6 sieresg Goodwin, Modart, Cameo Q 3 and Redfern Corsets, 2 A Perfect Fit Guaranteed Also a full line of Franco-American? Toilet Articles 3 Q Phone 611-VV 9 4518 2111! Street Chico, Calif. 9 Q Q 5........,..,.....,..,..,...........,..... . . . ..................,...........5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0--0--0--O--0--c--0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0--0--Q ! 9 6 6 5 5 C. C. DE MARAIS about that 3 PLUMBING JOB E 707 Broadway Q 6 : g 9 g.g..g.....g..g..g..g Q..g..Q..g.4.4..g.....g..g..g..g..g..g ......g..i 2 START RIGHT- - 9 g New York Life Insurance Lllllllllil-llyz 3 Policies Pay Five Ways: - Q 2 1. Sicknessg 2. Accidentg 3. Old Ageg Z 4. Disabilityg 5. Death. Q Z H. A. ROTH, Agent ' : 3 Telephone 437-J 6 4436 Fourth St. Chico, Calif. P ' i 9 ........0..5..0..g..g.....g..g..g..Q..0- 0 s..0..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..,..g..5 9..g..g..g.....g..g.....g Q q Q Q.'ng..g-.pegng..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..! 9 ! Z 3 5 ? Alone on the sofa. quite charmed, 2 Were Sis and her beau unalarxned. 2 Beneath it I squeezed, But fool-like I sneezed, E And so like great powers they dis-5 9 armed. Q Q 2 9 ? 9 9 : 6 ! in-gal--CHO' O00 O C O O C I O 0 O CHO O O-fO O O O l-'O1'O O l J UNCTION BAKERY f Pies, Cakes 5 Doughntus 4 Fancy Baking for 5 Parties, Etc. FRESH BREAD of the Best 5 Give Us An Order 3 3 3 ' YW... Q ? 5 Z 2 6 9 Q 5--I--0--0--Q--0--0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0--0--I--v-v-0-0-4-UP0--0--0--0-fo--0-U 9. g g gag..q..gnQ..gag..g..g.-9..Q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..q..g..g..g..g..g.., 9 ? 3 WHY CARRY WATER Z VVhen 215250 will give you NVater when and where you want automatically? 5 6 e E 0 5 e 6 0 5 5 6 5 2 Q 5 Q Q 5 Q 3 6 9 P 6 6 9 Q I 2 Q Q 9 2 I f I 3 We have a large number installed in Q 5 Chico and vicinity, and can give Q 2 References. 6 PARKER HARDWARE STORE 5 I Dealers in Light and Heavy Hard- 3 ware, Stoves, Ranges, Sporting Goods, 9 Paints, Oils, Etc. 2 3 We sell the Low Way on the Highway g Q Esplanade at Third Avenue 5 5 Phone 195 Q i..g..g Q..Q..g..g..g...nge4..guy..g..g..g..g..gup.-Q--Q..g..q..g..g..g....qui -O-4' 0. -o-0--0-o--0-0 -0--Q-0-0--0-o-0-o--0-Q-0 .n 0- ' 0- Q ' 2 6 f y-U 9 Us Z w Q 2 UUE I i 2 55 K1 3 E fm f 1 dw -1 1 rg 5 as Q K I Q r-:Om n-lj P Q i 'al vig' Q N UD, U2 9 Q Sag ggiigc, gm! ghgngwicup Eg 1535562:fgfi-u0C5ff?S5335E2jgg?Z Q25 mmp-4 F5 3, 6 X y D' -4 1 1: 05 w 'Th TS :O 3, y I m 'OZ OD- Q wg 9 fb 99 I we Pi Har NH- . v-4 Q FQ 5 FU , Q :I Q, 5 4 ...!.. O O -S: Z Z 2 Q EU gsgzzslgamg guismygrogw gc M1342 2:65-Q 4 5-SWNUQ:-bms,... FJ: 200252291 0732 Qisigghpq 2 gafgwffgn 9O+fs Qsewsffx Q D' Q 5 r-4 R4 9 9 H: 01+ 7 . . PU o tgp , 1 ww S 2 g rm Q 2 2 9, ar mm 2,22 3 5 H ' 3 2 W: 2 i Q aT Q . . ' IQ' ai iv I P? '2 2' CQ'0'UQ'4i09 70i0QK4Q ?5'90'?4'4WT1'iQWY4 'S ' '0. . f . . f f . . . G'. . .0. .0 'Q0. G'.' O' '. . . O'. .1 CH 'g 3' l7.0Y '.'Ti9 '. . .'0Q . f '0 . U .0. . Q 0 . 'E 5 2 5 in L1 Z .,, 1 3 3. Q 2' 3 - E g wg' 2 5 2 m 'D 'U 0,3 2 .Q no + , 23 Q E 2 Q0 O fb 3 D v-I-1 2 O 3 S 5 i m ,Q VT'-U 5 Q lg rn Q Q 4-D 2 E34 U- O fi? I Q 14 U- 0 s U2-Q IC, ' f 5 G Q 2. MS Q Q2 2 Q E w cj 3 Q as 4 ra Q5 Sw 2 Q. S S ETS. 2 FU 5- 'E. 4 E I Q 0 O 5 ' UQ 5 O Q H UQ I PL. 2 5 5 o Q CD Q' I Q 2 0 5 'LL Q 5 in Q O CD -v 4 0-' o-,o-o--o-o--o--o--o--o-o'-o-fo-o- 'I 0' CD Page One Hundred Thirty-six CADUCEUS, CHICO Z--o--o--o--o--o--s--o-o--o-o--o--o-o- o--4--o--0--o--o--o--9--0--0--0--m --0--0--m --5--ano--o-o--0--of-of-o--o-w-ov-c--0-0-0-0--o--ug 5 2 E AUll0 Upl'I0lSfCfy E - R- h of ,411 Kmds Cglll lg t 5 a Q Q ,: fA C 9 Z A A Procure the Right Equipment I Qudlltli M,1,fg of Social and Business 5 T My n x 3 'ops if-ff STATIONERY 3 4 Typewriters and Office Fixtures E .-uulmml H Illmmlmlllllln., v I ig at the E mm! 9 jlllww fffe ' 4, 1 1 3 K 1 1 f s - f - f E X fi 5 E Q E 5 ZW T E of W Wear 1 .C. NO L Y ,WCM 2 4421 3d Street Phone 346-J 5 ,...,..,.,...,......,...,.........- ,.....,. ..-........,....,...-..,..,.i :H O l U O-U'1'0O1lO'lO O0C' -Q0O0O0. . f U . . '. H000 . C . l C . U O C U C' 01101101'Q O O f l . '. U Cl'll-: I DAVE TOCHTERMAN A. N. VARTABEDIAN . 5 r , 1 V 5 2 The House of Courtesy - EM QQQTVKTFEERR AND Q T MEN'S HIGH GRADE New Hats Made to Order 5 CLOTHING, FURNISHING '1E?ndQei1S2LidGeEf2QkI3S tSRZihZYl1Q1y GOODS AND SHOES Bleached, Retrimnied ,and Dyedr 208 Main Street Chico, Calif- 231 Mai llStl'08f Chico, Calif. FOR RELIABLE DRY Goons, NOTIONS, SHOES, ETC., Telephone 503'Wv , Try , MANN sl MORGAN ' 1 fa- 2 NASH CARS AND TRUCKS E E 138442 Broadway 707 Broadway Chico, Calif. QP. H. FOTHERINGHAM, Prop. ' 5 3 -.o--o--o--m-v-0-0--0--0--0--0--0-4- -v-0-0--QQ-0--M-0--0--0-4--Q--0--M-0--0 Z -0-ov-0-4--0-9--0--0-1-0-O-vt-U -O--0-0-0--0-1--0--O--I-4--0-0-4--0+-i CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Thirty-seven -0-4--Q-ov-0 -Q +-0-Q--ow0--0--0--0--i-Ov-0--O-v-0--0-41-0-04-+0-Q-+4-+o+4++-0wv+++-votfm-M-9-W-no-M-0-0--0-0-O--0--0-o-0-O-OfO--0-0- CHICO BUSINESS COLLEGE Gives a Thorough Business Training 5 i. ' Q Q E ,Pg na E ' 5, m e g na O '63 QQ Q Q as Z E uf v EE F F . 2 O I w O Q CI 3 Z 2' Q U1 U1 I 5 E E After High School Then Business College + ' mufznmnuuc J. nosm, Li.. M., I-I-eminem 2 2,,,,,,.,,.,,,,,..,..,,.,..g..,..g..g.4.4..9.4..two--0--0--0-vo--0-A--0--0-0--0--4 -0--O-4-one--0--0--0--0-0-o-o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o-o--o--o--o--o--o-o--0-O- ,ug--Q..Qng,.g..gnQuQ-,Qi-Q-.Q-.gn9.94..Q0g..gu-Qu-O'-Cui--O-'O O O O g 3''O'-O-4000-'O-vbvlvi-vlvieflulv-O-'Owl'-00-0-00-lbw!-vOwO1'O'0O O0Ovv ' I 5U C GZl7U CZ'G Z fZ f-QKlZ , 4 1 E BEST WISHES OF E Q 132 Broadway t Q Q - 2 5 SHOE REPAIR SHOP 3 R. Hamilton 6: Co. i O' 'QQ' -0-4-4--Our-U-0-Q-0-9-O-0-0 Newton R. Dimple, Prop. -O-9 Chico, California Headquarters for Prompt Service . 4' Good Material School SHDDIIGS . First Class Workmanship Books and Magazines I Spalding Athletic G00dS I 315 Main Street Chico, Calif The Needlecraft Shop The Baby Corner D Z 2ZP 5-4-9-4-no-9-0-0-oo-oo Page One Hundred Thirty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO -0-O-0--0--0 -9-vw'-0--0-4-Q-Q-4--B-9 -3 'P i -0-0-0--0'-0'-O-vw--O-Q-0 ! C l C O'1O'lC0O0. f 0 f '0 l6lOMO0CvO O . O O . . . .l'l'-Q 'OWOHIHUHIH Owl'-Qngu.--Qnja-Q-ojnlanQuQnQnrQn-Q-.Qq.! Q 0 5 1 6Z'G CZ'GULZ!2'GZ00UDZ!4X 2 5 CSCHLE 0'-0 - 6 5 KLASSY I I 5 KICKS l 5 J Q 4 E 2 Barileii Drug Co si E Try a Pair of Label I SCHLEY'S KLASSY SHOES I 6 ' l Styles Up to the Minute I E IT MEANS QUALITY 4' Prices Always Right 2 2 E 2 E 310 Broadway Chico, Calif. E E 3 ' 2 E iZiZQ'DiZZZQCDZl2'0l JQ QC 330 Broadway Ph0l10 100 4 E-0-0-0-Q-0-0-0-onewoo--0-w-0--o-o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o--o-E 2-0-4--o-a..Q..g..,.....g..g..g--o--o--o-....g........g........g..g........,.....g i..g..g..g..g.....o-o--0--0--0--g....g. ..,.,..g..9-.0--0--0--0-0--Q--o--on -png E..g..g.....g.....g..g..g..g.. .... .. . . . .. .g..g..g..g..g..E Q O 1 Q 6 5 We Nichols Q 3 E HHTCIVVRTC CO. 2 ! T Q i O K 3 2 2 . . g E ATHLETIC AND SPORTING 5 1 Goons 4 2 B l 4 2 1 2 Q G lf, B b ll d T ' 'l 'l' 3 O asgugpligf enms CLASS OF 1921-22 3 2 We Wish You Success 2 Fire Arms and Ammunition 2 Z g -l't , S ' d t' f 'C' I f . . g Qual y egylisleaineega is ac ion? Gvgggariglliligecrgggtggiir if a Q + -- z 3 We Invite Your Patronage f 4 5 406 Broadway Chico? - Phones 6 and 7 2 Q 540 Broadway Chico, Calif. f l 2 2 E CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Thirty-nine -0-9 -0--9 Q 6 Q 6 9 Q Q 9 9 E 9 1 2 6 5 6 ? 9 Q 6 5 Q ! ! 9 9 6 Q 9 Q ! 2 ! 2 9 Q 6 ? 2 Y mm 2 QC' QR' 2.11 gi: SCD EQ :- Cb Cla -0--0-0--0--0--0--9-0--0--0--0--0--0-'O--0--0-0--r -0-0-0 MAJESTIC LYRIC i 3 BROADWAY I Q I 3 Wholesome, Clean and Enferialnmg 5 4 E PICTURES ROAD SHOWS VAUDEVILLE 2 2 5...........g..g..g.... . .....q--0--on --0-'O--5 9 I Z E Bring Your Feet to J- V- PULLINS I . oofr sHoP E THE ESTEQ B E RAMBLER BICYCLES . Q for Their Next Fitting R x I 1 U d A 1 I. We D0 3 Qpclll Ing an CC6Sb0118S E Phone 624-J 412 BI'021dW2W I 843 Main Street -0- -0-41 Q 3 Q 3 Q g.'. Z 5 Y ? Q 5 2 ...N 5.n.u.,,.,,.,,.,,.,.,.......,,...........q..g..g.. i 2-o--0--0--o--o--0--v --0--0--0-vo--mfo--o--9--o--0--0-0--4--Q--0--M-0-1--5 Q''.-...QHOGQQmuy...al..n,,,.,,.,,.,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,..,..,..,..,. Q 3--0-'o--o--o-o--u--o-v-o--o--0--0-1--0--n..QQ-Q..g..q.................g..g..g-.Q 0 g 3 i 5 2 2 THE JACK WLANTERN g QTHE MODEL HAIRCUTTING 3 FINE CANDIES 3 2 SHOP 2 ICE CREAM g 2 WATER ICES Third street 2 , 6 2 Between Main and Broadway 2 Somethlng to Please Everybody ii 4 6 Q Page One Hundred Forty CADUCEUS, CHICO 'MUNI'-CHO' ONO0O O'-000''OMCNO''Ov'O'lO O O 0 O-'O O O l O O C U l' O O0'O0O'lO C l l O C OvO l l O l1l.0'l U i09'O O . . . OMO Of1! il i 1 OW that you have finished and are on your way to higher eduf N cation, you will find that in our store we have one of the most necessary articles in your next step forward. In selling you a x :Suit Case, Trunk or Bag Z we give you the very best quality at the lowest price possible, because I we feel that to give good serviceable merchandise at at low cost will I build up our sales and give us a fair return for our money. We solicit your patronage because we know that before yo ustart on your way to college or to work that you will need good, dependable luggage. Q For me Classes of 1923, 1924 and 1925 i UR stock of athletic supplies is the most complete in Chico and Q 'O' QU? SHO'-Q' A 5 ' 45 nb :Q 2 5 w CDD.- IND . 'I O wmeme e gm 3 eg Saws QQHHO 5: '11 2 f as aiigo gjvvigg 3 5 LU 2 :J 5203 wimcbna ,lj e S, 3 2 Smeg UJFU O 3 ag V CD ' '1 Og C 5 3 -4 225,515 EQ Pj 5+ F Q Sw 'Q m 5' H: CU 2 26330 U1 23 3 Q 4 535535. '1 'U 'f ' 9 moi?-6 CD ' Q 9 gl' CL-Q-ES , 2- UQ ' gum? Q s 2 P sizes 4 4 on cr 'O0O O C0O O O0O OvO'lO ONO C O O0C C O'PC 0MO l O O O 'C O O OHC O 0 O C O O l i 2 3 5 O PF ca wager '0 Q Q O O O C O O O O O1'O1'O O1'? gsOHO1'O O0lf'O O I 0'+O0l0O0O O O OI'O O C' 'g E S F E' gi. gl 1 e O0 in 1 99 Q Q S Q 'U 5:5 S 5 5 'fi 5 222 2 sf ' 3 4 ,T mm ' Sei? 5 P7 Q Q H- UQ, nj H Q Q V' Qfhfb -on nsnfeflei-ee ww' Ugg ggO22Em27!ggH:-ge -rgm . 9 ' ,A ' v-- : l , S5a5E23.9f'sa'wU2gQ S52 pg '4 Q, 6 Q QCD gg ET 55 i-bg Q :sw Qu, 'pug 'mam-fag S gg 9 WN: H . 1 Z, ... u , O Sas fhziswgg-msg: Q., gee asia:-1n1+:ff 0f'2 Hess :Off em me 3 iEF'gdmQ F ,jf eg :ig m mf: sm A mg ruff! 99 2 2 39, E 51: Q' Hp Q5 2 P5 23.2 EE OE' 2 5 S 'Zi 2 r: 525 ' 5 nu- ' - PP 3 Z 5 gf va :CDW 'C O O l C0O O O O O O0l 'a av 'Q0OUO Q O O O0C0Q O O O C O O O O O O 'g gf ll 'O'-O O . O O O -O- U- Q-0-'ov 2 Q SENATOR E Q I-.g..g..g..g-.Q-.Q..g.-0-Q..g..g.g..g..g.....,.....,..p..g..g.-Q Q--Q.-Q--9--5 -o-w4-v-v-o-oao--o--a-v+1-4--o-4-4--o--o-4-4-4--v-y4..g....,. CADUCEUS CHICO Pa e One Hundred Fort -one 7 Q--of-0--0--0-0--o-0-o-0--0--o--0--0--0-fo--o--o 0- - --0-0--0-fr-ofo--o--o--o--Q--0-vo--0-0--Q1-0--0--v-0--of-v-9--ive-v-0--avr-va-4-0--9--v-Q e , N d430 .l,q',,E,lbs 3 ut si Klum-.mx-iQu-:1-m - mrivu cruco. 'VN Q-.R ink in CA:-rl-FORNIA 2 -ff, fffv- 1 - . Yrs ' B - . . 11-VI D f... d ., . - 9 - ,1fglinQi,.gf'-'?Yf3'f'??' M11 2 W 5' QQ - .:-'SS7i?,3q3 .9. ' e . - . ' H Ml. Q i f.-lllfjx, , ,. f X I l.- e H n Q r. mmfff ' t A11 nnnn writ.-arp gi ll xge mg. ' fm a 1: 'H ti, Q 1 ' . . ,, ML X ,,, ,,,. fi X: ,, , -AWA? . -Q lg ,V 93.451 Ml m fs 51' l ui fax .3-lim. -. fe. ,.. tl r - ' ' ,, ff , V - u 'iTa '1fm :iI W -- f ,- r ref' me-'mf . 3 :rn ' so ' L ff WF ,- .- 5 A ':EvQ5',a4.:' ,Wi g wh .18 ,blv.F'fAt 'hi lv' I . Q,- ,fggw , : ,,-, lf -- A , - .r ,F ' V-ftifkyrig ,x, 347- . ,spd I A . leafs A as ., 1 'Reasonable 73rices 5 + 500''. Q0C0. C O .4'. l0Q C . C Q O C POWUWCWI . .0. . O . . f . . I . l . . 6 ,.. . ,...,... . ........... .... ..... ,.,..,........,,.-...,.........,.,......., High School PARE T- TEA CHERS 1 Association ill OUR AIM--To secure the co-operation of parents and teachers for the promotion of child welfare 2 in home, school and community. I Lo4-4-4--o-ow0--0--0--o-0--0--O--0--o--0-- --0--0--W -0--0--l--0-vc--0--0'-0 -0 -0- - --O--O--0--0--0--on --0--Q--0-0--0--4-.5 Page One Hundred Forty-two CADUCEUS, CHICO gn.......,...........,......,.,...,,...,.....,........................................ ,................................................................................,..g 1 THE DIAMOND MATCH CDMPANY E Lumber and Building Materials Main Office, Chico, Calif. E Q Q T Q E 6 5 E ' 2 6 Q 5 9 6 3 Q 2 E 5 'MATERIALS FOR BETTER HOMES' E ASK FOR FREE PLAN BOOK I Retail Yard Phone 76 :: Main Office Phone 700 9+ 6 6 5 2 9 2 9 6 6 a 4 6 6 Q 9 2 9 6 6 6 6 Q Q 6 2 e 6 Q a 6 Q Q Q 9 9 9 6 Q Q 6 6 6 6 9 2 e 6 6 2 9 2 2 9 6 9 Q 5 9 -of-gf .9 2 ! 2 9 6 2 9 2 2 Q 5 9 6 6 9 9 6 Q 5 Q' Q -Of-O--Ov-0-'O-0--0-4--0--one--v 'O O l O+'O D'lOgl O'vQ O''C O Q0O O'-01-01 'CHO' P-4 41 EJ 2 A gd sv 'CII Pu 2 pq Pj an UID in me 5 EE s 'FU BP E. cn fb 4 ':-1 UQ H ve E3 5 T3 55 :D Po UD P1 +4 IT, H r' S Z T5 m Q E. O E G P' '11 9' E QQ 9-: 2 mg Q95- 5: tg' C Q P1 U1 O.. ' ' ab rn I 5 r cr' Q Q ra sw D. Q W U1 W' fa uf fb Q F -1 4 5 Z 3 c-A U '- SL F4 9 9 ! 2 : 5 : ! : Q ? 5 2 5 0 MAX, C CAMERON 81 McDONALD 5 i 9-our Q 9 2 9 2 2 5 9 6 Page One Hundred Forty-three -0- -0 E' O . O C O0O'-O0CMO O O'4l'-O Q-'O0C'-0-4--O O0O''O O O O0O O O0O O O 'O-'U O O O O O O O O'vO' 'Q O I . Q 3, 2 :2 1 1 1 4 1 -1-1 2 U Q CD Z1 5 0 CJ pl: e m -2 5 '-'- o 0 e CI Q r pu N. 1+ 0 0 H E. Q Q si E. EE if if 2 5' 2 flu r 5 A e. Sw 5 E: 2 '11 B-' 2 f: 2 ,.. 5 'D 4 4 CD O 9 U1 i I: 5' U2 m '-'- cn B I ' Q - '4 2 ff '56 f 4 Q 9 Q ' 5 5- 9' 0 99 ' . cn 3 :s 3 m Q W E+ O 3 G 5 gd D 6 P-4 ? yl M 3' 22 5 2 :S 2 cu 2 ,, 24 5 2 22 - S I ro U, ' 2 O ' UQ E U2 hh E. ,1 9, I cn H 9, :S 5 it '-' Q Q 5 S C 2 g an U 2, 22 D' v-Q Q 3 33 O ,... fg Q o O 5 5 9, 5 3 cp cn rv- - a 'E ' SB U' 2 fn - 'f 2 '-Q0O l0Q . . . O . .0l' I . Q0 Pl . O O O . . l I f''O . . C' 'Q O . . '. . . Q' '. . .'5'Q .' 'g Q i' 2 Q 2 'lf 2 Y Q 2 2 Q 4 4 I 2 2 Q ,D - CI 3 3 Q no l 5 P1 71 I 4 ,E U 2 Z Q2 WU F5 f 2 5 55? 5 E 2 glee S 4 mg E E cu 525' UP Q '46 I 2 4 8 5 5 Q ' Z I 5 Q 9 4- 5, td 'P 2 rs: PU f 5 re 1-4 0-0-0--0--0--0-0-4--0--to-0--0-0--of OAKDALE DRUG C0. 1548 Park Avenue Corner Sixteenth Street Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables Coffees, Teas, Enamel Phone 127 Cor. 5th and Bdwy. -0-- -Q-0--O-0--0-'O-Ow0-0-0-0--o-o- --0 fo--0--01-0-0 -0+-Q-v 1 ! 1 2 Q 6 6 'Z' 2 5 2 9 6 2 3 2 4 2 9 2. . . .'4. . . . .'f f . . . . . ,i 'Q I 2 2 3 2 2 2 5 + 2 2 3 2 2 2 5 4 I 2 'O-.'.' '2 ..,.....Q-....,..,..,...........,........, .,..,..,...................-of-o--o--0--9 j47GZQDU QQ'Gi IQ!'GZWJU i O. K. Fish Gpouliryif MARKET 2 I K. EEJIMA, Propl-ietor Q .M 3 ? Prompt Attention Given to All 5 Orders Place With Us 2 2 k Ti Y Q Your Patronage Is Solicited 119 Main Street Phone 119 D JQZl lRlEZQ M 2 Z 2 2 2 Q 4 4 2 -1 5 f 2 2 3 2 Q e 2 5 2 5 2 I Z I 2 2 I 2 Q 4 6 4 -5 5. E. V. DAVID Fire, Life and Casualty Insurance No Better Investment in Town Than the Above Protection 304 Broadway Chico, Calif. I KENNEDY'S KAN DIES Home-Made Candies and Ice Cream 343 Broadway Phone 318-W 5-0--Q--0--0--0-4--0--0--0--0--0--0--0 -0-4-Q--Q--0.10 S X 'O''O Ol'O0O O0O O O O O O0O O0l O 'O O l''Ol'O'-O0C-O0C0O O O0O-O0O O O . .'0. O Ol 'Q PU ? 9 Sb . 2 UQ cn Q O Q H O Q 5 9 5- Q. 0 Q Q Q' Q' 5 . Cf. Q- iq S 2 5 2 S Q: fl ' 4- gd 21 33 Q 5 2 ss Si Us M- 5- I 3 Q' ,... M- . Si 3 UU F1 E? 5 P-s ss: s: js : v-s a :s H- T ff : .... Q' ' U ! Q an E E1 Q ,La 3 9 O '41 qq 3 Q Q Z g a Q-O00 O1'O O'-O'-O O O''C i O C O0C'-O O O O O O OvI l UNO''0 O O D0O'-O O O O O O O O O O0O' 4, r-C 5 C ' 5:2 U S 53 KD Q F I r-1 sn S Ed QU E Q I O iss S- Q 2 ' Q FU 3 as . 2 O E' I C44 6 cn 9 Q Q 6 O '1 Lo Q Q 6 :- O Z Q P1 2 5' UU 'I Q Cl 5 9 Qj 5 fp a - : : Q he m ! O 3 E. s F' i I FGM 3 5 3' P. O O Ov'0lO0OQ'lO'4 C O'Q'PO'+C'-O'-O'-C O CMO O'0O O l l C U l O O CHO 'l O Q 00000 'CNOWI O 0 -0--0--0-4-Q ..g..g..g1.g..g..g..g..g..g Q. ng.. ..q..g..g ...gag DR. NELLIE A. ALLEN Osteopathic Physician Waterland-Breslauei' Building Office Phone 444-J Res. Phone 400-J Chico, Calif. 6 i Q D. H. MOULTON, M. D. 5 Phone 38 4 Waterland-Breslauer Building Residence, 124 Normal Ave.' Phone 900 i.....g..g..g..g..q.. -Q. .. 4..q..g..g..g..g..,..g.....g..g.....g... ,..g.. -0-0-0-O--0 -0--9 -0--of-0--0 .Ono- -0-0 -0--0-0-1 -0 0-If -0-0-0-ov 0--0-0-9 g..q. Q..g..g..g..g..g.-q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..q. gn! W. B. JOHNSON, M. D. Specialties OBSTETRICS - X-RAY Residence and Office: Phone 140 Residence, Room 212 Waterland-Breslauer Building 5 g..g........g..g.....g..g..g..g..g.-q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g,.g..g.4..g..g..g..g q..g. ..g..g.. .g..g..g..g..g.....! 5 Q A. R. WATERS 2 Osteopathic Physician E Waterland-Breslauer Bldg. 9 Phone 204-W Chico, Calif. 3 if 6 .-any -- -0--on0--0--0--0--0--N-I--0--0--0--0--0--0--0--5 Q C ' 'I' DP I U. Q CI 4' O 4 ra I c: 3 fat O III P-4 3 Q , O 6 1 Q 1 ? Q Q Q 'O O . O C l O0C .' 3 6 5 'U :S 2 G i O Q 5 I Q FP 5 U11 Q C1 Q 5 E' , . 2. 3 S: 5 rr Q :F ? I-'I , 2 4 ' --o-4-1--Q--Q-4--of-0-5 Q Y -6--9 -O-0--0 Q g DRS. W. L. AND ELLA F. 2 Q GATCHELL ? 2 P. L. HAMILTON Q Q 2 4 ' G 2 Q Physicians and Surgeons I Q Physlclan and Surgeon 5 Om 1331! B d E ce, 2 roa way ' 1 12-2 'L 4 R Q 1. 0. 0. F. Building 5 E Hours' P2536 56 O IResidence, 218 Chestnut Street E Chico, California 5 Resldence, 3615 Fxfth Street 3 Phone 267 -0--O-0-M -Q-Q.-g-4.-QQ-Q-0-0--0-Ont-0 0-0-0--Q-0-Q-0-'94--0-0-0-0-O --0--o--o--QQ-o--Q--on - --o- --Q--5 gif' 9 5 Q Q Q 5 5 Q Q Q ? Q Q Q Q Q 5 5 Q 2. -o-o-o--9 Q 11' Q Q 4 6 Q Q i 6 Q Q 3 if . . .. ' Q 1 E Q Q 9 2 Q 1 2 Q ce fi 1 . 6 if U 1 2 52 U 2 21- F 2 ' Cz :T :U F' . 5 :Y 5 3 cg E 55 3 2 a- ge-3 2 Z Q- 3 :J Q a 9 o E3 U H Q QQ QD g 3 Q Q 3 QQ w g '4 + 09 ew tg ? 5 po 200 ev- W 2 H 5' W 2 2 : jig Q af :lu 9 2 Q Q 5. 'H Q 5 Q' 5 5 9' Q va ' Z 6 Q r: vi Q e CL Q , 6 -. . Si Q 02 E' 'I0O4'O OHO Q C O C Q0O0. .0O C C'0O'0C'0ll 'E E- 'O O0O Q C O O-'9'O O O O 0 O0Q O O O' ,HO-O O O0i O C 'O O O O'Q O l'-CMO'-O 0 O' -3 zn'O Q-'O O0QvC0O O O O C C . O O1'O O O i1 5 g U3 a 5 'fa 51 5 Q 9- '4 5 2 pq :T ? 'DUO Q - ? ? 9 5' cn Q4 M O o f-- U g m B -'CD U, gg Q L4 ' '1 m zfngimif'-' 353 Eggs 5 CJ 6 , no ... Q :WU 9 Q 5+ 2 5 ' Q 7 D gn g Q O S' sw H- o sw Q 2 2 Q. 5 5 S Q3 3 2 Q! g o 51 g 2 co Q1 :U-' E V1 +1 4 Q O0 5 5 ro- pa L, Q tb O 4 2 -qw ...CD o 5 E, 2 ' 9, 5 Q 0000 Q94 n.. EW E Qq Q.. 5 Sf' g ? fp 2-9 Q he - 5' S ,E W Q3 'Jf :r we r' 5 3 5 ff QS 1 P N IND 0 3 3 ' in Sf Q-+ Q Q O O 6 5 3 5 5 Q 3' 'O l C O00 . . C O' 'OUOWOWO' 'a 5' 9 O O C U O Q C O Q l O O'-O O .' Page One Hundred Forty-six CADUCEUS, CHICO g-o-0-o-o--o-o-o--owo-o-o--o--o--o-bo--0--0--0--o--0--Q--0--0--0--0--o-w9 9--0-vo--o-v-o--o--o--A-o--0--o--Q--0--o--o--n--Q--of-one--o--of-o--of-o--o--0-.9 3 5 5 Z 9 Q 3 2 i gg 2 DR. N. T. ENLOE Q S 1 Practice Limited to operative? , J. R. YOUNG, D. D. s. E E and Preventive Surgery E Second and Main Streets 4 5 Enloe Hospital, 330 Flume St. I Chico Califrnia 2 I + I ' 4 E Evenings by Appointment only E 5 Office Hours, 2 to 4 P. M. 5 3 2 i 5 . if 5 I Q . 1 5 . 3 2 2 I i 3 , 3 4 Engng. . . ..g..g.. . .. -Q--0--v-o--9-.g..q..g.....g..g..g........,..g.....Z E-o--o--o-o--c--Q--o--o--s--o--o--o--Q--0--0--0--0--v-0--0-0--Q--0-0--0-a-Q--I if 2 I Q 4 2 2 2 i 5 2 2 I 6 3 Q E 2 Q I i l DR. C. W. CURRIE i E Dentist JOHN R. ROBINSON P Att - - -L Q 3 siibei-Stein Bldg. Chico, Calif. E E O1 Hey at aw Q . Q 1 Phone 59 Chico, Calif. E HUUTS- 9 to 5- I Waterland-Breslauer Bldg. 2 Q 5 P i i g X i 1 5 2 E 6 ! 2 2 i 2 I i 2 I z x 5 !'O O-'O-'l O . O . . C C 'CHO 'O O0O'-O Q O O OW 'O C'-. l O OM. C O C'-O O O O O O O'13 ev IMIHO' I' ' 'C 0' CHC C0000-'O 'O lui' D'4 O O O O' O00 'O' O4 vi O- 0 O O' 00000001-Y Q . Q N 3 5 Q Q 3 3' Q 0 Q Q 9 CJ ' 5 Q : 2 C fi' 5 3 0 3 Q 9 as CU 0 5 ' Q. 3' 0 E Q 3 CI s Sl Q Q Q U1 i UU o Z 5 Q ' , . 4 3 5 '1 U . Q 4 Q . 5 . Q 6 4 'YQ -'D QQ ' Q 4 '55 Q 5 Q Q Q 5 , . U Q Q r-Q 4 SD Pj Q Q 4 O O 1' ,.. Q + 5 5 Q 3, ' O 2 ' a 9 'U : li 2 Q O 0 2 - fb 2 3-P--cf-0--0--0 -0 -0 --0--0--0--Q--0--0--o--l-n--on 0--0 0--0 -0 0--0 0--0 -0 Q W wr: ,'O0O O O C l'-000000 O' Of'O'-O''l0O l O l'vO O''O O O l O O O I'Il l fO l O O l l O I-'O' -Q cd UU Q I I I 5 5' C N- . 2 S 6 CJ ,, . ru 1 E bw Z UE H Q S S UD F' Q ? O Z cv- F4 E I 9 I3 O SY' h-4 6 5 Q ' f-s 3' CD -is 3 E m Z '4 fc I I 1 S 53- 'U do P7 ! Q.. r c: 17+ 2 3 Q ,U fi gf gg G :L s 3' - - 5' Q S +G 5 Q P W I 5, gf QQ 'Q Zi n-1 ! ' e f 2 ' ' Q ? 1' co 6' 'O'-0000010-'O Q O l O . O O f O O O OU. O O' D4-O 0'lQ O .' Q i C l'4 l O O ?'O U . C'5 .' 'O O'5O--O O0O0O O O O . . .' 'Q O l O l O 'O 0-01-00000-O D'f Q l '. 3 9 Page One Hundred Forty-eight CADUCEUS, CHICO Ql'90O'-ONOwO1'O O0O0O'0O C0O O0l' O O O0O O O O0O l O0O0O'vOv1! Try VADNEYS Fresh Roasted PEAN UTS 2 228 BROADWAY PHONE 198 ...ii if Q if if Ei if Q if an si S3 F1 4 Ib U Z ra '-4 Real Estate 'Q04'fO O'O . O O'-! :HO-O-O' V 'ONOWOWO' I 4 S O 2 I OO E Q gd H S 5 e 5 Q 5 Q- E E 4 5 5 s O i 2 '4 S il z 2 g Q Q 2 2 5- 9 ' O 5 2 2 ei 5 5 ' Q S 5 an f + - M P1 1 ' O ie 3 2 B 3 4 FQ Gene Contoleno, Prop. '11 DU E11 U1 m za? ggz an UJUJ 2 O w E11 U Phone 383-W Q 2 ki44 44 '9'O'O-'O O 0 O'-O-'OvO O0l4-O-'Oli Esplanade, Between 2nd and 3rd Qwt--Ord--0--O--Q--0--Owl-Q--0--O-'O--G vc--0--O-Q00--0--Owtwl-Owl--0--in 77144 Golden Poppy We ask your continued patron- age because of the quality and variety of our Candies and Re- freshments, courteous and ap- preciative service and the honest desire to please our patrons. TRY OUR BUFFET LUNCH 11 o'Clock Until Closing Time 9.0-O--0-Ov Chico, California 6 4 Q 5 A. L. NEUBARTH 0--0--0-0--0--snow 3-o-o-o--o-o-o-o-o--v- 3 3 5 3 Q 9 9 Y ? 3 'P 9 Q Q Q 9 5 General Insurance Agent Second Street Chico, Calif. Q1-0f-0--O-0w0+-0--0-0--0--0--o--0-0--O- 0-'01-0--O0 -0--O--O-O-'O--O--01-0 NEW SONGS ABOUT SCHOOL 'I Just 'Cause I Go to Chico High, I'm Not a Hop-Head. -Fox Trot. Bum and the World Bums With 'I' You, 2 Study, and you Study Alone. 6 l -M-0--M-ra--91-U-v-0--0 -0--0-4--0--0--0--0-4--0-vswof-Oath -O-0-O--0--0--01-0--01-0-0--0--0--0 -O--0-0--0--0--0--0--su-0--9-0-0-9-Qu Q Q 'I' 9 Q 5 Q 3 Q Q Q 8 6 5 3 5 Q 9 -0--0 0- -0--0--0-0-0-4--0-4-0'-0--0--M-0--v-0-4-Q-9 -O-O-+0--5 -O-O-9 I- -0-0--0 CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Forty-nine 0--0--O--0++v-Q--0--0--000--Q--v-0-10'-0wo--0w0-4--0+-0--0-4'-0w0--0--v-r-o Reliability and Service -Q--0-904--N-0-9-9-v-0+-rdwv-U-0-0-'O-fr-0-0--0-+0--I-0-O-Q Roberts Grocery For Quality and Service OUR AIM CALL US UP . . F ' P ' B t ' Gua1'anteedIgi13:1f1ng of All lgigczounts es Exide Batteries, N0 LEADERS Battery Charging and Rebuilding a Specialty WOOD AUTO SUPPLY CO. Nord Ave., Near lst St. Corner Eleventh and Esplanade Phone 597-W Chico, Calif. Phone 831 i--o-o-ov-o-4--0-vso-1v-vw-+-v-0--env-r-vw-4--va--0--vw--va--6 -0-o--0--0--m-o--o-w--o--o--s--o--o-41-a--o--o-o--v-o-o-o--0wo-owof-o-5 Q Phone 913 Satisfaction Always or Money Refunded GRIST MILL COFFEE HOUSE COFFEE, TEA, SPICES AND EXTRACTS Cafes Direcl from 'Roaster lo Consumer Your Patronage Will Be Appreciated EIGHTH AND MAIN STREETS CHICO, CALIFORNIA i4+w+-p+++moa-ww+ouwvoaw-m+++w++mrawmmo+4+4wo+vo+m+044m+m+m+m+mi !,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,.,......,..,..,.......-0-Q4-0-5--puQ.-Q--g..g..p.. -9...-Q09 g-4-+-o-a-o--ra--o-4-4wo--o--v4wo-4-o-4wa4--0-4+4-r1-o-0-g WHEN Everet Grieves W. H. Johns B E T T E R B R E A D AND PASTRY is MADE THE CSQCQQNZLQEVQEQSG AND You Will Find it at the Cleaning and Pressing, P 0 L L Y A N N 3 Hats Cleaned and Blocked 9 Third and Salem Phone 155 5 E Phone 530-J 331 Main St. 5.......g..p++a-n-v4-o-0-vo-o-v+a--o--o-o-o-v4-va-0--i i-o-o--o--o-+-o-o--o-o--o--o--o-o--one--0--0--0--0--of-0--0--0--0-0-0-and Page One Hundred Fifty CADUCEUS, CHICO 5f,Cl.TOClCf2fZlf75f267!ZfC2iClZ7DZliUZiCK F Q 5 urnziure1 3 Q ' Q . .. - ' Z 2 E QUALITY SERVICE CASH 5 gHardware - Paints - Stoves? , , Nails - Refrigerators 2 Chlco Veclno Ice Cream Freezers G , Garden Hose - Lawn Mowers Q 'S 3 U ' 5 rober -, n , Sprinklers - Tents - Pumps Q Q y Motors - Engines - Etc. 3 J. H. NOPEL, Prop. AT BETTER PRICES 5 M- E , Telephone 322 Esplanade Between 2nd and 3rd 2 I zz5zJ12zJW4Z1uUp2QzaJZf4A12:zniZJuc 1150-52-54-56 Park Ave. ' 2 Phone 887 Chico, Calif. : 5 : ! 9 .gui -.g..g..g..g..g..g..g.-0.-0--Q.-9.4--Q-.g. .g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.....g..0--0,5 ge--0--0--a--0--o--o--0--0--o--o--0--of-v-Q--o--s--0--0-.9--0--v-0--0--0--0--u-.c.., Q-new--Q-.Q--q..4..Q,.g..g..g.....g.. ..,........,........g.....g........q..g..g.., 9 Q 9 5 a gHENRY NELSON'S SERVICE- , 4 Q 2 C ' ' g 2 qze hlco Enterprlse 2 Corner 17th and Park Ave. 2 ClI'Cl1l31LlOI1 Guafanteed by the 2 Across the Street H0111 2 Audit Bureau of Circulations 5 Ch1CO Motor Park 3 5 of Chicago ' 2 ASSOCIATED PRODUCTS Member of 5 All Makes of Tires and Tubes 9 ALPHA PI and 2 Tire Repair Kits, Fan Belts, Etc. ALPHA BETA KAPPA 5 Cigarettes and Tobaccos Q Y Seryed by ? H nr Nelson Pro . Chico ? ? VPSILON PI and 3 9 y ' p I NU ElfsII.oN ALPHA 5............. .........,.................,....................,..,......,...,.....5 a..,.......,..,.,....,........,.......... ,.........,....................... 9.....g..g.....,................,......,..g..... .............-gn -o--g Q--0--ono--o--0--0--o--0--qs-Q'-Q--Q--Q-....g..g..g..g.....,........q..g..g..g....., 2 9 YFHE BUSINESS OUTLOOK The rain it poured, i LEMON HOUSE g 3 . The sea it roared, 3 5 The sky was draped in black, 5 holesale and Retail ? ? The Old Ship Folledv ? 3 W 3 2 She pitched and bowled, 2 Q And lost her charted track. Q 2 FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ? Oh, dear! oh, dear! ' 5 Sir, will she clear? 5 Q Second and Broadway Q Loud wailed a dame on deck, Q g ALEX BROS., Proprietors 5 As they heaved E lead, 3 - A The skipper said, 5 . n s She allus has, by heck! i..g.....g.. ..,...........g.....g.-5-.0--m-0--o--0--0--U--0--v a-g..g.....g..9.-u-w--of-o--o--o-fo--0--o--0--of-0--Q--guy.,,.....,.....g.....g..5 -0-0-0--0--9-.E S Q U 2 C1 O 2 gn 2 fo Z 2-2 I E 2 cu O E Q I Q 'O'-O'lO'vl0O i .'E 0041-00 X 0441? -U 5 P1 Q O 6 'U 'U Q 9' F I 033 5 5 O 2 5 2 + fb Q Z 'P Q- Q Q '1 Us 3 af E E1 2 . r-+2 cv Z 2? 2 Q O . ....! 5 A I-O1 4--Ov-0-0 -0-0--Of-0 bO'lO'0?0. O'. Q O O O'O' Q'-doc: 3 UPQPU o Www 3 5 U5 5' CP 2 wl'0Q'0O'1O0C' '. .' lQ0?1C l0O'lC O U'40f . .' 53.702 Sings adm UOHH- gms: rp :G U2U2 among 25-Sai 025: mwuqvq CPO Cr ggi' QHSQ. C5 021305 5554-v-CD 'cimgg Fuflsm -0-0--0-0--on '0 0 0 COMMERCIAL BANK The Bank with the Chime Clock HOME BAKERY STUDENTS of our schools ERNEST MCPHERSON will be given every assist- We do all kinds of banking. PASTIUES Information Bureau main- tained for the benefit of the E community. + I i l 2 i Q il Q Q 4 5 2 2 2 3 Q Q T -1 I a I Q .2 Q 2 Q 2 5 Q 2 2 2 5 N MW.. .Q .MM .MM Q, F ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,..,..,..,..,.....i --e--o--on -o--o--Q--m-c--o--o--r-o--o--ow--o--o-4-0--0-4--o--o--o--0--5 .... . . . .. . . ....,. ..g..g..g..g..g..g.,g..g..9 T H E F A I R T. J. Kelly Company H CO. F- W' WOOLWORT Dry Goods, Men's and Ladies' 5-10-15-Cent Store Furnishings yd Ch' o, Calif. Pictorial Review and Ladies' 418 Broa Way lc Home Journal Patterns 426 Broadway Phone 458-J en ,.,..,..,,g..Ca-Ovvifflul' ' ' f ' Rl HEARD l K 0 R N ' S FURNITURE CDI fm 2 The Only Exclusive Ladies' Q if E E CLOAK AND SUIT HOUSE Af the - 'ct'0 Phone 421-J 222 Main st. Phone 635 6 CHICO, CALIF. 2 5 1 :Mu 4',.u.,,,,,,,,,..,.....e.-q........ .......g..g--Q-Q--o--of-o--on--o--5 5-o--0--no-o-1--0-o--o--Q-o--v4-Q-o-one--0-4--0--on-1--env-0-o--o--3 ,,.q.g.-o--o .Q-.o--n--9--Q.-g.-g..g.-q-.g-w--o--Q..o- E no-.Q--of-0-'O 0 .n..4,..0.n.. -.nv M gg .Q-.9-.Q--o--O- . . . w.'5.-'in'E PU G -0 Q..o--o..o.-0-'9 '. .... b. .ug 5. 5 5 2 fa NJ ru U U5 : In 2' DP 0 U3 'Q 3 '-1' 25555 ragga Q 2. 2 5' L4 13 game U1 I 3, 2 Ei O H -- 2 5 9 H Z F' N' 5 gg cv G an Z G 3 Zen ran O UQ N' E? S 5 E 2 Q4 E g S CME U1 R Q S 5 ' as 53 ' D20 I Q F P 2 A ,U 2 if S2 SQ2 5 2 ': O S11 3 Q g ,U , 5 5 UO O N Q Q o 3' PU Q :fi 0 ,U o 5 N K U Q O ' P1 L. 5' 5 w UQ 5 5 3 U2 . Y E. 'D ' a Q. Qu Q an U2 S CA ...Muni Exo 2 5 S ..g.-Q--O'-0'-o-0-.0-q--0 0 '. '.'h.'.....n. S ..0.n.u.0Fi 2'......'-.u.,,.,,,,.g-o--o--o-o-o.-o-q--5-g.-o--o--o--l 0. '.0....,..'..... .',,,.,.-o- -3 ..l--Q.-Q..0--0--0..ma..m -3 '. . ..-.'..n.'-.'..... 0-0-M-c-4--o-ow01-O-'0 '. .n.,..M.o.,..n. .-,.'.' G I .0--0-0 I. Nmov....'n.-,..,.,,,..g.-g-'o-o-.:.q-.o-o- 0 En: -4--0--0--0-4-.0-.o..o-4' .a.0..-....'.o E 5 5 3 E LEP S O 5 : O 0 5 ' C' 4 . Q 5 5 2 O cf: 2 m P1 gh 0 CU , Us 5 54 3 E . ' E Z 'U :U ' ? cn 3 gd cn cn O E E Ci: C3 5 gg g 5 3, 3 is 521492 5' QEJECU o,-:,- EU 2 . ,SL Q Q, tl! 5 5 Q l 5' E '-1 CD 3 CI Q, gg O g 4 Q 1+ P4 5 4 Q2 H 5 I S- VV' Q0 3 O -4 ' 4 e 512 an H av ' ' P1 P' m : If S E U' 3 Z 1 50 Us on Q 'D g Z 2 cu Q Q gg 5 - : : U 1-1 Q Q ...- P G Q m Q m fc O :U S 5 E z Q Q: Q 5 Q Pd 5 71' Q 5 CD .......-3 O ED sl' Q 5 5 8 .g..,..o--0-0.g-g..g.-o-o--o.-a..o--o--o-'0 0 . ...,n.n. E- 8 U1 ...-I 2.-o--o--0-0- ' :Pg .2 2..g-.4..g.-o-fo--o'-o-o--o-'0 0 '+,.0.' at--0 O- NWO' Q --Qui ? . ...s- CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Fifty-three ,O-l0O O+'O OHO l i'-Q O C O'+O'101-OvO0O O'vO0O O C C O f O .0! ! O 0 . . Q C0C0O O0O Ol'O00l-l0Of-O-'l1P01001-O l0Il'l O O O0OH, 9 3 1 M. C. STEELE Dwight C.-When I marry I CLOTHIER AND TAILOR I am going to marry at girl wh0 FURNISHINGS AND ? CHU 'Cake aJ0ke- SHOES Father-Yes, that's the only E kind you can get. 220 Broadway Chico, Calif. 1 ,'0O0O O1'O C O D4'l O0O 'f''C-'O O0O O O O4'l0l'lC'1Ol'l 0000 000'-O' O O'1O l'TO0O0 i'O0lNl'i+QMY0'MQ' '0ilQ0, 3 Finest Toilet Articles Reasonable Prices I Best Drugs Best Service . THE LEE PHARMACY Third and Broadway Phone 10 9..g.............. . ....,..g.-Q--0-0--o........g.-of-o--o--o--0--0--of-0--0--0-3 g-- -o--o--o--o--o--0--o--o--o--Q--0-m.g..p..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.....g.., 3 + .l , 5 i?GZVOU IQ'GlZZlQi'GZ7OU I MUZQGWwGK fZmi 4 Q . E Butte County 5 Chas. A. Drelss 3 ' ' JE ELE T 2 Savmgs Bank? f W R AND OP ICIAN , I 4 I DIAMONDS Paid up Capitalu, ,,,,,,.,.,,., S200,000 ' WATCHES Surplus and undivided E JEWELRY profits -.,--,---,-4,,,,,,,, ,,., 33 83,000 2 4 SILVERWARE 1. 1 CUT GLASS LET OUR BANK g HQEIQNZAINTED BE YOUR BANK Q 4 -1 I i ALL GRADES-ALL KINDS Four Per Cent Interest on All Q At Prices to Suit the Times E Deposits I ' -- Get a Nest Egg Bank 148 Broadway Chico !iZJ ZQ 'DiZZDQTl2ZZlW ZQWlZl ZDZ an I ,.,.,,.,,,,,,,,,.,......g........ .....,..g..g..n--0-0--0--0--0-+0--6 o-o--o--c-o--o-o--o--o-o-so--o--o--of-0--0-o--one--0--o--0--0--o........,..,..4 Page One Hundred Fifty-four CADUCEUS, CHICO IW-..,.,..,.........................-.......,,...........,...g .....................,.......,.,--,....,e I Y , 5 , 3 2 ZGZVQUWQZQCWJJMGZVQUWZZQC Dnycmrczilfmgrclcxvnmwzrcld f Q 9 6 3 2 2 2 2 Oflice Phone 2283 Res. Phone 179 Q CHARLES A. ANDREWS W. E. LUMAN Men's and Youths' Wear 1 Trunks and Bags Q FruitSH-iylqlgrfin Beans I Adler-Rochester Clothes 4 6 6 Are the Better Kind E 5 Real Estate 3 5 Opposite Majestic Theater E 4331 Second St. Chico, Calif. 4535 Second Street 6 4 3 2 3 Z Z 3 . 9 Q Q Q Q L Q A . 2 e e 5 . 9 Q 5, ll ll2QiZ5ZllZl7D2Il2Zl 4lI25D 1l2C - 2YJl lI2UDZQ?ZJl Jl2f'ZJl llZUDZl2f'Q 2 Q 5 3 + .. ..g-.9 gap... .. ...gn .. ug... .0..g,.g..,.....g..g..g............. -q.. Q.. 3 ' 5 2 4 5 5 'E . ' ' 5 fr- B- SWAIN ' 5 D. BRESLAUER E Q 9 4 ' FIRE INSURANCE 6 Get your new Suit here and you e That P3YS Wh9H YOU LOSS Q will be the Best Suited i 5 Man in town 5 2 209 ivmin st. Chico, Calif. 2 218 Main St. Chico, Calif. 2.4.....Q.....g..,.............4..g.....g..............g.................g..,....E .-0--0'-E 5 Q Q, 5 9 ELECTRIC SHOE REPAIRING 9 f 3 if E SHOP w 5 9 W A so E J. Riedel, Proprietor E S 5 All Work Guaranteed E E E -4 'P 4516 Second St. Chico, Calif. a ' S . , f ,Wm 2 2 Z ' CHARLES A. CLIFFORD Q 5 --0-A--Q--o--u-vo--a--c--v-Q---s--s--s--o--0--0--0--s--o--0--0 'o--o--o--o--o-- g..g..g..p.-q..g.....g..g..g..g..g..g-.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.....,..j CADUCEUS, CHICO Page One Hundred Fifty-five Q 4 4 Q f Q 2 2 2 2 Y Q 2 5 Y f I 4 Q 2 9 'P I -1 f 9 2 2 I f Q Q 2 2 2 2 Z 4 'P E A -O-0-0--O-r 0-400-4- en 'Q 'O' O'l. . Q . C . . l 5 I! Q' '. . . . . Q O . . l O O Q O'-O . O'4'-O 'I Qnviviv Q1 22 1 he Q 2 2 'Z 2 00 5, 4 4 F C: Q 4 ' E m 5 O P-3 Q .-4 5 W 'J' :U 5 5 U a a f',':1: 6 H H, ,-4 . . CD rg g . 2 - 5 gp 9 Y , v-qui 2 Q eb 3 3 03. 2 2 3 FE -115 2 SE 2 2' 2 O 2 'F' Og f z 9 242 a sw Q' rr' r' 5 a ' W QQ 2 rem tfesgesi f - Q : U2 a 9 5 5 Z QE w E E we vw ' 1 I 9 I5 A Pj 9 ? U' pq 9 : 4 Z UQ 257 E E QU! 5 Q L 2 'U gg :rl 5 U1 O5 O'-' bg, - ff ' 2 fb coz 'U' 2 2 za e Q- 5 9 . O 0 6 1 O . 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'D 2 ' ' The Butte County National Bank CHICO, Butte COLl.l1ty, CALIFORNIA Capital and Surplus 5421000.00 BANKING IN ALL LINES TRANSACTED TRUST DEPARTMENT AUTHORIZED TO CARE FOR TRUSTS OF ANY DESCRIPTION SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT WM, J, O'CONNOR .............. President Page One Hundred Fifty-Six CADUCEUS, CHICO ..g.....q..,..g.. .g..g..g..g..g..g..g..q..g..g..g..g..g..g.-9--Q-9-. 'Oni 3 Q s 9 I 4 Q I Q 1 9 Q 1 Z i' 9 'I' 9 Q 2 2 Z 2 4, I IDWWGWZIQQZVQDWZMQWM Q Q Z I Q I . . Q l I l C. E. DALY 6: C04 lTry Lutz Bread g Q Q Q 5 Hom f 2 2 AND YOU WILL EAT I 8 O - Q HART-SCHAFFNER an MARX? E N0 UTHER f + 4 T I and I Q Z 2 3 MACHINE MADE SOCIETY BRAND I I G , I I GUARANTEED CLOTHES I uaranteeS'Cleanl1nesS I -O-O--O-0-0--Ov -0-o+-0-0--0--Qo0f-0--9-O--0--0-0--0- O-O-O 0--Q-9-0-vdwm O-0--Q'-0 -0-0+-0 Park Hotel Building 5034 FIFTH STREET BRANCH 321. BROADWAY 330 Main Street, Chico 27Q lQUD2Q1Z7 Qf'Dl7 lQCE2lX- !lZZZ ZQ?'0ZZLQDZZZEg I I 5-4wo-o-o-4--o-o--o--0--o--O-o--v-o-o--o--o--o--o--v-o--o-4--o-0--0--o--o 5--0-0--of-0--04-O--Q--0--5..o--m4-wwe.-O-Q--0-A-4--o.a--0-0--0-0--0-u.5 200''C'OUUOUINOUO''CHO''O''O'lO C O O O O l0. l''O O . . O . . Q g C O O C O O O O l1'lI'DWORD'rival:-Quufugugn-Qs-Qugwj-aQ0Qo-.sQ-1, Q w. F. GAGE sz SONS CO. L f ZcIz00z1Wci5cJcWfZazvQ2JzzW4rfK E 21057037527-ZYCZCIZICKIZVOZTIYEICK I 5 I I FORDS - EORDSONS I LINCOLNCARS . DODGE BROTHERS! Second and Wall M 0 T 0 R C A R Q 4 g Q 2 MILLER AUTOMOBILE 3 5 3 COMPANY 5 - 2 3 2 5 2 2 1 THE uN'VERsA CAR' Phone 88 Second and Flume 41-04-O-Q 0--6-41-0-on 414--0-O-01 I Havoline - Firestones 4 1. 4, 1 I 5 I S IZZZiD:D1HzJIgGo21l2DI722Jz20 gCf 2 W42JD:'D1mIzUp21201ZJI2:ZJ1ZZz1QC . O . . I ' Phone 26 Chlco, Callf. I Q 2 5 5 5 2 5 2 5 Q I Q 2 5 I I Q 4 ? Y 5 9 5 Q 2 2 . ' --o- - --e--o--s--o--O--.--O-vo-o-.5 CADUCEHS, CHICO T' A-M Paige One HGHHQI1-FiRQfeeQeh 9..g.....g.....g.....g.....,..g.4.4.4..g..g..g..g..g..g.....g.....g..g..g.....g.., ,No-41.5--0 --0--Q-.Q--0.-0.-q..g..g..g.....g. .g.....g.....g..g..g..g. .g..g..g..g..! + 4 1922 2 I . . 1 .-l-- , W- i 1 We I I KKJOe!1 KGNeWt.H R E R le C 3 . - 0 Gris 0- 5 DEVENEY se ENLOE Our Shoefitting Makes Life's 5 Q Q Walk Easy Telephone 402-W I Fourth and Main Streets SELECT YOUR SHOES HERE AND BE FITTED RIGHT T See Us First 236 Broadway Chico, Calif. Ofvifini''O'-9010-'O O l O O O C O Q'livivla-000'-l O OwO0O l1. Q--0--0--0--Ov-O--in 0--0--0--0--a-O--Mfiw-'I--O-fl--0-0--v-O-'O-414-'oar VISIT 0l'Il NEW' ART STORE AND I'HONOGllAI'H SHOP Everything Up-to-Date I' Exclusive Agents for the Victrola and Victor Records PHONOGRAPH 81 ART SHOP CHICO PAINT AND OIL CO. 334-338 Brmuhvay Chico, Calif . 5-Q-0-0--0-+0--Q-0--9-01'Q--0--0--0--000-we-U--0'-0'-0--0--o1-0--0--0--0--0-- 5 2 E Where Your Dollar Buys Most THE VARIETY STORE H. F. Jones, Prop. 514 Broadway, Opp. Postoffice -0-Q--0-0--0-0-0+-9 '5 -O-0-0-0-0-0--0--Cf-0--0 -0-owe 5 Y 4 4 4 4 4 Q Q Q 4 4 4 4 4 Q Q Q 2 Q I Z ... -0--0--Q-C'-0--A--0-0 -0--0.-0--0-any 5-4-Q-an-4--m-0--o--0--Q--0--o--o--0-fn--A 0--o.....,..5 Chico, California - When better cars are built, Buick will built them -and Deveney Sz Enloe will sell them in Q 'I 3 3 Q 3 i i 5 3 2 2 Q 1 3.....................,........... ..--........,.,....,...., 3 F. B. ADAMS 81 SON 3 STAPLE AND FANCY i GROCERIES Q We Deliver 1 Sixteenth and Broadway gPhone 439-J Chico, Calif. I I s ,. 5 I 2 Q 9 2 Q 9 9 I 9 I 1 Q 9 5 Q l 3 I 9 9 e 9. ll -1 4 Q Q Q 3 f 2 fl I 4 2 P. A. HOOVER 2 STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES 734 Mein Street ohiee, ceuf. 5--0-o--o--o--0-fo--o--0--0 fo--o--o--0--m own- --n--0-Q--o--Q--o-.s........ ..5 Page One Hundred Fifty-eight CADUCEUS, CHIC6 E........g..W....q..Q..Q-.q..g..g..............g..g..g..q-.q..g..q..Q--g--9 gno--O--o--O--O--au0--0no--0--0--0--9-0--o-0--0--0'-o--0--0--v-0--0--0-fo-s--3 4 O 3 wAI.1,PAPP1R AND GLIDDEN o0.i I I is 1-Amws AND YARNISHES Q i- Q e g g BROADWAY WALLPAPER 3 3 g 5 AND PAINT STORE 3 E argfdcsidogoiraodfrs biitclhgabqeilt Welsfery gl Heck 5 D Y' I 3 Phone 925-J 3 I gift is one of Jewelry. It lasts Q LET UQ ESTIMATE -through the years and alwaysg ' ' 5 brings to mind the happy anni- ' E versary. ..g ..g..g..g..g..g. .g..g.....g..g..g..g..g..g. 'l' For the Best in 9 Q JEWELRY, DIAMONDS and E PRECIOUS STONES Glenn went to see the dentist a Come to picture of despair, THE GEM STORE But came back smiling broadly, J. Irving Bedford 'cause the dentist wasn't there. 2 422 Broadway 3.,,..,,.,..........................g........... .... .Q..Q.-Q--o--o--0--0--on g--0--o--0--a--o--o-o-c--0--ue..-.9 .....gn..............................: s 6 Q Q Q ' 2 Phone 422-J Chico, Calif. 4 Cluco Meat Co. - KIIICOYPOTIUCJD ? El' gFRESH AND CURED MEATS E 3 FISH AND POULTRY z 2 f R E 2 g., n Q 3 5 U5 Z 9 I Q We Succeed As We Serve 2 532 Broadway + Q Q 9 2 Q 6 3 Q Z 3 ' Z 2 Third and Broadway 5 Q 5 Q Q Phone 12 3 g TIRES-AooEssoR1Es Q Page One Hundred Fifty-mne CADUCEUS, CHICO -' W I 2-0--0--0--Q 0 0 i s 0--o--1-.Q--Q.-u-fo 0 0 0 0 0-0--Q--Q--r-on Y f 9 MARSI-I'S 3 ? 9 5 Good Shoes 5 5 3 QUALITY SHOES Q With Plenty of Style Y 9 if Q 2 1 E POPULAR PRICES 9 i - Ti... 4 5 E 4th and Bdwy. Phone 435-J Y 5.......,g.................,........g-.Q 0 Q Q-.g..g.................,.....g.. 5 T H E H U B 3 Dealers in GENTS' CLOTHING AND 5 FURNISHINGS Y 9 Q HATS, CAPS and NECKWEAR 4 5........,..,.., ..............,........,.... .,..,.....,..............,..,..,..,..,..., ,........ .........,........... . . .........,............ Q 2 a Q WAFFLE HOUSE 5 Open Day and Night E 239 Main Phone 28-J I ?-.g.....,.4-.o--o--0--0--o--0--o--0 0 0 o o 0 0 0 0 o Q--0--e-'E .....g..............,..g.....,..g..g..g. ..........g.....g..g..0..o--0-....g.....g.. More Truth Than Poetry ln Chico, a freshman named Hope, Gave all of his class some new dope, If at Penney's you'll trade Your fortune is made For there you can never go broke. A Soph in this school, who was clever, Made it ever her earnest endeavor To save money each day And to put it away To buy shoes she knew were all leather. Your professor who trades at our store, Will tell you he always saves more: And the goods that he buys, Are the best, in his eyes That he's seen since he crawled on the floor. Now the reason for this, as you know, Is the fact that wherever you 5:0 Our stores you will find, And they bring to your mind, That they're better or they never would grow. -This year we are adding more than 50 new stores. fwflaerfvwaq, ft finely if if Q ig tl E ,Jg 5, Ljh-a g ' A Klmdrpomud SIZDEPARTMENT STORES 2nd and Main Chico, Calif. AUTOGRAPHS . . . aw ., .f--.v,'.4, , ,-. -,.',,,,.. ,, V .,,.f: ,. .,,.,,L.,,: A, W Z L i v ? H 5 5 5 5 s ? Q 'Z 2 i E Q 3' 2, i i Q z ,. 4 f P, D J 5. -Y E 2 5 F 5 2 5 i a s a 2 E :JETiT,i!fivaEEYZI1?:'P'kLFl.fPFfiSw4fax 9' .Q 551- 'Q' HES Nr' ifilfflii -- A1 4 ?v'i1:5Efl!' 5?3i'Q33 'b fI5WK'dlU'.17FRUKEl1KanK
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